All Media Historical Markers Newsreels Old Radio Shows Postcards Silent Films Agriculture & Foods American, Misc. Art & Music Business & Econ City Histories Comm, Advertising Comm, Other Comm, Television Company Histories Disasters Energy Engineering Entertainment Exploration Local Histories Manufacturing Medicine Mining Native Culture Organizations Sports Technology Trans, Air & Space Trans, Auto Trans, Canals Trans, Misc Trans, Railroads War, Misc War, WWII
|
 |
Note: There are TWO programs on this clip. The first is RCA announcement that theyve developed stereophonic recording on records, and the second that theyve created the forerunner of the cassette tape.
Tags:
RCA
stereo
records
tape
1958
Added: 26th September 2007
Views: 152
Rating: 
Posted By: prelingerfan |

|
 |
"New York to London in the same time it takes to watch a baseball double-header." Pan Am celebrates the takeoff of paper "Flight 1000" in 1954. These mock flights were in anticipation of the day when real jets would make the trip over the Atlantic. In 1958 the Boeing 707 finally made the trip possible.
Tags:
pan
am
flight
1000
boeing
707
1958
Added: 11th November 2007
Views: 248
Rating: 
Posted By: prelingerfan |

|
 |
Before there was refrigeration, salt was important for its food-preservation qualities. In America's early years, Syracuse in Central New York State - aka "Salt City" - was the nation's largest producer of salt. The postcard above shows rows of shallow evaporating pans. The sloped covers on the extreme left and right of this picture would be slid to cover the pans if it rained. See salt - very possibly from Syracuse - being used at the Fulton Fish Market in NYC in the mid-thirties at the 3:18 mark on Manhattan Waterfront. Also see the film White Wonder for an overview of the salt industry today (modern evaporating at 5:17).

(click image)
|
Salt City and The Erie Canal
The original Erie Canal was deliberately routed to pass through what today is Syracuse, NY because of the large salt deposits that were already being harvested there by 1825 when the canal was completed. Syracuse's salt trade benefitted from the canal for two reasons: Low transportation costs, and the Erie made it more profitable for farmers all along the canal corridor to raise hogs than to grow wheat, which had been their principal crop before the canal was built. Pork required large amounts of salt for preservation. See video
|
Tags:
salt
shed
evaporator
syracuse
1905
Added: 1st December 2007
Views: 373
Rating: 
Posted By: USPSam |

|
 |
Tags:
Added: 11th April 2008
Views: 86
Rating: 
Posted By: Admin |

|
|