Newsletter - South Jersey Postcard Club
Transcription
Newsletter - South Jersey Postcard Club
South Jersey Post Card Club Newsletter April 2004 Serving Post Card Collectors Since 1971 Re. Vol. 4 No. Two On the Night of April 15, 1912 by Ray Hahn On the night of April 15, 1912, the Cunard Line steamship Carpathia, under the command of Captain Arthur Rostron, picked up the SOS distress call from the ill-fated liner RMS Titanic. Captain Rostron immediately turned his ship around, and dodging the same icebergs that sank the Titanic, sailed at full speed toward the position given by the Titanic’s radio operator. Upon arriving at the scene, Captain Rostron found icebergs and several scattered lifeboats with only 705 survivors, mostly women and children, freezing from the cold and in shock by a nightmare none could have imagined only a few hours before. After taking the survivors on board, Rostron set the Carpathia on a course for New York. The heroic rescue made the Carpathia and her crew famous throughout history as the ship that rescued the Titanic survivors. But what was the fate of the Carpathia after her fabled dash across the North Atlantic? Six years later, at just before midnight, on July 17th 1918, while traveling in convoy from Liverpool to Boston, the Carpathia was struck by two torpedoes from the German U-boat #47. Minutes later, a third torpedo slammed into the Carpathia's hull as her lifeboats were being lowered, killing five crew members . The celebrated liner slipped beneath the sea at 12:40 a.m. July 18th. The remaining crew and 157 passengers were picked up by the British warship HMS Snowdrop and safely taken to Liverpool. _____________________________________________________________________________________ Institute of American Deltiology 300 West Main Avenue Myerstown, Pennsylvania 17067 Dear Editor, signed Marvin Editor’s Note: It seems that SJPCC Newsletter [Jan. ’04 issue] was not the only recent publication with information about the John Stetson hat factory in Philadelphia. Club member Marvin Krupnick wrote a letter telling me that Reminisce Magazine [February 2004 issue] had a note from a reader who lives in Palermo, New Jersey. The note contained the following information: The Institute, privately incorporated December 28, 1993, is a research center, library, and gallery for the study, display and use of picture postcards as documents of American history, art, and culture. Donald R. Brown, founder, is shown standing outside the Institute in 2003, sixty years after starting to collect on August 20, 1943. A library of books, journals, club bulletins, news clippings and slides supports the Institute’s postcard collection. Call (717) 866-7747 for an appointment or email broiad@comcast.net for additional information. Editor’s Note: Our member Donald Brown sent this card to me with a very complimentary note about of the SJPCC Newsletter. Thank you! Frank Forster, Jr. was the paymaster for the company located in Philadelphia. Every employee was required to wear a hat to work. Mr. Gehris, the vicepresident, started a Sunday School for less fortunate children in the Germantown section of the city. Every June, the company took the children to Riverview Beach Park* near Asbury Park, NJ. * SJPCC Newsletter readers will remember in the July 2003 issue a full-page article about Riverview Beach Park, which was located in Pennsville, NJ – completely across the state from Asbury Park. š › PoCax 2004 May 8, 2004 Saturday, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Double Tree Guest Suites 515 Fellowship Road North, Mt. Laurel, NJ. April 2004 South Jersey Post Card Club Newsletter Editor’s note: As many SJPCC members know, I am a member of a post card club in England: The Canal Card Collectors Circle. Last summer the club president, David Moore, had a question about a postcard showing a canal in Portage, Wisconsin. David suggested that since I live this side of the Atlantic, that I might be able to shed-some-light on the history of the area. As it turned out, it is a fairly interesting story. ______________________ Twenty-five Hundred Yards That Saved Six Thousand Miles by Ray Hahn A postcard from Portage, Wisconsin, is not a difficult challenge – all you do is call the public library and ask for the most informed historian employed there. People love to talk about their pet projects and mid-westerners are no exception. I explained that I was only in Portage once, some years ago, and even that time was just a drive through, so when I talked to Donna at the Public Library and Gil at the Canal Preservation