1939 New York City | |
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![]() Poster by
Joseph Binder | |
Overview | |
BIE-class | Universal exposition |
Category | Second category General Exposition |
Name | New York World's Fair |
Motto | The World of Tomorrow |
Area | 1,202 acres (486 hectares) |
Organized by | Grover Whalen |
Participant(s) | |
Countries | 33 |
Location | |
Country | United States |
City | New York City |
Venue | Flushing Meadows–Corona Park |
Coordinates | 40°44′39″N 73°50′40″W / 40.74417°N 73.84444°W |
Timeline | |
Opening | April 30, 1939[1] |
Closure | October 27, 1940 |
Universal expositions | |
Previous | Exposition Internationale des Arts et Techniques dans la Vie Moderne in Paris |
Next | Exposition internationale du bicentenaire de Port-au-Prince in Port-au-Prince |
Specialized Expositions | |
Previous | Second International Aeronautic Exhibition (1938) in Helsinki |
Next | International Exhibition on Urbanism and Housing (1947) in Paris |
Simultaneous | |
Universal | Golden Gate International Exposition |
Specialized | Exposition internationale de l'eau in Liège |
The 1939–1940 New York World's Fair was a world's fair at Flushing Meadows–Corona Park in Queens, New York City, United States. It was the second-most expensive American world's fair of all time, behind the St. Louis Louisiana Purchase Exposition of 1904. Many countries around the world participated, and more than 44 million people attended over two seasons. [2] It was based on the future, with an opening slogan of "Dawn of a New Day", and it allowed all visitors to take a look at "the world of tomorrow".
Plans for the 1939 World's Fair were first announced in September 1935, and construction of the fairground began in June 1936. The fair opened on April 30, 1939, coinciding with the 150th anniversary of the first inauguration of George Washington. When World War II began four months into the 1939 World's Fair, many exhibits were affected, especially those on display in the pavilions of countries under Axis occupation. After the close of the fair in 1940, many exhibits were demolished or removed, though some buildings were retained for the 1964 New York World's Fair at the same site.
New York City had hosted the United States' first world's fair, the Exhibition of the Industry of All Nations, in 1853–1854. [3] At the time, the site of the 1939 World's Fair, Flushing Meadows–Corona Park in Queens, was a natural wetland straddling the Flushing River. [4] Flushing Meadows became the Corona Ash Dumps in the early 20th century. [5] New York City Parks Commissioner Robert Moses first conceived the idea of developing a large park in Flushing Meadows in the 1920s. [6] Although the neighborhoods around Flushing Meadows contained residential developments, the meadow itself remained undeveloped and isolated. [7]
As early as May 1935, a group led by the municipal reformer George McAneny had considered hosting an international exposition in New York City in 1939, coinciding with the 150th anniversary of George Washington's first inauguration. [8] That September, the group announced plans to spend $40 million to host an exhibition at the 1,003-acre (406 ha) Flushing Meadows site. [9] The New York City Board of Estimate approved the use of Flushing Meadows as a fairground on September 23, [10] and Moses directed municipal draftsmen to survey the site. [11] The Flushing Meadows site had been selected because of its large size and central location, [12] and the city already owned 586 acres (237 ha) nearby. [13] Mayor Fiorello La Guardia pledged financial support for the fair that October; [14] at the time, Moses estimated that it would cost $5–7 million to prepare the fairground and build transit to the fair. [15] The New York World's Fair Corporation (WFC) was formed to oversee the exposition on October 22, 1935, [16] and the Board of Estimate allocated $200,000 the next day for preliminary work. [17] The WFC elected McAneny as its president at its first meeting in November, [18] and two contractors were hired the following month to conduct preliminary surveys. [19]
Before the end of 1935, several foreign exhibitors had expressed interest in the fair. [20] There were also plans for exhibition spaces such as a fine arts building [21] and a cosmetics show. [22] In addition, the Fine Arts Federation of the City of New York urged the WFC to implement a "unified arts scheme" for the fair, [23] and the WFC and the New York City Board of Transportation devised plans for public transit lines to the fair. [24] In January 1936, state lawmaker Herbert Brownell Jr. proposed a bill to allow the city government to formally lease the Flushing Meadows site to the WFC. [25] Moses warned that the fairground's completion could be delayed due to funding issues; by then, the fair was estimated to cost $45 million. [26] [27] That February, McAneny announced that he would organize a committee to devise an architectural plan for the fairground. [28] Brownell requested funding from New York governor Herbert Lehman the same month for "basic World's Fair improvements"; [29] the city and state governments were each supposed to spend $5 million on site preparations. [30] The project remained stalled during early 1936 because of disagreements over the fair's location and financing. [30] [31] There were also competing proposals to relocate the fair to Marine Park in Brooklyn. [31] [32] but the New York State Legislature ultimately voted in April to allow the city to lease out Flushing Meadows. [33]
Grover Whalen replaced McAneny as the WFC's chairman in April 1936; [34] he would later be elected as the agency's full-time president as well. [35] At the end of the month, the city government announced plans to sell $7 million in bonds, while the state pledged $4.125 million for the project. [36] In addition, the WFC was to sell $20 million worth of bonds. [13] J. Franklin Bell was hired to draw up preliminary plans for the fair, [37] and the WFC appointed a committee of seven men [a] that May to devise a plan for the fairground. [38] The New York City Board of Estimate appropriated $308,020 to begin landscaping the site the same month, [39] and city officials acquired another 372 acres (151 ha) through eminent domain. [40] The WFC dedicated the fairground site on June 4, 1936, [41] shortly before the city finalized its lease of Flushing Meadows to the WFC in June 1936. [42]
Work on the World's Fair site began on June 16, 1936, [43] and a groundbreaking ceremony for the fairground took place on June 29. [44] The WFC established seven departments and thirteen committees to coordinate the fair's development. [13] Initially, the fair was to employ 35,000 people. [45] There was controversy in 1937 when the Municipal Civil Service Commission accused the WFC of patronage, claiming that Whalen had hired hundreds of World's Fair employees from outside the city's civil service lists. [46] To promote the fair, the WFC established advisory committees with members from every U.S. state. [47] Several baseball teams wore patches promoting the fair during the 1938 Major League Baseball season, [48] while the businessman Howard Hughes named an airplane after the fair and flew it around the world in 1938. [49] Helen Huntington Hull led a women's committee that helped promote and develop the fair. [50] New York license plates from 1938 were supposed to have slogans advertising the fair, [51] but a city judge deemed the slogans unconstitutional. [52]
The construction of the fairground primarily involved leveling the ash mounds; excavating Meadow and Willow lakes; and diverting much of the Flushing River into underground culverts. [53] [54] [55] The dirt from the lake sites was used as additional topsoil for the park. [56] The project was an around-the-clock job, with 450 workers operating on three eight-hour shifts. [57] As many as 10,000 trees were to be transplanted to the fairground, [58] and thousands of Douglas fir timbers were driven into the ground to act as pilings for the fair structures. [59] The rebuilt landscape was to be retained after the fair. [60]
The WFC's board of design reviewed several proposed master plans for the site, [61] and the corporation had relocated the last occupants of the fairground site by August 1936. [62] The WFC launched a design competition for several fairground pavilions that September [63] and selected several winning designs two months later. [64] Before the final master plan was revealed, Whalen said the fair would likely be dedicated to the past, present, and future. [65] The WFC announced details of the fair's master plan that October, which called for a $125 million exposition themed to "the world of tomorrow". [66] [67] The city, state, and federal governments would spend $35 million; the WFC was to spend $30 million; and the remaining funds would come from individual exhibitors. [68] There were to be ten themed zones, an amusement area, a central tower with paths radiating away from it, and extensive public-transit improvements. [67] Construction contracts for the fairground's first building were signed later the same month, [69] and the WFC also selected an official seal. [70] At that point, only a small number of fairground buildings had been approved. [45]
In November 1936, France became the first nation to announce its participation, [71] and U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt urged other nations to join the fair. [72] The city government also began selling bonds for the fair that month; [73] by then, several nations and hundreds of businesses had expressed interest in the fair. [74] That December, the International Convention Bureau endorsed the 1939 World's Fair, allowing the bureau's 21 member countries to host exhibits there, [75] and Lehman also sent invitations to the governors of all the other U.S. states. [76] By the beginning of 1937, eleven hundred concessionaires had applied for a concession at the fair, [77] and nine buildings were under construction. [78] The WFC unveiled a model of the fairgrounds at its Empire State Building headquarters that March. [79] Workers had finished grading and filling the World's Fair site by April, [80] and they began planting trees on the fairground. [81] That month, AT&T became the first company to lease a pavilion at the fair, [82] [83] and work officially began on the first building, the administration structure. [84] In addition, the WFC began auctioning off the fairground's concession spaces. [85]
Whalen predicted in mid-1937 that the fair would attract 59 nations. [86] He announced plans in June7 for a 280-acre (110 ha) amusement zone at the south end of the fairground, [87] and Moses proposed adding a trailer parking lot and a community interests zone. [88] Work on the first non-commercial pavilion, the Temple of Peace, began in July. [89] The fairground's first structure, the administration building, was completed by the next month. [90] At the time, 89 buildings were under construction, [91] and 86% of the fairground sites had been leased. [91] [92] Utah became the first U.S. state to lease space in the fair's Hall of States that September, [93] while Missouri was the first state to lease space for a standalone building. [94] Whalen also traveled to Europe to invite European countries to the fair. [95] The WFC reported in October that 62 construction contracts had been finished and that another 63 were in progress. [96] Various fairground buildings were rapidly being developed, along with the Trylon and Perisphere, the fair's icons. [97] [98] That December, the Ford Motor Company became the first automobile manufacturer to lease space at the fair; [99] by then, the WFC had received commitments from 60 nations. [100]
Whalen had begun planning the fair's opening ceremony by early 1938; he wanted to invite 50,000 soldiers to march at the ceremony. [101] Whalen also planned to have 100 buildings under construction by the end of April, employing 10,000 workers. [102] Work on the Perisphere, the fair's theme building, began in April. [103] The same month, the last available space in the fair's Government Zone was leased to the nations of Ireland, Lithuania, Sweden, and Venezuela. [104] The delivery of materials for the fair faced a delay in 1938 when it was temporarily halted during the New York City truckers strike. [105]
The fair had attracted 1,300 industrial exhibitors and 70 concessionaires at the beginning of 1939. [106] In addition, 62 nations and 35 U.S. states or territories had leased space at the fair; [106] their flags were flown atop a hill on the fairground. [107] A thousand retailers in the New York metropolitan area offered tickets to the fair before it officially opened. [108]
Whalen saw the fair as an opportunity for corporations to present consumer products, rather than as an exercise in presenting science and the scientific way of thinking in its own right. [109] For example, the IBM exhibit displayed the Radiotype writing machine, and RCA displayed various types of machinery in a "television laboratory". [110] RCA and NBC agreed to host television demonstrations at the World's Fair, [111] [112] and five major newsreel companies were hired to provide newsreel coverage of the fair. [113] The Crosley Corporation and WNYC both had radio broadcasting studios at the fair as well. [110] Sporting events throughout the New York City area were also planned in conjunction with the World's Fair. [114] Whalen agreed to hire only union laborers to install exhibits on the fairground; in exchange, several trade unions had agreed to buy the WFC's bonds. [115] The fairground ultimately cost $156 million to complete. On opening day, the fairground had 200 buildings, and Whalen anticipated that 60 million people would visit the fair. [116]
On April 30, 1939, the fair had its grand opening, with 206,000 people in attendance. [117] The date was chosen because it was exactly 150 years after Washington's first inauguration. [118] Although many of the pavilions and other facilities were not quite ready for this opening, it was put on with pomp and great celebration. [119] Plans for the United States Navy Fleet to visit New York City for the opening of the fair following maneuvers in the Caribbean were canceled, however, due to aggressive moves being made by Japan in the South China Sea, and the fleet instead transferred to the Pacific via the Panama Canal in April. [120] President Roosevelt's speech was not only broadcast over the various radio networks but also was televised along with other parts of the opening ceremony and other events at the fair. [121]
