Mustang Owners Club Australia Forum

Technical & General Discussion Area => General Chat Room => Topic started by: Shermatt on April 11, 2013, 09:57:08 pm

Title: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on April 11, 2013, 09:57:08 pm
Been posting these for a while and thought Id share them on the forum. Some interesting people and some great history

Feel free to add your own


On this day, April 10th 1879,

Sandor Hertz—the future John Hertz, the man behind what will one day be the world’s largest car-rental company—is born in present-day Slovakia.

Hertz immigrated to America with his family as a child and grew up in Chicago. In 1915, he founded the Yellow Cab Company in Chicago as a means of providing affordable transportation to average citizens.

(http://i1044.photobucket.com/albums/b447/Sheri2go/This%20Day%20in%20History/225586_10151268402070684_847854336_n_zps31230baa.jpg)




On this day April 11 1888,

24-year-old Henry Ford marries Clara Jane Bryant on her 22nd birthday at her parent's home in Greenfield Township, Michigan. Clara Ford would prove to be a big supporter of her husband's business ideas: Fifty years later, Henry Ford--who by then had founded the Ford Motor Company, invented the top-selling Model T car and revolutionized the auto industry with his mass-production technology--was quoted in a 1938 New York Times Magazine article as saying, "The greatest day of my life is when I married Mrs. Ford."

(http://i1044.photobucket.com/albums/b447/Sheri2go/This%20Day%20in%20History/images_zpse1d7d894.jpg)
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on April 12, 2013, 09:27:45 pm
On this day, April 12th 1888, Cecil Kimber, founder of the British sports car company MG, is born in England.
In 1921, Kimber went to work for British auto tycoon William Morris. A year later, he was made general manager of Morris Garages, the Oxford, England-based distributor of Morris autos. Kimber soon began selling customized Morris cars, lowering the chassis and fitting sportier bodywork, and by 1924, these small, high-performance sports cars bore the now-famous octagonal MG logo. By 1929, the MG Car Company was headquartered in Abingdon, England.
Contrary to popular belief, “Old Number One” was not the first car Cecil Kimber built. It was however, the first car referred to as an M.G. (pictured below)



(http://i1044.photobucket.com/albums/b447/Sheri2go/This%20Day%20in%20History/oldno1b_zps8ba7315c.jpg) (http://s1044.photobucket.com/user/Sheri2go/media/This%20Day%20in%20History/oldno1b_zps8ba7315c.jpg.html)
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on April 13, 2013, 07:49:05 pm
On this day, April 13, 1970, disaster strikes 200,000 miles from Earth when oxygen tank No. 2 blows up on Apollo 13, the third manned lunar landing mission. Astronauts James A. Lovell, John L. Swigert, and Fred W. Haise had left Earth two days before for the Fra Mauro highlands of the moon but were forced to turn their attention to simply making it home alive.

Mission commander Lovell reported to mission control on Earth: "Houston, we've had a problem here," and it was discovered that the normal supply of oxygen, electricity, light, and water had been disrupted. The landing mission was aborted, and the astronauts and controllers on Earth scrambled to come up with emergency procedures. The crippled spacecraft continued to the moon, circled it, and began a long, cold journey back to Earth.


(http://i1044.photobucket.com/albums/b447/Sheri2go/This%20Day%20in%20History/Apollo_13_crew_postmission_onboard_USS_Iwo_Jima_zps79f5b4fb.jpg) (http://s1044.photobucket.com/user/Sheri2go/media/This%20Day%20in%20History/Apollo_13_crew_postmission_onboard_USS_Iwo_Jima_zps79f5b4fb.jpg.html)


On April 13, 1964 over 125 media folks gathered at the Ford Pavilion at New York World’s Fair to preview one special car on display. Back then the Ford Motor Company’s Vice President was Lee Iacocca, he delivered a speech to discuss a car that would appeal to younger drivers born after World War II. This was the day that the 1965 Ford Mustang was unveiled to the media. The new pony car officially went on sales four days later and became an instant success selling more than 22,000 units that opening weekend and 420,000 in its first year.

Here is Lee Iacocca’s speech word for word on the day of April 13, 1964. It is amazing when you realize that this is just a few months shy of reaching 50 years old.
In the words of Lee Iacocca in 1964:

"Good morning, ladies and gentlemen. Welcome to one of the proudest moments of our lives.

We appreciate you coming here to share this moment with us. And we are particularly pleased to have this beautiful setting for one of the most important occasions in Ford Division history.

 Incidentally, I might point out that you are participating today in Ford’s first International Press Introduction of the automobile. Here in New York, we have newsmen from Canada and Puerto Rico, as well as the United States. And, while we meet here, the Mustang is being introduced to press, radio and TV newsmen in eleven European capitals. Some 2,000 reporters, editors and photographers…like yourselves…are attending Mustang showings in Great Britain, France, Belgium, the Netherlands, Switzerland, Norway, Sweden, Denmark, Finland, Austria, and Portugal.

From the beginning, the Mustang has been an exciting venture for all of us. We haven’t been able to contain our excitement entirely – with the result – I’m happy to say – that the public has caught some of our fever. We hope it’s highly contagious.

We can’t think of any product we have introduced – certainly in recent years, at least – that has generated more interest than the Mustang. People in every state, from as far away as England, Malta and Australia, have written to ask for more information about the car, and many were ready to order it sight unseen!

For instance, one man wrote from Virginia:

"Are you going to build it? If so, when? I am ready to order.”

A cadet at the Air Force Academy wanted one for his first day as a first classman.

A high school youngster from Louisiana promised to start a Mustang fan club. He wrote: “It’s better than Elvis or the Beatles.”

One customer we may have to disappoint. He wants a Mustang provided we can install a 427 high-performance engine in it. We’ve forwarded his name to Project Mercury at Cape Kennedy.

There isn’t much point in my standing here and reading a Mustang spec sheet to you, because the specifications are covered in considerable detail in the press packets we have for you. But I would like to hit a few high spots to try to put the Mustang into perspective as we see it.

First, the Mustang is a completely new line of cars – separate and distinct from Ford, Fairlane, Falcon and Thunderbird. Starting with public introduction on Friday, Ford Division will offer five lines of passenger cars instead of four.

Second, the Mustang will be available in two-door hardtop and convertible models, with probably the longest list of options and accessories ever offered on a new line of cars. It will have two front bucket seats, a bench-type rear seat, and a rear luggage compartment.

Third, the Mustang will have an astonishingly low price – so low we plan to introduce it with an intensive campaign of price advertising. The Detroit suggested retail price for a two-door Mustang hardtop with standard equipment…delivered at a Detroit dealership…will be just 2,368 dollars!

Fourth, the Mustang will be built at two assembly plants – Dearborn, Michigan, and San Jose, California.

Fifth, our introductory program for the Mustang will be one of the most extensive on record. We will run Mustang announcement ads in 2,600 newspapers reaching 75 per cent of the households in the country, and in 24 top magazines with a combined circulation of 68 million.

Beyond that, we believe we have lined up a television introduction unlike any other ever attempted. On Thursday evening of this week, we will sponsor three half-hour shows simultaneously on the three major networks from 9:30 to 10 p.m. eastern standard time. We expect to show the Mustang on TV screens in more than half the homes in the country – an estimated 29 million.

Finally, we plan to fit the Mustang into our program of participation in public performance events. We’ll use it in such famous road rallies as the Midnight Sun in Sweden, the Alpine in France, and the Spa-Sofia-Liege between Belgium and Yugoslavia.

We don’t claim the Mustang as a universal car, or that it can be all things to all people. But we do believe the Mustang will be more things to more people than any other automobile on the road.

The secret lies in its remarkable versatility. For a modest price it can be an economical compact car with traditional Ford quality and all the flair of a high-priced, highly styled European road car. For a little less modest price, customers can buy high performance to match the flair. The Mustang straddles price brackets in a way that will enable buyers to position it for themselves, depending on their individual needs, wants and pocketbooks.

According to Ward’s Automotive Reports, the Mustang is the 15th all-new car introduced by the industry since the coming of the compacts in the fall of 1959. We have watched the compact and intermediate markets closely, and fortunately have done rather well in it. Through last month, our 1964 model production of Falcons accounted for the highest production among any of the new compacts and intermediate cars, and our Fairlane ranked number three. The Comet, produced by our sister division, established its highest March production in history last month and is headed for a new April record.

Almost from the beginning of compact car production in this country, customers have shown a preference for sporty cars. They ordered hardtops, and then asked for convertibles even before they were available. And, they are still going for hardtops and convertibles. Through February, 1964 model production of convertibles and hardtops in the Ford, Fairland, Falcon, and Thunderbird lines, accounted for 39 percent of total production in those lines – up from 30 percent for the same period last year. I might add that those body styles are built to customer order.

From the outset, compact car customers have wanted bucket seats, deluxe trim packages, high-performance engines, four-on-the-floor stick shifts, and just about every other option we could devise. Customer wanted the basic economical compacts, to be sure. But they also wanted to be able to dress them up to suit their own individual tastes. The compact car market reflected the flavor of youth – young America out to have a good time.

We designed the Mustang with young America in mind. We like to think that in the process we have achieved a new dimension in American motoring – perhaps in the world of motoring. We offer some significant mechanical and functional innovations – particularly in the area of weight control. We believe we have succeeded in wrapping up…in one package…all the elements of what we call “total performance.” Best of all, we offer the package at a modest price.

In essence, the Mustang is not one car, but three.

First, it is a basic economy car, and with its back seat is particularly suited for the young married car with two children. It is also a leading candidate for a second or third car for larger families.

Second, the Mustang is a luxury car. The wide range of options permits a customer to start at a low price for the standard package, and then add such items as automatic transmission, power brakes and steering, a full-length console between the front bucket seats, a vinyl roof on the hardtop, air conditioning, and so forth.

Finally, it is a sports car suitable for street use or competition. In addition to its sporty console, we offer as optional equipment a Rally Pac consisting of a combination clock and tachometer, racing rear-view mirrors, and any of several kits to spark up the already nimble 289-cubic-inch engine.

Any customer who is really serious about entering his Mustang in rallies can order a special handling package that…in our estimation….will make the Mustang the first mass-produced car with a soft ride and light steering that, for a few dollars, can be transformed into a true sports car. And we believe that as a sports car the Mustang will more than hold its own with some fancy sports car costing a couple of thousand dollars more.

This is the car we have designed with young America in mind – for, frankly, we are very much interested in serving young America. By next year 40 percent of the total U.S. population will be under 20 years of age, and the 16 to 24 age group is growing faster than any other segment. This latter group is made up of high school and college students, young married couples, and young working men and women.

What these statistics emphasize is that not only are there more young people, but they are settling down at an earlier age….marrying and having families. One result is that – unlike some of us who grew up in the depression and regarded automobiles, appliances and other durables as luxuries – these people look at them as necessities.

Fortunately, our society is affluent enough to enable young Americans to buy immediately, many of the items that it took their parents years to acquire. With the Mustang, we expect to make it easier for them to have the kind of car that will suit their needs, wants and tastes.

In summary, we think people will want the Mustang because it offers them a “different” kind of car at low cost…because it satisfies – in one package – their need for basic transportation and their desire for comfort, fresh style, good handling, and a choice of performance capabilities. We also think they will want the Mustang because it provides two essential American motoring ingredients – a back seat and adequate trunk-space – within a unique, exciting configuration that no other car with comparable interior specifications can match.

You know, it’s easy to design a car with a spacious interior if you are willing to sacrifice exterior flair…and it’s also easy to design a car with a racy, sporty exterior if you’re willing to throw out a couple of seats or give up most of your trunk space.

The trick is finding the right combination of roominess and high style – and that’s exactly what we’ve accomplished with our new line of cars.

Ladies and gentlemen – the Mustang!

(http://i975.photobucket.com/albums/ae239/ktarn45/lee_iacocca_mustang.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/ktarn45/media/lee_iacocca_mustang.jpg.html)
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: peter9231 on April 13, 2013, 08:44:44 pm
Born on this day

Monday, April 13, 1570. :   Guy Fawkes, conspirator in the 1605 Gunpowder Plot, is born.

     Guy Fawkes (later also known as Guido Fawkes) was born on 13 April 1570, in Stonegate, York, England. He embraced Catholicism while still in his teens, and later served for many years as a soldier gaining considerable expertise with explosives; both of these events were crucial to his involvement in the Gunpowder Plot of 1605.

 From 1563, legislation evolved which demanded citizens recognise the King as Supreme Governor of the Church. Refusal to submit was punishable by death. The Gunpowder Plot was an attempt by a group of Catholic extremists to assassinate King James I of England, his family, and most of the Protestant aristocracy in one hit by blowing up the Houses of Parliament during the State Opening. A group of conspirators rented a cellar beneath the House of Lords and filled it with 2.5 tonnes of gunpowder. However, one of the conspirators, who feared for the life of fellow Catholics who would have been present at parliament during the opening, wrote a letter to Lord Monteagle. Monteagle, in turn, warned the authorities. Fawkes, who was supposed to have lit the fuse to explode the gunpowder, was arrested during a raid on the cellar early on the morning of 5 November 1605. Fawkes was tortured into revealing the names of his co-conspirators. Those who were not killed immediately were placed on trial, during which they were sentenced to be hanged, drawn and quartered in London. Climbing up to the hanging platform, Fawkes leapt off the ladder, breaking his neck and dying instantly.

 November 5 came to be known as Guy Fawkes Day. At dusk, citizens across Britain light bonfires, set off fireworks, and burn effigies of Guy Fawkes, celebrating his failure to blow up Parliament and James I.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on April 13, 2013, 09:28:10 pm
thats an interesting one for sure  :thumb:
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on April 15, 2013, 01:17:58 am
(http://i910.photobucket.com/albums/ac303/papapj_2010/mammyandpapashome/RMS-Titanic-leaving-Southampton-rms-titanic-5709381-2167-1776.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/papapj_2010/media/mammyandpapashome/RMS-Titanic-leaving-Southampton-rms-titanic-5709381-2167-1776.jpg.html)



On this day, April 14th, 1912

Just before midnight in the North Atlantic, the RMS Titanic fails to divert its course from an iceberg, ruptures its hull, and begins to sink.

Four days earlier, the Titanic, one of the largest and most luxurious ocean liners ever built, departed Southampton, England, on its maiden voyage across the Atlantic Ocean. While leaving port, the massive ship came within a couple of feet of the steamer New York but passed safely by, causing a general sigh of relief from the passengers massed on the ship's decks.

The Titanic was designed by the Irish shipbuilder William Pirrie and spanned 883 feet from stern to bow. Its hull was divided into 16 compartments that were presumed to be watertight. Because four of these compartments could be flooded without causing a critical loss of buoyancy, the Titanic was considered unsinkable. On its first journey across the highly competitive Atlantic ferry route, the ship carried some 2,200 passengers and crew.

After stopping at Cherbourg, France, and Queenstown, Ireland, to pick up some final passengers, the massive vessel set out at full speed for New York City. However, just before midnight on April 14, the ship hit an iceberg, and five of the Titanic's compartments were ruptured along its starboard side. At about 2:20 a.m. on the morning of April 15, the massive vessel sank into the North Atlantic.

Because of a shortage of lifeboats and the lack of satisfactory emergency procedures, more than 1,500 people went down in the sinking ship or froze to death in the icy North Atlantic waters. Most of the approximately 700 survivors were women and children. A number of notable American and British citizens died in the tragedy, including the noted British journalist William Thomas Stead and heirs to the Straus, Astor, and Guggenheim fortunes. The announcement of details of the disaster led to outrage on both sides of the Atlantic. The sinking of the Titanic did have some positive effects, however, as more stringent safety regulations were adopted on public ships, and regular patrols were initiated to trace the locations of deadly Atlantic icebergs.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on April 15, 2013, 08:19:23 am

(http://i28.photobucket.com/albums/c225/little_flowerfaerie/abraham-lincoln.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/little_flowerfaerie/media/abraham-lincoln.jpg.html)

On this day, April 15

At 7:22 a.m., Abraham Lincoln, the 16th president of the United States, dies from a bullet wound inflicted the night before by John Wilkes Booth, an actor and Confederate sympathizer. The president's death came only six days after Confederate General Robert E. Lee surrendered his massive army at Appomattox, effectively ending the American Civil War.

Booth, who remained in the North during the war despite his Confederate sympathies, initially plotted to capture President Lincoln and take him to Richmond, the Confederate capital. However, on March 20, 1865, the day of the planned kidnapping, the president failed to appear at the spot where Booth and his six fellow conspirators lay in wait. Two weeks later, Richmond fell to Union forces. In April, with Confederate armies near collapse across the South, Booth hatched a desperate plan to save the Confederacy.

Also on this day

1452  -    Renaissance painter, architect, engineer and scientist, Leonardo da Vinci, is born
1892  -    Dutch Christian, Corrie ten Boom, who helped to save hundreds of Jews during the Holocaust, is born
1865  -     President Lincoln dies
1998  -     Pol Pot dies
1990  -     Greta Garbo dies
1984  -    Tommy Cooper, famous British comic, dies while performing on stage1
1823  -    Allan Cunningham departs Bathurst to find an easier overland stock route to the Liverpool Plains
1912  -     The unsinkable Titanic sinks
1940  -     English author and politician Jeffrey Archer is born
1944  -    WORLD WAR II, Soviets capture Tarnopol in Poland
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: jiffy on April 15, 2013, 11:21:20 am
Only a couple of weeks late:
1st April 1968 - the 428CJ Mustang is released for sale after dominating the Winternationals, variously mis-quoted as "the fastest running pure stock in the history of man"
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on April 16, 2013, 04:36:50 am
(http://i1044.photobucket.com/albums/b447/Sheri2go/This%20Day%20in%20History/ChevroletBros_02_1000_zpsd6e7c977.jpg) (http://s1044.photobucket.com/user/Sheri2go/media/This%20Day%20in%20History/ChevroletBros_02_1000_zpsd6e7c977.jpg.html)


On this day April 16 1946

Arthur Chevrolet, an auto racer and the brother of Chevrolet auto namesake Louis Chevrolet, commits suicide in Slidell, Louisiana.

Louis Chevrolet was born in Switzerland in 1878, while Arthur's birth year has been listed as 1884 and 1886. By the early 1900s, Louis and Arthur, along with their younger brother Gaston, had left Europe and moved to America, where they became involved in auto racing. In 1905, Louis defeated racing legend Barney Oldfield at an event in New York. Louis Chevrolet's racing prowess eventually caught the attention of William C. Durant, who in 1908, founded General Motors (GM). Chevrolet began competing and designing cars for GM's Buick racing team. In 1911, Chevrolet teamed up with William Durant to produce the first Chevrolet car. The two men clashed about what type of car they wanted, with Durant arguing for a low-cost vehicle to compete with Henry Ford's Model T and Chevrolet pushing for something more high-end. In 1915, Chevrolet sold his interest in the company to Durant and the following year the Chevrolet Motor Company became part of General Motors.

Throughout this time, Louis Chevrolet's brothers continued racing and building cars. Arthur Chevrolet drove in the inaugural Indianapolis 500, held in 1911, although mechanical problems forced him out of the race and he failed to finish. He made another attempt at the Indy 500 in 1916, but once again dropped out due to mechanical issues. Gaston Chevrolet won the Indy 500 in 1920 in a Monroe car designed by his brothers; he died later that year in a racing accident.

Despite Louis and Arthur's talent for racing and design (in addition to building cars, they also designed aircraft engines) they had little gift for finance and often were pushed out of their endeavors before they could reap the rewards due to them. By the 1930s, both men were broke and their racing careers were over. Louis returned to Detroit to work in GM's Chevrolet division. He died on June 6, 1941. His brother Arthur committed suicide five years later.

(http://i821.photobucket.com/albums/zz140/webdahora/logo-chevrolet.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/webdahora/media/logo-chevrolet.jpg.html)


1908.   
The first Oakland car was sold to a private owner. Oakland Car Company was the creation of Edward Murphy, the founder of the Pontiac Buggy Company. Murphy was one of the most respected designers in the carriage industry. He decided to enter the car industry, and he invited Alanson Brush, the designer of the Brush Runabout to join him. Brush had been a chief engineer at Cadillac. His contract with Cadillac included a no-competition clause that had just ended when he met Murphy. Anxious to get back into the design race, Brush built a car for Murphy that was ready in 1908. Oakland ran independently for less than a year before it was purchased by William C. Durant and absorbed into Durant's holding company, General Motors. Durant's purchase of Oakland is often regarded as mysterious, considering the company had enjoyed little success and had produced less than a 1,000 cars at the time Durant purchased it. Often accused of "intuitive" business practices, Durant claimed that his purchase of Oakland, while exhausting his cash flow, provided GM with a more impressive portfolio on which to base their stock interest. Nevertheless, his decision to purchase Oakland, later called Pontiac, forced Durant out of control of GM.

(http://i233.photobucket.com/albums/ee33/frostydjc/GM%20Heritage%20Center%20Oct%202011/100_1694.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/frostydjc/media/GM%20Heritage%20Center%20Oct%202011/100_1694.jpg.html)
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: peter9231 on April 16, 2013, 08:36:37 pm
In Basel, Switzerland, Albert Hoffman, a Swiss chemist working at the Sandoz pharmaceutical research laboratory, accidentally consumes LSD-25, a synthetic drug he had created in 1938 as part of his research into the medicinal value of lysergic acid compounds. After taking the drug, formally known as lysergic acid diethylamide, Dr. Hoffman was disturbed by unusual sensations and hallucinations. In his notes, he related the experience:

"Last Friday, April 16, 1943, I was forced to interrupt my work in the laboratory in the middle of the afternoon and proceed home, being affected by a remarkable restlessness, combined with a slight dizziness. At home I lay down and sank into a not unpleasant, intoxicated-like condition characterized by an extremely stimulated imagination. In a dreamlike state, with eyes closed (I found the daylight to be unpleasantly glaring), I perceived an uninterrupted stream of fantastic pictures, extraordinary shapes with intense, kaleidoscopic play of colors. After some two hours this condition faded away."

After intentionally taking the drug again to confirm that it had caused this strange physical and mental state, Dr. Hoffman published a report announcing his discovery, and so LSD made its entry into the world as a hallucinogenic drug. Widespread use of the so-called "mind-expanding" drug did not begin until the 1960s, when counterculture figures such as Albert M. Hubbard, Timothy Leary, and Ken Kesey publicly expounded on the benefits of using LSD as a recreational drug. The manufacture, sale, possession, and use of LSD, known to cause negative reactions in some of those who take it, were made illegal in the United States in 1965.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on April 16, 2013, 10:01:00 pm
On this day, April 17 1964

The Ford Mustang, a two-seat, mid-engine sports car, is officially unveiled by Henry Ford II at the World’s Fair in Flushing Meadows, New York, on April 17, 1964. That same day, the new car also debuted in Ford showrooms across America and almost 22,000 Mustangs were immediately snapped up by buyers. Named for a World War II fighter plane, the Mustang was the first of a type of vehicle that came to be known as a “pony car.” Ford sold more than 400,000 Mustangs within its first year of production, far exceeding sales expectations.

The Mustang was conceived as a “working man’s Thunderbird,” according to Ford. The first models featured a long hood and short rear deck and carried a starting price tag of around $2,300. Ford general manager Lee Iacocca, who became president of the company in October 1964 (and later headed up Chrysler, which he was credited with reviving in the 1980s) was involved in the Mustang’s development and marketing. The car’s launch generated great interest. It was featured on the covers of Newsweek and Time magazines and the night before it went on sale, the Mustang was featured in commercials that ran simultaneously on all three major television networks. One buyer in Texas reportedly slept at a Ford showroom until his check cleared and he could drive his new Mustang home. The same year it debuted, the Mustang appeared on the silver screen in the James Bond movie “Goldfinger.” A green 1968 Mustang 390 GT was famously featured in the 1968 Steve McQueen movie “Bullitt,” in a car chase through the streets of San Francisco. Since then, Mustangs have appeared in hundreds of movies.

Within three years of its debut, some 500 Mustang fan clubs had cropped up. In March 1966, the 1 millionth Mustang rolled off the assembly line. In honor of the Mustang’s 35th anniversary in 1999, the U.S. Postal Service issued a stamp commemorating the original model. In 2004, Ford built its 300 millionth car, a 2004 Mustang GT convertible 40th anniversary model. The 2004 Mustangs were the final vehicles made at the company’s Dearborn production facility, which had been building Mustangs since their debut. (Assembly then moved to a plant in Flat Rock, Michigan.)

Over the decades, the Mustang underwent numerous evolutions, and it remains in production today, with more than 9 million sold.

PICTURED BELOW
Mustang Serial #1 at the The Henry Ford Museum, Dearborn, MI produced in 1964, titled as a 1964 1/2 Mustang due to the fact that the first Mustangs did not come out until the middle of the year.


(http://i1044.photobucket.com/albums/b447/Sheri2go/This%20Day%20in%20History/1964fordmustang_zpsa1d4c248.jpg) (http://s1044.photobucket.com/user/Sheri2go/media/This%20Day%20in%20History/1964fordmustang_zpsa1d4c248.jpg.html)
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on April 18, 2013, 06:39:11 am
(http://i216.photobucket.com/albums/cc261/Squeeze_Bang/Gottlieb_Daimler_motorcycle_580x.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/Squeeze_Bang/media/Gottlieb_Daimler_motorcycle_580x.jpg.html)


On this day, April 18th, 1882
Gottlieb Daimler and Wilhelm Maybach reached an agreement to work towards the creation of a high-speed internal combustion engine. Daimler had purchased a house with 75k goldmark from his Deutz compensation. In its garden they added a brick extension to the roomy glass-fronted summerhouse which became their workshop.Working in Daimler's greenhouse, the two men finished their first gas-powered engine in 1883. Four years later the two men achieved a major breakthrough when they constructed the first water-cooled, gas-powered internal combustion engine. Their activities alarmed the neighbours who suspected they were engaged in counterfeiting and, in their absence, the police raided the property using the gardener's key, but found only engines.


18th April 1906
Sunset Automobile Company, a startup company in San Francisco was totally destroyed by fire. Production of the Sunset never resumed, and the firm was legally dissolved in 1909. Throughout the history of American automobile production no company ever succeeded on the West Coast. they developed one of the most silent engine of that time.


18th April, 1936
Tommy Ivo, also known as "TV Tommy" was born in Denver, Colorado He is an actor and drag racer, who was active in the 1950-60s racing community. In the late 1950s, Ivo raced a twin (side by side) Nailhead Buick engined dragster which was the first Gasoline Powered dragster to break the nine second barrier. The Twin Buick also was the first gas dragster to record speeds of 170, 175 and 180 mph.


18th April, 1942
Karl Jochen Rindt was born in Mainz, Germany. He was a German racing driver who represented Austria over his entire career. He is the only driver to posthumously win the Formula One World Drivers' Championship (in 1970), after being killed in practice for the Italian Grand Prix. Away from Formula One, Rindt was highly successful in other single-seater formulae, as well as sports car racing. In 1965 he won the 24 Hours of Le Mans race, driving a Ferrari 250LM in partnership with Masten Gregory from the United States of America.


18th April, 1949
18 times Nascar winner Geoff Bodine was born.


18th April, 2009
On this day in 2009, driver Mark Martin wins the Subway Fresh Fit 500 at the Phoenix International Speedway in Avondale, Arizona, and becomes the first 50-year-old to claim victory at a National Association for Stock Car Auto Racing (NASCAR) Sprint Cup race since Morgan Shepherd did so at a race in Atlanta in 1993. Besides Martin and Shepherd, only two other drivers age 50 or older have won Sprint Cup events.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: peter9231 on April 19, 2013, 06:50:17 am
 
 
 
 

On April 19, 1897, John J. McDermott of New York won the first Boston Marathon with a time of 2:55:10.

The Boston Marathon was the brainchild of Boston Athletic Association member and inaugural U.S. Olympic team manager John Graham, who was inspired by the marathon at the first modern Olympic Games in Athens in 1896. With the assistance of Boston businessman Herbert H. Holton, various routes were considered, before a measured distance of 24.5 miles from the Irvington Oval in Boston to Metcalf's Mill in Ashland was eventually selected.

Fifteen runners started the race but only 10 made it to the finish line. John J. McDermott, representing the Pastime Athletic Club of New York City, took the lead from Harvard athlete Dick Grant over the hills in Newton. Although he walked several times during the final miles, McDermott still won by a comfortable six-minute, fifty-two-seconds. McDermott had won the only other marathon on U.S. soil the previous October in New York.

The marathon's distance was changed in 1908 in accordance with Olympic standards to its current length of 26 miles 385 yards.

The Boston Marathon was originally held on Patriot's Day, April 19, a regional holiday that commemorates the beginning of the Revolutionary War. In years when the 19th fell on a Sunday, the race was held the following Monday. In 1969, Patriots Day was officially moved to the third Monday in April and the race has been held on that Monday ever since.

Women were not allowed to enter the Boston race officially until 1972, but Roberta "Bobbi" Gibb couldn't wait: In 1966, she became the first woman to run the entire Boston Marathon, but had to hide in the bushes near the start until the race began. In 1967, Kathrine Switzer, who had registered as "K. V. Switzer", was the first woman to run with a race number. Switzer finished even though officials tried to physically remove her from the race after she was identified as a woman.

In the fall of 1971, the Amateur Athletics Union permitted its sanctioned marathons (including Boston) to allow female entry. Nina Kuscsik became the first official female participant to win the Boston Marathon in 1972. Seven other women started and finished that race.

In 1975, the Boston Marathon became the first major marathon to include a wheelchair division competition. Bob Hall won it in two hours, 58 minutes.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on April 20, 2013, 07:11:39 am
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On this day, April 20, 2008

26-year-old Danica Patrick wins the Indy Japan 300 at Twin Ring Montegi in Montegi, Japan, making her the first female winner in IndyCar racing history.
Danica Patrick was born on March 25, 1982, in Beloit, Wisconsin. She became involved in racing as a young girl and as a teenager moved to England in pursuit of better training opportunities. In 2002, after returning to the United States, she began driving for the Rahal Letterman Racing team, owned by 1986 Indianapolis 500 champ Bobby Rahal and late-night talk-show host David Letterman. In 2005, Patrick started competing in IndyCar events, which include the famed Indianapolis 500 race at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway in Indiana.

April 20, 1925
Pete Depaolo, wins his first Indy 500 in cluver city, California for Dusenberg family averaging an impressive 135mph.

April 20, 1927
Phil Hill, american F1 racer was born in Miami Florida, He won the 1961 F1 championship racing for Scuderia ferari, driving the famous 'sharknose' Ferari 156

April 20, 1931
Matilda Dodge Wilson, the widow of John Dodge, was named to the board of the Graham-Paige Motors Corporation, becoming the first woman to sit on the board of a major auto-manufacturer. Graham-Paige was founded by the Graham brothers, whose initial car-making endeavor, Graham Brothers Truck Company, had been purchased by Dodge in 1926.

April 20, 1946
Gordon Smiley, another Indy 500 racer was born. Though he raced twiced in 1980,81 in Indy500 but never won. He tragically died during qualifying run in 1982 Indy500, and to date is the last driver ever to die during qualifying run.

April 20, 2003
Dajiro Kato, Japanese MotoGP racer died at Suzuka, crashing hard at 125mph to a wall at final chicane of the circuit.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: peter9231 on April 20, 2013, 07:27:18 am
Sunday, April 20, 1862. :   Louis Pasteur completes the first test of pasteurisation.

     Louis Pasteur was born on 27 December 1822 in Dole, Jura, France. Known as the founder of microbiology, he moved into this field when he discovered the role of bacteria in fermentation. Pasteur's research showed that some microorganisms contaminated fermenting beverages. Extrapolating from this knowledge, Pasteur then developed a process in which liquids such as milk were heated to kill all bacteria and moulds already present within them. This process became known as pasteurisation. The first test of pasteurisation was completed by Louis Pasteur and his associate, Claude Bernard, on 20 April 1862.

 His experiments with bacteria conclusively disproved the theory of spontaneous generation and led to the theory that infection is caused by germs. Recognising that infectious diseases are caused by microorganisms, Pasteur's research soon led others to investigate sterilisation, disinfection, vaccines, and eventually antibiotics. Pasteur created and tested vaccines for diphtheria, cholera, yellow fever, plague, rabies, anthrax, and tuberculosis.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on April 21, 2013, 06:03:58 am
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On this day April 21, 1933

Frederick Henry Royce, who with Charles Stewart Rolls founded the luxury British automaker Rolls-Royce, dies on this day in 1933 at the age of 70 in England.
Royce was born on March 27, 1863, near Peterborough, Cambridgeshire, England. He grew up in a family of modest means and worked a variety of jobs, eventually becoming an electrician. In the mid-1880s, he founded a business that made electric cranes and electrical generators. In the early 1900s, after purchasing his first car, Royce began designing cars of his own, deciding he could build something better. Royce met British automotive dealer Charles Rolls, who agreed to sell Royce’s cars; the two men later formed a company, Rolls-Royce Limited. Royce, who was known for his attention to detail and perfectionism, served as head engineer. The six-cylinder Rolls-Royce Silver Ghost, which debuted in 1906, was dubbed by the British press the world’s “best car.”
In 1910, Charles Rolls died at the age of 32 while piloting his own plane. Royce continued on with their company and during World War I, designed aircraft engines for the Allied forces. Following the war, Rolls-Royce returned to making cars, launching the Phantom I , a vehicle that was “powered by an all-new, pushrod-operated overhead valve engine with detachable cylinder heads--cutting-edge technology for its time,” according to the automotive information Web site Edmunds.com. In 1931, Rolls-Royce acquired rival luxury automaker Bentley. Frederick Henry Royce died on April 22, 1933, at West Wittering, West Sus***, England.
In 1950, Rolls-Royce introduced the powerful and highly exclusive Phantom IV. Only 18 of these cars were produced, according to Edmunds.com, and they all went to royalty and other VIPs. The automaker continued to thrive during the 1950s and 1960s; however, in 1971, Rolls-Royce Ltd. declared bankruptcy after financial troubles related to the development of a jet engine. The company was restructured into two separate businesses: automotive and aircraft. In 1980, the auto company was acquired by a British defense business, Vickers. The following year, the Rolls-Royce Silver Spirit, a car designed to attract a new generation of buyers, launched.
In the late 1990s, when Vickers decided to sell Rolls-Royce, German automakers Volkswagen and BMW each made a play for the business. VW ended up acquiring the Rolls-Royce production facilities in Crewe, England, while BMW got the rights to the Rolls-Royce car brand. BMW licensed the Rolls-Royce name to VW until the end of 2002, then BMW began producing Rolls-Royce cars in 2003. VW continued to make Bentleys at the Crewe plant.


April 21, 1967

On this day General Motors (GM) celebrates the manufacture of its 100 millionth American-made car. At the time, GM was the world’s largest automaker.
General Motors was established in 1908 in Flint, Michigan, by horse-drawn carriage mogul William Durant. In 1904, Durant invested in the Buick Motor Company, which was started in 1903 by Scottish-born inventor David Dunbar Buick. Within a few years of forming his company, Buick lost control of it and sold his stock, which would later be worth hundreds of millions of dollars. (In 1929, Buick died at age 74 in relative obscurity and modest circumstances). Durant made Buick Motors the cornerstone of his new holding company, General Motors, then acquired Oldsmobile, Cadillac and Reliance Motor Company, among other auto and truck makers.
In 1911, Durant founded Chevrolet Motor Company, which by 1918 was part of GM. By the early 1930s, GM had passed the Ford Motor Company to become the world’s biggest automaker. Although Ford sold more than 15 million Model Ts between 1908 and 1927, the company was criticized for not responding quickly enough to consumer demand for new models, as GM did. GM also offered financing options to consumers, while Henry Ford objected to credit.
GM went on to experience decades of growth. The company pursued a strategy of selling a vehicle “for every purse and purpose,” in the words of Alfred Sloan, who became GM’s president in 1923 and resigned as chairman in 1956. In 1940, the company commemorated its 25 millionth American-made car, and by its peak in 1962, GM produced 51 percent of all the cars in the U.S. Its 75 millionth U.S.-made car rolled off the assembly line that year, while the 100 millionth car followed in 1967.
However, according to The New York Times, during the 1960s the automaker “began a long and slow process of undermining itself,” as it failed to innovate fast enough in the face of competition from foreign car manufacturers. In 2008, GM, hard hit by the global economic crisis, lost its title as the world’s top-selling automaker; that year, GM sold 8.356 million cars and trucks compared with Toyota’s 8.972 million vehicles. On June 1, 2009, GM filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection. It was a move once considered unthinkable for the company that became a giant of the U.S. economy in the 20th century.

Reading Eagle Newspaper, April 16 1967 Edition

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April 21, 1985

The legendary Ayrton Senna won his first of 41 F1 Championship victories driving a Lotus-Renault at the Portuguese Grand Prix in Estoril.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Ash on April 21, 2013, 08:34:40 am
April 20, 2003
Dajiro Kato, Japanese MotoGP racer died at Suzuka, crashing hard at 125mph to a wall at final chicane of the circuit.

http://www.motogp.com/en/news/2013/tribute+to+kato (http://www.motogp.com/en/news/2013/tribute+to+kato)

Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on April 23, 2013, 01:45:54 am
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On this day, 23rd April 1987

On this day in 1987, the Chrysler Corporation purchases Nuova Automobili F. Lamborghini, the Bologna, Italy-based maker of high-priced, high-performance cars. Although the terms of the deal were not disclosed, the media reported that Chrysler paid $25 million for Lamborghini, which at the time was experiencing financial difficulties.
Lamborghini was established in 1963 by Ferruccio Lamborghini (1916-1993), a wealthy Italian industrialist who made his fortune building tractors and air-conditioning systems, among other ventures. Lamborghini owned a variety of sports cars, including Ferraris. According to legend, after experiencing mechanical problems with his Ferraris, he tried to meet with Enzo Ferrari, the carmaker’s founder. When Enzo Ferrari turned him down, Ferruccio Lamborghini decided to build cars that would be even better than Ferrari’s. Lamborghini’s first car, the 350 GTV, a two-seat coupe with a V12 engine, launched in 1963.
The company’s logo featured a bull, a reference to Ferruccio Lamborghini’s zodiac sign, Taurus the bull. Various Lamborghini models had names related to bulls or bullfighting, including the Miura, a mid-engine sports car that was released in mid-1960s and gained Lamborghini an international following among car enthusiasts and a reputation for prestige and cutting-edge design. The Miura was named for a breeder of fighting bulls, Don Eduardo Miura.
In the early 1970s, Lamborghini’s tractor business experienced problems and he eventually sold his interest in his sports car business and retired to his vineyard in the mid-1970s. Automobili Lamborghini changed hands several times and in 1987 was sold to Chrysler.
In 1994, Chrysler sold Lamborghini to a group of Indonesian investors. Four years later, German automaker Audi AG owned by Volkswagen took control of Lamborghini. The company has continued to build high-performance cars, including the Murcielago, the Gallardo LP560-4 and theSpyder.




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April 23 1992
Smithsonian Museum bought one of Miller 91 Packard Cable Special Car. Harry Miller was one of very famous race car builder of his times. Cars and engines built by him won Indy500 12 times which was then dominated by Dusenberg family. This car bought was one of 12 racing cars built by Harry A. Miller. Its 1500cc supercharged V8 rated at 230 horsepower drives front wheel. Strangely it weighted only 108kgs. This particular car was driven by Ralph Hepburn in the 1929 Indianapolis 500 and set speed records of 143mph. In 1991 the car also won two of the most rigorous antique auto competitions in the world: the Pebble Beach Concourse in California and the Bagatelle Concourse Paris.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on April 24, 2013, 06:08:45 pm


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On this day, April 24, 1995
After producing about 6939 cars Lotus tuned Chevy Corvette ZR1's production was ceased. The heart of this car was lotus built LT5 V8 engine, which had a very unique intake manifold. It had 4 valves per cylinder and 4 camshaft to control them. It could shut off half of the intake valves and fuel injectors when the engine was at part-throttle, It was rated at 375bhp-405bhp in later models. In 2009 Chevy again revived ZR1.

April 24, 1983
Rolf Stommelen, a German race car driver fatally crashed in his porsche 935 while racing in Camel GT trophy on Riverside Raceway, California.
He was one of the best race car drivers of the '60s and '70s, He won the Daytona 4 times and the pole position for the 1969 Le Mans in a Porsche 917, during which he became the first person to reach speeds exceeding 350 km/h. In 1970, he made his Formula One debut with Brabham and raced both sportscars and F1 throughout the 1970s.
Unfortunately, he is also remembered for killing 5 spectators when he crashed his car, Embassy-Hill- Lola during the 1975 season Spanish Grand Prix in Barcelona.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on April 26, 2013, 12:03:58 am
Apart from being Anzac Day

On this day, April 25, 2001

On this day in 2001, 44-year-old Italian race car driver Michele Alboreto is killed on a track in Germany during a test drive. Alboreto collected five Grand Prix wins on the Formula One (F1) circuit, where he competed during the 1980s and early 1990s, and also claimed victory at the 24 Hours of Le Mans endurance race in 1997.
Michele Alboreto was born in Milan, Italy, on December 23, 1956, and began his racing career in the mid-1970s. He made his F1 debut in 1981 and took home his first victory at the Caesars Palace Grand Prix Las Vegas in 1982. From 1984 to 1988, Alboreto drove for the Ferrari team, the first Italian to do so in more than a decade. In 1985, his most successful year, he won the Canadian Grand Prix and the German Grand Prix and came in second place for the F1 drivers’ championship behind the iconic French driver Alain Prost, who collected the crown again in 1986, 1989 and 1993.


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April 25, 1926
Alfieri Maserati's first car, the Tipo 26, made its racing debut by winning its class at the Targa Florio. Alfieri Maserati drove the car himself.

April 25, 1901
Registration of vehicle which is today mandatory for all vehicle first started on this day in the state of New York. The fee to register the vehicle was $1. Total registration fees collected amounted $954 for very first year.
However France is considered the first to introduce a license plate, in 1893, followed by Germany in 1896. The Netherlands was the first country to introduce a national license plate, called a "driving permit", in 1898. But uniform registration and charging the owner for it was first introduced in the city of New York.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on April 26, 2013, 10:41:16 pm
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1937 Pierce Arrow

On this day, April 26, 1906
Pierce Arrow purchased 16 acre of land to create its new manufacturing unit. The factory that was constructed on it was of reinforced concrete and was absolutely fireproof. Albert Kahn, the architect of the factory, achieved a breakthrough with his single story, top-lit modular design. With its uniform lighting and physical flexibility, it rapidly became the prototype for American factory design, particularly in the emerging motor industry.
Pierce was the only luxury brand that did not created a lower price car. Its cars are collectors item world over.

April 26, 2009
On this day in 2009, Chrysler and the United Auto Workers (UAW) union reach a tentative deal that meets government requirements for the struggling auto manufacturer to receive more federal funding.
As part of the deal, the UAW agreed to let Chrysler reduce the amount of money it would pay toward health care costs of its retired workers. The month before the deal was announced, President Barack Obama issued an ultimatum to Chrysler that it must undergo a fundamental restructuring and shrink its costs in order to receive future government aid. Obama also gave Chrysler a month to complete a merger with Italian car maker Fiat or another partner. Although Chrysler reached a deal with the UAW as well as its major creditors shortly before the one-month deadline, Obama announced on April 30 that Chrysler, after failing to come to an agreement with some of its smaller creditors, would file for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection, then form a partnership with Fiat. The move made Chrysler the first big automaker to file for bankruptcy and attempt to reorganize since Studebaker did so in 1933.
The current stake holders are in New Chrysler are: Fiat, 20 %; U.S. government, 9.85 %; Canadian government, 2.46 %; and the UAW retiree medical fund 67.69 %.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on April 27, 2013, 11:45:34 pm

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On this day, April 27, 2009
On this day in 2009, the struggling American auto giant General Motors (GM) says it plans to discontinue production of its more than 80-year-old Pontiac brand.
Pontiac’s origins date back to the Oakland Motor Car, which was founded in 1907 in Pontiac, Michigan, by Edward Murphy, a horse-drawn carriage manufacturer. In 1909, Oakland became part of General Motors, a conglomerate formed the previous year by another former buggy company executive, William Durant. The first Pontiac model made its debut as part of the Oakland line in the 1920s. The car, which featured a six-cylinder engine, proved so popular that the Oakland name was eventually dropped and Pontiac became its own GM division by the early 1930s.
Pontiac was initially known for making sedans; however, by the 1960s it had gained acclaim for its fast, sporty “muscle cars,” including the GTO, the Firebird and the Trans Am. The GTO, which was developed by auto industry maverick John DeLorean, was named after a Ferarri coupe, the Gran Turismo Omologato. Pontiacs were featured in such movies as 1977’s “Smokey and the Bandit,” in which actor Burt Reynolds drove a black Pontiac Trans Am, and the 1980s hit TV show “Knight Rider,” which starred a Pontiac Trans Am as KITT, a talking car with artificial intelligence, alongside David Hasselhoff as crime fighter Michael Knight.
By the mid-1980s, Pontiac’s sales reached their peak. Experts believe GM hurt the Pontiac brand in the 1970s and 1980s by opting for a money-saving strategy requiring Pontiacs to share platforms with cars from other divisions. In 2008, General Motors, which had been the world’s top-selling automaker since the early 1930s, lost the No. 1 position to Japan-based Toyota. That same year, GM, with sales slumping in the midst of a global recession, was forced to ask the federal government for a multi-billion-dollar loan to remain afloat. On April 27, 2009, as part of its reorganization plan, GM announced it would phase out the Pontiac brand by 2010. A little over a month later, on June 1, GM filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection, becoming the fourth-largest bankruptcy in U.S. history.
Pontiac became the second brand General Motors has eliminated in six years. Oldsmobile met the same fate in 2004 after being more slowly phased out over four years. Pontiac also became the ninth North American automobile brand since 1987 to be phased out, after Merkur, Passport, Asüna, Geo, Plymouth, American Motors (AMC) (renamed Eagle in 1988, only to be phased out a decade later), and Oldsmobile.
The last American Pontiac, a 2010 G6, was built on November 25, 2009 at the Orion Assembly plant. No public farewell took place, although a group of plant employees documented the event. In December 2009, the last Pontiac-branded vehicle to roll off an assembly line was in the Canadian-market Pontiac G3 Wave, manufactured in South Korea by GM Daewoo.


April 27, 1952
Ari Vatanen, a Finnish rally driver turned politician was born in Tuupovaara. Vatanen won the World Rally Championship drivers' title in 1981 and the Paris Dakar Rally four times.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on April 28, 2013, 07:53:12 am
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On this day, 28th APril 1916
Legendary Ferruccio Lamborghini was born in a small Itallian village called Renazzo. His interest in automobile began early, modding and racing his souped up Fiat Topolino. His racing career ended when he crashed his fiat in Milli Migelia.
After the WWII he achieved great success manufacturing tractors and air conditioners. Race became his passion and collecting race cars became his hobby, including bunch of Ferraris.
Lamborgini jumped into making sports cars after a very ironic situation when he went to Enzo to advice on Ferarri's clutch issue. Enzo insulted him by saying that he doesn't need any advice from a tractor maker.
In order to achieve his goal, he hired ex-Ferrari engineers Gianpaolo Dallara and Bob Wallace to design and develop his own sports cars. The output was outstanding mid engined beauty like Lambo 350gt and Muira, which were way ahead of its time.
The company’s logo featured a bull, a reference to Ferruccio Lamborghini’s zodiac sign, Taurus the bull. Various Lamborghini models had names related to bulls or bullfighting, including the Miura (named for Don Eduardo Miura, a breeder of fighting bulls), a mid-engine sports car that was released in mid-1960s and gained Lamborghini an international following among car enthusiasts and a reputation for prestige and cutting-edge design.
In the early 1970s, Lamborghini’s tractor business experienced problems and he eventually sold his interest in his sports car business and retired to his vineyard. Automobili Lamborghini changed hands several times and in the late 1990s was purchased by German automaker Volkswagen. The company continued to build high-performance cars, including the Murcielago (capable of 250 mph) and the Gallardo. Ferruccio Lamborghini died on February 20, 1993, at the age of 76.

28th April 1939
Powel Crosely, an American industrilaist produces first American compact car. Initialy it was offered as a two-door convertible that weighed just 450 kg and sold for $250. It was powered by a 580cc 2 cylinder air cooled engine. It was mated with a 3speed gearbox The chassis had an 80-inch wheelbase, half elliptic springs with beam axle in front and quarter elliptics in the rear.
Later many body style were released viz., four-passenger convertibles, a convertible sedan, a station wagon, a panel truck , a pickup , and two models called "Parkway Delivery" (a mini-panel with no roof over the front seat) and "Covered Wagon" (a convertible picion wagonkup truck with a removable back seat).
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on April 28, 2013, 11:17:35 pm
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On this day, April 29, 1951
Dale Earnhardt Sr., popularly known as "The Intimidator" was born in Kannapolis, North Carolina. He is considered as one of the greatest drivers in NASCAR history. He died on February 18, 2001, when he was fatally injured in a last-lap at the Daytona 500. Earnhardt, age 49, died instantly of head injuries.


April 29, 2004
On this day in 2004, the last Oldsmobile comes off the assembly line at the Lansing Car Assembly plant in Michigan, signaling the end of the 106-year-old automotive brand, America’s oldest. Factory workers signed the last Oldsmobile, an Alero sedan, before the vehicle was moved to Lansing’s R.E. Olds Transportation Museum, where it went on display. The last 500 Aleros ever manufactured featured “Final 500” emblems and were painted dark metallic cherry red.
In 1897, Ransom E. Olds (1864-1950), an Ohio-born engine maker, founded the Olds Motor Vehicle Company in Lansing. In 1901, the company, then known as Olds Motor Works, debuted the Curved Dash Oldsmobile, a gas-powered, open-carriage vehicle named for its curved front footboard. More than 400 of these vehicles were sold during the first year, at a price of $650 each (around $17,000 in today’s dollars). In subsequent years, sales reached into the thousands. However, by 1904, clashes between Olds and his investors caused him to sell the bulk of his stock and leave the company. He soon went on to found the REO (based on his initials) Motor Car Company, which built cars until 1936 and produced trucks until 1975.
In 1908, Oldsmobile was the second brand, after Buick, to become part of the newly established General Motors (GM). Oldsmobile became a top brand for GM and pioneered such features as chrome-plating in 1926 and, in 1940, the first fully automatic transmission for a mass-market vehicle. Oldsmobile concentrated on cars for middle-income consumers and from the mid-1970s to the early 1980s, the Oldsmobile Cutlass was America’s best-selling auto. However, in the decades that followed, sales began to decline, prompting GM to announce in 2000 that it would discontinue the Oldsmobile line with the 2004 models. When the last Oldsmobile rolled off the assembly line in April 2004, more than 35 million Oldsmobiles had been built during the brand’s lifetime. Along with Daimler and Peugeot, Oldsmobile was among the world’s oldest auto brands.

