Gilbert Erector Giant Airship

1929-1932

This model does not represent a particular airship, but has features found on many rigid airships. It can be built from the No. 8 and larger sets of the 1929-1932 period. Strangely, only the propeller on the middle gondola is powered, as the set has only one motor.

In building the model, which is about four feet in length, the cloth bag is pulled over the frame of the airship, something like a sock, and laced up at the bottom. Holes must be made in the bag to accomodate the brackets for hanging the gondolas. The fragile cloth bags deteriorate and are often missing.

Note this is not a blimp. A blimp has no rigid internal structure and does not retain its shape if all the gas is let out. The Erector model represents a rigid airship which does have an internal structure and retains its shape if all the gas is let out.

Courtesy: Clyde Easterly

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This page last updated: April 12, 2007
Collection
This humble-looking Standard Vacuum Sweeper is the reason this Museum exists. In the early 1970s, accountant Frank Livermore spotted this sweeper in the corner of a local junk shop and, intrigued by its mechanical workings, Frank bought it on the spot. From that day on, he became a collector, and soon his Menlo Park home was bulging at the seams with his eclectic collection of antique mechanical and electrical devices.

Frank's friends joked that he should start a Museum of his own and, when one gave him a sign saying, Smithsonian West, Frank began to take the idea seriously. Frank and attorney Perry Moerdyke began the process of forming a registered non-profit Museum. In 1985 the Museum of American Heritage was incorporated. Frank's collection formed the nucleus of the Museum. In 1990 the Museum of American Heritage opened at its first location on Alma Street in Palo Alto and in 1997 MOAH was awarded tenancy of the City of Palo Alto's historic Williams House.

The Frank Livermore Trust was established to provide ongoing financial support for the care and maintenance of the collection.

Frank passed away in 2000, yet his curiosity and reverence for the spirit of innovation lives on in this Museum.

Today the collection boasts over 6,000 mechanical and electrical artifacts largely dating from the 1850s to the 1950s, which are housed in an offsite warehouse. Our artifacts are displayed in rotating exhibits at the Museum and are often loaned to other Museums and institutions for exhibit purposes.
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