History bows out. (T. Rinaldi)
When this sign reared its head over this old Bronx warehouse about 15 years ago, it struck me as somewhat ironic that such a historic form of advertising should be taken up by, of all things, the History Channel. This was a neon "spectacular" in the classic style of those Times Square signs of yore, even if it lacked the animated bravado of its iconic ancestors. Owing its existence to grandfather clauses in zoning codes that banned giant roof signs like this decades ago, its history stretches farther back than probably all but a very few of its admirers imagined.
An old photograph preserved with the Artkraft Strauss papers at the New York Public Library shows what may be the first in a series of signs to occupy this perch over the past 100 years. As traffic on the nearby Triborough bridge boomed after WWII, the Ruppert brewery cashed in on its location by hiring Artkraft Strauss to throw up a huge new spectacular advertising Knickerbocker Beer in 1952. Trade publication Signs of the Times Magazine noted that the new installation replaced "the old Ruppert sign which had been a landmark in the Bronx for years." Of the new sign, ST reported that "the letters are 40 feet high and extend 200 feet in length. The spectacular employs 3-1/2 million candlepower and is said to be visible for 12 miles."
Ruppert's Knickerbocker spectacular was unveiled on August 20, 1952. (Signs of the Times Magazine, used with permission)
Ruppert eventually relinquished the space, leaving the sign to be reborn in 1962 with a new meganeon spectacular for Cities Service Oil (petroleonic predecessor to Citgo), which ST noted was visible to "an estimated 250,000 motorists a day." Also erected by Artkraft Strauss, the sign flashed out the words "SEE AMERICA BY CAR" with candle power equal in intensity to a town of 10,000 people. Cities Service in turn made way for a giant neon billboard for Kent Cigarettes, once again put up by Artkraft Strauss, which appeared in the mid-1970s.
The Cities Service sign crowned the old Ruppert rooftop beginning in 1962. (Signs of the Times Magazine, used with permission)
The Kent sign, seen here in a brief cameo from Sidney Lumet's 1975 film "Dog Day Afternoon."
But the supreme incarnation of the old Ruppert roof sign, at least for my money, came in the early 1980s. Happily, the songline of my childhood just happened to intersect with the golden age of this dark angel of the night, when the big sign peddled the menthol wares of the Lorillard Tobacco Company, known to the world as Newports.
The Newport sign in 1997. (T. Rinaldi)The Kent sign, seen here in a brief cameo from Sidney Lumet's 1975 film "Dog Day Afternoon."
But the supreme incarnation of the old Ruppert roof sign, at least for my money, came in the early 1980s. Happily, the songline of my childhood just happened to intersect with the golden age of this dark angel of the night, when the big sign peddled the menthol wares of the Lorillard Tobacco Company, known to the world as Newports.
I / heart-heart-heart / NEW YORK!
ALIVE / WITH / PLEASURE!
I / heart-heart-heart / NEWPORT!
ALIVE / WITH / PLEASURE!
A few years after the History Channel sign appeared here, Artkraft Strauss bailed out of the sign making business after more than 100 years. Already, restrictive zoning ordinances had all but erased signs like these from the New York skyline, leaving the History Channel spectacular to stand out like a solitary neon dinosaur in an increasingly mundane nighttime cityscape. In the course of the sign's 15-year life, the big neon signs of Times Square and elsewhere have given way to giant LED billboards with all the character of supersized flatscreen TVs, completely devoid of the endearing mechanical acrobatics of their neon and incandescent ancestors.
History in 2010. (T. Rinaldi)
A long time ago, I had the idea that I would finish-off the New York Neon blog with a capstone tribute to the History Channel sign, an elegy plucked from the heartstrings in which this glow-in-the-dark landmark has been tangled up for as long as I can remember. But now that the moment has come, I find myself not quite ready to put this blog to bed. There's still enough left unwritten to keep this up a while longer. Long enough, perhaps, to report on whatever the next chapter holds in store for the old Ruppert roof.
History in reverse. (T. Rinaldi)
SOURCE MATERIAL:
"A Spectacular Spectacular," Signs of the Times Magazine, December 1962, pp 46-47.
"200 Foot Trade Name," Signs of the Times Magazine, September 1952, p 21.
The Artkraft Strauss Records collection at the NYPL
Fabricating the old Kent sign at the Artkraft Strauss shop in the 1970s. (NYPL)