INDUSTRY ON PARADE DEBARKING TREES CORNING GLASS EASTMAN KODAK FACTORY ROCHESTER NY 17274

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PeriscopeFilm

PeriscopeFilm

Күн бұрын

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“Industry On Parade was a television series created by the National Association of Manufacturers (NAM) from 1950-1960. The series consisted of weekly episodes that highlighted American manufacturing and business. Hundreds of companies and products were documented during the [program’s] decade-long run.”
This film is a collection of three episodes from the series (32, 245, 299). In the first episode, viewers see how logs are debarked using a high-pressure water sprayer made by Worthington Pump & Machinery Corporation of Harrison, NJ. Men use axes to chop down trees. An operator adjusts jet nozzles and moves a log through the chamber, where water blasts the log and rips off the bark (01:55). A bare log moves out of the chamber. The episode shows New York’s 5th Avenue (04:10) and the storefront of Steuben Glass. In Corning, NY, a man shapes molten glass (04:45). A glob of glass is used for the bulb of the piece. The craftsman blows and shapes the glass bowl. The glass maker cuts off excess glass (07:17). Viewers see the final shape of the bowl. Next, viewers see the Houston, TX yard of Commercial Metal Company (08:44). A crane with a powerful magnet moves a piece of pipe in the yard. Another crane moves the steel frame of a car to a hydraulic press. Inside the plant, men sort metals (10:18). A man salvages mercury from a thermometer. The final segment is on the Thillens, Inc. mobile check cashing service in Chicago, IL. Armored cars leave the parking lot (11:54). An employee wheels a cash box into Electrical Small Motors Company (12:22), where he cashes checks for employees on the assembly floor. Workers stand outside of a truck to cash their checks (13:10).
In Episode 245, a Northwest Orient Airlines Stratocruiser is moved out of hanger at NY International Airport (14:17). The pilot and copilot meet to review flight plan before takeoff. The flight engineer visually inspects the exterior of the aircraft. Luggage is loaded onto the plane (16:13). The pilot and copilot run through the safety check in the cockpit. Passengers walk out to the plane and climb up the stairs to board the plane. The large ship taxis to the end of the runway and takes off (17:42). Next, viewers see how price tags and fasteners for plastic packaging bags are made at Kwik-Lok Corporation in Yakima, WA. At the plant, rolls of paper are stamped into tags (18:50). A man watches a machine as it prints labels. A machine glues the labels and tags together. At the Pacific Fruit and Produce Company (20:19), women bag apples then apply the Kwik-Loks label tags to the bags of fruit. A tank car of anhydrous ammonia arrives at Southeastern Liquid Fertilizer Company’s distributing center in Albany, GA (21:05). Tractors with plastic tanks of fertilizer drive on a filed and fertilize the soil. Lastly, viewers see the combination boat and auto trailer invented by Dwight Johnson (23:34). A man and woman climb out of their car and unhook the roof the trailer, which is a boat. The woman pulls a fabric roof over the trailer. At the company’s manufacturing plant in Medford, OR, men assemble the units (24:50). A man assembles the kitchen section. Men slide a boat onto the top of the trailer.
The episode ends with the man motoring on water while his wife cooks at the trailer.
In episode 299, viewers are taken to the factory of Eastman Kodak in Rochester, NY. Employees get into their lint-free nylon work clothes prior to manufacturing x-ray film. A man studies a roll of film under a white light for imperfections (28:48). A sliver of emulsion is studied under a magnifying glass. Sheets are cut into smaller pieces; women inspect each emulsion sheet. The film shows the employees eating in the company’s dining room.
A man sprays paint at an autobody shop (31:57), using infrared lights from Fostoria Pressed Steel Corporation. At the company’s plant, a man presses a diamond reflector lamp. Viewers see other uses for infrared ovens, including heating metal parts (33:41) and baking frozen meat pies (34:12). Next, the episode shows the production of tufted carpet at E.T. Barwick Mills’ factory in Lafayette, GA. Machines tuft fabric (34:50), and a patterned drum is used to create a design in tufted carpets. Women inspect carpets and then fold the carpets up for shipping. In the episode’s final segment, viewers see elderly women making toys at the Childhood Interests, Inc. factory in Roselle Park, NJ (37:32). A woman assembles a xylophone. Employees celebrate a co-worker’s 80th birthday. A grandma shows her granddaughter a toy xylophone.
This film is part of the Periscope Film LLC archive, one of the largest historic military, transportation, and aviation stock footage collections in the USA. Entirely film backed, this material is available for licensing in 24p HD, 2k and 4k. For more information visit www.PeriscopeFi...

