| Postcards from the River’s Edge: Doug Smith Explores Davenport’s Past Through Photos |
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| News/Features - Literature | |||
| Written by Mike Schulz | |||
| Wednesday, 09 January 2008 02:19 | |||
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The Davenport native, a bio-medical equipment technician at Genesis Medical Center, is also a noted collector of local photographs, papers, and artifacts, and has written a regular feature column - "Doug's Q-C Collectibles" - for the Quad-City Times since February 2007. Yet finding a company willing to publish his first book, says Smith, wasn't a struggle: "They actually found me." Arcadia Publishing - which, with more than 3,000 titles in print, stands as North America's largest publisher of regional history works - contacted Smith with an intriguing idea for book: a photo-heavy guide to Davenport's early history. But before you struggling writers start sending him hate mail, know that, as Smith himself admits, the deal did come with its share of caveats. "The problem with the book, I guess - if you can call it a problem - is I was kind of handcuffed with a form that Arcadia Press has developed," he says. "Basically, they laid out a bunch of things for me such as: ‘Okay, you will have between 180 and 200 photographs, and you can have one on a page or two on a page, and if you have one on a page, then you have to limit your word count to so many words, and if you have two, then you have to limit it to a smaller word count.' So there was a lot that I wanted to say that I couldn't." Consequently, says the author, "I couldn't really take the book too seriously as a written history of Davenport. It's basically a collection of - I hope - interesting and rare photographs."
And in addition to being an entertaining, and frequently illuminating, light read, it's a most impressive one, as all of the reproduced inclusions come from Smith's personal collection of Davenport memorabilia. Even as a child, recalls the 49-year-old author, his future as a collector was hinted at. "When I started getting toys, probably at the age of four or five, my parents noticed that I always wanted to put 'em back in the boxes," says Smith. "I wanted to store 'em away - in perfect order, and stacked in my closet. I was really born with something different than the other kids, I think." Yet Smith says that "I really discovered I was a collector right about the age of 10," when he began frequenting local flea markets. "I'd buy whole boxes of stuff for 50 cents," he says, "and in these big boxes there'd be postcards and old photographs and all kinds of things that people just had in their attics, that they just thought were junk. And that's when I got started in collecting local history."
Smith is fortunate enough to also have others doing the collecting: "I buy things from eBay, and there's a lot of people that know I collect things, so they're out there looking for me, and they're all over the United States." He continues: "It's neat to get things that originated in Davenport and now, you know, they've found their way to Texas or California or wherever, and they're making their round-trip back home."
"And when they told me about it," adds Smith with a laugh, "Their next line was, ‘And you've got four months to start and complete it.'" Despite the time constraints, though, Smith was excited by the project. "They [Arcadia] had already done a book on Davenport about eight or nine years ago," he says, "but they thought it was time that that could be updated ... and I thought I could come at it from a different angle, and maybe show some rarer items." Smith accepted Arcadia's proposal - even with its word- and photo-limit restraints - and says that from that point on, "basically all I did in my spare time was try to sort through thousands of photographs and postcards and pull the things that I thought were the most interesting - the rarest things, and things that maybe weren't quite so rare but had to be in the book to make it better-rounded." In addition to amassing photos, though, Smith also wanted to compose accompanying historical descriptions, which required exact knowledge about the years in which the photos were taken and the postcards printed.
"One of the things I'm most proud of is my collection of original city directories," he says. "I have a pretty extensive collection, dating back to the very first one ever issued in the 1850s. I probably have, I dunno, maybe 75." While his collection is enormous, Smith admits that it isn't exhaustive, and so additional library research was also called for. "Even though you have an idea of what you want to say and think you know the facts," says the author, "everything has to be kind of double-researched." And Smith recalls that "the one thing that sticks out in my mind about everything else, in doing this book, is how much erroneous information is out there" concerning dates. "Hopefully I've cleared up some things, because you can go back into some of the history books that have been written on the area, and some of the misinformation has just been perpetuated from book to book to book."
"I tried to do my best at making it interesting," he adds. "I just hoped that my book would be able to, as I like to say, create images or reminiscences of our own pasts, based on the pictures that we see in the book." And is Davenport's author happy with the results? "I think so," says Smith. "For a first effort, and considering the hoops I had to jump through, I was pretty pleased with it."
Doug Smith's Davenport is available at area and online bookstores, or through Arcadia Publishing at (http://www.arcadiapublishing.com).
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