A Window Into Walt Disney World Before the World Knew Its Name
Long before the first family ever passed through the turnstiles of the Magic Kingdom — before the castle was more than steel framing rising from a Florida swamp — Walt Disney Productions was already building anticipation with newsletters like this one. This Disney World Newsletter from November 1968 is a rare artifact from one of the most consequential construction projects in American entertainment history. At this moment in time, Walt Disney World was not yet "Walt Disney World" to most of the public. It was a rumor, a dream, a massive land acquisition in Central Florida that curious fans were only beginning to understand.
Walt himself had passed away in December 1966, just two years before this newsletter was printed. The grief was still fresh in the company's culture, and the weight of completing his Florida Project — the project he had conceived but would never see open — hung over everyone at WDW Co. This newsletter captures that charged atmosphere: a company pressing forward, honoring its founder, and quietly preparing the public for something unprecedented.
The Walt Disney Commemorative Stamp and What It Meant
Among the most resonant details of this piece is the featured Walt Disney commemorative stamp artwork. In September 1968, the United States Post Office Department issued a six-cent commemorative stamp bearing Walt Disney's portrait alongside Mickey Mouse — a recognition of Walt's extraordinary cultural impact just under two years after his death. The inclusion of this stamp artwork in the newsletter was no small editorial choice. It was a deliberate act of tribute, tying the forward momentum of the Florida Project back to the man who had dreamed it up. For readers in 1968, seeing Walt's face on an official U.S. stamp alongside news of the new park under construction must have felt deeply moving — a passing of the torch rendered in ink and paper.
The stamp itself has become a beloved piece of philatelic Disneyiana, and newsletters that feature its artwork hold a special place in collections that bridge postal history and Disney history. Finding both together in a single document from this pre-opening window is a genuine pleasure.
Pre-Opening WDW: The "Project Future" Era
By November 1968, construction on Walt Disney World was well underway but still roughly three years from its October 1971 opening. Internally, elements of the development were sometimes referenced under planning and project names that never made it into public branding. The newsletter's construction updates — what the description refers to as "Pre-Project Future" content — give readers a glimpse at the methodical, milestone-driven communication Walt Disney Productions used to keep stakeholders, employees, and interested parties informed as the massive undertaking took shape.
At this stage, the underground utilidor tunnel system was being conceived, the man-made Bay Lake was being prepared, and the bones of what would become the Transportation and Ticket Center were taking form. The sheer ambition of the project — not just a theme park but a planned community, a resort destination, and an experimental prototype city — was being communicated in drips and drops through documents exactly like this one. Holding this newsletter is holding a piece of that slow, deliberate reveal.
The newsletter also features Small World children imagery, nodding to the beloved attraction that had debuted at the 1964 New York World's Fair and become one of the most iconic experiences in the Disney canon. "It's a Small World" was already a signature Disney property by 1968, and its cheerful international children characters served as a welcoming visual shorthand for the optimism and inclusivity that Walt Disney World was meant to embody.
Condition, Character, and the Estate Collection
This newsletter measures a standard 8.5 by 11 inches and is printed on paper — as one would expect from a promotional mailing of the era. There is a minor crease on the left side, the honest mark of a document that has traveled nearly six decades through time. For paper ephemera collectors, this kind of age-consistent wear is part of the object's authenticity; it confirms you are holding something real, something that existed in someone's hands in 1968, that was read and kept and valued enough to survive.
This piece comes to us as part of a larger Disney estate collection — a trove assembled by a dedicated collector over many years. Estate collections of this kind are where the rarest pre-opening Disney material surfaces, because the people who saved these newsletters in 1968 were not thinking about resale or museum value. They were simply fans, employees, and enthusiasts who sensed, even then, that something historic was being built. Their careful keeping is our good fortune today.
For the serious Walt Disney World historian, the Disney paper ephemera collector, or anyone drawn to the bittersweet intersection of Walt's legacy and the park he never saw open, this November 1968 newsletter is a primary document — not a reproduction, not a reprint, but the genuine article from one of the most consequential years in Disney history.
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