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Old gas stations

Messages
17,213
Location
New York City

Despite all the muddling, you can still see it is a nice looking little building. The original advertisement about "beauty in architecture" wasn't wrong.

Separately, you can feel how wordy and overly polite the advertising text was at that time - not unusual at all for that period. Today, that ad would use two-thirds fewer words and would just "shout" out bullet points at the reader, no "You are invited to become acquainted...."
 

2jakes

I'll Lock Up
Messages
9,680
Location
Alamo Heights ☀️ Texas
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A salesman having his motorized roller skates refueled at a gas station, 1961.

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July 1952 - The skates were controlled by a hand throttle connected to each 'power' unit, two-stroke engine.
 

3fingers

One Too Many
Messages
1,797
Location
Illinois
Let's see: beer, groceries, ice-cream, post office and gas - practically a town in one small building.
Those kinds of places were very common in rural areas. There was one in every wide spot in the road town around here when I was young. If the town was on a highway, there was sometimes more than one. The one with the post office was usually busier though. That brings to mind another thing. The UPS truck was a fairly rare sight outside of large towns. Everything came to the post office. Including the baby chicks every spring.
 

GHT

I'll Lock Up
Messages
9,793
Location
New Forest
Let's see: beer, groceries, ice-cream, post office and gas - practically a town in one small building.
That was very much The British scene too, pre-war. There was a gradual morphing from convenience store that also sold fuel, to a more purpose motor car orientated place that became known as a filling station, then some went on to become service and repair centres, whilst a few became car showrooms for new car sales. Now it's come full circle and the shop part of the filling station is once more, a convenience store.
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Benzadmiral

Call Me a Cab
Messages
2,815
Location
The Swamp
The Studebaker look awesome, she looks like a drop of rain has never fallen on her since birth and what sport requires him to wear that belt (probably some super-wealthy sport, which is why I'm not familiar with it)? And any idea on the year of the Sudebaker?
Mid- to late 1950s, I think. That was one of the Raymond Loewy-designed Studebakers, though I don't know model names.
 

Benzadmiral

Call Me a Cab
Messages
2,815
Location
The Swamp
To be a bit more specific, it's a 1957 Stude Golden Hawk. It was "in the ballpark" compared to other sports/performance vehicles of the time since it had 289 c.i., T-Bird had 292, and Corvette had 283.
It's real difference/claim-to-fame was that it had a belt-driven centrifugal McCullough supercharger that gave it 275 HP.
The top-of-the-line Corvette had fuel injection and 283 HP, so it was ahead, but not by a lot, just by the raw numbers. However, the Corvette engine was lighter and the vehicle had far more performance potential, so the S&M guy in the ad would be at a disadvantage in a Stude vs. Vette race.
As LizzieM said, the Golden Hawk was more in the T-Bird class than Corvette, i.e., "more show than go".
The car might be hers, and he's chatting her up -- the playboy owner, or owner's son, making time with a customer.

Or the car could have been purchased for her by her husband, and he's about to find that out.
 

Benzadmiral

Call Me a Cab
Messages
2,815
Location
The Swamp
"Motorist asking directions from State Trooper along Route, New Mexico (1939)". Colorized.
View attachment 121127
Without knowing what "Route," it would be hard to say where this is. NM is a big state. The mountains suggest north or west borders; the eastern border with Texas is pretty flat.

Lizzie suggests there would have been a CCC camp nearby. Maybe near Los Alamos? But no, it was a school that Oppenheimer converted into the Los Alamos laboratory later.
 

2jakes

I'll Lock Up
Messages
9,680
Location
Alamo Heights ☀️ Texas
Without knowing what "Route," it would be hard to say where this is. NM is a big state. The mountains suggest north or west borders; the eastern border with Texas is pretty flat.

Lizzie suggests there would have been a CCC camp nearby. Maybe near Los Alamos? But no, it was a school that Oppenheimer converted into the Los Alamos laboratory later.

According to the caption:

“ A motorist stops to get directions from a state trooper in New Mexico, Route 66 on the border to Arizona...”

(There’s comments regarding whether that’s a state trooper or a gas station attendant giving directions)
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Found on the web under “colorized” photos.
Here’s more:
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