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The Bowery Boys: New York City History

#288 The World of Tomorrow: The New York World's Fair of 1939

The Bowery Boys: New York City History

Tom Meyers

Places & Travel, History, Documentary, Society & Culture

4.73.9K Ratings

🗓️ 19 April 2019

⏱️ 65 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

EPISODE 288: Flushing Meadows-Corona Park, the fourth largest park in New York City and the pride of northern Queens, has twice been the gateway to the future. Two world's fairs have been held here, twenty-five years apart, both carefully guided by power broker Robert Moses. In this episode, we highlight the story of the first fair, held in 1939 and 1940, a visionary festival of patriotism and technological progress that earnestly sold a narrow view of American middle-class aspirations. It was the World of Tomorrow! (Never mind the protests or the fact that many of the venues were incomplete.) A kitschy campus of themed zones and wacky architectural wonders, the fair provided visitors with speculative ideas of the future, governed by clean suburban landscapes, space-age appliances and flirtatious smoking robots.  The fair was a post-Depression excuse for corporations to rewrite the American lifestyle, introducing new inventions (television) and attractive new products (automobiles, refrigerators), all presented in dazzling venues along gleaming flag-lined avenues and courtyards. But the year was 1939 and the world of tomorrow could not keep out the world of today. The Hall of Nations almost immediately bore evidence of the mounting war in Europe. Visitors who didn't fit the white middle-American profile being sold at the fair found themselves excluded from the "future" it was trying to sell.  And then, in July of 1940, there was a dreadful tragedy at the British Pavilion that proved the World of Tomorrow was still very much a part of the world of today. Support the show: https://www.patreon.com/boweryboys

Transcript

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0:00.0

The Bowry Boys Episode 288, the world of tomorrow, the New York World's Fair of 1939.

0:07.8

Hey, it's the Bowry Boys.

0:09.4

Hey.

0:10.6

Support for the Bowry Boys is provided by our listeners.

0:14.1

Join us for as little as $1 a month by visiting patreon.com slash Bowry Boys.

0:23.3

Hi there, welcome to the Bowry Boys. This is Greg Young.

0:25.9

And this is Tom Myers.

0:27.6

And today we are journeying into the future to Queens in 1939.

0:33.8

We're headed out for an afternoon of action packed and absurd and perhaps even somewhat

0:39.2

disturbing fun at the world's fair of 1939.

0:43.6

This was an event that was planned in the depths of the Depression and it opened as tensions were

0:50.4

mounting on the eve of World War II. However, this two-year event that was hosted out in

0:57.1

Flushing Meadows Queens celebrated the future, the world of tomorrow, especially in terms of

1:04.0

scientific development.

1:06.0

Which shouldn't be surprising as much of the fair was underwritten and supported by large

1:11.5

corporations and manufacturers.

1:14.4

They wanted to get their message out that the world of tomorrow was bright, it was exciting,

1:20.4

and it was for sale.

1:22.0

This month we'll be celebrating the 80th anniversary of the opening of that fair at Flushing Meadows

1:26.8

Corona Park in Northern Queens. And in this show, we'll be walking through pavilions and venues

1:32.9

celebrating optimism of the most American corporate kind.

1:37.7

Through this kitschy park that was designed with such earnestness that borrowed heavily from

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