In May 1939, the WFC began allowing visitors under the age of 14 to pay a ten-cent admission fee one day a week, rather than the standard admission fee of 75 cents. [122] Concessionaires in the Amusement Area also asked the WFC to consider offering reduced-price tickets after 9 p.m. [123] Additionally, the WFC opened additional restaurants after visitors complained that the existing restaurants were too expensive. [124] Within a month of the fair's opening, several exhibitors had alleged that labor unions had charged exorbitant prices for labor at the fair. [115] [125]
Due to the onset of World War II, Southern Rhodesia became the first exhibitor to completely shutter its pavilion in September 1939, while other exhibitors curtailed their operations. [126] The Romanian pavilion's restaurant also closed due to the war. [127] The fair's first season ended on October 31, 1939; the WFC had recorded 25.8 million visitors during the season. [128]
After the 1939 season ended, most of the commercial exhibitors agreed to continue hosting exhibits for the 1940 season. However, many exhibitors indicated that they would enlarge or modify their exhibits. [129] For the 1940 season, the WFC raised admission prices to 50 cents, and the agency indicated that it would renovate the Amusement Areas. [130] In January 1940, Finland became the first country to agree to reopen its pavilion during the fair's second season. [131]
For the 1940 season, the international area included exhibits from 43 countries, plus the Pan-American Union and League of Nations. Eleven nations, several of which had been invaded during World War II, did not return to the fair. [132] For example, Sweden closed its pavilion at the end of the 1939 season. [133] The Soviet pavilion was dismantled in December 1939 [134] and was replaced by the American Common. [135] Other countries to announce their withdrawals included Albania, Argentina, Chile, Denmark, the Netherlands, Yugoslavia. [136] and Turkey. [137]
The World's Fair reopened for its second season on May 11, 1940; [138] it recorded 191,000 visitors on that day. [139] To entice people to attend the fair, several local business groups and hotels sponsored a contest in which they randomly gave away 170 automobiles to visitors. [140] Venezuela and Cuba withdrew after the 1940 season had begun, although a Chinese pavilion was added during that time. [141] The Belgian pavilion was closed briefly during the 1940 season but reopened after the Belgian government-in-exile agreed to maintain the pavilion. [142] On July 4, 1940, two New York City Police Department officers were killed by a blast while investigating a time bomb left at the British pavilion; [143] the bombing has never been solved, but a British agent named William Stephenson is suspected of having left the bomb. [144]
By the beginning of October 1940, the WFC had come up with detailed plans for clearing 385 buildings on the site. The area around the Trylon and Perisphere was to be demolished first, and the Amusement Area would be destroyed last. [145]
The fairground was divided into seven geographic or thematic zones, five of which had "focal exhibits", as well as two focal exhibits housed in their own buildings. [146] The plan called for numerous wide tree-lined pathways, including a central "Cascade Mall" leading to the Trylon and Perisphere. [56] Because the fairground was built atop swampy land that extended 60 to 80 feet (18 to 24 m) deep, many of the largest buildings had to be placed on steel-and-concrete decks, pilings, or caissons. [147] The WFC subleased the land to exhibitors, charging different rates based on the sites' proximity to major paths. [83]
At the center of the fairground was Wallace Harrison and Max Abramovitz's Trylon and Perisphere, the fair's primary theme center. [148] The Trylon was a tower measuring over 700 feet (210 m) tall, while the Perisphere was a sphere 200 feet (61 m) across. [149] Each of the zones around the Trylon and Perisphere was color-coded. [150] A central mall was also planned as part of the fairground, running between the Grand Central Parkway to the west and Lawrence Street in Flushing to the east. [151]
Fairgoers walking to the north of the Theme Center on the Avenue of Patriots would encounter the Communications and Business Systems exhibits. The focal point of this area was the Communications Building, a large structure with a pair of 160-foot-high (49 m) pylons flanking it. [152] [153] Numerous smaller exhibitors had space in the Communications Building. [154] The structure also had a theater, Stuart Davis mural about technology, and seven illuminated panels about communications technologies. [152]
The Communications and Business Systems Zone also contained the following buildings:
Pavilion | Description | Refs. |
---|---|---|
American Telephone & Telegraph | A structure with several sections of varying heights. [155] The semicircular entrance court had a sculptural group called The Pony Express. Inside were several telecommunications exhibits, including one exhibit about the Voder electronic-voice synthesizer. [156] | [155] [156] |
Business Systems and Insurance Building | An L-shaped structure that housed numerous companies such as Aetna, MetLife, and IBM. [157] [158] The sculptor Joseph Kiselewski created a large sundial for the building. [159] | [157] [158] |
Crosley Corporation | A building displaying the products of the Crosley Corporation. The main building's facade had a panel depicting the corporation's products, while the products themselves were located inside. A separate structure contained a rest area. [160] In addition, there was a broadcast studio. [110] [161] | [160] [110] [161] |
Masterpieces of Art | Three pavilions around a courtyard, which contained 25 galleries with valuable Old Master works, many of which were borrowed from Europe. [160] Different works of art were displayed during the 1939 and 1940 seasons. [162] | [160] [162] |
Radio Corporation of America | A structure shaped like a radio tube. Inside were exhibits about televisions, broadcasting, and various types of radio communications; these included dioramas and a yacht. [163] There were also a lagoon and a park next to the structure. [164] | [163] [164] |
The Community Interest Zone was located just east of the Communications & Business Systems Zone. [165] The region's exhibits showcased several trades or industries that were popular among the public at the time, such as home furnishings, plumbing, contemporary art, cosmetics, gardens, the gas industry, fashion, jewelry, and religion. [166] Besides the focal exhibit, the Community Interest Zone included the following buildings:
Pavilion | Description | Refs. |
---|---|---|
American Radiator & Standard Sanitary Corporation | A yellow-and-orange structure with a curved colonnade. Inside the colonnade were displays of heating appliances, air conditioners, and plumbing. | [167] |
Christian Science | A visitor center for the Christian Science movement, with murals, conversation rooms, telephone booths, and reading rooms. [167] The building consisted of a rotunda topped by a circular tower. [168] | [167] [168] |
Contemporary Art | A building with 23 exhibition galleries that displayed contemporary art, in addition to two studios where artists demonstrated how they created their work. | [167] |
Electrified Farm | A fully functioning farm with electrically-powered appliances. [169] The farm included a farmhouse, orchard, barns, and crop fields. [170] | [169] [170] |
Gas Exhibits Inc. | A structure with an exhibit hall for 22 manufacturers and an auditorium. [171] There was also a "court of flame" and a model house with gas appliances. [172] | [171] [172] |
House of Jewels | A simple concrete structure with jewelry displays, alongside an amphitheater with diamond exhibits. [173] At the time of its opening, the pavilion was described as the largest display of jewels and diamonds in the U.S. [174] | [173] [174] |
Johns-Manville Sales Corporation | A structure with exhibits about Johns Manville's industrial products and home-construction materials. [175] On the facade was the Asbestos Man sculpture designed by Hildreth Meière. [176] | [175] [176] |
Maison Coty | A glass building with displays of Coty perfumes, as well as exhibits on the history and manufacturing process of perfumes, | [177] |
Palestine Exhibits Inc. | A structure with displays about the history of the Jews in the Palestine region. | [177] |
Temple of Religion | A nonsectarian structure with a 150-foot-tall (46 m) circular tower. [178] The pavilion included a landscaped garden, a porch where performances took place, and a 1,200-seat auditorium. [179] John W. Hausermann funded the new Aeolian-Skinner pipe organ that was installed in the building. [180] | [178] [179] |
Town of Tomorrow | A set of 15 "demonstration homes". [181] Each home was decorated by a different company; most of the houses were designed in an 18th-century style, though some were designed in a modern style. [182] | [181] [182] |
Works Progress Administration | An exhibit with models of Works Progress Administration workers doing various tasks. There was also a 299-seat auditorium and an open courtyard where performances were held. | [183] |
Young Men's Christian Association of the City of New York | A visitor center for the YMCA, with a restaurant, meeting areas, and lounges. [184] There was also a large map of YMCA locations worldwide. [185] | [184] [185] |
The Government Zone was located at the east end of the fair, on the eastern bank of the Flushing River. It contained 21 pavilions, several smaller buildings, a centrally located Court of Peace, a Lagoon of Nations, and a smaller Court of States. The 60 foreign governments built many pavilions housing a myriad of cultural offerings. [186] [187] Notable pavilions included:
Pavilion | Description | Refs. |
---|---|---|
Albania | An exposition of products made in Albania, along with an Albanian restaurant. | [188] |
Argentina | A structure surrounded by four pylons with glass showcases, including a diorama. There was a fine arts room, exhibition hall, theater, restaurant, and other visitor spaces. [189] The pavilion displayed work from Argentine artists and movies about life in Argentina. [190] | [189] [190] |
Australia | A structure at the western end of the Lagoon of Nations. The building was divided into three sections each describing a different aspect of Australia's history. | [191] |
Belgium | A structure constructed of Belgian materials, including a 155-foot (47 m) bell tower made of Belgian slate. Inside were a reception hall, restaurant, offices, movie theater, and three exhibition spaces. [192] A collection of Belgian diamonds was also displayed. [193] | [192] [193] |
Brazil | A two-story, L-shaped building with plants, a Good Neighbor hall, and exhibition halls about Brazilian products. [194] At the center of the building was an aviary with a reflecting pool and native Brazilian plants. [195] | [194] [195] |
Canada | A stucco-and-glass-block structure with a reflecting pool. [196] Inside was a main hall with exhibit spaces operated by various Canadian agencies, companies, and provincial governments, as well as a large map of Canada. A secondary hall was dedicated to Canadian industry. [197] | [196] [197] |
Chile | A two-story, stucco-and-steel structure. [198] Inside was a hall of government and other halls dedicated to various aspects of Chilean culture. There was also an open-air deck and a garden. [199] | [198] [199] |
Cuba | This exhibit displayed Cuban cultural artifacts, architecture, and products. | [200] |
Czechoslovakia | A structure dedicated to Czechoslovakian industry. The hall contained a mural, a decorative wood panel, and a large Czechoslovakian carpet, in addition to a restaurant and displays about several industries. | [200] |
Finland | This exhibit included displays about Finnish community and industry. There was also an information service, handicraft display, and restaurant. | [201] |
France | A two-story structure on the Court of Peace whose facade featured enormous curved windows. The first floor had a tourist bureau, dioramas, and displays of French fashions. The second floor had history, art, and furniture restaurants and a restaurant. | [202] |
Great Britain | Included two buildings with a first-floor connection. There were exhibits dedicated to various aspects of British society, in addition to a rare copy of the Magna Carta, the Crown Jewels of the United Kingdom, and royal silverware. In addition, there was also an art gallery, restaurant, movie theater, industrial exhibits, and an official-publication area. | [203] |
Italy | A structure with a 200-foot (61 m) high waterfall dedicated to Guglielmo Marconi. The pavilion occupied 100,000 square feet of space and cost more than $3 million. [204] The pavilion's restaurant was designed in the shape of the nation's luxury cruise line ships. [205] | [205] |
Japan | A structure designed by the Japanese-American architect Yasuo Matsui to resemble a traditional Shinto shrine, set within a Japanese garden. It offered tea ceremony and Japanese flower arrangement exhibits. [206] The interior had a "Diplomat room" and a mural. [207] The interior was designed by the Japanese architect and photographer Iwao Yamawaki. [208] | [206] |
Jewish Palestine | The building featured a monumental hammered copper relief sculpture on its facade titled The Scholar, The Laborer, and the Tiller of the Soil by Maurice Ascalon. [209] Several major Israeli artists presented their work, including Isaac Frenkel Frenel and Shimshon Holzman. [210] | [209] |
Netherlands | This exhibit contained dioramas and demonstrations relating to the Netherlands proper, the Dutch East Indies, and Curaçao and Dependencies. A garden with 65,000 tulips was placed around the pavilion. | [211] |
Pan American Union | The 21 countries of the Pan-American Union, as well as several communications companies, were represented in the Pan American Union pavilion. [212] Many of these countries tried to promote themselves as part of Good Neighbor policy at the 1939 World's Fair, an extension of Franklin D. Roosevelt's Good Neighbor policy, which sought to redefine negative Latin American stereotypes. [213] | [212] |
