vitanola
I'll Lock Up
- Messages
- 4,254
- Location
- Gopher Prairie, MI
The last photo, the one of the veteran car. The picture is obviously taken in North America because we never had Standard Oil as such, only S.O. branded as Esso.
Yet the car is right hand drive. It makes me wonder if there was any sort of ambiguity as to which side of the road motorists should keep to, in the early days of motoring.
Some sort of international agreement must have been arranged, I can't believe that every country on the entire continent of The Americas chose one side over the other, quite by chance.
That photo appears to showRollin White driving a then twenty-three or twenty-four year old White Steamer. He is fueling up at a (long since demolished) Standard station which stood at the corner of Euclid and Shaw Avenues in East Cleveland, Ohio. The other passengers are his brothers Windsor, Thomas, and Walter. At the time that this photo was taken (1930 or 1931) White Motors was a leading producer of heavy trucks. The White Sewing Machine Company (another family holding, founded by the brothers father) was the second largest manufacturer of sewing machines in the world, and Rollin White's Cle-Trac equipment was revolutionizing the construction industry.
Oh, and those Tudor Standard stations were built only in Ohio, (almost all were in Northern Ohio) so when one sees a photo of such a station one can narrow its location pretty closely.
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