Publication information |
Source: Semi-Weekly Messenger Source type: newspaper Document type: article Document title: “A New Business” Author(s): anonymous City of publication: Wilmington, North Carolina Date of publication: 24 October 1902 Volume number: 35 Issue number: 82 Pagination: 5 |
Citation |
“A New Business.” Semi-Weekly Messenger 24 Oct. 1902 v35n82: p. 5. |
Transcription |
full text |
Keywords |
Pan-American Exposition (closure and related matters); Frank Harris (public statements); Temple of Music; Pan-American Exposition (emergency hospital); Chicago House Wrecking Company. |
Named persons |
Frank C. Bostock; Frank Harris; William McKinley. |
Document |
A New Business
A Company Which Speculates in Old Exposition Buildings.
By January 1 the last vestige of the Pan-American
Exposition will have been removed, according to the calculations of the Chicago
Wrecking Company, the firm engaged in the demolition and disposal of the buildings.
Owing to litigation instituted by the creditors of the exposition company early
in the year and the scarcity of labor completion of the work has been considerably
delayed. From thirty to fifty carloads of lumber, structural iron, piping and
other material are being shipped every day from the grounds and about two-thirds
of the quantity remaining has been sold in different parts of the United States.
“The Exposition buildings,” said Superintendent
Harris, of the wrecking company, “are being scattered to the four corners of
the country and some of the material has been shipped to the Bermuda Islands.
Most of the lumber, of which more than 33,000,000 feet were used in the Fair,
has been disposed of to farmers in nearly every state for barns. As far West
as the Dakotas and Nebraska farm buildings are being erected from Pan-American
material.
“The floor of the Temple of Music, where President
McKinley was shot was bought by an Indiana man and is being used in some kind
of a ware house [sic]. That particular part upon which Mr. McKinley stood at
the time of the shooting is in our office. We propose to present it to the Field
Museum at Chicago. Some newspaper accounts, I know, have had it that this piece
of flooring was sent to the Smithsonian Institution at Washington, but that
is not true as you may see for yourself.”
Mr. Harris showed the reporter a square of flooring
upon which was marked the fatal spot where the tragedy of September, 1901, took
place.
“There has been a remarkable lack of sentiment,
or whatever you may choose to call it, in regard to the Temple of Music,” said
Mr. Harris. “Thousands of relic hunters have annoyed us by forcing their way
in to see the building, but nobody seems to want to buy the material for either
sentimental or practical purposes. In our catalogue we made special mention
of the building, and offered to furnish an affidavit with each portion, but
there it stands with hardly an offer for any part of it. In view of the eagerness
of the average visitor to get a peep at the temple we think this rather strange.”
Some of the structures have been sold outright
and rebuilt in other parts of the country. The agricultural building is now
doing service at Adrian, Mich., as a wire mill.
The principal power house at the fair will be
a rolling mill at Carnegie, Pa., and one of the buildings in which the government
exhibited the heavy ordnance, near the border of Delaware Park, is now a ware
house [sic] at Clarksville, Tenn.
One of East Aurora’s enterprising citizens bought
from the wrecking company the Midway building known as Dreamland and it is now
his home in that pretty town.
One half of the hospital building, to which President
McKinley was taken after his death wound, will be shipped to the Pennsylvania
coal region to be used as an office. It will probably include the room in which
the president lay prior to his removal to the Milburn house.
Bostock’s animal arena, a circular structure,
with a large platform in the centre, was bought for a dance pavilion, to be
used in a town of this state.
So methodical and expert has the wrecking business
became [sic] that there is little or no waste in the work of razing. Every nail,
screw and bolt is saved, and what is broken in lumber is sold for kindling.
On what was known to Exposition visitors as the
Grand Court, and midway between the Ethnology building and the Triumphal Causeway,
the wrecking company has a saw mill [sic] in operation. Timber is here converted
into lumber to fill orders, and various other wood material is changed to suit
the market.
Tearing down is a small part of the work of removing
an exposition. Preparing the material for purchasers is what takes time and
skill. An idea of the enormity of the task may be gained from the following
quantities of material which went to make up the Pan-American Exposition:
Lumber, 33,000,000 feet.
Structural steel, 1,500 tons.
Larg-esized [sic] piping, 40 miles.
Small piping, 20 miles.
Sewer pipe, 18 miles.
Steam boilers and engines, [9?],000 horse power.
Electric globes, 500,000.
Window sashes, 40,000 square feet.
Doors, 12,000 square feet.
Approximately, the structural cost of the exposition
was [$8,750,000?], for which the Chicago Wrecking Company paid $132,000 cash.
For the Chicago fair of 1893 the same company, then organized for the first
time, paid only $80,000, although its cost was over $33,000,000. It will thus
be seen that whereas the Buffalo exposition cost about [a?] quarter that of
the World’s Fair, the wreckers paid for the Pan-American buildings $52,000 more.
“We were able to pay more for the Pan-American,”
said Mr. Harris, “largely because of our increased experience in wrecking and
marketing the material. Since 1893 we have wrecked several big expositions,
to say nothing of the numerous large buildings like the Chicago postoffice,
the Four Seasons Hotel in the Cumberland mountains which cost $1,000,000, and
the Cleveland postoffice. House wrecking on a large scale has become one of
the established vocations, and as it grows in importance the greater percentage
of the original cost of the structures the wreckers can afford to pay. The more
economies they learn by experience the better it will be for their customers.
“We expect to reck [sic] the World’s Fair now
being constructed at St. Louis, and it will be the biggest contract ever undertaken
in our line. It is a mistake to suppose that any material used at the Pan-American
will go toward building the St. Louis fair. Not a stck [sic] nor a pound from
here has been sold for that purpose, and the officials would be very foolish
to buy any, as it would at once give the public the impression that the great
exposition was to be a secondhand affair.”—Buffalo Express.