Poland | A steel tower with gold-plated copper shields and a sandstone building plus Polish restaurant in a round building. The Second Polish Republic prepared some 200 tons of artifacts. The pavilion also displayed a color film about Poland. | [214] |
Sweden | A set of buildings grouped around a central garden. They included a restaurant and a cinema, as well as a 9-foot-tall Dalecarlian horse. [215] | |
Soviet Union | A semicircular structure with two wings partially enclosing a courtyard. [216] Exhibitions included the life-size copy of the interior of the showcase Mayakovskaya station of the Moscow Metro, whose designer Alexey Dushkin was awarded Grand Prize of the 1939 World's Fair. [217] The Soviet pavilion's courtyard contained a statue on a pylon, which was 260 feet (79 m) tall. [218] [219] | [216] |
United States | The Federal Building's main building was set between two 150-foot (46 m) pylons. The Federal Building and several surrounding structures contained a combined 23 exhibits, dedicated to 22 states and Puerto Rico. [220] Midway through the fair, the world's largest carillon was installed in the spire of the Florida state exhibition building. [221] |
Pavilion | Description | Refs. |
---|---|---|
British Colonial Empire | An adjunct to the Great Britain pavilion. It consisted of six sections, each dedicated to a different British dependency, in addition to a giant mural about all of the dependencies. | [222] |
Czechoslovakia | An adjunct to the Czechoslovakia pavilion with exhibits on the nation's history, products, artwork, literature, and tourism. | [200] |
Denmark | This exhibit included Danish arts and crafts, in addition to a restaurant. | [200] |
Dominican Republic | This exhibit contained a tribute to the voyages of Christopher Columbus, as well as displays about the Dominican Republic's industries. | [200] |
France | An adjunct to the France pavilion with exhibits about Overseas France. | [223] |
Greece | This exhibit was a marble room with murals of Greek landscapes, as well as five pieces of old Greek sculptures. Native Greek products were shown in a separate space on the second floor. | [222] |
Italy | A 10,000-square-foot (930 m2) adjunct to the Italy pavilion. [204] Within that space was a representation of She-Wolf, while in the center of the room stood Romano Romanelli's bronze statue of Mussolini. [224] |
Southwest of the Government Zone was the Food Zone, composed of 13 buildings in total (the Swedish and Turkish pavilions were physically within the Food Zone but were classified as being part of the Government Zone [225]). Its focal exhibit was Food No. 3, a rhomboidal structure with four shafts representing wheat stalks. [226] [227] The Food Zone included the following buildings:
Pavilion | Description | Refs. |
---|---|---|
Academy of Sport | A building with sports-related murals on the facade. Inside were displays of sports trophies and sports gear. Coaches also taught classes about sports. | [228] |
American Tobacco Company | This building included cigarette-making machines, dioramas about tobacco production, and a movie about how cigarettes were made. | [228] |
Beech-Nut Packing Company | A structure with murals on its facade. Inside were dioramas about coffee production, in addition to a miniature circus parade. | [229] |
Borden Company | A rotunda with 150 pedigreed cows (including the original Elsie) on a Rotolactor that allowed bathing them, drying them, and milking them in a highly mechanized way. There was also a main hall with dioramas and displays. | [229] |
Continental Baking Company | A structure with a curved facade decorated with balloons. Inside was a demonstration of the breads and other products being baked. | [230] |
Food Building | A large rotunda measuring 60 feet (18 m) tall, with murals on its red-and-white facade. Inside was a dining terrace and a large restaurant. [231] The rotunda hosted exhibits from multiple companies, such as dioramas, live manufacturing demonstrations, slideshows, films, and snack bars. [232] | [231] [232] |
General Cigar Company | A structure with a tobacco-themed mural, an exhibit auditorium, a movie screen displaying world news, scoreboards for American football games, and a lounge. | [233] |
Heinz Dome | A 90-foot-tall (27 m) dome with murals on its facade. Inside was the Goddess of Perfection sculpture by Raymond Barger, a set of plaques, and a laboratory where tomatoes were grown. | [234] |
Libby, McNeill & Libby | A replica of a modern ship. On the lower deck were an exhibition about the canning industry's history and a set of live shows. Libby, McNeill and Libby's products were displayed on a lounge on the upper deck. | [225] |
National Dairy Products Corporation | An exhibit about the manufacturing process of dairy and ice cream products, with a replica of a pasteurization and bottling plant. | [225] |
Schaefer Center | A 1,000-seat restaurant serving European and American cuisines. The restaurant included murals about the history of beer, and the attached bar included murals about the restaurant's sponsor, Schaefer Beer. | [225] |
Standard Brands Inc. | Four glass pavilions surrounding a 1,600-seat amphitheater. Inside the pavilion were exhibits relating to Fleischmann's Yeast, Chase & Sanborn Coffee Company, Royal Desserts, and the baking industry. | [225] |
Swift & Company | A replica of an airliner. The "body" of the airliner had a lounge with a pool, while the "wings" had exhibits about the manufacturing process of Swift & Company's hot dogs. | [225] |
The Production and Distribution Zone was dedicated to showcasing industries that specialized in manufacturing and distribution. [235] [236] The focal exhibit was the Consumers Building (also the Consumer Interests Building), [237] a L-shaped structure illustrated with murals by Francis Scott Bradford. [238] Numerous individual companies hosted exhibitions in this region. There were also pavilions dedicated to a generic industry, such as electrical products, industrial science, pharmaceuticals, metals, and men's apparel. [239] Among the exhibitors in the Production and Distribution Zone was General Electric. [240] A hall of textiles was also built for the fair. [241]
The Transportation Zone was located west of the Theme Center, across the Grand Central Parkway. [242] The focal exhibit of the Transportation Zone was a Chrysler exhibit group. In the focal exhibit, an audience could watch a Plymouth being assembled in an early 3D film in a theater with air conditioning, then a new technology. [243] Though the New York City Building was physically within the Transportation Zone, it was classified as part of the Government Zone. [244] Other buildings in the Transportation Zone included:
Pavilion | Description | Refs. |
---|---|---|
Aviation Building | A building divided into three sections, dedicated to travel, defense, and recreation and commerce. Four planes were suspended from the ceiling. [245] There were also three U.S. Army and three U.S. Navy planes. [246] | [245] [246] |
Railroads | A structure operated by the Eastern Railroads Presidents' Conference. [245] [247] The Railroad Pavilion was the fair's largest single site, at 17 acres (6.9 ha); [245] it included a 110,000-square-foot (10,000 m2) exhibition building with a replica of a roundhouse. [247] The building's facade included railway-related murals. The interior contained railway exhibits, a large model train set, a stage show, and exhibits of actual locomotives such as the Coronation Scot locomotive. [248] | [247] [248] |
Firestone Tire and Rubber Company | An L-shaped structure with a central rotunda and a 100-foot-tall (30 m) spire. Inside were mockups of a tire factory and an American farm. | [249] |
Ford Motor Company | A structure dedicated to the Ford Motor Company's products, which was topped by a 25-foot-tall (7.6 m) statue of the god Mercury. The entrance hall had Ford vehicles, a mural, and a large map, while the industrial hall had a turntable. There was also a garden court, as well as a rooftop spiral ramp called the Road of Tomorrow. | [250] |
General Motors | A 7-acre (2.8 ha) pavilion with four structures, each rising four to six stories. The structures included a casino of science with animated displays and a genuine locomotive engine. [251] The 36,000-square-foot (3,300 m2) Futurama exhibit, designed by Norman Bel Geddes, included a diorama of a fictional American landscape. [252] There was also a research laboratory and animated displays about General Motors cars. [251] Sun decks, ramps, plazas, and roof gardens were spread throughout the pavilion. [253] | [251] [252] [253] |
B. F. Goodrich Company | A streamlined structure, surrounding an elliptical courtyard where driving performances were hosted daily. [254] Above the pavilion's main entrance was a tower with a guillotine that crushed used tires. Inside were displays of automobiles, as well as interactive exhibits. [255] | [254] [255] |
Marine Transportation Building | An 80-foot-tall (24 m) structure shaped like the bows of two ocean liners. [256] The center of the building had an interactive world map showing steamship routes, and there were also model ships and exhibits about marine safety. Marine-transport companies had ticket booths and exhibits within the pavilion as well. [244] | [256] [244] |
The Amusement Area was located south of the World's Fair Boulevard, along 230 acres (93 ha) on the east shore of Fountain Lake. [257] Unlike traditional fairgrounds, the Amusement Area at the 1939 Fair had no midway; instead, the fairground was divided into more than a dozen themed zones. [98] [258]
Despite the high-minded educational tone that Grover Whalen attempted to set, the Amusements Area was the most popular part of the Fair. The attractions included a roller coaster, [259] a Flying Turns-style bobsled, [260] a Life Savers-branded parachute tower called the Parachute Jump [259] [261] (later moved to Coney Island, where it is standing but not operating [262]), the 3 ft (914 mm) narrow gauge Gimbels Flyer train ride, [263] (later purchased by Kennywood, where it still runs today), [264] and carnival acts such as a "Little Miracle Town" with dwarves. [265] Other attractions included a "winter wonderland" called Sun Valley, a Theatre of Time and Space, [266] and a replica of Victoria Falls. [267] At the north end of the zone was a "children's world", which included a playhouse and other attractions for young visitors. [268]
Frank Buck exhibited his "Frank Buck's Jungleland", which displayed rare birds, reptiles and wild animals along with Jiggs, a five-year-old trained orangutan. [259] In addition, Buck provided a trio of performing elephants, an 80-foot (24 m) "monkey mountain" with 600 monkeys, and an attraction that had been popular at the 1893 Chicago World's Fair: camel rides. [269] A number of the shows provided spectators with the opportunity of viewing women in very revealing costumes or topless, such as the "Frozen Alive Girl", the Living Pictures, and the Dream of Venus building. This last attraction was a pavilion designed by the Spanish surrealist artist Salvador Dalí which contained within it a number of unusual sculptures and statues as well as live nearly-nude performers posing as statues. [270] [271] For the 1940 season, the area was rebranded as "The Great White Way". [272]
The Bendix Lama Temple [273] was a 28,000-piece full-sized replica of the 1767 Potala temple in Rehe, Manchuria. It was commissioned and brought back by the industrialist and explorer Vincent Bendix. [274] [275] [276] The Temple had previously been exhibited at the 1933 Chicago World's Fair, called " Century of Progress". [277] Attendance was disappointing in 1939. As a result, in 1940, a provocative show was added to the temple, [278] which involved multiple nude women. [279] [280]
For the 1939 World's Fair, the New York state government built a massive curved amphitheater at the north end of Meadow Lake, which originally was intended to accommodate 12,000 guests. [281] The amphitheater hosted Billy Rose's Aquacade, a spectacular musical and water extravaganza with an orchestra to accompany the spectacular synchronized swimming performance. It featured Johnny Weissmuller and Eleanor Holm, two of the most celebrated swimmers of the era, and dazzled fairgoers with its lighting and cascades and curtains of water, pumped in waterfalls at 8,000 gallons a minute. The cost of admission was 80 cents. [282] The Aquacade facility served as an entertainment venue in the park for several decades; following a period of extended deterioration, [283] it was ultimately demolished in 1996. [284]
There were two focal exhibits that were not located within any zone. The first was the Medical and Public Health Building on Constitution Mall and the Avenue of Patriots (immediately northeast of the Theme Center). [285] This structure contained a massive "Hall of Man" dedicated to the human body and a "Hall of Medical Science" dedicated to medical professions and devices. [285] [286] The first floor of the building had a 5,000-square-foot (460 m2) private club for medical professionals, with a lounge. [287]
The Science and Education Building, located on a curved portion of Hamilton Place between the Avenue of Patriots and Washington Square, just north of the Medical and Public Health Building. The building was not used to teach science, but it contained an auditorium and several exhibits on science and education. [288]
One of the first exhibits to receive attention was the Westinghouse Time Capsule, which was not to be opened till the year 6939. [289] The time capsule, a tube containing various contemporary objects, is located at a depth of 50 feet (15 m) and is marked by a small stone plaque. [290]
At the west end of the fairground was the administration building; this structure included a first-floor hall with artifacts about the fair, in addition to offices and a cafeteria. [90] The building's facade had a 27-foot-tall (8.2 m) relief of a woman. [291] During the fairground's construction, the administration building contained mockups of industry-themed exhibits, [292] and it was also used to test out lighting systems. [293] The fair also had a hospitality center staffed mainly by women, This building had an auditorium, lounge, restaurant, dressing rooms, lockers, and offices for national and international organizations. [294]
