✦ Magazines & Ephemera

To and Through the Fair by Greyhound: 1940 New York World's Fair Travel Brochure

1940 Greyhound Lines travel brochure "To and Through the Fair," folded, showing Art Deco Lagoon of Nations cover with edge wear and center crease

A Ticket to Tomorrow, Folded in Your Pocket

Before the jet age, before the interstate highway system stretched coast to coast, the great American bus lines were the arteries of the nation. In 1940, Greyhound Lines placed itself squarely at the center of one of the most ambitious public spectacles the United States had ever staged — the New York World's Fair. This promotional travel brochure, titled To and Through the Fair by Greyhound, is a genuine artifact of that electric moment: a pocket-sized promise of speed, modernity, and wonder, printed for a world teetering on the edge of enormous change.

Measuring approximately four by nine inches folded, it slips easily into the hand. The cover features the Lagoon of Nations illumination — one of the most photographed and beloved spectacles of the Fair's run — rendered in the clean, optimistic lines of Art Deco graphic design. Open it and you step into a world where Greyhound was positioning itself not merely as a bus company but as a gateway to the future.

The World's Fair That Dreamed in Technicolor

The 1940 New York World's Fair was the second and final season of an exposition that had opened in 1939 under the theme The World of Tomorrow. Flushing Meadows in Queens, New York, was transformed into a gleaming city of pavilions, fountains, and futurist architecture. The Trylon and Perisphere — that soaring white needle and its companion sphere — became icons of the age. Corporations like General Motors, Ford, and Westinghouse competed to out-dazzle one another with visions of highways, television, and automation that seemed almost science-fictional to Depression-era visitors.

Disney himself had a connection to the fair's cultural moment. Walt Disney Productions was at the height of its golden-age ambition in this period, having released Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs in 1937, Pinocchio and Fantasia both in 1940. Mickey Mouse, already a global superstar, was woven into the promotional fabric of the era, appearing on merchandise and ephemera of every kind. The notation that Mickey Mouse appears in the background on a companion item in this collection speaks to how pervasive Disney's characters had become — they were shorthand for American joy and imagination, perfectly at home in the context of the Fair's optimism.

Greyhound was a natural partner for the Fair's boosters. For families in Ohio, Pennsylvania, or the Carolinas, a Greyhound ticket was often the only realistic way to make the pilgrimage to Flushing Meadows. The bus lines ran special excursion packages, and brochures like this one were distributed at depots and travel agencies across the country to stoke excitement and move seats.

What Collectors See in a Folded Piece of Paper

Paper ephemera from the 1939-1940 World's Fair has commanded serious collector attention for decades, and for good reason. The Fair generated an astonishing volume of promotional material — guidebooks, postcards, souvenir programs, corporate handouts — and much of it did not survive. Paper was fragile even before wartime paper drives sent mountains of it to the pulper. A brochure that someone tucked into a drawer, a hatbox, or a scrapbook and never threw away is a minor miracle of preservation.

This example shows the honest wear of eight decades. There is heavy vertical creasing down the center — the natural consequence of a document that was folded, unfolded, consulted, and folded again, perhaps many times in a single day at the Fair. The right edge shows fraying, and the corners carry the soft collapse of paper that has been handled with genuine use rather than stored pristine. Minor foxing and staining on the cover are the familiar signatures of age. None of this diminishes the piece; for most collectors of paper Americana, this kind of condition patina is authentic evidence that the item lived a real life in the real world.

The Lagoon of Nations cover image alone makes this a desirable display piece. The nightly illuminated fountain shows at the Lagoon were among the Fair's most celebrated attractions, and imagery from those shows appears on some of the most sought-after Fair ephemera. To find it rendered in period Art Deco style on a Greyhound promotional piece — a corporate partnership document rather than an official Fair publication — gives it a particular character. It is marketing history and design history simultaneously.

From a Disney Estate Collection

This brochure comes to us as part of a large Disney estate collection we recently acquired. Collections like this one tend to accumulate across decades with purpose and personality — a piece here because of the era, a piece there because of the character connection, a piece like this because someone understood that the story of American popular culture in the mid-twentieth century is inseparable from the story of travel, aspiration, and spectacle. The World's Fair and Walt Disney's studio were both, at their core, in the business of selling enchantment. It is no surprise that a devoted collector kept them company.

Whether you are focused on World's Fair ephemera, Greyhound history, 1940s Americana, or the broader cultural world that nurtured Disney's golden age, this brochure is a quietly extraordinary survivor — a small rectangle of paper that once helped someone decide to get on a bus and go see the future.

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