The World According to Trippe
The Pan Am Globe in its original home at Miami Dinner Key Seaplane Base (PAHF collection).
Probably the number one attraction for visitors to Pan American Airways' Dinner Key Marine Terminal, serving as the 'gateway to Latin America' from 1934 to 1946 -- after the wonderful flying boats themselves, of course -- was the massive globe that rotated ceaselessly in the lobby.
It was moved to the Science Museum, (currently Patricia and Phillip Frost Museum of Science). When the museum moved to its new structure in 2016, the future of the globe remained uncertain for many years. But today, it's beautifully installed at the Miami Worldcenter. The Pan Am Globe remains a lasting monument to the vision of a world-girdling aerial empire of Pan American World Airways, in a spot where visitors from all over the world can see it.
THE PAN AM GLOBE TODAY
(Photo thanks to Edie Stavinoha).
Link to the CBS report on Pan Am Globe at Miami's Worldcenter today.
In the Beginning...
The original was produced by the Rand McNally Company. The huge sphere was a masterpiece of geographical presentation, and likely sparked the imaginations of countless visitors who may not have had the chance to board a Pan Am Clipper traveling to far flung destinations, but at least they could dream. Those dreams were supercharged with the aid of the huge globe.
Pan Am ceased their flying boat operations shortly after the close of World War Two, but the Dinner Key globe was a treasure that was too valuable to abandon. Luckily, the Miami Science Museum, now the Patricia and Phillip Frost Museum of Science, was able to secure the globe and get it moved to their location at the time, not far up the road. Given the change of venue, it was re-purposed -- terra-formed you might say -- and the colorful but dated political map was replaced with a topographical representation of the Earth.
But as the world kept turning, the legacy of the globe's original glamorous context still exerted a powerful effect on the decision-makers at the science museum. With the help of a grant from American Express Corporation and exacting work of Conservation Solutions, Inc., an impressive project was put into motion to restore the the globe to its original appearance.The once world-famous Pan American Airways globe was restored with painstaking accuracy to its original splendor.
After Patricia and Phillip Frost Museum of Science moved to its new structure in 2016, the future of the globe was uncertain for many years. But today, it's beautifully installed at the Miami Worldcenter. It remains a lasting monument to the vision of a world-girdling aerial empire of Pan American World Airways, in a spot where visitors from all over the world can see it.