The original plans called for a veterans' temple of peace next to the state-themed buildings. [295] South of the Food Zone, there was originally supposed to be a fisheries building with a stadium. [296] The WFC had also announced plans for a "freedom pavilion" in January 1939, depicting Germany before the Nazi government takeover, [297] but the plans were abandoned because of a lack of time and money. [298]
As announced in 1936, the fair was themed to "the world of tomorrow". [66] [67] The colors blue and orange were chosen as the official colors of the fair, as they were the colors of New York City. [299] Each day at the fair was a special theme day, for which a special button was issued. [300] The fair's official seal depicted the Statue of Liberty with her torch. The seal was available in multiple color schemes, such as an orange-and-blue scheme and a white-and-silver scheme. [70] The fair's official flag was originally a triband with a blue bar flanked by orange bars; there was a white seal in the center of the blue bar. [301]
Another theme of the fair was the emerging new middle class, leading a hoped-for recovery from the Great Depression. The Westinghouse Electric Corporation produced the film The Middleton Family at the New York World's Fair, which depicted a fictional Midwestern family, the Middleton family, taking in the sights of the fair. [302] Westinghouse also featured Elektro the Moto-Man, a robot that talked, differentiated colors, and smoked cigarettes. [303]
The WFC established a music advisory committee for the fair in 1937, which was led by the conductor Allen Wardwell. [304] The music advisory committee had proposed a music festival with performances at the fairground itself, Carnegie Hall, and the Metropolitan Opera House. [305]
Olin Downes, the general director of the World's Fair music department, selected Hugh Ross to organize recitals and concerts at the Temple of Religion. [180] Ralph Vaughan Williams composed his work for harp and string orchestra Five Variants of Dives and Lazarus on commission from the World's Fair, which was first performed at Carnegie Hall in 1939. [306] In addition, the British Council commissioned a piano concerto from Arthur Bliss for the British Week at the World's Fair. Adrian Boult conducted the New York Philharmonic Symphony Orchestra in Carnegie Hall in 1939 with Solomon as the soloist. [307]
From the outset, the fairground was planned to include murals, sculptures, and colorful decorations. [308] Whalen, who was determined that the fair should "not represent the work of any one person or school", employed 181 visual artists, designers, and architects. [309] Whalen also agreed to include a community art center after observers criticized the fact that the original plans did not include any formal art galleries. [310]
WPA artists painted murals for the fair, which appeared in The New York Times Magazine. [311] Ceramic sculptor Waylande Gregory created The Fountain of the Atom, which displayed the largest ceramic sculptures in modern times. [312]
Nylon fabric, the View-Master, and Scentovision (an early version of Smell-O-Vision) were introduced at the Fair. Other exhibits included Vermeer's painting The Milkmaid from the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam, [313] a streamlined pencil sharpener, a diner (still in operation as the White Mana in Jersey City, New Jersey), a futuristic car-based city by General Motors, the first fully constructed computer game, and early televisions. [314] Bell Labs' Voder, a keyboard-operated speech synthesizer, was demonstrated at the fair. [156]
In addition, cuisine from 24 participating countries was served at the fair. [315] These included caviar in the Romanian and Polish pavilions; borscht, blini, and pelmeni from the Soviet pavilion; soufflés from the French pavilion; smorgasbords from the Swedish pavilion; and kebabs and honey desserts from the Albanian pavilion. [315] [316] There were at least 40 restaurants with a combined 23,000 seats, in addition to 261 refreshment stands. [316]
The fair coincided with the 1st World Science Fiction Convention, [317] [318] which took place at the Caravan Hall in Manhattan on July 2–4, 1939. [319]
On July 3, 1940, the fair hosted "Superman Day". [320] [321] The event included an athletic contest with a "Super-Boy and Super-Girl of the Day", as well as a public appearance by an actor portraying Superman. [321] Broadway actor Ray Middleton, who served as a judge for the contest, is often credited with having appeared in the Superman costume on Superman Day, but this is disputed. [322]
Whalen predicted in late 1936 that these lines needed to be able to handle as many as 800,000 visitors per day, though he predicted an average of 250,000 daily visitors. As such, several public transit lines were built or upgraded to serve the fair. [324] A special subway line, the Independent Subway System's (IND) World's Fair Line, was built to serve the fair. [325] The World's Fair Line, a spur of the IND Queens Boulevard Line, [326] was dismantled after the fair ended. [327] The Willets Point station on the Flushing Line was rebuilt to handle fair traffic on the Interborough Rapid Transit (IRT) and Brooklyn-Manhattan Transit (BMT) systems. [328] [323] A special fleet of 50 World's Fair Lo-V subway cars were built, [329] and the existing Q-type Queens subway cars were rebuilt to provide additional service on the Flushing Line. [330] A Long Island Rail Road station (now Mets–Willets Point) was built next to the Flushing Line station. [328] In addition, Queens-Nassau Transit Lines bought 55 buses to provide service to the fair. [331]
There were also several modes of transit traveling around the fairground itself. Exposition Greyhound Lines operated a fleet of one hundred 120-passenger buses that traveled around the fairground, connecting with each of the fairground's entrances. [332] [333] The original plan called for two bus routes, though this was expanded to seven routes soon after the fair opened. [334] There were also tractor trains that traveled along the fairground's paths, as well as tour buses that gave one-hour-long tours of the fair. In addition, visitors could rent one of 500 rolling chairs, each of which had space for one or two people. [332] [333] Boats also traveled around Fountain Lake (now Meadow Lake), stopping at seven piers. [333]
Several highway and road improvements were planned in advance of the World's Fair. [335] For example, Horace Harding Boulevard was completed in 1937 to connect the fair with Queens Boulevard, [336] and the Bronx–Whitestone Bridge and Whitestone Expressway were opened in early 1939, connecting with the Bronx. [337] The Grand Central Parkway was also extended to serve the fairground, [338] and Queens Boulevard was widened and paved. [339] The construction of the Queens–Midtown Tunnel was also expedited for the fair, [340] though the tunnel did not open until 1940. [341] Maps also touted the fairground's proximity to five airports and seaplane bases. [342] [b]
The fair was open for two seasons, from April to October each year, and closed permanently on October 27, 1940. [343] The fair attracted over 45 million visitors [344] and ultimately recouped only 32% of its original cost. [345] [346] Following the fair, the vast majority of structures were dismantled or moved. [347] The Bureau International des Expositions (BIE) retroactively recognized the 1939 World's Fair as an official World Expo, even though the BIE's rules specified that official Expos could run only for one year. [348]
World War II presented additional problems with what to do with the exhibits on display in the pavilions of countries under Axis occupation. Several countries in German-occupied Europe donated or lent their World's Fair exhibits to institutions across the United States. [349] In the case of the Polish Pavilion, most of the items were sold by the Polish Government in exile in London to the Polish Museum of America and shipped to Chicago. A notable exception was made for a monument of the Polish–Lithuanian King Jagiełło. which was reinstalled in Central Park. [350] A copy of the Magna Carta, displayed at the British Pavilion during the 1939 season, remained in Fort Knox during the war. [351]
When the fair closed, many among the European staff were unable to return to their home countries. [352] [353] An estimated 400 workers were unable to return to their home countries because of the war, prompting U.S. representative John J. Delaney to introduce legislation in October 1940, allowing these workers to remain in the U.S. [354] The French pavilion gave rise to three French restaurants—La Caravelle, Le Pavillon, and La Côte Basque. [355]
Many of the rides from the World's Fair were sold after its closure to Luna Park at Coney Island, which was allowed to call itself the New York World's Fair of 1941. [356] The Life Savers Parachute Jump was sold that same year and relocated to Steeplechase Park in Coney Island, where it was renamed the Parachute Jump. [262]
Another building saved from 1940 was the Belgian Building designed by Henry Van de Velde. It was awarded to Virginia Union University in Richmond, Virginia, and shipped to Richmond in 1941. The school still uses the building for its home basketball games. [357]
After the Fair, the Temple was again disassembled, and placed in storage for many years. There were proposals to erect it at Oberlin College, Harvard University, Indiana University, and elsewhere, but they all failed for lack of funding. In 1984, the approximately 28,000 pieces were shipped to the Museum of Ethnography in Stockholm, Sweden, with plans to rebuild it in a nearby park, but objections from the neighboring Chinese Embassy have stalled the project indefinitely. [275] [276] [358]
Seven structures were preserved as part of Flushing Meadows Park: the New York City Building, Aquacade amphitheater, B.F. Goodrich Pavilion, House of Jewels, Masterpieces of Art building, Japanese Pavilion, and Polish Pavilion's tower. [347] The New York City Subway's Mets–Willets Point station, which continued to serve Flushing Meadows Park after the fair, [359] was also renovated the 1964–65 Fair. [360]
The Japan pavilion was the first building to be preserved in the park, having been dedicated in September 1940, before the fair had officially ended. [361]
The New York City Building of the 1939 fair were used for the first temporary headquarters of the United Nations from 1946 until it moved in 1951 to its permanent headquarters in Manhattan. [362] The former New York City Building was used for the UN General Assembly during that time. [363] This building was later refurbished for the 1964 fair as the New York City Pavilion, [364] featuring the Panorama of the City of New York, an enormous scale model of the entire city. [365] It became the home of the Queens Center for Art and Culture (later renamed the Queens Museum of Art, and now called the Queens Museum) in 1972. [366]
When the fair was being developed, The Washington Post wrote in 1936 that the fair would give New York City a permanent public park, while the "visitors will get an eyeful beyond their fondest imagination and the hotel-keepers will get a pocketful" of money. [7]
To limit excessive real-estate development around the fairground, city officials requested in early 1936 that the neighborhoods around Flushing Meadows be rezoned as residential areas. [367] The Board of Estimate voted in 1937 to enact zoning restrictions around the fair, which prevented the construction of high-rise buildings around the site and created a buffer zone around the fairground. [368] The same year, the city restricted businesses from operating within 1,000 feet (300 m) of the fairground. [369]
Grover Whalen predicted that the fair would attract 50 million visitors who would spend $1 billion in total. [370] The WFC predicted in 1936 that it would lost $3.9 million if the fair recorded 40 million visitors and that it would earn at least $1 million with 50 million or more visitors. [371] Numerous retailers on Fifth Avenue in Manhattan renovated their buildings in advance of the fair. [372] By May 1939, real-estate figures predicted that the fair would earn between $1 billion and $1.5 billion for the city's economy. [116]
An archive of documents and films from the 1939 New York World's Fair is maintained at the New York Public Library. [373] The National Building Museum in Washington, D.C., described the 1939 fair in its exhibition Designing Tomorrow: America's World's Fairs of the 1930s, which ran from October 2010 to September 2011. [374]
1939 New York City | |
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![]() Poster by
Joseph Binder | |
Overview | |
BIE-class | Universal exposition |
Category | Second category General Exposition |
Name | New York World's Fair |
Motto | The World of Tomorrow |
Area | 1,202 acres (486 hectares) |
Organized by | Grover Whalen |
Participant(s) | |
Countries | 33 |
Location | |
Country | United States |
City | New York City |
Venue | Flushing Meadows–Corona Park |
Coordinates | 40°44′39″N 73°50′40″W / 40.74417°N 73.84444°W |
Timeline | |
Opening | April 30, 1939[1] |
Closure | October 27, 1940 |
Universal expositions | |
Previous | Exposition Internationale des Arts et Techniques dans la Vie Moderne in Paris |
Next | Exposition internationale du bicentenaire de Port-au-Prince in Port-au-Prince |
Specialized Expositions | |
Previous | Second International Aeronautic Exhibition (1938) in Helsinki |
Next | International Exhibition on Urbanism and Housing (1947) in Paris |
Simultaneous | |
Universal | Golden Gate International Exposition |
Specialized | Exposition internationale de l'eau in Liège |
The 1939–1940 New York World's Fair was a world's fair at Flushing Meadows–Corona Park in Queens, New York City, United States. It was the second-most expensive American world's fair of all time, behind the St. Louis Louisiana Purchase Exposition of 1904. Many countries around the world participated, and more than 44 million people attended over two seasons. [2] It was based on the future, with an opening slogan of "Dawn of a New Day", and it allowed all visitors to take a look at "the world of tomorrow".
