While standard elevators of the time (like those from Otis Brothers) crawled at 100 feet per minute, Baldwin’s machine reportedly reached speeds approaching 1,500 feet per minute .
Started by a user named WideRight , this sprawling "USFL (Alt History)" story reimagines the United States Football League as if it had survived and thrived instead of folding in the 1980s. 123761
Baldwin's design was a hydraulic powerhouse. When it was installed in the Western Union Building in New York City, it was whispered to be the fastest elevator in the world. While standard elevators of the time (like those
Over hundreds of posts, contributors have built a massive universe involving team rebrands (like the Memphis Maniax or Michigan Panthers ), stadium changes, and a decades-long fictional timeline of a football league that never was. Geographic Roots: Grisslan, Sweden When it was installed in the Western Union
Published in the Journal of Urology in 1980 (Volume 123, page 761), researchers Wendel, Crawford, and Hehman detailed an unusual cause for renal varicosities and hematuria.