Opening of Seattle World’s Fair
Opening of Seattle World’s Fair

On April 21, 1962, the Seattle World’s Fair, also known as the Century 21 Exposition, opened to the public.
Plans for the Seattle World’s fair began in 1955. At that time, organizers hoped to hold their fair in 1959 to mark the 50th anniversary of the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition. However, they wouldn’t have enough time to get everything ready by then so the plan had to change.
At the time, America was embroiled in the Space Race with the Soviet Union. And Boeing had a profound affect on Seattle, making it “an aerospace city.” So the new plan for the fair was to show that America wasn’t behind the Soviets in the Space Race. While previous talks of an American West themed fair were dropped, the new themes were space, science, and the future.

American representatives personally visited Moscow to invite the Soviets to participate in the fair, but they refused. None of the Baltic States were invited, nor were China, Vietnam, or North Korea.

The fair opened to the public on the morning of April 21, 1962. Dignitaries, celebrities, and other guests gave speeches or performances at Memorial Stadium. The stage also had a countdown clock that had been started by President Dwight D. Eisenhower over two years earlier. When the clock reached zero, president John F. Kennedy, who was on Easter holiday in Florida, pressed a gold telegraph key to start the fair. The key was the same one used by William Howard Taft to start the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition.
The fair grounds, which spanned 74 acres, were divided into several different sections, including the World of Science, the World of Tomorrow, the World of Commerce and Industry, the World of Art, the World of Entertainment, Boulevards of the World, and more. At the center of the fair was the 607-foot Space Needle observation tower. It remains a major tourist attraction. In an attempt to improve tourism, $130 million was spent to clean up the pollution in Lake Washington and Elliott Bay. A monorail was also constructed to carry visitors 1.3 miles from downtown Seattle to the fairgrounds.

The World of Science included a NASA exhibit with models and mockups of satellites plus the Project Mercury capsule that Alan Shepard took into space. The World of Tomorrow exhibit included a monorail and several examples of how they expected farms, offices, and schools could be changed in the future. The World of Commerce and Industry included 32 furniture companies, Encyclopedia Britannica, daily fashion shows, and a simulated space flight by Ford Motor Company.
There were many interesting foreign exhibits as well. Great Britain shared its science and technology while Mexico and Peru showed handicrafts and Japan and India shared their national cultures. Taiwan and South Korea showed how quickly their technologies had advanced.

The World of Art contained works of 50 contemporary American artists, 50 foreign artists, as well as 72 masterpieces by such noted artists as Rembrandt, Rubens, and Picasso. American artists included Willem de Kooning, Joan Mitchell, Georgia O’Keefe, Jackson Pollock, and Isamu Noguchi.
In the World of Entertainment there was a boxing championship and a twirling competition as well as several American and foreign performances. The Opera House included orchestras conducted by Igor Stravinsky, live telecasts of The Ed Sullivan Show, performances by the New York City Ballet Company, and the Marine Corps Band.

The fair ran until October 21, 1962. President John F. Kennedy was supposed to attend the closing ceremony in October 1962, but bowed out, saying he was suffering from a “heavy cold.” In reality, he was dealing with the most sensitive time in the Cuban Missile Crisis. The fair was a tremendous success and one of the few fairs of the era to turn a profit. In all, over 6 million people attended. The fair did a great deal to promote tourism for Seattle. The fair was later the setting for the Elvis movie, It Happened at the World’s Fair.
Click here for a promotional video for the fair and here for more stories and photos from the fair.
Click here to see what else happened on This Day in History.
Wow. Good times. Another World’s Fair two years later in New York, Flushing Meadows.
Simply amazing times.
I didn’t get to attend the fair. I, too, was involved in the Cuban Missile Crisis but I did get to go up in the Space Needle in 1967 while visiting a friend in Tacoma. Good Time but scary times.
At that time, I was still in my late twenties and lived in a back yard cottage less than two miles down “old” Hwy 99. So, I spent a lot of time at the Fair. A couple of my old army buddies came from Kansas and North Carolina to visit go to the fair. One feature that we all enjoyed was sitting in a beer garden admiring the fountain as it changed configurations of the water patterns and many colored lights. All in all a great experience. The Fair grounds continues to serve the city with festivals, food, music and the fact that the opera house is on the perimeter of the grounds
I think you meant Georgia O’Keefe.
Might that artist have been Georgia O’Keefe, not George?