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Excerpt:
...The legend of George Daynor and the Palace Depression
began in earnest on Christmas Day, 1932, when Daynor
opened his handmade structure to the public. Almost
immediately, the multi-colored, eighteen-spire castle
crafted out of clay, concrete, and automobile parts
became the subject of excited newspaper articles, sensational
comic book stories, and gossipy radio programs -- fueled
by its creator's aptitude for unabashed self-promotion.
'I like that depression Tin Can Triumph that came out
of Vineland, N.J.!' chortled one New York columnist.
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Billed as an antidote to the misery of the Great Depression,
the Palace became a popular stop-off for tourists en
route to Atlantic City. 'The only real depression is
a depression of individual ingenuity,' Daynor instructed
visitors, describing how he converted an automobile
junkyard and swamp into a unique residence surrounded
by landscaped gardens. By 1940, tourist demand for directions
was so great, Esso felt compelled to feature the sleepy,
rural town of Vineland -- and the Palace -- on its Pictorial
Map of New Jersey. Signed guest books show that as many
as 250,000 tourists visited the Mill Road site during
its first decade.
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