Society this is what I learned. Today, Portage, Wisconsin, is a town of about ten thousand people. It is almost dead-center in southern Wisconsin and has always had a unique locational distinction. It is the one place in North America where the waterways of the northeast and the waterways of the southeast reside in closest proximity – a distance of less than a mile-and-a-half. Early on, it was discovered that the Fox river, which flows north into Lake Michigan at Green Bay, Wisconsin, had navigable water inland for at least a hundred and ten miles. On the west side of Wisconsin, along its boundary line with Iowa, the Wisconsin River, flows wide and deep into the Mississippi, just south of Prairie du Chien, the site of the famed Villa Louis, a trapping and fur trading center dating back to the late 1600s. And, the place where these two river systems came closest together was the village of Portage. The Ho-Chunk Indians called the place, "Wau-wau-onah," which means the land between the rivers where one shouldered a canoe, but the French named the area, "le portage," and that stuck and became Portage. The great significance of this mile-and-a-half stretch of land was that by using this connection, any one who needed to travel could go by water all the way from Page 2. the Gulf of Mexico to the mouth of the St. Lawrence River on the east coast of Canada. (To go to the other side of the village without using ‘le portage’ the traveler would be required to undertake the five thousand, nine hundred and ninety miles from the headwaters of the Fox River, through the Great Lakes, along the St. Lawrence River; then turn down south along the east coast of the United States, go around the Florida peninsula into the Gulf of Mexico, up the Mississippi River to the mouth of the Wisconsin River and then up the Wisconsin to the village of Portage. I guess shouldering a canoe for a mile-and-a-half was worth the effort.) Throughout the history of the Great Lakes region of the USA, great manufacturing centers developed along the shores of the lakes – primarily on the American side, but the great freighters and tankers bringing raw materials and taking manufactured goods to and from Michigan, Illinois and Wisconsin ports were forced to pass through more than six hundred miles of Canadian waters. Those miles in ‘foreign’ waters was thought unsatisfac tory and unnecessary, thus the overland corridor at Portage, between the two water-systems was given hard scrutiny as a possible solution and thought a sure remedy to cost-cutting the expensive shipping through Canada. In 1828, the U.S. military built a fort* here to protect the fur trade and fifty years later, a canal was cut to facilitate the growing commercial interests of the region. One such interest was lumber needed for a fast growing America. The railroads were soon pressed by the logging companies and tracks were laid from what was then the edge of the northern pinery to Portage and then from Portage the lumber was sent by ship to big cities south and east. The two lock Portage Canal runs just two blocks south of the town center. The Wisconsin River Lock and the Winnebago Lock were capable of handling 300,000 ton orecarriers and cargo vessels. The canal was in full operation until 1951 when the Army Corps of Engineers welded the Winnebago Lock gates closed and ordered the operation to be abandoned. The canal is now, with help from federal and state granting organizations, in a continuing state of renovation after being neglected for over five decades. Using both volunteer workers and professional contractors, over 1.6 million dollars in state and federal funds, are encumbered for the renovation. It is the goal of the 100 member Canal Preservation Society to bring the locks and canal-bed up to standards for use by recreational boaters, to run parallel to the canal both hiking and bicycle paths, and to complete an educational center that will be integrated into the Ice Age Trail Project – a state sponsored recreational project that traces the edge of the last glacier that covered Wisconsin. For some time there were members of the community who wanted the canal filled because they felt it contributed to an ever worsening mosquito problem, even though the canal has always served as a storm water drain for the entire village. With the founding of the Portage Canal Preservation Society and the demonstration of benefits that the restoration of the canal would bring to Portage, the two factions within the community have come to realize the need to preserve this important historical site. Attempts are currently underway to have the canal added to the federal list of historical places. * Fort Winnebago Surgeons Quarters, built in 1828, is the only remaining remnant of the fort. See picture, right. April 2004 South Jersey Post Card Club Newsletter Postcard Sunday – 100 Years Ago! This is a second in a series of reprinted articles that will appear in our newsletter. The originals appeared in the New York Times on the dates of our club meetings - 100 years ago. ______________________ Page 3. 