April 29th 1992
An jury of 10 whites, one Hispanic, and one Filipina in the Los Angeles suburb of Simi Valley acquits four police officers who had been charged with using excessive force in arresting black motorist Rodney King a year earlier. The announcement of the verdict, which enraged the black community, prompted widespread rioting throughout much of the sprawling city. It wasn't until three days later that the arson and looting finally ended.

Immediately after the verdict was announced that afternoon, protestors took to the streets, engaging in random acts of violence. At the corner of Florence and Normandie streets, Reginald Denny, a white truck driver, was dragged from his truck and severely beaten by several angry rioters. A helicopter crew caught the incident on camera and broadcast it live on local television. Viewers saw first-hand that the police, woefully unprepared, were unwilling—or unable—to enforce the law in certain neighborhoods of the city.

As it became evident that breaking the law in much of South Central Los Angeles would yield little, if any, consequences, opportunistic rioters came out in full force on the night of April 29, burning retail establishments all over the area. Police still had no control of the situation the following day. Thousands of people packed the streets and began looting stores. Korean-owned businesses were targeted in particular. For most, the looting was simply a crime of opportunity rather than any political expression.

The acquitted police officers were later convicted of violating Rodney King's civil rights in a federal court trial. Reginald Denny's attackers were identified through the helicopter videotape, arrested, and convicted of assault and battery. However, the jury declined to convict on attempted murder charges, apparently due to the defense's argument that the defendants had only fallen prey to uncontrollable mob rage.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on April 30, 2013, 04:58:06 am

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On this day, 30th April 1925
The Dodge widows sold Dodge Brothers Inc to the New York City banking firm of Dillon, Read & Company for $146 million plus $50 million for charity. It was the largest cash deal in history at that time. The sale of Dodge was not the result of a downturn in the company's fortune as Dodge was still selling well. The sale of the company was rather the result of the unwillingness of the Dodge Brothers' offspring to manage the company's affairs. Both Horace and John Dodge died in 1920. During their lifetimes, they had run the company personally, explicitly excluding their family members from participation in the company's management. After the brothers' deaths a brief depression in the stock market in 1921 scared the family members into "cashing out" of the company's affairs.
After running it unsuccessfully for three years Dillion Read & Company approached Chrysler for takeover.

April 30th 1948
Land Rover was unveiled for the first time in Amsterdam Motor Show. Land Rover was developed as a result of necesscity when Maurice Wilks, a Rover engineer was unable to procure parts for his constanly breaking WW2 american Jeep while working on his farm in Wales.
He thought there could be a huge demand of such vehcile, as there were a very limited option in that segment namely, Jeep and Kubelwagen only.
He had very limited resource, as Steel was rationed and available to company that exported and at that time Rover didn't. So he thought of using Alumunium, as they were plenty as WWII surplus used to built aircraft. Ironically this had added advantage, one it was cheap, other it was rust proof, just right for Britain's weather.
Its said that 75% of Landy that left the Solihull is still alive.

April 30th 1963
Micheal Waltrip, two time Daytona 500 champion was born in Kentucky. He is retired and currently lives in North Carolina. He owns a racing team, Michael Waltrip Racing and do ocassional commentary for race events.

April 30th 1975
Elliot Sadler, a Nascar race driver was born in Virginia. He currently drives No19 Dodge Charger for Gillett Evernham Motorsports.

April 30th 1991
The last Trabant rolled out of assembly line after 34 years of production and and nearly three million example produced. The model hardly had any significant change during its 34 years of lifecycle. It is commonly used as a handy symbol by the advocate of free market for everything wrong with government planned economies and communism.

April 30th 1993
Roland Ratzenberger, an Austrian racecar driver crashed fatally during the qualifying run for the San Marino Grand Prix at Imola, In the same event the very next day three-time Formula One world champion Ayrton Senna died.

April 30th 2003
Possum Bourne, A kiwi rally driver succumbed due to head injuries sustained on 18th April in non-competitive circumstances while driving on a public road, that was to be the track for an upcoming race. He was driving his Subaru Outback and collided with a Jeep Cherokee driven by another rally driver Mike Baltrop. At the time of his death, Possum had just re-entered the world stage, driving a production-class Subaru Impreza.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on May 01, 2013, 06:03:16 am
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On this day, May 1st 1926

Ford Motor Company becomes one of the first companies in America to adopt a five-day, 40-hour week for workers in its automotive factories. The policy would be extended to Ford's office workers the following August.
Henry Ford's Detroit-based automobile company had broken ground in its labor policies before. In early 1914, against a backdrop of widespread unemployment and increasing labor unrest, Ford announced that it would pay its male factory workers a minimum wage of $5 per eight-hour day, upped from a previous rate of $2.34 for nine hours (the policy was adopted for female workers in 1916). The news shocked many in the industry--at the time, $5 per day was nearly double what the average auto worker made--but turned out to be a stroke of brilliance, immediately boosting productivity along the assembly line and building a sense of company loyalty and pride among Ford's workers.
The decision to reduce the workweek from six to five days had originally been made in 1922. According to an article published in The New York Times that March, Edsel Ford, Henry's son and the company's president, explained that "Every man needs more than one day a week for rest and recreation….The Ford Company always has sought to promote an ideal home life for its employees. We believe that in order to live properly every man should have more time to spend with his family."
Manufacturers all over the country, and the world, soon followed Ford's lead, and the Monday-to-Friday workweek became standard practice.


May 1st 1902
First gasoline powered Locomobile was produced.


May 1st 1925
Ettore Bugatti registered both the 'Pur Sangre Des Automobiles', and the thoroughbred racing horse profile, as French trademarks.


May 1st 1994
Three time F1 World Champion, Aryton Senna died at Imola. Austrian driver Roland Ratzenberger was killed in a practice accident the previous day. Senna and the other drivers still opted to start the Grand Prix, but the race was interrupted by a huge accident at the start line. A safety car was deployed and the drivers followed it for several laps. On the restart Senna immediately set a quick pace with the third quickest lap of the race, followed by Schumacher. As Senna entered the high-speed Tamburello corner on the next lap, the car left the track at high speed, hitting the concrete retaining wall at around 135 mph. Senna was removed from the car by Sid Watkins and his medical team and treated by the side of the car before being airlifted to Bologna hospital where Senna was later declared dead.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on May 02, 2013, 05:00:15 am
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On this day, May 2nd 1918

The General Motors acquired the Chevrolet Motor Company for $32 million in GM stock. This is quite an interesting story. The deal was actually a merger engineered by William Durant rather than a buyout. The original founder of GM, Durant had been forced out of the company by stockholders who had disapproved of Durant's increasingly reckless policies to run the company. Durant after being kicked out of GM started Chevrolet with Swiss racer Louis Chevrolet and managed to make the company a successful competitor in a relatively short period of time. Still the owner of a considerable portion of GM stock, Durant began to purchase more stock in GM as his profits from Chevrolet allowed. In a final move to regain control of the company he founded, Durant offered GM stockholders five shares of Chevrolet stock for every one share of GM stock. Though GM stock prices were exorbitantly high, the market interest in Chevrolet made the five-for-one trade irresistible to GM shareholders. With the sale, Durant regained control of GM.

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Fifty years ago,1963, Ford photographers were capturing this styling prototype on film. The new car was still known at Ford as the "Special Falcon," but also notice the Cougar grille emblem. The Mustang name would not be chosen for several more months.


May 2nd 1972
Buddy Baker became the first stock car driver to finish a 500-mile race in less than three hours en route to winning the Winston Select 500 at the Alabama International Motor Speedway in Talladega, Alabama. He also broke the 200mph barrier two years ago on the same track.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on May 03, 2013, 06:08:13 am
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On this day, May 3rd 1987

The late Davey Allison recorded his first NASCAR Winston Cup victory at Talladega, Alabama, driving his Ford Thunderbird. The very day and in the same race his father, legendary Bobby Allison suffered a near fatal crash.
After the crash, NASCAR made the use of restrictor plates mandatory in all
cars.


May 3rd 1980
On this day in 1980, 13-year-old Cari Lightner of Fair Oaks, California, is walking along a quiet road on her way to a church carnival when a car swerves out of control, striking and killing her. Cari's tragic death compelled her mother, Candy Lightner, to found the organization Mothers Against Drunk Driving (MADD), which would grow into one of the country's most influential non-profit organizations.
When police arrested Clarence Busch, the driver who hit Cari, they found that he had a record of arrests for intoxication, and had in fact been arrested on another hit-and-run drunk-driving charge less than a week earlier. Candy Lightner learned from a policeman that drunk driving was rarely prosecuted harshly, and that Busch was unlikely to spend significant time behind bars. Furious, Lightner decided to take action against what she later called "the only socially accepted form of homicide." MADD was the result.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on May 04, 2013, 05:03:58 am
On this day, May 4th 1904
Charles Stewart Rolls met Frederick Henry Royce in Midland Hotels, Manchester for the very first time and rest is history.

(http://i212.photobucket.com/albums/cc146/ahyoung1950/3_Charles_Stuart_Rolls.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/ahyoung1950/media/3_Charles_Stuart_Rolls.jpg.html)
Pictured Charles S. Rolls


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Historic Midland Hotel in Manchester, which occupies a whole city block where Rolls met Royce for the first time on 4th May 1904.


May 4th 1920
Harry Miller was issued a U.S. patent for a race car design that introduced many features later incorporated into race cars in the following decades.

May 4th 1946
British F1 racer John Watson was born in Northern Ireland.

May 4th 1948
Three time le Mans winner Hurley Haywood was born in Chicago. He was drafted into Army and sent to Vietnam in 1970 before driving his Porsches' to victory.

May 4th 1949
14 time NHRA funny car drag race winner John Force was born in Bell Gardens, California.

May 4th 1984
New Jersey rocker Bruce Springsteen releases "Pink Cadillac" as a B-side to "Dancing in the Dark," which will become the first and biggest hit single off "Born in the U.S.A.," the best-selling album of his career.

May 4th 1987
Jorge Lorenzo, a two time 250cc class World champion was born in Mallorca, Spain. He is currently Rossi's partner in Fiat Yamaha Moto GP team. He previously rode Aprilla to both his victories.

May 4th, 1965
San Francisco Giants outfielder Willie Mays hits his 512th career home run to break Mel Ott’s National League record for home runs. Mays would finish his career with 660 home runs, good for third on the all-time list at the time of his retirement
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on May 05, 2013, 07:00:06 am
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On this day, 5th May 1914
Erwin "Cannonball" Baker began his record setting cross-continental motorcycle trip. After this trip he received his nickname 'Canonball' by A New York newspaper reporter who compared him with Canonball Train.
Baker set 143 driving records from the 1910s through the 1930s. His first was set in 1914, riding coast to coast on an Indian motorcycle in 11 days. In 1915, Baker drove from Los Angeles to New York City in 11 days, 7 hours and fifteen minutes in a Stutz Bearcat, and the following year drove a Cadillac 8 roadster from Los Angeles to Times Square in seven days, eleven hours and fifty-two minutes while accompanied by an Indianapolis newspaper reporter. In 1926 he drove a loaded two-ton truck from New York to San Francisco in a record five days, seventeen hours and thirty minutes, and in 1928, he beat the 20th Century Limited train from New York to Chicago. Also in 1928, he competed in the Mount Washington Hillclimb Auto Race, and set a record time of 14:49.6 seconds, driving a Franklin.
His best-remembered drive was a 1933 New York City to Los Angeles trek in a Graham-Paige model 57 Blue Streak 8, setting a 53.5 hour record that stood for nearly 40 years. This drive inspired the later Cannonball Baker Sea-To-Shining-Sea Memorial Trophy Dash, better known as the "Cannonball Run", which itself inspired at least five movies and a television series. In 1941, he drove a new Crosley Covered Wagon across the nation in a 6,517-mile run to prove the economy and reliability characteristics of Crosley automobiles. Other record and near-record transcontinental trips were made in Model T Fords, Chrysler Imperials, Marmons, Falcon-Knights and Columbia Tigers, among others.

5th May 1944
Bertha Benz, the wife of inventor Karl Benz and the first person to drive an automobile over a long distance, dies on this day in 1944, in Ladenburg, Germany.
Born Bertha Ringer, she married Karl Benz around 1870. Karl Benz received a patent for his horseless carriage, called the Motorwagen, in January 1886. The wooden vehicle had two wheels in the back, one in the front, and a handle-like contraption as a steering wheel. Powered by a single-cylinder, 2.5-horsepower engine, it could reach speeds of up to 25 miles per hour. Benz was having trouble selling the Motorwagen, however: Early press reports were not altogether positive, and customers were reluctant to take a chance on a vehicle that had so far only been tested over short distances.
In early August 1888, Bertha and her two teenage sons, Richard and Eugen, hatched a plan to take the car on a surprise visit to her mother in Pforzheim, Germany. Knowing that Karl would never allow it, they left early in the morning, while he was still sleeping. The trio drove from their home in Mannheim to Pforzheim and back, a total distance of 106 kilometers. Though big streets in the cities were often paved, there were no real roads outside urban areas yet, and Bertha had to drive along railway lines in order to find her way. To refuel the car, she bought Ligroin, a detergent then used as fuel, at local pharmacies. When the car's fuel line clogged, she unclogged it using one of her hairpins. She also used the garter on her stocking to fix a broken ignition.
Bertha's history-making drive proved that the horseless carriage was suitable for regular use. The press covered it extensively, and Karl Benz began to field requests from potential buyers all over the world. By the end of the 19th century, Benz & Cie. was the world's largest automobile company, with 572 vehicles produced in 1899 alone. Karl Benz left the company several years later. He died in 1929, three years after Benz & Cie. merged with Daimler Motors to form Daimler-Benz, makers of the famous Mercedes-Benz. Bertha Benz continued to live at their home in Ladenburg until her death on May 5, 1944, at the age of 95.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on May 06, 2013, 05:31:54 am
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On this day, May 6th 1991
Harry Gant, aged 51, broke his own record to become the oldest man to win a NASCAR race when he won the Winston 500 in Talladega.

May 6th 1994
French President Mitterrand and Queen Elizabeth II jointly open the Channel Tunnel linking Britain and France underneath the English Channel. Eurotunnel Shuttle service, a roll-on roll-off shuttle service is used to transport road vehicles including freight lorries from France to UK and vice-versa.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on May 07, 2013, 02:30:52 am
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On this day, May 7th 1967
Don Prudhomme, then 26, popularly known as 'The Snake' drove a modified Ford to became the first dragster to run the quarter mile in less than seven seconds when he reached 226 mph at the NHRA World Series.

May 7th 1952
James J. Nance resigned form his position at Hotpoint, an appliance maker to become the president and general manager of the Packard Motor Company. There he was responsible for development of Packard's first V8 engine and automatic transmission popularly known as Ultramatic.

May 7th 1998
Dana Holding Corporation announces its participation in the largest-ever merger of automotive suppliers by its acquisition of Echlin Inc.

May 7th 1998
On this day in 1998, the German automobile company Daimler-Benz--maker of the world-famous luxury car brand Mercedes-Benz--announces a $36 billion merger with the United States-based Chrysler Corporation.
The purchase of Chrysler, America's third-largest car company, by the Stuttgart-based Daimler-Benz marked the biggest acquisition by a foreign buyer of any U.S. company in history. Though marketed to investors as an equal pairing, it soon emerged that Daimler would be the dominant partner, with its stockholders owning the majority of the new company's shares. For Chrysler, headquartered in Auburn Hills, Michigan, the end of independence was a surprising twist in a striking comeback story. After a near-collapse and a government bailout in 1979 that saved it from bankruptcy, the company surged back in the 1980s under the leadership of the former Ford executive Lee Iacocca, in a revival spurred in part by the tremendous success of its trendsetting minivan.
The new company, DaimlerChrysler AG, began trading on the Frankfurt and New York stock exchanges the following November. A few months later, according to a 2001 article in The New York Times, its stock price rose to an impressive high of $108.62 per share. The euphoria proved to be short-lived, however. While Daimler had been attracted by the profitability of Chrysler's minivans and Jeeps, over the next few years profits were up and down, and by the fall of 2003 the Chrysler Group had cut some 26,000 jobs and was still losing money.
In 2006, according to the Times, Chrysler posted a loss of $1.5 billion and fell behind Toyota to fourth place in the American car market. This loss came despite the company's splashy launch of 10 new Chrysler models that year, with plans to unveil eight more. The following May, however, after reportedly negotiating with General Motors about a potential sale, DaimlerChrysler announced it was selling 80.1 percent of Chrysler to the private-equity firm Cerberus Capital Management for $7.4 billion. DaimlerChrysler, soon renamed Daimler AG, kept a 19.9 percent stake in the new company, known as Chrysler LLC.
By late 2008, increasingly dismal sales led Chrysler to seek federal funds to the tune of $4 billion to stay afloat. Under pressure from the Obama administration, the company filed for bankruptcy protection in April 2009 and entered into a planned partnership with the Italian automaker Fiat.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on May 08, 2013, 06:36:22 am
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On this day, May 8th 1899
Olds Motor Works was incorporated by the merger of Olds Motor Vehicle and Olds Gasoline Engine Works.

May 8th 1933
The very first police radio system was installed in Eastchester Township, New York, by Radio Engineering Laboratories of Long Island.

May 8th 1956
Henry Ford II resigned as the chairperson of Ford Foundation. The Ford Foundation is a philanthropic institution incorporated in Michigan and based in New York City created to fund programs that was chartered in 1936 by Edsel Ford and Henry Ford. He resigned as a trustee in 1976 rendering it independent of Ford Motor Company and Ford family.

May 8th 1964
Bobby Labonte, an american Nascar driver for born in Texas. As of 2008, Labonte is the only driver to have won both the NASCAR Sprint Cup championship and the NASCAR Nationwide Series championship.

May 8th 1982
Gilles Villeneuve, Canadian race car driver died when he crashed his Ferrari during the Belgian Grand Prix.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on May 09, 2013, 05:32:12 am
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On this day, May 9th 2008
"Speed Racer," the big-budget live-action film version of the 1960s Japanese comic book and television series "MachGoGoGo," makes its debut in U.S. movie theaters.
Christina Ricci, John Goodman, Susan Sarandon and Matthew Fox co-starred in "Speed Racer" alongside Hirsch. Another key cast member was not an actor but an automobile: the mighty Mach 5, a race car designed and built by Speed's father, Pops Racer. As in the American version of the comic, the sleek Mach 5 used in the film is white with red accents, bears similarities to an early Ferrari Testarossa and is outfitted with an array of special features, including jacks that automatically boost the car, allowing for easy repair; rotary saws that protrude from the front tires; and a deflector that seals the driver into a crash-proof container. As part of the publicity for the Wachowskis' "Speed Racer," the Mach 5 went on display in January 2008 at the North American International Auto Show in Detroit, Michigan. As reported in USA Today, however, the car saw little real action on the track. During filming, it was attached to a crane, and most of the effects for the racing scenes were computer generated.

May 9th 1911
Thomas H. Flaherty, of Pittsburgh, PA, received a patent for a "Signal for Crossing", first U. S. patent application for a traffic signal design.

May 9th 1992
Roberto Guerrero, a Colombian race car driver set an Indianapolis 500 qualifying record, driving his Lola-Buick to an average speed of 232.483mph and setting the single lap record at 232.618mph.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on May 10, 2013, 08:16:14 am
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On this day, May 10th 1841
James Gordon Bennett Jr., publisher of the New York Herald and one of the very first sponsor and patrons of auto racing (Gordon Bennett Cup Races) was born in New York City.

May 10th 1923
Alfred P. Sloan, Jr. elected GM president, Chairman of Executive Committee.

May 10th 1975
Hélio Castroneves, a two time Indy500 race car driver was born in Sao Paulo, Brazil.

May 10th 2012
Carroll Shelby dies.

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Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on May 11, 2013, 01:10:29 am

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On this day, May 11th 1947
Ferrari made its independent racing debut at a race in Piacenza, Italy. Enzo Ferrari had been designing race cars for Alpha Romeo since the late 1920s, After the WWII he decided to start his own brand. His debut car Tipo 125 featured a revolutionary V12 engine and way ahead of time but failed to finish due to fuel pump error. Still during the season he made and sold 3 Tipos. He adopted the now famous prancing horse logo in honour of Italian World War I ace Enrico Baracca, who used the logo on his fighter plane. Interesting thing about Enzo is that he manufactured and sold his cars to
fullfill his racing hobby.

May 11th 1916
Charles Kettering and Edward Deeds agreed to sell their Dayton Engineering Laboratories Company, famously known as DELCO to the United Motors Corporation, a holding company of William C. Durant at a record $9 million. Delco was responsible for several innovations in automobile electric systems, including the first battery ignition system and the first practical automobile self starter.

May 11th 1947
On this day in 1947, the B.F. Goodrich Company of Akron, Ohio, announces it has developed a tubeless tire, a technological innovation that would make automobiles safer and more efficient.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on May 12, 2013, 01:35:04 am
William Claytons Odometer
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On this day, May 12th 1847
William Clayton invented the odometer. During his trip across the plains from Missouri to Utah he was assigned to record the number of miles the company traveled each day. Clayton with the help of mathematecian Orson Pratt tired counting the revolutions of a wagon wheel and computing the day's distance by multiplying the count by the wheel's circumference. After consulting with Pratt, he developed a design consisting of a set of wooden cog wheels attached to the hub of a wagon wheel, with the mechanism "counting" or recording by position the revolutions of the wheel. The apparatus was built by the company's carpenter Appleton Milo Harmon.

May 12th, 1948,
Roy McCarty rendered his sketch for the first Mustang. (Not Ford) The first Mustang was built in 1948 by Roy in Seattle, Washington who later went on to sue Ford for $10,000,000 in damages over the use of the Mustang name?
He was a service manager at a Lincoln dealership and a thinker of large proportions. On paper, his logic was unassailable. He planned on using parts that were already in manufacture for every system of the car and he’s adapt them to fit. Steering from a Willys Jeep, engine from Continental, Spicer axles originally intended for some other car. The benefit was cost and ease of access to repair parts and service items. The downside is that Roy McCarty didn’t have a lot of money and launching a car company from a far flung corner of the USA was no small job. A maximum of 12 1949 Mustangs were actually built before the company went bankrupt in 1950
MORE INFO HERE:
http://bangshift.com/blog/the-first-mustang-was-built-in-1948-not-by-ford-and-it-looked-like-this-cool-story.html?utm_content=buffer21b3e&utm_source=buffer&utm_medium=facebook&utm_campaign=Buffer (http://bangshift.com/blog/the-first-mustang-was-built-in-1948-not-by-ford-and-it-looked-like-this-cool-story.html?utm_content=buffer21b3e&utm_source=buffer&utm_medium=facebook&utm_campaign=Buffer)

May 12th 1957
Alfonso de Portago fataly crashed his Ferrari during the Mili Miglia. He, his co-driver Edmund Nelson along with nine spectators were killed when his tire blew. Among the dead were five children. This accident also resulted in a long trial for Ferrari team owner Enzo Ferrari.


May 12th 1973
Art Portland, an american race car driver died during the practice session for the 1973 Indianapolis 500.


May 12th 2000
On this day in 2000, 19-year-old Adam Petty, son of Winston Cup driver Kyle Petty and grandson of National Association for Stock Car Auto Racing (NASCAR) icon Richard Petty, is killed after crashing into a wall during practice for a Grand National race at Loudon, New Hampshire.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on May 13, 2013, 03:18:31 am
Vice President Richard Nixon's car is attacked by an angry crowd
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On this day, May 13th 1958
During a goodwill trip through Latin America, Vice President Richard Nixon's car is attacked by an angry crowd and nearly overturned while traveling through Caracas, Venezuela. The incident was the dramatic highlight of trip characterized by Latin American anger over some of America's Cold War policies.


May 13th 1980
At the annual meeting of the Chrysler Corporation on this day in 1980, stockholders vote to appoint Douglas Fraser, president of the United Automobile Workers (UAW), to one of 20 seats on Chrysler's board of directors. The vote made Fraser the first union representative ever to sit on the board of a major U.S. corporation.
Born in 1916 in Glasgow, Scotland, to a strongly unionist father, Fraser was brought to the United States at the age of six. After dropping out of high school, he was fired from his first two factory jobs for trying to organize his fellow workers. Fraser then got a job at a Chrysler-owned DeSoto plant in Detroit that was organized by the UAW. Quickly promoted through union ranks, Fraser caught the eye of UAW president Walter Reuther. He worked as Reuther's administrative assistant during the 1950s, a groundbreaking period during which the UAW solidified policies on retirement pensions and medical and dental care for its members. Well liked by Reuther, with whom he shared a similar philosophy of unionism as social action, Fraser became a member of the union's executive board in 1962 and a vice president in 1970. Reuther died in an airplane crash that year, and Leonard Woodcock won a narrow vote over Fraser to become UAW president. Fraser succeeded Woodcock in 1977.
The late 1970s were turbulent times for the American auto industry: Rising fuel prices and the popularity of fuel-efficient Japanese-made cars had crippled sales, and Chrysler--known for its big, gas-guzzling cars--faced possible bankruptcy. In 1979-80, Fraser played a key role in getting Chrysler a $1.5 billion bailout from the U.S. government, negotiating a deal that called for hourly workers at Chrysler to accept wage cuts of $3 per hour (to $17) and giving the company permission to shed nearly 50,000 of its U.S. jobs. In a controversial move that was viewed with trepidation from both sides of the labor-management divide, Chrysler's chief executive, Lee Iacocca, nominated Fraser to the company's executive board. The stockholders voted in Fraser on May 13, 1980--three days after U.S. Treasury Secretary G. William Miller announced the approval of the Chrysler bailout.
Chrysler's subsequent turnaround--the company paid off its government loans ahead of schedule and posted record profits of some $2.4 billion in 1984--seemed to justify Fraser's willingness to make compromises on the labor side. Some critics, however, saw the union leader's actions as opening the door to a wave of similar concessionary bargaining on the part of automakers that later spread to management in other industries. Fraser retired as UAW president in 1983 and left the Chrysler board the following year. He died in February 2008, at the age of 91.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on May 14, 2013, 08:53:14 am
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On this day, May 14, 2007
Cerebrus Capital Management, a private equity firm acquired 80.1% interest in Chrysler from Daimler A.G. for $7.4 billion. Daimler had bought it for $36 billion in 1998. The management renamed it Chrysler Holdings. Daimler paid $677 million in cash in return for release from $18 billion health/pension liabilities but retained 19.9% interest in Chrysler. This was the first private auto company in Detroit since 1956 (Ford went public).
On March 30, 2009, it was announced that Cerberus Capital Management will lose its equity stake and ownership in Chrysler as a condition of the Treasury Department’s bailout deal, but Cerberus will maintain a controlling stake in Chrysler’s financing arm, Chrysler Financial. Cerberus will utilize the first $2 billion in proceeds from its Chrysler Financial holding to backstop a $4 billion December 2008 Treasury Department loan given to Chrysler. In exchange for obtaining that loan, it promised many concessions including surrendering equity, foregoing profits, and giving up board seats.

May 14 1998
The legendary singer, actor and show-business icon Frank Sinatra dies of a heart attack in Los Angeles, at the age of 82.

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Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on May 15, 2013, 07:23:50 pm
On this day, May 15th 1942
United States began gasoline rationing.

May 15th 1981
The 20,000,000th Volkswagen Beetle was produced at the Volkswagen plant in Puebla, Mexico.

May 15th 1982
Gordon Smiley, an american race car driver was killed in Indianapolis Speedway

May15th 1986
Elio de Angelis an Italian F1 racer was killed during testing at the Paul Ricard circuit at Le Castellet

May 15th 1992
Edward Jovy Marcelo, a Filipino race car driver from Quezon City, Philippines was killed in practice for the 1992 Indianapolis 500.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on May 16, 2013, 10:11:14 pm
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On this day, May 16th 1903
George Wyman became the first motorcyclist to make a transcontinental trip across America. In fact, he was the first ever to make the trip by means of a motorized vehicle. Wyman’s trip was made on a 1.25-horsepower, 90cc California motorcycle designed by Roy Marks. Wyman’s arduous journey, which started in San Francisco on May 16, took 50 days and ended in New York City on July 6.
PS: not to be confused with a 19th century architect of the same name.

May 16th 1956
General Motors opens its brand-new $125 million GM Technical Center in Warren, Michigan. Today, the GM Technical Center is one of the landmarks of twentieth-century architecture. A $1 billion dollar renovation of the GM Technical Center was completed in 2003.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on May 17, 2013, 06:47:13 am
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On this day, May 17th 2005
On this day in 2005, Toyota Motor Company announces its plans to produce a gasoline-electric hybrid version of its bestselling Camry sedan. Built at the company's Georgetown, Kentucky, plant, the Camry became Toyota's first hybrid model to be manufactured in the United States.
Toyota introduced the Camry--the name is a phonetic transcription of the Japanese word for "crown"--in the Japanese market in 1980; it began selling in the United States the following year. By the late 1980s and early 1990s, the success of the Camry and its Japanese competitor, the Honda Accord, had allowed Toyota and Honda to seize control of the midsize sedan market in the United States. By then, Toyota had adapted the Camry more to American tastes, increasing its size and replacing its original boxy design with a smoother, more rounded style. By 2003, as Micheline Maynard recorded in her book "The End of Detroit," apart from the early-'90s success of the Ford Taurus, the Camry and Accord had long maintained their position atop the list of the nation's best-selling cars overall, each selling around 400,000 units per year.
In 1997, Toyota's Prius--the world's first mass-produced gasoline-electric hybrid vehicle--went on sale in Japan. It was released worldwide in 2001. By using an electric motor to supplement power from the gasoline, hybrid technology resulted in greatly improved fuel efficiency and higher gas mileage. Honda launched its own hybrid lineup with the Insight in 1999 and continued with the hybrid Civic in 2002. By then, skyrocketing gas prices had combined with a backlash against gas-guzzling sport utility vehicles (SUVs) to make hybrids suddenly chic. Eco-conscious Hollywood celebrities such as Leonardo DiCaprio and Cameron Diaz proudly drove their Priuses around Los Angeles, and by 2003 Honda and Toyota were selling 50,000 hybrids a year in the United States. The plans to develop a hybrid Camry, announced in May 2005, brought the total number of Toyota-made hybrid models to four, including the Prius; the Lexus RX 400h, a midsize sport utility vehicle (SUV) released in April 2005; and a second SUV, the Toyota Highlander, released that June.

May 17th 1868
Horace Elgin Dodge, automobile manufacturing pioneer was born in Niles, Michigan.

May 17th 1890
Emile Levassor married Louise Sarazin, the widow of Edouard Sarazin and the French distributor of Daimler engines. The marriage set the stage for Levassor's business venture, Panhard et Levassor, which would use Daimler engines in its cars. Emile, France's premier car racer before the turn of the century, set an early record by driving from Paris to Bordeaux and back at an average of 14.9mph in 1895. His cutting-edge Panhard had a 2.4 liter engine and produced only 4hp. After two years of development Levassor's Daimler engine was capable of pushing the lightweight, wood-framed Panhard to over 70mph.

May 17th 1994
Al Unser Sr. announced his retirement from auto racing, ending one of the greatest Indy Car careers of all time.

Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on May 18, 2013, 08:09:33 am
(http://i98.photobucket.com/albums/l263/camberix/cars/Colin_Chapman_Lotus_Esprit_.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/camberix/media/cars/Colin_Chapman_Lotus_Esprit_.jpg.html)
Pictured: Colin Chapman


On this day, May 18th 1958
In Monaco, France, Team Lotus makes its Formula One debut in the Monaco Grand Prix, the opening event of the year's European racing season. Over the next four decades, Team Lotus will go on to become one of the most successful teams in Formula One history.
Team Lotus was the motor sport wing of the Lotus Engineering Company, founded six years earlier by the British engineer and race car driver Anthony Colin Bruce Chapman.
Chapman built his first car, a modified 1930 Austin Seven, while still a university student. His success building trial cars led to the completion of the first Lotus production model, the Mark 6, in 1952; 100 were produced by 1955, establishing Chapman's reputation as a innovator in the design of top-performing race cars. By 1957, Lotus had become a well-known name among car aficionados, while Team Lotus dominated the Le Mans racing circuit, winning the 750-cc class and the Index of Performance at Le Mans in 1957 with the Lotus Type 11.
On May 18, 1958, Team Lotus made its first entry in the Formula One circuit, entering two single-seat Type 12s, driven by Cliff Allison and Graham Hill, into the Monaco Grand Prix. Though Ferrari was the favorite going into the race, British-made cars dominated the qualifying rounds, with Vanwall, British Racing Motors (BRM) and Cooper all finishing in front of Ferrari. In the main event, Maurice Trintignant (driving a Cooper) took first place after Ferrari's Mike Hawthorn, that year's eventual Formula One champion, was forced to stop with a broken fuel pump. Allison finished sixth in his Lotus, 13 laps behind the leader; Hill finished in 26th place.
Chapman learned from the success of the midsize engine Cooper race cars, incorporating the layout into a refined version of the Lotus Type 12. In 1960, Stirling Moss drove the result--the Type 18--to victory in the Monaco Grand Prix, scoring the first of what would be many Grand Prix wins for Lotus. Jim Clark won the team's first World Driver's Championship in 1963, beginning a golden age of Lotus racing. Both Clark and Graham Hill won multiple Formula One titles, and Clark also drove a Lotus to victory in the Indianapolis 500 in 1965. In later years, virtuoso drivers like Emmerson Fittipaldi, Mario Andretti and Alessandro Zanardi all represented Lotus. In 1977, the low-slung Lotus Esprit had a starring turn in the James Bond movie "The Spy Who Loved Me"; another Esprit, the Turbo, was featured in the 1981 Bond film "For Your Eyes Only."
Chapman died in 1982, and Team Lotus left racing in the 1990s. It remains one of the most successful Formula One teams of all time, with more than 50 Grand Prix titles.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on May 19, 2013, 12:07:30 am
(http://i86.photobucket.com/albums/k85/AUPepBand/Spicer_car.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/AUPepBand/media/Spicer_car.jpg.html)

On this day, May 19th 1903
Clarence Spicer received a patent for a "Casing for Universal Joints"; first practical universal joint to power automobile (vs. chain-and-sprocket drives
Pictured: First car utilizing Spicer's universal joint, built at Cornell in 1903. Spicer had attended Alfred Academy where he studied physiology, then applied human joint structure to the auto.

May 19th 1903
David Dunbar Buick, former plumbing inventor and manufacturer, incorporated Buick Motor Co. (formed in 1902) in Detroit, Michigan.

May19th 1928
Colin Chapman, the founder of Lotus Cars was born in the suburb of London.

May19th 1991
Willy T. Ribbs became the first African-American driver to qualify for the Indy 500.

May19th 2007
Los Angeles, California, is the first stop on a cross-country road show launched on this day in 2007 by Smart USA to promote the attractions of its "ForTwo" microcar, which it had scheduled for release in the United States in 2008.
In the early 1990s, Nicholas Hayek of Swatch, the company famous for its wide range of colorful and trendy plastic watches, went to German automaker Mercedes-Benz with his idea for an "ultra-urban" car. The result of their joint venture was the diminutive Smart (an acronym for Swatch Mercedes ART) ForTwo, which debuted at the Frankfurt Motor Show in 1997 and went on sale in nine European countries over the next year. Measuring just over eight feet from bumper to bumper, the original ForTwo was marketed as a safe, fuel-efficient car that could be maneuvered easily through narrow, crowded city streets. Despite its popularity among urban Europeans, Smart posted significant losses, and Swatch soon pulled out of the joint venture.
Undaunted, Mercedes maker DaimlerChrysler (now Daimler AG) launched the Smart ForTwo in Canada in 2004 as an initial foray into the North American market. In June 2006, DaimlerChrysler chairman Dieter Zetsche announced that the Smart would make its U.S. debut in early 2008. Between 2003 and 2006, as reported by the German newspaper Handelsblatt, DaimlerChrysler took a loss of some 3.9 billion euros (around $5.2 billion) on the Smart brand, and the company looked to the U.S. market as a way to bring the brand into profitability.
The cross-country road show that began in May 2007 allowed consumers in 50 cities nationwide to test-drive the ForTwo. On each stop on the tour, a large truck served as a mobile exhibit dedicated to the microcar, complete with interactive displays and virtual demonstrations. As Dave Schembri, president of Smart USA, put it: "The Smart ForTwo is all about urban independence and freeing people from the constraints of city driving." Under normal driving conditions, the ForTwo was designed to achieve 40 plus miles per gallon. The show was presumably a success: By September 2007, according to an article in MarketWatch, Smart USA said it had already received more than 30,000 registrations from potential buyers. The FortTwo went on sale in the United States in January 2008, at prices ranging from around $12,000 to around $21,000.

May19th, 2014
Three-time formula one world champion Sir Jack Brabham has passed away, aged 88.
A former Royal Australian Air Force mechanic, Brabham’s motorsport career started on Australian speedway dirt tracks in the late 1940s before he headed to the United Kingdom and joined the Cooper Racing Team, with which he won the 1959 and 1960 Formula One championships.
But it was his own Brabham racing cars – designed and engineered with friend and fellow Australian Ron Tauranac – that led to him winning the 1966 championship.
Brabham is the only person to have won the F1 world championship in his own car.
He was born John Arthur Brabham on April 2, 1926 but was known as Jack and later picked up the nickname Black Jack.
Brabham is survived by his second wife, Lady Margaret, and sons to his first wife Betty - Geoff, Gary and David, each of whom has enjoyed success in motorsport.



Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on May 20, 2013, 08:45:45 pm
On this day, May 20th 1899
Jacob German, operator of a taxicab for the Electric Vehicle Company, became the first driver to be arrested for speeding when he was stopped by Bicycle Roundsman Schueller for driving at the speed of 12mph on Lexington Avenue in Manhattan. German was booked and held in jail at the East Twenty-second Street station house. He was, of course, not made to hand over his license and registration, as neither item was required until two years later in the State of New York.

May 20th 1961
The Ford Motor Company completed a highly modified stretch Lincoln Continental convertible sedan for the U.S. Secret Service to be used as a presidential limousine. It was modified by Hess & Eisenhardt Company. The limo, later known as the SS-100-X, carried President John F. Kennedy down Elm Street in Dallas, Texas, when he was assassinated in 1963.


May 20th 1971
Anthony Wayne "Tony" Stewart, a NASCAR driver was born in Columbus, Indiana.


May 20th 1973
Jarno Karl Keimo Saarinen, a Finnish Grand Prix motorcycle racer died during the fourth Moto GP season in Monza, Italy. A crash during the 350cc race left an oil slick on the track which the Race officials had failed to clean it properly between races. On the opening lap of the 250cc race, track marshals didn't wave the yellow and red stripe oil flag warning riders of the oil slicked surface. The race leader, Renzo Pasolini fell in front of Saarinen, who was in second place. He couldn't avoid the fallen rider and the resulting crash caused a multiple rider pile up. In all, 14 riders were embroiled in the mayhem that resulted. When the dust cleared, Jarno and Pasolini laid dead with many other riders seriously injured.

SS-100-X as it stands today in the Henry Ford Museum in Dearborn, Michigan.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on May 20, 2013, 08:46:02 pm
On this day, May 20th 1899
Jacob German, operator of a taxicab for the Electric Vehicle Company, became the first driver to be arrested for speeding when he was stopped by Bicycle Roundsman Schueller for driving at the speed of 12mph on Lexington Avenue in Manhattan. German was booked and held in jail at the East Twenty-second Street station house. He was, of course, not made to hand over his license and registration, as neither item was required until two years later in the State of New York.

May 20th 1961
The Ford Motor Company completed a highly modified stretch Lincoln Continental convertible sedan for the U.S. Secret Service to be used as a presidential limousine. It was modified by Hess & Eisenhardt Company. The limo, later known as the SS-100-X, carried President John F. Kennedy down Elm Street in Dallas, Texas, when he was assassinated in 1963.


May 20th 1971
Anthony Wayne "Tony" Stewart, a NASCAR driver was born in Columbus, Indiana.


May 20th 1973
Jarno Karl Keimo Saarinen, a Finnish Grand Prix motorcycle racer died during the fourth Moto GP season in Monza, Italy. A crash during the 350cc race left an oil slick on the track which the Race officials had failed to clean it properly between races. On the opening lap of the 250cc race, track marshals didn't wave the yellow and red stripe oil flag warning riders of the oil slicked surface. The race leader, Renzo Pasolini fell in front of Saarinen, who was in second place. He couldn't avoid the fallen rider and the resulting crash caused a multiple rider pile up. In all, 14 riders were embroiled in the mayhem that resulted. When the dust cleared, Jarno and Pasolini laid dead with many other riders seriously injured.

SS-100-X as it stands today in the Henry Ford Museum in Dearborn, Michigan.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on May 21, 2013, 05:28:24 am

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On this day, May 21st 2003
Alejandro de Tomaso an Argentinean racing driver and car maker died in Modena Italy. He participated in two F1 races winning no points but was a very successful car maker. He founded the Italian sports car company De Tomaso Automobili in 1959, and later built up a substantial business empire. Even Elvis Presly was fan of his car and owned himself a yellow one
...
May 21st 1901
Connecticut became the first state to enact a speeding-driver law. The State General Assembly passed a bill submitted by Representative Robert Woodruff that stipulated the speed of all motor vehicles should not exceed 12mph on country highways and eight mph within city limits.
...
May 21st 1950
Juan Manuel Fangio, Argentinean auto racer won the Monaco Grand Prix in an Alfa Romeo 158, the victory was the first of the 24-Grand Prix victories in his illustrious Formula One career.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on May 22, 2013, 02:31:23 am
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On this day, May 22nd 1921
Racer Marshall Teague was born in Daytona Beach, Florida. Teague was one of NASCAR's earliest heroes. Racing Hudson Hornets equipped with revolutionary step-down chassis, Teague won five races in 1951 alone.

May 22nd 1977
Janet Guthrie became the first female to qualify for the Indianapolis 500. However she failed to finish the 1977 race due to mechanical troubles.

May 22nd 2001
Ford Motor Co. announced plans to spend more than $2 billion to replace up to 13 million Firestone tires on its vehicles because of safety concerns and numerous law suits.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on May 23, 2013, 07:19:05 am
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Iconic Image of Bonnie and Clyde, Check the Ford V8 at back


On this day, May 23rd 1934
Wanted outlaws Clyde Barrow and Bonnie Parker are shot to death by Texas and Louisiana state police officers as they attempt to escape apprehension in a stolen 1934 Ford Deluxe near Bienville Parish, Louisiana.
Beginning in early 1932, Parker and Barrow set off on a two-year crime spree, evading local police in rural Texas, Louisiana and New Mexico before drawing the attention of federal authorities at the Bureau of Investigation (as the FBI was then known). Though the couple was believed to have been responsible for 13 murders by the time they were killed, along with several bank robberies and burglaries, the only charge the Bureau could chase them on was a violation of the National Motor Vehicle Act, which gave federal agents the authority to pursue suspects accused of interstate transportation of a stolen automobile. The car in question was a Ford, stolen in Illinois and found abandoned in Pawhuska, Oklahoma. Inside, agents discovered a prescription bottle later traced to the Texas home of Clyde Barrow's aunt.
As authorities stepped up the pressure to catch the outlaw couple, the heavily armed Barrow and Parker were joined at various times by the convicted murderer Raymond Hamilton (whom they helped break out of jail in 1934), William Daniel Jones and Clyde's brother Ivan "Buck" Barrow and his wife, Blanche. In the spring of 1934, federal agents traced the Barrow-Parker gang to a remote county in southwest Louisiana, where the Methvin family was said to have been aiding and abetting the outlaws for over a year. Bonnie and Clyde, along with some of the Methvins, had staged a party at Black Lake, Louisiana, on the night of May 21. Two days later, just before dawn, a posse of police officers from Texas and Louisiana laid an ambush along the highway near Sailes, Louisiana. When Parker and Barrow appeared, going some 85 mph in another stolen Ford--a four-door 1934 Deluxe with a V-8 engine, the officers let loose with a hail of bullets, leaving the couple no chance of survival despite the small arsenal of weapons they had with them.
The bullet-ridden Deluxe, originally owned by Ruth Warren of Topeka, Kansas, was later exhibited at carnivals and fairs then sold as a collector's item; in 1988, the Primm Valley Resort and Casino in Las Vegas purchased it for some $250,000. Barrow's enthusiasm for cars was evident in a letter he wrote earlier in the spring of 1934, addressed to Henry Ford himself: "While I still have got breath in my lungs I will tell you what a dandy car you make. I have drove Fords exclusively when I could get away with one. For sustained speed and freedom from trouble the Ford has got every other car skinned and even if my business hasn't been strictly legal it don't hurt anything to tell you what a fine car you got in the V-8."

May 23 1945,
Heinrich Himmler, chief of the SS, assistant chief of the Gestapo, and architect of Hitler's program to exterminate European Jews, commits suicide one day after being arrested by the British.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on May 24, 2013, 06:21:07 am
(http://i474.photobucket.com/albums/rr108/nothing_wong/Blog/thelma.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/nothing_wong/media/Blog/thelma.jpg.html)


On this day, May 24th 1991
On this day in 1991, the critically acclaimed road movie "Thelma and Louise" debuts in theaters, stunning audiences with a climactic scene in which its two heroines drive off a cliff into the Grand Canyon, in a vintage 1966 green Ford Thunderbird convertible.

May 24th 1899
W. T. McCullough, of Boston opened first public garage, Back Bay Cycle and Motor Company, as a "stable for renting, sale, storage, and repair of motor vehicles."

May 24th 2013
Aussie drag racer, John English passes away aged 89. John, along with Eddie Thomas, was one of the first real stars of Australian drag racing, a pioneer of the speed equipment industry and an all-round top bloke

May 24th 1903
Marcel Renault, age 31, and his riding mechanic Vauthier, were killed in a crash during the Paris-to-Madrid Race. After another deadly crash, the race was canceled at the end of the first leg from Paris to Bordeaux, and the era of city-to-city races came to an end.

May 24th 1938
The very first patent was received for a "Coin Controlled Parking Meter" by Carl C. Magee of Dual Parking Meter Company of Oklahoma City

May 24th 1987
Al Unser Sr. won his fourth Indianapolis 500 driving the year-old March-Cosworth car. At 47 years and 360 days old, Al became the oldest winner in the event's history.

Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on May 25, 2013, 05:12:22 am
(http://i832.photobucket.com/albums/zz250/IN500trail/Howard%20County/elwoodfirstcar.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/IN500trail/media/Howard%20County/elwoodfirstcar.jpg.html)
Pictured: Elwood Haynes first car

On this day, May 25th 1898
Elwood Haynes and Elmer Apperson organized the Haynes-Apperson Company in Kokomo, Indiana. Credited with having built America's first gas-powered car for much of his lifetime, Elwood Haynes was one of the most brilliant inventors in the early car industry. The Haynes-Apperson Company was his first foray into the mass production of cars. Together, the pair expected to manufacture 50 cars per year. Most famous as a metallurgist, Haynes was the first man to outfit his cars with all-aluminum engines, and to build his car bodies of nickel-plated steel. Haynes and Apperson shocked the world when they fulfilled the terms of a buyer's agreement by delivering their car from Kokomo to New York City. It was the first 1,000-mile car trip undertaken in the United States.

May 25th 1927
Ford Motor Company announced end of Model T and its replacement by Model A.

May 25th 1985
The Charlotte Motor Speedway, a k a the Mecca of Motorsports, held its first race. The Speedway, and the city of Charlotte itself, are symbols of the new era of NASCAR racing.

May 25th 1977
Memorial Day weekend opens with an intergalactic bang as the first of George Lucas' blockbuster Star Wars movies hits American theaters.

May 25, 1935, at Forbes Field in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, Babe Ruth hits his 714th home run, a record for career home runs that would stand for almost 40 years. This was one of Ruth’s last games, and the last home run of his career. Ruth went four for four on the day, hitting three home runs and driving in six runs.

May 25th 1895
Playwright Oscar Wilde is taken to Reading Gaol in London after being convicted of sodomy. The famed writer of Dorian Gray and The Importance of Being Earnest brought attention to his private life in a feud with Sir John Sholto Douglas, whose son was intimately involved with Wilde.


May 25th 1985
On this day in 1994, the ashes of 71-year-old George Swanson are buried (according to Swanson's request) in the driver's seat of his 1984 white Corvette in Hempfield County, Pennsylvania.
Swanson, a beer distributor and former U.S. Army sergeant during World War II, died the previous March 31 at the age of 71. He had reportedly been planning his automobile burial for some time, buying 12 burial plots at Brush Creek Cemetery, located 25 miles east of Pittsburgh, in order to ensure that his beloved Corvette would fit in his grave with him. After his death, however, the cemetery balked, amid concerns of vandalism and worries that other clients would be offended by the outlandish nature of the burial. They finally relented after weeks of negotiations, but insisted that the burial be private, and that the car be drained of fluids to protect the environment.
According to the AP, Swanson's widow, Caroline, transported her husband's ashes to the cemetery on the seat of her own white 1993 Corvette. The ashes were then placed on the driver's seat of his 10-year-old car, which had only 27,000 miles on the odometer. Inside the car, mourners also placed a lap quilt made by a group of women from Swanson's church, a love note from his wife and an Engelbert Humperdinck tape in the cassette deck, with the song "Release Me" cued up and ready to play. The license plate read "HI-PAL," which was Swanson's go-to greeting when he didn't remember a name. As 50 mourners looked on, a crane lowered the Corvette into a 7-by-7-by-16-foot hole.

(http://i645.photobucket.com/albums/uu176/MustangMayhem/web/GeorgeSwanson_zpse739f85a.jpg) (http://s645.photobucket.com/user/MustangMayhem/media/web/GeorgeSwanson_zpse739f85a.jpg.html)
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on May 26, 2013, 12:02:36 am
On this day, May 26th 1923
First Le Mans Grand Prix d'Endurance is run.

May 26th 1927
Ford Motor Company manufactured its 15 millionth Model T automobile

May 26th 1897
The first copies of the classic vampire novel Dracula, by Irish writer Bram Stoker, appear in London bookshops

May 26th 1937
Union leaders, Ford Service Department men clashed in violent confrontation on Miller Road Overpass outside Gate 4 of Ford River Rouge Plant in Dearborn, MI (three months after UAW achieved its first landmark victory at Ford, had forced company to negotiate policy toward organized labor by staging lengthy sit-down strike at Rouge complex); UAW organizers Walter Reuther, Bob Kanter, J.J. Kennedy, Richard Frankensteen were distributing leaflets among workers at Rouge complex when approached by gang of Bennett's men; Ford Servicemen brutally beat four unionists while many other union sympathizers, including 11 women, were injured in resulting melee - Battle of the Overpass.

