Skip to content

[An extraordinary souvenir album featuring 57 linen-backed silver gelatin photographs vividly documenting the first industrial Electrical Exposition held in Reading, Pennsylvania, sponsored by the Metropolitan Edison Company. Thousands of attendees flocked to the event held Nov. 14 to 21, 1925, to ogle and experience the latest in electrical gadgets and lighting fixtures when nearly half of local households had been electrified].

[An extraordinary souvenir album featuring 57 linen-backed silver gelatin photographs vividly documenting the first industrial Electrical Exposition held in Reading, Pennsylvania, sponsored by the Metropolitan Edison Company. Thousands of attendees flocked to the event held Nov. 14 to 21, 1925, to ogle and experience the latest in electrical gadgets and lighting fixtures when nearly half of local households had been electrified].

Click for full-size.

[An extraordinary souvenir album featuring 57 linen-backed silver gelatin photographs vividly documenting the first industrial Electrical Exposition held in Reading, Pennsylvania, sponsored by the Metropolitan Edison Company. Thousands of attendees flocked to the event held Nov. 14 to 21, 1925, to ogle and experience the latest in electrical gadgets and lighting fixtures when nearly half of local households had been electrified].

by [ELECTRICAL EXPOSITION -- READING, PENNSYLVANIA]

  • Used
Condition
See description
Seller
Seller rating:
This seller has earned a 5 of 5 Stars rating from Biblio customers.
Vancouver, Washington, United States
Item Price
NZ$11,064.30
Or just NZ$11,030.26 with a
Bibliophiles Club Membership
NZ$8.94 Shipping to USA
Standard delivery: 10 to 14 days

More Shipping Options

Payment Methods Accepted

  • Visa
  • Mastercard
  • American Express
  • Discover
  • PayPal

About This Item

[Reading, PA: Metropolitan Edison Co., 1925]. Oblong 4to. 11.5 x 8.25 in. 57 linen-backed silver gelatin photographs, nearly all w/ typed captions on versos, linen hinges & stubs at gutter margin, bound w/ two brass screw-posts at gutter margin, recent flexible mylar cover as protection secured w/ screw-posts (slight curling at fore-edges), still all photos w/ bright strong contrast. This remarkable series of undocumented photographs visually produces the efforts of Metropolitan Edison to further expand their footprint in the Pennsylvania market after electrifying over 35,000 customers by 1925. As they accelerated their push to introduce additional electrical appliances following World War I, they sponsored trade shows and expositions to advertise the latest available products, and even commissioned their employees to regularly make house calls after hours with electrical toasters, and lamps with prizes awarded for the most sales. Met-Ed customers could pay for the latest appliances with installments on their monthly electric bills. These images reveal the nighttime lighting illuminating the Electrical Exposition Auditorium on South Fifth in Reading, featuring over 30 display booths of local suppliers and contractors, wired-in music, as well as demonstrators of all the different gadgets showing off their features, and uses. “Kill O’Watt” figures as symbols of electrical service were installed at the doorways, and with all the different booths, and the exhibition space featured a “Court of Illumination” dominated by a life-size nude of the Egyptian Goddess of Light, surrounded by 12-foot columns, and golden incense burners. Every night and afternoon electric waffle irons and coffee percolators were raffled off, and one lucky visitor won the grand prize of a brand-new Frigidaire refrigerator when the Exposition ended. As shown by the photographs, visitors to the Electrical Exposition could view huge lighted display maps for the Pennsylvania-New Jersey Super Power System; Frigidaire Refrigerators; miniature home architectural models with cutaways showing the electrification of homes; lighted advertising signs and generators for Exide batteries, 1920’s Art Deco Lamps, electric train sets, and even the most “beautiful booth,” from the Philadelphia Electric Co., Supply Dept. with a lavish display of electric vacuums, lights, lamps, toasters, percolators, fans, irons, and sound equipment. The Met-Ed Co. filled the entire balcony with the latest insulators, meters, control devices, power transformers and equipment for their system, and also featured are salesman sample photo albums, displays, electric ranges, washing machines, and more. Of special interest is the photo from Pennsylvania Edison Co. showing “The Story Behind Your Lighting Switch,” a motorized mechanical book featuring articulated brass arms turning pages as they slid along the leaves, and powered by a small motor. These were produced by the Metropolitan Mechanical Display Co. of New York, who were one of the earliest and most successful firms for animatronic and popular powered displays. Metropolitan Edison was originally formed in 1917 after merging Met-Ed with Edison Electric Illuminating, Lebanon Valley Electric Light Co., with subsidiaries of Reading Electric Light & Power, Neversink, and Penn-Ed under W.S. Barstow & E.L. West. We could find no other contemporary surviving visual records of the Electrical Exposition, trade literature, programs, or catalogues in institutional holdings, or sales records. See: A History of Met-Ed’s Western Division, Met-Ed Centennial (1983); Moody’s Manual of Investments: American and Foreign (1922), pp. 414-418; Reading Times, Nov. 7-21, 1925 (multiple entries & advertisements -- no images).