2. The original bridge was a closed bridge (a tube), but fumes generated by steam locomotives created problems. Ice Threatens Thousands in Verdun Special to the New York Times. MONTREAL, April 10. – Three thousand people in the village of Verdun, adjoining the western limits of the City of Montreal, are tonight living in the upper stories of their homes, while several thousand more who reside in that section of the city known as Point St. Charles are also in danger. 3. The bridge was modified to an open-air bridge in 1898. The photo to the left shows the construction site and if you look closely you can see the new iron-work superstructure. Early today a large quantity of ice came down from Lake St. Louis, and jammed up against the Victoria Bridge. In just a few minutes the water began to rise, and in a short time had reached the top of the dike built after the last great flood, and which, up to the present time, has been sufficient protection. By 6 o’clock the water had reached a depth of six feet in the streets. Thankfully by 9 o’clock the water had begun to drop and was down to one foot. The danger, however, is by no means yet over, for there is more ice to come. The villages of La Prairie and Lachine are also threatened. š› 4. A modern view of Victoria Bridge (1960s). You can see; little has changed in sixty years. š› Scattergood Baines? Who was he? Attention Bridge Post Card Collectors The 100th Anniversary article above is a reminder that Mother Nature always holds the upper hand, and postcard makers will use almost anything to sell cards. When I tried to locate post cards for illustrations, I had no problem finding exactly what I wanted. Here are a few samples: 1. The Victoria Railroad Bridge (below) was a major engineering achievement in the nineteenth century. It was completed in 1859, marking the first time Montreal had a direct rail link to the United States and to Eastern Canada. This is a vintage real photo postcard, circa 1940s, featuring the cast of the Scattergood Baines Radio Program. Pictured are Scattergood, Hipp Brown, Pliny Pickett, Clara Potts, Ed Potts, Polly Nagle, and Squire Hooper. Back of card says: 'SCATTERGOOD BAINES RADIO PROGRAM. An interesting dramatization of events in the life of 'America's Best Know n Storekeeper' and his neighbors in the little town of Coldriver. Scattergood Baines, wise and friendly meddler in other people's affairs, is the key figure in many humorous, romantic and exciting episodes. The program is sponsored by the merchants who display and sell Wrigley's Spearmint Gum. April 2004 South Jersey Post Card Club Newsletter Page 4. An Answer to the Philadelphia Challenge The Iroquois Theatre Fire In the January issue, you were challenged to tell us about the Dock Street Fish Market. As it turns out no one has rendered a fish story, but none other than our own John McClintock has a tale of Dock Street. It follows Chicago, December 30, 1903. Fire, smoke and chaos caused by fear, killed over six hundred soles today at the new Iroquois Theatre on Randolph Street. Dear Editor: Your mention of Dock Street brought forth one memory of it. I was on Dock Street one morning in the 1950s when I saw three men helping a police officer get on his horse. I asked if he was injured. , “No,” one gentleman stated, “he has so many quarters in his coat pocket that he couldn’t climb into the saddle without help.” Naturally my next question was, “Well, where did he get so many quarters?” It was explained that the only parking allowed on Dock Street was for vendors to load and unload, thus anyone parking a car had to give the officer a quarter to avoid a parking ticket. As for the officer needing help mounting his horse, I must mention that he was very overweight to begin with. Thanks John for sharing this great story. š› The Linen Corner This linen era postcard caught my attention at the Carney’s Point show on the weekend of March 27th. At first I looked at the card and passed it over with the same distain that I have for chromes and moderns. Then I remembered, when I was in forth