May 26th 1907
John Wayne, an actor who came to epitomize the American West, is born in Winterset, Iowa.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on May 27, 2013, 09:54:13 am
(http://i547.photobucket.com/albums/hh469/RBlake1026/ford_model_t_henry.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/RBlake1026/media/ford_model_t_henry.jpg.html)
Ford Model T & Henry Ford. Its named as the world's most influential car of the twentieth century after an International poll

On this day, May 27th 1927
Production of the Ford Model T officially ended after 15,007,033 units had been built. The Model T sold more units than any other car model in history, until the Volkswagen Beetle eclipsed its record in the 1970s.

May 27th 1930
Chrysler Building in NYC. opened as world's tallest building.

May 27th 1923
First Le Mans Grand Prix d'Endurance is concluded. Winners Andre Lagache and Renee Leonard covered 1,372.928 miles in a Chenard-Walker car. Le Mans is the world's longest-running 24-hour event, a type of racing that's considered the ultimate test of sports car performance.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: R_Beckhaus on May 27, 2013, 10:19:37 am
At 10:39 am on Tuesday 27th May 1941 the German Battleship "Bismark" slid beneath the waves after a running battle with elements of the Royal Navy. Of a crew of 2,200 only 114 survived.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on May 28, 2013, 04:30:18 am
(http://i192.photobucket.com/albums/z34/tynewlin/kdf-wagen.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/tynewlin/media/kdf-wagen.jpg.html)

On this day, May 28th 1937
The government of Germany--then under the control of Adolf Hitler of the National Socialist (Nazi) Party--forms a new state-owned automobile company, then known as Gesellschaft zur Vorbereitung des Deutschen Volkswagens mbH. Later that year, it was renamed simply Volkswagenwerk, or "The People's Car Company."
Originally operated by the German Labor Front, a Nazi organization, Volkswagen was headquartered in Wolfsburg, Germany. In addition to his ambitious campaign to build a network of autobahns and limited access highways across Germany, Hitler's pet project was the development and mass production of an affordable yet still speedy vehicle that could sell for less than 1,000 Reich marks (about $140 at the time). To provide the design for this "people's car," Hitler called in the Austrian automotive engineer Ferdinand Porsche. In 1938, at a Nazi rally, the Fuhrer declared: "It is for the broad masses that this car has been built. Its purpose is to answer their transportation needs, and it is intended to give them joy." However, soon after the KdF (Kraft-durch-Freude)-Wagen ("Strength-Through-Joy" car) was displayed for the first time at the Berlin Motor Show in 1939, World War II began, and Volkswagen halted production. After the war ended, with the factory in ruins, the Allies would make Volkswagen the focus of their attempts to resuscitate the German auto industry.
Volkswagen sales in the United States were initially slower than in other parts of the world, due to the car's historic Nazi connections as well as its small size and unusual rounded shape. In 1959, the advertising agency Doyle Dane Bernbach launched a landmark campaign, dubbing the car the "Beetle" and spinning its diminutive size as a distinct advantage to consumers. Over the next several years, VW became the top-selling auto import in the United States. In 1960, the German government sold 60 percent of Volkswagen's stock to the public, effectively denationalizing it. Twelve years later, the Beetle surpassed the longstanding worldwide production record of 15 million vehicles, set by Ford Motor Company's legendary Model T between 1908 and 1927.
With the Beetle's design relatively unchanged since 1935, sales grew sluggish in the early 1970s. VW bounced back with the introduction of sportier models such as the Rabbit and later, the Golf. In 1998, the company began selling the highly touted "New Beetle" while still continuing production of its predecessor. After nearly 70 years and more than 21 million units produced, the last original Beetle rolled off the line in Puebla, Mexico, on July 30, 2003.

May 28th 1916
Barney Oldfield ran a qualifying lap in his front-wheel-drive Christie at 102.6mph. It was the first time any driver had rounded the Indianapolis Motor Speedway in excess of 100mph. But Oldfield ended up finishing fifth on race day, as Dario Resta beat the field in his Peugeot.

May 28th 1937
The Golden Gate Bridge opened to vehicular traffic on this day in 1937. One of the world's largest single-span suspension bridges, the Golden Gate Bridge was designed by Clifford Paine.

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Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on May 29, 2013, 09:55:15 am

(http://i865.photobucket.com/albums/ab215/woodburner802/Dealers/Tucker/1-PrestonTuckerautomagnateandwifefreedoffraudcharges1023AM12350.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/woodburner802/media/Dealers/Tucker/1-PrestonTuckerautomagnateandwifefreedoffraudcharges1023AM12350.jpg.html)

After the verdict : Preston Tucker auto magnate and wife freed of fraud charge


On this day, May 29th 1950
Preston Tucker's lawsuit against his former prosecutors was thrown out of court. Tucker had been indicted for stock fraud after managing to produce only 53 of his long-awaited Tucker cars. The court case ruined Tucker's chances of ever releasing the car on a grand scale. Tucker charged the Big Three with trumping up a conspiracy to ground his competitive operation. Eventually all the charges against Tucker were dropped. Hungry to clear his name, Preston Tucker sued his former prosecutors on various grounds related to the destruction of his reputation. It was generally believed that Tucker's initial acquittal was an act of charity granted to an overly-ambitious, failed entrepreneur. Tucker's case was dismissed after little consideration. It was Preston Tucker's last-gasp effort to save his name, and it failed. His reputation has fared far better in recent years with the help of the Hollywood movie Tucker: The Man and His Dream, starring Jeff Bridges, that portrays Tucker as a visionary in a practical age.

29th May 1971
Al Unser became the first racer to win a single-day purse of over $200,000 at the Indy 500. The only racer besides A.J. Foyt to win four Indy 500s, Al Unser, too, has a legitimate claim to the title of Indy's greatest.

29th May 2005
On this day in 2005, 23-year-old Danica Patrick becomes the first female driver to take the lead in the storied Indianapolis 500.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on May 30, 2013, 07:40:27 am
(http://i280.photobucket.com/albums/kk171/crabber1967/Indianapolis%20Earliest%20Years/1911_Indianapolis_Marmon_Wasp_winne.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/crabber1967/media/Indianapolis%20Earliest%20Years/1911_Indianapolis_Marmon_Wasp_winne.jpg.html)
Pictured: The Marmon Wasp


On this day, May 30th 1911
Ray Harroun won the inaugural Indianapolis 500, averaging 74.6mph in the Marmon Wasp. The Indy 500 was the creation of Carl Fisher. In the fall of 1909, Fisher replaced the ruined, crushed-stone surface of his 2.5-mile oval with a brand-new brick one. It was the largest paved, banked oval in the United States. Fisher then made two decisions vital to the success of the Indy 500. First, he determined to hold only one race per year on his Indianapolis Motor Speedway; second, he elected to offer the richest purse in racing as a reward for competing in his annual 500-mile event.

May 30th 1896
First recorded auto accident occurred: Duryea Motor Wagon, driven by Henry Wells from Springfield, MA, collided with bicycle ridden by Evylyn Thomas of New York City.

May 30th 2002
Trabant filed for insolvency protection.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Mustangpaul on May 30, 2013, 01:56:19 pm
Australian Explorers
1861  -    Wills returns to the Dig tree to see whether a rescue party has arrived. [more]
1894  -    Explorer David Carnegie finds gold at Niagara Creek, Western Australia. [more]
Australian History
1886  -    The Ly-ee-Moon steamer runs aground off Cape Green lighthouse in southern NSW, Australia, killing 71. [more]
World History
1431  -    Joan of Arc is burned at the stake. [more]
1971  -    Mariner 9, the first artificial satellite of Mars, is launched by the United States.

http://today.wmit.net.au/ (http://today.wmit.net.au/)
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on May 31, 2013, 10:39:02 pm
On this day, May 31st 1870
Professor Edward Joseph De Smedt of the American Asphalt Pavement Company, New York City, received two patents for his invention known as "French asphalt pavement." De Smedt had invented the first practical version of sheet asphalt. On July 29 of the same year, the first road pavement of sheet asphalt was laid on William Street in Newark, New Jersey.

May 31st 1898
Thomas A. Edison received a patent for a "Governor for Motors", a "means for adjusting the governor for any desired speed, and with the means, such as centrifugal governor-*****, for regulating the friction members to maintain a constant speed."

May 31st 1904
Byron J. Carter, of Jackson, MI, received a U.S. patent for "Transmission-Gearing"; "friction-drive" mechanism replaced conventional transmission to provide more precise control of a car's speed; never really caught on, proved susceptible to poor road conditions; technology involved in the friction-drive is, however, related to today's disc brakes.

May 31st 1929
After two years of exploratory visits and friendly negotiations, Ford Motor Company signs a landmark agreement to produce cars in the Soviet Union on this day in 1929.
The Soviet Union, which in 1928 had only 20,000 cars and a single truck factory, was eager to join the ranks of automotive production, and Ford, with its focus on engineering and manufacturing methods, was a natural choice to help. The always independent-minded Henry Ford was strongly in favor of his free-market company doing business with Communist countries.
Signed in Dearborn, Michigan, on May 31, 1929, the contract stipulated that Ford would oversee construction of a production plant at Nizhni Novgorod, located on the banks of the Volga River, to manufacture Model A cars. An assembly plant would also start operating immediately within Moscow city limits. In return, the USSR agreed to buy 72,000 unassembled Ford cars and trucks and all spare parts to be required over the following nine years, a total of some $30 million worth of Ford products. Valery U. Meshlauk, vice chairman of the Supreme Council of National Economy, signed the Dearborn agreement on behalf of the Soviets. To comply with its side of the deal, Ford sent engineers and executives to the Soviet Union.
At the time the U.S. government did not formally recognize the USSR in diplomatic negotiations, so the Ford agreement was groundbreaking. (A week after the deal was announced the Soviet Union would announce deals with 15 other foreign companies, including E.I. Du Pont de Nemours and RCA.) As Douglas Brinkley writes in "Wheels for the World," his book on Henry Ford and Ford Motor, the automaker was firm in his belief that introducing capitalism was the best way to undermine communism. In any case, Ford's assistance in establishing motor vehicle production facilities in the USSR would greatly impact the course of world events, as the ability to produce these vehicles helped the Soviets defeat Germany on the Eastern Front during World War II. In 1944, according to Brinkley, Stalin wrote to the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, calling Henry Ford "one of the world's greatest industrialists" and expressing the hope that "may God preserve him."


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Best known to his many fans for one of his most memorable screen incarnations--San Francisco Police Inspector “Dirty” Harry Callahan--the actor and Oscar-winning filmmaker Clint Eastwood is born on this day in 1930, in San Francisco, California.


Near Tel Aviv, Israel, Adolf Eichmann, the Nazi SS officer who organized Adolf Hitler's "final solution of the Jewish question," was executed for his crimes against humanity.
Eichmann was born in Solingen, Germany, in 1906. In November 1932, he joined the Nazi's elite SS (Schutzstaffel) organization, whose members came to have broad responsibilities in Nazi Germany, including policing, intelligence, and the enforcement of Adolf Hitler's anti-Semitic policies. Eichmann steadily rose in the SS hierarchy, and with the German annexation of Austria in 1938 he was sent to Vienna with the mission of ridding the city of Jews. He set up an efficient Jewish deportment center and in 1939 was sent to Prague on a similar mission. That year, Eichmann was appointed to the Jewish section of the SS central security office in Berlin.

this day 2005..."Deep throat" revealed
W. Mark Felt’s family ends 30 years of speculation, identifying Felt, the former FBI assistant director, as “Deep Throat,” the secret source who helped unravel the Watergate scandal. The Felt family’s admission, made in an article in Vanity Fair magazine, took legendary reporters Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein, who had promised to keep their source’s identity a secret until his death, by surprise. Tapes show that Nixon himself had speculated that Felt was the secret informant as early as 1973.

31st May 1813
In Australia, Lawson, Blaxland and Wentworth, reached Mount Blaxland, effectively marking the end of a route across the Blue Mountains.

May 31, 1942
Japanese midget submarines enter Sydney Harbour in WWII

May 31, 1884
Kellogg patents the cornflake

May 31, 1578
The Catacombs of Rome are discovered
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on June 01, 2013, 08:08:49 am
(http://i201.photobucket.com/albums/aa296/moefuzzz/COOL%20PICTURES/HENRY%20FORD/4486303242_6eaa2b407d_o.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/moefuzzz/media/COOL%20PICTURES/HENRY%20FORD/4486303242_6eaa2b407d_o.jpg.html)
Left to Right, Edsel Ford, Henry Ford, Henry Leland, and Wilfred Leland

On this day, June 1st 1917
Henry Leland, the founder of the Cadillac Motor Car Company, resigned as company president on this date in 1917. Ever since William Durant had arranged for General Motors (GM) to purchase Cadillac, Leland and Durant had endured a strained relationship. But Leland's electric starter had made Cadillac so successful early on that Durant had avoided meddling with the autonomy of his company. Leland's next great achievement at Cadillac was his supervision of his son's proposal that Cadillac should introduce a V-8 engine.

June 1st 1934
The Tokyo-based Jidosha-Seizo Kabushiki-Kaisha (Automobile Manufacturing Co., Ltd. in English) takes on a new name: Nissan Motor Company.
Jidosha-Seizo Kabushiki-Kaisha had been established in December 1933. The company's new name, adopted in June 1934, was an abbreviation for Nippon Sangyo, a "zaibatsu" (or holding company) belonging to Tobata's founder, Yoshisuke Aikawa. Nissan produced its first Datsun (a descendant of the Dat Car, a small, boxy passenger vehicle designed by Japanese automotive pioneer Masujiro Hashimoto that was first produced in 1914) at its Yokohama plant in April 1935. The company began exporting cars to Australia that same year. Beginning in 1938 and lasting throughout World War II, Nissan converted entirely from producing small passenger cars to producing trucks and military vehicles. Allied occupation forces seized much of Nissan's production operations in 1945 and didn't return full control to Nissan until a decade later.
In 1960, Nissan became the first Japanese automaker to win the Deming Prize for engineering excellence. New Datsun models like the Bluebird (1959), the Cedric (1960) and the Sunny (1966) helped spur Nissan sales in Japan and abroad, and the company experienced phenomenal growth over the course of the 1960s.
The energy crises of the next decade fueled the rise in exports of affordable, fuel-efficient Japanese-made cars: The third-generation Sunny got the highest score on the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's tests of fuel economy in 1973. Success in the United States and other markets allowed Nissan to expand its foreign operations, which now include manufacturing and assembly plants in as many as 17 countries around the world. Today, Nissan--which dropped the Datsun name in the mid-1980s--is the third-largest car manufacturer in Japan, behind first-place Toyota and just behind Honda. After struggling in the late 1990s, the company turned itself around by building an alliance with French carmaker Renault; overhauling its luxury car line, Infiniti; and releasing the Titan pickup truck as well as revamped versions of the famous Z sports car and mid-size Altima sedan.

June 1st, 1964
It was on this day that Ford offered the now legandary 289 Hi-Po engine for the Mustang. The history behind this special engine started long before it was ever made famous by the Ford Mustang.
Beginning with Ford's Dearborn division introduction to European rally competition in 1963, Ford released the 289 High Performance (Hi-Po) engine which produced 271 HP @ 6000 RPM. With this engine a variety of Ford products ambushed continental racing of all sorts in following years. Ford's "Total Performance" was targeted at European racing.
Early versions of this engine were in the Ford Falcon’s that were being raced in the “Rally” circuit in Europe including the prestigious Monte Carlo Rally were the Falcon finished first in class.
In early 1964 the 289 Hi-Po powered Mercury Comet's made its mark on the world when it finished first in class on the world toughest course "The African Safari". The 289 Hi-Po also set record lap times at Le Mans in GT40's. This engine also powered Shelby Cobras and Daytonas to World Championships.

Monday, June 1, 1829
Today is Foundation Day for Western Australia.

The first recorded sighting of Australia's western coastline came in 1611, when Dutch mariner Hendrik Brouwer experimented with a different route to the Dutch East Indies. As the route became more popular, the Dutch began to refer to the land as "New Holland".

Dutch captain Willem de Vlamingh named the Swan River in 1697 because of the black swans he saw in abundance there. In 1826, Edmund Lockyer was sent to claim the western half of the Australian continent for Britain. He arrived at King George Sound on Christmas Day in 1826, and established a military base which he named Frederick's Town (now Albany). However, this is not regarded as Western Australia's Foundation Day.

In 1829, Captain Charles Fremantle was sent to take formal possession of the remainder of New Holland which had not already been claimed for Britain under the territory of New South Wales. On 2 May 1829, Captain Fremantle raised the Union Jack on the south head of the Swan River, thus claiming the territory for Britain.
Western Australia's Foundation Day is considered to be 1 June as, on 1 June 1829, Western Australia's first non-military settlers arrived in the Swan River Colony aboard the Parmelia. The colony of Western Australia was then proclaimed on 8 June 1829, and two months later, Perth was also founded.


June 1, 1962.
Adolf Eichmann, 'Chief Executioner of the Third Reich', is hanged for his war crimes.

Adolf Eichmann was a member of the Austrian Nazi party in World War II. After his promotion to the Gestapo's Jewish section, he was essentially responsible for the extermination of millions of Jews during the war. He is often referred to as the 'Chief Executioner' of the Third Reich. After the war Eichmann escaped to Argentina in South America, but was located and captured by the Israeli secret service in 1960.
     
Eichmann's trial in front of an Israeli court in Jerusalem started on 11 April 1961. He faced fifteen criminal charges, including crimes against humanity, crimes against the Jewish people and war crimes. As part of Israeli criminal procedure, his trial was presided over by three judges instead of a jury, all of which were refugees from the Nazi regime in Germany. Eichmann was protected by a bulletproof glass booth and guarded by two men whose families had not suffered directly at the hands of the Nazis. Eichmann was convicted on all counts and sentenced to death on 15 December 1961. He was hanged a few minutes after midnight on 1 June 1962 at Ramla prison, the only civil execution ever carried out in Israel.

June 1, 1850.
The first convicts arrive in Fremantle, Western Australia, to help populate the waning Swan River colony.

The Swan River colony, established on Australia's western coast in 1829, was begun as a free settlement. Captain Charles Fremantle declared the Swan River Colony for Britain on 2 May 1829. The first ships with free settlers to arrive were the Parmelia on June 1 and HMS Sulphur on June 8. Three merchant ships arrived 4-6 weeks later: the Calista on August 5, the St Leonard on August 6 and the Marquis of Anglesey on August 23. Although the population spread out in search of good land, mainly settling around the southwestern coastline at Bunbury, Augusta and Albany, the two original separate townsites of the colony developed slowly into the port city of Fremantle and the Western Australian capital city of Perth.

For the first fifteen years, the people of the colony were generally opposed to accepting convicts, although the idea was occasionally debated, especially by those who sought to employ convict labour for building projects. Serious lobbying for Western Australia to become a penal colony began in 1845 when the York Agricultural Society petitioned the Legislative Council to bring convicts out from England on the grounds that the colony's economy was on the brink of collapse due to an extreme shortage of labour. Whilst later examination of the circumstances proves that there was no such shortage of labour in the colony, the petition found its way to the British Colonial Office, which in turn agreed to send out a small number of convicts to Swan River.

The first group of convicts to populate Fremantle arrived on 1 June 1850. Between 1850 and 1868, ultimately 9721 convicts were transported to Western Australia. The last convict ship to Western Australia, the Hougoumont, left Britain in 1867 and arrived in Western Australia on 10 January 1868.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on June 02, 2013, 05:37:48 am
(http://i5.photobucket.com/albums/y152/Mercmad/BruceMcLarenandJuanFangio-1.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/Mercmad/media/BruceMcLarenandJuanFangio-1.jpg.html)

On this day, June 2nd 1970
Car racer, designer, and manufacturer Bruce McLaren was killed when his McLaren M8D lost its back end at high speed and collided with an earthen embankment at the Goodwood racetrack in England.

June 2nd, 1969
It was on this date that Boss 429 engines with solid lifters became the norm for both 820T and 820A spec engines. This happened after Mr. Kavanagh of Ford's E & F division issued a damage control letter on May 20, 1969. This service bulletin detailed the procedure for replacing the Boss' s 429CJ hydraulic camshaft for a 429SCJ mechanical camshaft.Ford built four versions of the Boss 429 engine: the 650hp NASCAR version and three street versions. The street versions all carried a "Z" as the engine code in the VIN but under the hood an aluminum tag and sticker distinguished which version was in use. These three versions were the 820S (heavy NASCAR rods), 820T (lighter reciprocating mass), and the 820A (820T with California Emissions).In order for Ford to sell this race inspired engine in a street legal Mustangs it had to be detuned with a milder camshaft and a different intake rocker arm ratios, 1.65:1 for the street engine vs. 1.75:1 for the NASCAR engine. The heads on the NASCAR version used a intake valve with a 2.37" diameter, compared to 2.25" on the street versions. And to fit under the stock hood the street Boss 429 intake manifold used a dual plane intake with a lower carb mounting pad in comparison to the higher non restrictive magnesium and aluminum spider manifolds used in NASCAR. Even the blocks differed from one another with the the NASCAR version using sealing rings machined into the block were the street engines were machined with the grooves in the head. The street block differed with two oil passages cast into the lifter valley, while the NASCAR block used a thicker first main cap. The hydralic cam 820S was the first of the street versions. There were 279 cars built with the more desirable "S" versions engine.The difference between a "S" and "T" version was that the "S" had lightweight magnesium valve covers, short and stout (6.549") center to center length connecting rods with 1/2" rod bolts (C9AZ-6200-A) and matching pistons. The steel crank C9AZ-6303-A was balanced for these heavy 1145-gram rods.The rods were listed by FoMoCo as the alternate NASCAR rod. The real NASCAR rod was a very beefy 6.785" rod with special 1/2" rod bolts, and was forged with a rib down the center which Ford then drilled for pressure oiling to the pin (C9AX-6200-B).
The second version was an attempt to make the engine rev quicker by lightening the rotating mass. The "T" engine used a 6.605" lighter weight rod C9AZ-6200-B, with a 3/8" rod bolts. On June 2, 1969 Ford fitted this engine with a solid cam from the 429SCJ.
The 820A was the final version used in 1970 with California style smog control.

June 2nd 1988
Consumer Reports called for ban on Suzuki Samurai automobile.

June 2, 1953
Queen Elizabeth II is crowned, watched by millions in the first televised coronation of a monarch.
Princess Elizabeth, who became Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom, was born Elizabeth Alexandra Mary Windsor on 21 April 1926. She was proclaimed queen on 6 February 1952, following the death of her father, George VI. She ascended the throne the following year, on 2 June 1953. The Queen was crowned in a lavish coronation ceremony attended by over 8,000 guests in Westminster Abbey, London. The ceremony included the Queen being handed the four symbols of authority - the orb, the sceptre, the rod of mercy and the royal ring of sapphire and rubies. The ceremony was completed as the Archbishop of Canterbury, Dr Geoffrey Fisher, placed St Edward's Crown on her head.
Whilst approximately three million people lined the streets of London to glimpse the new monarch travelling to and from Buckingham Palace in the golden state coach, millions more around the world watched the first ever televised coronation of a monarch in a broadcast made in 44 languages.
Queen Elizabeth II celebrated her Diamond Jubilee in 2012.

June 2, 1841.
Eyre's expedition across the Nullarbor is saved when he meets Captain Rossiter, of the whaler 'Mississippi'.

Edward John Eyre, born 5 August 1815, was the first white man to cross southern Australia from Adelaide to the west, travelling across the Nullarbor Plain to King George's Sound, now called Albany. Eyre originally intended to cross the continent from south to north, taking with him his overseer, John Baxter, and three Aborigines. He was forced to revise his plans when his way became blocked by the numerous saltpans of South Australia, leading him to believe that a gigantic inland sea in the shape of a horseshoe prevented access to the north.

Following this fruitless attempt, Eyre regrouped at Streaky Bay on the west coast of the Eyre Peninsula. He then continued west, which had never before been attempted, in a gruelling journey across the Nullarbor, during which his party faced starvation and thirst. Eyre's overseer, Baxter, was killed on the night of 29 April 1841, as he tried to stop two of the expedition's Aborigines from raiding the meagre supplies. After Baxter died, Eyre was left with just one loyal companion, the Aborigine, Wylie. The two continued on, trying to outrun the Aborigines whilst susbsisting on very few rations.
The pair faced starvation a number of times during their journey, in between rest stops in places when they found food was abundant. On 2 June 1841, Eyre and Wylie were travelling along the shore near Thistle Cove when they encountered the French whaler 'Mississippi'. Attracting the attention of the ship's crew by way of a fire, they were met at the beach and taken aboard the Mississippi as guests of Captain Rossiter. Here, they were given ample food and water, and their horses even shod by the ship's blacksmith. Loaded with supplies from the ship, Eyre continued his westward journey on 14 June. Eyre named the inlet Rossiter Bay after the ship's captain, though it was later renamed Mississippi Point.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on June 03, 2013, 06:01:31 am
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June 3rd 1957
On this day in 1957, the U.S. Supreme Court rules that the chemical company E. I. Du Pont de Nemours & Co. must give up its large stock interest in the Detroit-based automobile company General Motors on the grounds that it constituted a monopoly, or a concentration of power that reduced competition or otherwise interfered with trade.
Between 1917 and 1919, Du Pont invested $50 million in GM, becoming the automaker's largest stockholder, with a 23 percent share. The chemical company's founder, Pierre S. Du Pont, served as GM's president from 1920 to 1923 and as chairman of the company's board from 1923 to 1929. By that time, GM had passed Ford Motor Company as the largest manufacturer of passenger cars in the United States, and had become one of the largest companies in the world, in any industry.
In 1949, the U.S. Justice Department brought suit against Du Pont, charging that the chemical giant's close relationship with GM gave it an illegal advantage over competitors in the sale of its automotive finishes and textiles. This advantage, according to the suit, violated the 1890 Sherman Antitrust Act, Congress' first attempt to regulate monopolies. The case dragged on for five years before Chicago's U.S. District Court Judge Walter J. LaBuy dismissed the government's suit, ruling that it had "failed to prove conspiracy, monopolization, a restraint of trade, or any reasonable probability of a restraint."
The Justice Department appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court, and on June 3, 1957, the Court handed down its decision. It based its reversal of LaBuy's verdict not on the Sherman Act but on Section 7 of the Clayton Act, which had been passed in 1914 to clarify and support the Sherman Act. This section, to which government lawyers had dedicated only a tiny portion of their case, prohibited any corporation from purchasing stock in another "where the effect of such acquisition may be to restrain commerce or tend to create a monopoly of any line of commerce."
The four justices in the majority were Chief Justice Earl Warren, William Brennan, Hugo Black and William Douglas; Brennan wrote the majority opinion, which stated that the "inference is overwhelming that Du Pont's commanding position [in the sale of automobile finishes and fabrics to GM] was promoted by its stock interest and was not gained solely on competitive merit." Justices Harold Burton and Felix Frankfurter dissented from the majority, while two justices--Tom Black and John Marshall Harlan--disqualified themselves from the case: Black had been attorney general in 1949, when the Justice Department brought the case, and Harlan had previously represented Du Pont as a lawyer.

June 3rd 1965
One hundred and 20 miles above the earth, Major Edward H. White II opens the hatch of the Gemini 4 and steps out of the capsule, becoming the first American astronaut to walk in space. Attached to the craft by a 25-foot tether and controlling his movements with a hand-held oxygen jet-propulsion gun, White remained outside the capsule for just over 20 minutes. As a space walker, White had been preceded by Soviet cosmonaut Aleksei A. Leonov, who on March 18, 1965, was the first man ever to walk in space.

June 3rd 1956
Rock and roll is banned in Santa Cruz, California
Santa Cruz, California, a favorite early haunt of author Ken Kesey and his Merry Pranksters, was an established capital of the West Coast counterculture scene by the mid-1960s. Yet just 10 years earlier, the balance of power in this crunchy beach town 70 miles south of San Francisco tilted heavily toward the older side of the generation gap. In the early months of the rock-and-roll revolution, in fact, at a time when adult authorities around the country were struggling to come to terms with a booming population of teenagers with vastly different musical tastes and attitudes, Santa Cruz captured national attention for its response to the crisis. On June 3, 1956, city authorities announced a total ban on rock and roll at public gatherings, calling the music "Detrimental to both the health and morals of our youth and community."

June 3rd 1864
Ransom Eli Olds, founder of Old Motor Vehicle Company was born to Pliny and Sarah Olds in the northeastern Ohio town of Geneva.

June 3rd 1921
Mack adopted Bulldog as symbol for Mack trucks.

June 3rd 1769 
Lieutenant James Cook observes the transit of Venus across the sun, on the trip during which he would chart Australia's eastern coast

June 3rd 1790
The Lady Juliana is the first ship of the Second Fleet to arrive in Sydney Cove

June 3rd 1787 
The First Fleet arrives in Tenerife, in the Canary Islands, to take on extra supplies

June 3rd 1862 
John McKinlay, during his relief expedition to locate the missing Burke and Wills, loses a horse to snake bite
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on June 04, 2013, 01:13:18 pm
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On this day, June 4th 1896
At approximately 4:00 a.m. on June 4, 1896, in the shed behind his home on Bagley Avenue in Detroit, Henry Ford unveils the "Quadricycle," the first automobile he ever designed or drove.
Ford was working as the chief engineer for the main plant of the Edison Illuminating Company when he began working on the Quadricycle. On call at all hours to ensure that Detroit had electrical service 24 hours a day, Ford was able to use his flexible working schedule to experiment with his pet project--building a horseless carriage with a gasoline-powered engine. His obsession with the gasoline engine had begun when he saw an article on the subject in a November 1895 issue of American Machinist magazine. The following March, another Detroit engineer named Charles King took his own hand-built vehicle--made of wood, it had a four-cylinder engine and could travel up to five miles per hour--out for a ride, fueling Ford's desire to build a lighter and faster gasoline-powered model.
As he would do throughout his career, Ford used his considerable powers of motivation and organization to get the job done, enlisting friends--including King--and assistants to help him bring his vision to life. After months of work and many setbacks, Ford was finally ready to test-drive his creation--basically a light metal frame fitted with four bicycle wheels and powered by a two-cylinder, four-horsepower gasoline engine--on the morning of June 4, 1896. When Ford and James Bishop, his chief assistant, attempted to wheel the Quadricycle out of the shed, however, they discovered that it was too wide to fit through the door. To solve the problem, Ford took an axe to the brick wall of the shed, smashing it to make space for the vehicle to be rolled out.
With Bishop bicycling ahead to alert passing carriages and pedestrians, Ford drove the 500-pound Quadricycle down Detroit's Grand River Avenue, circling around three major thoroughfares. The Quadricycle had two driving speeds, no reverse, no brakes, rudimentary steering ability and a doorbell button as a horn, and it could reach about 20 miles per hour, easily overpowering King's invention. Aside from one breakdown on Washington Boulevard due to a faulty spring, the drive was a success, and Ford was on his way to becoming one of the most formidable success stories in American business history.


June 4th 1959
Kihachiro Kawashima selected as Executive Vice President, General Manager of American Honda Motor Company (seven employees, operating capital of $250,000.); opened shop in small storefront office on Pico Boulevard in Los Angeles to serve consumers wanting small, light, easy to handle and maintain two-wheeled vehicles.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on June 05, 2013, 03:15:12 am
(http://i68.photobucket.com/albums/i25/Conormacnessa/Classic%20Autos/auburn-00002-1.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/Conormacnessa/media/Classic%20Autos/auburn-00002-1.jpg.html)

On this day, June 5th 1951
Gordon M. Buehrig, of South Bend, IN, received a patent for "Vehicle Top Construction", vehicle top with removable panels; appeared as "T-top" on 1968 Chevrolet Corvette Stingray.
Buehrig was one of 25 candidates for Car Designer of the Century, an international award given in 1999 to honor the most influential automobile designer of the 20th century.
PICTURED: The 1935 Auburn Speedster designed by Gordon Buehrig

June 5th 1937
Henry Ford initiated 32 hour work week.

June 5th 1998
On this day in 1998, 3,400 members of the United Auto Workers (UAW) union walk out on their jobs at a General Motors (GM) metal-stamping factory in Flint, Michigan, beginning a strike that will last seven weeks and stall production at GM facilities nationwide.

Jun 5th, 1968:
Bobby Kennedy is assassinated
Senator Robert Kennedy is shot at the Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles after winning the California presidential primary. Immediately after he announced to his cheering supporters that the country was ready to end its fractious divisions, Kennedy was shot several times by the 22-year-old Palestinian Sirhan Sirhan. He died a day later.

Jun 5th 2004,
Ronald Wilson Reagan, the 40th president of the United States, dies, after a long struggle with Alzheimer's disease. Reagan, who was also a well-known actor and served as governor of California, was a popular president known for restoring American confidence after the problems of the 1970s and helping to defeat communism.

Jun 5th 1944,
more than 1,000 British bombers drop 5,000 tons of bombs on German gun batteries placed at the Normandy assault area, while 3,000 Allied ships cross the English Channel in preparation for the invasion of Normandy—D-Day.

Jun 5th 1866
Explorer John McDouall Stuart, first to successfully cross Australia from north to south, dies

Jun 5th 1988 
Kay Cottee returns to Sydney, the first woman to sail solo around the world.

Jun 5th 1823 
Explorer Allan Cunningham breaks through the Warrumbungle Range on his quest to find an overland route to the Liverpool Plains

jun 5th 1788 
First Fleet cattle from the government herds go bush, disappearing for seven years
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on June 06, 2013, 05:17:06 am


On this day, June 6th 1933
eager motorists park their automobiles on the grounds of Park-In Theaters, the first-ever drive-in movie theater, located on Crescent Boulevard in Camden, New Jersey.
Park-In Theaters--the term "drive-in" came to be widely used only later--was the brainchild of Richard Hollingshead, a movie fan and a sales manager at his father's company, Whiz Auto Products, in Camden. Reportedly inspired by his mother's struggle to sit comfortably in traditional movie theater seats, Hollingshead came up with the idea of an open-air theater where patrons watched movies in the comfort of their own automobiles. He then experimented in the driveway of his own house with different projection and sound techniques, mounting a 1928 Kodak projector on the hood of his car, pinning a screen to some trees, and placing a radio behind the screen for sound. He also tested ways to guard against rain and other inclement weather, and devised the ideal spacing arrangement for a number of cars so that all would have a view of the screen.
The young entrepreneur received a patent for the concept in May of 1933 and opened Park-In Theaters, Inc. less than a month later, with an initial investment of $30,000. Advertising it as entertainment for the whole family, Hollingshead charged 25 cents per car and 25 cents per person, with no group paying more than one dollar. The idea caught on, and after Hollingshead's patent was overturned in 1949, drive-in theaters began popping up all over the country. One of the largest was the All-Weather Drive-In of Copiague, New York, which featured parking space for 2,500 cars, a kid's playground and a full service restaurant, all on a 28-acre lot.
Drive-in theaters showed mostly B-movies--that is, not Hollywood's finest fare--but some theaters featured the same movies that played in regular theaters. The initially poor sound quality--Hollingshead had mounted three speakers manufactured by RCA Victor near the screen--improved, and later technology made it possible for each car's to play the movie's soundtrack through its FM radio. The popularity of the drive-in spiked after World War II and reached its heyday in the late 1950s to mid-60s, with some 5,000 theaters across the country. Drive-ins became an icon of American culture, and a typical weekend destination not just for parents and children but also for teenage couples seeking some privacy. Since then, however, the rising price of real estate, especially in suburban areas, combined with the growing numbers of walk-in theaters and the rise of video rentals to curb the growth of the drive-in industry. Today, fewer than 500 drive-in theaters survive in the United States.

The first movie Showing "Wife Beware"

Pictured: The reverse side of the world's first drive-in movie screen, in Camden, New Jersey. (front side also shown)
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June 6th 1925
Walter Percy Chrysler renamed Maxwell Motor Company as the Chrysler Corporation.

June 6th 1932
The first gasoline tax levied by US Congress was enacted as a part of the Revenue Act of 1932. The Act mandated a series of excise taxes on a wide variety of consumer goods. Congress placed a tax of 1¢ per gallon on gasoline and other motor fuel sold.

June 6, 1980 
For the second time in a week, a computer error falsely warns US forces of an impending Soviet nuclear attack.

June 6, 1944
Although the term D-Day is used routinely as military lingo for the day an operation or event will take place, for many it is also synonymous with June 6, 1944, the day the Allied powers crossed the English Channel and landed on the beaches of Normandy, France, beginning the liberation of Western Europe from Nazi control during World War II. Within three months, the northern part of France would be freed and the invasion force would be preparing to enter Germany, where they would meet up with Soviet forces moving in from the east.

June 6, 1827
Explorer Allan Cunningham discovers the Darling Downs

June 6, 1835
John Batman, the native-born founder of Melbourne, signs a treaty with Aborigines entitling him to 250,000 hectares of land in Port Phillip Bay.

June 6, 1859 
Today is Queensland Day, marking the day that Queensland separated from the colony of New South Wales.

June 6, 1888 
The British Crown annexes Christmas Island

June 6, 1980 
For the second time in a week, a computer error falsely warns US forces of an impending Soviet nuclear attack.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on June 07, 2013, 03:19:40 am
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On this day, June 7 1954
Ford Motor Company formed styling team to design entirely new car, later named Edsel. The car brand is best known as one of the most spectacular failures in the history of the United States automobile industry.
More than sixty years after its spectacular failure, Edsel has become a highly collectible item amongst vintage car hobbyists. A mint 1958 car can sell up to $100,000, while rare models, like 1960 convertible, may price up to $200,000. While the design was considered "ugly" fifty years ago, many other car manufacturers, such as Pontiac and Alfa Romeo, have employed similar vertical grille successfully on their car designs.

June 7 1962
On this day in 1962, the banking institution Credit Suisse, then known as Schweizerische Kreditanstalt (SKA), opens the first drive-through bank in Switzerland at St. Peter-Strasse 17, near Paradeplatz (Parade Square) in downtown Zurich.
Like many developments in automotive culture--including drive-through restaurants and drive-in movies--drive-through banking has its origins in the United States. Some sources say that Hillcrest State Bank opened the first drive-through bank in Dallas, Texas, in 1938; others claim the honor belongs to the Exchange National Bank of Chicago in 1946. Regardless of when exactly it began, the trend didn't reach its height until the car-crazy era of the late 1950s and early 1960s. Around that time, California-based Wells Fargo Bank introduced the "TV Auto Banker Service," where an image of the teller was broadcast to the customer in their car on a special closed-circuit television. Deposits, withdrawals and other transactions were completed using an underground pneumatic tube that whisked money and paperwork between the car and the teller station.
The SKA branch that opened in Zurich in June 1962 featured eight glass pavilions, seven outfitted for left-hand drive cars and one for vehicles with right-hand drive (such as those used in the United Kingdom and Ireland). Upon the opening of the large and modern facility, Zurich daily newspaper Neue Zurcher Zeitung advised motorists on how to enter the drive-through portion: "At the entrance to the bank, approaching cars trigger a sensor on the ground, activating a light trail that directs the driver to the next available counter."
The Paradeplatz drive-through was well received by the press, and in its first year of operation, the bank handled around 20,000 customers. By the 1970s, however, the automobile's popularity had led to a major traffic problem in downtown Zurich, and fewer and fewer drivers opted to stop to do their banking from their cars. After years without a profit, SKA closed the drive-through in 1983.
In the United States, by contrast, drive-through banking never lost its popularity. Nearly all major banks nationwide offer some type of drive-through option, from regular teller service to 24-hour automated teller machines (ATMs). In recent years, drive-through banking reached the previously untapped Asian market: Citibank opened China's first drive-through ATM at the Upper East Side Central Plaza in Beijing in August 2007.

June 7th 1976
Disco as a musical style predated the movie Saturday Night Fever by perhaps as many as five years, but disco as an all-consuming cultural phenomenon might never have happened without the 1977 film and its multi-platinum soundtrack featuring such era-defining hits as the Bee Gees' "Stayin' Alive" and Yvonne Elliman's "If I Can't Have You." What is absolutely certain is that Saturday Night Fever would never have been made were it not for a magazine article detailing the struggles and dreams of a talented, young, Italian-American disco dancer and his scruffy entourage in Bay Ridge, Brooklyn. That article—"The Tribal Rites of the New Saturday Night," by journalist Nik Cohn—was published on this day in 1976 in the June 7 issue of New York magazine.

June 7th, 1770
Lieutenant James Cook names Palm Island, off Australia's eastern coast.

June 7th 1825 
Van Diemen's Land (Tasmania) officially separates from New South Wales.

June 7th 1654 
Louis XIV is crowned King of France

June 7th 1942 
The Battle of Midway, between American and Japanese forces, ends with a US victory.

June 7th also marks "International Donut day" ...(9 things you didn’t know about donuts)
In honor of National Donut Day, we share some fun facts about the sweet treats you probably didn't know.
* In the U.S. alone, more than 10 billion donuts are made every year. Between 27 locations, Lamar’s Donuts produces 17 million donuts per year.
* The US donut industry is worth 3.6 billion dollars.
* The largest donut ever made was an American-style jelly donut weighing 1.7 tons, which was 16 feet in diameter and 16 inches high in the center.
* Per capita, Canada has more donuts shops than any other country.
* The hole in the donut’s center appeared in the first half of the 19th Century and allows the donut to cook more evenly.
* The Dutch are often credited with bringing donuts to the U.S. with their olykoeks, or oily cakes in the 1800s.
* Adolph Levitt invented the first donut machine in 1920.
* Ray’s Original Glazed Donut only has 220 calories, while a bagel and cream cheese averages 450 calories.
* The Guinness World record for donut eating is held by John Haight, who consumed 29 donuts in just over 6 minutes.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on June 07, 2013, 11:49:56 pm
Bit of an early post as Im on the road the whole day

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Porsche Type1-356 in the Porsche Museum
 
On this day,June 8th 1948, a hand-built aluminum prototype labeled "No. 1" becomes the first vehicle to bear the name of one of the world's leading luxury car manufacturers: Porsche. Dr. Ferdinand Porsche test drove first Porsche two-seat roadster sports car, Project 356-1, built in a sawmill in Gmund, Austria (Tyrolean Alps).
Dr. Ferdinand Porsche debuted his first design at the World's Fair in Paris in 1900. The electric vehicle set several Austrian land-speed records, reaching more than 35 mph and earning international acclaim for the young engineer. He became general director of the Austro-Daimler Company (an outpost of the German automaker) in 1916 and later moved to Daimler headquarters in Stuttgart. Daimler merged with the Benz firm in the 1920s, and Porsche was chiefly responsible for designing some of the great Mercedes racing cars of that decade.
Porsche left Daimler in 1931 and formed his own company. A few years later, Adolf Hitler called on the engineer to aid in the production of a small "people's car" for the German masses. With his son, also named Ferdinand (known as Ferry), Porsche designed the prototype for the original Volkswagen (known as the KdF: "Kraft durch Freude," or "strength through joy") in 1936. During World War II, the Porsches also designed military vehicles, most notably the powerful Tiger tank.
At war's end, the French accused the elder Porsche of war crimes and imprisoned him for more than a year. Ferry struggled to keep the family firm afloat. He built a Grand Prix race car, the Type 360 Cisitalia, for a wealthy Italian industrialist, and used the money to pay his father's bail. When Porsche was released from prison, he approved of another project Ferry had undertaken: a new sports car that would be the first to actually bear the name Porsche. Dubbed the Type 356, the new car was in the tradition of earlier Porsche-designed race cars such as the Cisitalia. The engine was placed mid-chassis, ahead of the transaxle, with modified Volkswagen drive train components.
The 356 went into production during the winter of 1947-48, and the aluminum prototype, built entirely by hand, was completed on June 8, 1948. The Germans subsequently hired Porsche to consult on further development of the Volkswagen. With the proceeds, Porsche opened new offices in Stuttgart, with plans to build up to 500 of his company's own cars per year. Over the next two decades, the company would build more than 78,000 vehicles.

June 8th 1986
Tim Richmond won the first of his seven Winston Cup Series races in 1986, a total that would vault him to third place in the Series point race and solidify his reputation as one of NASCAR's greatest drivers. He had his career cut short when he contracted HIV and died of complications from AIDS on 19th Aug 1989.

June 8th 1770 
Lieutenant James Cook names Palm Island, off Australia's eastern coast

June 8th 1825 
Van Diemen's Land (Tasmania) officially separates from New South Wales

June 8th 1654 
Louis XIV is crowned King of France

June 8th 1942 
The Battle of Midway, between American and Japanese forces, ends with a US victory
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on June 09, 2013, 09:38:54 pm


On this day, June 9th 2006
The animated feature film "Cars," produced by Pixar Animation Studios, roars into theaters across the United States.
For "Cars," which won the first-ever Academy Award for Best Animated Feature, Pixar's animators created an alternate America inhabited by vehicles instead of humans. The film's hero is Lightning McQueen (voiced by Owen Wilson), a Corvette-like race car enjoying a sensational debut on the National Association for Stock Car Auto Racing (NASCAR) circuit. Arrogant and foolish, with talent to burn, McQueen thinks of himself as a one-man show. After he refuses a tire change during the prestigious Piston Cup race, McQueen blows a huge lead, setting up a three-way tie-breaking race with The King, a longtime champion, and Chick Hicks, an intimidating competitor with a chip on his shoulder. On the way to the race site in California, however, McQueen goes off course (and off the interstate) and ends up in Radiator Springs, a forgotten town on the now-defunct Route 66.
At first desperate to escape, McQueen learns to appreciate Radiator Springs, especially after finding a best friend (the rusting tow-truck Mater, as in Tow-Mater), a love interest (Sally Carrera, a fetching Porsche) and a mentor (it turns out the town's gruff doctor-mechanic, Doc Hudson, is actually the Hudson Hornet, a real-life NASCAR legend). Among the other memorable inhabitants of Radiator Springs are an aging hippie VW van; a military Jeep named Sarge; Flo, a glamorous show car and proprietress of the V-8 Café (a gas station); Ramon, a Chevy Impala low rider; and Guido, a Fiat who owns a tire shop and is obsessed with Ferraris.
As director John Lasseter told The New York Times, he was inspired to make "Cars" by a cross-country road trip he took with his wife and five sons, as well as by a general love of automobiles. While researching the movie, the team of animators traveled along the historic Route 66, once the iconic route to the American West and now bypassed by interstate highways. (The "Mother Road" was decertified in 1985 and has been reborn as a tourist attraction.) In addition to the painstaking depictions of both classic and modern cars and their distinctive personalities, "Cars" features the voices of some of the leading figures in auto racing, beginning with the late Paul Newman, the legendary actor-turned-race car driver, as Doc Hudson. Racing legends Mario Andretti (as himself), Richard Petty (as The King) and Michael Schumacher (as a Ferrari) can also be heard, along with sports announcers Darrell Waltrip and Bob Costas.

June 9th 1903
Stanley Steamer received a patent for a "Steam Motor-Vehicle"; arrangement of engine on axle and housing.

June 9th 1909
Alice Huyler Ramsey, a 22-year-old housewife and mother from Hackensack, New Jersey, became the first woman to drive across the United States. With three female companions, none of whom could drive a car, for fifty-nine days she drove a Maxwell automobile the 3,800 miles from Manhattan, New York to San Francisco, California.
In later years, she lived in Covina, California, where in 1961 she wrote and published the story of her journey 'Veil, Duster, and Tire Iron'. Between 1909 and 1975, Ramsey drove across the country more than 30 times. On October 17, 2000, she became the first woman inducted into the Automotive Hall of Fame.

Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on June 10, 2013, 08:24:43 am




On this day, June 10th 1947
Saab introduced its first car, the model 92001, the Ursaab prototype. Saab had been primarily a supplier of military aircraft before and during World War II. With the end of the war, company executives realized the need to diversify the company's production capabilities. After an exhaustive planning campaign that at one point led to the suggestion that Saab manufacture toasters, But company executives decided to start building motor cars. Saab director Sven Otterbeck placed aircraft engineer Gunnar Ljungstrom in charge of creating the company's first car.

June 10th 1954
General Motors announced its research staff had built the GM Turbocruiser, a modifed GMC coach powered by a gas turbine; engine consisted of a single burner with two turbine wheels (one used to drive the centrifugal compressor, second delivered power for the transmission to the rear wheels of the vehicle).

June 10th 1954
Paul Newman, the blue-eyed movie star-turned-race car driver, accomplishes the greatest feat of his racing career on this day in 1979, roaring into second place in the 47th 24 Hours of Le Mans, the famous endurance race held annually in Le Mans, France.
Newman emerged as one of Hollywood's top leading men in the 1960s, with acclaimed performances in such films as "The Hustler" (1961), "Cool Hand Luke" (1967) and "Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid" (1969). Also in 1969, he starred in "Winning" as a struggling race car driver who must redeem his career and win the heart of the woman he loves--played by Newman's real-life wife, Joanne Woodward--at the Indianapolis 500. To prepare for the movie, Newman attended racing school, and he performed many of the high-speed racing scenes in the movie himself, without a stunt double. In 1972, Newman began his own racing career, winning his first Sports Club Car of America (SCCA) race driving a Lotus Elan. He soon moved up to a series of Datsun racing sedans and won four SCCA national championships from 1979 to 1986.
Newman's high point at the track came in June 1979 at Le Mans, where he raced a Porsche 935 twin-turbo coupe on a three-man team with Dick Barbour and Rolf Stommelen. His team finished second; first place went to two brothers from Florida, Don and Bill Whittington, and their teammate, Klaus Ludwig. Drama ensued during the last two hours of the race, when the Whittingtons' car--also a Porsche 935--was sidelined with fuel-injection problems and it looked like Newman's team could overtake them to grab the win. In the end, however, they had trouble even clinching second due to a dying engine. The Whittington team covered 2,592.1 miles at an average speed of 107.99 mph, finishing 59 miles ahead of Newman, Barbour and Stommelen.
After the race, The New York Times quoted the 54-year-old Newman as saying he might not race at Le Mans again: "I'm getting a bit long in the tooth for this. And my racing here places an unfortunate emphasis on the team. It takes it away from the people who really do the work." In fact, he continued racing into his eighties, making his last start at the Rolex 24 at Daytona International Speedway in 2006. He also found success as a race car owner, forming a team with Carl Haas that became one of the most enduring in Indy car racing. Newman died in September 2008 at the age of 83.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on June 11, 2013, 08:59:05 am
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On this day, June 11th 1939
Racer Jackie Stewart, popularly know as the Flying Scotsman was born in Dumbarton, Scotland


June 11th 1994
TOYOTA Commemorative Museum of Industry and Technology was Established on the 100th anniversary of the birth of Kiichiro Toyoda, founder of Toyota Motor Corporation.

