Showing posts with label Bekins. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bekins. Show all posts

Friday, November 06, 2020

Bekins Friday


I was really happy to obtain this October 1958 vintage image from Disneyland’s Town Square. It’s the first really decent view in my collection of the Bekins moving truck that guests could pose next to. My first zoom was to get a closer look at the artwork; in doing so, I noticed that both guests had some kind of ribbon attached to their outfits.


Could this be part of the The Magic Kingdom Club that started back in 1957? The MKC was an early Annual Passport program that offered memberships free of charge both for companies and their employees, encouraging families to visit the parks by giving them discounts.


Last closeup is of the Grand Canyon Diorama attraction poster which had just been unveiled:


See more Disneyland Town Square photos at my main website.

Monday, August 08, 2016

1959 Digital Magic



What happens when you take two consecutively shot 1959 badly faded vintage slides and spend some time cleaning them up digitally?



You get an amazing panorama view of Disneyland's Town Square circa 1959.



Here are a few juicy details from these images, beginning with the Fire Department/Walt's Apartment and Bekins Storage:



In this view, you can see the banner heralding all of the new attractions for 1959 as well as the Skyway in the background.



And a recent shot of Town Square for comparison:



More vintage (and current) Disneyland Town Square photos at my main website.

Wednesday, March 25, 2015

9 Months Til Christmas!



Are your Christmas shopping lists ready yet? You only have 9 more months left! In the meantime, enjoy this December 1955 image from Town Square. There's a crowd right outside the Fire Department/Walt's Apartment. Wonder what's going on? Could Walt be in the middle signing autographs?



Anyone able to read this billboard to the left of the Bekins Storage truck?



See more Disneyland Town Square photos at my main website.

Thursday, September 25, 2014

City Hall Fashion



This August 1959 shot gave me 4 (count 'em) detailed views worthy of a closer look. This trio of guests is standing near City Hall in Disneyland's Town Square. I was hoping that the lady in the center was a total Disneyland kook and that her dress was a homemade concoction with a Disney-related pattern.

No such luck. Still, it's an interesting vintage pattern.



The signage in front advertises the Disneyland Band, the Golden Horseshoe Revue, the Frontierland Indian Village, and The Gonzales Trio.



Parents must schlep on up to Central Plaza to East Plaza Street to find their lost kiddies.



Another dashed hope with detailed view 4, as there is always the possibility of seeing Walt around the Fire Department as he leaves his private apartment.



See more Daveland Disneyland City Hall photos at my main website.

Monday, November 18, 2013

What Happened To My Vehicle, Pt. 1



Photo #1 for today shows a vintage stat of a Disneyland vehicle on the backlot of the Disney Studios in Burbank. For the life of me, I can't figure out what this ended up being. My guess is that it might have been repurposed by Bob Gurr for the Carnation Gurr-mobile that sat on West Center Street for years, as the bodies are somewhat similar. But like I said, this is only a guess.



From the Mickey Mouse Club Magazine of August 1957 comes this information:

BRAND-NEW OLD AUTOMOBILES: UNIQUE ANTIQUES

Those delightful, brightly-painted antique autos, trucks and buses one sees at Disneyland have a special charm for everyone. It is fun to see them, but even more fun to climb aboard and putt-putt down Main Street toward Sleeping Beauty Caslte. Building them was fun, too.

First, two autos of the period around 1904, with two-cylinder low speed engines, were constructed. All parts were similar to those used in the cars of those early years, but they actualy were brand-new stock parts*. The resulting vehicles were antiques but they were of no particular make of car, and being completely new they were unique. A Carnation delivery truck, in the style of 1910, was also built. Then came a double-decked omnibus patterned after Frnehc and ENglish buses of 1908. It was such a hit all who rode in it that a second one was built. All of these colorful vehicles, designed and constructed by Robert Gurr and a group of experts, are referred to as Gurrmobiles.

*Bob Gurr himself told me that he felt it was much more logical to use standard parts already available than to create something newfangled; his theory (which makes a lotta' sense) was that whenever something was broken or needed to be replaced, it would be much easier to repair.

Next up are two vintage shots of (once again, guessing) a vehicle that could have been what was refurbished into the Bekins Storage Truck.





Here is the Bekins Truck in Town Square:





When Global Van Lines replaced Bekins, a completely different (and motorized) vehicle was used:





I am sure there are a few readers out there who know if there are correlations or not between the vintage shots taken on the Burbank lot and the vehicles in the park...

See more vintage & current Disneyland Behind-The-Scenes/Construction photos on my Disneyland Construction web page.