grade, my teacher, Mrs. Jones, took my class to Washington, DC, on a field trip. I can’t believe it, that was fifty years ago. I think the reason I remember the building on this postcard so vividly, is that when I first saw it, I thought it was the White House. Easy mistake for a ten year old. The building is of course the Headquarters of the American Red Cross. The founding of the American Red Cross in 1881 was due to the dedication of Clara Barton. A t the Visitors Center, located in this building on historic Red Cross Square at 1730 E Street, NW, Washington, D. C., you can see exhibits about Miss Barton and others involved in a hundred years of Red Cross history. š› Look for the March Club Meeting News & April Contest Topic at the bottom of Page 8. That’s the way the lead story in the Chi cago Sun-Times began on the morning of December 31, 1903. A grusome story of death and suffering that need not have happened. (This post card of the Iroquois Theatre is the only one I’ve ever found. It is also used as the only illustration of the theater on the website. Here’s the story as found on the Iroquois Theatre Memorial Website.) The Iroquois Theatre was a mere five weeks old that day in 1903. Located on Randolph Street between State and Dearborn, it was a magnificent palace of marble and mahogany, a "virtual temple of beauty," and had been advertised as "absolutely fireproof ." On the afternoon of December 30th, an audience of 1,900 was present to see Eddie Foy and Annabelle Whitford in the musical comedy "Mr. Blue Beard". The crowd consisted of mostly women and children. As the orchestra played "Let Us Swear by the Pale Moonlight" during the second act, a malfunctioning arc light ignited the muslin drapes. The fire quickly spread to the backdrops hanging above the stage, pieces of which then fell toward the performers. The actors fled; Eddie Foy soon returned and urged the audience to remain calm and in their seats. The crew tried to lower the asbestos curtain between the stage and the audience, but midway down, it stuck - the wooden tracks had jammed with fire debris . As the stage collapsed, the audience panicked and ran for the twenty-seven exits, only to find most of them locked. Those in front were trampled and crushed against the doors, which opened inwards. The whole tragic event happened in less that fifteen minutes, and by the time firefighters arrived, the auditorium was silent. Five hundred and seventy five were dead, and at least 25 more would die from their injuries. The Iroquois fire prompted new safety standards nationwide. Under the new laws, exits had to be clearly marked; be openable from the inside at all times; and all exit doors were required to open outwards. It was the worst theatre fire in the history of the United States, and had the highest number of deaths of any fire in Chicago, surpassing even the Great Chicago Fire of 1871. A coroner's inquest began within a week. Over two hundred witnesses testified. It was a national sensation, exposing unbelievable laxity on the part of the theater and city officials charged with public safety. Hearings revealed that 'complimentary' tickets motivated city inspectors to ignore the fire code and let the theater open without proper inspections. Not one of the injured survivors or victims' relatives ever collected a cent of damages. The only person to serve a jail term was a tavern keeper whose nearby saloon was used as a temporary morgue. He was convicted of robbing the dead. The Iroquois, which sustained only light interior damage, was repaired and reopened less than a year later as the Colonial Theater. In 1926, it was torn down to make way for the new “absolutely fireproof” Oriental Theatre. April 2004 South Jersey Post Card Club Newsletter Recently for sale on e-Bay, the World's Online Marketplace™ Page 5. Oh, those French. They think of everything. We know the French take post cards seriously, because we recently received an invitation to a postcard show on Sunday the 18th of July 2004. It is a whole show devoted to cat postcards. Many SJPCC club members know postcard dealer Francis Gresse. You see him at dozens of American show s throughout the year, most notably the Metro shows, the York show and the Havre de Grace shows. Suspicions are that this invitation will go unheeded, but Francis is asking as many Americans as possible to attend his Exposition on Cats in Fréjus, France, on July 18, 2004. Fréjus is in Provence and is close to St. Tropez and Cannes. If you would like a numbered postcard advertising the event you may contact Francis at: francisgresse@aol.com. š› It seems Ernest was visiting Medford, New Jersey , in September 1914. He mailed this card to Miss Grace Rice in Reading, Pennsylvania. His message reads: Finn's Point Rear Range Light, Pennsville N.J. Dear Miss Grace, They had what they call old home weak at Medford. Where the x is at Raymond’s feet is him helping to carry a float but you cannot tell him. Ernest Is it safe to assume that Ernest’s spelling was a bit weak? š› The only postcard of Cedarville, N. J.? In a sleepy corner of Cumberland County, New Jersey, between the towns of Fairton and Newport, the casual traveller will find the village of Cedarville, population: 793. Is this the only postcard ever made of Cedarville? Just for fun . . . here is a recent photo of the Finn’s Point Light. Maybe one of our club’s lighthouse collectors would venture a contribution telling the story of this unusual structure? April 2004 South Jersey Post Card Club Newsletter May 5, 1919 Page 6. Japanese Art on Postcards By Don T. Matter Volland. A name familiar to all postcard collectors is famous for many reasons, not the least of which is the enormously popular Raggedy Ann and Raggedy Andy series of books and dolls. But, there is a different side to the Volland Family history and that is the story I want to tell here. Born in Germany in 1874, Paul Frederick Volland was only 32 years old when he founded, in 1906, the P. F. Volland Company to publish greeting cards. Volland knew his business for he had apprenticed in Germany and had a keen eye for beauty in design and perfection in printing. Volland maintained an office in the Garland building along Chicago’s loop. Circa 1907 Volland published his first series of postcards, an artist named McFall, had created the American Beauties pictures showing elegantly dressed couples. These cards are rare and expensive. Business was good; greeting cards sustained the company, and soon both adult and childrens books began to appear with the Volland imprint. By 1908 Volland moved the factory to a nine-acre plot just south of Chicago and within their first ten years they acquired exclusive contracts with authors like Elizabeth Gordon, Elizabeth Brown Kirkland, Olive Beaupre Miller, and Miriam Clark Potter. Volland’s roster of illustrators included M. T. Ross, John Rae of Howard Pyle's Brandywine School, John Gee, Rachael Robinson Elmer, Miles K. Sater, and Maginel Wright Enright, the sister of architect Frank Lloyd Wright. By 1914 the Volland Company was pioneering new ideas in printing that included colorful paper and special handmade bindings. The idea of “gift” books originated in Paul Volland’s office, and the publishing of artist drawn postcards came to be when Rachael Elmer and Miles Sater were hired to create sets of postcards showing familiar scenes in New York and Chicago. (Sater’s drawing of the Field Museum is seen here.) Paul Volland was married and had three children. Gordon was born in 1899. He attended private school in Chicago and graduated with honors. Young Volland had hoped for a career as a Naval officer and joined the Navy. He enjoyed great success until family matters caused him to return to Chicago in 1919. Volland’s two daughters, Virginia, born in 1908, and Doris, born in 1911 were precocious girls; both attended college and, as they say, “they married well.” The Volland Family lived very comfortably from the Company. Paul was a member of the Chicago Athletic Club, the South Shore Country Club, and the Chicago Yacht Club. Mrs. Volland’s time was well spent doing charity work in the Chicago area. She especially liked doing volunteer work in the Chicago Arts Institute. Among Volland’s passions in life was cricket. He was an active member of the Forty Club – known mostly today only in exclusive circles and Europe. Then came May 5, 1919. On that day Paul Volland had gone to his office with several contracts pending and he wanted to “put-an-end” to a nagging problem that had started in his New York office nearly two years earlier. (In the Summer of 1917, Volland was visited by a Mrs. Vera Trepagnier of New Orleans. She had shown him a wonderful, 1780s , miniature painting of General George Washington by the colonial artist, John Turnbull. Volland was captivated by the picture and offered to make reproductions of it and for that privilege he offered to give Mrs. Trepagnier the royalties. Unfortunately, in one of the rare failures of Volland’s career, the 175 Washington reproductions did not sell. No profit was realized, and no royalties ensued.) By Susan Lane The Leonard A. Lauder collection of