June 11th 1895
Charles E. Duryea received a patent for a "Road Vehicle", first US patent granted to an American inventor for a gasoline-driven automobile.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on June 12, 2013, 03:41:20 am
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On this day, June 12th 1940, Edsel Ford telephones William Knudsen of the U.S. Office of Production Management (OPM) to confirm Ford Motor Company's acceptance of Knudsen's proposal to manufacture 9,000 Rolls-Royce-designed engines to be used in British and U.S. airplanes.
By the spring of 1940, Nazi Germany had conquered Poland, Norway and Denmark and pushed France to the brink of defeat. An increasingly nervous General George C. Marshall, chief of staff of the U.S. Army, warned President Franklin D. Roosevelt that the United States needed to rearm in order to prepare for the possibility of a German attack on American shores. That May, Roosevelt called on Knudsen, a former Ford executive who became president of General Motors in 1937, to serve as director general of the OPM, the agency responsible for coordinating government purchases and wartime production. Knudsen had barely settled in Washington when he received an urgent appeal from the British government: The Royal Air Force (RAF) was in desperate need of new airplanes to defend Britain against an expected German offensive.
Unlike other automakers, Ford had already built a successful airplane, the Tri-Motor, in the 1920s. In two meetings in late May and early June 1940, Knudsen and Edsel Ford agreed that Ford would manufacture a new fleet of aircraft for the RAF on an expedited basis. One significant obstacle remained, however: Edsel's father Henry, who still retained complete control over the company he founded, was known for his opposition to the possible U.S. entry into World War II. Edsel and Charles Sorensen, Ford's production chief, had apparently gotten the go-ahead from Henry Ford by June 12, when Edsel telephoned Knudsen to confirm that Ford would produce 9,000 Rolls-Royce Merlin airplane engines (6,000 for the RAF and 3,000 for the U.S. Army). However, as soon as the British press announced the deal, Henry Ford personally and publicly canceled it, telling a reporter: "We are not doing business with the British government or any other government."
In fact, according to Douglas Brinkley's biography of Ford, "Wheels for the World," Ford had in effect already accepted a contract from the German government. The Ford subsidiary Ford-Werke in Cologne was doing business with the Third Reich at the time, which Ford's critics took as proof that he was concealing a pro-German bias behind his claims to be a man of peace. As U.S. entry into the war looked ever more certain, Ford reversed his earlier position, and in May of 1941 the company opened a large new government-sponsored facility at Willow Run, Michigan, for the purposes of manufacturing B-24E Liberator bombers (pictured above) for the Allied war effort. In addition to aircraft, Ford Motor plants produced a great deal of other war materiel during World War II, including a variety of engines, trucks, jeeps, tanks and tank destroyers.


June 12th 1952
Maurice Olley, Chevrolet's chief engineer, completed chassis, code-named Opel, for eventual use in 1953 Corvette.
Maurice Olley was the ultimate engineer. He had a passion for understanding engineering fundamentals and was committed to creating solutions to solve mechanical engineering problems related to automobiles. His entire career, from his time at Rolls-Royce to his 25 years at General Motors and Chevrolet, prepared him for the important role he was asked to play with the Corvette. But his contribution would have been just as passionate whether it had been applied to a Buick Roadmaster or to the Corvette. To Maurice Olley, it wasn’t the specific product that motivated him; it was how he could improve the function of the product while furthering the understanding of the engineering principle behind it.
Working along side Harley Earl and Bob McLean, Olley developed the chassis and suspension of the first-generation Corvette. Acting as head of Chevrolet Research and Development, he headed the engineering team that worked to perfect the early Corvettes and hired Zora Arkus-Duntov to continue the improvements.
Olley had a passion for making an automobile as good as it can be, along with an unmistakable influence on the development of the first Corvette.


June 12th 1931 
The territories of North Australia and Central Australia are reunited as the Northern Territory


June 12th 1948 
Donald Bradman scores 138 in the First Test at Trent Bridge.


June 12th 2003 
Optus launches the C1 satellite, the largest Australian hybrid communications and military satellite ever launched.


June 12th 1929 
WWII Holocaust diarist, Anne Frank, is born.


June 12th 1964 
Anti-apartheid leader, Nelson Mandela, is given a life sentence in jail
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on June 13, 2013, 04:28:28 am
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On this day, June 13th 1895
Emile Levassor drives a Panhard et Levassor car with a two-cylinder, 750-rpm, four-horsepower Daimler Phoenix engine over the finish line in the world's first real automobile race. Levassor completed the 732-mile course, from Paris to Bordeaux and back, in just under 49 hours, at a then-impressive speed of about 15 miles per hour.
Levassor and his partner Rene Panhard operated one of the largest machine shops in Paris in 1887, when a Belgian engineer named Edouard Sarazin convinced Levassor to manufacture a new high-speed engine for the German automaker Daimler, for which Sarazin had obtained the French patent rights. When Sarazin died later that year, the rights passed to his widow, Louise. In 1889, visitors to the Paris exposition celebrating the 100th anniversary of the French Revolution were able to admire not only Gustave Eiffel's now-famous tower, but also a Daimler-produced automobile with one of the new Panhard et Levassor-constructed engines. The following year, Levassor married Louise Sarazin.

By 1891, Levassor had built a drastically different automobile, placing the engine vertically in front of the chassis rather than underneath or behind the driver--a radical departure from the carriage-influenced design of earlier vehicles--and put in a mechanical transmission that the driver engaged with a clutch, allowing him to travel at different speeds. In the years to come, this arrangement, known as the Systeme Panhard, would become the model for all automobiles. In 1895, a committee of journalists and automotive pioneers, including Levassor and Armand Peugeot, France's leading manufacturer of bicycles, spearheaded the Paris-Bordeaux-Paris race in order to capitalize on public enthusiasm for the automobile. Out of 46 entries, Levassor finished first but was later disqualified on a technicality; first place went to a Peugeot that finished 11 hours behind him.
The Paris-Bordeaux-Paris race highlighted France's superiority in automotive technology at the time, and established Panhard et Levassor as a major force in the fledgling industry. Its success spurred the creation of the Automobile Club de France in order to foster the development of the motor vehicle and regulate future motor sports events. Over the next century, these events would grow into the Grand Prix motor racing circuit, and eventually into its current incarnation: Formula One.

June 13th 1978
Ford Motor Company Chairman, Henry Ford II, fired Lee Iaccoca, the mustang designer, from the position of president, ending a bitter personal struggle between the two men.

June 13th 1980
Markus Winkelhock (born June 13, 1980 in Stuttgart Germany was a German Formula One driver. Winkelhock is the only driver in Formula One history to start last on the grid and lead the race in his first Grand Prix, and due to the red flag and restart, is also the only driver in Formula One history to start both last and first on the grid in the same Grand Prix.

Published Jul 13, 2004
Lee A. Iacocca, who gave the world the Ford Mustang and revived Chrysler by popularizing the modern minivan, left the automobile industry a decade ago. But he is still pushing new ideas. His latest product was a spray-on version of Olivio, a butter substitute made from olive and canola oils. Mr. Iacocca, the founder and principal owner of Olivio Premium Products, joined some of his grandchildren that fall in testing the company's new spray pump on soda crackers.

(http://i975.photobucket.com/albums/ae239/ktarn45/lee_iacocca_mustang.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/ktarn45/media/lee_iacocca_mustang.jpg.html)
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on June 14, 2013, 12:02:32 pm


June 14th 1928
Leon Duray drove his Miller 91 Packard Cable Special to a world close-coursed speed record, recording an astonishing top speed of 148.173mph, at the Packard Proving Ground in Utica, Michigan. Two weeks earlier, Duray had posted a record lap of 124mph at the Indy 500, a record that stood for 10 years until the track was banked.

June 14th 2002
In one of the most memorable scenes in the film "The Bourne Identity," released on this day in 2002, the amnesiac assassin Jason Bourne (Matt Damon) drives a vintage Austin Mini Cooper through the traffic-heavy streets of Paris to evade his police and Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) pursuers.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: dyates on June 14, 2013, 11:50:57 pm
Hi Shermatt

Don't give up on this I love it.Would prefer to read what happened today than watch the news.Less depressing.

Derek
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on June 15, 2013, 12:47:36 pm
(http://i716.photobucket.com/albums/ww169/domestic_platypus3/MODELS/IMG_2186.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/domestic_platypus3/media/MODELS/IMG_2186.jpg.html)

On this day, June 15th 1924
Ford Motor Company manufactured its 10 millionth Model T automobile.

June 15th, 1844.
Vulcanised rubber is patented by Charles Goodyear.
Vulcanisation, or curing, of rubber is a chemical process in which rubber molecules become locked together to a greater or lesser extent, making the bulk material harder, more durable and more resistant to chemical attack. The process also alters the surface of the material from a stickiness that adheres to other materials, to a smooth soft surface.
Prior to the mid-19th century, natural or India rubber had limited usefulness because it melted in hot weather, froze and cracked in cold weather, and tended to stick to virtually everything. Charles Goodyear, a businessman who experimented with the properties of gum elastic, accidentally discovered the process of vulcanisation of rubber when he dropped some rubber mixed with sulfur on a hot stove. He received US Patent No. 3,633 on 15 June 1844 for his invention.
Goodyear did not benefit from his invention as Englishman Thomas Han**** copied his idea and attained a British patent for the process before Goodyear applied for a British patent. However, vulcanised rubber was later was made into tyres emblazoned with Goodyear's name. The Goodyear Tyre and Rubber Company adopted the Goodyear name because of its activities in the rubber industry, but it has no other links to Charles Goodyear and his family.

June 15th 1937
Harold T. Ames, of Chicago, IL, chief executive of Duesenberg, received a patent for a "Headlight Structure"; retractable headlamps (defining detail on Cord 810).

June 15th 1986
Driving legend Richard Petty makes the 1,000th start of his National Association for Stock Car Racing (NASCAR) career, in the Miller American 400 in Brooklyn, Michigan. He became the first driver in NASCAR history to log 1,000 career starts.

15th June 1966
Andrew Goldman was born to rich oil tycoon Marty Mcfly from the movie "back to the future". Andrew went on through the 20th century to become one of the most influential world leaders to prevent virginity gaining him the Nobel peace prize in 2019. Andrews statue to this day remains at the base of the Sydney Harbour bridge
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on June 16, 2013, 10:11:44 am

(http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v170/drfong/Cars/1917MillerGoldenSubmarine02a.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/drfong/media/Cars/1917MillerGoldenSubmarine02a.jpg.html)
Pictured: Harry Millers Golden Submarine

On this day, June 16th 1917
Harry Miller completed the Golden Submarine, the first of his expensive custom-made race cars that would change the shape of things to come in American auto racing. The Golden Submarine carried an unimaginable ticket price of $15,000 at its completion. Its gold color was the result of a combination of lacquer and bronze dust. Built for Barney Oldfield, America's most brash race-car driver, the Golden Submarine had an enclosed cockpit. Oldfield, who helped design the car, thought the closed cockpit would make the car safer if it rolled; he'd lost his close friend, Bob Burman, in a crash the year before. The Golden Submarine was the first American race car to possess an all electrically welded steel chassis. Also unique to the sub was the liberal use of aluminum in engine and body components. The engine--the component that would later define Miller's career--contained four cylinders and a single overhead cam. It put out 130hp at 290 cubic inches of piston displacement, and, most remarkable for its time, it only weighed 410 pounds. Consider that the car's competition carried engines that produced around 300hp at over 400 cubic inches of piston displacement.

June 16th 1903
At 9:30 in the morning on this day in 1903, Henry Ford and other prospective stockholders in the Ford Motor Company meet in Detroit to sign the official paperwork required to create a new corporation. Twelve stockholders were listed on the forms, which were signed, notarized and sent to the office of Michigan's secretary of state. The company was officially incorporated the following day, when the secretary of state's office received the articles of association.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on June 17, 2013, 01:30:41 am
INTERMISSION

USELESS FACTS

....The longest one-syllable word in the English language is "screeched."
... FACT, chevy badges dont belong on holdens
...Everytime the media uses the word "HOON" to describe a car enthusiast, a puppy dies
...The name for Oz in the "Wizard of Oz" was thought up when the creator, Frank Baum, looked at his filing cabinet and saw A-N, and O-Z, hence "Oz."
...The sentence, "The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog," uses every letter in the alphabet.
...The term "the whole 9 yards" came from WWII fighter pilots in the Pacific. When arming their airplanes on the ground, the .50 caliber machine gun ammo belts measured exactly 27 feet, before being loaded into the fuselage. If the pilots fired all their ammo at a target, it got "the whole 9 yards."
...The name Jeep came from the abbreviation used in the army for the "General Purpose" vehicle, G.P.
...Pound for pound, hamburgers cost more than new cars.
...Only FOUR automobiles were registered in the United States in 1895.
...a production car contains more than 20kgs (44lbs) of glue
...The first speeding ticket was issued in 1902
...The World’s Oldest Car was built in France in 1884 for French Count De Dion
...The engine in the Mclaren F1 is a distant cousin of the one found in the BMW 850CSi
...The porsche 911 Sc was supposed to be the last 911 so it was given the SC designation(Super Carrera)
...The RS Cosworth came about due to a fluke. Stuart Turner, head of motorsport at Ford Europe spotted a prototype 16v head on a pinto block during a visit to Cosworth. He suggested they turbocharge it and bung it in a Sierra to knock Rover off the top spot in touring car racing. The rest is history
...The Jaguar XK120 was designed on the roof of the Coventry factory during an air-raid in WW2
...Mazda is named after the Zoroastrian religion
...Subaru is named after the pleides constellation, which has six stars visible, plus Subaru was made up of 5 companies becoming one so the logo conveniently displays six stars to represent that
...The Hyundai (which means modernity in Korean) badge spells out an H but is also supposed to represent two people, the customer and company, shaking hands
...Ford was the second car company that Henry Ford started. The first was the Henry Ford Motor Company, which he sold, and which eventually evolved into Cadillac
...Ford was offered the Beetle after WWII. Their assessors sent a report back saying the car 'wasn't worth a damn'
...Ferrari originally wanted to be paid for the use of the Ferrari 308 in Magnum PI. They relented when the producers told them they would use a Porsche 911 instead
...Volvo have the patent on 3-point seatbelts, but have never enforced it
...The 3-letter abbreviation for Harley-Davidson on the NY Stock Exchange is HOG
...California has issued at least 6 drivers licenses to people named Jesus Christ.
...In 1910, magician Harry Houdini was the first solo pilot to fly a plane in Australia. He taught himself to drive a car just so he could drive out to the airfield then never drove again
...Nicolas Cugnot made a steam powered car in 1769, this car was driven into a wall in 1771 and is recorded as the first motor accident
...Volvo is Latin for - "I roll"
...The doorhandles on the Mazda 3/5 are the same as on a 2005-on Mustang.
...Pontiac is named after an Indian tribe
...the Renault Feugo was the first car to come with remote central locking
...Oldsmobile's 4-4-2 stands for four-barrel carb, four-speed manual transmission, and two exhausts
...The Ford Probe was destined to be the new Ford Mustang but after a public outcry and petition, Ford backed down and called it the Probe. The Probe is now long dead and the Mustang is one of Ford's best sellers
...The double "RR" on the front of a Rolls Royce used to be red in colour. When Mr Rolls or Mr Royce died (can't remember which), one of the "R"s was changed to black. So some Rolls have a black and red "RR". When the other one died both "R"s became black
...The Porsche 993 Turbo was the first production road Porsche to use forged finned cylinder barrels
...Porsche wanted to call the 911 the 901 but couldnt because Peugeot own the copyright of all 3 digit numbers with an zero in the middle. Hence the 911
...Henry Ford asked all companies supplying parts and components to send them in boxes and crates of his design and specification so he could use the packaging as part of the vehicle structure as a way to cut costs
...Henry Ford was illiterate and he named the two-door Model A, tudor because he couldn't spell two-door
...If you look at an older VW ignition key (say for a Golf Mk II) it has the intials AH stamped on it. As do all air-cooled VWS. The intials stand for Adolf Hitler
...The Cadillac car brand was named after Antoine Laumet, dit de La Mothe, sieur de Cadillac, a French pioneer who founded a trading post on what was to become Detroit
...Only Phase I Nissan GTI-R's were actually built by Nissan (at Tochigi), The remaining three production phases were assembled by Fuji Heavy Industries (ie: Subaru Automotive)
...The AstonMartin Vantage which at the time had the largest brakes fitted to a production car produced enough heat energy stopping from 200mph to heat a small 1 bed flat for a fortnight
...The doors on the sides of the AMC Pacer are different sizes
...The production car with the longest cambelt - Porsche 928.
...The tail lights fitted to the Mclaren F1 came from a coach.
...The worlds first v6 was produced by Lancia
...Adolf Hitler had a false floor fitted into his Mercedes 770K, making him look 5 inches taller, when he stood up in the car
...A 1973 Oldsmobile Delta 88 is featured in every single Sam Rami film
...The Aston Martin in Goldfinger was the last DB4 S5 Vantage off the line. Being pretty similar-looking to the DB5 meant that they changed its identity to keep the film 'current' when it was announced during filming. The only point where it's referred to as a 'DB5' is during Q's briefing
...The Rolls-Royce Silver Cloud in A View To A Kill actually belonged to producer Albert 'Cubby' Broccoli
...E.L Cord once ran the Auburn-Cord-Duesenberg empire which made some of the greatest American cars. When it went bankrupt in the thirties he founded a refrigerator firm and made a large fortune.He had no interest in the cars he had built and never talked about them or attneded any meeting afterwards
...The turbocharger on a Mitsubishi Lancer EVO spins in the oposite direction to the turbocharger fitted to a Subaru Impreza
...The O in GTO, as in Ferrari 250GTO, stands for Gran Turismo 'omologato' or homologated to conform to the rules of a specific motor race, so should only apply to race specification cars built to satisfy the numbers required for homologation
...Ferris Buellars Ferrari was NOT an MG with a Ferrari bodykit on it






(http://i270.photobucket.com/albums/jj93/Blacquenhard/OJSimpsonInterstate405June171994.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/Blacquenhard/media/OJSimpsonInterstate405June171994.jpg.html)
PICTURED: Innocent O.J. Simpson being chased by LA Police.

On this day, June 17th 1994
Viewers around the world are glued to their television screens, watching as a fleet of black-and-white police cars pursues a white Ford Bronco along Interstate-405 in Los Angeles, California. Inside the Bronco is Orenthal James "O.J." Simpson, a former professional football player, actor and sports commentator whom police suspected of involvement in the recent murders of his former wife, Nicole Brown Simpson, and her friend Ronald Goldman.
The bodies of Brown Simpson and Goldman were found outside her home in the exclusive Los Angeles neighborhood of Brentwood shortly after midnight on June 13, 1994. Bloodstains matching Simpson's blood type were found at the crime scene, and the star had become the focus of the Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD) investigation by the morning of June 17. When police arrived to arrest Simpson at the home of his friend and lawyer, Robert Kardashian, they found that Simpson had slipped out the back door with his former college and Buffalo Bills teammate Al Cowlings. The two men had then driven off in Cowlings' white Ford Bronco.
After a news conference--in which his lawyer, Howard Shapiro, announced that Simpson was distraught and might attempt suicide--the LAPD officially declared the former football star a fugitive. Around 7 p.m. PST, police located the white Bronco by tracing calls made from Simpson's cellular phone. Simpson was reported to be in the back seat of the vehicle, holding a gun to his head. With news helicopters following the chase from above and cameras broadcasting the dramatic events live to millions of astonished viewers, vehicles from the LAPD and California Highway Patrol pursued the Bronco for about an hour as it traveled at some 35 miles per hour along I-405. Finally, after about an hour, the Bronco pulled into the driveway of Simpson's Brentwood home. He emerged from the car close to 9 pm and was immediately arrested and booked on double murder charges.
The trial that followed gripped the nation, inspiring unprecedented media scrutiny along with heated debates about racial discrimination on the part of the police. Though a jury acquitted Simpson of the murder charges in October 1995, a separate civil trial in 1997 found him liable for the deaths and ordered him to pay $33.5 million in damages to the Brown and Goldman families.

June 17th 1903
Ford Motor Company was officially incorporated with capital of $28,000 and Ford's patents, knowledge and engine, John S. Gray was elected as President and Henry Ford as Vice President. Primary stockholders were Henry Ford, Alexander Malcomson, John W. Anderson, C.H. Bennett, James Couzens, Horace E. Dodge, John F. Dodge, Vernon C. Fry, John S. Gray, Horace H. Rackham, Albert Strelow and Charles J. Woodall.

June 17th 1923
On this day, Enzo Ferrari, who would go on to an historic career as a driver for Alpha Romeo before being put in charge of their racing division, won his first race, a 166-mile event at the Circuito del Savio in Ravenna, Italy.

June 17th 1962
Scotch racer Jim Clark won his first Formula One Grand Prix at Spa-Francorchamps in Belgium. Clark would go on to one of the most storied careers in F1 history. His 1965 season is his crowning achievement as the sport's most dominant racer. Clark led every lap of every race he competed in, and he became the first Briton to win the Indy 500. Clark died in a tragic accident in a Formula Two race in Germany.

June 17th 1990
"Handsome" Harry Gant became the oldest driver to win a Winston Cup race when he won the Miller Genuine Draft 500 in Long Pond, Pennsylvania, at the age of 50 years, 158 days.

June 17th 1867
Henry Lawson, one of Australia's best known writers, is born

June 17th 1703 
John Wesley, founder of Methodism, is born

June 17th 1893 
Gold is discovered at Kalgoorlie in Western Australia

June 17th 1928 
Amelia Earhart becomes the first woman to fly across the Atlantic

June 17th 1961 
Russian ballet legend Rudolf Nureyev breaks free from Russian guards and requests asylum in France

June 17th 1972 
The Watergate scandal begins.

June 17th 1999 
Removal of the entire Cape Hatteras lighthouse tower in the USA commences.

June 17th 1779
In support of the US, Spain declares war on England and the siege of Gibraltar begins

June 17th 1784 - Holland forbids orange clothes (also in the same year, Ben Franklin expresses unhappiness over eagle as America's symbol...Go figure!!)
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on June 18, 2013, 06:33:12 am
(http://i359.photobucket.com/albums/oo33/69belair/other%20makes/nyc1946_zps3a058dee.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/69belair/media/other%20makes/nyc1946_zps3a058dee.jpg.html)
Pictured: 1946 checkered cab


On this day, June 18th 1923
The first Checker Cab rolls off the line at the Checker Cab Manufacturing Company in Kalamazoo, Michigan.
Morris Markin, founder of Checker Cab, was born in Smolensk, Russia, and began working when he was only 12 years old. At 19, he immigrated to the United States and moved to Chicago, where two uncles lived. After opening his own tailor's shop, Markin also began running a fleet of cabs and an auto body shop, the Markin Auto Body Corporation, in Joliet, Illinois. In 1921, after loaning $15,000 to help a friend's struggling car manufacturing business, the Commonwealth Motor Company, Markin absorbed Commonwealth into his own enterprise and completely halted the production of regular passenger cars in favor of taxis. The result was the Checker Cab Manufacturing Company, which took its name from a Chicago cab company that had hired Commonwealth to produce its vehicles.
By the end of 1922, Checker was producing more than 100 units per month in Joliet, and some 600 of the company's cabs were on the streets of New York City. Markin went looking for a bigger factory and settled on Kalamazoo, where the company took over buildings previously used by the Handley-Knight Company and Dort Body Plant car manufacturers. The first shipment of a Checker from Kalamazoo on June 18, 1923 stood out as a major landmark in the history of the company, which by then employed some 700 people.
During the Great Depression, Markin briefly sold Checker, but he bought it back in 1936 and began diversifying his business by making auto parts for other car companies. After converting its factories to produce war materiel during World War II, Checker entered the passenger car market in the late 1950s, with models dubbed the Superba and the Marathon. In its peak production year of 1962, Checker rolled out some 8,173 cars; the great majority of those were taxis. Over the course of the 1970s, however, as economic conditions led taxi companies to convert smaller, more fuel-efficient standard passenger cars into cabs, the 4,000-pound gas-guzzling Checker came to seem more and more outdated. Markin had died in 1970, and in April 1982 his son David announced that Checker would halt production of its famous cab that summer. Though the company still owns the Yellow and Checker cab fleets in Chicago and continued to make parts for other auto manufacturers, including General Motors, the last Checker Cab rolled off the line in Kalamazoo on July 12, 1982.

18 June 1936
Denis Clive "Denny" Hulme, New Zealand car racer and the 1967 Formula One World Champion for the Brabham team was born in Moteuka, New Zealand.

18 June 1983 
America launches its first woman into space

18 June 1936
1st bicycle traffic court in America established, Racine, WI

18 June 1977
Sex Pistols Johnny Rotten & Paul Cook, beaten & robbed by London pub

18 June 1815 
Napoleon Bonaparte is defeated in the Battle of Waterloo

18 June 1928 
Arctic explorer Roald Amundsen disappears while on a rescue mission.

18 June 1972 
118 people are killed in the UK's worst air disaster

18 June 2000 
58 Chinese immigrants die from suffocation whilst trying to illegally enter Britain

18 June 1178
5 Canterbury monks report explosion on moon (only known observation)

18 June 1879
W H Richardson, a black inventor, patents the children's carriage
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on June 19, 2013, 09:57:17 am
(http://i293.photobucket.com/albums/mm46/CarClassic/Blog-03/Lamborghini_Gallardo_05.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/CarClassic/media/Blog-03/Lamborghini_Gallardo_05.jpg.html)
PICTURED: The Lamborghini Gallardo

On this day, June 19th 1965
Luc Donckerwolke, famous Belgian car designer was born in Lima, Peru. He started his design career in 1990 with Peugeot. He also worked for Skoda (1994-98 where he helped design Octavia and Fabia. After that he shifted to Audi where he helped design Audi A4 and R8. He was head of design at Lamborghini from 1998, where he was responsible for the 2001 Lamborghini Diablo VT 6.0, 2002 Lamborghini Murciélago and 2003 Lamborghini Gallardo, winning the 'Red Dot Award' in 2003 in recognition for his work on them. He also worked with Walter de'Silva to produce the 2006 Lamborghini Miura concept. In September 2005, Donckerwolke was appointed SEAT Design Director overseeing the design of future SEAT models.

June 19th 1949
NASCAR staged its first Grand National event at the Charlotte Fairgrounds, the event marked the birth of NASCAR racing as we know it today.

June 19, 1940
Shirley Muldowney, the "First Lady of Drag Racing" was born in Schenectady, New York. She was the first woman to receive a licence to drive a top fuel dragster by the NHRA. She won the NHRA Top Fuel championship in 1977, 1980 and 1982.

June 19th 2005
After 14 Formula One race car drivers withdraw due to safety concerns over the Michelin-made tires on their vehicles, German driver Michael Schumacher wins a less-than-satisfying victory at the United States Grand Prix on this day in 2005. The race, held at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway in Indianapolis, Indiana, will go down one of the most controversial Formula One racing events in history.
Two days before the race, driver Ralf Schumacher (Michael's brother) crashed in practice while negotiating the speedway's banked right-hand 13th turn. Michelin, makers of Schumacher's tires, determined that the tires they had supplied for the Grand Prix could not withstand the high speed on the turn, and asked the Federation Internationale de l'Automobile (FIA), the sanctioning body for Formula One races, for permission to send another batch of tires. The FIA refused, citing its mandate that only one set of tires be used in a weekend. The organization also refused Michelin's petition to build a chicane, or series of turns, designed to slow down cars before the 13th turn--despite the fact that the speedway's chief executive and 9 out of the 10 teams in the race agreed that the track could be altered. The only team that didn't was Ferrari, the team of Michael Schumacher and Rubens Barrichello (who ended up finishing second) and one of three teams in the race that used Bridgestone tires instead of Michelin.
In the end, 14 cars stayed in the garage for the Grand Prix; the six remaining cars were from the Bridgestone-outfitted Ferrari, Minardi and Jordan teams. The race itself featured one moment of excitement, when Michael Schumacher almost collided with Barrichello after a pit stop, forcing Barrichello off the track briefly and onto the grass before he regained his bearings. Many disgruntled fans left early, while others threw beer bottles and other debris from the stands and booed the victory ceremony, during which a subdued Schumacher declined to spray the customary bottle of champagne into the crowd.
The teams that used Michelin tires issued a joint apology to fans and sponsors, while Michelin later reimbursed some ticket holders for the event. Though many faulted Michelin for not providing adequate tires and agreed that the FIA and Ferrari team had the right to insist that the race course not be changed, many felt a compromise would have benefited Formula One racing as a whole, especially in the United States, where it was still seeking to build a solid fan base. The 2005 Grand Prix had drawn a crowd of some 100,000 fans--far less than that attracted by the Indianapolis 500 or a regular NASCAR Nextel Cup event.

2005 - Michael Schumacher wins controversial Formula 1 United States Grand Prix where only 6 of 20 cars complete the race amongst ridicule

June 19 2013
Sopranos star James Gandolfini best known as TV mob boss Tony Soprano dies of suspected heart attack in Italy, age 51. Already a well-travelled actor, Gandolfini shot to fame in 1999 as the head of a mob family on HBO TV series The Sopranos, the show that changed TV's reputation into a destination for quality drama and in turn, film actors.
Sept 18 1961 - June 19 2013

(http://i1010.photobucket.com/albums/af230/Seeking_uno/James-Gandolfini_zps6a65684d.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/Seeking_uno/media/James-Gandolfini_zps6a65684d.jpg.html)

2012 - A man in Saudi Arabia is beheaded for witchcraft and sorcery

1835 - New Orleans gives US government Jackson Square to be used as a mint

1862 - Slavery outlawed in US territories

1889 - Start of the first Sherlock Holmes adventure "Man with the Twisted Lip"

1910 - 1st airship in service "Germany"

1910 - Father's Day celebrated for 1st time (Spokane, Wash)

1917 - After WW I King George V ordered members of British royal family to dispense with German titles & surnames, they take the name Windsor

1954 - Tasmanian Devil, debuts in "Devil May Hare" by Warner Bros

1956 - Jerry Lewis & Dean Martin end partnership after 16 films

1967 - Paul McCartney admits on TV that he took LSD

1973 - "Rocky Horror Picture Show," stage production opens in London

1978 - "Best Little Whorehouse..." opens at 46th St NYC for 1577 perfs

1978 - Garfield, created by Jim Davis, 1st appears as a comic strip

1981 - Heaviest known orange (2.5 kg) exhibited, Nelspruit, South Africa

1988 - World's Largest Sausage completed at 13 1/8 miles long

1992 - "Batman Returns," opens
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on June 20, 2013, 08:17:33 am
(http://i163.photobucket.com/albums/t289/Eryk_PL/fs_7706921-1-1.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/Eryk_PL/media/fs_7706921-1-1.jpg.html)
PICTURED: Shekhar Mehta in a Datsun 240Z - '73 Safari Rally

On this day, June 20th 1945
Shekhar Mehta, the only five-time winner of the Safari Rally, was born in Uganda. The most grueling rally race in the world, the Safari originated in 1953 at the behest of the Royal East African Automobile Association. He was born in 1945 to an Indian family of plantation owners in Uganda, and began rallying behind the wheel of a BMW aged 21. In 1972 he and his family fled Idi Amin's regime to Kenya.
Through the most successful period of his career he drove Nissan/Datsun 240Z car.

June 20th 1987
First Junior Go-Kart race was run at the three-quarter-mile cross-country course outside of Easton, Maryland. Racer William Smith won this event in his 50cc Yamaha Green Dragon.

June 20th 1941
After a long and bitter struggle on the part of Henry Ford against cooperation with organized labor unions, Ford Motor Company signs its first contract with the United Automobile Workers of America and Congress of Industrial Organizations (UAW-CIO)
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on June 21, 2013, 05:35:47 am
(http://i200.photobucket.com/albums/aa56/AAinsworthNo2/Mille_Miglia_1955_Stirlingcopy.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/AAinsworthNo2/media/Mille_Miglia_1955_Stirlingcopy.jpg.html)
PICTURED: Stirling Moss at 1955 Mille Miglia

On this day, June 21 1947
After an interim of seven years, during which World War II wreaked havoc across the European continent, the first post-war Mille Miglia auto race is held on this day in 1947 in Brescia, Italy.
The Mille Miglia ("Thousand Miles") was the brainchild of the Brescia Automobile Club, formed in 1926 under the leadership of Franco Mazzotti and Count Aymo Maggi. An important center for Italian motor sports since the turn of the century, Brescia was smarting over the fact that Monza (near Milan) had been chosen as the site of the prestigious Italian Grand Prix. Using its considerable political connections, the fledgling automobile club gained the approval of Italy's Fascist government to run a race from Brescia to Rome--a distance of some 1,600 kilometers (around 1,000 miles) on Italian public roads. The first race, held on March 26 and 27, 1927, featured all of the leading Italian drivers; foreign participation was limited to three tiny French-made Peugeots in the lower-power Class H field. Cars made by local manufacturer Officine Meccaniche (OM) captured the three top spots. The winner completed the course in a little more than 20 hours, at an average speed of more than 77 kilometers per hour.
After an entrant spun out of control during the 1938 Mille Miglia, killing 10 spectators--, including seven children--the Fascist government of Benito Mussolini banned the race. It resumed briefly during wartime but was suspended again after the 13th running in 1940. After World War II ended in 1945, much of Italy's infrastructure, including roads and bridges, had to be rebuilt, gasoline and rubber were still being rationed and the country's new government was struggling to demonstrate its effectiveness in the wake of the Fascist movement's demise. Mille Miglia organizers were forced to postpone the starting date from late April to June 1947; they also switched to a new 1,800-kilometer route. Finally, on June 21, 1947, 155 starters left the line for the 14th edition of the Mille Miglia. Aided by a violent rainstorm that hampered runner-up Tazio Nuvolari's small Cisitalia convertible, the driver Clemente Biondetti won the race in an Alfa Romeo.
Even in its new incarnation, Italian drivers and cars dominated the race, which popularized such powerhouse brands as Alfa Romeo, Ferrari and Maserati. Tragically, driver Alfonso de Portago blew a tire and spun off the road during the 1957 edition, killing himself, his co-driver and 10 spectators. Three days later, the Italian government banned the Mille Miglia and all other motor racing on Italian public road

June 21 1947
William Clay Ford married Martha Firestone, uniting two of the greatest fortunes in the American automotive industry. Henry Ford and Harvey Firestone had been close friends and allies during their lives after Firestone received the exclusive contract to supply tires for Ford's Model T. Neither man lived to see the union of their families.

June 21 1894
Workers in Pittsburgh strike Pullman sleeping car company

June 21 1938
Bradman scores 101* in 77 minutes, Australia v Lancashire

June 21 1954
John Landy runs world record mile (3:58.0)

June 21 1960
Armin Hary runs world record 100m (10.0)

June 21 1962
USAF Maj Robert M White takes X-15 to 75,190 m

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June 21 1982
John Hinckley found not guilty of 1981 attempted assassination of President Reagan by reason of insanity

June 21 2004
SpaceShipOne becomes the first privately funded spaceplane to achieve spaceflight.

June 21 2006
Pluto's newly discovered moons are officially named Nix & Hydra.

June 21 2013,
Today we received these 2 documents in the post from the Governor of Kentucky for saving the life of Kimmy Perry a few weekends ago when she was standing in front of our boat and she got caught in a rip current. She happened to be from Kentucky and the governors good friend.
Might open up a Chicken shop  :thumb:

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Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on June 22, 2013, 12:55:02 am
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On this day, June 22nd 2001
"The Fast and the Furious," a crime drama based in the underground world of street racing in Southern California, debuts in theaters across the United States.
In the film, directed by Rob Cohen, Paul Walker starred as Brian O'Connor, an undercover cop who infiltrates the illegal late-night racing scene in Los Angeles to catch a gang suspected of hijacking big-rig trucks to get the parts to outfit their souped-up cars. As the movie opens, O'Connor is practicing his high-speed driving in order to blend in with his targets; his vehicle is a bright green 1995 Mitsubishi Eclipse, which he powers through an empty parking lot near Dodger Stadium. Later on, O'Connor loses the title to the Mitsubishi to Dominic Toretto (Vin Diesel), the leader of the gang of suspected thieves, after a street race. Toretto, the reigning "king of the streets," dominates the competition in his powerful fire-engine red 1993 Mazda RX-7 Twin Turbo. In another scene, Toretto drives a hulking vintage 1969/1970 Dodge Charger.
These were just three of the cars featured prominently in the high-speed, high-impact racing scenes that punctuate "The Fast and the Furious." The screenplay for the film was based on an article about the street-racing scene titled "Racer X," written by Kenneth Li and published in Vibe magazine in 1998. Street racing (an illegal practice that should not be confused with drag racing, which is a popular sport most commonly done on a track, along a straight "drag" strip) began in the early 1990s on the roads and highways of Southern California, mostly among young Asian Americans, but quickly spread; Li's article chronicled the adventures of a racer living in New York City. Like many street racers, the characters in "The Fast and the Furious" favor low-slung Acura Integras, Honda Civics, and other common Japanese-made compact cars that are modified so that they can reach speeds of around 160 mph.
Despite mixed reviews from critics, "The Fast and the Furious" was an unexpected hit at the box office. It spawned three sequels: "2 Fast 2 Furious" (2003), "The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift" (2006) and "Fast & Furious" (2009), in which the four main co-stars of the first film--Walker, Diesel, Michelle Rodriguez and Jordana Brewster--all reprised their roles.

June 22nd 1915
Joseph Lewinka, of Philadelphia, PA, received a patent for an "Automobile-Body"; design.

June 22nd 1934
Ferdinand Porsche contracted with Automobile Manufacturers Association of Germany (RDA) to build three prototype "people's cars". The contract was a direct result of Hitler's personal request to Porsche that he design such a car.
Also on this day, 1941 - Germany, Italy & Romania declares war on Soviet Union during WW II

June 22nd 1633 - Galileo Galilei forced to recant Earth orbits Sun by Pope (on Oct 31, 1992, Vatican admits it was wrong)

June 22nd 1870 - 1st Boardwalk in America invented

June 22nd 1910
1st airship with passengers sets afloat-Zeppelin Deutscheland

June 22nd1962
1st test flight of a Hoovercraft

June 22nd 1981
Mark David Chapman pleads guilty to killing John Lennon

June 22nd 1983
"Monty Python's The Meaning of Life," released in France
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June 22nd 1990
Florida passes a law that prohibits wearing a throng bathing suit (which has since been abolished)
which brings me to this
Also on this day 22nd June, is something that I was unaware of (but can see myself supporting), is International "No Panty Day"
"Who'd of thought"

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Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on June 23, 2013, 05:51:32 am
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On this day, June 23rd 1902
German automaker Daimler-Motoren-Gesellschaft (DMG) first registers "Mercedes" as a brand name; the name will gain full legal protection the next September.
Mechanical engineer Gottlieb Daimler sold his first luxury gasoline-powered automobile to the sultan of Morocco in 1899; a year later, he formed DMG in his hometown [or whatever] of Cannstatt, Germany. Emil Jellinek, a prominent Austrian diplomat and businessman who was extremely enthusiastic about the development of the automobile, ordered a car from Daimler in 1897. The carmaker delivered a six-horsepower vehicle with a two-cylinder engine, but it was too slow for Jellinek; to replace it, he ordered two of a faster model--the four-cylinder Daimler Phoenix. Soon, Jellinek began to sell Daimler cars to high society customers and to drive them in racing events, including Nice Week on the French Riviera, in 1899. He entered these races using the pseudonym "Mercedes," the name of his elder daughter.
In April 1900, Jellinek signed an agreement with DMG to distribute and sell a new line of four-cylinder vehicles. He suggested they call the car Mercedes, feeling that the non-German name might sell better in France. On December 22, 1900, DMG delivered the first Mercedes to Jellinek. Designed by Wilhelm Maybach, chief engineer for DMG, the 35-horsepower vehicle featured a pressed-steel chassis (or frame), honeycomb radiator, mechanical intake valves and an improved gearbox; it could achieve a speed of 53 mph. For this combination of attributes, the 1901 Mercedes is considered to have been the first truly modern automobile.
At Nice Week in March 1901, Mercedes race cars nearly swept the field, and orders began pouring into DMG's Cannstatt factory. "Mercedes" was registered as a brand name on June 22, 1902, and legally protected the following September 26. In June 1903, Emil Jellinek obtained permission to take the name Jellinek-Mercedes, observing that it was "probably the first time that a father has borne the name of his daughter."
The famous Mercedes symbol, a three-point star, was registered as a trademark in 1909 and used on all Mercedes vehicles from 1910 onward. It had its origins in a story that Paul and Adolf Daimler, sons of Gottlieb Daimler and senior executives at DMG, remembered about their father, who died in 1900. On a postcard with a picture of Cologne and Deutz, where he was working at the time in the Deutz engine factory, the elder Daimler had drawn a star over the house where he was living. In the card's message, he told his wife the star represented the prosperity that would shine on them in the future, when he would have his own factory.

June 23rd 1951
Michèle Mouton was born in Grasse, France. She is the most successful and well-known female rally driver of all time, as well as arguably the most successful female in motor racing as a whole. She was the first and so far the only woman to win a round of the World Rally Championship, the Rallye Sanremo in 1981.

June 23rd 1991
Bertrand Gachot, Johnny Herbert, and Volker Wiedler won the 24-Hours of Le Mans driving a Mazda. It was the first time an automaker outside of Western Europe had won the prestigious title. The 1991 Mazda was also the first car to win Le Mans with a Wankel rotary engine. The engine consisted of four rotors with three sequential spark plugs per rotor. The Mazda drove 4,923 kilometers at an average speed of 295kmh.

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June 23rd 1784
1st US balloon flight (13 year old Edward Warren)

June 23rd 1942
World War II: Germany's latest fighter, a Focke-Wulf FW190 is captured intact when it mistakenly lands at RAF Pembrey in Wales.

June 23rd 1961
USAF Maj Robert M White takes X-15 to 32,830 m

June 23rd 1972
Nixon & Haldeman agree to use CIA to cover up Watergate

June 23rd 1974
1st extraterrestrial message sent from Earth into space

June 23rd 1993
Lorena Gallo Bobbitt amputates husband's John Wayne Bobbitt's penis

June 23rd 1996
Nintendo 64 goes on sale in Japan
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on June 24, 2013, 06:20:36 am
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JUNE 24rd, 1969 (reported)
A 1966 Mustang GT with vinyl top was crushed and burned when a DC4 airplane with a engine fire skipped across rooftops, spreading debris for four blocks and exploded in a used car lot in downtown Miami. One of the engines from the plane ended up on the Mustang. (11-people died)

June 24th 1900
Oliver Lippincott became the first motorist in Yosemite National Park, when he drove his Toledo Automobile Company-built car to the South Rim from Flagstaff. Lippincott would start a trend with his visit, as motorists increasingly chose to drive to National Parks, avoiding the more time-consuming train and coach rides. By 1901, a number of other motorists had made the trip to Yosemite, mostly in Locomobiles.

June 24th 1928
The rocket-powered Opel RAK 3 debuted on a section of railroad track near Hanover, Germany. With approximately 20,000 spectators looking on, the rocket car recorded a rail-speed record of 157mph on its first run. The result of a rather odd experiment, the RAK 3 carried a caged cat as its driver. Tragically, on the car's second run, too many of its rockets fired at once and the car crashed, killing its feline pilot.

June 24th 1939
Pan Am's 1st US to England flight

June 24th 1947
Flying saucers sighted over Mount Rainier by pilot Ken Arnold

June 24th 1968
Australia all out for 78 v England at Lord's

June 24th 1970
"Catch 22" opens in movie theaters

June 24th 1976
1975 movie "Rocky Horror Picture Show" released in Germany

June 24th 1997
USAF reports Roswell 'space aliens' were dummies

June 24th 1980
Darren "Serova" Powell (youth prodigy and forum member) from Adelaide Australia was born at 62,000ft by Russian cosmonaut "Elena Serova" (Im sure they have) as they re-entered the earths orbit over the city of Adelaide deeming him an Australian citizen
Throughout his distinctive career, he set 5 land speed records where he earned the nickname "The Sonic Boom"...several years later, game creators came up with the video game "Sonic Hedgehog" in honor of Darren and his achievements
Darren went on to study aeronautics and mechanical engineering in his later years where Nissan Japan offered him a top ranking position in their Top secret design K7 building in Kyoto of the R32 Nissan GTR Skyline in which Darren's revised design of just a fuel injected turbo 4 cyl, to his design of the twin turbo'd RB26 6cyl, 4WD that would be become of the most feared race cars in history earning its name on the race tracks as "Godzilla" where it eventually was banned from racing in most countries. It was deemed "to fast and years ahead of its time"
Darren was rewarded by the Japanese emperor the right to own land in japan. The first westerner ever to be awarded this and is to this day. Darren now owns 7 APEXI and 4 Turbo companies on this land aswell as 1 Planet Hollywood as a silent partner with his good friends, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Sylvester Stallone and Bruce Willis.
All of this, was done prior his 16th birthday
He finally came to the conclusion in 1996 and with his degrees and years of experience as a youth prodigy setting multiple land, air speed records, starring in films across the world as Chuck Norris's stunt double and assisting the United States government with with the modified drones and Top secret Stealth Black hawk helicopters that extracted Osama Bin Laden, that he would retire in Adelaide Australia and that his first US muscle car, would be a Ford mustang and continue with his passion of writing music for none other than George Micheal,..... to name a few. His best work is at 4am on his friends porch in O'Town, Florida
Happy birthday mate. Matt & Sheri

(http://i709.photobucket.com/albums/ww96/Uzivatel/Elena03.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/Uzivatel/media/Elena03.jpg.html)
PICTURED: Darren's mum, Elena Serova
Elena went on to Marry Sir Kenneth Dover from England making her "Elena Dover" (I think theres a pattern here)
He was the first Chancellor in the St Andrews University's history to be neither a peer nor an archbishop. Dover stepped down from the position after twenty-five years of service, effective 31 December 2005. Sir Kenneth passed 7 March 2010.


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PICTURED: Darren's design of the R32 Nissan Skyline GTR, 2,6L fuel injected twin turbo (RB26) 4WD bearing its Australian racing colours "GODZILLA"
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on June 25, 2013, 06:21:01 am
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PICTURED: 1956 Packard

On this day, June 25th 1956
The last Packard--the classic American luxury car with the famously enigmatic slogan "Ask the Man Who Owns One"--rolls off the production line at Packard's plant in Detroit, Michigan on this day in 1956.
Mechanical engineer James Ward Packard and his brother, William Dowd Packard, built their first automobile, a buggy-type vehicle with a single cylinder engine, in Warren, Ohio in 1899. The Packard Motor Car Company earned fame early on for a four-cylinder aluminum speedster called the "Gray Wolf," released in 1904. It became one of the first American racing cars to be available for sale to the general public. With the 1916 release of the Twin Six, with its revolutionary V-12 engine, Packard established itself as the country's leading luxury-car manufacturer. World War I saw Packard convert to war production earlier than most companies, and the Twin Six was adapted into the Liberty Aircraft engine, by far the most important single output of America's wartime industry.
Packards had large, square bodies that suggested an elegant solidity, and the company was renowned for its hand-finished attention to detail. In the 1930s, however, the superior resources of General Motors and the success of its V-16 engine pushed Cadillac past Packard as the premier luxury car in America. Packard diversified by producing a smaller, more affordable model, the One Twenty, which increased the company's sales. The coming of World War II halted consumer car production in the United States. In the postwar years, Packard struggled as Cadillac maintained a firm hold on the luxury car market and the media saddled the lumbering Packard with names like "bathtub" or "pregnant elephant."
With sales dwindling by the 1950s, Packard merged with the much larger Studebaker Corporation in the hope of cutting its production costs. The new Packard-Studebaker became the fourth largest manufacturer of cars. Studebaker was struggling as well, however, and eventually dropped all its own big cars as well as the Packard. In 1956, Packard-Studebaker's then-president, James Nance, made the decision to suspend Packard's manufacturing operations in Detroit. Though the company would continue to manufacture cars in South Bend, Indiana, until 1958, the final model produced on June 25, 1956, is considered the last true Packard.


June 25th 1964
John Paul Herbert was on born June 25, 1964 in Romford, London, England. He is a former racing driver from England. He competed in Formula One, winning three races, and also in sports cars winning the Le Mans 24 Hours in 1991 driving a Mazda 787B. They only non-european car to win Le-Mans that too with a rotary engine.

June 25th 1919
1st advanced monoplane airliner flight (Junkers F13)

June 25th 1953
1st passenger to fly commercially around the world < 100 hours

June 25th 1997
Christies auctions off Princess Di's clothing for $5.5 million
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on June 26, 2013, 08:05:11 am
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June 26 1906
The first French Grand Prix, the first race of that kind to be held anywhere was staged in Le Mans by the Automobile Club of France and won by Hungarian driver Ferenc Szisz in a 90hp Renault. The race covered 1,200 kilometers over two days, and was run under a new set of rules that would become a standard element of Grand Prix racing.
PICTURED: 1st GP ever - 1906 LeMans, Ferenc Szisz and his riding mechanic winning the 1906 race

June 26th 1925
After two years of stock acquisitions by Walter Chrysler and Harry Bronner, Chrysler Corporation was incorporated in Delaware, Later it took over Maxwell Motor Corporation with Walter P. Chrysler as president and chairman of the board.

June 26th 1971
Massimiliano "Max" Biaggi, Italian motercycle racer was born in Rome, Italy. Biaggi is also known as the Roman Emperor and Mad Max and is notorious for his difficult relationship with the press, team personnel and other riders.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on June 27, 2013, 07:02:43 am
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On this day, June 27th 1985
After 59 years, the iconic Route 66 enters the realm of history on this day in 1985, when the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials de-certifies the road and votes to remove all its highway signs.
Measuring some 2,200 miles in its heyday, Route 66 stretched from Chicago, Illinois to Santa Monica, California, passing through eight states. According to a New York Times article about its decertification, most of Route 66 followed a path through the wilderness forged in 1857 by U.S. Navy Lieutenant Edward Beale at the head of a caravan of camels. Over the years, wagon trains and cattlemen eventually made way for trucks and passenger automobiles.
The idea of building a highway along this route surfaced in Oklahoma in the mid-1920s as a way to link the state to cities like Chicago and Los Angeles. Highway Commissioner Cyrus S. Avery touted it as a way of diverting traffic from Kansas City, Missouri and Denver. In 1926, the highway earned its official designation as Route 66. The diagonal course of Route 66 linked hundreds of mostly rural communities to the cities along its route, allowing farmers to more easily transport grain and other types of produce for distribution. The highway was also a lifeline for the long-distance trucking industry, which by 1930 was competing with the railroad for dominance in the shipping market.
Route 66 was the scene of a mass westward migration during the 1930s, when more than 200,000 people traveled from the poverty-stricken Dust Bowl to California. John Steinbeck immortalized the highway, which he called the "Mother Road," in his classic 1939 novel "The Grapes of Wrath."
Beginning in the 1950s, the building of a massive system of interstate highways made older roads increasingly obsolete, and by 1970, modern four-lane highways had bypassed nearly all sections of Route 66. In October 1984, Interstate-40 bypassed the last original stretch of Route 66 at Williams, Arizona, and the following year the road was decertified. According to the National Historic Route 66 Federation, drivers can still use 85 percent of the road, and Route 66 has become a destination for tourists from all over the world.
Often called the "Main Street of America," Route 66 became a pop culture mainstay over the years, inspiring its own song (written in 1947 by Bobby Troup, "Route 66" was later recorded by artists as varied as Nat "King" Cole, Chuck Berry and the Rolling Stones) as well as a 1960s television series. More recently, the historic highway was featured prominently in the hit animated film "Cars" (2006).

