GMC's Tower Of Power

"Tower of Power" shapes up as featured GMC Attraction

On a cold and drizzly day in mid-March, a huge crane rumbled into the GMC Truck & Coach Division display area at the New York World's Fair. It's mission was to erect  a new exhibit called the "GMC Tower of Power"

The exhibit would consist of a pyramid of four truck. Stacking up the top three would be the job of the crane. Before the crane's arrival, the bottom truck, a GMC model DBWI7005 with flatbed trailer, had been rolled onto 18-inch reinforced concrete slabs and bolted down. The preliminary work looked easy, but it didn't happen by chance. Every move in erecting the "Tower of Power" had been pre-planned weeks in advance. When the unique exhibit was conceived by GMC Truck's Advertising Department, Richard T. Jennings, ad manager, assigned Lyle B. Gately to spearhead the project. A veteran shows and exhibits manager, Gately left nothing to luck. Before sending the trucks and their tie-downs to New York, he erected the Tower at GMC Truck's headquarters in Pontiac Michigan. Any bugs that could crop up later were eliminated at that time. The components were then shipped to New York. They went to the GMC Truck exhibit site where the base for the display had been prepared.


After the bottom truck was rolled into place on the concrete base, the crane moved alongside it. Slings were put under the frame of a GMC Model WA5029 and it was hoisted onto the bottom truck's flatbed trailer.


The third truck, a GMC model LV4011, was raised and lowered onto the flatbed of the WA5029.

The final truck, a GMC Handi-Van cargo carrier with a large GMC Trucks sign mounted atop, then became airborne. By now the stack was nearly three stories high, and the Handi-Van looked like a toy truck as it dangled from the crane's 70 foot boom before being lowered into place on top of the LV4011. With all four trucks in position and bolted together, the exhibit became a reality. Visitors to the GMC Truck & Coach Division display area behind the General Motors Futurama building seen a unique exhibit, Truly a "Tower of Power" weighing 30 tons and towering high into the sky. The exhibit was part of the 1965 New York World's Fair that opened on April 21, 1965.






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