Plans for the 1939 World's Fair were first announced in September 1935, and construction of the fairground began in June 1936. The fair opened on April 30, 1939, coinciding with the 150th anniversary of the first inauguration of George Washington. When World War II began four months into the 1939 World's Fair, many exhibits were affected, especially those on display in the pavilions of countries under Axis occupation. After the close of the fair in 1940, many exhibits were demolished or removed, though some buildings were retained for the 1964 New York World's Fair at the same site.
New York City had hosted the United States' first world's fair, the Exhibition of the Industry of All Nations, in 1853–1854. [3] At the time, the site of the 1939 World's Fair, Flushing Meadows–Corona Park in Queens, was a natural wetland straddling the Flushing River. [4] Flushing Meadows became the Corona Ash Dumps in the early 20th century. [5] New York City Parks Commissioner Robert Moses first conceived the idea of developing a large park in Flushing Meadows in the 1920s. [6] Although the neighborhoods around Flushing Meadows contained residential developments, the meadow itself remained undeveloped and isolated. [7]
As early as May 1935, a group led by the municipal reformer George McAneny had considered hosting an international exposition in New York City in 1939, coinciding with the 150th anniversary of George Washington's first inauguration. [8] That September, the group announced plans to spend $40 million to host an exhibition at the 1,003-acre (406 ha) Flushing Meadows site. [9] The New York City Board of Estimate approved the use of Flushing Meadows as a fairground on September 23, [10] and Moses directed municipal draftsmen to survey the site. [11] The Flushing Meadows site had been selected because of its large size and central location, [12] and the city already owned 586 acres (237 ha) nearby. [13] Mayor Fiorello La Guardia pledged financial support for the fair that October; [14] at the time, Moses estimated that it would cost $5–7 million to prepare the fairground and build transit to the fair. [15] The New York World's Fair Corporation (WFC) was formed to oversee the exposition on October 22, 1935, [16] and the Board of Estimate allocated $200,000 the next day for preliminary work. [17] The WFC elected McAneny as its president at its first meeting in November, [18] and two contractors were hired the following month to conduct preliminary surveys. [19]
Before the end of 1935, several foreign exhibitors had expressed interest in the fair. [20] There were also plans for exhibition spaces such as a fine arts building [21] and a cosmetics show. [22] In addition, the Fine Arts Federation of the City of New York urged the WFC to implement a "unified arts scheme" for the fair, [23] and the WFC and the New York City Board of Transportation devised plans for public transit lines to the fair. [24] In January 1936, state lawmaker Herbert Brownell Jr. proposed a bill to allow the city government to formally lease the Flushing Meadows site to the WFC. [25] Moses warned that the fairground's completion could be delayed due to funding issues; by then, the fair was estimated to cost $45 million. [26] [27] That February, McAneny announced that he would organize a committee to devise an architectural plan for the fairground. [28] Brownell requested funding from New York governor Herbert Lehman the same month for "basic World's Fair improvements"; [29] the city and state governments were each supposed to spend $5 million on site preparations. [30] The project remained stalled during early 1936 because of disagreements over the fair's location and financing. [30] [31] There were also competing proposals to relocate the fair to Marine Park in Brooklyn. [31] [32] but the New York State Legislature ultimately voted in April to allow the city to lease out Flushing Meadows. [33]
Grover Whalen replaced McAneny as the WFC's chairman in April 1936; [34] he would later be elected as the agency's full-time president as well. [35] At the end of the month, the city government announced plans to sell $7 million in bonds, while the state pledged $4.125 million for the project. [36] In addition, the WFC was to sell $20 million worth of bonds. [13] J. Franklin Bell was hired to draw up preliminary plans for the fair, [37] and the WFC appointed a committee of seven men [a] that May to devise a plan for the fairground. [38] The New York City Board of Estimate appropriated $308,020 to begin landscaping the site the same month, [39] and city officials acquired another 372 acres (151 ha) through eminent domain. [40] The WFC dedicated the fairground site on June 4, 1936, [41] shortly before the city finalized its lease of Flushing Meadows to the WFC in June 1936. [42]
Work on the World's Fair site began on June 16, 1936, [43] and a groundbreaking ceremony for the fairground took place on June 29. [44] The WFC established seven departments and thirteen committees to coordinate the fair's development. [13] Initially, the fair was to employ 35,000 people. [45] There was controversy in 1937 when the Municipal Civil Service Commission accused the WFC of patronage, claiming that Whalen had hired hundreds of World's Fair employees from outside the city's civil service lists. [46] To promote the fair, the WFC established advisory committees with members from every U.S. state. [47] Several baseball teams wore patches promoting the fair during the 1938 Major League Baseball season, [48] while the businessman Howard Hughes named an airplane after the fair and flew it around the world in 1938. [49] Helen Huntington Hull led a women's committee that helped promote and develop the fair. [50] New York license plates from 1938 were supposed to have slogans advertising the fair, [51] but a city judge deemed the slogans unconstitutional. [52]
The construction of the fairground primarily involved leveling the ash mounds; excavating Meadow and Willow lakes; and diverting much of the Flushing River into underground culverts. [53] [54] [55] The dirt from the lake sites was used as additional topsoil for the park. [56] The project was an around-the-clock job, with 450 workers operating on three eight-hour shifts. [57] As many as 10,000 trees were to be transplanted to the fairground, [58] and thousands of Douglas fir timbers were driven into the ground to act as pilings for the fair structures. [59] The rebuilt landscape was to be retained after the fair. [60]
The WFC's board of design reviewed several proposed master plans for the site, [61] and the corporation had relocated the last occupants of the fairground site by August 1936. [62] The WFC launched a design competition for several fairground pavilions that September [63] and selected several winning designs two months later. [64] Before the final master plan was revealed, Whalen said the fair would likely be dedicated to the past, present, and future. [65] The WFC announced details of the fair's master plan that October, which called for a $125 million exposition themed to "the world of tomorrow". [66] [67] The city, state, and federal governments would spend $35 million; the WFC was to spend $30 million; and the remaining funds would come from individual exhibitors. [68] There were to be ten themed zones, an amusement area, a central tower with paths radiating away from it, and extensive public-transit improvements. [67] Construction contracts for the fairground's first building were signed later the same month, [69] and the WFC also selected an official seal. [70] At that point, only a small number of fairground buildings had been approved. [45]
In November 1936, France became the first nation to announce its participation, [71] and U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt urged other nations to join the fair. [72] The city government also began selling bonds for the fair that month; [73] by then, several nations and hundreds of businesses had expressed interest in the fair. [74] That December, the International Convention Bureau endorsed the 1939 World's Fair, allowing the bureau's 21 member countries to host exhibits there, [75] and Lehman also sent invitations to the governors of all the other U.S. states. [76] By the beginning of 1937, eleven hundred concessionaires had applied for a concession at the fair, [77] and nine buildings were under construction. [78] The WFC unveiled a model of the fairgrounds at its Empire State Building headquarters that March. [79] Workers had finished grading and filling the World's Fair site by April, [80] and they began planting trees on the fairground. [81] That month, AT&T became the first company to lease a pavilion at the fair, [82] [83] and work officially began on the first building, the administration structure. [84] In addition, the WFC began auctioning off the fairground's concession spaces. [85]
Whalen predicted in mid-1937 that the fair would attract 59 nations. [86] He announced plans in June7 for a 280-acre (110 ha) amusement zone at the south end of the fairground, [87] and Moses proposed adding a trailer parking lot and a community interests zone. [88] Work on the first non-commercial pavilion, the Temple of Peace, began in July. [89] The fairground's first structure, the administration building, was completed by the next month. [90] At the time, 89 buildings were under construction, [91] and 86% of the fairground sites had been leased. [91] [92] Utah became the first U.S. state to lease space in the fair's Hall of States that September, [93] while Missouri was the first state to lease space for a standalone building. [94] Whalen also traveled to Europe to invite European countries to the fair. [95] The WFC reported in October that 62 construction contracts had been finished and that another 63 were in progress. [96] Various fairground buildings were rapidly being developed, along with the Trylon and Perisphere, the fair's icons. [97] [98] That December, the Ford Motor Company became the first automobile manufacturer to lease space at the fair; [99] by then, the WFC had received commitments from 60 nations. [100]
Whalen had begun planning the fair's opening ceremony by early 1938; he wanted to invite 50,000 soldiers to march at the ceremony. [101] Whalen also planned to have 100 buildings under construction by the end of April, employing 10,000 workers. [102] Work on the Perisphere, the fair's theme building, began in April. [103] The same month, the last available space in the fair's Government Zone was leased to the nations of Ireland, Lithuania, Sweden, and Venezuela. [104] The delivery of materials for the fair faced a delay in 1938 when it was temporarily halted during the New York City truckers strike. [105]
The fair had attracted 1,300 industrial exhibitors and 70 concessionaires at the beginning of 1939. [106] In addition, 62 nations and 35 U.S. states or territories had leased space at the fair; [106] their flags were flown atop a hill on the fairground. [107] A thousand retailers in the New York metropolitan area offered tickets to the fair before it officially opened. [108]
Whalen saw the fair as an opportunity for corporations to present consumer products, rather than as an exercise in presenting science and the scientific way of thinking in its own right. [109] For example, the IBM exhibit displayed the Radiotype writing machine, and RCA displayed various types of machinery in a "television laboratory". [110] RCA and NBC agreed to host television demonstrations at the World's Fair, [111] [112] and five major newsreel companies were hired to provide newsreel coverage of the fair. [113] The Crosley Corporation and WNYC both had radio broadcasting studios at the fair as well. [110] Sporting events throughout the New York City area were also planned in conjunction with the World's Fair. [114] Whalen agreed to hire only union laborers to install exhibits on the fairground; in exchange, several trade unions had agreed to buy the WFC's bonds. [115] The fairground ultimately cost $156 million to complete. On opening day, the fairground had 200 buildings, and Whalen anticipated that 60 million people would visit the fair. [116]
On April 30, 1939, the fair had its grand opening, with 206,000 people in attendance. [117] The date was chosen because it was exactly 150 years after Washington's first inauguration. [118] Although many of the pavilions and other facilities were not quite ready for this opening, it was put on with pomp and great celebration. [119] Plans for the United States Navy Fleet to visit New York City for the opening of the fair following maneuvers in the Caribbean were canceled, however, due to aggressive moves being made by Japan in the South China Sea, and the fleet instead transferred to the Pacific via the Panama Canal in April. [120] President Roosevelt's speech was not only broadcast over the various radio networks but also was televised along with other parts of the opening ceremony and other events at the fair. [121]
In May 1939, the WFC began allowing visitors under the age of 14 to pay a ten-cent admission fee one day a week, rather than the standard admission fee of 75 cents. [122] Concessionaires in the Amusement Area also asked the WFC to consider offering reduced-price tickets after 9 p.m. [123] Additionally, the WFC opened additional restaurants after visitors complained that the existing restaurants were too expensive. [124] Within a month of the fair's opening, several exhibitors had alleged that labor unions had charged exorbitant prices for labor at the fair. [115] [125]