Wednesday, December 21, 2011

Lost in Adventureland



Here's an odd one; the Bekins Van & Storage Horse & Wagon, normally seen in Town Square, appears to be in Adventureland (judging by the rooftops) or someplace backstage that was near Adventureland.

Here's another vintage shot showing where guests normally would see this vehicle:



See more vintage & current Disneyland Town Square photos on my Disneyland Town Square web page.

Monday, July 26, 2010

Disneyland June 1961 in Living Color, Pt. 2



Enjoy this view from June 1961 of a colorful yet fairly empty Town Square and Main Street U.S.A. You won’t see anything like this during the summer of 2010, that’s for sure!

Nothing says old fashioned Americana like a big bouquet of plastic flowers from the Flower Market!







Finally, a view that looks like it could be from today: a mob appears to be congregating by the Main Street Cinema (too soon for Yippies; must be a protest about the Mack Sennett Bathing Beauties!).



Looking at the inhabitants of this vehicle, I'd say the ratio of kids to parents is way out of whack! Look at the driver just scratching his head with worry! And how about that cute little tyke in the red sweater and plaid shorts! I think he wants to be a Disneyland Tour Guide when he grows up!



The landscaping has always been an attraction in itself at Disneyland:



Meanwhile in the news of upcoming Blu-ray/DVD releases, “James and the Giant Peach” is about to be released on Blu-ray for the first time.



This movie seems to be lesser known in the Disney line-up, but is definitely worth watching. Done with a combo of live-action and stop-motion animation, it is a very sweet story based on Roald Dahl’s novel. The sets for the live-action segments are literally out of this world; stylized to the hilt, they make the gap of going from live-action to stop-motion much smaller. One of my friends worked as an extra in this movie for the New York City finale. Although the sequence in the Art-Deco inspired NYC doesn’t last too terribly long, it took approximately 2 weeks to film on a sound stage in an old aircraft hanger on San Francisco’s Treasure Island. My friend has memories of eating very well (lobster!) for two weeks while all of the necessary shots were made. He also remembers production being shut down while Paul Terry (James) threw a fit one day and said he didn’t want to work anymore. His brief resume would confirm that acting was not his chosen profession. On the other hand, Joanna Lumley (Aunt Spiker) was super nice to all. Lumley is best known for her role of Patsy on “Absolutely Fabulous.”



See more Disneyland Town Square photos at my main website.

Monday, March 29, 2010

You Are There: Disneyland December 1961, Pt. 1



It’s another bright and colorful “you are there” (anybody remember that show?) showcase of Disneyland History, circa December 1961. Leaving the Disneyland Hotel, our family heads towards the entrance, which looks almost as crowded as the park would be today! I always get anxious at the entrance when I see the train parked at the station: “Let me in already!” That Guided Tour price looks like a steal!



How about those inviting wooden chairs on the porch of the City Hall in Town Square?



Zooming in for a detailed view of the Horseless Carriage sign and the schedule of events at the park:



Plenty of locker space at the Bekins Storage facility, ready to hold all of your souvenir goodies!



See more Disneyland photos at my regular website.

Saturday, August 15, 2009

Christmas in August: Main Street U.S.A., December 1962, Pt. 2



There are a few large gifts in Town Square; we might need the assistance of Bekins!

For your holiday shopping list, maybe something from the plastic flower market?



And while we’re here, how about a nice juicy closeup of the Sunkist Citrus House window? I have a feeling those oranges might have come from the plastic flower market!



At the very least, you should pick up a card or two at the Hallmark Communication Center to send to the loved ones.



Here’s a detailed peak inside:



See more Disneyland Main Street, U.S.A. photos at my website.

Sunday, March 01, 2009

The Nixon Family & Disneyland, Pt. 7



Shot #1 for today is from a 1961 visit; Nixon poses with daughter Tricia (on the left), driving the Fire Department Engine #1 around Town Square. The next big visit by the Nixons that was covered by the media was on August 16, 1968. Here are a number of color photos from that trip. Apparently, this trip through Disneyland was late in the day and there wasn’t much time to ride the attractions.



Here’s Pat & Richard Nixon aboard the Disneyland Railroad; I believe the Disneyland Ambassador with them is Sally Sherbin (thanks to Progressland for the ID!). Daughter Tricia can be seen at far right.



A few aboard the Mark Twain:





What was Julie’s parents’ favorite attraction? Small world! In 1968, on a late tour of Disneyland, Pat specially requested that they get to go on iasw, even though they didn’t have much time at the park. The theme of world peace through children of the world struck a chord with Pat and her husband. The inscription on her tombstone fittingly reads, “Even when people cannot speak your language, they know if you have love in your heart.” Both Nixons felt that you should respect other people and their cultures. This is part of what Julie also admired in Walt; his ideas about the future and bringing people together in an environment that both young and old could have fun together while learning and expanding themselves: “It was never a lecture with Disney.” August 16, 1968. Sisters Tricia and Julie are in the front seat; Julie’s future husband, David Eisenhower, is sitting next to her. David is the grandson of President Dwight Eisenhower.