Japanese postcards has been presented to the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston where 300 choice postcards are presently on display in the exhibition, Art of the Japanese Postcard. The cards appearing in the exhibit were selected from 25,000 Japanese postcards donated to the museum in 2002 and catalogued. They are being shown for the first time. While there are many themes in Japanese postcards, the exhibition highlights the art of the late Meiji period (1900 to 1912), the Taisho era (1912-1926) and the early Showa era (after 1926) where Art Nouveau meets Art Deco and East meets West. The earliest of the cards are recognized as eastern in their style, incorporating the traditional scenes and techniques used by Japanese fine art painters and those using woodblock designs. However, with the end of isolationism and the exposure and inclusion of European standards in Japanese ideology, the Japanese Ministry encouraged artists to attend the 1900 Exposition in Paris and to study and share their work with their European counterparts. Postcards were noticed in travels through Germany and the Japanese artists took the small palate seriously and began exchanging handmade miniature works of art. Returning to Japan, two schools evolved: one in their traditional style, and the other with this new foreign influence. Like me, those who are not scholars of Japanese art are not familiar with the names of their artists of the day and the same for those unfamiliar with European works of this period. Of course there are differences in their works, but when you look at the postcards of European artists such as Kirchner, Meunier and Grasset and those of Japanese artists Kuniske and Hiromtsu, one can acknowledge and compare the influence of each culture on the other. Works done by some of the leading Japanese artists of the time would eventually become known as the foremost artwork in the Modern Japanese Art movement. The museum catalogue, Art of the Japanese Postcard, with essays by Anne Nishimura Morse, J. Thomas Rimer and Kendall H. Brown provides a rare look into the newly researched area of art and Japanese postcards . The exhibition runs through June 6, 2004. š› Volland had an appointment with Mrs. Trepagnier on May 5th, but the now 60 year old grandmother arrived at his office and introduced herself to Volland’s secretary as Mrs. Martin. Knowing no difference, the secretary allowed “Mrs. Martin” into Volland’s office and within sec onds a shot was heard. Forty-two year old, Paul Frederick Volland – shot in the heart – fell dead. When the police arrived they found Mrs. Trepagnier at the window, watching the crowds of people pass along the street several stories below. When questioned, her simple reply was, “Yes, I shot him.” She had expected to receive at least $5,000 from the contract she had signed with Volland in New York, but since the reproductions were a complete failure, the contract proved to be unfavorable to her. She told the police she needed the money for her grandson’s education. ---- Continued: See Volland: on page 7, column 2 ---- April 2004 South Jersey Post Card Club Newsletter The Page Seven Mystery Post Card Page 7. One of the “Strangest” Postcards Ever! The postcard below is truly unique. A guess would date the card from sometime in the 1930s. It tells the story of Sarah Bishop of North Salem, New York. (North Salem and South Salem, New York are in the Taconic Valley, near the boundary line with the state of Connecticut. In the most recent census, North Salem had a population of 930; South Salem has 12,300 inhabitants. I’m betting that few have ever heard of Sarah Bishop.) The card is currently featured on a poster being circulated in that part of New York advertising an outing to the unassuming abode of North Salem’s eighteenth century hermitress! This brisk spring walk is sponsored by the North Salem Free Public Library. Used post card. Mailed August 22, 1964. With a caption that reads: Music Pier and Bathing Beach, _____ _____, NJ You Can Win This Post Card! Be the first to correctly identify the location (city) of this south Jers ey view. Send your answer to the return address on this newsletter or email the editor at: ray@rayhahn.com . š› Desperately Seeking . . . Postcards! John McClintok – Is looking for postcards of Roy Knabenshue and his airship. If you can help him , write to: P. O. Box 1765 Manassas, VA 20108 Sarah Bishop’s Rock, North Salem, N.Y. Shortly after the Revolutionary War, a well dressed young woman appeared in South Salem who after a time made her home in the shelter