The Cedar
Point, Ohio, convention of 1922 is an historical milestone for the Bible
Students who later adopted the name Jehovah’s Witnesses. What is not generally
known is that a short “home movie” was produced of the proceedings and sold commercially
thereafter.
Below is an advertisement that
appeared in the New Era Enterprise newspaper on October 3, 1922. The Instructo
Cinema Services of Chicago offered a 400 foot reel of convention highlights, to
be used with the Kinemo equipment. The advertisement was reprinted in the
November 28, 1922 issue. According to the pitch, anyone could purchase the film
for home viewing, and perhaps see if they could spot themselves amongst the
audience.
As the
previous article explained, the first three films made for this system –
basically travelogs linked to J R Rutherford’s visit to Egypt and the Holy Land
– have survived, even if currently unavailable. But has anyone out there still
got a reel of film about Cedar Point, Ohio, in 1922? It would be footage worth discovering if it
still exists.
There is
an element of good news and bad news about this kind of film. The good news is
that film for private home use was generally not on nitrate stock. Unless
stored under very specific conditions, nitrate tends to crumble to dust, unless
it goes up in flames first. But safety film, although not having the
translucent properties of nitrate, can survive a lot longer.
The bad
news is that the Kinemo system used one of the very first “amateur” film sizes
- 17.5 mm. Basically this film size started life as 35 mm stock split down the
middle, and even then, different manufacturers had different ways of organizing
the sprocket holes. It was only commercially available for a short time and was
soon superseded when Kodak popularised 16mm and Pathé 9.5 mm. Ultimately 8 mm
became the standard amateur gauge for home viewing.
So even
if someone had the film, they would have great difficulty projecting it without
very ancient equipment - and probably not just any 17.5 equipment, but specific
Kinemo equipment. That is assuming Kinemo equipment still existed in working
order and wouldn’t automatically chew up the product and spit it out in bits.
But back
to the good news - many of the classics of the silent screen have only survived
to our day because someone had the forethought to produce copies for these
smaller sized film stocks that had the capacity for survival. In many cases, film
archives have re-photographed them frame by frame to preserve them for modern
audiences.
No-one is
going to say that Cedar Point, Ohio, is a classic lost film. But does ANYONE
know if it is still out there? Somewhere? The Instructo Cinema Service Company
of Chicago must have sold a few at the time.
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