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.
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.