of an overhanging rock on Long Pond, (Waccabuc) Mt. She enlarged the tiny cavity with stones and barks and lived here for years, coming down to friendly households in North and South Salem to exchange wild fruits and nuts for the necessities of life, but avoiding strangers and accepting charity only when indirectly offered. She attended the Presbyterian Church in South Salem, sometimes wearing a yellow satin dress which she had brought with her. It was rumored that from the mountain she could look across the Sound to her old home in L. I. the destruction of which by the war combined with an unfortunate love affair had unsettled her mind. After some years her brother traced her, and tried unsuccessfully to persuade her to return with him. She finally perished in a snow storm in 1809. Editor’s note: The caption is copied exactly as it appears on the card. I have no qualm with the grammar, the syntax nor the spelling, but if you’re standing on any mountain in South Salem, New York, you are at least 25 miles from the nearest point on Long Island, and at that you would have to look across parts of two states and the entire width of Long Island Sound. Ms. Bishop must have had extraordinary eye-sight or this is a bit of an exaggeration. Go figure. š› Volland: continued from previous page. This example of the postcards John is looking for has a caption: Copyright by F. W. Glazier, 1905 Roy Knabenshue, navigating his air-ship. In the years that followed, Gordon Volland headed the company founded by his father. In the early 1920s the firm moved to Joliet, Illinois, and hired a young writer and illustrator named Johnny Gruette. With Gruette’s help the Volland name and reputation spread worldwide because Gordon Volland had the foresight to agree when asked to publish a series of books called the Adventures of Raggedy Ann and Raggedy Andy. April 2004 South Jersey Post Card Club Newsletter Page 8. THE GREAT HANGAR, CAPE MAY, NJ by Don Pocher Having grown up in Cape May, I thought I knew just about all there was to know about our small town. Well, I found out, not all! At a show, a prospective customer as ked if I had any dirigible or airship post cards. I told him no but that I did have one of a dirigible hangar at Cape May, which I then showed to him. He then explained that this was not the original hangar but the enlarged one. That was all the information he had but it was enough to send me on a quest for more. The Cape May Hangar contract was awarded in August 1917 and the building was completed in 1918. The The Old Hanger at Cape May, New Jersey original dimensions were: length 250 feet; width 122 feet; and height 72.5 feet. The original purpose of the facility was to house small non-rigid blimps. However in 1921 it was decided to enlarge the hangar to house the ZR-2, almost 700 feet in length, which was under construction in England. In order to complete the enlargement, the hangar at Montauk, NY was dis assembled and that, with additional material, formed the basis of the new building: length 710 feet; width 156 feet; width inside 106 feet; and height 110 feet. Since the ZR-2 had a diameter of approximately 86 feet, it would not have left much room for handling, especially since the site was on an unprotected strip of land fronting on the Atlantic Ocean. The ZR-2 exploded and crashed in the English Channel, killing 44 crewmen, including Lt. Charles Little, a Cape May native. With the expected dirigible now out of the picture, the Great Airship Hanger, Naval Air Station, Cape May, N. J. building was used to house aircraft. In 1930 the hangar was leased to Anton Heinen for construction of his non-rigid “Air Yachts.” Salt air and neglect took their toll and the hangar was demolished in 1941. Approaching Cape May by car we children would shout “I see the Hangar, I see the Admiral (Hotel).” and we would know we were home. š› News from the March 14th Meeting ü ü ü ü ü ü President Judi Kearney presided with 14 members present. PoCax Update. Partial dealers list and exhibit information announced. Boards and sleeves will be on sale at the next meeting. Again, this year, the exhibit will be open and unlimited. The officers and trustees encourage every member to exhibit at least one board. Newsletter Update. The editor wants to thank all those who sent Get Well wishes and extends thanks for all the kind remarks made concerning the quality of the newsletter. Best card contest – topic was unusual transportation. Don Pocher with the card seen left. 50/50. Sal Fiorello. Contest Topic for April. Artist Signed; any era, any subject.