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Saturday, 23 November 2013
Sunday, 17 November 2013
A Thanksgiving Road Trip Film: Planes Trains and Automobiles
A 1986 Chrysler Town and Country |
Getting home for Thanksgiving, any way one can! No matter how life is,there is that moment of joy when first getting home for the holidays. Then the joy gets complicated once reality sets in.
One of the funniest depictions of a burned up but somehow running automobile.
Friday, 15 November 2013
Kjell Qvale dies at 94 -- a key individual in bringing the sports car to America! Who is the girl who won the 1974 Jensen Healey?
Photo taken from New York Times Obituary. Can anyone identify the girl who won this Jensen-Healey in 1974? |
Kjell Qvale, who introduced Americans living on the West Coast to the sports car in the years immediately after WWII, died on November 1. A figure as important to the hobby as Max Hoffman was to those living on the East Coast and Chicago, Qvale entered the car business in 1946, investing $8,500 in a Jeep dealership located in Alameda, CA. After taking a trip to New Orleans where he first rode in a MG-TC, he subsequently became an MG dealer and left Jeeps behind. Qvale's efforts in promoting the MG in Northern California was so significant that in 2005 the Automotive News stated that MG's popularity as the sports car America loved first was "largely because of one man, Kjell Qvale." Later Qvale added other foreign brands, including Aston-Martin, Austin-Healey, Jaguar, Morris, Bentley, Jensen-Healey, Volkswagen and Porsche. By 1970, he operated more than 100 dealerships. In building this business, Mr. Qvale overcame difficulties in acquiring capital and in developing a parts supply inventory to support his dealerships.
A promoter of sports car racing beginning in 1949, he promoted the first Pebble Beach race in 1950, and then in 1956 the first events at Laguna Seca.
Thursday, 14 November 2013
A Select Bibliography of American Road Trip Literature Published before WWII
Bedell, Mary Crehore. Modern Gypsies: The Story of a Twelve Thousand Mile Motor Camping Trip Encircling the United States. New York, 1924.
Copeland, Estella M. Overland by Auto in 1913: Diary of a Family Tour from California to Indiana. Indianapolis, 1913.
Dunn, Edward D. Double-Crossing America by Motor: Routes and Ranches of the West. New York, 1933.
Faris, John T. Roaming American Highways. New York, 1931.
Finger, Charles Joseph. Adventure under Sapphire Skies. New York, 1931.
Gladding, Effie Price. Across the Continent by Lincoln Highway. New York, 1915.
Higner, Dorothy Childs. South to Padre. Boston, 1936.
Hogner, Dorothy Childs. Westward, High, Low and Dry. New York, 1936.
Humphrey, Zephine. Green Mountains to Sierras. New York, 1936.
Post, Emily. By Motor to the Golden Gate. NewYork, 1916.
Stockett, Maria Letitia. America, First, Fast, and Furious. Baltimore, 1930.
Gail Wise's First Mustang Ever Sold -- and a personal note from Ed Garten
THE FIRST MUSTANG SOLD: STILL ON THE ROAD
Gail Wise, retired Chicago schoolteacher, on her Mustang�believed to be the first one ever sold�as told to A.J. Baime for the Wall Street Journal (November 13, 2013)
�I bought my Mustang on April 15, 1964, for $3,447.50. I had just graduated from Chicago Teachers College and I told a salesman at Johnson Ford on Cicero Avenue that I wanted a convertible. He had none on the floor, but he invited me into the back room, where he had a baby blue convertible under a tarp. And there it was.
I had never heard of the Mustang. It hadn't been launched yet, but they let me drive it out of the showroom that night. Everyone stared at me. I felt like a movie star! Two days later, Lee Iacocca unveiled the Mustang to the rest of the world at the New York World's Fair.
In 1979, the car's battery got stolen and my husband, Tom, put the Mustang in the garage. It stayed there until 2006, when he fully restored it. A year later, Tom was reading a story about a Mustang purchased the day after I bought mine; that owner claimed to be the first buyer. This summer we brought the Mustang to a car show in Dearborn, Mich., where we met some Ford executives. The car was a hit, and that was the beginning of Ford recognizing us as owners of the first Mustang ever sold.�
Note: A Ford spokesman says Ms. Wise's paperwork convinced the company hers was the first known retail purchase of a Mustang.
A Personal Note from Ed Garten: In May of 1964, my stepfather�s sister purchased an early 1964 Mustang coupe in light blue. In backwoods West Virginia where we lived the car was the talk of the town and everyone wanted a ride in it. This was one of the last cars purchased from the Ford dealership owned by my grandfather Garten since in late 1964 he sold the small dealership and retired to Florida. My late uncle told me that the dealership sold only two Mustangs that first year
Sunday, 10 November 2013
Bambi Airstream Trailer pulled by 1957 Buick Caballero Wagon
Ed Garten has pointed out that the 1957 Caballero wagon was a very rare car, a station wagon hardtop! What a cool combination. Anyone know how many of these wagons were made and possibly survive?
Saturday, 9 November 2013
The 1958 Packard
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