Did Anyone Here Receive One Of These As A Child?

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dales
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Did Anyone Here Receive One Of These As A Child?

Post by dales »

Image

My father gave me one of these when I was around 10 or 11.

I still have it and will demand that Pan Am honor this card! :mrgreen:

Your collective inability to acknowledge this obvious truth makes you all look like fools.


yrs,
rubato

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Bicycle Bill
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Re: Did Anyone Here Receive One Of These As A Child?

Post by Bicycle Bill »

I wouldn't hold my breath.
Here's an example of PanAm today, and I don't think that this is capable of going to the moon anytime soon.

Image
Image
-"BB"-
Yes, I suppose I could agree with you ... but then we'd both be wrong, wouldn't we?

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RayThom
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Did Anyone Here Receive One Of These As A Child?

Post by RayThom »

What a lunatic idea this was.
Image
“In a world whose absurdity appears to be so impenetrable, we simply must reach a greater degree of understanding among us, a greater sincerity.” 

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Joe Guy
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Re: Did Anyone Here Receive One Of These As A Child?

Post by Joe Guy »

Is this the recording of how you got it?


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dales
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Re: Did Anyone Here Receive One Of These As A Child?

Post by dales »

No, I got the card sometime around 1961-62.

Your collective inability to acknowledge this obvious truth makes you all look like fools.


yrs,
rubato

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Bicycle Bill
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Re: Did Anyone Here Receive One Of These As A Child?

Post by Bicycle Bill »

dales wrote:No, I got the card sometime around 1961-62.
Better check your timeline again.  Considering the first Mercury launch was a sub-orbital flight with Alan Shepherd as America's first astronaut in 1961, and the first orbital Mercury flight didn't take place until John Glenn circled the globe three times in "Friendship 7" in 1962, I think your memory is a little faulty.

And even the Smithsonian agrees with me:
The Smithsonian would like to add to its national collection a Pan American Airways (Pan Am) “First Moon Flights” Club card as an example of early enthusiasm for space travel.  When the renovated Boeing Milestones of Flight Hall is completed in July 2016, one of the artifacts that will be featured will be SpaceShipOne, winner of the Ansari X Prize in 2004 as the first privately developed, piloted spacecraft.  But long before 2004, there were those who had hoped spaceflight could someday be accessed just by purchasing a ticket.  If you own one of these cards, and it is in excellent condition, we invite you to fill out our object donation form.  Between 1968 and 1971, Pan Am issued over 93,000 “First Moon Flights” Club cards to space enthusiasts eager to make a reservation for the first commercial flight to the Moon.  Issued at no cost, the membership cards were numbered according to priority.  The Club originated from a waiting list that is said to have started in 1964, when Gerhard Pistor, an Austrian journalist, went to a Viennese travel agency requesting a flight to the Moon.  The agency forwarded his request to Pan Am, which accepted the reservation two weeks later and replied that the first flight was expected to depart in 2000.
https://airandspace.si.edu/stories/edit ... 80%9D-club
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-"BB"-
Yes, I suppose I could agree with you ... but then we'd both be wrong, wouldn't we?

oldr_n_wsr
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Re: Did Anyone Here Receive One Of These As A Child?

Post by oldr_n_wsr »

Kinda like naming a star after someone.

Burning Petard
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Re: Did Anyone Here Receive One Of These As A Child?

Post by Burning Petard »

My memory is indeed fuzzy about everything. But I remember some breakfast food company offering deeds to one square inch of land in Alaska. The gimmick was that you had to register the deed and pay a fee in person in Alaska or it reverted back to the original owner.

snailgate

oldr_n_wsr
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Re: Did Anyone Here Receive One Of These As A Child?

Post by oldr_n_wsr »

And cool prizes came in Cracker Jacks. Little plastic things you sometimes had to put together. :ok
Not stupid notepad type things that they went to. :(
Now they put digital codes in there. :shrug :loon :arg

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dales
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Re: Did Anyone Here Receive One Of These As A Child?

Post by dales »

Bicycle Bill wrote:
dales wrote:No, I got the card sometime around 1961-62.
Better check your timeline again.  Considering the first Mercury launch was a sub-orbital flight with Alan Shepherd as America's first astronaut in 1961, and the first orbital Mercury flight didn't take place until John Glenn circled the globe three times in "Friendship 7" in 1962, I think your memory is a little faulty.

And even the Smithsonian agrees with me:
The Smithsonian would like to add to its national collection a Pan American Airways (Pan Am) “First Moon Flights” Club card as an example of early enthusiasm for space travel.  When the renovated Boeing Milestones of Flight Hall is completed in July 2016, one of the artifacts that will be featured will be SpaceShipOne, winner of the Ansari X Prize in 2004 as the first privately developed, piloted spacecraft.  But long before 2004, there were those who had hoped spaceflight could someday be accessed just by purchasing a ticket.  If you own one of these cards, and it is in excellent condition, we invite you to fill out our object donation form.  Between 1968 and 1971, Pan Am issued over 93,000 “First Moon Flights” Club cards to space enthusiasts eager to make a reservation for the first commercial flight to the Moon.  Issued at no cost, the membership cards were numbered according to priority.  The Club originated from a waiting list that is said to have started in 1964, when Gerhard Pistor, an Austrian journalist, went to a Viennese travel agency requesting a flight to the Moon.  The agency forwarded his request to Pan Am, which accepted the reservation two weeks later and replied that the first flight was expected to depart in 2000.
https://airandspace.si.edu/stories/edit ... 80%9D-club
-"BB"-

You're right bb.
It was Christmas Eve, 1968, and three American astronauts had just become the first human beings to orbit the moon. But it wasn’t the only major news that day. Pan Am airlines announced plans for commercial flights to the moon – and they were so confident it would happen soon, they started a waiting list. And so the “First Moon Flights” Club was born – attracting more than 93,000 members over the next two decades, each convinced they would soon be following the astronauts into space…just in more comfortable surroundings, with an in-flight magazine and a beverage service, at the very least…
The old cracker barrel isn't what it used to be. :lol:

Your collective inability to acknowledge this obvious truth makes you all look like fools.


yrs,
rubato

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