Holy Toledo! I spend a couple of hours in the shop and come back upstairs to find THIS???
You guys are very kind, but as I've told Fran several times, having someone nearby who takes an intelligent, enthusiastic interest in antique phonographs is a real treat for me. I'm a teacher at heart, and Fran has allowed me to drone on and on...
I was looking forward to this trip, because I remember my first phonograph show (Union 1980) and my first trip to the Edison site (summer 1978). I could re-live those days vicariously through Fran, and he didn't disappoint. I was, however, surprised at his reaction to the Heavy Machine Shop on the first floor of the lab. Fran is a former machinist, so I figured he'd like it, but...

He froze in the door and blurted out something that sounded like, "I didn't know THIS was here!" His face was what you'd expect if Pamela Anderson jumped out of his birthday cake naked. His jaw was hanging open as though he'd been hit in the head.
It was even worse on the second floor where the Precision Machine Shop is located. A friendly docent struck up a conversation, and I mentioned that Fran was a machinist. That was a mistake...

For the next 45 minutes, Fran was answering the docents questions about the fine points of some of the machines. I was completely lost in all the terminology...
The third floor is great. I hadn't been there since the renovation, but after studying the old Site photos for decades, it was like meeting a celebrity... "Wow, it's really
you..." The experimental horns, the music room, and of course the phonograph display. We showed most of the displayed pieces in
Discovering Antique Phonographs, but seeing them in person again was like seeing old (very old!) friends.
By the way, I've decided that when I go to my Great Reward, I'll haunt the third floor thereafter. It will look something like this:

- ghost.JPG (81.07 KiB) Viewed 1055 times
Anyway, it was a great weekend, and a nice opportunity to see a number of you at the show.
And if you haven't been to the Edison National Historic Park since the renovation, you really should go. It costs 7 bucks to get in, and well worth it if you have an ounce of historical romance in you. To look at the drafting tables in one of the engineering rooms and realize that the drawings for our Edison Phonograph components were likely created there, is to commune with those ghosts to whom we owe so much. Unlike Camden NJ or Bridgeport CT, the cradle of the Edison Phonograph still exists.
Best to all,
George P.