Пікірлер: 20
@usmale4915
@usmale4915 4 жыл бұрын
Thank you for sharing such informative videos'1 It's greatly appreciated!
@jaminova_1969
@jaminova_1969 3 жыл бұрын
The bark fuels the plant. Ingenious!
@artyzinn7725
@artyzinn7725 4 жыл бұрын
Industry on Parade should get a folder all its own. I was curious and found a wikipedia entry. Ran for 10 years, with 500 episodes, from 1950-60. It probably grabs the same people who like "How Its Made" which ran, or is running, just as long. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Industry_on_Parade
@fromthesidelines
@fromthesidelines 3 жыл бұрын
Actually, it continued through the mid-1960's, with color episodes added to the mix.
@chrisfreemesser5707
@chrisfreemesser5707 4 жыл бұрын
11:00 Guy is handing mercury without any safety gear at all :O Thanks for posting this...I live in the hometown of Kodak and I drive past the building shown at 27:51 regularly. Looks a little bit different now but it's still Kodak.
@fryode
@fryode Жыл бұрын
The x-ray film segment made me realize how much has changed. You used to be absolutely bombarded with x-rays to take an image in the past. I used to build digital x-ray panels for Varian and those are insanely sensitive in comparison. You don't have to get lit up with radiation like in the past, plus you get the image results immediately and can email the files instead of sending film. Resolution isn't as good, but it certainly narrows down any areas of interest for more detailed shots.
@marctronixx
@marctronixx 4 жыл бұрын
@6:30 - The "Glory Hole"..
@StonesAndSand
@StonesAndSand 3 жыл бұрын
I came looking specifically for this comment. I'm surprised to find that it was the very last one.
@MarioMastar
@MarioMastar 2 ай бұрын
I'm sure it's not called that anymore! XD
@mr.scruffydog4961
@mr.scruffydog4961 4 жыл бұрын
I grew up near Corning, NY, and Steuben Glass. Watched the glass blowers many times. The old joke told around them was "Never inhale".
@feltongailey8987
@feltongailey8987 5 ай бұрын
Dude was spraying that car, in a non-ventilated building, with no respirator. I'm surprised he wasn't smoking a cigarette while he was doing it. That, not to mention, that was probably oil-based paint. Pretty hazardous to your health.
@MarioMastar
@MarioMastar 2 ай бұрын
As impressive as the innovations are, the attitudes of the time seem to reflect a callous disregard for individuals. They literally brag about a handicap organization getting labor out of those who lost limbs in the war "for profit". Pleasure to know all the grand and great grand parents who fought for our country and got hurt can be exploited to make someone who paid to dodge the draft can line his pockets....
@OldsVistaCruiser
@OldsVistaCruiser 2 жыл бұрын
We now have machines on site that cut the tree down in seconds, and remove the branches and bark.
@tom7601
@tom7601 4 жыл бұрын
Still haven't "cured" the common cold.
@tom7601
@tom7601 3 жыл бұрын
George Campbell: True. There are thousands of mutations, so when you catch a cold, you are immune to that strain of virus but there are thousands of mutations waiting...
@jaredkinneyjr
@jaredkinneyjr 2 жыл бұрын
cuz its incurable. its not a virus, its natural body discretion of toxins
@fryode
@fryode Жыл бұрын
With new technologies allowing trivial diseases to be put in the cross hairs, even a fast-spreading, fast-mutating inconvenience like The Common Cold might well be eliminated in the near future if our immune systems can be taught to snipe it quickly enough. Right now it's like picking a lock. If there's a way to drop a train on any Rhinovirus the moment it shows up, that's a powerful tool to have.
@fryode
@fryode Жыл бұрын
That trailer with the boat roof was a clever idea. It looks really cool, too. I wonder if any are still around?
@volvo09
@volvo09 4 жыл бұрын
I love this!
@MrWolfTickets
@MrWolfTickets 2 жыл бұрын
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