The 1926 Tatler
The 1926 Tatler
This is a portal. Open it and you step into the halls of the Northrop School in 1926, where teenagers named Evelyn and Mary and Margaret were laughing, competing, falling in love, and dreaming about futures they couldn't yet imagine. The 1926 Tatler isn't just a yearbook - it's a time machine preserving the exact moment when a generation stood on the edge of everything. Through earnest class histories, candid photographs, inside jokes, and the sincere foreword from Senior Class President Evelyn McQube Baker, this artifact captures something universal and irreplaceable: the fierce joy of youth and the particular magic of being part of something larger than yourself. These students would live through the Depression, the War, the whole transformed twentieth century. Here they are still, frozen in that spring of 1926, proud and hopeful and not yet knowing. For anyone who has ever wondered what it felt like to be young in another era - to wonder, to love, to leave - this is an extraordinary chance to hear voices from nearly a century ago, and find they sound familiar.







