Bronson
Engineering
Company
Old Fashioned American Ingenuity
Applied to Today’s Problems
If you want to contact me via U.S. Mail, my mailing address’s are below.
Bill Bronson
DBA Bronson Engineering Company
2540 Hillcrest Drive
High Ridge, Missouri
63049 USA
If you have questions about Bronson Engineering Company services or
other details, please use; bill-bronson@sbcglobal.net
If you have questions about my Airplane, the Engine Narrative or the Wind
Generator Narrative, please use; onehalfvwguy@sbcglobal.net
If you have questions about my specialty work overseas and particularly
in Japan, please use; miyakobill@sbcglobal.net
For Village of Saint Gilbert orders, please use;
stgilbertville1@sbcglobal.net
Questions about The Village of Saint Gilbert
The Village of Saint Gilbert is already becoming very popular and with over
300 million Americans (many of whom love American Flyer Electric Trains)
I simply cannot keep up with questions. In time, I plan to put up a FAQ
on the most common questions and post tips on how I do things.
Like all my narratives, the Village of Saint Gilbert (every building comes on a
CD) will have the handy and secure Pay Pal feature to get your CD headed
your way. The real charm of my system is that it guides our minds back to
old fashioned Rote Study, which solidly embeds durable and versatile
learning skills.
This picture was taken on
the veranda of the old
Harbormaster’s Mansion in
Nagasaki Japan. In the
background, you can see
several Navy Cruisers, one
of which is underway. To
the right of this picture is
where the Atomic Bomb
that ended WW 2 exploded
and the museum has many
sad pictures of the hell of
war. War is what happens
when people “stop thinking”
and rely on their feelings
to solve problems. When
Your Feelings Are Bad, Take
Time To Think!
In the old days of 10-Cent Comet airplane kits, their motto was; “Model Building Builds Model Boys”.
What those kits really did was to mold us into Problem Solvers. Unfortunately, the modern world
speaks badly about people with this skill. Becoming “a fixer” helps us to never give up on our
dreams, but merely “fix the problems”, so the dreams can come true. We need to encourage the
young to become fixers instead of them waiting for someone (or group) to “negotiate their dreams”.