The other evening, someone was looking at the house which my family has been trying to sell, saw my interest in phonograph records (had 6 cases of LP's & 78's out in the open), and told me of a case of records he had & didn't know what to do with. He tried to give them away at a local library and the schools, but no one wanted them, so he gave them to me. They turned out to be all pre-"Bay of Pigs" Armed Forces Radio records from about 1958 to 1963 - 136 in all. There were 7 acatate records in the group but the sound information was falling off the aluminum disc on 5 of them - only 2 good ones left. I'll give a quick run down of what all was in the box:
Army -
1 - "The United States Army Presents Feel Like A Man"
Navy -
1 - "Spot Announcement Navy Recruiting Record"
3 - "Your Navy Presents Pat Boone"
5 - "The Navy Swings"
7 - "The Champagne Music Of Lawrence Welk"
Air Force -
1 - U.S. Air Force Recruting Service Public Service Program - Serenade In Blue
5 - The United States Air Force Public Service Program - Serenade In Blue
2 - The United States Air Force Public Service Program - Reserved For You
1 - USAF Interview (Spots for nurses, WAF's, Oficer Training, ROTC)
4 - Air Force Reserve 5 minute shows - Sound Flights Into Jazz
National Guard -
11 - Guard Session - Your National Guard Musical Variety Show
Office Of Civil Defense -
8 - Stars For Defense (Includes The Glen Miller Orchestra, Johnny Ray, The Buffalo Bills, Merv Griffin, Eddy Arnold and others)
Other records include:
7 - Great Moments For Young Americans
Religious records, records for car commercials (1960 & 1961 - Ford, Ramblers, Plymouth Valiants & more) and many other records of commercials (Beer - Schmidt, Falstaff, Hamms & others) (1958 Evenrude Star Flight boat motor, Frigidaire washers & dryers, Culligan soft water products, etc.) - more than 40 of these.
Most of the collection says "Property of the U.S. Government" (Hope I didn't get stuck with something illegal here...) Many of the commercial records are 1 sided while most of the collection are 33.3 RPM but a few are 78's. I also noticed some of the records made mention to start the play at the outside of the record. (??? - Could it be different on some of them?) There were many colored vinyl records in the group (red & blue), & other than the rotting sleeves from being stored in a basement, most of the records in the box, at least the vinyl ones look nearly new! I have never run into discs like this in the past & they have me curious. All though interesting, is any of this stuff collectable or worth anything (or even worth saving)? I'll have to move soon (they sold the house) - not sure if the future will allow me the room for yet another case of discs...
Army -
1 - "The United States Army Presents Feel Like A Man"
Navy -
1 - "Spot Announcement Navy Recruiting Record"
3 - "Your Navy Presents Pat Boone"
5 - "The Navy Swings"
7 - "The Champagne Music Of Lawrence Welk"
Air Force -
1 - U.S. Air Force Recruting Service Public Service Program - Serenade In Blue
5 - The United States Air Force Public Service Program - Serenade In Blue
2 - The United States Air Force Public Service Program - Reserved For You
1 - USAF Interview (Spots for nurses, WAF's, Oficer Training, ROTC)
4 - Air Force Reserve 5 minute shows - Sound Flights Into Jazz
National Guard -
11 - Guard Session - Your National Guard Musical Variety Show
Office Of Civil Defense -
8 - Stars For Defense (Includes The Glen Miller Orchestra, Johnny Ray, The Buffalo Bills, Merv Griffin, Eddy Arnold and others)
Other records include:
7 - Great Moments For Young Americans
Religious records, records for car commercials (1960 & 1961 - Ford, Ramblers, Plymouth Valiants & more) and many other records of commercials (Beer - Schmidt, Falstaff, Hamms & others) (1958 Evenrude Star Flight boat motor, Frigidaire washers & dryers, Culligan soft water products, etc.) - more than 40 of these.
Most of the collection says "Property of the U.S. Government" (Hope I didn't get stuck with something illegal here...) Many of the commercial records are 1 sided while most of the collection are 33.3 RPM but a few are 78's. I also noticed some of the records made mention to start the play at the outside of the record. (??? - Could it be different on some of them?) There were many colored vinyl records in the group (red & blue), & other than the rotting sleeves from being stored in a basement, most of the records in the box, at least the vinyl ones look nearly new! I have never run into discs like this in the past & they have me curious. All though interesting, is any of this stuff collectable or worth anything (or even worth saving)? I'll have to move soon (they sold the house) - not sure if the future will allow me the room for yet another case of discs...
Comment