By
Mary
Bellis
Richard Hollingshead was a young
sales manager at his dad's Whiz Auto Products, who had a hankering to invent
something that combined his two interests: cars and movies.
Richard Hollingshead's vision was
an open-air movie theater where moviegoers could watch from their own cars.
He experimented in his own driveway at 212 Thomas Avenue, Camden, New Jersey.
The inventor mounted a 1928 Kodak projector on the hood of his car, projected
onto a screen he had nailed to trees in his backyard, and used a radio
placed behind the screen for sound.
The inventor subjected his beta drive-in
to vigorous testing: for sound quality, for different weather conditions
(Richard used a lawn sprinkler to imitate rain) and for figuring out how
to park the patrons' cars. Richard tried lining up the cars in his driveway,
which created a problem with line of sight if one car was directly parked
behind another car. By spacing cars at various distances and placing blocks
and ramps under the front wheels of cars that were further away from the
screen, Richard Hollingshead created the perfect parking arrangement for
the drive-in movie theater experience.
The first patent for the Drive-In
Theater (United States Patent# 1,909,537) was issued on May 16, 1933. With
an investment of $30,000, Richard opened the first drive-in on Tuesday
June 6, 1933 at a location on Crescent Boulevard, Camden, New Jersey. The
price of admission was 25 cents for the car and 25 cents per person.
The
design did not include the in-car speaker system we know today. The inventor
contacted a company by the name of RCA Victor to provide the sound system,
called "Directional Sound." Three main speakers were mounted next to the
screen that provided sound. The sound quality was not good for cars in
the rear of the theater or for the surrounding neighbors.
The largest drive-in theater in patron
capacity was the All-Weather Drive-In of Copiague, New York. All-Weather
had parking space for 2,500 cars, an indoor 1,200 seat viewing area, kid's
playground, a full service restaurant and a shuttle train that took customers
from their cars and around the 28-acre theater lot.
The two smallest drive-ins were the
Harmony Drive-In of Harmony Pennsylvania and the Highway Drive-In of Bamberg,
South Carolina. Both drive-ins could hold no more than 50 cars.
An interesting innovation was the
combination drive-in and fly-in theater. On June 3, 1948, Edward Brown,
Junior opened the first theater for cars and small planes. Ed Brown's Drive-In
and
Fly-In of Asbury Park, New Jersey had the capacity for 500 cars and 25
airplanes. An airfield was placed next to the drive-in and planes would
taxi to the last row of the theater. When the movies were over, Brown provided
a tow for the planes to be brought back to the airfield.
The drive-in theater movie experience
cannot be beat.
all artwork Mary Bellis - (original
photo source LOC)
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