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                                    Fools%u2019 Journey520era, such as the various facilities at Oak Ridge Tennessee, where raw materials were processed for the bombs. I also picked up a set of 16 cards from an eBay seller in Russia featuring Igor Kurchatov, the father of the Soviet Union%u2019s atomic bomb project. And I included a number of vintage press photographs from the nuclear era, including some depicting a few of the Los Alamos scientists, and of Soviet spies Klaus Fuchs and Ethel Rosenberg. Plus I added various pieces of ephemera from that time period, such as pamphlets discussing how to build fallout shelters, and what to do in the event of a nuclear attack.Together, Lynn and I began a collection of vintage postcards from Indiana%u2019s Camp Chesterfield, a spiritualist enclave near Anderson. We had visited there twice when working on our photography books, and found it quite fascinating, primarily because it still exists. Anyone is free to drive around the grounds, and there are many mediums who live on the property in brightly painted cottages with signs advertising what services they offer. While there were many such camps in the early 1900s where mediums performed seances and gave readings, most of them shut down long ago. But Chesterfield continues to exist, partially because of the determination of one particular medium, Mable Riffle, who had a good head for business, and helped the camp thrive until she %u201cpassed into spirit%u201d in 1961. One of her tactics was to convey to a person in a seance that their dead relative wanted them to build an art museum, or a monument, or whatever %u2014 and they often did. There is quite a bit to see at Camp Chesterfield, so a number of interesting postcards were produced over the years. We have several cards depicting the camp%u2019s three hotels, of which one has been demolished, one is now closed, and one remains open. Some of the more interesting cards have examples of spirit photography. They depict images of deceased individuals (in one case, a dog) that %u201cmysteriously%u201d appeared on the prints in the darkroom. There are also cards with portraits of the camp%u2019s mediums and other personalities, which we think of as spiritualist baseball cards.As we thought about our collecting, we realized that when we first started collecting the postage stamps of Tuva, we couldn%u2019t have imagined what it would evolve into. But evolve it did. Now, in early 
                                
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