Due to the onset of World War II, Southern Rhodesia became the first exhibitor to completely shutter its pavilion in September 1939, while other exhibitors curtailed their operations. [126] The Romanian pavilion's restaurant also closed due to the war. [127] The fair's first season ended on October 31, 1939; the WFC had recorded 25.8 million visitors during the season. [128]
After the 1939 season ended, most of the commercial exhibitors agreed to continue hosting exhibits for the 1940 season. However, many exhibitors indicated that they would enlarge or modify their exhibits. [129] For the 1940 season, the WFC raised admission prices to 50 cents, and the agency indicated that it would renovate the Amusement Areas. [130] In January 1940, Finland became the first country to agree to reopen its pavilion during the fair's second season. [131]
For the 1940 season, the international area included exhibits from 43 countries, plus the Pan-American Union and League of Nations. Eleven nations, several of which had been invaded during World War II, did not return to the fair. [132] For example, Sweden closed its pavilion at the end of the 1939 season. [133] The Soviet pavilion was dismantled in December 1939 [134] and was replaced by the American Common. [135] Other countries to announce their withdrawals included Albania, Argentina, Chile, Denmark, the Netherlands, Yugoslavia. [136] and Turkey. [137]
The World's Fair reopened for its second season on May 11, 1940; [138] it recorded 191,000 visitors on that day. [139] To entice people to attend the fair, several local business groups and hotels sponsored a contest in which they randomly gave away 170 automobiles to visitors. [140] Venezuela and Cuba withdrew after the 1940 season had begun, although a Chinese pavilion was added during that time. [141] The Belgian pavilion was closed briefly during the 1940 season but reopened after the Belgian government-in-exile agreed to maintain the pavilion. [142] On July 4, 1940, two New York City Police Department officers were killed by a blast while investigating a time bomb left at the British pavilion; [143] the bombing has never been solved, but a British agent named William Stephenson is suspected of having left the bomb. [144]
By the beginning of October 1940, the WFC had come up with detailed plans for clearing 385 buildings on the site. The area around the Trylon and Perisphere was to be demolished first, and the Amusement Area would be destroyed last. [145]
The fairground was divided into seven geographic or thematic zones, five of which had "focal exhibits", as well as two focal exhibits housed in their own buildings. [146] The plan called for numerous wide tree-lined pathways, including a central "Cascade Mall" leading to the Trylon and Perisphere. [56] Because the fairground was built atop swampy land that extended 60 to 80 feet (18 to 24 m) deep, many of the largest buildings had to be placed on steel-and-concrete decks, pilings, or caissons. [147] The WFC subleased the land to exhibitors, charging different rates based on the sites' proximity to major paths. [83]
At the center of the fairground was Wallace Harrison and Max Abramovitz's Trylon and Perisphere, the fair's primary theme center. [148] The Trylon was a tower measuring over 700 feet (210 m) tall, while the Perisphere was a sphere 200 feet (61 m) across. [149] Each of the zones around the Trylon and Perisphere was color-coded. [150] A central mall was also planned as part of the fairground, running between the Grand Central Parkway to the west and Lawrence Street in Flushing to the east. [151]
Fairgoers walking to the north of the Theme Center on the Avenue of Patriots would encounter the Communications and Business Systems exhibits. The focal point of this area was the Communications Building, a large structure with a pair of 160-foot-high (49 m) pylons flanking it. [152] [153] Numerous smaller exhibitors had space in the Communications Building. [154] The structure also had a theater, Stuart Davis mural about technology, and seven illuminated panels about communications technologies. [152]
The Communications and Business Systems Zone also contained the following buildings:
Pavilion | Description | Refs. |
---|---|---|
American Telephone & Telegraph | A structure with several sections of varying heights. [155] The semicircular entrance court had a sculptural group called The Pony Express. Inside were several telecommunications exhibits, including one exhibit about the Voder electronic-voice synthesizer. [156] | [155] [156] |
Business Systems and Insurance Building | An L-shaped structure that housed numerous companies such as Aetna, MetLife, and IBM. [157] [158] The sculptor Joseph Kiselewski created a large sundial for the building. [159] | [157] [158] |
Crosley Corporation | A building displaying the products of the Crosley Corporation. The main building's facade had a panel depicting the corporation's products, while the products themselves were located inside. A separate structure contained a rest area. [160] In addition, there was a broadcast studio. [110] [161] | [160] [110] [161] |
Masterpieces of Art | Three pavilions around a courtyard, which contained 25 galleries with valuable Old Master works, many of which were borrowed from Europe. [160] Different works of art were displayed during the 1939 and 1940 seasons. [162] | [160] [162] |
Radio Corporation of America | A structure shaped like a radio tube. Inside were exhibits about televisions, broadcasting, and various types of radio communications; these included dioramas and a yacht. [163] There were also a lagoon and a park next to the structure. [164] | [163] [164] |
The Community Interest Zone was located just east of the Communications & Business Systems Zone. [165] The region's exhibits showcased several trades or industries that were popular among the public at the time, such as home furnishings, plumbing, contemporary art, cosmetics, gardens, the gas industry, fashion, jewelry, and religion. [166] Besides the focal exhibit, the Community Interest Zone included the following buildings:
Pavilion | Description | Refs. |
---|---|---|
American Radiator & Standard Sanitary Corporation | A yellow-and-orange structure with a curved colonnade. Inside the colonnade were displays of heating appliances, air conditioners, and plumbing. | [167] |
Christian Science | A visitor center for the Christian Science movement, with murals, conversation rooms, telephone booths, and reading rooms. [167] The building consisted of a rotunda topped by a circular tower. [168] | [167] [168] |
Contemporary Art | A building with 23 exhibition galleries that displayed contemporary art, in addition to two studios where artists demonstrated how they created their work. | [167] |
Electrified Farm | A fully functioning farm with electrically-powered appliances. [169] The farm included a farmhouse, orchard, barns, and crop fields. [170] | [169] [170] |
Gas Exhibits Inc. | A structure with an exhibit hall for 22 manufacturers and an auditorium. [171] There was also a "court of flame" and a model house with gas appliances. [172] | [171] [172] |
House of Jewels | A simple concrete structure with jewelry displays, alongside an amphitheater with diamond exhibits. [173] At the time of its opening, the pavilion was described as the largest display of jewels and diamonds in the U.S. [174] | [173] [174] |
Johns-Manville Sales Corporation | A structure with exhibits about Johns Manville's industrial products and home-construction materials. [175] On the facade was the Asbestos Man sculpture designed by Hildreth Meière. [176] | [175] [176] |
Maison Coty | A glass building with displays of Coty perfumes, as well as exhibits on the history and manufacturing process of perfumes, | [177] |
Palestine Exhibits Inc. | A structure with displays about the history of the Jews in the Palestine region. | [177] |
Temple of Religion | A nonsectarian structure with a 150-foot-tall (46 m) circular tower. [178] The pavilion included a landscaped garden, a porch where performances took place, and a 1,200-seat auditorium. [179] John W. Hausermann funded the new Aeolian-Skinner pipe organ that was installed in the building. [180] | [178] [179] |
Town of Tomorrow | A set of 15 "demonstration homes". [181] Each home was decorated by a different company; most of the houses were designed in an 18th-century style, though some were designed in a modern style. [182] | [181] [182] |
Works Progress Administration | An exhibit with models of Works Progress Administration workers doing various tasks. There was also a 299-seat auditorium and an open courtyard where performances were held. | [183] |
Young Men's Christian Association of the City of New York | A visitor center for the YMCA, with a restaurant, meeting areas, and lounges. [184] There was also a large map of YMCA locations worldwide. [185] | [184] [185] |
The Government Zone was located at the east end of the fair, on the eastern bank of the Flushing River. It contained 21 pavilions, several smaller buildings, a centrally located Court of Peace, a Lagoon of Nations, and a smaller Court of States. The 60 foreign governments built many pavilions housing a myriad of cultural offerings. [186] [187] Notable pavilions included:
Pavilion | Description | Refs. |
---|---|---|
Albania | An exposition of products made in Albania, along with an Albanian restaurant. | [188] |
Argentina | A structure surrounded by four pylons with glass showcases, including a diorama. There was a fine arts room, exhibition hall, theater, restaurant, and other visitor spaces. [189] The pavilion displayed work from Argentine artists and movies about life in Argentina. [190] | [189] [190] |
Australia | A structure at the western end of the Lagoon of Nations. The building was divided into three sections each describing a different aspect of Australia's history. | [191] |
Belgium | A structure constructed of Belgian materials, including a 155-foot (47 m) bell tower made of Belgian slate. Inside were a reception hall, restaurant, offices, movie theater, and three exhibition spaces. [192] A collection of Belgian diamonds was also displayed. [193] | [192] [193] |
Brazil | A two-story, L-shaped building with plants, a Good Neighbor hall, and exhibition halls about Brazilian products. [194] At the center of the building was an aviary with a reflecting pool and native Brazilian plants. [195] | [194] [195] |
Canada | A stucco-and-glass-block structure with a reflecting pool. [196] Inside was a main hall with exhibit spaces operated by various Canadian agencies, companies, and provincial governments, as well as a large map of Canada. A secondary hall was dedicated to Canadian industry. [197] | [196] [197] |
Chile | A two-story, stucco-and-steel structure. [198] Inside was a hall of government and other halls dedicated to various aspects of Chilean culture. There was also an open-air deck and a garden. [199] | [198] [199] |
Cuba | This exhibit displayed Cuban cultural artifacts, architecture, and products. | [200] |
Czechoslovakia | A structure dedicated to Czechoslovakian industry. The hall contained a mural, a decorative wood panel, and a large Czechoslovakian carpet, in addition to a restaurant and displays about several industries. | [200] |
Finland | This exhibit included displays about Finnish community and industry. There was also an information service, handicraft display, and restaurant. | [201] |
France | A two-story structure on the Court of Peace whose facade featured enormous curved windows. The first floor had a tourist bureau, dioramas, and displays of French fashions. The second floor had history, art, and furniture restaurants and a restaurant. | [202] |
Great Britain | Included two buildings with a first-floor connection. There were exhibits dedicated to various aspects of British society, in addition to a rare copy of the Magna Carta, the Crown Jewels of the United Kingdom, and royal silverware. In addition, there was also an art gallery, restaurant, movie theater, industrial exhibits, and an official-publication area. | [203] |
Italy | A structure with a 200-foot (61 m) high waterfall dedicated to Guglielmo Marconi. The pavilion occupied 100,000 square feet of space and cost more than $3 million. [204] The pavilion's restaurant was designed in the shape of the nation's luxury cruise line ships. [205] | [205] |
Japan | A structure designed by the Japanese-American architect Yasuo Matsui to resemble a traditional Shinto shrine, set within a Japanese garden. It offered tea ceremony and Japanese flower arrangement exhibits. [206] The interior had a "Diplomat room" and a mural. [207] The interior was designed by the Japanese architect and photographer Iwao Yamawaki. [208] | [206] |
Jewish Palestine | The building featured a monumental hammered copper relief sculpture on its facade titled The Scholar, The Laborer, and the Tiller of the Soil by Maurice Ascalon. [209] Several major Israeli artists presented their work, including Isaac Frenkel Frenel and Shimshon Holzman. [210] | [209] |
Netherlands | This exhibit contained dioramas and demonstrations relating to the Netherlands proper, the Dutch East Indies, and Curaçao and Dependencies. A garden with 65,000 tulips was placed around the pavilion. | [211] |
Pan American Union | The 21 countries of the Pan-American Union, as well as several communications companies, were represented in the Pan American Union pavilion. [212] Many of these countries tried to promote themselves as part of Good Neighbor policy at the 1939 World's Fair, an extension of Franklin D. Roosevelt's Good Neighbor policy, which sought to redefine negative Latin American stereotypes. [213] | [212] |
