Wartime Wednesday:
The 1939 World’s Fair
When I was in college, the 1982 World’s Fair was held in
Knoxville, Tennessee. As a young adult, it was an amazing experience to see the
hundreds of thousands of people from all over the globe and to visit the
eclectic displays. I must admit to being very wide-eyed each time I attended.
Those who went to the 1939 World’s Fair must have felt the
same way. In a world that had struggled through a crippling depression, many
people had been severely impacted by loss of savings accounts and jobs.
Traveling was done primarily to find work, not take a vacation. But in 1939,
life was improving. Roosevelt’s programs had brought the country through the
worst of times, and U.S. citizens were guardedly optimistic. Little did they
realize that six months later, Hitler would invade Poland and plunge the world
in catastrophic conflict.
Held in Flushing Meadows on a site that had previously been
a dump site, the fair opened on April 30th to a crowd of more than
200,000 visitors. The grounds covered more than twelve hundred acres or nearly
two square miles, and touted the futurist theme of “Dawn of a New Day.”
Exhibits included Westinghouse’s time capsule that wasn’t to be opened for
5,000 years, a robot that talked, a science fiction convention, the
introduction of nylon fabric, and early televisions. The structures at the fair
were unusual, many of them considered architecturally experimental. The fair
colors were orange and blue, and most of the building included one or both
colors in their design. Only the Trylon and Perisphere, known as Theme Center,
were completely white.
The fair operated for two seasons, from May to October in 1939
and 1940. Wikipedia said it best: “Although the U.S. would not enter WWII until
the end of 1941, the fairgrounds served as a window in the troubles overseas. German
was the only major world power that did not participate. The pavilions of
Poland and Czechoslovakia did not open for the 1940 season, and the USSR
Pavilion was dismantled after the first season, leaving an empty lot. Also in
1940 a time bomb exploded near the British Pavilion. When the fair closed, many of the European staff
were unable to return to their home countries, being stranded in the U.S.”
Fairs continue to
operate intermittently. This year’s event is a horticultural exposition in
Turkey and will close at the end of this month. Kazakhstan will host Expo 2017
with a theme of Future Energy, certainly a hot topic.
Have you ever
attended a World’s Fair or similar event?
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