Introduction
"Signs" refers to a great number of verbal, symbolic or
figural markers. Posters, billboards, graffiti and traffic signals, corporate
logos, flags, decals and bumper stickers, insignia on baseball caps and
tee shirts: all of these are "signs." Buildings themselves can
be signs, as structures shaped like hot dogs, coffee pots or Chippendale
highboys attest. The signs encountered each day are seemingly countless,
for language itself is largely symbolic. This Brief, however, will limit
its discussion of "signs" to lettered or symbolic messages affixed
to historic buildings or associated with them.
Signs are everywhere. And everywhere they play an important role in
human activity. They identify. They direct and decorate. They promote,
inform, and advertise. Signs are essentially social. They name a human
activity, and often identify who is doing it. Signs allow the owner to
communicate with the reader, and the people inside a building to communicate
with those outside of it.
Neon first appeared in signs in the 1920s, and reached its height of
popularity in the 1940s. Photo: Peter Phillips.
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Signs speak of the people who run the businesses, shops, and firms.
Signs are signatures. They reflect the owner's tastes and personality.
They often reflect the ethnic makeup of a neighborhood and its character,
as well as the social and business activities carried out there. By giving
concrete details about daily life in a former era, historic signs allow
the past to speak to the present in ways that buildings by themselves do
not. And multiple surviving historic signs on the same
building can indicate several periods in its history or use. In this respect,
signs are like archeological layers that reveal different periods of human
occupancy and use.
Historic signs give continuity to public spaces, becoming part of the
community memory. They sometimes become landmarks in themselves, almost
without regard for the building to which they are attached, or the property
on which they stand. Furthermore, in an age of uniform franchise signs
and generic plastic "box" signs, historic signs often attract
by their individuality: by a clever detail, a daring use of color and motion,
or a reference to particular people, shops, or events.
Yet historic signs pose problems for those who would save them. Buildings
change uses. Businesses undergo change in ownership. New ownership or use
normally brings change in signs. Signs are typically part of a business
owner's sales strategy, and may be changed to reflect evolving business
practices or to project a new image.
Signs also change to reflect trends in architecture and technology:
witness the Art Deco and Depression Modern lettering popular in the 1920s
and 1930s, and the use of neon in the 1940s and 1950s.
The cultural significance of signs combined with their often transitory
nature makes the preservation of historic signs fraught with questions,
problems, and paradoxes. If the common practice in every period has been
to change signs with regularity, when and how should historic signs be
kept? If the business is changing hands, how can historic signs be reused?
The subject is an important one, and offers opportunities to save elements
that convey the texture of daily life from the past.
This Brief will attempt to answer some of the preservation questions
raised by historic signs. It will discuss historic sign practices, and
show examples of how historic signs have been preserved even when the business
has changed hands or the building itself has been converted to a new use.