Poland | A steel tower with gold-plated copper shields and a sandstone building plus Polish restaurant in a round building. The Second Polish Republic prepared some 200 tons of artifacts. The pavilion also displayed a color film about Poland. | [214] |
Sweden | A set of buildings grouped around a central garden. They included a restaurant and a cinema, as well as a 9-foot-tall Dalecarlian horse. [215] | |
Soviet Union | A semicircular structure with two wings partially enclosing a courtyard. [216] Exhibitions included the life-size copy of the interior of the showcase Mayakovskaya station of the Moscow Metro, whose designer Alexey Dushkin was awarded Grand Prize of the 1939 World's Fair. [217] The Soviet pavilion's courtyard contained a statue on a pylon, which was 260 feet (79 m) tall. [218] [219] | [216] |
United States | The Federal Building's main building was set between two 150-foot (46 m) pylons. The Federal Building and several surrounding structures contained a combined 23 exhibits, dedicated to 22 states and Puerto Rico. [220] Midway through the fair, the world's largest carillon was installed in the spire of the Florida state exhibition building. [221] |
Pavilion | Description | Refs. |
---|---|---|
British Colonial Empire | An adjunct to the Great Britain pavilion. It consisted of six sections, each dedicated to a different British dependency, in addition to a giant mural about all of the dependencies. | [222] |
Czechoslovakia | An adjunct to the Czechoslovakia pavilion with exhibits on the nation's history, products, artwork, literature, and tourism. | [200] |
Denmark | This exhibit included Danish arts and crafts, in addition to a restaurant. | [200] |
Dominican Republic | This exhibit contained a tribute to the voyages of Christopher Columbus, as well as displays about the Dominican Republic's industries. | [200] |
France | An adjunct to the France pavilion with exhibits about Overseas France. | [223] |
Greece | This exhibit was a marble room with murals of Greek landscapes, as well as five pieces of old Greek sculptures. Native Greek products were shown in a separate space on the second floor. | [222] |
Italy | A 10,000-square-foot (930 m2) adjunct to the Italy pavilion. [204] Within that space was a representation of She-Wolf, while in the center of the room stood Romano Romanelli's bronze statue of Mussolini. [224] |
Southwest of the Government Zone was the Food Zone, composed of 13 buildings in total (the Swedish and Turkish pavilions were physically within the Food Zone but were classified as being part of the Government Zone [225]). Its focal exhibit was Food No. 3, a rhomboidal structure with four shafts representing wheat stalks. [226] [227] The Food Zone included the following buildings:
Pavilion | Description | Refs. |
---|---|---|
Academy of Sport | A building with sports-related murals on the facade. Inside were displays of sports trophies and sports gear. Coaches also taught classes about sports. | [228] |
American Tobacco Company | This building included cigarette-making machines, dioramas about tobacco production, and a movie about how cigarettes were made. | [228] |
Beech-Nut Packing Company | A structure with murals on its facade. Inside were dioramas about coffee production, in addition to a miniature circus parade. | [229] |
Borden Company | A rotunda with 150 pedigreed cows (including the original Elsie) on a Rotolactor that allowed bathing them, drying them, and milking them in a highly mechanized way. There was also a main hall with dioramas and displays. | [229] |
Continental Baking Company | A structure with a curved facade decorated with balloons. Inside was a demonstration of the breads and other products being baked. | [230] |
Food Building | A large rotunda measuring 60 feet (18 m) tall, with murals on its red-and-white facade. Inside was a dining terrace and a large restaurant. [231] The rotunda hosted exhibits from multiple companies, such as dioramas, live manufacturing demonstrations, slideshows, films, and snack bars. [232] | [231] [232] |
General Cigar Company | A structure with a tobacco-themed mural, an exhibit auditorium, a movie screen displaying world news, scoreboards for American football games, and a lounge. | [233] |
Heinz Dome | A 90-foot-tall (27 m) dome with murals on its facade. Inside was the Goddess of Perfection sculpture by Raymond Barger, a set of plaques, and a laboratory where tomatoes were grown. | [234] |
Libby, McNeill & Libby | A replica of a modern ship. On the lower deck were an exhibition about the canning industry's history and a set of live shows. Libby, McNeill and Libby's products were displayed on a lounge on the upper deck. | [225] |
National Dairy Products Corporation | An exhibit about the manufacturing process of dairy and ice cream products, with a replica of a pasteurization and bottling plant. | [225] |
Schaefer Center | A 1,000-seat restaurant serving European and American cuisines. The restaurant included murals about the history of beer, and the attached bar included murals about the restaurant's sponsor, Schaefer Beer. | [225] |
Standard Brands Inc. | Four glass pavilions surrounding a 1,600-seat amphitheater. Inside the pavilion were exhibits relating to Fleischmann's Yeast, Chase & Sanborn Coffee Company, Royal Desserts, and the baking industry. | [225] |
Swift & Company | A replica of an airliner. The "body" of the airliner had a lounge with a pool, while the "wings" had exhibits about the manufacturing process of Swift & Company's hot dogs. | [225] |
The Production and Distribution Zone was dedicated to showcasing industries that specialized in manufacturing and distribution. [235] [236] The focal exhibit was the Consumers Building (also the Consumer Interests Building), [237] a L-shaped structure illustrated with murals by Francis Scott Bradford. [238] Numerous individual companies hosted exhibitions in this region. There were also pavilions dedicated to a generic industry, such as electrical products, industrial science, pharmaceuticals, metals, and men's apparel. [239] Among the exhibitors in the Production and Distribution Zone was General Electric. [240] A hall of textiles was also built for the fair. [241]
The Transportation Zone was located west of the Theme Center, across the Grand Central Parkway. [242] The focal exhibit of the Transportation Zone was a Chrysler exhibit group. In the focal exhibit, an audience could watch a Plymouth being assembled in an early 3D film in a theater with air conditioning, then a new technology. [243] Though the New York City Building was physically within the Transportation Zone, it was classified as part of the Government Zone. [244] Other buildings in the Transportation Zone included:
Pavilion | Description | Refs. |
---|---|---|
Aviation Building | A building divided into three sections, dedicated to travel, defense, and recreation and commerce. Four planes were suspended from the ceiling. [245] There were also three U.S. Army and three U.S. Navy planes. [246] | [245] [246] |
Railroads | A structure operated by the Eastern Railroads Presidents' Conference. [245] [247] The Railroad Pavilion was the fair's largest single site, at 17 acres (6.9 ha); [245] it included a 110,000-square-foot (10,000 m2) exhibition building with a replica of a roundhouse. [247] The building's facade included railway-related murals. The interior contained railway exhibits, a large model train set, a stage show, and exhibits of actual locomotives such as the Coronation Scot locomotive. [248] | [247] [248] |
Firestone Tire and Rubber Company | An L-shaped structure with a central rotunda and a 100-foot-tall (30 m) spire. Inside were mockups of a tire factory and an American farm. | [249] |
Ford Motor Company | A structure dedicated to the Ford Motor Company's products, which was topped by a 25-foot-tall (7.6 m) statue of the god Mercury. The entrance hall had Ford vehicles, a mural, and a large map, while the industrial hall had a turntable. There was also a garden court, as well as a rooftop spiral ramp called the Road of Tomorrow. | [250] |
General Motors | A 7-acre (2.8 ha) pavilion with four structures, each rising four to six stories. The structures included a casino of science with animated displays and a genuine locomotive engine. [251] The 36,000-square-foot (3,300 m2) Futurama exhibit, designed by Norman Bel Geddes, included a diorama of a fictional American landscape. [252] There was also a research laboratory and animated displays about General Motors cars. [251] Sun decks, ramps, plazas, and roof gardens were spread throughout the pavilion. [253] | [251] [252] [253] |
B. F. Goodrich Company | A streamlined structure, surrounding an elliptical courtyard where driving performances were hosted daily. [254] Above the pavilion's main entrance was a tower with a guillotine that crushed used tires. Inside were displays of automobiles, as well as interactive exhibits. [255] | [254] [255] |
Marine Transportation Building | An 80-foot-tall (24 m) structure shaped like the bows of two ocean liners. [256] The center of the building had an interactive world map showing steamship routes, and there were also model ships and exhibits about marine safety. Marine-transport companies had ticket booths and exhibits within the pavilion as well. [244] | [256] [244] |
The Amusement Area was located south of the World's Fair Boulevard, along 230 acres (93 ha) on the east shore of Fountain Lake. [257] Unlike traditional fairgrounds, the Amusement Area at the 1939 Fair had no midway; instead, the fairground was divided into more than a dozen themed zones. [98] [258]
Despite the high-minded educational tone that Grover Whalen attempted to set, the Amusements Area was the most popular part of the Fair. The attractions included a roller coaster, [259] a Flying Turns-style bobsled, [260] a Life Savers-branded parachute tower called the Parachute Jump [259] [261] (later moved to Coney Island, where it is standing but not operating [262]), the 3 ft (914 mm) narrow gauge Gimbels Flyer train ride, [263] (later purchased by Kennywood, where it still runs today), [264] and carnival acts such as a "Little Miracle Town" with dwarves. [265] Other attractions included a "winter wonderland" called Sun Valley, a Theatre of Time and Space, [266] and a replica of Victoria Falls. [267] At the north end of the zone was a "children's world", which included a playhouse and other attractions for young visitors. [268]
Frank Buck exhibited his "Frank Buck's Jungleland", which displayed rare birds, reptiles and wild animals along with Jiggs, a five-year-old trained orangutan. [259] In addition, Buck provided a trio of performing elephants, an 80-foot (24 m) "monkey mountain" with 600 monkeys, and an attraction that had been popular at the 1893 Chicago World's Fair: camel rides. [269] A number of the shows provided spectators with the opportunity of viewing women in very revealing costumes or topless, such as the "Frozen Alive Girl", the Living Pictures, and the Dream of Venus building. This last attraction was a pavilion designed by the Spanish surrealist artist Salvador Dalí which contained within it a number of unusual sculptures and statues as well as live nearly-nude performers posing as statues. [270] [271] For the 1940 season, the area was rebranded as "The Great White Way". [272]
The Bendix Lama Temple [273] was a 28,000-piece full-sized replica of the 1767 Potala temple in Rehe, Manchuria. It was commissioned and brought back by the industrialist and explorer Vincent Bendix. [274] [275] [276] The Temple had previously been exhibited at the 1933 Chicago World's Fair, called " Century of Progress". [277] Attendance was disappointing in 1939. As a result, in 1940, a provocative show was added to the temple, [278] which involved multiple nude women. [279] [280]
For the 1939 World's Fair, the New York state government built a massive curved amphitheater at the north end of Meadow Lake, which originally was intended to accommodate 12,000 guests. [281] The amphitheater hosted Billy Rose's Aquacade, a spectacular musical and water extravaganza with an orchestra to accompany the spectacular synchronized swimming performance. It featured Johnny Weissmuller and Eleanor Holm, two of the most celebrated swimmers of the era, and dazzled fairgoers with its lighting and cascades and curtains of water, pumped in waterfalls at 8,000 gallons a minute. The cost of admission was 80 cents. [282] The Aquacade facility served as an entertainment venue in the park for several decades; following a period of extended deterioration, [283] it was ultimately demolished in 1996. [284]
There were two focal exhibits that were not located within any zone. The first was the Medical and Public Health Building on Constitution Mall and the Avenue of Patriots (immediately northeast of the Theme Center). [285] This structure contained a massive "Hall of Man" dedicated to the human body and a "Hall of Medical Science" dedicated to medical professions and devices. [285] [286] The first floor of the building had a 5,000-square-foot (460 m2) private club for medical professionals, with a lounge. [287]
The Science and Education Building, located on a curved portion of Hamilton Place between the Avenue of Patriots and Washington Square, just north of the Medical and Public Health Building. The building was not used to teach science, but it contained an auditorium and several exhibits on science and education. [288]