June 27th 1909
Mercedes Benz introduced three-pointed star symbol.

June 27th 1955
Illinois, the 21st state of United State enacted first automobile seat belt legislation.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on June 28, 2013, 11:04:00 am
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PICTURED: The 1911 Gräf & Stift Double Phaeton in which the Archduke Franz Ferdinand was riding at the time of his assassination.

June 28th 1914
Archduke Franz Ferdinand was assassinated by Gavrilo Princip in Sarajevo, Bosnia, while riding in an The 1911 Gräf & Stift Double Phaeton (Austro Daimler)that was chauffeured by Otto Merz, a Mercedes team driver. The assassination resulted in the outbreak of World War I.

June 28th 1926
Benz & Cie. and Daimler Motoren Gesellschaft (DMG) merged to form Daimler-Benz AG.

June 28th 1931
Robert Glen Johnson Junior famously known as Junior Johnson was born in Wilkes County, North Carolina. He was a legendary moonshiner (bootlegger) in the rural South who became one of the early superstars of NASCAR in the 1950s and 1960s. He won 50 NASCAR races in his career before retiring in 1966. In the 1970s and 1980s he became a highly successful NASCAR racing team owner. He sponsored such NASCAR champions as Cale Yarborough and Darrell Waltrip. He is credited with discovering drafting/slipstreaming
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on June 29, 2013, 07:50:04 am
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Marcel Renault and his mechanic, Vauthier

On this day, June 29th 1902
Marcel Renault won the four-day Paris-to-Vienna race, driving a car of his own design. The early city-to-city races were the largest sporting events of that era. Some three million people turned out to cheer Renault on to victory during the 15-hour, 615-mile race. These races were discontinued in large part due to Renault's fatal accident the following year at the Paris-Madrid race.

June 29th 1932
Audiwerke, Horchwerke, Zschopauer Motorenwerke - DKW, Automobile Division of Wanderer merged to formed Auto Union AG (second-largest motor vehicle manufacturer in Germany.). The new company's logo, four interlinked rings, one for each of founder companies was adopted. Horch was on supervisory board of Auto Union.

June 29th 1956
President Dwight Eisenhower signed into law the Highway Revenue Act of 1956 which outlined a policy of taxation with the aim of creating a fund for the construction of over 42,500 miles of interstate highways. The plan called for $50 billion over 13 years to pay for the project. A system of taxes, relying heavily on the taxation of gasoline, was implemented. Eisenhower thought of the Federal Interstate System as his greatest achievement.

June 29th 1957
Giuseppe Bacciagaluppi, managing director of the Autodromo Nazionale di Monza, staged the first race at his newly remodeled track, a match race between the top 10 Indy Car drivers and the top 10 Formula One drivers in the world. Monza enjoyed the reputation of being Europe's fastest racetrack. Jimmy Bryan of the United States won the Two Worlds Trophy in a Salih roadster at 160mph. The race did little to settle the dispute as to where the world's best drivers reside, on the high-speed ovals of the United States or on the curvy Grand Prix tracks of Europe. In those days, many racers bridged the gap between the two worlds-- like Jim Clark, who won at Indy in the same year he captured the F1 crown. Today it is widely held that the world's best drivers compete on the F1 circuit, though the specialized cars of today make the two types of racing more difficult to compare.

June 29th 1985
Jim Pattison purchased a custom-painted Rolls-Royce Phantom V limousine that had belonged to John Lennon for $2,229,000. Lennon had purchased the car in 1966 and asked a friend to paint the car with a period-typical psychedelic design pattern. The auction sale price was 10 times Sotheby's initial estimate.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on June 30, 2013, 07:42:52 am
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On this day, June 30th 1953
The first production Corvette is built at the General Motors facility in Flint, Michigan. Tony Kleiber, a worker on the assembly line, is given the privilege of driving the now-historic car off the line.
Harley J. Earl, the man behind the Corvette, got his start in his father's business, Earl Automobile Works, designing custom auto bodies for Hollywood movie stars such as Fatty Arbuckle. In 1927, General Motors hired Earl to redesign the LaSalle, the mid-range option the company had introduced between the Buick and the Cadillac. Earl's revamped LaSalle sold some 50,000 units by the end of 1929, before the Great Depression permanently slowed sales and it was discontinued in 1940. By that time, Earl had earned more attention for designing the Buick "Y Job," recognized as the industry's first "concept" car. Its relatively long, low body came equipped with innovations such as disappearing headlamps, electric windows and air-cooled brake drums over the wheels like those on an airplane.
After scoring another hit with the 1950 Buick LeSabre, Earl headed into the 1950s--a boom decade for car manufacturers--at the top of his game. In January 1953, he introduced his latest "dream car," the Corvette, as part of GM's traveling Motorama display at the Waldorf Astoria Hotel in New York City. The sleek Corvette, the first all-fiberglass-bodied American sports car, was an instant hit. It went into production the following June in Flint; 300 models were built that year. All 1953 Corvettes were white convertibles with red interiors and black canvas tops. Underneath its sleek exterior, however, the Corvette was outfitted with parts standard to other GM automobiles, including a "Blue Flame" six-cylinder engine, two-speed Powerglide automatic transmission and the drum brakes from Chevrolet's regular car line.
The Corvette's performance as a sports car was disappointing relative to its European competitors, and early sales were unimpressive. GM kept refining the design, however, and the addition of its first V-8 engine in 1955 greatly improved the car's performance. By 1961, the Corvette had cemented its reputation as America's favorite sports car. Today, it continues to rank among the world's elite sports cars in acceleration time, top speed and overall muscle.

June 30th 1969
The last U.S. produced Rambler (an American Rambler) rolls off the production line in Kenosha. A total of 4,204,925 had been made.
The Nash Rambler had originally been developed by George Walter Mason after World War II. Mason realized before anyone else that the postwar "seller's market" would evaporate once the market was again saturated with cars. He foresaw the difficulty that independent car companies would experience once they were faced with head-to-head competition with the Big Three's massive production capabilities. It was Mason's theory that to compete with the Big Three, the independents needed to market a different product. He developed a number of smaller cars, including the Rambler, the Nash-Healey (a collaboration with British Healey), and the Metropolitan. None of the cars managed to capture the American market. But years later, after Nash-Kelvinator and Hudson merged to become AMC, the Rambler finally caught on as a sub-compact car. George Romney, Mason's protÉgÉ, coined the term "gas-guzzling dinosaur" to describe the Big Three's products. Romney led a personal ad campaign promoting the AMC Rambler as an efficient, reliable car. His campaign was immensely successful, and the Rambler single-handedly kept AMC alive during impossible times for independents.
The Rambler marque was continued in numerous international markets. Examples include AMC Hornets and AMC Matadors assembled by the Australian Motor Industries (AMI) from CKD kits that continued to be badged as Ramblers until 1978. The Rambler nameplate was last used on automobiles in 1983 by Vehiculos Automotores Mexicanos (VAM) in Mexico.
In Argentina, the Rambler American became the IKA Torino in 1967. It then became the Renault Torino and was offered until 1980.

June 30 1926
GM traded 667,720 shares of its own stock, at market value of $136 million to acquire remaining 40 percent of Fisher Body to make Fisher Body Division of GM.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on July 01, 2013, 10:27:21 pm


On this day, July 1st 1948
Achille Varzi, an Italian Grand Prix driver who died during practice runs for the 1948 Swiss Grand Prix during light rain. His car skidded on the wet surface, flipping over and crushing him to death. Varzi's death resulted in the FIA mandating the wearing of crash helmets for racing, which had been optional previously. He used to race for Buggati and Alfa Romeo.

(http://i183.photobucket.com/albums/x207/Starcowboy/race%20trib/France/GrandPrix/grid-f34.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/Starcowboy/media/race%20trib/France/GrandPrix/grid-f34.jpg.html)
PICTURED: XL Louis Chiron (12), Achille Varzi (6), Rudolf Caracciola (8), Ren� Dreyfus (18), Hans Stuck (4) Scuderia Ferrari Alfa Romeo Tipo B, Scuderia Ferrari Alfa Romeo Tipo B, Mercedes-Benz W25, Bugatti T59, Auto Union A 1934


July 1st 1913
Carl Fisher, President of Prest-o-lite, formed Lincoln Highway Association with headquarters in Detroit, MI. Henry Joy, President of Packard Motor Cars, came up with the idea of naming the highway after Abraham Lincoln to build coast-to-coast paved road; envisioned improved, hard-surfaced road that would stretch almost 3400 miles from coast to coast, New York to San Francisco, over shortest practical route; promoted road using private, corporate donations; Henry Joy elected as president. Carl Fisher elected vice-president.

July 1st 2005
The last Thunderbird, Ford Motor Company's iconic sports car, emerges from a Ford factory in Wixom, Michigan.
Ford began its development of the Thunderbird in the years following World War II, during which American servicemen had the opportunity to observe sleek European sports cars. General Motors built the first American sports car: the Chevrolet Corvette, released in 1953. The undeniably sleek Corvette's initial engine performance was relatively underwhelming, but it was gaining lots of attention from the press and public, and Ford was motivated to respond, rushing the Thunderbird to the market in 1955. The 1955 Thunderbird was an immediate hit, selling more than 14,000 that year (compared to just 700 Corvettes). The success of the Thunderbird led Chevrolet to continue production of (and improve upon) the Corvette, which soon became a tough competitor in the sports car market.
In addition to the powerful V-8 engine that Ford was known for, the Thunderbird boasted all the conveniences consumers had become accustomed to, including a removable hard convertible top, soundproofing and the accessories standard to most Ford cars. In 1958, to satisfy critics who thought the T-Bird was too small, Ford released a four-seater version with a roomier trunk and bucket seats. The Beach Boys elevated the Thunderbird to pop- culture-icon status in 1964 by including it in the lyrics of their hit single "Fun Fun Fun" ("she'll have fun, fun, fun 'til her daddy takes the T-Bird away"). By that time, President John F. Kennedy had already included 50 Thunderbirds in his inaugural procession in 1961, and a T-Bird would also feature prominently in the 1973 film "American Graffiti."
Thunderbird sales slowed during the 1990s, and Ford discontinued the Thunderbird in 1997. In 2002, however, in an attempt to capitalize on car buyers' nostalgia, the company launched production of a retro T-Bird, a two-seater convertible that took some of its styling from the original classic. The luxury retailer Neiman Marcus offered an early special edition version in their 2000 Christmas catalog, priced at just under $42,000; their stock of 200 sold out in two hours and 15 minutes. Despite brisk early sales and good reviews, sales of the new Thunderbird couldn't justify continued production, and Ford discontinued it again in mid-2005.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on July 02, 2013, 06:44:23 am
(http://i1011.photobucket.com/albums/af236/ricktrae/Atlanta%20High%20Art%20Museum%20Auto%20exhibit/ZorasVette.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/ricktrae/media/Atlanta%20High%20Art%20Museum%20Auto%20exhibit/ZorasVette.jpg.html)

On this day, June 2nd 1992
Original Corvette engineer Zora Arkus Duntov drove the one-millionth Chevrolet Corvette off of the assembly line in Bowling Green, Kentucky. The event was monumental to both America's first sports car and the man that made the car possible.
The color choice for the one millionth Corvette - white with red interior and black roof - was appropriate. This was a nod to the 1953 Corvette, whose entire production run of 300 units featured the same livery
PICTURED: Zora Arkus Duntov's Concept Vette

July 2nd 1910
Frank D. and Spencer Stranahan incorporated Champion Spark Plug Company in Toledo, Ohio in accordance with manufacturing contract with Willys-Overland Company.

July 2nd 1843
An alligator falls from sky during a Charleston SC thunderstorm

July 2nd 1940
Hitler orders invasion of England (Operation Sealion)

July 2nd 1956
Elvis Presley records "Hound Dog" & "Don't Be Cruel"

July 2nd 1970
1st Boeing 747 to land in Amsterdam & Brussels

July 2nd 1982
Larry Walters using lawn chair & 42 helium balloons, rose to 16,000'

July 2nd 2002
Steve Fossett becomes the first person to fly solo around the world nonstop in a balloon.

July 2nd 1993
F-28 crashes at Sorong Irian Barat, 41 die

July 2nd 1993
Muslem fundamentalists in Sivas Turkey, set hotel on fire, kill 36
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on July 03, 2013, 11:04:32 am

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On this day July 3rd 1985
The blockbuster action-comedy "Back to the Future"--in which John DeLorean's iconic concept car is memorably transformed into a time-travel device--is released in theaters across the United States.
"Back to the Future," directed by Robert Zemeckis, starred Michael J. Fox as Marty McFly, a teenager who travels back 30 years using a time machine built by the zany scientist Doc Brown (Christopher Lloyd). Doc's mind-blowing creation consists of a DeLorean DMC-12 sports car outfitted with a nuclear reactor. Once the car reaches a speed of 88 miles per hour, the plutonium-powered reactor achieves the "1.21 gigawatts" of power necessary to travel through time. Marty arrives in 1955 only to stumble in the way of his own parents (Crispin Glover and Lea Thompson) and keep them from meeting for the first time, thus putting his own life in jeopardy.
A veteran of the Packard Motor Company and General Motors, John DeLorean founded the DeLorean Motor Company in Detroit in 1975 to pursue his vision of a futuristic sports car. DeLorean eventually set up a factory in Dunmurry, near Belfast in Northern Ireland. There, he built his iconic concept car: the DMC-12, known simply as the DeLorean. An angular vehicle with gull-wing doors, the DeLorean had an unpainted stainless-steel body and a rear-mounted engine. To accommodate taller drivers (like its designer, who was over six feet tall), the car had a roomy interior compared to most sports cars.
Although it was built in Northern Ireland, the DeLorean was intended predominantly for an American audience, so it was built with the driver's seat on the left-hand side. The company built about 9,000 of the cars before it ran out of money and halted production in 1982; only 6,500 of those are still in existence. Despite its short lifespan, the DeLorean remains an object of great interest to car collectors and enthusiasts, no doubt largely due to the smashing success of "Back to the Future" and its two sequels, released in 1989 and 1990. John DeLorean died in March of 2005, at the age of 80.

July 3rd 1909
Hudson Motor Car Company in Detroit, Michigan began production with the Model 20. The company had several 'firsts' for the auto industry: self starter, dual brakes, first balanced crankshaft which allowed the Hudson straight-6 engine to work at a higher rotational speed while remaining smooth, developed more power than lower-revving engines.

July 3rd 1978
Ernest R. Breech, chairman of the Ford Motor Company from 1955-1960, died in Royal Oak, Michigan at the age of 81. Breech had been at the top of the accounting world when Henry Ford II had personally pleaded with him to join the ailing Ford Motor Company and take a chance at reviving one of America's historic corporations.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on July 04, 2013, 09:14:41 am
(http://i832.photobucket.com/albums/zz250/IN500trail/Howard%20County/elwoodfirstcar.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/IN500trail/media/Howard%20County/elwoodfirstcar.jpg.html)
PICTURED: Elwood Haynes & America's First Car

On this day, July 4th 1894
Elwood Haynes successfully tested one-horsepower, one-cylinder vehicle at 6 or 7 mph at Kokomo, IN. It was one of the first automobiles built and oldest American-made automobile in existence. Currently it is on exhibition at the Smithsonian Institution, Washington DC.

July 4th 1957
Fiat launched "Nuova 500", cinquecento in Turin. It was designed by Dante Giacosa. it was marketed as a cheap and practical town car. Measuring only 2.97 m (9 ft 9 in) long, and originally powered by a tiny 479 cc two-cylinder, air-cooled engine, the 500 redefined the term "small car" and is considered one of the first city cars.
During the filming of Italian Job (original), the boss of Fiat Motors offered to donate huge number of Fiat 500s in place of the Minis. The director however decided that as it was a very British film, it should be British Minis.

July 4th 2007
Fiat 500 Nuova was launched officially at Murazzi del Po, Turin lexactly 50 year after the launch of the original Fiat 500. With 250,000 in attendance it was the largest launch party held in the last ten years, a testament to the 500's huge popularity. The show was coordinated by Marco Balich, who was also responsible for Turin's 2006 Winter Olympic Games. Several artists performed during the show, including Lauryn Hill, Israeli dancing group Mayumana and others followed by huge firework spectacle. The car was also displayed in the squares of 30 cities in Italy for the launch.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on July 05, 2013, 06:45:44 am
(http://i171.photobucket.com/albums/u316/WardAutomotiveGruppe/Mart_IMSpeedster.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/WardAutomotiveGruppe/media/Mart_IMSpeedster.jpg.html)

On this day, July 5th 1933
Fritz Todt was appointed general inspector for German highways. His primary assignment was to build a comprehensive autobahn system. Todt, a civil engineer who was a proponent of a national highway system as a means of economic development, was handpicked for the position in 1932 by Adolf Hitler. The two men were close friends, and Todt remained a Nazi party member throughout World War II. By 1936, 100,000 kilometers of divided highways had been completed, leaving Germany with the most advanced transportation system in the world.
The autobahn inspired U.S. President Dwight D. Eisenhower to foster a similar American interstate highway system. Having been in Germany during the war, he returned to the United States deeply convinced that good highways were directly linked to economic prosperity.

July 5th 1937
Henry Ford initiated 32 hour work week for his factory workers.

July 5th 1951
Gordon M. Buehrig, of South Bend, Indiana, received a patent for "Vehicle Top Construction" ("to provide a vehicle top construction which is essentially the type providing an enclosed passenger compartment with the attendant advantages but which may be opened to a substantial degree to simulate an open passenger compartment"); vehicle top with removable panels; appeared as "T-top" on 1968 Chevrolet Corvette Stingray.

July 5th 1998
Strike at General Motors parts factory near Detroit closed five assembly plants which idled workers nationwide. This standoff lasted seven weeks

1902 - Australia won the one & only Test Cricket played at Sheffield

1937 - Spam, the luncheon meat, was introduced into the market by the Hormel Foods Corporation.

1954 - B-52A bomber made its maiden flight

1963 - 1st Beatle tune to hit US charts, Del Shannon "From Me to You" at #87

1968 - John Lennon sells his psychedelic painted Rolls-Royce

1973 - Isle of Man begins issuing their own postage stamps

1982 - Challenger flies to Kennedy Space Center via Ellington AFB, Texas

1985 - Nicholas Mark Sanders (England) begins circumnavigation of globe, covering 13,035 road miles in 78 days, 3 hr, 30 min

1993 - Richard Chelimo run world record 10 km (27:07.91)

Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on July 06, 2013, 05:35:17 am

(http://i155.photobucket.com/albums/s301/redarmysoja/Drivers/JuanManuelFangio.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/redarmysoja/media/Drivers/JuanManuelFangio.jpg.html)

On this day, July 6th 1958
The great Argentine race car driver Juan Manuel Fangio, winner of five Formula One driver's world championships, competes in his last Grand Prix race--the French Grand Prix held outside Reims, France.
Fangio left school at the age of 11 and worked as an automobile mechanic in his hometown of San Jose de Balcarce, Argentina before beginning his driving career. He won his first major victory in the Gran Premio Internacional del Norte of 1940, racing a Chevrolet along the often-unpaved roads from Buenos Aires to Lima, Peru. In 1948, Fangio was invited to race a Simca-Gordini in the French Grand Prix, also at Reims, which marked his European racing debut. After a crash during a road race in Peru that fall killed his co-driver and friend Daniel Urrutia, Fangio considered retiring from racing, but in the end returned to Europe for his first full Formula One season the following year.
In Formula One, the top level of racing as sanctioned by the Fédération International de l'Automobile (FIA), drivers compete in single-seat, open-wheel vehicles typically built by large automakers (or "constructors," in racing world parlance) and capable of achieving speeds of more than 230 mph. Individual Formula One events are known as Grands Prix. Fangio signed on in 1948 with Alfa Romeo, and won his first Formula One championship title with that team in 1951. Over the course of his racing career, he would drive some of the best cars Alfa-Romeo, Mercedes-Benz, Ferrari and Maserati ever produced. Capturing four more Formula One titles by 1957, Fangio won an impressive 24 of 51 total Grand Prix races.
Reims, famous for its 13th-century cathedral, hosted the oldest Grand Prix race, the French Grand Prix, at its Reims-Gueux course a total of 14 times (the last time in 1966). In the race on July 6, 1958, the British driver Mike Hawthorn--who would win the driver's world championship that season, but die tragically in a (non-racing) car accident the following January, at the age of 29--took the lead from the start in his 2.4-liter Ferrari Dino 246 and held on for the win. Fangio, driving a Maserati, finished fourth, in what would be the last race before announcing his retirement at the age of 47. The 1958 French Grand Prix also marked the Formula One debut of Phil Hill, who in 1960 would become the first American driver to win the world championship.
PICTURED: Juan Manuel Fangio

July 6th 1955
Federal Air Pollution Control Act was implemented and federal funds were allocated for research into causal analysis and control of car-emission pollution.

1919 - British R-34 lands in NY, 1st airship to cross Atlantic (108 hr)

1924 - 1st photo sent experimentally across Atlantic by radio, US-England

1947 - The AK-47 goes into production in the Soviet Union.

1964 - Beatles' film "Hard Day's Night" premieres in London

1965 - Rock group "Jefferson Airplane" forms

1969 - Filming begins on "Ned Kelly" starring Mick Jagger

2003 - The 70-meter Eupatoria Planetary Radar sends a METI message Cosmic Call 2 to 5 stars: Hip 4872, HD 245409, 55 Cancri, HD 10307 and 47 Ursae Majoris that will arrive to these stars in 2036, 2040, 2044, 2044 and 2049 respectively.

Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on July 07, 2013, 04:05:43 am
(http://i66.photobucket.com/albums/h257/jimsecor/Walter%20P%20Chrysler%20Museum/1928PlymouthModelQCoupe.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/jimsecor/media/Walter%20P%20Chrysler%20Museum/1928PlymouthModelQCoupe.jpg.html)

On this day, July 7th 1928
The Chrysler Corporation introduced the Plymouth as its newest car. The Plymouth project had taken three years to complete, as Chrysler engineers worked to build a reliable and affordable car to compete with the cheaper offerings of Ford and General Motors. The Plymouth debuted with great fanfare in July of 1928, with renowned aviator Amelia Earhart behind the wheel. The publicity blitz brought 30,000 people to the Chicago Coliseum for a glimpse of the new car. With a delivery price of $670, the Plymouth was an attractive buy, selling over 80,000 units in its first year and forcing Chrysler to expand its production facilities drastically.
PICTURED: 1928 Plymouth

July 7th 2000
Eight weeks to the day after the fourth-generation NASCAR driver Adam Petty was killed during practice at the New Hampshire International Speedway in Loudon, New Hampshire--the driver Kenny Irwin Jr. dies at the same speedway, near the exact same spot, after his car slams into the wall at 150 mph during a practice run.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on July 08, 2013, 04:04:51 pm
July 8, 1907
George Wilcken Romney was born in Colonia Dublán, Galeana, in the Mexican state of Chihuahua. He was chairman of American Motors Corporation from 1954 to 1962. He then served as the 43rd governor of Michigan from 1963 to 1969 and then the 3rd United States Secretary of Housing and Urban Development from 1969 to 1973. Romney was a candidate for President in 1968, ultimately losing the Republican nomination to Richard Nixon.
He entered the car industry as a salesman and eventually became one of the most powerful men in the business, leading AMC in becoming the largest independent car company in the country.

July 8, 2004
Suzuki Motor Corporation and Consumers Union, publisher of Consumer Reports magazine, agree to a settlement in an eight-year-long lawsuit in which the automaker accused Consumer Reports of damaging its reputation with claims that its Samurai sport utility vehicle (SUV) was prone to rolling over.
In July 1988, a Consumer Reports product review judged the Samurai as unacceptable because of its propensity to tip during sharp turns. (The magazine based this conclusion on the car's performance in avoidance-maneuver tests.) Suzuki stopped making the Samurai in 1995. The following year, the company filed the lawsuit, accusing Consumer Union of rigging the test and perpetrating consumer fraud. The automaker sought $60 million in compensation and unspecified punitive damages. Suzuki's case included testimony from a former Consumers Union employee who served for 10 years as a technician in the company's auto testing group, as well as videotapes and records of automobile testing that date back to 1988. The videos showed, among other things, that the testing personnel had driven the Samurai through the course no fewer than 46 times before getting it to tip up on two wheels on the 47th, a result that was met by laughing and cheering from the group.
A federal judge dismissed Suzuki's lawsuit without a trial, but in September 2002 an appeals court ruled that a jury should hear the case. In April 2000, Consumers Union had won a jury trial over a lawsuit filed by Isuzu Motor, which claimed that Consumer Reports magazine had rigged a test involving its Trooper SUV in order to make the vehicle tip over. In November 2003, U.S. Supreme Court rejected a Consumers Union appeal in the Suzuki case, and the case was headed for a jury trial in California before the settlement was reached the next July.
No money changed hands in the agreement. Though Consumers Union did not issue an apology--"We stand fully behind our testing and rating of the Samurai," David Pittle, vice president for technical policy at Consumers Union, said--it made a "clarification," stating that the magazine's statement that the Samurai "easily" rolls over during turns may have been "misconstrued or misunderstood." The agreement also stated that Consumers Reports "never intended to imply that the Samurai easily rolls over in routine driving conditions" and had spoken positively of other Suzuki models such as the Sidekick and the Vitara/XL-7. For its part, Suzuki claimed the settlement as a win for its side: Company officials said it would allow them to concentrate on growing Suzuki's business in the United States, including building national sales to 200,000 vehicles by 2007, compared with 58,438 in 2003.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on July 09, 2013, 09:46:55 am
(http://i1053.photobucket.com/albums/s462/Countach_fan/IMG_3600.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/Countach_fan/media/IMG_3600.jpg.html)

July 9th 1919
The Ford Motor Company was reorganized as a Delaware corporation with Edsel Ford as company president. The reorganization was the last step in Henry Ford's drive to gain 100% of the company's stock for his family. He borrowed heavily in order to buy out the minority shareholders. The extent to which the Ford family has maintained control over the company makes Ford unique in the annals of business history. Edsel Ford held the title of president until his death in 1943, but Henry effectively ran the company until 1945, when Henry Ford II took control of the company.
PICTURED: The Edsel Ford Speedster

July 9th 1979
A car bomb destroys a Renault owned by famed "Nazi hunters" Serge and Beate Klarsfeld at their home in France. Individuals purporting to represent the pro-Nazi ODESSA secret international organization took credit for the attack and demanded that the Klarsfelds stop pursuing (former) Nazis.
The Klarsfelds were involved in finding Klaus Barbie, René Bousquet, Jean Leguay, Maurice Papon and Paul Touvier and seeking prosecution for their war crimes committed during WWII.


July 9th 2006
The Fiat 500 Club Italia, an organization formed in appreciation of the iconic 500--"Cinquecento" in Italian--car produced by the automaker Fiat (Fabbrica Italiana Automobili Torino), holds what the Guinness Book of World Records will call the world's largest parade of Fiat cars on July 9, 2006, between Villanova d'Albenga and Garlenda, Italy.
Fiat, founded in 1899 by Giovanni Agnelli, released a 500-cc car known as "Il Topolino" (the Italian name for Mickey Mouse) before World War II; at the time, it was the smallest mass-produced car on the market. In the postwar years, the company sought to capitalize on the need for affordable family-size cars by revamping their 500 model. To that end, the Nuova Cinquecento, a two-cylinder rear-engined four-seater, made its debut on July 4, 1957. Some 3.5 million new 500s were sold between 1957 and 1975, when Fiat halted production. Like the Volkswagen Beetle in Germany, the diminutive but efficient 500 became an iconic symbol of postwar Italy and its people.
In 1984, a group of enthusiasts calling themselves the "Amici della 500" (Friends of the 500) unofficially organized as the Fiat 500 Club Italia in Garlenda, in the province of Savona. Some 30 participants attended the club's first rally on that July 15: the crowd included Dante Giacosa, the designer of the 500. The club was officially established in 1990 and today boasts more than 200,000 members and holds as many as 100 rallies per year. In July 2006, during the club's international meeting in Garlenda, a record-high number of participants (754 teams) gathered to make up a parade of 500 Fiats, later recorded by Guinness as a world record.
After struggling financially in the face of stiff competition from Volkswagen and other automakers, Fiat turned its fortunes around beginning in 2004, with the arrival of Sergio Marchionne as the company's head. A key part of Fiat's resurgence was was the launch of a redesigned Cinquecento in 2007. Italian Prime Minister Romano Prodi was among the more than 100,000 spectators who gathered in Turin on July 4, 2007--50 years to the day after the original Nuova 500 made its debut--to celebrate the new version's arrival. In 2009, Fiat completed an alliance with Chrysler after the struggling American automaker was forced to file for federal bankruptcy protection. Under the terms of the partnership, Fiat owns a 20 percent share of Chrysler (which could eventually grow to at least 35 percent).
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on July 10, 2013, 04:24:13 am
(http://i233.photobucket.com/albums/ee155/djebrecina/trabant.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/djebrecina/media/trabant.jpg.html)

On this day, July 10th 1958
The final production line of Trabant started at VEB Sachsenring factory in Zwickau, Saxony. It was considered to be East Germany's answer to Volkswagen. The Trabant was a steel monocoque design with roof, bootlid, bonnet, fenders and doors in Duroplast, a form of plastic containing resin strengthened by wool or cotton. This helped the GDR to avoid expensive steel imports, but in theory did not provide much crash protection, although in crash tests it has actually proven to be superior to some modern small hatchbacks. The duroplast was made of recycled material, cotton waste from Russia and phenol resins from the East German dye industry making the Trabant the first car with a body made of recycled material.
The engine for the Trabant was a small two-stroke engine with two cylinders, giving the vehicle modest performance of 25 horsepower from a 600 cc displacement. The car took 21 seconds from 0 to 100 km/h and the top speed was 112 km/h. There were two main problems with the engine: the smoky exhaust and the pollution it produced. The fuel consumption was a modest 7 liters/100 km. However later models of trabant did had bigger 1.1L VW engine until 1991 when its production ended.
The name Trabant means "fellow traveler" in German and was inspired by Soviet Sputnik. Since it could take years for a Trabant to be delivered from the time it was ordered, people who finally got one were very careful with it and usually became skillful in maintaining and repairing it. The lifespan of an average Trabant was 28 years.Used Trabants would often fetch a higher price than new ones, as the former were available immediately, while the latter had the aforementioned waiting period of several years.
PICTURED: The P50 Trabant mounted to a 80 foot tower....now used as a nest for wildlife.

July 10th 1962
The United States Patent Office issues the Swedish engineer Nils Bohlin a patent for his three-point automobile safety belt "for use in vehicles, especially road vehicles"
Four years earlier, Sweden's Volvo Car Corporation had hired Bohlin, who had previously worked in the Swedish aviation industry, as the company's first chief safety engineer. At the time, safety-belt use in automobiles was limited mostly to race car drivers; the traditional two-point belt, which fastened in a buckle over the abdomen, had been known to cause severe internal injuries in the event of a high-speed crash. Bohlin designed his three-point system in less than a year, and Volvo introduced it on its cars in 1959. Consisting of two straps that joined at the hip level and fastened into a single anchor point, the three-point belt significantly reduced injuries by effectively holding both the upper and lower body and reducing the impact of the swift deceleration that occurred in a crash.
On August 17, 1959, Bohlin filed for a patent in the United States for his safety belt design. The U.S. Patent Office issued Patent No. 3,043,625 to "Nils Ivar Bohlin, Goteborg, Sweden, assignor to Aktiebolaget Volvo" on July 10, 1962. In the patent, Bohlin explained his invention: "The object … is to provide a safety belt which independently of the strength of the seat and its connection with the vehicle in an effective and physiologically favorable manner retains the upper as well as the lower part of the body of the strapped person against the action of substantially forwardly directed forces and which is easy to fasten and unfasten and even in other respects satisfies rigid requirements."
Volvo released the new seat belt design to other car manufacturers, and it quickly became standard worldwide. The National Traffic and Motor Vehicle Safety Act of 1966 made seat belts a required feature on all new American vehicles from the 1968 model year onward. Though engineers have improved on seat belt design over the years, the basic structure is still Bohlin's.
The use of seat belts has been estimated to reduce the risk of fatalities and serious injuries from collisions by about 50 percent.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on July 11, 2013, 08:02:41 am
(http://i283.photobucket.com/albums/kk308/area82/GianniAgnelli.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/area82/media/GianniAgnelli.jpg.html)

On this day, July 11th 1899
Company charter of Societa Anonima "Fabbrica Italiana Automobili Torino” (FIAT) signed at Palazzo Bricherasio by Giovanni Agnelli with several of his investors.
Giovanni Agnelli founded and led the company until his death in 1945, while Vittorio Valletta administered the day-to-day activities of the company. Its first car the 3 ½ CV (of which only eight copies were built, all bodied by Alessio of Turin) strongly resembled contemporary Benz and had a 697 cc boxer twin engine.

July 11th, 1979
US Space laboratory, Skylab I, plunges back to earth, scattering debris across parts of Western Australia.
Skylab was the first space station the United States launched into orbit. Launched on 14 May 1973, it was designed to test various aspects of human endurance in space by having teams of astronauts living in Skylab for up to 84 days at a time. Each Skylab mission set a record for the duration of time astronauts spent in space.
In all, the space station orbited Earth 2,476 times during the 171 days and 13 hours of its occupation during the three manned Skylab missions. Astronauts performed ten spacewalks totalling 42 hours 16 minutes. Skylab logged about 2,000 hours of scientific and medical experiments, including eight solar experiments. Skylab had been in orbit for six years when it made its descent on 11 July 1979, with many chunks of hot debris falling across southern Western Australia. Most of the pieces were found on a 160km wide strip of land between the Perth-Adelaide highway and the Indian Pacific railway line.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on July 12, 2013, 11:09:48 am
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On this day, July 12th 1933
The first three-wheeled, multi-directional Dymaxion car (PICTURED)--designed by the architect, engineer and philosopher Buckminster Fuller--is manufactured in Bridgeport, Connecticut.
Born in Massachusetts in 1895, Fuller set out to live his life as (in his own words) "an experiment to find what a single individual can contribute to changing the world and benefiting all humanity." After making up the world "Dymaxion" as a combination of the words "dynamic," "maximum" and "ion," he took the word as his own personal brand. Among his groundbreaking creations were the geodesic dome and the Dymaxion house, which was made of lightweight aluminum and could be shipped by air and assembled on site.
In 1927, Fuller first sketched the Dymaxion car under the name "4D transport." Part aircraft, part automobile, it had wings that inflated. Five years later, Fuller asked his friend, the sculptor Isamu Noguchi, to make more sketches of the car. The result was an elongated teardrop design, with a rear third wheel that lifted off the ground and a tail fin. Fuller set up production of the Dymaxion car in a former Locomobile factory in Bridgeport in March 1933. The first model rolled out of the Bridgeport factory on July 12, 1933--Fuller's 38th birthday. It had a steel chassis and a body made of ash wood, covered with an aluminum skin and topped with a painted canvas roof. It was designed to be able to reach a speed of 120 miles per hour and average 28 miles per gallon of gasoline.
Sold to Gulf Oil, the Dymaxion car went on display at the Century of Progress exposition in Chicago. That October, however, the professional driver Francis Turner was killed after the Dymaxion car turned over during a demonstration. An investigation cleared Dymaxion of responsibility, but investors became scarce, despite the enthusiasm of the press and of celebrities such as the novelist H.G. Wells and the painter Diego Rivera.
Along with the Nazi-built KdF-wagen (the forerunner of the Volkswagen Beetle), the Dymaxion was one of several futuristic, rear-engined cars developed during the 1930s. Though it was never mass-produced, the Dymaxion helped lead to public acceptance of new streamlined passenger cars, such as the 1936 Lincoln Zephyr. In 2008, the only surviving Dymaxion was featured in an exhibit dedicated to Fuller's work at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York City.

July 12th 1904
Driver Harry Harkness won the first Mount Washington, New Hampshire, hill-climb race driving a 60hp Mercedes Benz on this day in 1904 and placed the record figures for the year at twenty-four minutes, thirty seconds in his $18000 imported Mercedes.

July 12th 1946
Spicer Manufacturing Company was renamed Dana Holding Corporation recently emerged from Chapter 11 Bankruptcy.
The company has 35,000 workers and is listed on the Fortune 500. Originally incorporated in New Jersey in 1904 as the 'Spicer Universal Joint Manufacturing Company', named after Clarence W. Spicer, engineer, inventor, and founder of the company. It was renamed the 'Spicer Manufacturing Company' in 1909. It relocated to Toledo, Ohio in 1928 and was renamed the Dana Corporation after Charles Dana, who joined the company in 1914 and became president and treasurer in 1916.
Its key products include axles, driveshafts, frames, and sealing and thermal-management products.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on July 13, 2013, 04:53:32 am
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On this day, July 13th 1978
Ford Motor Company chairman Henry Ford II fires Lee Iacocca as Ford's president, ending years of tension between the two men.
Born to an immigrant family in Pennsylvania in 1924, Iacocca was hired by Ford as an engineer in 1946 but soon switched to sales, at which he clearly excelled. By 1960, Iaccoca had become a vice president and general manager of the Ford division, the company's largest marketing arm. He successfully championed the design and development of the sporty, affordable Ford Mustang, an achievement that landed him on the covers of Time and Newsweek magazines in the same week in 1964.
In December 1970, Henry Ford II named Iacocca president of Ford, but his brash, unorthodox style soon brought him into conflict with his boss. According to Douglas Brinkley's history of Ford "Wheels for the World," Henry authorized $1.5 million in company funds for an investigation of Iacocca's business and private life in 1975. Suffering from a heart condition and aware that the time for his retirement was approaching, Ford made it clear that he eventually wanted to turn the company over to his son Edsel, then just 28. In early 1978, Iacocca was told he would report to another Ford executive, Philip Caldwell, who was named deputy chief executive officer. In his increasingly public struggle with Ford, Iacocca made an attempt to find support among the company's board of directors, giving Ford the excuse he needed to fire him. As Iacocca later wrote in his bestselling autobiography, Ford called Iacocca into his office shortly before 3 pm on July 13, 1978 and let him go, telling him "Sometimes you just don't like somebody."
News of the firing shocked the industry, but it turned into a boon for Iacocca. The following year, he was hired as president of the Chrysler Corporation, which at the time was facing bankruptcy. Iacocca went to the federal government for aid, banking on his belief that the government would not let Chrysler fail for fear of weakening an already slumping economy. The gamble paid off, with Congress agreeing to bail out Chrysler to the tune of $1.5 billion. Iacocca streamlined the company's operations, focused on producing more fuel-efficient cars and pursued an aggressive marketing strategy based on his own powerful personality. After showing a small profit in 1981, Chrysler posted record profits of more than $2.4 billion in 1984. By then a national celebrity, Iacocca retired as chief executive of Chrysler in 1992.


July 13th 1995
The Chrysler Corporation opened a car dealership in downtown Hanoi, Vietnam. One week later, Chrysler opened another dealership in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam, with the intention of marketing 200 import vehicles per year through the two dealerships. The openings were a part of Chrysler's long-term goal of implementing auto production in Vietnam--something that rivals Ford and Toyota were also pursuing at the time. On September 6, Chrysler received permission from the Vietnamese government to assemble vehicles in Vietnam, allowing Chrysler to construct a production facility in Dong Nai Province, Southern Vietnam, with the aim of manufacturing 500 to 1,000 Dodge Dakota pick-up trucks for the Vietnamese market annually.


July 13th 1998
General Motors announced recall of 800,000 vehicles due to malfunctioning airbags. A large number of Chevrolet and Pontiac cars displayed "an increased risk of airbag deployment in a low speed crash or when an object strikes the floor pan.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on July 14, 2013, 04:49:18 am
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On this day, July 14th 1955
Volkswagen introduced the Karmann-Ghia coupe at the Kasino Hotel in Westfalia, Germany. As the European car market finally recovered from the war, Volkswagen felt that it needed to release an "image car" to accompany its plain but reliable "Bugs and Buses." Volkswagen was not the only automotive company looking for a flagship car at the time. Chevrolet had released the Corvette, and Ford the Thunderbird. The Chrysler Corporation had contracted with the Italian design firm Ghia to create designs for a Chrysler dream car; however, none of the designs came to fruition. Meanwhile, Volkswagen had contracted with German coach-builder Karmann for their own image car, and Karmann, in turn, had sub-contracted to Ghia for design offerings. Eventually Ghia supplied Karmann with a version of their Chrysler design, modified for the floor plan of the Volkswagen Beetle. The Karmann-Ghia was released as a 1956 model by Volkswagen. The car's sleek lines and hand craftsmanship attracted the attention Volkswagen had hoped for. Nevertheless, as sporty as the Karmann-Ghia looked, it suffered from its 36hp flat four engine in the area of power. Still, the Karmann-Ghia sold 10,000 units in its first full production year ,and with the release of the convertible in 1958, production reached 18,000 units for one year. Sales climbed steadily through the 1960s, peaking at 33,000 cars per year. While General Motors and Ford focused on their Corvette and Thunderbird, respectively, Volkswagen found that the Bug had increased in popularity, especially in the U.S. market. Executives decided to focus their marketing attention on the Bug, abandoning the Karmann-Ghia, which was last produced in 1

1853 - 1st US World's fair opens (Crystal Palace NY)

1912 - Kenneth McArthur runs Olympic record marathon (2:36:54.8)

1914 - 1st patent for liquid-fueled rocket design granted (Robert Goddard)

1927 - 1st commercial airplane flight in Hawaii

1945 - Battleship USS South Dakota is 1st US ship to bombard Japan

1949 - USSR explodes their 1st atom bomb

1955 - 2 killed, many dazed when lightning strikes Ascott racetrack, England

1959 - 1st atomic powered cruiser, Long Beach, Quincy Mass

1962 - US performs nuclear Test at Nevada Test Site

1964 - Jacques Anquetil wins his 5th Tour de France

1965 - Australian Ronald Clarke runs world record 10k (27:39.4)

1965 - US Mariner IV, 1st Mars probe, passes at 6,100 miles (9,800 km)

1967 - Surveyor 4 launched to Moon; explodes just before landing

1969 - "Soccer War" between El Salvador & Honduras begins, 1000 dead

1969 - The United States $500, $1,000, $5,000 and $10,000 bills are officially withdrawn from circulation.

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1972 - USSR performs underground nuclear Test

1975 - EPCOT Center (Florida) plans announced (This is right next door to our office)

1979 - USSR performs nuclear Test

1984 - USSR performs nuclear Test at Eastern Kazakh/Semipalitinsk USSR

1985 - Columbia returns to Kennedy Space Center via Offutt AFB, Neb

1986 - Motley Crue's Vince Neil begins 30 day sentence for vehicular homicide

1988 - WYHY radio offers $1M to anyone who can prove Elvis is still alive

Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on July 15, 2013, 07:35:11 am
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On this day, July 15th 1903
The newly formed Ford Motor Company takes its first order from Chicago dentist Ernst Pfenning: an $850 two-cylinder Model A (Not to be confused with Model A of 1927) automobile with a tonneau (or backseat). The car, produced at Ford's plant on Mack Street (now Mack Avenue) in Detroit, was delivered to Dr. Pfenning just over a week later.
Henry Ford had built his first gasoline-powered vehicle--which he called the Quadricycle--in a workshop behind his home in 1896, while working as the chief engineer for the main plant of the Edison Illuminating Company in Detroit. After making two unsuccessful attempts to start a company to manufacture automobiles before 1903, Ford gathered a group of 12 stockholders, including himself, to sign the papers necessary to form the Ford Motor Company in mid-June 1903. As Douglas Brinkley writes in "Wheels for the World," his history of Ford, one of the new company's investors, Albert Strelow, owned a wooden factory building on Mack Avenue that he rented to Ford Motor. In an assembly room measuring 250 by 50 feet, the first Ford Model A went into production that summer.
Designed primarily by Ford's assistant C. Harold Wills, the Model A could accommodate two people side-by-side on a bench; it had no top, and was painted red. The car's biggest selling point was its engine, which at two cylinders and eight-horsepower was the most powerful to be found in a passenger car. It had relatively simple controls, including two forward gears that the driver operated with a foot pedal, and could reach speeds of up to 30 miles per hour (comparable to the car's biggest competition at the time, the curved-dash Oldsmobile).
Dr. Pfenning's order turned out to be the first of many, from around the country, launching Ford on its way to profitability. Within two months, the company had sold 215 Fords, and by the end of its first year the Mack Avenue plant had turned out some 1,000 cars. Though the company grew quickly in the next several years, it was the launch of the Model T in 1908 that catapulted Ford to the top of the automobile industry. The Lizzie's tremendous popularity kept Ford far ahead of the pack until dwindling sales led to the end of its production in 1927. That same year, Ford released the second Model A amid great fanfare; it enjoyed similar success, though the onset of the Great Depression kept its sales from equaling those of the Model T.

July 15th 1939
Carl Fisher, the founder of both the Indy 500 and Miami Beach, died in Miami at age 65. Born in Greensburg, Indiana, Fisher grew up racing cars and bicycles and aspired to be a successful inventor. He turned out to be a better businessman than an inventor, and left his first imprint on the business world when he partnered with Fred Avery, who held the patent for pressing carbide gas into tanks. Together, they manufactured car headlamps as the Presto-O-Lite Corporation. By 1910, six years after starting the business, Fisher was a multimillionaire. He bought land and built a track in Indianapolis, paving the track with local brick. By offering the largest single day purse in sport, Fisher guaranteed interest in his epic 500-mile race, and in less than five years "Indy" had become one of the premier car races in the world. In 1915, Fisher led the development effort for the Lincoln Highway, the nation's first continuous cross-continental highway from New York to California. Later, in the 1920s, Fisher developed the Dixie Highway, a road that ran from Michigan to Miami. Fisher fell in love with Miami, and in 1910 he bought a house there. It became his project to develop Miami Beach into a city. Fisher gave $50,000 of his own money to complete the longest wooden bridge in the state, stretching between Miami and Miami Beach. At that time Miami Beach was wild, and Fisher set about cleaning up the beach. He built lavish facilities near the water and invited the rich and famous to check out his creation. The Florida land bust of 1926 and the subsequent stock market crash of 1929 left Fisher penniless, and he lived in a small home on Miami Beach until his death.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on July 16, 2013, 04:59:27 am

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On this day, July 16th 1955
Stirling Moss won his first Grand Prix race, the British Grand Prix in Aintree, driving a Mercedes Benz W196. Moss is considered the greatest racer that never won a World Driving Championship, having finished second to Juan Manuel Fangio for four consecutive years. Most impressive is Moss' record of having won 16 of 66 Grand Prix starts and 194 of his 466 starts in major events.

1985 - F-86 Sabre sets world aircraft speed record of 1152 kph (716 mph)

1935 - 1st automatic parking meter in US installed (Oklahoma City, Ok)

1945 - 1st test detonation of an atomic bomb, Trinity Site, Alamogordo, New Mexico

1969 - Apollo 11, carrying 1st men to land on Moon, launched

1999 - John F. Kennedy Jr., his wife Carolyn Bessette Kennedy, and sister-in-law Lauren Bessette are killed in a plane crash off the coast of Martha's Vineyard. The Piper Saratoga aircraft was piloted by Kennedy.

Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on July 17, 2013, 07:49:15 pm
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On this day, July 17th 1964
Donald Campbell, the son of Britain's most prolific land-speed record holder, Sir Malcolm Campbell, drove the Proteus Bluebird CN7 to a four-wheel, gasoline-powered land-speed record with two identical runs of 403mph (648.783 kph) at Lake Eyre, South Australia.

July 17th 1920
Nils Bohlin, the Swedish engineer and inventor responsible for the three-point lap and shoulder seat belt was born in Härnösand, Sweden. Seat belt is considered one of the most important innovations in automobile safety.

1879 - 1st railroad opens in Hawaii

1959 - Dr Leakey discovers oldest human skull (600,000 years old)

1962 - Robert White in X-15 sets altitude record of 108 km (354,300 ft)

1964 - Don Campbell sets record for turbine vehicle, 690.91 kph (429.31 mph)

1968 - Beatle's animated film "Yellow Submarine" premieres in London

1989 - 1st Test flight of US stealth-bomber

1993 - Graeme Obree bicycles world record time, 51,596 km

1994 - Hulk Hogan beats Ric Flair to win WCW wrestling championship

Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on July 18, 2013, 06:22:33 am
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On this day, July 18th 1948
Juan Manuel Fangio, a.k.a. "the Maestro," made his Formula One debut finishing 12th at the Grand Prix de l'ACF in France. Fangio was 37 years old at the start of his first Formula One race, but his late appearance onto the racing scene did not diminish his impact. Born to an Italian immigrant family outside of Buenos Aires, Argentina, Fangio learned to race on the death-trap tracks of Argentina for little reward. Finally, his excellence was recognized by Argentine dictator Juan Peron, who agreed to sponsor Fangio's racing career. Formula One Grand Prix racing began in 1950, and Fangio took second place in the World Driver's Championship driving for Alpha Romeo. The next year he won. A crash kept him out of the circuit for the next two years, but in 1954, he switched to the Mercedes team and won his first of four consecutive World Driver's Championships. He is the only man to ever have won five titles.

July 18th 1911
James D. Robertson, of Toledo, OH, received a patent for a "terminal Clamp"; assigned to Champion Spark Plug Company. It was the company's first patent.

1940 - 1st successful helicopter flight, Stratford, Ct

1942 - World War II: the Germans test fly the Messerschmitt Me-262 using only its jet engines for the first time.

1955 - 1st electric power generated from atomic energy sold commercially

1971 - Eddy Merckx wins his 3rd Tour de France

1976 - Lucien van Impe wins Tour de France

2009 - Five members of one family are found murdered at Epping, New South Wales.


Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on July 19, 2013, 07:35:26 am
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On this day, July 19th 1934
Harold T. Ames filed a patent application for his retractable headlamps. The design would later become one of the defining details on Ames' most triumphant project, the Cord 810. Ames, then the chief executive at Duesenberg, asked Cord designer Gordon Buehrig to make a "baby version" of the Duesenberg car. Buehrig's response, the Cord 810, is widely held to be one of the most influential cars in American automotive history. It was the last great offering of the Auburn, Cord, and Duesenberg triumvirate, as the company became insolvent at the end of the Depression. In 1952, the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) chose the 1937 Cord as one of eight automotive works of art for a year-long exhibition.
PICTURED: The 1936 Cord 810 Phaeton

July 19th 1935
The first automatic parking meter in the U.S., the Park-O-Meter invented by Carlton Magee, was installed in Oklahoma City by the Dual Parking Meter Company. Twenty-foot spaces were painted on the pavement, and a parking meter that accepted nickels was planted in the concrete at the head of each space. The city paid for the meters with funds collected from them. Today parking meters are big business. Companies offer digital parking meters, smart parking meters, and, even more remarkably, user-friendly parking meters. The user-friendly parking meters are an attempt to stem the tide of "violent confrontations" between users and their meters.

1860 - 1st railroad reaches Kansas

1879 - Doc Holliday kills for the first time after a man shoots up his New Mexico saloon.

1944 - 500 15th Air Force Liberators/Flying Fortresses bomb Munich vicinity

1957 - Don Bowden becomes 1st American to break 4 minute mile (3m58s7)

1958 - Charly Gaul wins Tour de France

1963 - NASA civilian Test pilot Joe Walker in X-15 reaches 105 km high

1965 - Shooting begins on Star Trek 2nd pilot "Where No Man Has Gone Before"

1969 - Apollo 11 goes into Moon orbit

1976 - Rock group Deep Purple disbands

1984 - 1st female to captain a 747 across Atlantic (Lynn Rippelmeyer)

1991 - Mike Tyson rapes a Miss Black America contestant (Desiree Washington)

1993 - Last day of 1st-class cricket for Ian Botham

Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on July 20, 2013, 06:58:22 am
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On this day, July 20th 2014
James Garner, the US star of hit TV series The Rockford Files and Maverick and films including The Great Escape, has died aged 86

July 20th 1894
Errett Lobban Cord was born in Warrensburg, Missouri, on this day in 1894. Cord moved to Los Angeles while he was in high school and remained there after his graduation, starting a number of car dealerships. His prowess as a salesman led him to pursue bigger goals and to look for a way to invest the $100,000 he had managed to save in a few years of work. "Then I started looking around," he said, "I wanted to do something with that $100,000."
Cord was a leader in United States transport during the early and middle 20th century. Cord founded the Cord Corporation in 1929 as a holding company for over 150 companies he controlled, mostly in the field of transportation.

1969 - 1st men on the Moon, Neil Armstrong and Edwin Aldrin Jr. from Apollo 11

1969 - Eddy Merckx wins Tour de France

1973 - Jack Brisco beats Harley Race in Houston, to become NWA champ

1976 - US Viking 1 lands on Mars at Chryse Planitia, 1st Martian landing

1977 - The Central Intelligence Agency releases documents under the Freedom of Information Act revealing it had engaged in mind control experiments.

1984 - Uwe Hohn of East Germany throws javelin a record 104.8 m

1991 - Mike Tyson is accused of raping a Miss Black America contestant

1992 - Round World Air Race begins in Paris

1994 - OJ Simpson offers $500,000 reward for evidence of ex-wife's klller

2000 - Terrorist Carlos the Jackal sues France in the European Court of Human Rights for allegedly torturing him.

2012 - 12 people are killed and 59 injured after a gunman opens fire at a Dark Knight movie premier in Aurora, Colorado
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on July 21, 2013, 05:54:29 am
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On this day, July 21st 1904
Louis Rigolly, driving a 15-liter Gobron-Brillie on the Ostend-Newport road in Belgium, became the first man to break the 100mph barrier in a car by raising the land-speed record to 103.55mph. On the same day in 1925, Sir Malcolm Campbell was first to best the 150mph mark when he drove his Sunbeam to a two-way average of 150.33mph at the Pendine Sands in Wales.
PICTURED: A 1909 Gobron-Brillie

July 21st 1917
Rapp-Motorenwerke renamed Bayerische Motoren Werke GmbH (Bavarian Motor Works or BMW) Rapp Motorenwerke GmbH was one of the first aircraft engine manufacturers in Germany founded by Karl Rapp and Julius Auspitzer with a capital stock of Reich Mark 200,000 on 28 October 1913 on the site of Flugwerke Deutschland.


July 21st 1960
The German government passes the "Law Concerning the Transfer of the Share Rights in Volkswagenwerk Limited Liability Company into Private Hands," known informally as the "Volkswagen Law."
Founded in 1937 and originally under the control of Adolf Hitler's Nazi Party, Volkswagen would eventually grow into Europe's largest car manufacturer and a symbol of Germany's economic recovery after the devastation of World War II. The Volkswagen Law, passed in July 1960, changed the company to a joint stock corporation, with 20 percent held each by Germany and Lower Saxony, the region in which Volkswagen is still headquartered. By limiting the share of any other stockholder to 20 percent, regardless of how many shares owned, the law effectively protected the company from any attempt at a hostile takeover.
By 2007, the controversial legislation had come under full-blown attack from the European Commission as part of a campaign against protectionist measures in several European capitals. The commission objected not only to the 20 percent voting rights cap but to the law's stipulation that measures taken at the annual stockholders' meeting must be passed by more than four-fifths of VW shareholders--a requirement that gave Lower Saxony the ability to block any such measures as it saw fit.
In March of that year, fellow German automaker Porsche announced that it had raised its stake in Volkswagen to 30.9 percent, triggering a takeover bid under a German law requiring a company to bid for the entirety of any other company after acquiring more than 30 percent of its stock. Porsche announced it did not intend to take over VW, but was buying the stock as a way of protecting it from being dismantled by hedge funds. Porsche's history was already entwined with Volkswagen, as the Austrian-born engineer Ferdinand Porsche designed the original "people's car" for Volkswagen in 1938.
On October 23, 2007, the European Court of Justice formally struck down the Volkswagen Law, ruling that its protectionism illegally restricted the free movement of capital in European markets. The decision cleared the way for Porsche to move forward with its takeover, which it did, maintaining that it will still preserve the Volkswagen corporate structure. By early 2009, Porsche owned more than 50 percent of Volkswagen shares.

July 21st 1987
Enzo Ferrari (89), in ceremony commemorating his company's 40th year, unveiled Ferrari F40 at factory in Maranello, It had 2.9litre twin turbo v8 under the hood and Italy's first production sports car to top 200mph barrier and capable of 0-60mph in 3.5 seconds, could hold top speed of 201mph.

1884 - 1st Test Cricket match played at Lord's

1969 - Neil Armstrong steps on Moon at 2:56:15 AM (GMT)

1984 - 1st documented case of a robot killing a human in US

1985 - Bernard Hinault wins his 5th & last Tour de France

1989 - Greg LeMond (US) wins Tour de France in fastest time

1990 - Pink Floyds' "Wall" is performed where Berlin Wall once stood

2011 - NASA's Space Shuttle program ends with the landing of Space Shuttle Atlantis on mission STS-135.

1997 - Madelaine Clarke (my 1st daughter was born) Happy 16th birthday sweetheart
Who'd of thought that on this same day in 1969, Neil Armstrong would be the first human to put a footprint on the moon and 28 years later, you would be born to be the first to leave footprints on your Dads heart.
 I love you to the moon and back baby
 Happy 16th Birthday
 Dad xx
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on July 22, 2013, 10:19:00 am
(http://i1137.photobucket.com/albums/n519/gerard1973/fisher-body_logo_30s.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/gerard1973/media/fisher-body_logo_30s.jpg.html)

July 22 1908
Albert Fisher and his nephews, Frederic and Charles Fisher, established the Fisher Body Company to manufacture carriage and automobile bodies. Albert Fisher personally supplied $30,000 of the company's total of $50,000 in initial capital. Charles and Frederic had been trained in their father's carriage building shop and supplied the technical know-how required at the company's inception. Fisher Body quickly abandoned carriage building to concentrate on car frames. By 1910, Fisher supplied some car bodies for General Motors (GM), and in 1919 GM purchased controlling interest in the company to shore up a supplier for its car bodies. At that time, Fisher was the largest supplier of car bodies in the world. The Fisher brothers were early advocates of closed-body, steel and wood frames, and they pre-empted their competition by creating more closed-bodied cars than open-bodied. They were also early in their adoption of aluminum and steel frames.

July 22nd 1911
General Motors organized General Motors Truck Company (later GMC) to handle sales of GM's Rapid and Reliance products.
In 1901, Max Grabowski established a company called the "Rapid Motor Vehicle Company", which developed some of the earliest commercial trucks ever designed. The trucks utilized one-cylinder engines. In 1909, the company was purchased by General Motors to form the basis for the General Motors Truck Company, from which GMC Truck was derived.
Another independent manufacturer purchased by GM that same year was Reliance Motor Car Company. Rapid & Reliance were merged in 1911 by GM, and in 1912 the marque "GMC Truck" was first shown at the New York International Auto Show.

July 22nd 1912
Edward G. Budd formed Edward G. Budd Mfg. Co., at 121 S. Broad Street, Philadelphia, with $75,000 of his own savings. He borrowed $15,000 from family friend named A. Robinson McIlvaine, $10,000 from another friend, J.S. Williams. Budd became president and appointed McIlvaine as secretary. Their first product was an all-metal truck body for Philadelphia coal distributor.

July 22nd 2005
MG Rover Group acquired by Nanjing Automobile for $97 million.

1933 - 1st solo flight round the world 7d 19hrs (Wiley Post)

1942 - Gasoline rationing using coupons begins in the United states

1980 - Scott Dixon, New Zealand racing driver was born

1983 - Dick Smith makes 1st solo helicopter flight around the world

1994 - William Sigei runs world record 10k (26:52.53)

2003 - Members of 101st Airborne of the United States, aided by Special Forces, attack a compound in Iraq, killing Saddam Hussein's sons Uday and Qusay, along with Mustapha Hussein, Qusay's 14-year old son, and a bodyguard.

Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on July 23, 2013, 09:13:33 pm
(http://i269.photobucket.com/albums/jj45/mms58/Misc%20Ford%20Photos/Ford%20Canada%20Cenn/1903FordModelAFCC001.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/mms58/media/Misc%20Ford%20Photos/Ford%20Canada%20Cenn/1903FordModelAFCC001.jpg.html)

On this day, July 23rd 1903
The first two-cylinder Ford Model A was delivered to its owner, Dr. Ernst Pfenning of Chicago, on this day in 1903 (a week after the Dr. Ernst booked the car). The Model A was the result of a partnership between Henry Ford and Detroit coal merchant Alexander Malcomson. Ford had met Malcomson while working at Edison Illuminating Company: Malcomson sold him coal. The Model A, designed primarily by Ford's assistant C. Harold Wills, was the affordable runabout that Ford needed to begin marketing his company's stock. In the next year Ford raised enough stock to release a line of cars and to incorporate as the Ford Motor Company. Ford's company grew quickly, but it wasn't until the release of the Model T that Ford took the position of our nation's largest carmaker. The Model T kept Ford number one in the industry until production was stopped in 1927, and Ford relinquished its place to Chevrolet. The second Model A, released in November of 1927, was a great success. Between 1927 and 1931, 4.3 million Model A Fords were made. The stylish, dependable, and affordable Model A reaffirmed Ford's position as a premier automaker at the time. Sales for the Model A would never approach those of its forerunner the Model T, due to the onset of the Depression. As sales slumped, Henry Ford decided to release a new car model in 1932. He introduced the speedy Ford V-8, known as the fastest car in the land at the time.

Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on July 24, 2013, 05:29:24 pm
(http://i386.photobucket.com/albums/oo306/Tarya/F1%20Nostalgia/1939belgiangprichardseaow9.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/Tarya/media/F1%20Nostalgia/1939belgiangprichardseaow9.jpg.html)

24th July 1938
Dick Seaman, driving a Mercedes-Benz 154 to victory at the German Grand Prix at Nurburgring, Germany, became the first Briton to win a major Grand Prix since Malcolm Campbell did it 15 years earlier. The race turned out to be a showdown between Mercedes--with their driving team of Seaman, Caracciola, von Brauchitsch and Lang; Auto Union--with newly acquired Italian great Tazio Nuvolari; and Alpha--with their team of Tartuffi and Farina. Mercedes qualified all three first row positions with Seaman in his British green helmet on the outside. After the typical lengthy Nazi parading, the race got underway in front of over 400,000 spectators. Midway through the race, in spite of Nuvolari's noble efforts, it was clear the race would be decided among the Mercedes drivers and that von Brauchtitsch and Seaman were the men to beat. Von Brauchtitsch led the race until he came into pit for tires and fuel. The crowd buzzed to see how fast the crew could change him, but in their rush the fuel tank was overfilled. The portable starter ignited the engine, the tank sucked in air and then shot a massive flame into the sky, igniting the back half of the car. Seaman pulled away unscathed, taking the lead for the first time. Von Brauchtitsch eventually returned to the race only to let his foul mood get the best of him as he took a corner too fast and crashed into a ditch. He is said to have walked back to the pits, black in the face, holding his detachable steering wheel that he claimed came off in the turn. His mechanic denied the possibility. Meanwhile, Seaman steamed to a comfortable victory ahead of Lang, Stuck, and Nuvolari.
PICTURED: Richard "Dick" Seaman

24th July 1998
South Korea's government opens the bidding for the Kia Motors Corporation, the country's third-largest car company, which went bankrupt during an economic crisis that gripped much of Asia.
Founded on the outskirts of Seoul in 1944, Kia began as a small manufacturer of steel tubing and bicycle parts. The name of the company was derived from the Chinese characters "ki" (meaning "to arise" or "to come out of") and "a" (which stood for Asia). By the late 1950s, Kia had branched out from bicycles to motor scooters, and in the early 1970s the company launched into automobile production. Kia's Sohari plant, completed by 1973, was Korea's first fully integrated automobile production facility; it rolled out the Brisa, the country's first passenger car, in 1974.
Kia's lineup by the late 1980s included the Concord, Capital, Potentia and Pride. Ford Motor Company brought the Pride to the United States, calling it the Ford Festiva; the company later sold the Kia Avella as the Ford Aspire. In the 1990s, Kia began selling cars in the United States under its own name, beginning with the Sephia. At first available in only a few states, Kia gradually rolled out across the country, jumping on the success of the sport-utility-vehicle (SUV) category in the mid-1990s with its Sportage, released in 1995.
By 1997, Kia was struggling financially, and that July it collapsed under $10 billion worth of debt. The automaker's failure marked the beginning of a full-blown economic crisis that eventually led South Korea to seek a record international bailout of some $57 billion. Auto sales plummeted nationwide, and by the time bidding for Kia opened in late July 1998, both Hyundai Motor and Daewoo Motor, South Korea's largest and second-largest automakers respectively, had suffered heavy losses as well. The two companies placed bids for Kia and its commercial-vehicle subsidiary, Asia Motors; the other bidders included another local company, Samsung, and Ford Motor, which along with its subsidiary Mazda already owned nearly 17 percent of Kia.
Hyundai managed to win the auction that October, having offered the highest bid; Daewoo was the runner-up. As a subsidiary of Hyundai, Kia made improvements in its cars' quality as well as their reliability, including the introduction of a new warranty program in 2001. It also began concentrating intently on the European market, building a sleek new $109 million design center in Frankfurt, Germany, in early 2008. At the Paris Motor Show that fall, Kia unveiled its new Soul, a subcompact mini multi-purpose-vehicle (MPV). Designed jointly by studios in California and South Korea, the Soul debuted on the global marketplace in early 2009.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on July 25, 2013, 08:21:06 am
On this day, July 25th 1941
The American automaker Henry Ford sits down at his desk in Dearborn, Michigan and writes a letter to the Indian nationalist leader Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi. The letter effusively praises Gandhi and his campaign of civil disobedience aimed at forcing the British colonial government out of India.
By July of 1941, Ford's pacifist views led him to despair at the current global situation: Nazi Germany had invaded Poland, causing Britain and France to declare war against it. The United States, led by President Franklin D. Roosevelt, was firmly on the side of the Allies, but Ford was convinced that the country should remain neutral, despite mounting pressure from the government for his company to start mass-producing airplanes to help defeat the Nazis. The previous May, Ford had reluctantly bowed to this pressure, opening a massive production facility for airplane production at Willow Run, near Dearborn, to manufacture B-24E Liberator bombers for the Allied war effort. (Building 1 plane every 55 minutes)
As Douglas Brinkley writes in "Wheels for the World," his history of Ford Motor Company, the automaker disliked imperialism and was hopeful that Gandhi's campaign would succeed in pushing the British out of India and establishing Indian home rule. In addition, Ford Motor Company had long enjoyed healthy sales in the cities of Bombay (now Mumbai) and Calcutta. Ford's letter to Gandhi, now included in the Henry Ford Museum and Library, read: "I want to take this opportunity of sending you a message…to tell you how deeply I admire your life and message. You are one of the greatest men the world has ever known."
The letter was sent to the Mahatma (as Gandhi was known) via T.A. Raman, the London editor of the United Press of India. According to Raman, Brinkley recounts, Gandhi didn't receive the letter until December 8, 1941--the day after the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor. Greatly pleased, he sent in response a portable spinning wheel, one of the old-fashioned devices that Gandhi famously used to produce his own cloth. The wheel, autographed in Hindi and English, was shipped some 12,000 miles and personally delivered to Ford by Raman in Greenfield Village, Michigan. Ford kept it as a good luck charm, as well as a symbol of the principles of simplicity and economic independence that both he and Gandhi championed.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iKlt6rNciTo#at=95 (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iKlt6rNciTo#at=95)

July 25th 1945
Henry Kaiser and Joseph Frazer announced plans to form a corporation to manufacture automobiles. The two men formed an unlikely pair. Frazer had great contacts in the auto industry and Kaiser had initial capital and experience with huge government contracts.

PICTURED: 1954 Kaiser Darrin Convertible
(http://i1232.photobucket.com/albums/ff365/IDriveA6K4/SFIAS%202011/100_6669.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/IDriveA6K4/media/SFIAS%202011/100_6669.jpg.html)

1941 - FDR bans selling benzine/gasoline to Japan

1944 - 1st jet fighter used in combat (Messerschmitt 262)
Here's a great Documentary on the worlds first NAZI Stealth long range fighter decades ahead of its time
Greatest Mysteries of WWII: Hitler's Stealth Fighter 720P (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NaJzKjtjZnY#ws)

1946 - 1st bikini is shown at a Paris fashion show

1959 - SR-N1 hovercraft crosses the English Channel from Calais to Dover in just over 2 hours.

1964 - Beatles' "Hard Day's Night, A," album goes #1 & stays #1 for 14 weeks

1966 - Supremes release "You Can't Hurry Love"

1976 - Annegret Richter runs 100m (11.01)

1978 - Louise Brown, the world's first "test tube baby" is born.

2000 - Air France Flight 4590, a Concorde supersonic passenger jet, F-BTSC, crashes just after takeoff from Paris killing all 109 aboard and 4 on the ground.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on July 26, 2013, 11:35:44 am
(http://i1011.photobucket.com/albums/af233/carl44s/Driver%20Photos%20The%20Early%20Years/dues.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/carl44s/media/Driver%20Photos%20The%20Early%20Years/dues.jpg.html)

On this day, July 26th 1932
Frederick S. Duesenberg died in Johnstown, Pennsylvania, of complications from injuries suffered in an automobile accident on July 2, 1932. Frederick and his brother Augie created the Duesenberg Automobile and Motors Company. Born in Lippe, Germany, Frederick moved to the U.S. in 1885. In 1897 he started a bicycle business, and in 1899 he built a highly efficient gasoline engine to be used for motorcycles. This was the beginning of his automotive career. He took a job with the Rambler Motor Company and worked there, learning the business, until 1905, when he convinced his brother Augie to go into business selling engines. The two brothers designed the Mason engine, with its famous "walking beam" overhead valve design, and started the Mason Motor Car Company. When they sold the business in 1913, they were mature players in the automotive industry.
PICTURED: Augie and Fred Duesenberg 1916 (Fred on the left)

July 26th 1998
The U.S. 500, the most prestigious race in the Championship Auto Racing Teams (CART) series, dissolves into tragedy on this day in 1998, when three fans are killed and six others wounded by flying debris from a car at Michigan Speedway in Brooklyn, Michigan.
CART (later known as Champ Car) was an open-wheel racing circuit created in the late 1970s by racing team owners frustrated with the direction of the existing United States Automobile Club (USAC). Open-wheel cars, built specifically for racing, are sophisticated vehicles built for speed, with small, open cockpits and wheels located outside the car's main body. In CART races, as well as those of its rival open-wheel circuit, the Indy Racing League, drivers often achieved speeds of up to 230 mph in the straightaways. (In comparison, drivers in National Association for Stock Car Racing--better known as NASCAR--events reach some 200 mph.)
While rounding the fourth turn at Michigan Speedway (a two-mile oval) in the 1998 U.S. 500, driver Adrian Fernandez lost control of his car and crashed into one of the raceway's retaining walls. The car broke apart, and the right front tire and part of the suspension flew over the 15-foot-high wall and into the stands. Traveling nearly 200 mph, the debris hit fans in the eighth and 10th rows. Two people were killed instantly; another died moments later, and six others received minor injuries. To the outrage of Sports Illustrated reporter Rick Reilly, who wrote a scathing editorial about the incident in the magazine, race officials didn't stop the event, which was won by the young Canadian driver Greg Moore. (In a tragic twist of fate, Moore died in October 1999, after a fatal crash in the CART season finale, the Marlboro 500, in California.) In August 1998, Michigan Speedway announced that it would extend the protective fencing around all of its grandstand sections to a total of around 17 feet in an effort to prevent further accidents.
The CART circuit changed its name to Champ Car in 2004. Four years later, plagued by financial troubles, the Champ Car World Series declared bankruptcy and merged with the Indy Racing League.

1902 - Australia beat England by 3 runs at Old Trafford

1942 - RAF bombs Hamburg

1944 - The first German V-2 rocket hits Great Britain.

1983 - Light flashes seen on Jupiter moon Io

1991 - Paul Reubens (Pee Wee Herman) is arrested in Florida, for exposing himself at an adult movie theater

1993 - Mars Observer takes 1st photo of Mars, from 5 billion km

BIRTHDAYS

1939 - J W Howard, Prime Minister of Australia (Good Ol Lil Johny)

(http://i249.photobucket.com/albums/gg234/HayleyM_007/johny.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/HayleyM_007/media/johny.jpg.html)

1949 - Roger Taylor, British rock drummer (Queen-Bohemian Rhapsody)

1957 - Wayne Grady, Brisbane, Australia, PGA golfer (1990 PGA Champion)

1964 - Sandra Bullock, Wash DC, actress

1970 - Phil Alley, cricketer (NSW left-arm pace bowler)

1981 - Abe Forsythe, Australian actor/director


Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on July 27, 2013, 11:41:08 am
(http://i716.photobucket.com/albums/ww169/domestic_platypus3/MODELS/IMG_2289.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/domestic_platypus3/media/MODELS/IMG_2289.jpg.html)

On this day, July 27th 1904
Dr. Herbert Hills of Flint, Michigan, purchased the first Buick automobile ever to be sold. Founder David Buick initially made his mark as an inventor and mechanic in the plumbing industry, but had sold out of his business in order to pursue building motor cars. Buick was a man with an innate gift for inventing and tinkering, but who cared little for financial matters. He reputedly was unable to sit still unless he was concentrating on some kind of mechanical problem. None of his contemporaries would have been surprised that his company eventually became more successful than he did. In 1902, after years of fiddling with an automobile design, Buick agreed to a partnership with the Briscoe Manufacturing Company, wherein Briscoe would write off Buick's debts while in turn establishing a $100,000 capitalization for Buick's car company. Buick ceded $99,700 of the company's stock to Briscoe until he repaid his standing debt of $3,500, at which point he could buy controlling interest in the stock. Still, Buick had yet to complete an automobile. When it became clear to Briscoe that Buick would neither be able to pay his debts nor complete his vehicle soon, they sold their interest in the company to the Flint Wagon Works for $10,000. Buick and his son were given stock, but their managerial roles shrunk. Finally, in July of 1904, the first Buick made its initial test run. During the test run, the Buick averaged 30mph on a trip around Flint, going so fast at one point that the driver "couldn't see the village six-mile-an-hour sign." Sixteen Buicks were sold in the next few months, but Flint Wagon Works remained troubled by the Buick venture. They had purchased the company in order to help the city of Flint adjust to a new economy of automobile production, but Buick was already heavily in debt to a number of Flint banks. At this point, David Buick owned only a small share of stock and held none of the business responsibilities, and the Wagon Works decided to bring in Flint whiz kid William Durant to turn the business around. Durant kept Buick on as a manager, a position he held with little impact until 1908. Durant turned Buick into a major player in the automotive industry before incorporating it into his General Motors project.
PICTURED: A 1904 Buick

July 27th 1888
Philip W. Pratt demonstrated first electric automobile in Boston, a tricycle powered by six Electrical Accumulator Company cells. It weighed 90 pounds (about 41 kilograms).

July 27th 1990
The last Citroen 2CV, known as the "Tin Snail" for its distinctive shape, rolls off the production line at the company's plant in Mangualde, Portugal at four o'clock on the afternoon of July 27, 1990. Since its debut in 1948, a total of 5,114,959 2CVs had been produced worldwide.
The French engineer and industrialist Andre Citroen converted his munitions plant into an automobile company after World War I; beginning in 1919, it was the first automaker to mass-produce cars outside of the United States. As in Germany (the Volkswagen Beetle), Italy (the Fiat 500) and Britain (Austin Mini), the rise of mass car ownership in France in the 1930s led to a demand for a light, economical "people's car," which Citroen answered in the post-World War II years with the 2CV. The company actually began testing the 2CV before the war but kept the project under wraps when war broke out; the original production model was only discovered by chance in the late 1960s. When Citroen finally unveiled the car at the 1948 Paris Motor Show, it was an immediate success: At one point, the waiting time to buy one was five years.
The 2CV ("Deux Chevaux Vapeur" in French, or "two steam horses," a reference to France's policy of taxing cars based on their engine output) was a trailblazer among other small cars of its era. Its innovations included a sophisticated suspension system, front-wheel drive, inboard front brakes, a lightweight, air-cooled engine and a four-speed manual transmission. Its front and rear wings, doors, bonnet, fabric sunroof and trunk lid were all detachable. The 2CV's endearingly unfashionable form joined the Eiffel Tower as a quintessential symbol of France in popular culture. Citroen released a 2CV van in 1951 and a luxury version, the 2CV AZL, in 1956. New models came out over the years, including the 2CV4 and 2CV 6, capable of reaching speeds above 100 kilometers per hour, in 1970; and the popular "Charleston" model in 1981. That same year, Roger Moore--playing the superspy James Bond in "For Your Eyes Only"--drove a bright yellow, high-performance version of the 2CV, evading his pursuers (in Peugeots) in the requisite Bond movie high-speed car chase.
By the late 1980s, however, consumers were no longer wild about the 2CV's quirky, antiquated design. This fact, combined with poor performance according to crash-testing and anti-pollution standards, led to the Tin Snail's demise. In 1988, production moved from France to Portugal, and the last 2CV was produced two years later.

1898 - Start of Sherlock Holmes "Adventure of Dancing Men"

1909 - Orville Wright tests 1st US Army airplane, flying 1h12m40s

1920 - Radio compass used for 1st time for aircraft navigation

1940 - Bugs Bunny debuts in "Wild Hare"

1944 - 1st British jet fighter used in combat (Gloster Meteor)

1948 - Australia set 404 to win v England at Headingley

1948 - Bradman's 29th & last Test Cricket century, part of winning 3-404

1949 - 1st jet-propelled airline (De Havilland Comet) flies

1956 - Jim Laker takes 9-37 in Australia's 1st innings at Manchester

1965 - Pres Johnson signs a bill requiring cigarette makers to print health warnings on all cigarette packages about the effects of smoking

1972 - The F-15 Eagle flies for the first time.

1977 - John Lennon is granted a green card for permanent residence in US

1987 - First expedited salvaging of Titanic wreckage begins by RMS Titanic, Inc.

1988 - Radio Shack announces Tandy 1000 SL computer

2002 - Ukraine airshow disaster: A Sukhoi Su-27 fighter crashes during an air show at Lviv, Ukraine killing 85 and injuring more than 100 others, the largest air show disaster in history.

2005 - STS-114: NASA grounds the Space shuttle, pending an investigation of the external tank's continued foam-shedding problem. During ascent, the external tank of the Space Shuttle Discovery sheds a piece of foam slightly smaller than the piece that caused the Space Shuttle Columbia disaster; this foam does not strike the spacecraft.

2007 - Phoenix News Helicopter Collision: News helicopters from Phoenix, Arizona television stations KNXV and KTVK collide over Steele Indian School Park in central Phoenix while covering a police chase; there were no survivors. This was the first known incidence of two news helicopters colliding in mid-air, and the worst civil aviation incident in Phoenix history.

BIRTHDAYS

1955 - Allan Border, cricket captain (Australia)

1973 - Gorden Tallis, Australian rugby league footballer

1976 - Scott Mason, Australian cricketer (d. 2005)

1980 - Allan Davis, Australian cyclist

1986 - Ryan Griffen, Australian rules footballer

1988 - Adam Biddle, Australian footballer

1990 - Indiana Evans, Australian actress
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on July 28, 2013, 11:27:05 am
(http://i183.photobucket.com/albums/x207/Starcowboy/gran%20prix/Tazio/nuvolari.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/Starcowboy/media/gran%20prix/Tazio/nuvolari.jpg.html)

On this day, July 28th 1935
The Italian race car driver Tazio Nuvolari wins the greatest victory of his career in the Grosser Preis von Deutschland (German Grand Prix) held on the Nurburgring racetrack in Nurburg, Germany 
Known to his fans as "Il Montavano Volante," or the Flying Mantuan, for his home city of Mantua, Nuvolari served as a driver in the Italian army before beginning his career racing motorcycles at the age of 28; he won the Italian championship in that sport in 1924 and 1928. His first major victory in a four-wheeled vehicle came in the 1930 Mille Miglia (Thousand Miles), Italy's most famous automobile road race. Over the course of his career, in addition to racing as part of the Alfa Romeo team (and later the German Auto Union teams), Nuvolari raced as an independent driver in cars constructed by Bugatti, Maserati and MG.
The German Grand Prix of 1935 is remembered as Nuvolari's greatest victory, and arguably one of the most impressive auto racing victories of all time. At the time, German automakers reigned supreme in the world of race car construction, and the "home team" at the Nurburgring that July day consisted of five Mercedes and four German Auto Union vehicles, all of which overpowered Nuvolari's older 330 bhp (brake horsepower is a unit used to measure the power of an engine by the energy needed to brake it) Alfa Romeo. An estimated 250,000 to 300,000 spectators turned up to watch the race on that rainy, foggy July day, and drama broke out from the beginning, when Nuvolari's longtime rival, Achille Varzi, driving for the German Auto Union, hit an auto mechanic working the race.
With one lap left to go, the German driver Manfred von Brauchitsch in his 445 bhp W25 Mercedes Benz--the most powerful car of the day--took a 35-second lead over Nuvolari; the rest of the field, competitive throughout, had fallen behind. Von Brauchitsch's left rear tire was fraying, however, and with Nuvolari in hot pursuit behind him he declined a pit stop: The tire blew, and von Brauchitsch was forced to slow to 40 mph and guide it to the rim of the track. Nuvolari blew past him for the win, to the great chagrin of the Nazi Party officials at the finish line who had already started to raise the flag of the Reich and prepare the celebration.
Though Nuvolari would later race for the German Auto Union himself, that day he broke German hearts in his little red Alfa Romeo, beating the most powerful cars on the planet on one of the world's most demanding tracks.

July 28th 1973
Bonnie and Clyde's bullet-riddled 1934 Ford V-8 sedan was sold at auction for $175,000 to Peter Simon of Jean, Nevada. The Ford V-8 model succeeded the new Model A, and it was well received due to its speed and power, perhaps this is why it seemed most popular among the criminal element. Henry Ford first received a personal letter congratulating him on the car's performance from famed outlaw gunman John Dillinger.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on July 29, 2013, 07:44:39 am
(http://i1245.photobucket.com/albums/gg592/JonCole56/1-1%20CADILLAC%20and%20LaSALLE/CADILLAC195702.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/JonCole56/media/1-1%20CADILLAC%20and%20LaSALLE/CADILLAC195702.jpg.html)

On this day, July 29th 1909.
The newly formed General Motors Corporation (GM) acquires the country's leading luxury automaker, the Cadillac Automobile Company, for $4.5 million.
Cadillac was founded out of the ruins of automotive pioneer Henry Ford's second failed company (his third effort, the Ford Motor Company, finally succeeded). When the shareholders of the defunct Henry Ford Company called in Detroit machinist Henry Leland to assess the company's assets for their planned sale, Leland convinced them to stay in business. His idea was to combine Ford's latest chassis (frame) with a single-cylinder engine developed by Oldsmobile, another early automaker. To that end, the Cadillac Car Company (named for the French explorer Antoine Laumet de La Mothe Cadillac, who founded the city of Detroit in 1701) was founded in August 1902. Leland introduced the first Cadillac--priced at $850--at the New York Auto Show the following year.
In its first year of production, Cadillac put out nearly 2500 cars, a huge number at the time. Leland, who was reportedly motivated by an intense competition with Henry Ford, assumed full leadership of Cadillac in 1904, and with his son Wilfred by his side he firmly established the brand's reputation for quality. Among the excellent luxury cars being produced in America at the time--including Packard, Lozier, McFarland and Pierce-Arrow--Cadillac led the field, making the top 10 in overall U.S. auto sales every year from 1904 to 1915.
By 1909, William C. Durant had assembled Buick and Oldsmobile as cornerstones of his new General Motors Corporation, founded the year before. By the end of July, he had persuaded Wilfred Leland to sell Cadillac for $4.5 million in GM stock. Durant kept the Lelands on in their management position, however, giving them full responsibility for automotive production. Three years later, Cadillac introduced the world's first successful electric self-starter, developed by Charles F. Kettering; its pioneering V-8 engine was installed in all Cadillac models in 1915.
Over the years, Cadillac maintained its reputation for luxury and innovation: In 1954, for example, it was the first automaker to provide power steering and automatic windshield washers as standard equipment on all its vehicles. Though the brand was knocked out of its top-of-the-market position in the 1980s by the German luxury automaker Mercedes-Benz.
PICTURED: 1957 CADILLAC

July 29th 1904
Jehangir Ratanji Dadabhoy (J.R.D.) Tata was born in Paris, France to Ratanji Dadabhoy Tata and his French wife Suzanne Briere. Ratanji Tata was a first cousin of Jamsetji Tata.
He was a pioneer aviator and important businessman of India. He was one of the few people who were awarded Bharat Ratna during their life time.
J.R.D.Tata was inspired early by French aviation pioneer Louis Bleriot, and took to flying. In 1929 Tata got the first pilot licence issued in India. He later came to be known as the father of Indian civil aviation. He founded India's first commercial airline, 'Tata Airlines', in 1932, which in 1946 became Air India, now India's national airline.

1899 - 1st motorcycle race, Manhattan Beach, NY

1910 - JWEL Hilgers is 1st Dutchman to fly above Dutch territory

1930 - Airship R100, 1st passenger-carrying flight from England to Canada

1938 - Comic strip "Dennis the Menace," 1st appears

1945 - After delivering the Atomic Bomb across the Pacific, the cruiser USS Indianapolis is torpedoed & sunk by a Japanese submarine

1952 - 1st nonstop transpacific flight by a jet

1961 - Bob Dylan injured in car accident

1966 - Bob Dylan hurt in motorcycle accident near Woodstock NY

Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on July 30, 2013, 07:10:26 pm
(http://i645.photobucket.com/albums/uu176/MustangMayhem/web/1stautoad_zps377002f9.jpg) (http://s645.photobucket.com/user/MustangMayhem/media/web/1stautoad_zps377002f9.jpg.html)

On this day, July 30th 1898
Scientific American magazine carried the very first automobile advertisement for Winton Motor Car Company of Cleveland, OH; invited readers to "dispense with a horse".

July 30th 2003
The last of 21,529,464 Volkswagen Beetles built since World War II rolls off the production line at Volkswagen's plant in Puebla, Mexico. One of a 3,000-unit final edition, the baby-blue vehicle was sent to a museum in Wolfsburg, Germany, where Volkswagen is headquartered.
The car produced in Puebla that day was the last so-called "classic" VW Beetle, which is not to be confused with the redesigned new Beetle that Volkswagen introduced in 1998. (The new Beetle resembles the classic version but is based on the VW Golf.) The roots of the classic Beetle stretch back to the mid-1930s, when the famed Austrian automotive engineer Dr. Ferdinand Porsche met German leader Adolf Hitler's request for a small, affordable passenger car to satisfy the transportation needs of the German people Hitler called the result the KdF (Kraft-durch-Freude)-Wagen (or "Strength-Through-Joy" car) after a Nazi-led movement ostensibly aimed at helping the working people of Germany; it would later be known by the name Porsche preferred: Volkswagen, or "people's car."
The first production-ready Kdf-Wagen debuted at the Berlin Motor Show in 1939; the international press soon dubbed it the "Beetle" for its distinctive rounded shape. During World War II, the factory in Kdf-stat (later renamed Wolfsburg) continued to make Beetles, though it was largely dedicated to production of war vehicles. Production was halted under threat of Allied bombing in August 1944 and did not resume until after the war, under British control. Though VW sales were initially slower in the United States compared with the rest of the world, by 1960 the Beetle was the top-selling import in America, thanks to an iconic ad campaign by the firm Doyle Dane Bernbach. In 1972, the Beetle surpassed the longstanding worldwide production record of 15 million vehicles, set by Ford Motor Company's legendary Model T between 1908 and 1927. It also became a worldwide cultural icon, featuring prominently in the hit 1969 movie "The Love Bug" (which starred a Beetle named Herbie) and on the cover of the Beatles album "Abbey Road."
In 1977, however, the Beetle, with its rear-mounted, air-cooled-engine, was banned in America for failing to meet safety and emission standards. Worldwide sales of the car shrank by the late 1970s and by 1988, the classic Beetle was sold only in Mexico. Due to increased competition from other manufacturers of inexpensive compact cars, and a Mexican decision to phase out two-door taxis, Volkswagen decided to discontinue production of the classic bug in 2003. The final count of 21,529,464, incidentally, did not include the original 600 cars built by the Nazis prior to World War II.

1889 - Start of Sherlock Holmes adventure "Naval Treaty" (BG)

1898 - Will Kellogg invents Corn Flakes

1908 - Around the World Automobile Race ends in Paris

1909 - Wright Brothers deliver 1st military plane to the army

1956 - US motto "In God We Trust" authorized

1971 - Japanese Boeing 727 collides with an F-86 fighter killing 162

1971 - US Apollo 15 (Scott & Irwin) lands on Mare Imbrium on the Moon

1983 - Official speed record for a piston-driven aircraft, 832 kph, Calif

1990 - The first Saturn automobile rolls off the assembly line.

BIRTHDAYS

1945 - David Sanborn, jazz saxophonist (David Letterman Show)

1947 - Arnold Schwarzenegger, Austria, body builder/actor/politician (Terminator, 38th Governor of California)

1958 - Kate Bush, Plumstead England, singer/songwriter

1963 - Lisa Kudrow, Encino California, actress (Phoebe-Friends, Romy & Michele)

1982 - Yvonne Strahovski, Australian actress

Compliments of CPU


(http://www.bloomberg.com/image/iszaHL5qTnNM.jpg)


​Henry Ford was born 150 years ago, July 30, 1863. He is remembered now for building a great many automobiles, for saying that history was “bunk” and for a strenuous anti-Semitic campaign that did his Ford Motor Co. (F) incalculable harm (and whose effects the company has successfully worked to ameliorate almost since the day he died, in 1947).

But there is much more to his legacy than that -- a legacy that takes on added resonance with the bankruptcy of Detroit, where it was largely forged. Late in Ford’s life, Will Rogers dropped his friendly folksiness to say, “It will take a hundred years to tell whether you have helped us or hurt us. But you certainly didn’t leave us where you found us.”

Just where that might have been was articulated by Ford himself to a high school boy who was interviewing him. The carmaker was speaking nostalgically about the virtues of the farm and the one-room schoolhouse, and the boy found this pretty stodgy. “But sir, these are different times, this is the modern age and -- ” Ford cut him off. “Young man,” he snapped, “I invented the modern age.”

You’ll notice he didn’t say, “I built a hell of a lot of cars.” He was claiming authorship of the world he and the boy inhabited, and, despite its grandiosity, his boast is hard to gainsay. Yet the very scope of the changes he worked on American society may make them less obvious to us: They are as ubiquitous as the air we breathe, and thus as transparent.


Shifting Labor

Ford was born on a prosperous farmstead a few miles outside of Detroit. He would love the American farm all his days, save for one thing: He detested farming. From his childhood on, he sought ways to shift labor from humans to machines. Unlike most farm boys, he had a strong dislike of horses, and by the time he was in his teens, he was in thrall to the idea of a self-propelled vehicle.

When he was 17, he went into Detroit, then a vigorous young industrial city with a thousand machine shops. Those shops were his college, and he proved a brilliant student. He returned to the farm only briefly, in 1888, to marry a woman named Clara Bryant, a most fortunate choice as she proved steadfast, brave and so convinced of her husband’s genius that he came to call her “the believer.”

She needed to be when her husband made it clear that he was going to spend his future making gasoline-powered vehicles. As he said about his goal years later: “There was no demand for the automobile. There never is for a new product.” This defies the bromide about necessity being the mother of invention: Ford thought it was the other way around, and who can say he’s wrong? People didn’t know they needed an iPhone until they got their hands on one.

He built his first car in 1896, and it ran, and he founded a company, almost immediately withdrew from it, then bankrupted a second one. He wasn’t ready yet to manufacture what he was beginning to envision: a car as dependable as the $5,000 juggernauts the infant auto industry was turning out in the early years of the last century, yet so inexpensive that farmers and shop clerks could own it.

The way to do that, he said, “is to make one automobile like another automobile, to make them all alike, to make them come through the factory just alike -- just as one pin is like another when it comes from a pin factory, or one match like another when it comes from a match factory.”

When he founded his third company -- the one that would last -- he set about finding ways to do that. The result, in 1908, was the Model T, as ugly and dependable as a cast-iron stove. It was an instant success, and, as its high body negotiated the impossible roads of the day, it set about changing the way people lived. In a few years, it broke down the age-old isolation of rural life. “You know, Henry,” a Georgia farmwife wrote its maker, “Your car lifted us out of the mud. It brought joy to our lives.”


Consumerism Cycle

Of course, the Model T couldn’t remake a nation’s social patterns without being deployed in staggering numbers. By 1912, Ford was producing 340 cars a day, which shows impressive organization and control, but there is a vast difference between quantity production and mass production, and it is by inventing the latter that Ford invented the modern age.

Ford and his lieutenants began experimenting with bringing the work to the workers in a continuous flow. Instead of one man doing 20 things to assemble, say, a carburetor, 20 men would do one thing: tighten a screw or seat a valve as it rolled past them on a conveyor belt. The results were astonishing. By the 1920s, the Ford Motor Co. was turning out a completed car every 10 seconds.

With the accelerating production came profits so great that, in 1914, Henry Ford raised his workers’ base pay to $5 a day, doubling the standard wage in a single stroke. And in doing that, he made his employees his customers. So began a cycle of consumerism that is with us yet, and that is the goal toward which those production lines were moving: widening prosperity; a growing, mobile middle class; the modern age.

Even as he became the richest man in America, Ford soured. The second half of his life was one of increasing bitterness and bile. He became jealous of his high lieutenants and fired them one by one. He tormented his gifted son, Edsel, because he didn’t think he was tough enough, when in fact Edsel would have been Henry’s ideal successor: He understood, as the 1920s wore on, that the car was now no longer merely a utilitarian necessity but an object of desire. The pioneering days were over.

Ford surely saw this, but he hated it. No inventor has ever been more emotionally bound to his invention. To its maker, the Model T was more than a generator of wealth; it was a moral force. When Ford finally shut down the line after making his 15 millionth Model T, in 1927, he had waited years too long. In 1920, his company was building half the cars on the American road. Those days were gone forever, and General Motors Co. was in ascendancy.

But what Will Rogers said remains true. Even now it is too early to fully assess Henry Ford’s contribution to the U.S., to the world. But take one example: World War II. In his fine book about the conflict, “The Storm of War,” Andrew Roberts writes, “If Britain had provided the time and Russia the blood necessary to defeat the Axis, it was America that produced the weapons.”

It was Henry Ford who produced the weapons. That was never his goal; he was a lifelong pacifist who once told the press that every American soldier should have the word “murderer” embroidered on his uniform. But without the industrial techniques he developed 30 years earlier, the U.S. couldn’t have done it. Over the years, those techniques would surely have come about, but would they have been here when Hitler started battering down the dikes of civilization?

In his best years, when he was a genuinely great man and an inspiring leader, one of his workers described Ford’s personality by saying “he had the magnet.” All of us are still feeling its pull.

By Richard Snow
via http://www.bloomberg.com (http://www.bloomberg.com)

(Richard Snow is the author of “I Invented the Modern Age: The Rise of Henry Ford” and several other books.)
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on July 31, 2013, 12:39:45 pm
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On this day. July 31st 1916
The future racing legend Louise Smith, who will become the first woman inducted into the International Motorsports Hall of Fame, is born in Barnesville, Georgia.
In the mid-1940s, the racing promoter Bill France was looking for a female driver as a way to attract spectators to some of the earliest events in what would become the National Association for Stock Car Auto Racing (NASCAR) circuit. Before a race near Greenville, South Carolina, in 1946, he heard of Louise Smith, a local resident who was famous for outrunning law enforcement on the roads. With France's encouragement, Smith entered the race at Greenville-Pickens Speedway in a 1939 Ford and finished third. Unaware that a checkered flag meant the finish line, she kept going beyond the end of the race until someone threw out a red flag.
Though her husband Noah, the owner of a junkyard, didn't approve of her new speed-demon career, Smith was hooked. In 1947, she famously "borrowed" Noah's new car, a Ford coupe, and drove it to watch races in Daytona Beach, Florida. She ended up entering the race herself and wrecking the car, a fact she tried to conceal from him, not knowing that the news had made the front page of the Greenville paper before she returned home. Smith subsequently became a regular on France's new circuit, appearing in NASCAR events throughout the United States and Canada for the next decade. She won 38 races and had some spectacular crashes, including one in which her car overturned, earning her 48 stitches and four pins in her left knee. Dubbed the "Good Ol' Gal" by her fellow drivers, Smith nonetheless struggled in the masculine world of NASCAR.
Smith retired in 1956 but remained active in the racing world: She sponsored various drivers, and was involved in the Miss Southern 500 Scholarship Pageant at Darlington Raceway in South Carolina. In 1999, she was inducted into the International Motorsports Hall of Fame in Talladega, Alabama. Smith died in April 2006, at the age of 89.

July 31st 1928
The Chrysler Corporation acquired Dodge Brothers, Inc. from Dillon Read for $170 million.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on August 01, 2013, 09:47:34 pm
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August 1st 1941
Jeep is born. Parade magazine called it "...the Army's most intriguing new gadget...a tiny truck which can do practically everything." During World War I, the U.S. Army began looking for a fast, lightweight all-terrain vehicle, but the search did not grow urgent until early 1940. At this time, the Axis powers had begun to score victories in Europe and Northern Africa, intensifying the Allies' need for an all-terrain vehicle. The U.S. Army issued a challenge to automotive companies, requesting a working prototype, fit to army specifications, in just 49 days. Willy's Truck Company was the first to successfully answer the Army's call, and the new little truck was christened "the Jeep." General Dwight D. Eisenhower said that America could not have won World War II without it. Parade was so enthusiastic about the Jeep, that, on this day, it devoted three full pages to a feature on the vehicle.

August 1st 1903
The first cross-country auto trip, from New York City to San Francisco, was completed on this day in 1903. The trail was blazed by a Packard, which finished in a mere 52 days. Since then, countless Americans have embarked on the cross-country trek, driving from coast to coast.

August 1st 1910
The state of New York issued its first license plates on this day in 1910. Massachusetts, the first state in the nation to issue plates, had been doing so since 1893, when it introduced iron plates with the registration number etched on top. The current New York plate, which features the Statue of Liberty, has been in use since 1986.

August 1st 2006
Market share of Detroit auto companies fell to 52% in July 2006, lowest point in history (52.2% in October 2005). Auto sales figures showed that Toyota passed Ford Motor Company to rank as the second-biggest-selling auto company in the U.S. Honda outsold DaimlerChrysler's Chrysler group for the first time. General Motors held a 27% share of the auto market and Chrysler - 10%.

August 1st 2007
Citibank opens China's first drive-through automated teller machine (ATM) at the Upper East Side Central Plaza in Beijing.
Like those of drive-through restaurants and drive-in movies, the origins of drive-through banking can be traced to the United States. Some sources say that Hillcrest State Bank opened the first drive-through bank in Dallas, Texas, in 1938; others claim the honor belongs to the Exchange National Bank of Chicago in 1946. The trend reached its height in the post-World War II boom era of the late 1950s. Today, nearly all major banks in the United States offer some type of drive-through option, from regular teller service to 24-hour ATMs.
Drive-through banking, like other developments in automobile-centered culture, caught on a bit later in the rest of the world. Switzerland, for example, didn't get its first drive-through bank until 1962, when Credit Suisse--then known as Schweizerische Kreditanstalt (SKA)--opened a branch in downtown Zurich featuring eight glass pavilions with drive-through banking services. Though popular at first, the branch faltered in the 1970s, when traffic problems in the city center made fewer people willing to do their banking from their cars. SKA closed the drive-through in 1983.
In December 2006, five years after joining the World Trade Organization, China opened its retail banking sector to foreign competition. Under the new regulations Citibank became one of four foreign banks--along with HSBC, Standard Chartered and Bank of East Asia--approved to provide banking services using the Chinese currency, renminbi. (Often abbreviated as RMB, renminbi literally means "people's money.") The agreement had been signed in the fall of 2006, and by early December Citi had already opened 70 regular ATMs across the Chinese mainland.
Initially, the Citibank drive-through ATM that opened in Beijing in August 2007 was available only to holders of bank cards issued abroad, as foreign banks were not yet allowed to issue their own cards in China. Other banks soon hopped on the drive-through banking bandwagon in China, including China Construction Bank, which opened the first drive-through ATM in the southern Chinese city of Guangzhou in May 2008.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on August 02, 2013, 12:50:53 pm
On this day, August 2nd 1990
Sven-Erik Soderman, driving an Opel Kadett at Mora, Sweden, set a world's record in stunt driving. Soderman reached a speed of 102.14mph while driving his car on two side wheels.

