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How to beat the heat wave, 1939 NYWF style.
Image from the Queens Museum Archive.
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Happy Fourth of July from the Queens Museum and Archive staff!
Photo taken from East River fireworks show in Long Island City, 1995.
Image from the Jayne Mangino Collection @ The Queens Museum Archive.
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It's snowing outside and a decent sized show at the Queens Museum just came down last week involving the World's Fair and the legacy of Eastman Kodak. Collections material is awaiting to be put back but here are some scans of vintage photography books before they go back into their boxes. 
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Yesterday, Snowstorm Linus covered Flushing Meadow Park with another layer of wind swept snow and rain. Luckily the cold temperatures froze most of the slushy puddles making for a manageable walk to the Met Willets Point subway stop. Enjoy some of the photographs of the museum and the park covered in cool winter serenity.
All photographs taken by Richard J. Lee, Queens Museum archivist.
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A look at the World's Fair as it was being built in 1939.
Online news source, The Gothamist covers the NY World's Fair with archival photographs from 1939 Fair courtesy of the New York Public Library.
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Happy New Years from the Queens Museum Archives!
Snow blanketed New York City yesterday for the first time this year causing for a pretty sight of white between the usual Flushing Meadow Park markers.
Seventy-six years ago, snow also covered the 1939 New York World's Fair which reopened to the public the following April. Above is an image of the fairground in a calm white with the Trylon and Perisphere in the center and the drained Lagoon of Nations behind it. The sculpture of George Washington was encased in scaffolding to protect it from the elements.
Photograph taken by William Morris, Chief Photographer of the New York World's Fair, 1939
Photographic print in the Collection of the 1939-1940 New York World’s Fair at the Queens Museum
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Human Rights Day is observed by the international community every year on the 10th of December. Today we look back at the history of massive protests highlighting racial and economic inequality that were held at 1964 World’s Fair in New York City. 700 people from around the country came and had sit-ins at pavilions, saying that they wanted the passage of the civil rights bill, and minorities visibly working at the World's Fair.
Photographic print by Ron Galella in the Collection of the 1964-1965 New York World’s Fair at the Queens Museum.
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Transformation Tuesday
The Panorama of the City of New York was built by a team of more than 100 people working for the great architectural model makers Raymond Lester & Associates over the course of three years. In planning the model, Lester referred to aerial photographs, Sanborn fire insurance maps, and a range of other City material as the Panorama had to be accurate, with the initial contract demanding less than one percent margin of error between reality and the “world’s largest scale model.”
Come see the Panorama of the City of New York on long-term display at the Queens Museum.
Photographic print the Collection of the 1964-1965 New York World's Fair at the Queens Museum
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1939 was a busy year for New York Major Fiorello H. La Guardia. He opened the 1939 New York World's Fair, and on December 2, 1939, opened New York Municipal Airport No. 2 in Queens (later renamed Fiorello H. LaGuardia Field). Now solely named "LaGuardia Airport," it is the busiest airport in the United States without any non-stop service to Europe. Photographic print in the Collection of the 1939-1940 New York World’s Fair at the Queens Museum. 
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Happy Thanksgiving! We wish that you are having a festive holiday with your loved ones, and hope that you are all well fed tonight!
The 1939/1940 World's Fair had a diverse selection of restaurants at each pavilion. These are just a few of the menus that the Queens Museum holds in their collection.
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Harold Thomas Webber was 25 years old in 1939 when his twin passions for railroads and photography brought him to volunteer at the Railroad Pavilion. He was granted an unlimited two year admission pass, allowing him the freedom to roam the grounds undisturbed. This resulted in a breathtaking series of nighttime portraits of the structures of the fair, weeks before the final days of the last season.
Images: Photographic print of Harold Thomas Webber taken at the Railroad Pavilion, 1939 Harold Thomas Webber, Theme Center with Fountain, 1940
Come check out more images from the Collection at That Kodak Moment: Picturing the New York Fairs, an exhibition at the Queens Museum from Oct 11 2014-Feb 8 2015
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Happy Universal Children's Day! The World's Fair had many amusement areas for children, including this carousel in the Belgian Village at the 1964 fair.
Jerry Kean, Carousel, Belgian Village, 1964. Collection of the Queens Museum, gift of Jerry Kean.
Come check out more images from the Collection at That Kodak Moment: Picturing the New York Fairs, an exhibition at the Queens Museum from Oct 11 2014-Feb 8 2015.
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Peggy Anne Holmes and Gene Elliott read a sign marking the closing of the first season of the New York World's Fair on October 31st 1939.
Photographic print in the Collection at the Queens Museum. Come check out more images from the Collection at That Kodak Moment: Picturing the New York Fairs, an exhibition from Oct 11 2014-Feb 8 2015.
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Clipping from the Collection at the Queens Museum. On October 31, 1939 the New York World's Fair closed. It later reopened for the 1940 season on May 11th, 1940.
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Come check out original scrapbooks and images at That Kodak Moment: Picturing the New York Fairs, an exhibition at the Queens Museum from Oct 11 2014-Feb 8 2015.
Cover of album in the Collection on the 1939-1940 New York World's Fair at the Queens Museum. 
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Photo of the Westinghouse Time Capsule Exhibit at the 1939-1940 New York World's Fair from the Collection at the Queens Museum.
Come check out more images from the Collection at That Kodak Moment: Picturing the New York Fairs, an exhibition at the Queens Museum from Oct 11 2014-Feb 8 2015.
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Hall of Science at the 1964-1965 New York World's Fair. Come check out more images from the Queens Museum Collection at That Kodak Moment: Picturing the New York Fairs, an exhibition running from Oct 11, 2014 to Feb 8, 2015.
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