About Kathy Alpert

Postcard collector, author, and speaker dedicated to preserving social history and visual narratives through the acquisition and study of postcards.

Over the course of a lifetime, Kathy has built an encyclopedic collection of postcards and other ephemera, with particular strengths in the areas of Women’s History and the City of Boston.

Biography

Kathy Alpert began collecting postcards in the early 1990s, initially drawn to images of Boston’s West End—a neighborhood demolished during urban renewal. What started as a personal connection to a lost landscape evolved into a scholarly pursuit spanning women’s suffrage, social clubs, romantic correspondence, and the material culture of everyday life.

Her collection grew to encompass over 15,000 postcards and ephemera items, with particular strengths in women’s organizations, New England regional history, and the “W Towns” (Weston, Wellesley, Watertown, and others). The archive documents social networks, holiday traditions, leap year customs, and the voices of women who used postcards as tools of connection and advocacy.

From the demolished West End to the immigrant enclaves that shaped the city’s character, this book reveals how postcards—often dismissed as trivial—served as chronicles of social change, urban renewal, and collective memory.

Featuring over 200 postcards from the Alpert Collection, many reproduced in full color for the first time, Lost and Found offers scholars, collectors, and general readers a new lens on American history.

The book includes historical context, archival research, and personal reflections on the act of collecting itself—what it means to preserve what others discard.

In 2024, the Library Company of Philadelphia acquired the Alpert Collection, recognizing its significance for scholars of women’s history, visual culture, and American social life. The collection is now accessible to researchers and has been featured in exhibitions and digital projects.

Kathy’s first book, Lost and Found: Historic Boston and Postcards, was published in April 2026 by PostMark Press. She speaks regularly at museums, libraries, historical societies, and collector groups, offering insight into the hidden narratives within ephemera.

Recognition & Credentials

Collection Archive

Library Company of Philadelphia

The Alpert Collection of women’s history postcards and ephemera was acquired by the Library Company in 2024, joining one of America’s most significant independent research libraries.

Feature Coverage

Martha Steward Living

Profiled for innovative approaches to collecting and preserving women’s social history through postcards.

Museum Exhibitions

Multiple Institutions

Materials from the collection have been featured at the Spellman Museum, West End Museum, and Boston Public Library.

Area of Expertise

Women’s Social History & Ephemera

Boston & New England History

Urban Renewal & Lost Neighborhoods

Postcard Production & Distribution

Collecting Methodology & Preservation

Visual Culture & Material History

Press & Media

The Boston Globe

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Local Collector Preserves Vanished Boston Through Postcards

March 2025

Martha Stewart Living

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The Art of Collecting: Kathy Alpert's Postcard Archive

November 2024

WGBH Boston

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Postcards Tell the Story of Boston's West End

September 2025

Invite Kathy to Speak

Available for lectures, panels, book talks, and collection consultations. Topics include postcard history, women’s ephemera, collecting methodology, and Boston’s lost neighborhoods.