At the height of the Great Depression, an eccentric man named George Daynor arrived in Vineland. He was rumored to have amassed a fortune during the gold rush only to lose it in the crash of 1929. Daynor invested in a piece of barren land that nobody else wanted and--believing that he was guided by angels--built a "palace" from car parts, trash, bits of stone and anything else he could find. The Palace Depression, as it came to be known, was one man's testament to surviving the hard times, and hundreds of thousands flocked to its gates over the next two decades. A misguided publicity stunt landed Daynor in jail, and after his incarceration and death, the palace deteriorated and was torn down in the 1960s. Yet the memory lingered for some local residents who started a movement to rebuild. Discover Vineland's mysterious story of Daynor and his palace.
Patricia Martinelli is a South Jersey native who spent ten years reporting for local papers. Now she is the Administrator/Curator of the Vineland Historical & Antiquarian Society, member of the American Association of Museums, Friends of Vineland Library, Vineland Chamber of Commerce, the Cumberland County Historical Association and the New Jersey League of Museums.