things that people either forgot or dont know about

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At one point in history buying a car meant something.

In some areas a whole block of people would pool their resources to buy a single car, there was no trucks available, and they would do maintenance and repairs themselves. Once or twice a week runs would be made with the car to purchase whatever was needed by the block. Occasionally it was used for appointments or special events but since fuel/petrol was very expensive and hard to come buy not so much.

There was also ...friction... between nations so buying anything not made in that nation was almost, but not quite, illegal. Most times it was made much more locally than that.

When you look at cars, especially old cars that have survived, there is a history to each one.

As the years progressed more and cheaper cars became available. So instead of one car per block there might be three cars. Petrol/fuel was more and more common. Cars started to be used daily and people moved out of the neighboorhood for purchases and whatnot.

By the 1930's there was almost a car per house, almost. People would drive longer distances for purchases and use car for work. Trucks were available and used by businesses now.

A businessman's coupe became available for door to door salesmen and other higher profile people.

War broke out. Amids bombings and destruction, inovations caused made vehicles designs alter to suit needs of people at the time.

By 1950 there was a car and half per household on a city block. Not many people had new cars but they had at least one good working car. Some had two. People also started to really get into the pleasure boating craze.

At the start of 1960 it was almost expected that everyone would have a car to use everyday to go to and from work. Used cars started to lay around and gather dust, pests, and other debris before becoming junk or forgotten.

The 60's was a big time for cars. Lots were sold and regular trucks became available for everyone to use. The dodge power wagon, which was a civilian equivalent of the wwII fourwheel drive was still being sold and used quite a bit. The civilian jeep also became available(cj). While there was trucks available in the 50's not a lot of people, except farmers, bought them.

Up until the 1970s people drove cars for the simple pleasure of driving around and seeing new things, stopping to camp or look around, or just drive period.

The 1970s introduced new regulations on cars and there was a fuel shortage that put many, even new low milage cars, into fields parked left to rust and rot away. Mass transit, which had been slowly dying, if not removed completely, became popular again.

More and more regulations, and buying of cheaper cars from oversea's, continued into the 1990s. Suddenly those cheap oversea cars became expensive. People, for whatever reason, believed that made them valuble and would only drive a car for a few years before selling it to get another one. Some places have multiple cars being used. Plus they take mass transit.

Today there is video stories available where you can see people had, at one point, built garages for their cars. The garage was quite well built but over time the cars and the garage was forgotten and overgrowth almost hid them from view.

It is sad really to see that most people just take their cars for granted and drive whatever the heck is available. They don't really care what they buy or where its made. "well car magazine says..." yeah whatever, that is one persons opinion.

In my area, for example, dodge cars and trucks probably outnumber the other manufacturers on the road. Other provinces it is, so im told, almost hard to find a dodge truck. Which is kinda funny really when dodge trucks were some of the first available for consumers that were good. Note dodge brothers at the time, ford model t was produced but it was not actually a truck. The box was built by consumer making them one.

I see all these old cars that tell their stories, I see people blindly buying new vehicles that pretty much send money outside of canada in large amounts.

These same people then complain about how poor we are, and I look at them all and just shake my head.

I drive my 1985 car, while it doesn't have heated seats or fancy electronic computer gizmo's, it gets good gas mileage, I can repair it myself, and it gives me dam good heat in winter while keeping me cool in summer.

Really what more do I need? I care for my car and yes sometimes just drive it because I enjoy doing so. There is "ruins" of places that used to be back when people cared about cars and I can see evidence of what used to be.

There is towns that just died out over the years. Some that are dying. And some that time has erased completely. A friend showed me where his hometown once stood. About five hundred people with stores, gas stations, houses and stuff used to be there. There is only a church now. Another friend told me how this one small town used to have thousands of people, with multiple hotels, stores, stations, railway station.

All that history gone in my lifetime with no records. Just memories of people, some of which are dead or dying right now.

People want to travel to see sights in different countries, provinces, states. I am partway through my fourties and I still find new, and interesting things, in my small province of Manitoba. Be it cars, ships, boats, trains, or places and people. Every year there is something new. I may not live to see all of it.

Next time you are bored or think you have seen everything, look again. Just in your neighboorhood you can find or imagine what it used to be like back in those old days.

Comments

I know exactly what you mean

This does not apply to just automobiles or hometowns that have been lost to the past. Think about everything our parents and grandparents know and learned over their lives. They can tell us so much about what it was like when they were growing up and building their lives. All of that history and knowledge is being lost to us because so many of us do not want to take the time to talk to them and learn from them.

