UNION TERMINAL – A Cincinnati Art Deco Masterpiece

The fountain of the plaza of the station.

The fountain in the plaza leading up to the entrance of the station

Last July after spending 10 days in Texas, “freakin’ tiquen'”, as Chris and I wound our way home we spent a couple of days in Ohio. Whenever possible, we always try to do some antiquing in the “Buckeye” state. While there, one of the Deco places that we wanted to visit was Union Terminal in Cincinnati.

 

 

Opened officially on March 31, 1933, train service actually began almost two weeks earlier on the 19th. This station was the culmination of thirty five years of work to consolidate all five of Cincinnati’s train depots and seven railroads under one roof. Alfred Fellheimer, Steward Wagner, Paul Philippe Cert and Roland Wank were the architects of the station.  Cret is usually credited for creating the Moderne design of the building. Construction started in 1928 with the regrading of Mill Creek and was finished five years later at the cost of just over 41 million dollars. Passenger use through the station peaked during The Second World War and then started a steady decline, and seemed to come to an end on October 29, 1972. Union Terminal was then put to other uses after the abandonment of train service; first a shopping mall in 1978, which closed in the early 1980’s, then a Museum Center in 1990. And best of all, Amtrak began to use the station again in 1991.

 

 

 

Entering the Union Terminal rotunda, one is standing in the largest semi dome in the Western Hemisphere, it measures 180 feet high by 106 wide. Two large murals line the walls of the rotunda. The one on the North side depicts American transportation from the time of Native Americans to the present day air transports (circa 1933); the South mural depicts Cincinnati’s growth up to 1933. All the murals in the station were the work of Winold Reiss. The November, 1933 issue of American Architect described the method of Reiss’ work on the murals “Besides the traditional method of covering the entire surface with tesserae, a new method – silhouette mosaic – has lately been developed. The broad areas of the composition are executed in colored cements and only the important spots are picked out in mosaic.”

 

 

Winold Reiss' North Mural

Winold Reiss’ North Mural

 

Winold Reiss' South Mural.

Winold Reiss’ South Mural.

Some more details of the Rotunda interior.

If a passenger needed to kill some time between trains, one of the features of the station was a newsreel theater. For 25 cents, one could sit in air-conditioned comfort and get caught up on what was happening in the world that week. Because Chris and I were there on a weekday the theater was not open. As I was taking photos through the glass doors of the ticket lobby, a very nice security guard, was kind enough to open the lobby door for me and was apologetic that she could not let me into the theater itself.

 

 

If you love Art Deco architecture and you are in the Cincinnati area, you owe it to yourself to pay a visit to Union Terminal. And if you are there on a Saturday or Sunday (I wish that we were), free tours of the station are given.

For tour information click this link: http://www.cincymuseum.org/programs/heritage .

 

Looking toward downtown Cincinnati from the station entrance.

Looking toward downtown Cincinnati from the station entrance.

 

 

Anthony & Chris (The Freakin’, Tiquen’ Guys)

Start Your Day the “Deco” Way.

Setting the breakfast table with Fiestaware and Riviera makes for a colorful start to the day.

Setting the breakfast table with Fiestaware and Riviera makes for a colorful start to the day.

I enjoy collecting 1930’s kitchen items and I love to use them. Before going out on a day of antique hunting, I will start by making a 1930’s style breakfast.

 

Big brother, little brother - 1930's six cup and two cup, vacuum coffee pots.

Big brother, little brother – 1930’s Silex six cup and two cup, vacuum coffee pots.

 

A good cup of coffee is always welcome at the start of the day. And the best tasting coffee is made with a vacuum coffee pot, like my 1936 Silex. This style of coffee pot went out of favor in the 1950’s and the electric percolator became the standard coffee pot in homes. Vacuum pots are not easy to clean, but they make a very good tasting coffee, because the grounds do not sit in the coffee, there is no bitterness to the flavor. The earlier style Silex coffee makers, like mine, had a narrow neck. Around 1940 the wide neck versions started to appear. I like the look of the earlier style (much more like an hour-glass), but the wide neck variety are much easier to clean.

 

This video shows the coffee pot in use –

If I’m only making coffee for myself, I will use my Silex two cup pot, instead of the larger six cup model. The two cup coffee pots are not that easy to find, I found this one at The Whistle Stop Antique Mall in Ontario, New York, this past January.

 

Silex two cup vacuum coffee pot.

Silex two cup vacuum coffee pot.

The second staple of a “Deco” breakfast is toast. I have a great 1930 Universal “drop down” toaster. Here are some pictures of  the  toaster.

 

 

This is a short video of the toaster in action –

 

The best way to make hard-boiled eggs, in my opinion, is with a Hankscraft Egg Cooker. Introduced toward the end of 1928 they were produced up through 1960’s. The great thing about a  Hankscraft Egg Cooker is that it takes all the guess work out of making hard-boiled eggs. Just add 8 teaspoons of water in the cooker and plug it in, the water completes the current and the cooker turns on. The water starts to boil and when it has evaporated the cooker turns off. It’s not just hard-boiled eggs that can be made, with 4 teaspoons of water the Hankscraft cooker will make a perfect soft-boiled egg, to be enjoyed in a matching egg cup –

 

And with 5 teaspoons of water one can poach an egg using the supplied dish (which needs to be be greased with butter) –

 

 

The Hankscraft cooker that I have is a model 730 that dates from 1933. This was the top of the line model, it is all porcelain, with platinum trim.

1933 Model 730 Egg Cooker

1933 Model 730 Egg Cooker

Below is a video of me using the egg cooker –

 

 

 

After having my breakfast of coffee, toast and maybe a hard-boiled egg, I’m ready to hit the road to find more Deco treasures. I will also stop for an early lunch as there is no way a breakfast that insubstantial will carry me for a long time, and I get very cranky when hungry.

 

Anthony