-40%

1915 San Francisco Newspaper Pages - Panama Pacific Exposition Edison Day

$ 10.55

Availability: 86 in stock
  • All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted
  • Year: 1915
  • Condition: Please look at the listing photos for additional condition details.
  • Country/Region of Manufacture: United States
  • World Fair: 1915 San Francisco PPIE
  • Theme: World’s Fairs
  • Modified Item: No

    Description

    Available are two rare pages that came from an October 20, 1915 San Francisco Call and Post newspaper. The pages contain news with great pictures celebrating Thomas Edison's achievements and the 36th anniversary of the invention of the incandescent light bulb at the international Panama Pacific Exposition.
    The two friends (Thomas Edison and Henry Ford) traveled west with their families in Ford’s private rail car to enjoy the Exposition’s Edison Day, on October 21. Upon arrival, they were swept up in a series of events celebrating Edison’s achievements. General Electric had promoted the event, celebrating the thirty sixth anniversary of the incandescent electric light with an illustration titled “Edison’s Dream Come True.” It depicted Edison gazing through a window onto a cityscape made brilliant by his invention. On the night after he arrived, San Franciscans were asked to turn on all their electric lights in honor of the “Wizard of Menlo Park.” A photograph of Edison taken that night, while no doubt partially staged, was a remarkable match to the illustration.
    At a banquet of telegraph operators honoring Edison, wires strung between miniature telegraph poles connected the tables, and the “speeches” were made via Morse code. M. H. de Young, a “key man” in his youth, clicked out a description of installing the first electric lights in San Francisco—at his newspaper, the Chronicle—in 1878. Edison passed over all the food that evening except apple pie and milk, of which he was famously fond.
    Before his public appearance on Edison Day, he and Ford attended a luncheon at which each guest received a full-sized model of the first successful incandescent bulb. At the Inside Inn, Ford and Edison “were the center of throngs that crowded about and shook the hands of the distinguished guests in a thoroughly American, democratic manner.” That night Edison attended a dinner cooked entirely by electricity in the Home Electrical exhibit and watched illuminations that featured his likeness executed in fireworks.
    Mutual friend and industrialist Harvey Firestone joined the two men in San Francisco. Mr. and Mrs. Edison took a jaunt through the city with Firestone in an open, chauffeur-driven touring car. After their visit to the Fair, Ford and Edison went north to visit agricultural scientist Luther Burbank, the “plant wizard,” at his home in Santa Rosa, then spent several days touring the Bay Area before traveling to San Diego and the Panama-California Exposition. While both Edison and Burbank had “special days” at the Fair, Ford politely but firmly declined the honor.
    Condition
    This newspaper pages are in good condition. However, the pages should be treated as delicate and handled with care upon receipt. This newspaper pages originally came from a bound library volume and exhibits typical chipping and paper loss on the edges.
    Domestic Shipping
    The pages will be placed in a clear plastics sleeve and gently rolled and inserted into a sturdy cardboard tube. Single newspaper pages can be shipped via First Class Mail. Please specifiy if expidited Priority Mail is desired. I will combine shipping but additional newspaper pages will require Priority Mail shipping due to weight.
    International Shipping
    I can ship single pages using First Class International Postage. Any additional pages will require Priority Mail International shipping.
    Ebay Store
    : Newspaper Time Capsule
    I am a long time eBay seller with 100% Postitive feedback on over 5000+ transactions. I am dedicating this store to vintage newspapers and newspaper pages. My store will primarily carry vintage newspaper sports pages. I also offer pages that contain historical events, classic and hard to find ads, comics and unusual general interest stories.