Portable Sanitation Association International

Association Insight, Sept 15 2021

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24 I PSAI Association Insight, September 15, 2021 Pictoral History of Wooden Portable Restroom Units (continued from page 23) Requests: As this series of articles continues in our 50th Anniversary Year as well as the update of "PSAI Through the Decades" is composed, I would appreciate any articles, stories, remembrances, or any other information that you could share to assist in the preservations and the publication of the amazing history of our industry and our PSAI would be greatly appreciated. Email Jeff or call him at 770-206-0794. THANK YOU! would place it outside the units and, sure enough, the next week it was back inside the unit. This continued for a few weeks and finally he confronted the job superintendent. This rather small gentleman told Grandfather that at a little over 5 feet tall, he could not reach the seat in the unit, thus the concrete block. At 6 feet 4 inches tall, Grandfather realized that the seating area was too tall and began lowering this height." Remember, it was all trial and error in the early days of hand-crafted wooden units! Final Thoughts "A picture is worth a thousand words," and in becoming familiar with these first types of units, we can have a greater appreciation of the hard work and innovation of the founders of our industry. Thank you so much to Nancy Gump, Ron Inman, Bill Reynolds, Jr, and Satellite Industries for your continued help and support in providing images for today's article. Your dedication to this endeavor is greatly appreciated! We end this with a humorous story that further illustrates that the early operators of our industry were on their own in terms of the design of their units. Nancy Gump tells of an interesting discovery that her grandfather, Andy, made concerning the designing of his famous "Another Andy Gump" restrooms. Nancy relates, "Each week when my grandfather went to a certain jobsite for service, he had to remove a concrete block from inside the unit. He Trial and Error Although this photo resolution is not ideal, this image shows advancement in transportation technology. In the middle of this shot, a flatbed truck is loaded and will be pulling a trailer also filled with units. The flatbed truck on the right is carrying 8 units. We wonder what the weight on those axles was! Harvey Heather—a pioneer of our industry who was featured in an Association Insight story on May 26, 2021—and others solved the problem of transporting units on a jobsite. This is one of Harvey's wood units on a single axle trailer that can be moved to meet the customers' needs. Apart from the materials used to build the unit, the entire assembly is not very different from similar options available today. Transporting Multiples United Sanitation Unit on a Single Axle Trailer

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