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Valued Member
United States
88 Posts |
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Rest in Peace
United States
4052 Posts |
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Quote: ... Note: These pages show only those postcards I have. Some series are complete, or nearly so. Some series are far from complete. Looks like a nice leg up on your (new) life's work  Cheers, /s/ ikeyPikey |
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Valued Member
United States
149 Posts |
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Valued Member
United States
88 Posts |
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Apparently, the Graf Zeppelin also made it to the fair, but there don't seem to be any postcards featuring it. |
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Rest in Peace
United States
4052 Posts |
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' Yes Perhaps, but there are newspaper articles. In fact, there is an embarrassment of riches: the Graf Zeppelin seems to appear, for one reason or another, most every day. The visit took place on/about Friday 27 October 1933, but that day's Chicago Tribune is behind a paywall, albeit one with a 7-day free trial: https://chicagotribune.newspapers.com/ ... I found this interface chunky, and the search function a little too literal I had better luck at the New York Times, where I am on the right side of the paywall, and the search function is more supple. Cheers, /s/ ikeyPikey   |
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| Edited by ikeyPikey - 04/10/2019 08:59 am |
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Valued Member
United States
88 Posts |
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I've seen some covers with special cachets honoring the zeppelin's visit, with 3-cent Century of Progress stamps, so they weren't flown, just mailed domestically. |
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Valued Member
United States
88 Posts |
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Interesting info about the Zeppelin's visit to Chicago: "While Graf Zeppelin's appearance was one of the highlights of the Chicago Fair, the swastika-emblazoned ship, which was viewed as a symbol of the new government in Berlin, triggered strong political responses from both supporters and opponents of Hitler's regime, especially among German-Americans. The political controversy muted the enthusiasm that Americans had previously displayed toward the German ship during its earlier visits, and when Eckener took Graf Zeppelin on a aerial circuit around Chicago to show his ship to the residents of the city, he was careful to to fly a clockwise pattern so that Chicagoans would see only the tricolor German flag on the starboard fin, and not the swastika flag painted on the port fin under the new regulations issued by the German Air Ministry." I found this here: https://www.airships.net/lz127-graf...lin/history/ |
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Pillar Of The Community
United States
1430 Posts |
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Very interesting! I'm reminded of the 1937 movie, Charlie Chan at the Olympics, where the stock footage of the Hindenburg was retouched to obliterate the swastikas on its tail fins. |
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| Edited by erilaz - 04/14/2019 3:56 pm |
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Valued Member
United States
88 Posts |
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I found this also interesting: "The Zeppelin Company (Luftshiffbau Zeppelin G.m.b.H.) agreed to fly to Chicago and the fair if the U.S. Post Office Department issued a special postage stamp to help offset the expenses of the flight. As a result, 42˝ cents of the fifty cents went to the Zeppelin Company." Quoted From: https://postalmuseum.si.edu/collect...33-fair.html |
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Valued Member
United States
42 Posts |
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Back from the dead, but it really is on topic. A fun, postally used Burlington Route postcard from the 1933 worlds fair. With Century of Progress stamp For those who can't read sideways and are just dying to know what G. said to Mr D - basically it is a very interesting exhibit and a perfect day.   |
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| Edited by Junius_Morgan - 03/31/2026 2:04 pm |
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Pillar Of The Community
United States
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Replies: 26 / Views: 6,108 |
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