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GM Heritage Center Post #4

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    Posted 9 years ago

    pw-collector
    (297 items)

    This is one of the GM Futurliners used in GM's Parade of Progress tours that began at the 1939 New York World's Fair and lasted until the 1956 parade was cancelled.
    This one I have posted before, but deleted it with hundreds of other post.
    I think it deserves another post.

    From the GM Heritage Center site:
    The General Motors "Parade of Progress" was a large, multi-faceted road show that began touring across America in 1936. It represented an investment of millions of dollars and thousands of man hours. To a country reeling from first depression and then war, it brought the future to hundreds of small towns and rural communities. Its stage show and animated exhibits presented a dramatic picture of the cavalcade of American progress, telling how scientific research and engineering helped improve lives. A jet engine, radar, diesel-electric power, television, an electric ping-pong game with stereo sound, and a microwave oven were shown to amazed audiences.

    The Parade was staged by a group of 57 men, most of them young, single, and recent college graduates. They met the public, lectured at the exhibits, and ran the stage show. They also drove the vehicles, put the Aerodome tent up, tore it down, and did anything necessary to make the big show run smoothly.

    The Parade of Progress stemmed from an idea by Charles Kettering, famed inventor and GM Research Director, who wanted to bring the story of industry and research to people throughout the country. It was originally built around eight streamlined vans, accompanied by all of GM's latest new cars. The original Parade started touring the country in 1936. The second Parade was launched from the 1939 New York World's Fair and featured 12 purpose-built Futurliners, a giant 152-foot by 80-foot silver exoskeleton Aerodome tent, 26 major exhibits and over 44 vehicles. With the outbreak World war II the tour ended: It had visited 251 towns and small cities in North America, reaching more than 12 ? million people. The idea was revived in again 1953, but in 1956 the third and final Parade was cancelled.
    The Futurliners were specially built to carry animated exhibits. On the show lot, their 16-foot side panels folded out to form marquees and stage platforms. Lighting towers pushed up from their tops and they had their own public address systems. The GM Heritage Center has the only surviving Parade of Progress Futurliner display: "Our American Crossroads". It is a 10-minute mechanically animated display that covers 50 years as small town America is transformed by the automobile.

    Thanks for looking,
    Dave

    Comments

    1. pw-collector pw-collector, 9 years ago
      Thanks for the appreciation:
      rniederman
      aghcollect
      welzebub
    2. kiwipaul kiwipaul, 9 years ago
      Cool - Reminds me of the DecoLiner Barry Weiss drove in one of the episodes of Storage Wars: http://starcasm.net/archives/166243
    3. fortapache fortapache, 9 years ago
      The GM Futureliners are great. I recall the first post. Do you know which of the futureliners this is? I posted #5 which was a parts donor for #8 and #10 and is now a car hauler.

      http://www.collectorsweekly.com/stories/122724-gm-futureliner-5

    4. pw-collector pw-collector, 9 years ago
      Thanks kiwipaul for the appreciation.
    5. pw-collector pw-collector, 9 years ago
      fortapache,
      I do not know what number this one is. Sorry.
      Thanks for the appreciation again.
    6. pw-collector pw-collector, 9 years ago
      Thanks for the appreciation:
      kyratango
      vetraio50
      mikelv85
      Vintagefran
      GeodeJem
      BB2
      walksoftly
      Manikin
    7. pw-collector pw-collector, 9 years ago
      nutsabotas6, I agree and am guilty of doing it. Deleting also caused lost a lot of good information on particular items that I did not record elsewhere.
      Thanks for the comment and appreciation.
      Dave
    8. pw-collector pw-collector, 9 years ago
      Thanks for the appreciation:
      Trey
      RonM
    9. pw-collector pw-collector, 9 years ago
      Thanks ttomtucker for the appreciation.
    10. pw-collector pw-collector, 9 years ago
      Thanks Coke 1234 for the appreciation.
    11. pw-collector pw-collector, 9 years ago
      Thanks again mikelv85 for the appreciation.
    12. pw-collector pw-collector, 9 years ago
      Thanks for the appreciation:
      Rustfarm
      antiquerose
    13. pw-collector pw-collector, 9 years ago
      Thanks for the appreciation:
      ttomtucker
      Chadden
    14. pw-collector pw-collector, 9 years ago
      Thanks for the appreciation:
      Stammy
      ChadB
      surfdub66
    15. pw-collector pw-collector, 9 years ago
      Thanks Coke1234 for the appreciation.
    16. pw-collector pw-collector, 9 years ago
      Thanks for the appreciation:
      Karolina
      Signoholic
      Rattletrap
    17. pw-collector pw-collector, 9 years ago
      Thanks Kerry for the appreciation.
    18. pw-collector pw-collector, 9 years ago
      Thanks for the appreciation:
      gargoylecollector
      skio42
    19. pw-collector pw-collector, 9 years ago
      Thanks inky for the appreciation.
    20. pw-collector pw-collector, 8 years ago
      Thanks for the appreciation:
      pops52
      packrat-place
    21. Walt_league, 8 years ago
      Love it!
      it was eventually replaced by the Oscar Meyer Weiner-mobile.
      Just joking, Great piece of automotive history.
    22. Padit, 7 years ago
      Great Post, brought back a time when I first saw one of those back in the 1980's or possibly the early 1990's. It was sitting derelict on a lot located in the area of Ventura Blvd, in the area of Sherman Oaks/Studio City area of California. If I recall correctly, it was no longer was red, but was silver or gray primer in place of that and in poor condition. I went back at a later time as I sometimes worked in that are, but it was gone and I felt someone was going to restore it. It left an impression on me. Pleased to have seen it.
    23. pw-collector pw-collector, 7 years ago
      Thanks for the appreciation:
      MrSkin
      Celiene
      Rattletrap
      Indianabottlecollector
      MALKEY
      Walt_league
      Padit
      ttomtucker
      MacDaddyRico

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