There are many oft-told stories about the Monorail christening, especially about how the ribbon did not cooperate with the ceremonial scissors. Julie remembers that they were made of wood, and more ornamental than functional. Try as they might, the Nixon girls (Julie & her sister Tricia) could not cut through the ribbon. Some writers love to poke fun at this little goof and tell how Walt cursed out his staff for not checking the scissors. However, Julie was there: “I don’t remember it as being anything horrendous; actually, Walt saved the day. We were in front of hundreds, thousands of people that day, and Walt just tore the ribbon—he saved the day with his quick thinking. I don’t remember him being upset over the ribbon.”



On March 25, 1969, President Nixon presented Lillian Disney with a Congressional Gold Medal honoring her late husband, Walt. What follows is the speech that Nixon gave to the audience of approximately 200 local schoolchildren that day in the White House State Dining Room:

“Many ceremonies are held in this White House, but none that I think will have more meaning to all of us, young and old, than this one today, because it is my great privilege to present to Mrs. Walt Disney, on behalf of the Congress of the United States, by reason of a joint resolution, and on behalf of all the people of the United States and, I think, of the world, a gold medal; a gold medal honoring Walt Disney for his service through so many years not only to the people of the United Sates, but to the people of the world.

“The medal and the resolution will speak for themselves, but in making this presentation, and before I do so, I would like to just add a word that I know all of you would want to say to Mrs. Disney and to her children and to Walt Disney’s brother, Roy Disney, and their family who are here today.

“It is very hard to describe our feelings about Walt Disney. I say our feelings, because my wife and I had the opportunity of knowing him personally. He was ust as exciting and interesitng personally as he was in all of those wonderful movies that we remmeber through the years, starting witht he cartoons and then the real-life ones and then “Mary Poppins,” and all of the rest.

“To know this man was to know that we had been fortunate to have a spirit with us that perhaps comes once in a generation to a fortunate people. But I think we are all very lucky that we still have Walt Disney with us. We have him in his movies; we see him on television sometimes when we see those wonderful creations rerun, and of course, those of us who have the chance can go to Disneyland in California or Disneyland in Florida when it is completed, and there it all is, this man so creative, so imagineative, so fine.

“You know in these days of entertainment when we do have on television and sometimes in the movies some kinds of entertainment that many think are not perhaps too constructive and to healthy—I was talking to Sentor Pastore about this problem in my office yesterday—we are very fortunate to have had a Walt Disney who recognized that what was important was to make people happy.

“You have heard some music today, and the theme of that music was ‘Dreams Coming True.’ If you think back about all of the music, the soundtracks from the Walt Disney films, looking ahead, dreams were coming true.

“That is why he leaves for us a very special place in our hearts. And in our hearts that means a very special place in our hearts for you, Mrs. Disney, and for your family.

“I once asked Walt Disney how I should describe him when we went out and dedicated the monorail at Disneyland. He said that he was an ‘imagineer,’ which means he was an engineer with imagination. But he was more than that. He was a great artist. He was a perfectionist. He was a wonderful human being.

“All of that he shared with us, not just with his family who loved him because they knew him, but he shared it with the world, and the world is a better and a happier and more joyful place in which to live because he was there.

“Could I say a word to the children that are here? Most people, when they think of Walt Disney, think that he created his various movies and cartoons and the rest, and Disneyland just for children. But he didn’t think that at all. I once asked him about that, and he said, ‘Oh, that isn’t true.’ He said: ‘I don’t create just for children. I never talk down to them.’

“The reason he was successful, you see, was that he respected children—young people of all ages—and because he respected them he was able to communicate not only with the young people, but with the older people as well.

“Perhaps that is what we all need today. When we talk about the problem of the genration gap, and how we are able to communicate with our children, we can learn from Walt Disney, a man who could communicate because he had that one quality which is so important. He had respect for an individual no matter how young he was, or how old.

“Thank you very much for coming. We are particularly happy to welcome all of our guests from California, and all of the schoolchildren from the Washington area. We hope that you will all get a chance to go to Disneyland sometime...because it is a wonderful treat....Thank you very much.”

Final shot in the series is Julie on the City Hall steps with Mickey Mouse, February 1976.



Many many many thanks to Julie Nixon Eisenhower for being so open in sharing her memories and photographs; I hope you have all enjoyed this series. See more Nixon family photos at my website.