Details

Bookseller
Zephyr Used & Rare Books US (US)
Bookseller's Inventory #
59293
Title
[An extraordinary souvenir album featuring 57 linen-backed silver gelatin photographs vividly documenting the first industrial Electrical Exposition held in Reading, Pennsylvania, sponsored by the Metropolitan Edison Company. Thousands of attendees flocked to the event held Nov. 14 to 21, 1925, to ogle and experience the latest in electrical gadgets and lighting fixtures when nearly half of local households had been electrified].
Author
[ELECTRICAL EXPOSITION -- READING, PENNSYLVANIA]
Book Condition
Used
Publisher
Metropolitan Edison Co.,
Place of Publication
[Reading, PA:
Date Published
1925].
Weight
0.00 lbs
Keywords
Electricity, Electrification, Electrical Engineering, Displays, Window Displays, Advertising, Commercial, Appliances, Lighting, Electrical Exposition, Metropolitan Edison Company, Reading, Berks, Pennsylvania, Edison Company, Lighting, Lamps, Night Lighti

Terms of Sale

Zephyr Used & Rare Books

All books are as described. All books can only be returned if not as described within 7 days and receive refund of original price, if the purchaser has TELEPHONED to (360) 695-7767 (email notification WILL NOT BE ACCEPTED, NO REFUND WILL BE ISSUED) and checked first, and if the book has been returned in condition shipped out (no exceptions). Misdescribed book returns shall receive full refunds and shipping Thank you. Zephyr Used & Rare Books, Kol Shaver, P.O. Box 55, Vancouver, WA 98666, USA. zephybook@gmail.com

About the Seller

Zephyr Used & Rare Books

Seller rating:
This seller has earned a 5 of 5 Stars rating from Biblio customers.
Biblio member since 2005
Vancouver, Washington

About Zephyr Used & Rare Books

We are an independent bookseller, established in 1994, who exhibit at numerous book fairs and antique shows throughout the year, including Christine Palmer Antique Expos in Portland, OR & Vancouver, WA, The Rose City Book & Paper Show in Portland, the Custer Antique Show in Spokane, the Seattle Antiquarian Book Fair, the Sacramento Antiquarian Book Fair, the Pasadena Book & Paper Show, and others. We specialize in 19th-century imprints, Technical Books, History, Children's Literature, and much more. In addition we offer appraisals for insurance and tax purposes.

Glossary

Some terminology that may be used in this description includes:

Leaves
Very generally, "leaves" refers to the pages of a book, as in the common phrase, "loose-leaf pages." A leaf is a single sheet...
New
A new book is a book previously not circulated to a buyer. Although a new book is typically free of any faults or defects, "new"...
Miniature
A book that is less then 3 inches in width and ...
Gutter
The inside margin of a book, connecting the pages to the joints near the binding.
tracking-