One of the first exhibits to receive attention was the Westinghouse Time Capsule, which was not to be opened till the year 6939. [289] The time capsule, a tube containing various contemporary objects, is located at a depth of 50 feet (15 m) and is marked by a small stone plaque. [290]
At the west end of the fairground was the administration building; this structure included a first-floor hall with artifacts about the fair, in addition to offices and a cafeteria. [90] The building's facade had a 27-foot-tall (8.2 m) relief of a woman. [291] During the fairground's construction, the administration building contained mockups of industry-themed exhibits, [292] and it was also used to test out lighting systems. [293] The fair also had a hospitality center staffed mainly by women, This building had an auditorium, lounge, restaurant, dressing rooms, lockers, and offices for national and international organizations. [294]
The original plans called for a veterans' temple of peace next to the state-themed buildings. [295] South of the Food Zone, there was originally supposed to be a fisheries building with a stadium. [296] The WFC had also announced plans for a "freedom pavilion" in January 1939, depicting Germany before the Nazi government takeover, [297] but the plans were abandoned because of a lack of time and money. [298]
As announced in 1936, the fair was themed to "the world of tomorrow". [66] [67] The colors blue and orange were chosen as the official colors of the fair, as they were the colors of New York City. [299] Each day at the fair was a special theme day, for which a special button was issued. [300] The fair's official seal depicted the Statue of Liberty with her torch. The seal was available in multiple color schemes, such as an orange-and-blue scheme and a white-and-silver scheme. [70] The fair's official flag was originally a triband with a blue bar flanked by orange bars; there was a white seal in the center of the blue bar. [301]
Another theme of the fair was the emerging new middle class, leading a hoped-for recovery from the Great Depression. The Westinghouse Electric Corporation produced the film The Middleton Family at the New York World's Fair, which depicted a fictional Midwestern family, the Middleton family, taking in the sights of the fair. [302] Westinghouse also featured Elektro the Moto-Man, a robot that talked, differentiated colors, and smoked cigarettes. [303]
The WFC established a music advisory committee for the fair in 1937, which was led by the conductor Allen Wardwell. [304] The music advisory committee had proposed a music festival with performances at the fairground itself, Carnegie Hall, and the Metropolitan Opera House. [305]
Olin Downes, the general director of the World's Fair music department, selected Hugh Ross to organize recitals and concerts at the Temple of Religion. [180] Ralph Vaughan Williams composed his work for harp and string orchestra Five Variants of Dives and Lazarus on commission from the World's Fair, which was first performed at Carnegie Hall in 1939. [306] In addition, the British Council commissioned a piano concerto from Arthur Bliss for the British Week at the World's Fair. Adrian Boult conducted the New York Philharmonic Symphony Orchestra in Carnegie Hall in 1939 with Solomon as the soloist. [307]
From the outset, the fairground was planned to include murals, sculptures, and colorful decorations. [308] Whalen, who was determined that the fair should "not represent the work of any one person or school", employed 181 visual artists, designers, and architects. [309] Whalen also agreed to include a community art center after observers criticized the fact that the original plans did not include any formal art galleries. [310]
WPA artists painted murals for the fair, which appeared in The New York Times Magazine. [311] Ceramic sculptor Waylande Gregory created The Fountain of the Atom, which displayed the largest ceramic sculptures in modern times. [312]
Nylon fabric, the View-Master, and Scentovision (an early version of Smell-O-Vision) were introduced at the Fair. Other exhibits included Vermeer's painting The Milkmaid from the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam, [313] a streamlined pencil sharpener, a diner (still in operation as the White Mana in Jersey City, New Jersey), a futuristic car-based city by General Motors, the first fully constructed computer game, and early televisions. [314] Bell Labs' Voder, a keyboard-operated speech synthesizer, was demonstrated at the fair. [156]
In addition, cuisine from 24 participating countries was served at the fair. [315] These included caviar in the Romanian and Polish pavilions; borscht, blini, and pelmeni from the Soviet pavilion; soufflés from the French pavilion; smorgasbords from the Swedish pavilion; and kebabs and honey desserts from the Albanian pavilion. [315] [316] There were at least 40 restaurants with a combined 23,000 seats, in addition to 261 refreshment stands. [316]
The fair coincided with the 1st World Science Fiction Convention, [317] [318] which took place at the Caravan Hall in Manhattan on July 2–4, 1939. [319]
On July 3, 1940, the fair hosted "Superman Day". [320] [321] The event included an athletic contest with a "Super-Boy and Super-Girl of the Day", as well as a public appearance by an actor portraying Superman. [321] Broadway actor Ray Middleton, who served as a judge for the contest, is often credited with having appeared in the Superman costume on Superman Day, but this is disputed. [322]
Whalen predicted in late 1936 that these lines needed to be able to handle as many as 800,000 visitors per day, though he predicted an average of 250,000 daily visitors. As such, several public transit lines were built or upgraded to serve the fair. [324] A special subway line, the Independent Subway System's (IND) World's Fair Line, was built to serve the fair. [325] The World's Fair Line, a spur of the IND Queens Boulevard Line, [326] was dismantled after the fair ended. [327] The Willets Point station on the Flushing Line was rebuilt to handle fair traffic on the Interborough Rapid Transit (IRT) and Brooklyn-Manhattan Transit (BMT) systems. [328] [323] A special fleet of 50 World's Fair Lo-V subway cars were built, [329] and the existing Q-type Queens subway cars were rebuilt to provide additional service on the Flushing Line. [330] A Long Island Rail Road station (now Mets–Willets Point) was built next to the Flushing Line station. [328] In addition, Queens-Nassau Transit Lines bought 55 buses to provide service to the fair. [331]
There were also several modes of transit traveling around the fairground itself. Exposition Greyhound Lines operated a fleet of one hundred 120-passenger buses that traveled around the fairground, connecting with each of the fairground's entrances. [332] [333] The original plan called for two bus routes, though this was expanded to seven routes soon after the fair opened. [334] There were also tractor trains that traveled along the fairground's paths, as well as tour buses that gave one-hour-long tours of the fair. In addition, visitors could rent one of 500 rolling chairs, each of which had space for one or two people. [332] [333] Boats also traveled around Fountain Lake (now Meadow Lake), stopping at seven piers. [333]
Several highway and road improvements were planned in advance of the World's Fair. [335] For example, Horace Harding Boulevard was completed in 1937 to connect the fair with Queens Boulevard, [336] and the Bronx–Whitestone Bridge and Whitestone Expressway were opened in early 1939, connecting with the Bronx. [337] The Grand Central Parkway was also extended to serve the fairground, [338] and Queens Boulevard was widened and paved. [339] The construction of the Queens–Midtown Tunnel was also expedited for the fair, [340] though the tunnel did not open until 1940. [341] Maps also touted the fairground's proximity to five airports and seaplane bases. [342] [b]
The fair was open for two seasons, from April to October each year, and closed permanently on October 27, 1940. [343] The fair attracted over 45 million visitors [344] and ultimately recouped only 32% of its original cost. [345] [346] Following the fair, the vast majority of structures were dismantled or moved. [347] The Bureau International des Expositions (BIE) retroactively recognized the 1939 World's Fair as an official World Expo, even though the BIE's rules specified that official Expos could run only for one year. [348]
World War II presented additional problems with what to do with the exhibits on display in the pavilions of countries under Axis occupation. Several countries in German-occupied Europe donated or lent their World's Fair exhibits to institutions across the United States. [349] In the case of the Polish Pavilion, most of the items were sold by the Polish Government in exile in London to the Polish Museum of America and shipped to Chicago. A notable exception was made for a monument of the Polish–Lithuanian King Jagiełło. which was reinstalled in Central Park. [350] A copy of the Magna Carta, displayed at the British Pavilion during the 1939 season, remained in Fort Knox during the war. [351]
When the fair closed, many among the European staff were unable to return to their home countries. [352] [353] An estimated 400 workers were unable to return to their home countries because of the war, prompting U.S. representative John J. Delaney to introduce legislation in October 1940, allowing these workers to remain in the U.S. [354] The French pavilion gave rise to three French restaurants—La Caravelle, Le Pavillon, and La Côte Basque. [355]
Many of the rides from the World's Fair were sold after its closure to Luna Park at Coney Island, which was allowed to call itself the New York World's Fair of 1941. [356] The Life Savers Parachute Jump was sold that same year and relocated to Steeplechase Park in Coney Island, where it was renamed the Parachute Jump. [262]
Another building saved from 1940 was the Belgian Building designed by Henry Van de Velde. It was awarded to Virginia Union University in Richmond, Virginia, and shipped to Richmond in 1941. The school still uses the building for its home basketball games. [357]
After the Fair, the Temple was again disassembled, and placed in storage for many years. There were proposals to erect it at Oberlin College, Harvard University, Indiana University, and elsewhere, but they all failed for lack of funding. In 1984, the approximately 28,000 pieces were shipped to the Museum of Ethnography in Stockholm, Sweden, with plans to rebuild it in a nearby park, but objections from the neighboring Chinese Embassy have stalled the project indefinitely. [275] [276] [358]
Seven structures were preserved as part of Flushing Meadows Park: the New York City Building, Aquacade amphitheater, B.F. Goodrich Pavilion, House of Jewels, Masterpieces of Art building, Japanese Pavilion, and Polish Pavilion's tower. [347] The New York City Subway's Mets–Willets Point station, which continued to serve Flushing Meadows Park after the fair, [359] was also renovated the 1964–65 Fair. [360]
The Japan pavilion was the first building to be preserved in the park, having been dedicated in September 1940, before the fair had officially ended. [361]
The New York City Building of the 1939 fair were used for the first temporary headquarters of the United Nations from 1946 until it moved in 1951 to its permanent headquarters in Manhattan. [362] The former New York City Building was used for the UN General Assembly during that time. [363] This building was later refurbished for the 1964 fair as the New York City Pavilion, [364] featuring the Panorama of the City of New York, an enormous scale model of the entire city. [365] It became the home of the Queens Center for Art and Culture (later renamed the Queens Museum of Art, and now called the Queens Museum) in 1972. [366]
When the fair was being developed, The Washington Post wrote in 1936 that the fair would give New York City a permanent public park, while the "visitors will get an eyeful beyond their fondest imagination and the hotel-keepers will get a pocketful" of money. [7]
To limit excessive real-estate development around the fairground, city officials requested in early 1936 that the neighborhoods around Flushing Meadows be rezoned as residential areas. [367] The Board of Estimate voted in 1937 to enact zoning restrictions around the fair, which prevented the construction of high-rise buildings around the site and created a buffer zone around the fairground. [368] The same year, the city restricted businesses from operating within 1,000 feet (300 m) of the fairground. [369]
Grover Whalen predicted that the fair would attract 50 million visitors who would spend $1 billion in total. [370] The WFC predicted in 1936 that it would lost $3.9 million if the fair recorded 40 million visitors and that it would earn at least $1 million with 50 million or more visitors. [371] Numerous retailers on Fifth Avenue in Manhattan renovated their buildings in advance of the fair. [372] By May 1939, real-estate figures predicted that the fair would earn between $1 billion and $1.5 billion for the city's economy. [116]
An archive of documents and films from the 1939 New York World's Fair is maintained at the New York Public Library. [373] The National Building Museum in Washington, D.C., described the 1939 fair in its exhibition Designing Tomorrow: America's World's Fairs of the 1930s, which ran from October 2010 to September 2011. [374]