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Westinghouse Time Capsules


Cupaloy is both the name for the material used to construct the 1939 New York World's Fair time capsule, as well as the name given by Westinghouse of the time capsule itself that was part of their pavilion exhibit. It is an alloy made of 99.4% copper, 0.5% chromium, and 0.1% silver. Westinghouse claims it has the same strength of mild steel and would very likely resist most corrosion over thousands of years. [1]

Overview

The time capsule is bullet-shaped, measures 90 inches, and weights 800 pounds. The contents for the time capsule were sealed inside an insulated airtight glass envelope with a diameter of six and a half inches. Its contents were recorded in a Book of Record of the Time Capsule of Cupaloy deemed capable of resisting the effects of time for five thousand years, preserving an account of universal achievements, embedded in the grounds of the New York World's Fair 1939.

1939 Time Capsule Cupaloy

Among the contents put inside were copies of Life Magazine, a kewpie doll, a dollar in change, a pack of Camel cigarettes, a 15-minute RKO Pathe Pictures newsreel, and millions of pages of text put on microfilm rolls which included a Sears Roebuck catalog, dictionaries, and almanacs. The seeds contained in the time capsule (wheat, corn, oats, tobacco, cotton, flax, rice, soy beans, alfalfa, sugar beets, carrots and barley, all sealed in glass tubes) are probably the only ones on earth never exposed to radiation from nuclear explosions.

This first modern time capsule was followed in 1965 by an undated version at the same site. The second time capsule is located 10 feet to the north of the original 1939 time capsule. Both time capsules are buried 50 feet below Flushing Meadows Park. This was the site of both the 1939 World's Fair and 1965 World's Fairs. These cupaloy time capsules are meant to be opened at the same time in the year 6939 AD, some 5000 years in the fuure!

A visitor to the Westinghouse pavilion exhibit of the 1964 New York World's Fair was asked to sign a guest book which was photographed onto microfilm and put into the time capsule. The signer received a tin pin, about the size of a fifty-cent piece, that said, My name is in the Westinghouse Time Capsule for the next 5000 years. Their "Message In A Bottle" was then put into the Pyrex glass interior shell of the time capsule for posterity.

Cupaloy cut-away

The items that were selected to be put inside were based upon how well they chronicled 20th Century life.[2] In packaging the contents under the direction of representatives of the United States Bureau of Standards each object was examined to determine whether it could be expected to last 5,000 years.[3] The five main categories of the objects put into the time capsule were:

Cupaloy contents
Small Articles of Common Use
Textiles and Materials
Miscellaneous Items
Essay in Microfilm
Newsreel

Some of the actual 35 small everyday physical items placed inside the time capsule were a fountain pen and an alphabet block set. It also had 75 types of fabrics, metals, plastics and seeds. Modern literature, contemporary art, and news events of the twentieth century on microfilm were all placed inside. The hope is that in 5,000 years a person will stumble across a key to the time capsules. Maybe someone will find it in a museum, monastery, or library where a copy of the over 3000 copies of the "Book of Record" was placed worldwide in 1938. They were printed on permanent paper with special ink.

The latitude and longitude corordinaces of the capsule's burying place in New York was recorded in the Book of Record as 40°44′34.089″N 73°50′43.842″W / 40.74280250°N 73.84551167°W / 40.74280250; -73.84551167. A small stone plaque marks the position where both these time capsules are buried at a depth of 50 feet below the surface with an electromatic signal emanating from it.[4]

The Book of Record of the Time Capsule requests that its contents be translated into new languages as they develop. In it is instructions for using special instruments to locate both the time capsules electromagnetically. It also contains an ingenious key devised by Dr. John P. Harrington of the Smithsonian Institution to help future archaeologists should knowledge of the English language be lost.[5] The Book of Record also contains written messages from three important men of the time: Albert Einstein, Robert Millikan and Thomas Mann.

Footnotes

Cupaloy being lowered to final resting place
  1. ^ The 1939 Westinghouse Time Capsule
  2. ^ Complete Contents List of 1939 Time Capsule
  3. ^ The Story of the Westinghouse Time Capsule
  4. ^ Westinghouse Electric Corporation. Book of record of the time capsule of 'Cupaloy', 1939 New York World's Fair. OCLC 1447704.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  5. ^ The Story of the Westinghouse Time Capsule 1939 New York World's Fair

See Also

Printed Material References

  • William Jarvis (2002). Time Capsules: A Cultural History. ISBN 0786412615
  • Official Souvenir Book. New York World's Fair 1964/1965. Time Life, Inc. 1964.
  • Official Guide, New York World's Fair 1964/1965. Time-Life Books. Time Life, Inc. 1964.
  • Official Guide, New York World's Fair 1965. All New for 1965. Time-Life Books. Time Life, Inc. 1965.
  • Suzanne Hilton, Here Today and Gone Tomorrow. The Story of World's Fairs and Expositions. Westminster Press Books. 1978
  • John Peabody Harrington, The Book of Record of the Time Capsule 1939, Manuscript 3494, Smithsonian Institution National Anthropological Archives.