Pretty cool video below

Söderman 2-Wheel Stunt (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JrNqAl_G-6g#)

August 2nd 1950
The Ford Motor Company created the Defense Products Division in order to handle the large number of government contracts related to the Korean War. The conversion from automobile manufacture to weapons production had already been made several times in history, including during World War II, when civilian automobile production in the U.S. virtually ceased as manufacturers began turning out tanks instead.

August 2nd 1987
This fateful day in 1987 witnessed the fastest race in Indy car history to that date, when Michael Andretti won the Marlboro 500 at the Michigan International Speedway with an average speed of 171.490mph. Andretti broke the record previously set by Bobby Rahal at 170.722mph. Incidentally, one of the drivers that Andretti sped past on that day was his father and fellow driver, Mario Andretti.

Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on August 03, 2013, 09:01:19 pm
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On this day, August 3rd 1900
The Firestone Tire & Rubber Company was established in Akron, Ohio. Thirty-one-year-old inventor and entrepreneur Harvey S. Firestone seized on a new way of making carriage tires and began production with only 12 employees. Eight years later, Firestone tires were chosen by Henry Ford for the Model T, and Firestone eventually became a household name. Firestone is now owned by Bridgestone.
In May 2000, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration contacted Ford and Firestone about the high incidence of tire failure on Ford Explorers, Mercury Mountaineers, and Mazda Navajos fitted with Firestone tires. Ford investigated and found that several models of 15" Firestone tires had very high failure rates, especially those made at Firestone's Decatur, Illinois plant. This was one of the leading factors to the closing of the Decatur plant.
In a 2001 letter to Ford Motor Company Chief Executive at the time Jacques Nassar, then Chairman / CEO of Bridgestone/Firestone announced that Bridgestone/Firestone would no longer enter into new contracts with Ford Motor Company, effectively ending a 100-year supply relationship.

August 3, 1926
The first traffic lights in Britain were installed at Piccadilly Circus.

August 3rd 1938
The famous English circuit Brooklands hosted its final race on this day in 1938, ending the track's 32-year history. It opened in 1907, and was the world's first oval-style motorsport venue and was also one of Britain's first airfields. Nowadays it plays host to an aviation and motoring museum, as well as various vintage car rallies.

August 3rd 1941
Although the U.S. had not yet entered World War II at this time, gasoline rationing began in parts of the eastern United States on this day in 1941. The rationing would spread to the rest of the country as soon as the U.S. joined the Allied forces, and the production of cars for private use halted completely in 1942. Measures of a similar sort had already taken place in most European countries.

August 3rd 1977
"The Spy Who Loved Me," starring Roger Moore as the suave superspy James Bond, known for his love of fast cars and dangerous women, is released in theaters across America. The film features one of the most memorable Bond cars of all time--a sleek, powerful Lotus Esprit sports car that does double duty as a submarine.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on August 04, 2013, 01:13:48 pm
(http://i1085.photobucket.com/albums/j439/82lebaronconv/Connecticut%20Packard%20Graveyard/070.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/82lebaronconv/media/Connecticut%20Packard%20Graveyard/070.jpg.html)

On this day, August 4th 1898
On a visit to the Winton plant with his brother James, William D. Packard was taken for a test-drive in one of the company's vehicles, accompanied by George L. Weiss, a Winton executive. Packard ended up purchasing the Winton, to his later regret. The Packards' disappointing experience with the Winton prompted them to build their own car and establish the Ohio Automobile Company in 1900, which would later become the Packard Motor Company.
PICTURED: Rear detail - 1953 Cavalier
Note Packard script on upper rear quarter panel. This was adopted from James Ward Packard's personal signature, who founded the Packard Motor Car Company in 1899. The last Packards were built in 1958

August 4th 1957
Juan Fangio won his last auto race and captured the world auto driving championship for the fifth consecutive year on this day in 1957. Fangio, born in Argentina and of Italian descent, won the World Championship a record five times, as well as capturing 24 Grand Prix titles. He began his career as a mechanic, but eventually started racing in South America with a car he built himself. After his retirement from racing, Fangio went to work for Mercedes-Benz in Argentina.

August 4th 1957
The Italian automaker Fiat (short for Fabbrica Italiana Automobili Torino) debuts the "Nuova Cinquecento," a redesigned version of a model that it first released in 1936.
Founded in 1899 by Giovanni Agnelli, Fiat had dominated the Italian auto industry since the early 20th century. When Fiat's first 500-cc car--known as "Il Topolino" (the Italian name for Mickey Mouse)--came on the scene, it was the smallest mass-produced car on the market, with space for two people, a tiny luggage capacity and a top speed of 53 mph. In the years following World War II (during which Fiat made many of the vehicles used by Italian forces under Benito Mussolini), the company sought to capitalize on the need for affordable family cars by revamping the 500. The Nuova Cinquecento was a two-cylinder rear-engined four-seater; like the German Volkswagen Beetle, it was intended as an Italian "people's car." Like the Beetle, the 500 was became a symbol of a country and a people, an emblem of "la dolce vita" in post-war Italy. Some 3.5 million new 500s were sold between 1957 and 1975, when Fiat halted production.
By 2004, Fiat--once the largest carmaker in Europe--was struggling financially due to stiff competition from Volkswagen and other companies. That year, Sergio Marchionne took over as the company's chief executive; he soon ended Fiat's largely unsuccessful five-year partnership with General Motors and would be praised by investors for the subsequent revival of the company's fortunes. A critical step in this turnaround was the launch of the new Cinquecento in 2007. Designed by Frank Stephenson (already famous for the redesign of another classic, the Mini Cooper), the new 500 was based on the mechanical elements of the popular Fiat Panda, but modified significantly. Though its retro styling evoked its iconic predecessor, the strong performance and extensive safety features (including seven airbags) were all its own.
On July 4, 2007--50 years to the day after Giacosa's famous car debuted--several thousand VIP guests, including Italian Prime Minister Romano Prodi, were among the 100,000 spectators who gathered in Turin to celebrate the launch of the Nuova Cinquecento. The lavish ceremony featured a fireworks display and a waterborne carnival procession along the Po River. Two years later, Fiat completed an alliance with Chrysler after the struggling American automaker was forced to file for federal bankruptcy protection. Under the terms of the partnership, Fiat owns a 20 percent share of Chrysler (which could eventually grow to at least 35 percent).

August 4th 1971
Jeff Gordon, a stock-car driver known as "The Kid," was born. Gordon raced onto the NASCAR scene in 1997 by winning the Winston Cup season points championship for a prestigious second time at the age of 26. "The Kid" was also the first driver to win the Southern 500, NASCAR's oldest race, three years in a row. His clean-cut California image was initially disliked by many racing fans, who tended to prefer the gritty personas of traditional stock-car drivers. However, Gordon had talent, an aggressive driving style, and a knack for publicity, which drew many new fans to the sport.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on August 05, 2013, 09:52:05 pm
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On this day, August 5th 1882
The Standard Oil Company of New Jersey was established as part of the giant Standard Oil Trust. The trust had been organized earlier in the year, bringing together John D. Rockefeller's oil empire under one central management, run by Rockefeller and an "inner circle." The Standard Oil Trust became the first great monopoly in American history, eventually acquiring 90 percent of the world's oil refining capacity before it was ordered to dissolve in 1892. Rockefeller was infamous for his ruthless business tactics, and it was rumored that he often threatened to put local merchants out of business unless they bought Standard Oil.

August 5th 1914
The first traffic light was installed at the intersection of Euclid Avenue and East 105th Street in Cleveland, Ohio. Earlier roads, shared by horses, cars, and streetcars, were chaotic. As accidents and traffic increased it became apparent that some rules of the road were required. The traffic light was only one of several improvements to arrive in this period--the traffic island was introduced in 1907, dividing lines appeared in 1911, and the "No Left Turn" sign debuted in 1916

August 5, 1947
Ferdinand Porsche was released from a French prison. Porsche had been arrested as a suspected Nazi collaborator by United States and French occupation authorities in the aftermath of World War II and held in custody for two years. He would live to see his 75th birthday

August 5, 1990
Amos Neyhart, an engineering professor who established the first driver education courses in the United States in the 1930s, dies in a Pennsylvania nursing home at the age of 91.
Neyhart joined the faculty of Pennsylvania State University in 1929 as an assistant professor of industrial engineering. (He earned his bachelor's and master's degrees at the same institution.) Around 1931, when a drunk driver hit Neyhart's parked car, he became convinced of the need for teenagers to be educated in how to drive properly. Parents lacked the necessary objectivity and patience to teach their children to drive, he believed, and they also often unknowingly passed along their own bad driving habits. Neyhart began by teaching volunteer students from State College High School; he used his own 1929 Graham-Paige automobile, which he had specially fitted with dual brake and clutch linkages. In 1933, he established a formal course at the high school, and he soon developed a teacher-preparation program. In 1934, Neyhart published "The Safe Operation of an Automobile," the first textbook on driver education.
Neyhart's pioneering work in Pennsylvania soon caught on across the country. By 1968, according to an article that year in The New York Times, accredited driver education courses were offered in more than 71 percent of the nation's high schools. A study completed at the time by the New York State Department of Motor Vehicles found that graduates of such courses were involved in 22 percent fewer accidents and had 50 percent fewer driving violations than non-graduates, and most insurance companies had begun granting discounts to accredited young drivers.
Beginning in the late 1930s, Neyhart served as a consultant on driver education for the American Automobile Association (AAA); he was also director of Penn State's Institute of Public Safety in Continuing Education. Presidents Harry S. Truman, John F. Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson all named him to national traffic safety committees during their administrations. In 1988, Neyhart was inducted into the Safety and Health Hall of Fame International.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on August 06, 2013, 08:13:57 am
(http://i237.photobucket.com/albums/ff157/IDriveA6K2/Cars/103867.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/IDriveA6K2/media/Cars/103867.jpg.html)

August 6th 1957
The Chevrolet Corporation registered the Corvair name for its new rear-engine compact car. Corvairs became quite controversial--people either loved them or hated them. The car was accused of being "unsafe at any speed," with much criticism directed toward its handling, even though a 1972 government study later exonerated the Corvair. Today, the Corvair is considered rare and collectible and has been called one of the most significant cars in automotive history.

August 6th 1928
Chung Se Yung, a cofounder of the Hyundai Motor Company, was born on this day in Kangwon Province, Korea. Hyundai, which was founded in 1967, is one of the largest auto manufacturers in the world, actively exporting to 160 countries. Its international network consists of 145 independent importers and distributors, as well as several subsidiaries, such as Hyundai Motor America.

August 6th 1932
Richard Hollingshead Jr. first registered his patent for the drive-in movie theater. Tired of ordinary movie houses, Hollingshead wanted to create a theater where parents could bring the children in their pajamas, avoid baby-sitters, and relax in the comfort of their own car while watching a Friday night film. Hollingshead was awarded the patent in May of the following year, though it was declared invalid in 1950. After the patent was revoked, thousands of drive-ins appeared on the American landscape, reaching a high of 4,063 in 1958.

August 6th 1958
The great Argentine race car driver Juan Manuel Fangio, winner of five Formula One driver's world championships, competes in his last Grand Prix race--the French Grand Prix held outside Reims, France.
Fangio left school at the age of 11 and worked as an automobile mechanic in his hometown of San Jose de Balcarce, Argentina before beginning his driving career. He won his first major victory in the Gran Premio Internacional del Norte of 1940, racing a Chevrolet along the often-unpaved roads from Buenos Aires to Lima, Peru. In 1948, Fangio was invited to race a Simca-Gordini in the French Grand Prix, also at Reims, which marked his European racing debut. After a crash during a road race in Peru that fall killed his co-driver and friend Daniel Urrutia, Fangio considered retiring from racing, but in the end returned to Europe for his first full Formula One season the following year.
In Formula One, the top level of racing as sanctioned by the Fédération International de l'Automobile (FIA), drivers compete in single-seat, open-wheel vehicles typically built by large automakers (or "constructors," in racing world parlance) and capable of achieving speeds of more than 230 mph. Individual Formula One events are known as Grands Prix. Fangio signed on in 1948 with Alfa Romeo, and won his first Formula One championship title with that team in 1951. Over the course of his racing career, he would drive some of the best cars Alfa-Romeo, Mercedes-Benz, Ferrari and Maserati ever produced. Capturing four more Formula One titles by 1957, Fangio won an impressive 24 of 51 total Grand Prix races.
Reims, famous for its 13th-century cathedral, hosted the oldest Grand Prix race, the French Grand Prix, at its Reims-Gueux course a total of 14 times (the last time in 1966). In the race on July 6, 1958, the British driver Mike Hawthorn--who would win the driver's world championship that season, but die tragically in a (non-racing) car accident the following January, at the age of 29--took the lead from the start in his 2.4-liter Ferrari Dino 246 and held on for the win. Fangio, driving a Maserati, finished fourth, in what would be the last race before announcing his retirement at the age of 47. The 1958 French Grand Prix also marked the Formula One debut of Phil Hill, who in 1960 would become the first American driver to win the world championship.

August 6th 1991
Peugeot SA announced its withdrawal from the United States market, due to lagging sales. The major French automotive manufacturer and holding company has been in existence since 1896 and is presently headquartered in Paris.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on August 07, 2013, 08:06:00 am
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On this day, August 7th 1915
Driving a Peugeot, race-car driver Dario Resta broke the 100mph speed barrier. He broke the record while winning the 100-mile Chicago Cup Challenge Race at the Maywood Board Speedway in Chicago. With an average speed of 101.86mph, this was the first event in which such speeds had been attained for a race of this length in the U.S.

August 7th 1927
The last Dodge Convertible Cabriolet, produced as a sporty car, was discontinued on this day in 1927. The Cabriolet was in production for only four months after its debut.

August 7th 1974
French daredevil Philip Petit walked across a tightrope strung between the twin towers of the World Trade Center in New York City. The stunt caused a massive traffic jam on the streets below.

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August 7th 2000
Eight weeks to the day after the fourth-generation NASCAR driver Adam Petty was killed during practice at the New Hampshire International Speedway, New Hampshire--the driver Kenny Irwin Jr. dies at the same speedway, near the exact same spot, after his car slams into the wall at 150 mph during a practice run.
At 19, Adam Petty was in his second season in the Busch Series and was planning to move to the Winston Cup circuit full time the following year. He finished 40th in his first Winston Cup race in April 2000, three days before the death of his great-grandfather, Lee Petty, a pioneer of NASCAR (the acronym stands for National Association for Stock Car Auto Racing). On May 12, during a practice session to qualify for the following day's Busch 200 in Loudon, the youngest Petty's car crashed head-on into a wall while traveling at 130 miles per hour. He was airlifted to Concord Hospital, where he was pronounced dead of head trauma.
A native of Indianapolois, Indiana, Kenny Irwin Jr. won Rookie of the Year honors for the NASCAR Winston Cup series in 1998, earning one fifth-place finish and four top-10s while driving the famous No. 28 Texaco Havoline Ford for the Robert Yates Racing team. (Among the celebrated previous drivers of the No. 28 were Ernie Irvan and Davey Allison.) After Irwin racked up three more top-five finishes in 1999, including third place in the Daytona 500, he Irwin left the Yates organization and joined a team owned by Felix Sabates. In a car sponsored by BellSouth, he ran a total of 17 races, still seeking a win.
On July 7, 2000, the 30-year-old Irwin was killed instantly when his car hit the wall on Turn 3 of the New Hampshire International Speedway; it flipped over and landed on its roof before coming to a halt. As in the case of Petty's crash, speculation as to the cause focused on a stuck accelerator, which would have prevented both drivers from slowing enough to make the turn. As The Chicago Tribune reported, some drivers pointed out that the track was one of the slickest on the NASCAR circuit, with no margin for error on the tight turns. On the other hand, Petty's grandfather, the NASCAR icon Richard Petty, dismissed those charges, attributing the two similar crashes to "circumstances beyond human control…circumstances with the way you stop that thing so quick. Your body just can't stand it."

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Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on August 08, 2013, 04:57:52 am
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On this day, August 8th 1907
The Rolls-Royce Silver Ghost passed its 15,000-mile official trial with flying colors, showing off its seven-liter engine and four-speed overdrive gearbox. It was this trial that made "the Ghost's" reputation and gave the Rolls-Royce the name "The Best Car in the World." A total of 6,173 Silver Ghosts were produced.

August 8th 1954
Nigel Mansell, the Formula-1 racer, was born on this day in Birmingham, West Midlands, England. Mansell won 29 Grand Prix titles between 1980 and 1992. He retired from Formula-1 racing in 1992 to join the Haas-Newman Indy car racing team in the U.S., becoming an Indy car champion within his first year. He later returned to Formula-1 racing.

August 8th 1986
The last episode of the TV show Knight Rider aired on this day. The program featured David Hasselhoff as private eye Michael Knight, but the real star of the show was "KITT," his talking car. KITT was a modified Pontiac Firebird, complete with artificial intelligence and glowing red lights. KITT assisted Michael on his crime-fighting missions, communicating with him through a remote device Michael wore on his wrist.

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August 8th 1991
James B. Irwin, pilot of the Lunar Roving Vehicle, died on this day. Irwin visited the surface of the moon during the Apollo 15 mission in 1971, during which he spent almost three days on the moon's surface investigating the Hadley-Apennine site, 462 miles north of the lunar equator. The Lunar Rover was a specially designed vehicle used to transport Irwin and David Scott around the moon's surface while collecting rocks and core samples. Irwin died at the age of 61.

August 8th 2004
On July 8, 2004, Suzuki Motor Corporation and Consumers Union, publisher of Consumer Reports magazine, agree to a settlement in an eight-year-long lawsuit in which the automaker accused Consumer Reports of damaging its reputation with claims that its Samurai sport utility vehicle (SUV) was prone to rolling over.
In July 1988, a Consumer Reports product review judged the Samurai as unacceptable because of its propensity to tip during sharp turns. (The magazine based this conclusion on the car's performance in avoidance-maneuver tests.) Suzuki stopped making the Samurai in 1995. The following year, the company filed the lawsuit, accusing Consumer Union of rigging the test and perpetrating consumer fraud. The automaker sought $60 million in compensation and unspecified punitive damages. Suzuki's case included testimony from a former Consumers Union employee who served for 10 years as a technician in the company's auto testing group, as well as videotapes and records of automobile testing that date back to 1988. The videos showed, among other things, that the testing personnel had driven the Samurai through the course no fewer than 46 times before getting it to tip up on two wheels on the 47th, a result that was met by laughing and cheering from the group.
A federal judge dismissed Suzuki's lawsuit without a trial, but in September 2002 an appeals court ruled that a jury should hear the case. In April 2000, Consumers Union had won a jury trial over a lawsuit filed by Isuzu Motor, which claimed that Consumer Reports magazine had rigged a test involving its Trooper SUV in order to make the vehicle tip over. In November 2003, U.S. Supreme Court rejected a Consumers Union appeal in the Suzuki case, and the case was headed for a jury trial in California before the settlement was reached the next July.
No money changed hands in the agreement. Though Consumers Union did not issue an apology--"We stand fully behind our testing and rating of the Samurai," David Pittle, vice president for technical policy at Consumers Union, said--it made a "clarification," stating that the magazine's statement that the Samurai "easily" rolls over during turns may have been "misconstrued or misunderstood." The agreement also stated that Consumers Reports "never intended to imply that the Samurai easily rolls over in routine driving conditions" and had spoken positively of other Suzuki models such as the Sidekick and the Vitara/XL-7. For its part, Suzuki claimed the settlement as a win for its side: Company officials said it would allow them to concentrate on growing Suzuki's business in the United States, including building national sales to 200,000 vehicles by 2007, compared with 58,438 in 2003.

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August 8th 2013,
'Five Easy Pieces,' 'Easy Rider' actress Karen Black dies at 74
Karen Black, a versatile actress whose name became virtually synonymous with films that reflected and helped define America in the late 1960s and early 1970s, including “Five Easy Pieces,” died Thursday in Los Angeles. She was 74.
Family spokesman Elliot Mintz confirmed her death.
Diagnosed with ampullary cancer in 2010, Black had sought help from the public earlier this year to cover the cost of her
medical treatment. An appeal by her husband, Stephen Eckelberry, on a crowd-sourcing website raised more than $60,000.
Although she had a small part in Dennis Hopper’s groundbreaking 1969 counterculture movie, “Easy Rider,” Black was best known for her performance in “Five Easy Pieces,” the 1970 film in which she plays the clingy, ultimately abandoned girlfriend of Jack Nicholson’s character, a brooding dropout from an upper-class life who becomes an oilfield roughneck.

She also had roles in the 1974 version of “The Great Gatsby,” “The Day of the Locust” in 1975 and two Robert Altman films, “Nashville” and “Come Back to the Five and Dime, Jimmy Dean, Jimmy Dean.”
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on August 09, 2013, 07:32:20 pm
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On this day, August 9th 1898
Rudolf Diesel, of Berlin, Germany, received a U.S. patent for an "Internal Combustion Engine" ("improvements in apparatus for regulating the fuel supply in slow-combustion motors and, in particular to internal combustion engines").
PICTURED: Rudolf Diesel

August 9th 1901
The first rally race in Ireland, sponsored by the Irish Automobile Club, was held on this day as 12 automobiles attempted an organized journey from Dublin to Waterford. A rally takes place over a specified public route with a driver and navigator straining to maintain a breakneck pace from checkpoint to checkpoint. The course is generally kept secret until the race begins. Rally racing became extremely popular after World War II, and weekend rallies became common worldwide. The longest rally took place in 1977, spreading over 19,239 miles from London to Sydney.

August 9th 1918
Following the lead of countries all over the world, the U. S. government ordered automobile production to halt by January 1, 1919, and convert to military production. Factories instead manufactured shells, and the engineering lessons of motor racing produced light, powerful engines for planes. Manufacturers turned out staff cars and ambulances by the hundreds. In fact, World War I has often been described as the war of the machines.

August 9th 1962
The Chrysler Corporation was the forst Auto Company to set an industry milestone by announcing for 1963 a five-year, 50,000-mile warranty covering all of its cars and trucks.


August 9th 2006
The Fiat 500 Club Italia, an organization formed in appreciation of the iconic 500--"Cinquecento" in Italian--car produced by the automaker Fiat (Fabbrica Italiana Automobili Torino), holds what the Guinness Book of World Records will call the world's largest parade of Fiat cars on July 9, 2006, between Villanova d'Albenga and Garlenda, Italy.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on August 10, 2013, 05:19:37 am
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On this day, August 10th 1907
Stretching nearly 10,000 miles, this Peking-to-Paris race lasted for 62 days, and was won by the team of Prince Scipione Borghese and Ettore Guizzardi of Italy. Driving like a madman across Asia and Europe, Prince encountered brush fire, got stuck in a swamp, numerous crash and was pulled over by a policeman in Belgium. The policeman refused to believe that the prince was racing, rather than merely speeding.
There were no rules in the race, except that the first car to reach Paris would win the prize of a magnum of Mumm Champagne. The race went without any assistance through country where there were no roads or road-maps. For the race, camels carrying fuel left Peking and set up at stations along the route to give fuel to the racers. The race followed a telegraph route so that the race was well covered in newspapers at the time. Each car had one journalist as a passenger, with the journalists sending stories from the telegraph stations regularly through the race.
PICTURED: Peking to Paris & Prince Borghese

August 10th 1897
C. Harrington Moore and Frederick R. Simms founded Automobile Club of Great Britain and Ireland, later known as the Royal Automobile Club. Its the oldest auto club.

August 10th 1986
The Hungarian Grand Prix, the first such race held behind the Iron Curtain, was won by Nelson Piquet on this day driving the Williams-Honda. Held at the twisty Hungaroring near Budapest, the race has been a mainstay of the racing calendar. Run in the heat of a central European summer, it also holds the distinction of being the only current Grand Prix venue that had never seen a wet race up until the 2006 Hungarian Grand Prix. The first Grand Prix saw 200,000 people spectating even though the tickets were expensive at the time.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on August 11, 2013, 10:16:35 pm
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August 11th 1966
The first Chevy Camaro drove out of the manufacturing plant in Norwood, Ohio. The 1967 Camaro coupe was named just weeks before production. General Manager Elliot Estes, when publicly announcing the name saying, "I went into a closet, shut the door and came out with the name." Camaro is actually French for "comrade, pal, or chum." The Camaro was a hit with the public, sporting a base price of only $2,466 for a six-cylinder engine and three-speed manual transmission.
PICTURED: The Chevrolet Camaro

August 11th 1965
The Ford Bronco, intended to compete against Jeep's CJ-5 and International Harvester's Scout, was introduced on this day, feeding the burgeoning four-wheel-drive market. The first Broncos were very simple, without options such as power steering or automatic transmission. The classic Bronco was manufactured for 12 years, with 18,000 produced in 1966 alone. The Bronco's small size (92 in wheelbase) made it popular for off-roading and some other uses, but impractical for such things as towing. The Bronco was Ford's first compact SUV.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on August 12, 2013, 06:56:17 am
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On this day, August 12, 1988
Director Francis Ford Coppola's critically acclaimed biopic "Tucker: The Man & His Dream" premieres in U.S. theaters, starring Jeff Bridges as the brash Chicago businessman-turned-car-designer Preston Tucker who shook up 1940s-era Detroit with his streamlined, affordable "Car of Tomorrow."
Remembered by some as a visionary and others as a flamboyant but failed opportunist, Preston Tucker was inspired to build cars by his friendship and pre-World War II business partnership with the race car driver and auto designer Harry Miller. In the renewed prosperity following the war, Tucker believed that Americans were ready to take a chance on a new kind of car, and that he, as an independent entrepreneur, was in the position to take risks that the big, established car companies were unwilling to take. He hired a skilled team including designer Alexander S. Tremulis and chief mechanic John Eddie Offuttas and leased an old Dodge aircraft engine plant in Chicago with plans to design and produce his dream cars.
Based on clay mock-ups built to scale, the Tucker team produced a metal prototype, dubbed the "Tin Goose," in June 1947. The following spring, the teardrop-shaped, 150-horsepower rear-engined Tucker "Torpedo" began rolling off the line, accompanied by the memorable advertising slogan "Don't Let a Tucker Pass You By." Among the Torpedo's innovations were a padded dashboard, a pop-out windshield and an innovative center-mounted headlight.
Despite rave reviews in the automotive press, Tucker's company fell under harsh scrutiny from the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), who investigated the automaker for mail fraud and other charges. The investigation caused a flood of negative publicity for the company, while Tucker struggled to keep producing cars with a fraction of his staff. His efforts were in vain; in March 1949 the company fell into receivership and its assets were seized.
Tucker was ultimately acquitted of all charges, but his dream car would never rise again; only 51 were produced after that initial prototype. Forty-seven of those still exist, and a number of them were used in the making of Coppola's movie, which revived interest in the Tucker '48 and the story of the man behind it. At the time of his death in 1956, Preston Tucker was working on plans for a sports car, the Carioca, to be produced in Brazil.
PICTURED: Henry Ford at a baseball game with Preston Tucker


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August 12th 1901
Charles A. Yont and W.B. Felker completed the first automobile trip to the summit of Pikes Peak, Colorado, on this day, driving an 1899 locomobile steamer. Climbing 14,110 feet to the top was quite a feat for the little steamer. Pikes Peak is well known because of its commanding location and easy accessibility. Today, an ascent to the top is made easy by a graded toll road.

August 12, 1908
Henry Ford's first Model T, affectionately known as the "Tin Lizzie," rolled off the assembly line in Detroit, Michigan. The Model T revolutionized the automotive industry by providing an affordable, reliable car for the average American. Prior to the invention of the Model T, most automobiles were viewed as playthings of the rich. Ford was able to keep the price down by retaining control of all raw materials, as well as his use of new mass production methods. When it was first introduced, the "Tin Lizzie" cost only $850 and seated two people. Though the price fluctuated in the years to come, dipping as low as $290 in 1924, few other changes were ever made to the Model T. Electric lights were introduced in 1915, and an electric starter was introduced as an option in 1919. Eventually, the Model T's design stagnancy cost it its competitive edge, and Ford stopped manufacturing the "Tin Lizzie" in 1927.
The Ford Model T car was designed by Childe Harold Wills and two Hungarian immigrants named Joseph A. Galamb and Eugene Farkas. Also, Harry Love, C. J. Smith, Gus Degner and Peter E. Martin were part of the team.

Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on August 13, 2013, 02:56:39 am
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August 13, 1902
The German engineer Felix Wankel, inventor of a rotary engine that will be used in race cars, is born on this day in Lahr, Germany.
Wankel reportedly came up with the basic idea for a new type of internal combustion gasoline engine when he was only 17 years old. In 1924, Wankel set up a small laboratory where he began the research and development of his dream engine, which would be able to attain intake, compression, combustion and exhaust, all while rotating. He brought his knowledge of rotary valves to his work with the German Aeronautical Research Establishment during World War II, and to a leading German motorcycle company, NSU Motorenwerk AG, beginning in 1951. Wankel completed his first design of a rotary-piston engine in 1954, and the first unit was tested in 1957.
In other internal-combustion engines, moving pistons did the work of getting the combustion process started; in the Wankel rotary engine, an orbiting rotor in the shape of a curved equilateral triangle served this purpose. Fewer moving parts created a smoothly performing engine that was lightweight, compact, low-cost and required fewer repairs. After NSU officially announced the completion of the Wankel rotary engine in late 1959, some 100 companies around the world rushed to propose partnerships that would get the engine inside their products. Mazda, the Japanese automaker, signed a formal contract with NSU in July 1961, after receiving approval from the Japanese government.
In an attempt to experiment with the rotary engine and perfect it for use in its vehicles, Mazda formed an RE (Rotary Engine) Research Department in 1963. The Cosmo Sport, which Mazda released in May 1967, was the planet's first dual-rotor rotary engine car. With futuristic styling and superior performance, the Cosmo wowed car enthusiasts worldwide. Mazda began installing rotary engines in its sedans and coupes in 1968, and the vehicles hit the U.S. market in 1971. In the wake of a global oil crisis in 1973-74, Mazda continually worked on improving its rotary engines to improve fuel efficiency, and by the end of that decade its sports cars had become popular in both Europe and the United States In addition to Mazda, a number of other companies licensed the Wankel engine during the 1960s and 1970s, including Daimler-Benz, Alfa Romeo, Rolls Royce, Porsche, General Motors, Suzuki and Toyota.
Meanwhile, Wankel continued his own work with the rotary piston engine, forming his own research establishment in Lindau, Germany, in the mid-1970s. In 1986, he sold the institute for 100 million Deutschmarks (around $41 million) to Daimler Benz, maker of the Mercedes. Wankel filed a new patent as late as 1987; the following year, he died after a long illness.

August 13th 1898
After a visit to the Winton plant with his brother William, James W. Packard purchased a Winton automobile #12. However, the car turned out to be a poor purchase. Dissatisfaction with it would prompt Packard to build his own car and establish the Packard Motor Car Company. Packard Motor Car Company would later be acquired by Studebaker, and lagging sales eventually led to the discontinuation of the Packard in 1958.

August 13, 1907
The first taxicab took to the streets of New York City, marking the beginning of the love-hate relationship between New Yorkers and their cabbies. Motorized taxicabs had actually begun appearing on the streets of Europe in the late 1890s, and their development closely mirrors that of the automobile. The taxi is named after the taximeter, a device that automatically records the distance traveled or time consumed and used to calculate the fare. The term cab originated from the cabriolet, a one-horse carriage let out for hire.

August 13, 1955
Racer Hideo Fukuyama was born on this day in Owase, Japan. A NASCAR racer, he has contributed to the growing popularity of racing in Japan.

Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on August 14, 2013, 09:04:39 am
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On this day, August 14th 1912
As part of a yearlong celebration of its 100th anniversary, a redesigned version of the Michelin Man, Bibendium, the corporate symbol of one of the world's largest tire manufacturers, makes an appearance at the Monterey Historic Automobile Races in Monterey, California, beginning on this day in 1998.
The history of Michelin dates back to 1889, when two brothers named Edouard and Andre Michelin took over a struggling rubber factory in the French industrial city of Clermont-Ferrand. The Michelins later became France's leading producer of pneumatic (inflatable) bicycle tires, and in June 1895 they entered the first car to be equipped with pneumatic tires in the historic Paris-Bordeaux-Paris auto race.
As the story goes, their now-iconic corporate symbol originated with Edouard Michelin's observation that a stack of tires resembled a human figure. A cartoonist named Maurice Rossillon, who signed his work O'Galop, created a series of sketches based on this idea. One depicted a man made of tires raising a glass of champagne and declaring "Nunc est bibendum" ("Now is the time to drink"). The figure's white color mirrored the pale hue of rubber tires at the time, before manufacturers began using carbon black as a preservative around 1912. The symbol subsequently became known as Bibendum (sometimes Bibidendum or Mr. Bib), or the Michelin Man.
The original poster, produced from 1898 to 1914, was followed by a variety of other posters and signs featuring Bibendum smoking a cigar, wearing gladiator garb, riding a bicycle and carrying a load of tires, among other activities. Ubiquitous in France, the logo's fame spread along with the popularity and success of Michelin tires around the world. In 1923, the Michelin Man was redesigned, losing some of his rings to reflect the introduction of wider, low-pressure tires. During the 1980s, he grew slimmer to conform to the healthy-living trend, a process that continued with the 1998 redesign. By that time, Bibendum was one of the oldest and most recognized advertising symbols in the world.
On January 1, 1998, the Michelin Man kicked off his centennial celebration by appearing on his own birthday float at the Tournament of Roses Parade in Pasadena, California. The Monterey Historic Automobile Races, held at the Laguna Seca Raceway in Monterey that August 14-16, welcomed the Michelin Man as part of its own 25th anniversary celebration. Two years later, an international jury of 22 designers, advertising executives and branding experts voted Bibendum the winner of a competition co-sponsored by The Financial Times, proclaiming him the "greatest logo in history."
PICTURED: The original 1898 poster featuring Bibendum

August 14th 1893
The world's first automobile license plates were issued in Paris, France. However, plates were not issued in the United States for a few more years, when they were finally instituted as a safety measure. The city of Boston was the first to require its motorists to hold a license and register their vehicle--the owner would make his own plate with the corresponding registration numbers. The rest of Massachusetts soon followed the trend and began issuing registration plates made of iron and covered with a porcelain enamel.

August 14th 1912
The first double-decker bus appeared on the streets of New York, travelling up and down Broadway. The double-decker originated in London as a two-story horse-drawn omnibus. The vehicles eventually added roof seating. Two-story buses can still be seen in the Big Apple, usually carrying a busload of tourists.

August 14th 1935
Mrs. M.S. Morrow of Whitestone, New York, had the last U.S.-built Rolls-Royce Phantom 1 delivered to her home. Manufactured at the Rolls-Royce plant in Springfield, Massachusetts, the U.S.-built Phantom I made its debut one year after its British counterpart. It featured elegant proportions and well-engineered coachwork, suitable for the successor of the Silver Ghost--the model that earned Rolls-Royce a reputation as "the best car in the world." A total of 1,241 Phantoms were produced.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on August 15, 2013, 09:35:25 am
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August 15th 1899
Henry Ford resigned as chief engineer at the main Detroit Edison Company plant in order to concentrate on automobile production. On call at all times, Ford had no regular hours and could experiment in his free time. His tinkering was fruitful, for he completed his first horseless carriage by 1896. After turning to automobiles full time, he would revolutionize the automotive industry with the Model T, also known as the "Tin Lizzie."
PICTURED: The Ford Model T

August 15th 1945
World War II gasoline rationing in America ended on this day. Rationing was just one of the special measures taken in the U.S. during wartime. Civilian auto production virtually ceased after the attack on Pearl Harbor, as the U.S. automotive industry turned to war production. Automotive firms made almost $29 billion worth of military materials between 1940 and 1945, including jeeps, trucks, machine guns, carbines, tanks, helmets, and aerial bombs. After the war, rationing ended and the auto industry boomed.

August 15th 1947
On 3 June 1947, Viscount Louis Mountbatten, the last British Governor-General of India, announced the partitioning of the British Indian Empire into a secular India and a Muslim Pakistan. At midnight, on 15 August 1947, India became an independent nation. This is largest mass mobilization of people in India.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on August 16, 2013, 10:25:42 pm
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August 16th 1985
The last episode of the television show Dukes of Hazzard aired on this day, concluding a successful five-year run. Aside from Bo (John Schneider), Luke (Tom Wopat), and Daisy (Catherine Bach), the star of the show was General Lee, a 1969 Dodge Charger. The specially customized car became a favorite of fans as a large portion of each show was devoted to car chases and jumps. Several changes were made to the car, including custom orange paint, new manifolds, a special exhaust system, and a grill guard. Also, the stock horn was replaced by a special horn that played the first 12 notes of "Dixie."
On August 5, 2005, the General Lee made its big-screen debut in the release of the action comedy The Dukes of Hazard. The "Duke Boys," Bo (Seann William Scott) and Luke (Johnny Knoxville) Duke, elude authorities in the famed car while trying to help Daisy (Jessica Simpson) and moonshine running Uncle Jesse (Willie Nelson) save the family farm from being destroyed by Hazzard County's corrupt commissioner Boss Hogg (Burt Reynolds).

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August 16th 1984
After close to 30 hours of deliberation, a jury of six men and six women unanimously acquits the former automaker John Z. DeLorean of eight counts of drug trafficking in Los Angeles, California.
A Detroit native and the son of an autoworker, DeLorean began working for the Packard Motor Company as an engineer in 1952. He rose quickly at Packard and later at General Motors (GM), where he moved in 1956. At GM, he managed both the Pontiac and Chevrolet divisions before becoming a vice president in 1972. DeLorean's flashy style and self-promotional ability distinguished him in the staid culture of the auto industry, while his ambition and appetite for innovation seemed never to be satisfied: He claimed to hold more than 200 patents and was credited with such developments as the lane-change turn signal, overhead cam-engine and racing stripes.
In 1975, DeLorean left GM to found the DeLorean Motor Company and follow his dream of building a high-performance and futuristic but still economical sports car. With funds from the British government, DeLorean opened his car plant near Belfast in Northern Ireland in 1978 to manufacture his eponymous dream car: Officially the DMC-12 but often called simply the DeLorean, it had an angular stainless-steel body, a rear-mounted engine and distinctive "gull-wing" doors that opened upward. After skyrocketing production costs caused the DMC-12's price tag to top $25,000 (at a time when the average car cost just $10,000) sales were insufficient to keep the company afloat. Following an investigation into suspected financial irregularities, the British government announced the closing of the DeLorean Motor Company on October 19, 1982. That same day, John DeLorean was arrested and charged with conspiring to obtain and distribute $24 million worth of cocaine.
The prosecution's seemingly airtight case centered on a videotaped conversation about the drug deal between DeLorean and undercover FBI agents. If convicted, DeLorean faced up to 60 years in prison. DeLorean's defense team argued that he had been entrapped, or lured into a situation that made it look like he had committed a crime. On August 6, 1984, the jury issued its surprising acquittal verdict. Over the next 15 years, DeLorean saw his dream car shoot to Hollywood stardom (in the "Back to the Future" film trilogy) even as he battled nearly 40 legal cases relating to his failed auto company. He declared bankruptcy in 1999 and died in 2005, at the age of 80.

August 16th 1937
Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts, became the first school to institute graduate study courses in traffic engineering and administration.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on August 17, 2013, 06:41:26 am
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On this day, August 17th 1915
Charles F. Kettering, co-founder of Dayton Engineering Laboratories Company (DELCO) in Dayton, Ohio, is issued U.S. Patent No. 1,150,523 for his "engine-starting device"--the first electric ignition device for automobiles
In the early years of the automobile, drivers used iron hand cranks to start the internal combustion process that powered the engines on their cars. In addition to requiring great hand and arm strength, this system was not without certain risks: If the driver forgot to turn his ignition off before turning the crank, the car could backfire or roll forward, as at the time most vehicles had no brakes. Clearly a better system was needed, and in 1911 Cadillac head Henry M. Leland gave Charles Kettering the task of developing one.
Before founding DELCO with his partner Edward Deeds in 1909, Kettering had worked at the National Cash Register Company, where he helped develop the first electric cash register. He drew on this experience when approaching his work with automobiles. Just as the touch of a button had started a motor that opened the drawer of the cash register, Kettering would eventually use a key to turn on his self-starting motor. The self-starter was introduced in the 1912 Cadillac, patented by Kettering in 1915, and by the 1920s would come standard on nearly every new automobile. By making cars easier and safer to operate, especially for women, the self-starting engine caused a huge jump in sales, and helped foster a fast-growing automobile culture in America.
United Motors Corporation (later General Motors) bought DELCO in 1916, and Kettering worked as vice president and director of research at GM from 1920 to 1947. Other important auto-related innovations developed during Kettering's tenure were quick-drying automotive paint, spark plugs, leaded gasoline, shock absorbers, the automatic transmission, four-wheel brakes, the diesel engine and safety glass. He helped develop the refrigerant Freon, used in refrigerators and air conditioners, and the Kettering home in Dayton was the first in the country to be air-conditioned. In the realm of medicine, Kettering created a treatment for venereal disease and an incubator for premature infants, and in 1945 he and longtime General Motors head Alfred P. Sloan established the Sloan-Kettering Institute for Cancer Research in New York City. Kettering died in 1958.

August 17th 1890
Ralph R. Teetor, inventor of the cruise control, was born in Hagerstown, Indiana. A mechanical engineer with a degree from the University of Pennsylvania, Teetor began working at the Light Inspection Car Company. This family business eventually evolved into the Perfect Circle Company, of which Teetor became president. Teetor had a knack for invention and continued to work on new ideas after his retirement. His accomplishments are even more remarkable because he was blinded at the age of six, but never let his handicap keep him from his dream of becoming an inventor.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on August 18, 2013, 05:22:02 am
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August 18th 1940
Walter Percy Chrysler, the founder of the American automotive corporation that bears his name, dies on this day in 1940 at his estate in Great Neck, New York, after suffering a cerebral hemorrhage. He was 65 years old.
Born in 1875 in Kansas, Chrysler was the son of a locomotive engineer; he began working himself when he was 17, earning seven cents an hour as an apprentice in a railroad machine shop. He worked his way up quickly, becoming a plant manager for the American Locomotive Company by the time he was 33 years old. In the early years of the automobile, Chrysler became fascinated: At a 1905 automobile show in Chicago, he borrowed $5,000 to purchase his own car, taking it apart and putting it back together again before taking a single ride. In 1911, Chrysler accepted a job as a manager at the Buick Motor Company at half his former salary. Within five years, he rose to become the company's president, and to make Buick into the strongest unit of William C. Durant's General Motors (GM).
Durant and Chrysler clashed over policy, however, and Chrysler left GM in 1920 to work with the Willys-Overland Company and with Maxwell Motors Company. A car designed by Chrysler and featuring a high-compression engine sold $50 million worth in its first year replaced the existing Maxwell car. In 1925, he emerged as president of the Chrysler Corporation, consisting of the former Maxwell and Chalmers car companies. After acquiring Dodge in 1928 and introducing the Plymouth that same year, the Chrysler Corporation would go on to become one of the Big Three of American automakers, alongside Ford and GM.
Aside from automobiles, Chrysler was chiefly known for financing the 77-story Art Deco skyscraper in midtown Manhattan (at the corner of Lexington Avenue and 42nd Street) that bears his name. To complete the distinctive ornamentation around the spire of the building, its architects used elements from Chrysler's automobiles, including radiator caps, hubcaps and stainless steel that evoked the chrome shine on a car. When it was completed in 1930, the Chrysler building was the tallest building in the world and the first manmade structure to top 1,000 feet. Surpassed by the Empire State Building a year later, the building remains one of New York City's most distinctive skyscrapers.
PICTURED: One of the chrome features on the Chrysler building in Manhattan

August 18th 1905
Newell S. Wright, an attorney, filed to register the Cadillac crest as a trademark. The insignia has adorned Cadillac's luxury car for almost a century.

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August 18th 1937
The Toyota Motor Company, Ltd., began as a division of the Toyota Automatic Loom Works, was established on this day. The company underwent huge expansion in the 1960s and 1970s, exporting its smaller, more fuel-efficient cars to countless foreign markets. During this period, Toyota also acquired Hino Motors, Ltd., Nippondenso Company, Ltd., and Daihitsu Motor Company Ltd. Toyota has been Japan's largest automobile manufacturer for several decades.
PICTURED: A replica 1936 Model AA. Japan
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Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on August 19, 2013, 05:42:08 am
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On this day, August 19th 1909
In front of some 12,000 spectators, automotive engineer Louis Schwitzer wins the two-lap, five-mile inaugural race at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway in Indianapolis, Indiana.
Conceived by local businessmen as a testing facility for Indiana's growing automobile industry, the Indianapolis Motor Speedway would later become famous as the home to the now world-famous Indianapolis 500 race, which was first held in 1911. In that inaugural race, Schwitzer (then the chief engineer at Stoddard-Dayton) drove a stripped-down Stoddard Dayton touring car with a four-cylinder engine. He achieved an average speed of 57.4 mph on the new track, which was then covered in macadam, or crushed pieces of rock layered and bound by tar. Later, the speedway would be covered with 3.2 million paving bricks, which earned it its enduring nickname, "The Brickyard."
Born in Silesia in northwestern Austria in 1881, Schwitzer earned advanced degrees in electrical and mechanical engineering before immigrating to America around the turn of the century. His first job in the auto industry was with Pierce Arrow, as an engineer, working on one of the very first six-cylinder engines; he then began working for Canada Cycle and Motor Company, designing the Russell motor car. There, he met the prosperous automaker Howard Marmon (of the Marmon Motor Car Company), and would later earn lasting fame as the designer of the famous "Marmon Yellow Jacket" engine, which powered the vehicle of Ray Harroun, winner of the first Indianapolis 500 in 1911.
After leaving racing, Schwitzer remained active in the sport's development, joining the Indianapolis Motor Speedway Technical Committee in 1912 (he was its chairman from 1919 through 1945). He served in the United States Army Motor Transport Corps during World War I, then returned to Indianapolis to start his own business, which later became Schwitzer-Cummins. After developing improved automotive cooling systems and water pumps, Schwitzer began producing superchargers for gasoline and diesel engines, which helped both truck and boat engines produce increased horsepower. He then moved on to so-called "turbochargers," the first of which was introduced on a Cummins diesel-powered racing car which won the pole position for the 1952 Indianapolis 500.
In 1965, Schwitzer suffered a stroke while riding a horse on his farm. He was paralyzed, and for a time lost his ability to speak English, reverting to Hungarian. He died in 1967.
To honor Schwitzer's legacy, the Society of Professional Engineers now presents an individual or group involved with the Indianapolis 500 with the annual Louis Schwitzer Award for Engineering Excellence.
PICTURED: Louis Schwitzer (center) led both laps, and won by a 150-foot margin

August 19th 1927
Henry and Edsel Ford drove the fifteen millionth Model T off the assembly line at the Highland Park plant in Michigan, officially ending Model T production. Production in England ended on August 19; in Ireland on December 31. After revolutionizing the automobile market, sales of the Model T had started to falter due to its failure to keep up with the competition. Total world Model T production: 15,458,781.

August 19th 1958
The production of the elegant Packard line came to a halt. Studebaker-Packard attributed the decision to lagging luxury car sales, but many Packard fans were disgruntled by the decision, which came shortly after Packard's merge with Studebaker. Many wondered why Packard, with its reputation for high-quality cars and knowledgeable management would join with the debt-ridden Studebaker Company. Studebaker management assumed the company reins after the merger, not Packard.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on August 20, 2013, 12:08:19 pm

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On this day, August 20th 2004
83 tow trucks roll through the streets of Wenatchee, Washington, in an event arranged by the Washington Tow Truck Association (WTTA). "The Guinness Book of World Records" dubbed it the world's largest parade of tow trucks.
According to the International Towing and Recovery Hall of Fame and Museum in Chattanooga, Tennessee, the first tow truck was the invention of a Chattanooga native named Ernest Holmes, who helped his friend retrieve his Model T Ford after the car slid into a creek. Holmes had previously assembled a system consisting of three poles, a pulley and a chain, all connected to the frame of a 1913 Cadillac. Holmes soon patented his invention, and began manufacturing the equipment to sell to garages and other interested customers out of a small shop on Chattanooga's Market Street. The Holmes brand went on to earn an international reputation for quality in the towing industry.
The WTTA organized the August 2004 tow-truck parade as part of its annual Tow Show & Road-E-O event. Wenatchee's tow-truck world record came under assault from at least two quarters in 2008. In Hampton Beach, New Hampshire, that May 18, more than 250 tow trucks took part in a single-file parade organized by the New Hampshire Towing Association (NHTA). According to an article in The Hampton Union newspaper, all kinds of trucks--"Flatbeds, wheel-hook tow trucks, massive, 72-ton big-rig wreckers"--participated in the parade, which was followed by a driving skills competition and a tow-truck "beauty" contest. Rene Fortin, president of the NHTA, said that his organization had unofficially broken Wenatchee's record in 2005 with a parade of 235 trucks, but as the parade didn't fit Guinness' long list of requirements, it hadn't been accepted. World records aside, Fortin told The Hampton Union, the central goal of the parade was to revamp the image of the towing industry: "People don't often like towers, so this is our chance to show our good side."
On September 20, 2008, the Metropolitan New York Towing Association threw its own hat into the ring. Two hundred and ninety-two tow trucks, including flatbeds, wreckers and 50-ton rotators, left Shea Stadium in Queens (previously the home of the New York Mets, the baseball park has since been demolished to make way for the Mets' new Citi Field) and traveled along the Van Wyck Expressway and the Belt Parkway before ending up at an abandoned airport tarmac at Floyd Bennett Field in Brooklyn. There, the trucks parked in a formation that spelled out the words "New York."

August 20th 1946
World War II civilian truck restrictions were lifted in the U.S. Truck restrictions were only the beginning of special regulations during the war. Civilian auto production virtually ceased after the attack on Pearl Harbor as the U.S. automotive industry turned to war production, and gas rationing began in 1942.