Different but same

BarbieLee's picture

Daddy went from horses, mules to watching men walk on the moon. The US 66 was a county dirt road not a concrete highway. Montgomery Wards, JC Penney, CR Anthony, the Rex theater, Elk theater, Westland theater, 66 Drive In, Otasco, Western Auto, Dairy Freeze, Dairy Queen, IGA Grocery, Green Frog Cafe, the sale barn, three cotton gins, the compress, four new car dealerships, along with dozens of others, gone. But we have Walmart, thank god where I can purchase their "Great Value" brands which I hate. I can buy their made in China, Pakistan, or India clothes and shoes. Great marketing strategy. After killing all the other merchants, they began to eliminate the major food brands and replaced them with their own brand. Hurray for the big SuperStore. Walmart is three miles from me. I find I'm driving another four miles across town to buy from Braums or United Super Market to purchase the major brands, which incidentally still taste right and aren't half of the stuff we fed to the pigs.
Family farms are disappearing like crazy. The big superfarms are one crop wonders. Every superfarm specializes in raising one product be it wheat, cows, dairy, chickens, etc. There are so few farms raising milk cows, chickens, home gardens, if anything goes wrong with supply at the SuperStore we are going to starve to death along with all you city dwellers.
Nope, things haven't changed around here out in the boonies. We're good, how about you? And I lie a lot. Let's talk about that big fish I caught.
hugs people, gear up
always,
Barb
The only constant in life is change.

Oklahoma born and raised cowgirl

Cars.

When I used to vacation in Idaho, and Eastern Oregon, most pickups were Dodge 4x4s.

The changes are by no means over.

When we were kids, we couldn't wait to get our license. Nowadays, a lot of kids aren't at all excited. That includes two of my kids. I have a niece that got her permit, but getting pulled over once was so traumatizing to her that she never drove again. She's talking about moving to the city where she can use mass transit.

In another ten years, there will be little reason to buy a car. Unless you need to drive a lot, it'll be cheaper to call an autonomous Uber, Wamo, Tesla, or whatever. Why deal with the hassle of insurance, a loan, maintenance, parking, and the like?

Those who do buy fully autonomous cars can take them to work, then release them to make money by carrying other people around.

Don't want other people in your shiny new car? Then, be picky about your fares, make your money, and use it to buy a car just for you. Build up a fleet, and you can quit your job.

So, just like lots of science fiction stories have predicted, most people will use autocabs, PTVs, or whatever they end up getting called.

My Nephew...

...as a young and mid-teen was fascinated by classic and sports cars; looked for museums and specialty car lots when his family traveled. He's 20 now and I'm not sure he has a driver's license yet; turns out his interest didn't extend to actually driving one. (He chose an art academy for college, which may be relevant here.) Takes Uber or Lyft for cross-city trips when he can't get a ride; I think he still uses a skateboard for shorter ones. Never got into bicycles.

Eric

thats a very

Maddy Bell's picture

Blinkered and US-centric view of the history of the motor car.

Here in Europe, for a variety of socio - economic reasons, car ownership didn't blossom until the '50's. That doesn't mean people didn't drive or move about just that the use of public transport and yes, even the humble bicycle was what the working classes did. It was only with higher wages and the production of more affordable models that it became less of a work beast and more of a leisure thing.
Today, many Europeans don't own a car or indeed have a licence - if you live and work in cities they simply aren't a sensible transport option. That's not to say that many households (generally lower socio economic groups) aspire to multiple vehicle ownership, often one for every resident which of course sit idle most of the time.
Personal motorised transport will always have an appeal and even be a neccesity for some but whether that means cars or power assisted 2 wheelers who can say?
My father has driven since his teens, over 70 years and counting. The vehicles and traffic may have changed but that doesn't mean the core use has changed much, the weekly shop, visiting relations, days out, 'road trips' and yes, 'Dad's Taxi'!

The world doesn't end at the US borders, there is a whole planet of different experiences out here!


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Madeline Anafrid Bell

Also not my experience

Perhaps because I'm a Californian, my experience doesn't match Tels' narrative. Perhaps she was describing a much earlier time. My house was built in 1940, and every house in my neighborhood has a garage, often designed for two cars. Even neighborhoods more than a decade older here (Oakland) have a garage for each house. One of my earliest memories was our family getting a new (for us) car in 1952, followed by a second car in 1954. Thereafter, we always had two (or more) cars in the family, right up until my mother passed in 1971. Here the public transport is inadequate for most not to have a car available. Even my grown daughter, who regularly uses Uber when she plans to be out drinking, has a car for daily use (she lives about 100 miles from us, which is not considered very far in California).

sorry maddy

But the only history of motor cars i have is for north america, germany, australia, and sorta italy and such. The english isles do not uhm post much about the history of cars as other countries.

English isles history is mostly around steam, steam trains, or trains. bicycles....ehh so not gonna touch that subject as there is not a lot of ...established history that doen't include a fair amount of bickery and claims that are conflicting to say the least.

History - Just one f***ing thing after another

Being a Brit, I’m with Maddy here, in a very different world to North America. We are in a very crowded country, where car ownership is essential for many people, but at the same time is seen as anti social because there simply isn’t room for everyone to use a car.

Successive governments should have boosted public transport but (undoubtedly lobbied by the car manufacturing industry) have never done so.

In a post Brexit world, we may well see the end of British car manufacture and I for one won’t mourn that. Maybe then we will start boosting public transport.

The quote: “History is just one fucking thing after another,” is by Alan Bennett, in The History Boys and aptly reflects my views of the so-called “Good old days.”

I’m looking forward to driverless cars, which we summon when we need them and they drop us off at the end of our journey never to be seen again.