August 20th 1991
The Mazda Motor Corporation of Japan announced that it planned to enter the luxury car market in 1994 with the Amati. Several other high-end brands from Japan had already been introduced: Lexus, Infiniti, and Acura. But the plan never took off.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on August 21, 2013, 11:13:05 am
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August 21st 1909
Barney Oldfield broke five world records on this day, pushing his Benz to new speeds on the Indianapolis Motor Speedway. However, the record-breaking feat was marred by tragedy. Three other drivers died on the same track as 20,000 spectators watched in disbelief, and the three-day meet was ended early.
PICTURED: Barney Oldfield in his 1907 CHRISTIE. 20 Liter V4

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August 21st 1897
Ransom Eli Olds of Lansing, Michigan, founds Olds Motors Works--which will later become Oldsmobile--on August 21, 1897.
Born in Geneva, Ohio, in 1864, Olds went to work for his family's machine-repair and engine-building business in 1883. In 1896, Olds completed his first gasoline-powered vehicle, and the following year he founded Olds Motor Works with financial backing from Samuel L. Smith, who had made his fortune in lumber. After the company moved from Lansing to Detroit in 1900, a fire destroyed all of its cars except its small, one-cylinder curved-dash model. Light, reliable and relatively powerful, the curved-dash Oldsmobile (as Olds had renamed his company) became a commercial sensation after appearing at the New York Auto Show in 1901. Olds returned to Lansing in 1902 and began large-scale production of the car.
The curved-dash Oldsmobile was the first American car to be produced using the progressive assembly-line system, and the first to become a commercial success. Olds soon split with Smith and his board of directors over the future direction of the company, however: Olds wanted to continue the focus on smaller cars, while the others favored the production of larger, more expensive automobiles. In 1904, Olds left to found the Reo Motor Car Company (for his initials, R.E.O.). After his departure, Oldsmobile struggled, and in 1908 it was swallowed up by the new General Motors (GM) conglomerate.
By the 1920s, Oldsmobile's six- and eight-cylinder models sat solidly in the middle of GM's lineup--less expensive than Buick or Cadillac, but still comfortably ahead of Chevrolet. Oldsmobile survived the Great Depression years and earned a reputation as GM's "experimental" division, introducing the so-called "safety automatic transmission" in 1938, a precursor to 1940's "Hydra-Matic," which was the first successful fully automatic transmission. The 135-horsepower "Rocket" engine, introduced in the new 88 model in 1949, made Oldsmobile one of the world's top-performing cars. In 1961, with the release of the upscale compact F-85 (powered by a V-8 engine), Oldsmobile launched its Cutlass, which would become one of the industry's longest-running and most successful names. The Cutlass Supreme would reign as the best-selling American car for much of the 1970s and early 1980s.
In the 1980s, however, Oldsmobile sales declined, and in 1992 a story in The Washington Post--denied by both Oldsmobile and GM--claimed that GM had seriously considered killing the brand. In August 1997, Oldsmobile celebrated the 100th anniversary of its founding. Despite efforts to compete with foreign imports with smaller, more fuel-efficient models like the Aurora, Intrigue, Alero and Bravada, Oldsmobile continued to struggle, and in 2004 GM finally discontinued the brand. At the time of its demise, Oldsmobile was America's oldest continuously operating automaker.
PICTURED: the Liberty engine with distinctive 45 degree angles between the banks used in WW1 designed by Ransom Olds

August 21st 1903
America's first transcontinental auto race, stretching from New York City to San Francisco, was completed on this day. The race was finished by Tom Fetch and M.C. Karrup in two Model F Packards, travelling an average of 80 miles per day for 51 days. They arrived covered in mud and exhausted. Along the way, the two travelers and their motorcars generated quite a bit of interest as they drove through many rural areas where automobiles were a rare sight. In one instance, a couple of Nebraska farmers, suspicious of the vehicles, threatened Fetch and Karrup with shotguns.

August 21st 1947
Ettore Bugatti, the French car manufacturer, died on this day. Born on September 15, 1881, in Brescia, Italy, Bugatti specialized in racing and luxury automobiles, and his factory in Alsace turned out some of the most expensive cars ever produced. The best-known Bugatti car was Type 41, known as the "Golden Bugatti" or "La Royale." It was produced in the 1920s, meticulously constructed and inordinately expensive--only a few were ever built. After Bugatti's death, the firm failed to survive, at least in part because Ettore's eldest son and chosen successor died before Bugatti himself.

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Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on August 22, 2013, 08:44:36 am
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On this day, August 22nd 1902
President Theodore Roosevelt became the first U.S. chief executive to ride in an automobile. His first drive took place in Hartford, Connecticut, adding yet another first to Roosevelt's presidential accomplishments. He was also the first president to entertain an African-American in the White House. With a reputation for aggressiveness, righteousness, and pride, Roosevelt was not the kind of man to fear uncharted waters; he also wrote almost 40 books, cleared the building of the Panama Canal, and won a Nobel Peace Prize for his contributions toward the resolution of the Russo-Japanese War.

August 22nd 1647
Denis Papin, inventor of the piston steam engine (Steam digester), was born in Blois, France. This British physicist, who also invented the pressure cooker, got the first seedlings of an idea when he noticed the enclosed steam in the cooker raising the lid. Why couldn't one use steam to drive a piston? Though he never actually constructed an engine, nor had a practical design, his sketches were improved on by others and led to the development of the steam engine.

August 22nd 1901
The Cadillac Company, named after eighteenth century French explorer Antoine de la Mothe Cadillac, founder of the city of Detroit, was established on this day. Henry Leland, a former mechanic and precision machinist, founded the company that would come to be known as the maker of America's luxury car. The Cadillac reached its height of popularity during the 1950s. The Cadillac Debutante, which debuted at the Waldorf-Astoria, was based on the play The Solid Gold Cadillac. Cadillac sales decreased during the 1970s as the American car market experienced an influx of smaller imports, but luxury car sales, Cadillac included, have rebounded in recent years.

August 22nd 1962
President Charles De Gaulle of France survives one of several assassination attempts against him thanks to the superior performance of the presidential automobile: The sleek, aerodynamic Citroen DS 19, known as "La Deesse" (The Goddess).
When the Citroen DS made its sensational debut at the 1955 Paris Motor Show, its streamlined, understated form stood out among the tail-finned and chrome-covered cars popular in that era. A far cry from Citroen's famous 2CV (dubbed the "ugly duckling"), the DS had a 1.9-liter engine and power-assisted gearshift, clutch, steering and brake systems. Its crowning aspect, however, was a hydropneumatic suspension system that Citroen would become known for, which automatically adjusted the height of the car to keep it level and enable the driver to maintain control more easily. Citroen took 12,000 orders for the DS by the end of that first day, and it soon became known as the preferred mode of transportation among France's wealthy and most powerful citizens.
In August 1962, a group called the OAS (Secret Army Organization in English) plotted an assassination attempt on President De Gaulle, who they believed had betrayed France by giving up Algeria (in northern Africa) to Algerian nationalists. Near dusk on August 22, 1962, De Gaulle and his wife were riding from the Elysee Palace to Orly Airport. As his black Citroen DS sped along the Avenue de la Liberation in Paris at 70 miles per hour, 12 OAS gunmen opened fire on the car. A hail of 140 bullets, most of them coming from behind, killed two of the president's motorcycle bodyguards, shattered the car's rear window and punctured all four of its tires. Though the Citroen went into a front-wheel skid, De Gaulle's chauffeur was able to accelerate out of the skid and drive to safety, all thanks to the car's superior suspension system. De Gaulle and his wife kept their heads down and came out unharmed.
Frederick Forsyth dramatized the events of that August in his best-selling novel "The Day of the Jackal," later made into a film. In 1969, De Gaulle--knowing that he owed his life to that Citroen--attempted to prevent the outright sale of France's premier auto manufacturer (owned by the Michelin family of tire fame) to the Italian automaker Fiat by limiting the stake Fiat could buy to 15 percent. In 1975, to avert potential bankruptcy, the French government funded Citroen's sale to a group that included its French rival, Peugeot; the result was PSA Peugeot Citroen SA, formed in 1976.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on August 23, 2013, 08:34:23 pm
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On this day, August 23rd 1922
A 23-litre car named "Chitty Chitty Bang Bang" won the first Southsea Speed Carnival in 1922, driven by Count Louis Zborowski at 73.1mph. It is to be noted that the name "Chitty Chitty Bang Bang" reappeared much later in Ian Fleming's book about a magical car, and again in the 1968 movie of the same name starring Dick Van Dyke.

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August 23rd 1904
Harold D. Weed of Canastota, New York, is issued U.S. Patent No. 768,495 for his "Grip-Tread for Pneumatic Tires," a non-skid tire chain to be used on automobiles in order to increase traction on roads slick with mud, snow or ice.
At the time, Weed worked for the Marvin and Casler Company, a Canastota machine shop that made a range of products including automobile engines, name plate machines, automatic palm readers and motion picture equipment. He reportedly drew inspiration for his tire chain from the habit of some local motorists who wrapped rope around their tires to increase traction on muddy country roads. In his patent, Weed said that his invention aimed to "provide a flexible and collapsible grip or tread composed entirely of chains linked together and applied to the sides and periphery of the tire and held in place solely by the inflation of the tire, and which is reversible." The tire chain was assembled around a tire when it was partially deflated; after hooks on either end of the chain were fastened, the tire was then reinflated. Weed's tire chains were soon found to work just as well on snow and ice as on mud.
In 1908, in a promotional effort, representatives of the Weed Chain Tire Grip Company challenged the master magician Harry Houdini to escape from a prison created by their product. According to "The Secret Life of Houdini," by William Kalush and Larry Sloman, Houdini was enmeshed in a series of looped, locked tire chains, then chained into two steel-rimmed automobile tires. At one point during the escape, the chains had to be moved lower, as Houdini was turning blue from one of them binding his throat; he was then able to release himself. Houdini performed this famous stunt during a weeklong engagement at Hammerstein's Theatre in New York.
Harry Weed eventually sold his tire chain patents to the American Chain and Cable Company, the successor to the Weed Chain Tire Grip Co. After serving as a lieutenant colonel in the U.S. Army during World War I, he held patents for devices related to the tire chain and was honored by the Army Ordnance Committee for his work in designing bomb-release mechanisms and machine gun synchronizing devices for use in aircraft. He died in Palm Beach, Florida, in 1961, at the age of 89.

August 23rd 1913
Automobiles were legally allowed to enter Yosemite National Park, California, for the first time; marked huge change in national park system.

August 23rd 1967
Georges Berger, a Belgian racing driver was killed racing a Porsche 911 in the 1967 Marathon de la Route at Nürburgring.
He raced a Gordini Type 15/16 in his two World Championship Formula One Grands Prix.

August 23rd 1987
Didier Pironi, a racing driver from France who decided to take powerboat racing crashed his powerboat near the Isle of Wight. The accident also took the life of his two crew members, journalist Bernard Giroux and his old friend Jean-Claude Guenard.
During his career he competed in 72 Formula One World Championship Grands Prix, mostly driving for Tyrrell and Ferrari, and won the 24 Hours of Le Mans in 1978 driving a Renault Alpine A442B.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on August 24, 2013, 11:53:40 pm
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On this day, August 24th 1958
Maria Teresa de Filippis--the first woman ever to compete in Formula One racing--drives a Maserati in the Portuguese Grand Prix at Oporto on August 24, 1958.
In Formula One (also known as F1), the highest class of automobile racing sanctioned by the Federation Internationale de l'Automobile, drivers compete in single-seat, open-wheel vehicles capable of speeds above 230 mph and typically built by large automakers, or "constructors" in racing parlance. The F1 season consists of a series of events known as Grand Prix races; since 1950, the circuit has awarded a driver's world championship title, and since 1958, it has given one for the top constructor. From 1958 to 2009, only five women have ever competed in F1 racing; in 1980, the South African driver Desire Wilson became the only female driver to win a F1 race, at Britain's Brands Hatch circuit.
Born in Naples, Italy, in 1926, De Filippis got her start racing small Fiat 500s when she was around 22. As she told the British newspaper The Observer during a 2006 interview, she began her racing career after two of her brothers made a bet with each other that she couldn't drive fast. De Fillipis won her first race at Salerno-Cava dei Tirreni in a 500. After she finished second in the 1954 Italian sports car championship, the Italian automaker Maserati hired her as a works driver, testing their high-performance cars, and in 1958 she became the first woman to compete in a Formula One world championship race.
De Filippis raced in three Grand Prix events for Maserati that year, posting her best finish--10th place, two laps behind the winner--in her first race, the Belgian Grand Prix. At Oporto that August 24, she was forced to quit the race due to engine troubles. The British driver Stirling Moss, driving a Vanwall, won the event after his countryman Mike Hawthorn (the year's eventual world champion) spun out and stalled his Ferrari and was forced to push-start it in order to get back in the race.
De Filippis used the same Maserati that the great Argentine driver Juan Manuel Fangio drove when he won his then-record fifth world championship title in 1957. As De Filippis told The Observer, Fangio had warned her of her tendency to drive too fast, to take risks: "I wasn't frightened of speed, you see, and that's not always a good thing. He worried I might have an accident." As it turned out, De Filippis quit the sport the following year and started a family. In 1979, she joined the International Club of Former F1 Grand Prix Drivers; she became its vice president in 1997, and was also president of the Maserati Club.
August 24th 1832
Nicolas Carnot, a pioneer in the development of the internal combustion engine, died in Paris at age 36. The import of advanced British engines dismayed Carnot, for he saw how far behind French design had fallen. However, his own work would change that. He would go on to develop the Carnot cycle and Carnot efficiency, improving the efficiency of all types of engines.

August 24th 1945
The last Cadillac-built M-24 tank was produced on this day, ending the company's World War II effort. Civilian auto production virtually ceased after the attack on Pearl Harbor, as the U.S. automotive industry turned to war production. Between 1940 and 1945, automotive firms made almost $29 billion worth of military materials, including jeeps, trucks, machine guns, carbines, tanks, helmets, and aerial bombs.
August 24th 1967
The famous industrialist Henry J. Kaiser passed away in Honolulu, Hawaii, at the age of 85 on this day. Along with a construction company, a shipyard, an aircraft company, and an aluminum manufacturing plant, Kaiser owned an automobile company. Co-founded with Joseph W. Frazer in 1945, the company produced only a few models before production was ceased in 1954.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on August 25, 2013, 08:23:11 pm
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On this day, August 25, 1991
The German race car driver Michael Schumacher makes his Formula One (Europe's top racing circuit) debut in the Belgian Grand Prix at Spa Francorchamps.
Schumacher was born in Hurth-Hermulhein, West Germany, in 1969. His father managed a go-kart track in the town of Kerpen, and young Michael won the German junior karting championship in 1984 and 1985 and the German and European titles in 1987. He left school to work as a car mechanic and in 1988 began racing on the Formula Three circuit, which features less-powerful vehicles than those of Formula One. After winning the German Formula Three championship in 1990, Schumacher made the move to the big time: The next August, he made his Formula One debut at Spa, racing for Irish businessman Eddie Jordan's team.
Though Schumacher retired during the first lap of that first Grand Prix (as individual Formula One events are called) with clutch problems, he drew the attention of Benetton, another Formula One constructor owned by the same family as the international clothing store chain. Benetton soon snapped up the rising young star (he and Jordan had not signed a contract), beginning a successful five-year collaboration. Schumacher won the drivers' world championship, Formula One's top honor, for the team in 1994--a season marred by the death of the Brazilian driver Ayrton Senna in the San Marino Grand Prix and accusations of technical irregularities against the Benetton team--and 1995.
Schumacher signed with the venerable Ferrari team before the 1996 season. Things began well, despite an incident in 1997 when Schumacher tried in vain to ram the car of his top rival, Jacques Villeneuve, off the road during the final race, at Jerez in Spain; he was stripped of his second-place finish as punishment. After crashing his Ferrari during the 1999 British Grand Prix--he emerged with a broken leg, the only injury of his career to date--Schumacher won the 2000 drivers' world championship (Ferrari's first since 1979). He went on to win the title another four years in a row, racking up nine Grand Prix wins in 2001 and 11 in 2002. His sixth drivers' title in 2003 broke the previous record, held by the Argentine driver Juan Manual Fangio. In 2004, Schumacher won 13 of 18 total Grand Prix races held that year, easily securing his seventh championship.
At the age of 41, still at the top of his game, Schumacher retired from racing. During his final season in 2006, he won seven Grand Prix races, bringing his career total to 91, and making him by far the winningest driver in Formula One history (his closest rival, the French driver Alain Prost, had 51).
August 25th 1910
Walden W. Shaw and John D. Hertz formed the Walden W. Shaw Livery Company, which later became the Yellow Cab Company. In 1907, the Shaw Livery Company purchased a number of small taxicabs equipped with meters. The first yellow cab (the Model J) hit the streets in 1915, and its distinctive color became the company's trademark. The company was also the first to use automatic windshield wipers, ultrahigh frequency two-way radios, and passenger seat belts.

August 25th 1910
Horch Automobil-Werke GmbH forced to change company name due to legal dispute over Horch trademark. It was renamed Audi Automobilwerke GmbH. Audi in Latin translation to Horch.

August 25th 1921
Six-Cylinder Love, the first full-length play based on the motor car, opened at the Sam H. Harris Theatre in New York City. The play traces a family's purchase of an expensive car and their resulting woes. A silent film version of the play was produced in 1923, and a talkie starring Spencer Tracy followed in 1931.

August 25, 1954
The United States Postal Service began issuing a Classic Cars booklet of stamps. The special edition stamps, designed by Ken Dallison, featured five different designs: a 1928 Locomobile, a 1929 Pierce-Arrow, a 1931 Cord, a 1932 Packard, and a 1935 Dusenberg.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on August 26, 2013, 11:04:13 am
On this day, August 26th 1940
The LaSalle, manufactured by Cadillac, was discontinued after 14 years of production. Intended to boost profits during a lag in luxury car sales, the LaSalle was a moderately priced alternative to the opulence of the Cadillac. The company chose to market the car under a new name so as not to lessen the value of the Cadillac name.

August 26th 1957
The Ford Motor Company rolled out the first Edsel automobile. The car was named after Henry Ford's son, Edsel Bryant Ford. 110,847 Edsels were built before the company pulled the plug after three years due to lack of sales and negative press. Ironically, market research conducted just a few years earlier had pointed to the Edsel's success; consumers had said they wanted more horsepower, tailfins, three-tone paint jobs, and wraparound windshields. However, by 1957, fickle consumers had changed their minds, and despite a relatively low price, Edsel sales lagged. Today, due to the limited number produced, the Edsel has become a collector's item.

August 26th 1959
The British Motor Corporation (BMC) launches its newest car, the small, affordable–at a price tag of less than $800–Mark I Mini. The diminutive Mini went on to become one of the best-selling British cars in history.
The story behind the Mini began in August 1956, when President Gamal Abdel Nasser of Egypt nationalized the Suez Canal in response to the American and British decision to withdraw funding for a new dam's construction due to Egypt's Communist ties. The international crisis that followed led to fuel shortages and gasoline rationing across Europe. Sir Leonard Lord, head of BMC--formed by the merger of automakers Austin and Morris in 1952--wanted to produce a British alternative to the tiny, fuel-efficient German cars that were cornering the market after the Suez Crisis. He turned to Alec Issigonis, a Turkish immigrant who as chief engineer at Morris Motors had produced the Morris Minor, a teapot-shaped cult favorite that had nonetheless never seriously competed with the Volkswagen "Beetle" or Fiat's 500 or Cinquecento.
Mini development began in 1957 and took place under a veil of secrecy; the project was known only as ADO (for Austin Drawing Office) 15. After about two and a half years–a relatively short design period–the new car was ready for the approval of Lord, who immediately signed off on its production.
Launched on August 26, 1959, the new front-wheel-drive car was priced at around $800 and marketed under two names: Austin Seven and Morris Mini-Minor. The two vehicles were the same except for each had a different radiator grille, and by 1962 both were known simply as the Mini. Issigonis' design, including an engine mounted sideways to take up less space, had created a surprising amount of space for a small-bodied car: At only 10 feet long, the Mini could sit four adults, and had a trunk big enough for a reasonable amount of luggage. With a starting price of around $800, the Mini was truly a "people's car," but its popularity transcended class, and it was also used by affluent Londoners as a second car to easily maneuver in city traffic.
By the time production was halted in 2000, 5.3 million Minis had been produced. Around that same time, a panel of 130 international journalists voted the Mini "European Car of the Century." A high-performance version of the Mini engineered by the race car builder John Cooper had first been released in 1961; known as the Mini Cooper, it became one of the favorites of Mini enthusiasts worldwide. In 2003, the Mini Cooper was updated for a new generation of buyers by the German automaker BMW.

August 26th 1985
The Yugo, manufactured in Yugoslavia, was first introduced to the U.S. market. Originally marketed as a lower-cost alternative, the Yugo quickly became infamous for its poor quality of construction.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on August 27, 2013, 09:41:13 am
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On this day, August 27th 1938
Captain George E. T. Eyston breaks his own automobile land speed record at the Bonneville Salt Flats in Utah, raising the mark to 345.49 mph.
Located approximately 80 miles west of Salt Lake City, Utah, the Bonneville Salt Flats were formed by the evaporation of a huge Ice Age-era lake. Near the end of the 19th century, the flats hosted a bicycle competition arranged as a publicity stunt by the publishing magnate William Randolph Hearst. Then, in 1914, the daredevil racer Teddy Tezlaff drove his Blitzen Benz vehicle at 141.73 mph to set an unofficial land speed record at the flats. Bonneville truly took off as a racing destination thanks to the efforts of Utah native Ab Jenkins, who set several endurance speed records there beginning in 1925, driving a Studebaker dubbed the Mormon Meteor. In 1935, the British racing legend Sir Malcolm Campbell set a world land speed record of 301.126 mph in his famous Bluebird, and since then the flats became the standard course for land speed record attempts.
Drivers who attempted to set the world land speed record, or the fastest speed traveled on land in a wheeled vehicle, had to complete two mile-long runs in opposite directions, within a space of sixty minutes. George Eyston, an engineer and retired British Army captain, had set the previous record of 311.42 mph at Bonneville in November 1936. On his August 27 run, he hit 347.49 mph on the outbound trip and 343.51 on the return; his new record, 345.49, was the average of the two. As Eyston told the press at the time, he did not even bring his vehicle, the Thunderbolt, to full throttle to achieve the record-setting speed: "I had a very comfortable ride and not once did I feel there was any danger….I wanted to be certain I set a new record, but I also wanted to be sure that the car and I got through in good shape."
By September 1938, Eyston had raised the land speed record to 357.5 mph. In a lecture he delivered that month, Eyston described his built-for-speed Thunderbolt as having two 2,000-horsepower Rolls Royce motors geared together; the vehicle measured 35 feet long and weighed nearly 7 tons. One of Eyston's rivals, John Cobb, set a new world land speed record of 394.194 mph in 1947 at Bonneville in a car with a piston engine; thereafter, most record holders have driven jet- or rocket-powered vehicles. In October 1997, a twin turbofan jet-powered car dubbed ThrustSSC achieved 763.035 mph (the first supersonic world land speed record) over one mile at Nevada's Black Rock Desert.

August 27th 1904
Newport, Rhode Island, imposed the first jail sentence for a speeding violation on this day. This was a harsh sentence in 1904 because traffic laws were still relatively new--the first traffic code wasn't implemented until 1903, when New York introduced a two-page book of regulations. Early traffic regulations varied drastically from state to state, some having no speed limits at all.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on August 28, 2013, 07:07:04 pm
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On this day, August 28th 1877
Charles Stewart Rolls, the pioneering British motorist, aviator and co-founder (with Henry Royce) of the Rolls-Royce Ltd. luxury automobile company, is born in London's upscale Mayfair district.
The third son of Lord and Lady Llangattock, who had their ancestral seat in Monmouth, Wales, Rolls was a card-carrying member of the British aristocracy. He was educated at Eton and at Cambridge University's Trinity College, where he first developed his love for the new sport of motoring. His first vehicle, a Peugeot with 3.75 horsepower, was the first car to be seen at Cambridge, and enabled him to drive home to Monmouth in an astonishingly quick time of two days. In 1900, Rolls drove a 12-horsepower Panhard car in the famous British auto race the Thousand Mile Trial; he also took part in a number of other early long-distance European races. Considered the best driver in Wales, he was reportedly responsible for changing the national speed limit at the time from 4 to 12 miles per hour.
In 1902, Rolls went into the business of selling cars. Two years later, at the Midland Hotel in Manchester, England, he met with Frederick Henry Royce, an electrical engineer of modest background who had his own engineering business, Royce Ltd., and had built several experimental cars of his own design. After that historic meeting, Rolls and Royce merged their firms in 1906 to form Rolls-Royce Ltd. The Rolls-Royce Silver Ghost, produced that year, became one of the world's most admired cars. While Royce was responsible for every aspect of car design, Rolls provided the bulk of the financing, as well as the social connections that helped make sales.
In addition to automobiles, Rolls became passionate about aviation, including hot air balloons and early airplanes. In February 1910, Rolls wrote to the inventor Wilbur Wright to complain about the Wright plane he had bought in Europe. In the letter, Rolls told Wright he had resigned his former position at Rolls Royce and taken another, which "does not require any regular attendance at the office," in order "to devote myself to flight." That June, Rolls became the first aviator to fly nonstop across the English Channel and back. Tragically, on July 12, 1910, Rolls was killed when the tail of his plane snapped off in mid-air during a flying exhibition in Bournemouth, England. He was 32 years old.
PICTURED: Charles with the 1898 PANHARD 8hp

August 28th 1921
Construction of the Paragon Motor Company factory began in Cumberland, Maryland. The company's production was limited to only four prototypes, and the factory was never completed.

August 28th 1922
The famous Autodromo, an automobile-racing track, was opened in Monza, Italy. Set in a busy industrial center along the Lambro River, this track, with its elliptical shape and concrete banked curves, is said to be the fastest in the world.

August 28th 1937
The Toyota Motor Company, Ltd., originally a division of the Toyota Automatic Loom Works, became a corporation. The company underwent huge expansion in the 1960s and 1970s, exporting its smaller, more fuel-efficient cars to countless foreign markets. During this period, Toyota also acquired Hino Motors, Ltd., Nippondenso Company Ltd., and Daihitsu Motor Company, Ltd. Toyota has been Japan's largest automobile manufacturer for several decades and is headquartered in Toyota City, Japan.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on August 29, 2013, 03:25:51 am
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On this day, August 29th 1885
The world's first motorcycle, made by Gottlieb Daimler, was patented. The two-wheeled vehicle gained immense popularity after 1910, when it was used heavily by all branches of the armed forces during World War I. The motorcycle's popularity lagged during the Great Depression, but came back with a vengeance after World War II and remains popular today. Often associated with a rebellious image, the vehicle is often used for high-speed touring and sport competitions.
PICTURED: The first motorcycle, made by Gottlieb Daimler, at the Deutsches Zweirad-und NSU-Museum in Neckarsulm, Germany.

August 29th 1876
Charles F. Kettering, inventor of the electric starter, was born on this day in Detroit. Kettering, along with Edward A. Deeds, founded Delco (Dayton Engineering Laboratories Company). He and his company invented countless improvements for the automobile, including lighting and ignition systems, lacquer finishes, antilock fuels, and leaded gasoline. The Cadillac was the first car to use the electric starter, and Delco would later become a subsidiary of General Motors. Incidentally, Kettering also invented the first electric cash register before he started working on cars.

August 29th 1898
The Goodyear Tire and Rubber Co. was incorporated in Ohio. Originally founded as a rubber company by the Seiberling brothers, the company began manufacturing tires shortly after its establishment. Today, Goodyear makes passenger and industrial tires, in addition to producing rubber, chemical, and plastic products. The company also is well-known for its marketing skill--its Goodyear blimp is one of the most recognizable corporate symbols in America.

TODAYS TRIVIA:
A jail in Brazil allows inmates to pedal exercise bikes connected to generators to power alights in a nearby city in exchange for reduced sentences

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Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on August 30, 2013, 07:17:02 am
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August 30th 1945
A pale green Super Six coupe rolled off the Hudson Company's assembly line, the first post-World War II car to be produced by the auto manufacturer. Like all other U.S. auto manufacturers, Hudson had halted production of civilian cars in order to produce armaments during the war. The Super Six boasted the first modern, high-compression L-head motor, though it garnered its name from the original Hudson-manufactured engine produced in 1916. The name stayed, though the engines became more sophisticated

August 30th 1898
Henry Ford, of Detroit, Michigan, received a patent for a "Carbureter" (fuel injector) especially designed for use in connection with gas or vapor engines.

August 30th 1916
Studebaker announced the release of the Heaslet Special, a semi-custom touring car. The car was named in honor of Studebaker's vice president of engineering, James G. Heaslet.

TODAYS TRIVIA:

RUDD's POLITICAL SPIN.
 If it weren’t for the fact that it’s Rudd the Dudd replying, I just would not believe this…Judy Rudd an amateur genealogy researcher in southern Queensland’s, was doing some personal work on her own family tree. She discovered that Prime Minister Kevin Rudd's great-great uncle, Remus Rudd, was hanged for horse stealing and train robbery in Melbourne in 1889. Both Judy and Kevin Rudd share this common ancestor. The only known photograph of Remus shows him standing on the gallows at the Melbourne Gaol: On the back of the picture Judy obtained during her research is this inscription: 'Remus Rudd horse thief, sent to Melbourne Gaol 1885, escaped 1887, robbed the Melbourne-Geelong train six times. Caught by Victoria Police Force, convicted and hanged in 1889.' So Judy recently e-mailed Prime Minister Rudd for information about their great-great uncle. Remus Rudd:
 ***** Believe it or not, Kevin Rudd's staff sent back the following biographical sketch for her genealogy research:

 "Remus Rudd was famous in Victoria during the mid to late 1800s . His business empire grew to include acquisition of valuable equestrian assets and intimate dealings with the Melbourne-Geelong Railroad. Beginning in 1883, he devoted several years of his life to government service, finally taking leave to resume his dealings with the railroad. In 1887, he was a key player in a vital investigation run by the Victoria Police Force. In 1889, Remus passed away during an important civic function held in his honour when the platform upon which he was standing collapsed."

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Brief Analysis
The claims in the message are false. All though Kevin Rudd is a total toolbag and he wouldnt get my vote even if he paid me, Kevin Rudd has no such ancestor and no such "political spin" reply was ever sent. In fact, the message is just one more version of an old joke that has been used to target several public figures in the United States and Canada. The condemned man shown in the gallows photograph, is Tom "Black Jack" Ketchum, a murderer and train robber who was hanged in Clayton, New Mexico in April 1901.
 
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on August 31, 2013, 04:52:20 am
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On this day, August 31st 1899
A Stanley Steamer, driven by F.O. Stanley, became the first car to reach the summit of Mount Washington, New Hampshire. Stanley was one of the Stanley twins, founders of the Stanley Motor Company, which specialized in steam-driven automobiles. The steamers not only climbed mountains, but often beat larger, gasoline-powered cars in races. In 1906, a Stanley Steamer would break the world record for the fastest mile when it reached 127mph.
PICTURED: A Stanley Steamer racer 1907

August 31st 1903
Packard automobile completed a 52-day journey from San Francisco to New York, became first car to cross U.S. under its own power.

August 31st 1951
James E. Lynch, the stunt driver, died in Texarkana, Arkansas, at age 50. He was founder of the "Jimmie Lynch Daredevils" stunt drivers show.

August 31st 1955
William G. Cobb of the General Motors Corp. (GM) demonstrates his 15-inch-long "Sunmobile," the world's first solar-powered automobile, at the General Motors Powerama auto show held in Chicago, Illinois.
Cobb's Sunmobile introduced, however briefly, the field of photovoltaics--the process by which the sun's rays are converted into electricity when exposed to certain surfaces--into the gasoline-drenched automotive industry. When sunlight hit 12 photoelectric cells made of selenium (a nonmetal substance with conducting properties) built into the Sunmobile, an electric current was produced that in turn powered a tiny motor. The motor turned the vehicle's driveshaft, which was connected to its rear axle by a pulley. Visitors to the month-long, $7 million Powerama marveled at some 250 free exhibits spread over 1 million square feet of space on the shores of Lake Michigan. In addition to Cobb's futuristic mini-automobile, Powerama visitors were treated to an impressive display of GM's diesel-fueled empire, from oil wells and cotton gins to submarines and other military equipment.
Today, more than a half-century after Cobb debuted the Sunmobile, a mass-produced solar car has yet to hit the market anywhere in the world. Solar-car competitions are held worldwide, however, in which design teams pit their sun-powered creations (also known as photovoltaic or PV cars) against each other in road races such as the 2008 North American Solar Challenge, a 2,400-mile drive from Dallas, Texas, to Calgary, Alberta, Canada.
In early 2009, The Nikkei, a Japanese business daily, reported that Toyota Motor Corp. was secretly developing a vehicle that would be powered totally by solar energy. Hurt by a growing global financial crisis and a surge in the Japanese yen relative to other currencies, Toyota had announced in late 2008 that it was expecting its first operating loss in 70 years. Despite hard economic times, Toyota (which in 1997 launched the Prius, the world's first mass-produced hybrid vehicle) has no plans to relinquish its reputation as an automotive industry leader in green technology. The company uses solar panels to produce some of its own electricity at its Tsutsumi plant in central Japan, and in mid-2008 announced that it would install solar panels on the roof of the next generation of its groundbreaking electric-gasoline hybrid Prius cars. The panels would supply part of the 2 to 5 kilowatts needed to power the car's air conditioning system.
According to The Nikkei, Toyota's planned solar car is not expected to hit the market for years. The electric vehicle will get some of its power from solar cells on the vehicle, and will be recharged with electricity generated from solar panels on the roofs of car owners' homes.

August 31st 2003
Harley-Davidson 100th Anniversary Party held in Milwaukee's Veterans Park.
PICTURED: The original Harley Davidson workshop

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Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on September 01, 2013, 09:56:22 pm
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On this day, September 1st 1950
A new chapter in Porsche history began with the company's return to Zuffenhausen, Germany, and the completion of the first Porsche. The first car to bear the Porsche name had actually been built two years earlier by Ferry Porsche and his design team, but this Porsche was the first car to boast a Porsche-made engine. Porsche became an independent automobile manufacturer during this year and soon sealed its success with a stunning victory at Le Mans in 1951.
PICTURED: Glaser coachworks 1950 Porsche Cabriolet

September 1st 1989
The federal government passed new car safety legislation, requiring all newly manufactured cars to install an air bag on the driver's side. While air bags have proven to be life-saving devices in most cases, concern over the safety of the air bags themselves arose during the 1990s. Several instances in which small children were seriously injured or killed by an air bag caused a public clamor for further investigation of the devices, which can explode out of the dashboard at up to 200mph. Air bags are still installed in all newly manufactured models.

September 1st 1989
The first Lexus was sold, launching Toyota's new luxury division. However, Lexus' story had begun six years earlier in a top secret meeting of Toyota's elite. Surrounded by the company's top-level management, Chairman Eiji Toyota proposed the company's next challenge - a luxury car that could compete with the world's best. The project was given the code name "F1," with F for "flagship," and the numeral 1 recalling the high performance of Formula 1 race cars. Designed by chief engineers Shoiji Jimbo and Ichiro Suzuki, the F1 prototype was completed just two years later. The top secret project was finally unveiled after extensive testing in 1987, and officially launched in 1989.

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Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on September 02, 2013, 10:14:00 pm
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On this day, September 2nd 1959
At a news conference broadcast to viewers in 21 cities on closed-circuit television, Henry Ford II introduces his company’s newest car--the 90-horsepower, 30 miles-per-gallon Falcon. The Falcon, dubbed “the small car with the big car feel,” was an overnight success. It went on sale that October 8 and by October 9, dealers had snapped up every one of the 97,000 cars in the first production run.
In 1959, each one of Detroit’s Big Three automakers began to sell a smaller, zippier, lower-priced car: Ford had the Falcon, while General Motors had the Corvair and Chevrolet had the Valiant. After years of building huge, gas-guzzling, lavishly be-finned cars, American companies entered the small-car market because European carmakers like Volkswagen, Fiat, and Renault were selling their little cars to American buyers by the thousands. (Foreign-car sales in the United States had jumped 1,060 percent since 1954 and accounted for about 10 percent of the nation’s new-car sales.) Executives in Detroit hoped that cars like the Falcon would “drive the imports back to their shores.”
Mostly, people liked these smaller cars because they were inexpensive. The Falcon cost about $1,900 (about $14,029 in today’s dollars)--still much more expensive than even the priciest of the European imports (the Triumph and the Simca sold for about $1,600, while a Fiat, the cheapest car you could buy, cost about $1,000), but more affordable than any other American car. In addition, more fuel-efficient cars like the Falcon also saved their drivers money on gas.
Many people believed that the introduction of American compact cars would permanently transform the automobile industry. The “desire of American car buyers for sensible automobiles,” one industry executive told a reporter, would soon make big, inefficient cars obsolete. Unfortunately, though the Falcon was an immediate sensation--Ford sold more than a million of them in the car’s first two years on the market, and its design went on to inspire the iconic Ford Mustang which at the time was also going to be offered in a 4 door--this did not prove to be the case for the falcon. Today, small cars account for less than 20 percent of new-car sales.
PICTURED: The 1965 Ford Mustang 4 door concept (1962)

September 2nd 1969
Willy Mairesse, race-car driver for the Ferrari team, died in Ostend, Belgium, from an overdose of sleeping pills. His career had been a continuing disappointment, with zero wins from 12 grand prix starts and only seven points. He left the Ferrari team in 1963 and was only 40 years old at the time of his death.

September 2nd 1992
The Southern California Gas Company purchased the first motor vehicles powered by natural gas. Spurred on by a new California law promoting the commercialization of alternative fuel vehicles, the company put 50 of the new vehicles into service and began promoting the natural gas vehicles (NGVs) as a viable option for the future. Compressed natural gas costs 25-30 percent less than gasoline and has an octane rating of 130 - meaning it burns much cleaner than even premium unleaded gasoline. The NGVs can also go 10,000 miles between oil changes, 40,000 miles between tune-ups, and 75,000 miles between spark plugs. However, the most compelling argument for natural gas is its environmental advantages. NGVs reduce NOX emissions and reactive hydrocarbons by as much as 95 percent. The new vehicles also reduce carbon monoxide by 85 percent and carcinogenic particulate emissions by 99 percent.

TODAYS TRIVIA:
The first man to survive going over Niagara Falls later died from slipping on an orange peel.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on September 03, 2013, 09:55:22 pm
(http://i645.photobucket.com/albums/uu176/MustangMayhem/This%20Day%20History/Sweden1967_02_1500-700x412_zps32fb1630.jpg) (http://s645.photobucket.com/user/MustangMayhem/media/This%20Day%20History/Sweden1967_02_1500-700x412_zps32fb1630.jpg.html)
On this day, 3 rd Sept 1967
Chaos reigned on the day that Sweden switched from driving on the left side of the road to driving on the right side of the road, also known as Dagen H, caused confusion in the streets all over the country.
PICTURED: photo appears to have been taken on Kungsgatan in Stockholm
(http://i280.photobucket.com/albums/kk171/crabber1967/NASCAR%201950-s/1951-southern-500-start-grid.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/crabber1967/media/NASCAR%201950-s/1951-southern-500-start-grid.jpg.html)

3rd Sept 1951.
Southern 500 starting field
Looking toward turn four. The photo shows from the third row to the end of the starting field. Notice the huge starting field! A starting field of 82! The pole sitter, Frank Mundy in a 1951 Studebaker dropped out after 12 laps due to oil pressure and finished last. The second place starter Herb Thomas in a Hudson Hornet won, quite a difference! The white car shown near the right in the photo is Frank Gise, driving the #38 B. R. Waller owned 1951 Studebaker V8 Commander Starlight coupe [Redmond Motors (Studebaker) Knoxville, TN] started 9th and finished 65th, reason out: "wheel". The cars were lined up in rows of three.
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September 3rd 1875
Ferdinand Porsche, engineer and patriarch of Porsche cars, was born on this day in Maffersdorf, Austria. He began his career at the Daimler Company, rising to general director, but he eventually left in 1931 to design his own sports and racing cars. Perhaps his most famous project was Hitler's "car for the people," the Volkswagen. Together with his son, Porsche was responsible for the initial Volkswagen plans, but his involvement with Hitler was to cost him dearly. He was arrested by the French after World War II and held for several years before finally being released.

September 3rd 1900
The first car ever made in Flint, Michigan makes its debut in the town’s Labor Day parade. Designed and built by a county judge and weekend tinkerer named Charles H. Wisner, the car was one of the only cars built in Flint that did not end up being produced by General Motors. In the end, only three of the Wisner machines were ever built.
Wisner’s car, nicknamed the “Buzz-Wagon,” was a somewhat ridiculous contraption: it was “very noisy,” according to The Flint Journal; its only door was in the rear; and it had no brakes. In order to stop, Wisner had to collide with something sturdy, usually the side wall of his machine shop. At the Labor Day parade, however, he didn’t have a problem with the brakes; instead, in front of 10,000 spectators, the car stalled and had to be pushed off the parade route.
Wisner’s lemon notwithstanding, Flint soon became the cradle of the American auto industry. GM was formed there in 1908, and the city quickly became known for all the Chevrolets and Buicks--not to mention the engine parts and electronics--produced and assembled there. The sit-down strikes at Flint’s GM plants in 1936 and 1937 won union recognition for autoworkers along with a 30-hour workweek and a 6-hour day, overtime pay, seniority rights, and “a minimum rate of pay commensurate with an American standard of living.” These victories guaranteed a middle-class existence for generations of autoworkers. In fact, for a long time, Flint had the highest average per-household income of any city in the United States.
But GM has been declining painfully since the 1970s, and Flint has suffered along with it. The 1988 film Roger & Me, which told the story of 30,000 layoffs at one of Flint’s GM plants, made the city’s woes famous. In July 1999, GM closed its Buick City complex, the last assembly plant in the city. And in the beginning of 2009, as a financial crisis enveloped the auto industry and the nation as a whole, Michigan’s Genesee County (which includes Flint) had an unemployment rate of nearly 15 percent--higher than it had been in 18 years and almost twice the national average.


September 3rd 1939
The first and only Yugoslavian Grand Prix was held at Kalemagdan Park in Belgrade. Won by Tazio Nuvolari, this race marked yet another victory for the great Italian champion, and was the last Grand Prix event before World War II. Nuvolari's win was particularly stunning in light of the German domination of Formula 1 racing during the late 1930s, backed by massive funding from the Third Reich.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on September 04, 2013, 04:45:17 am

(http://i998.photobucket.com/albums/af102/photax/Edsel.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/photax/media/Edsel.jpg.html)

On this day, September 4th 1957
--“E-Day,” according to its advertising campaign--the Ford Motor Company unveils the Edsel, the first new automobile brand produced by one of the Big Three car companies since 1938. (Although many people call it the “Ford Edsel,” in fact Edsel was a division all its own, like Lincoln or Mercury.) Thirteen hundred independent Edsel dealers offered four models for sale: the smaller Pacer and Ranger and the larger Citation and Corsair.
To many people, the Edsel serves as a symbol of corporate hubris at its worst: it was an over-hyped, over-sized, over-designed monstrosity. Other people believe the car was simply a victim of bad timing. When Ford executives began planning for the company’s new brand, the economy was booming and people were snapping up enormous gas-guzzlers as fast as automakers could build them. By the time the Edsel hit showrooms, however, the economic outlook was bad and getting worse. People didn’t want big, glitzy fin cars anymore; they wanted small, efficient ones instead. The Edsel was just ostentatious and expensive enough to give buyers pause.
At the same time, there is probably no car in the world that could have lived up to the Edsel’s hype. For months, the company had been running ads that simply pictured the car's hood ornament and the line “The Edsel Is Coming.” Everything else about the car was top-secret: If dealers failed to keep their Edsels hidden, they’d lose their franchise. For the great E-Day unveiling, promotions and prizes--like a giveaway of 1,000 ponies--lured shoppers to showrooms.
When they got there, they found a car that had a distinctive look indeed--but not necessarily in a good way. Thanks to the big impact ring or “horse collar” in the middle of its front grille, it looked (one reporter said) like “a Pontiac pushing a toilet seat.” (Another called it “an Oldsmobile sucking a lemon.”) And its problems were more than cosmetic. Drivers changed gears by pushing buttons on the steering wheel, a system that was not easy to figure out. In addition, at highway speeds that famous hood ornament had a tendency to fly off and into the windshield.
In its first year, Edsel sold just 64,000 cars and lost $250 million ($2.5 billion today). After the 1960 model year, the company folded.

September 4th 1997
The very last Ford Thunderbird rolled off the assembly line in Lorain, Ohio, leaving many of the car's fans disappointed. One Ford dealer even held a wake for the beloved Thunderbird, complete with flowers and a RIP plaque. Originally conceived as Ford's answer to the Corvette, the Thunderbird has enjoyed an illustrious place among American cars. It was promoted as a "personal" car, rather than a sports car, so it never had to compete against the imports that dominated the sports car market. The name of the enormously successful car was eventually shortened to "T-Bird".

September 4th 1891
Fritz Todt, the head designer of the German autobahn, was born in Pforzheim, Germany. Todt's creation was the first true system of national superhighways, and was held up by Germany as a proud symbol of the modernity of their engineering. However, the autobahn system emerged from World War II as a battered version of its earlier self. The newly formed nations of East and West Germany set about repairing the old system, though at different rates. Booming increases in motor traffic propelled extensions and enhancements in West Germany, while improvements were more gradual in East Germany. Over the years, the autobahn regained its status as a model expressway and became famous for its nonexistent speed limit.

September 4th 1922
William Lyons (21) and William Walmsley (9) launched Swallow Sidecar Company in Blackpool, UK, to produce sidecars for motorcycles; financed with bank overdraft of £1000 guaranteed by their respective fathers.

TODAYS TRIVIA:
All blue eyed people can be traced back to one person who lived near the Black Sea about 10,000 years ago.
Mark Wahlberg had a cocaine addiction by age 13, and was convicted of attempted murder at the age of 16.
About 159,635 people will die on the same day as you.
In North Korea, it's not 2013. The year is 102, because North Korea marks years from the birth of Kim Il-sung, not Jesus.
Since the earth's rotation is slowing down, today is about 0.00000002 seconds longer than yesterday.
The sentence "Are you as bored as I am?" can be said backwards and still make sense.
There is an evil counterpart to Santa named Krampus. Krampus physically beats bad children before sacking them away to Hell.
Darrell, from the reality show "Storage Wars" once found a plastic-wrapped human corpse in a storage locker.
25,000,000 of your cells died while you were reading this status.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on September 05, 2013, 05:33:05 am
(http://i1293.photobucket.com/albums/b582/laherrera/FinalAssemblyof1932FordModelAV8AutomobilesFordRougePlantDearbornMichigan_zps0ab50876.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/laherrera/media/FinalAssemblyof1932FordModelAV8AutomobilesFordRougePlantDearbornMichigan_zps0ab50876.jpg.html)

On this day, September 5th 1930
Cross-country trips were no longer considered big news in 1930, but Charles Creighton and Jam Hargises ' unique journey managed to make headlines. The two men from Maplewood, New Jersey, arrived back in New York City, having completed a 42-day round trip to Los Angeles - driving their 1929 Ford Model A the entire 7,180 miles in reverse gear.
PICTURED: Final Assembly of a Ford Model A V8, Ford Rouge Plant, Dearborn, Michigan

TODAYS TRIVIA
...75% of cars that Rolls Royce has ever produced are still on the road today.
...Arnold Schwarzenegger did not accept his governor's salary of $175,000 per year because of his already substantial wealth from acting.
...Boris Yeltsin, when he was president of Russia, was found by White House secret service drunk and in his underwear on Pennsylvania Ave, trying to hail a cab to get some pizza.
...In 1962, Bruce Lee landed 15 punches and a kick that knocked out his opponent in a fight which lasted 11 seconds.
...There's an area of the universe a billion light years away that has virtually nothing in it, not even dark matter.
...The colors blue, yellow, red, green and black were chosen for the Olympic rings because at least one of them appears on every nation's flag.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on September 06, 2013, 05:41:58 am
(http://i1011.photobucket.com/albums/af233/carl44s/motorsports%201920-1942/189620narragansett20park20rhode20island20first20auto20race20on20closed20circuit2.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/carl44s/media/motorsports%201920-1942/189620narragansett20park20rhode20island20first20auto20race20on20closed20circuit2.jpg.html)

On this day, September 6th 1900
Andrew L. Riker set a new speed record, driving an electric car. His time of 10 minutes, 20 seconds established a new low for the five-mile track in Newport, Rhode Island, proving that the electric car could compete with its noisier petroleum-fueled cousins. In fact, the electric car remained competitive until 1920, often preferred for its low maintenance cost and quiet engine. However, developments in gasoline engine technology, along with the advent of cheaper, mass-produced non-electrics like the Model T, proved to be the death knell of the electric car. However, rising fuel costs in the late 1960s and 1970s renewed interest in the electric car, and several working models have recently been sold in small numbers.
PICTURED: The first US oval track events took place in early September 1896 at Narragansett Park Rhode Island They consisted of three 5 mile sprint events The first two were won by Andrew Lawrence Riker (1862-1930) in an electric car of his own design and the third race was won by an electric also dubbed the Electrobat

September 6th 1915
The first tank prototype was completed and given its first test drive, developed by William Foster & Company for the British army. Several European nations had been working on the development of a shielded, tracked vehicle that could cross the uneven terrain of World War I trenches, but Great Britain was the first to succeed. Lightly armed with machine guns, the tanks made their first authoritative appearance at the Battle of Cambrai in 1917, when 474 British tanks managed to break through the German lines. The Allies began using the vehicles in increasing numbers throughout the rest of the war. After World War I, European nations on all sides continued to build tanks at a frantic pace, arming them with even heavier artillery and plating. This competitive stockpiling came to a lethal head on the battlefields of World War II.

September 6th 1949
By the end of World War II, Germany's Volkswagen factory was in shambles, along with much of Europe. The machines stood silent, the assembly lines lay still, and rubble littered the hallways. It was in this state that the British occupation forces took control of the Volkswagen factory and the town of Wolfsburg. The next four years were spent in an attempt to return to normal life, and the wheels of industry eventually began to turn in the old Volkswagen factory. With Heinrich Nordhoff as managing director and the German economy rejuvenated by currency reform, Volkswagen had become the largest car producer in Europe by 1949. On this day, the Allied military authorities relinquished control of the former Nazi regime's assets, including the Volkswagen factory - marking the final transition back to everyday life.

September 6th 1995
Chrysler Corporation received permission from Vietnamese government to assemble vehicles in Vietnam, allowed Chrysler to construct production facility in Dong Nai Province, Southern Vietnam, with aim of manufacturing 500 to 1,000 Dodge Dakota pick-up trucks for Vietnamese market annually.

TODAYS TRIVIA:
...If you are 6 feet 2 inches tall, then you are taller than 94% of the world.
...Today is National Be Late for Something Day!
...There were no cats on the Titanic. Cats were often brought on ships as a form of good luck.
...Women in ancient Rome wore the sweat of Gladiators to improve their beauty and complexion.
...PG-13 movies are allowed one non-sexual use of the word "f@#k" per script.
...George W. Bush was the head cheerleader at Phillips Academy Boarding school during his senior year of high school.
...The word "mortgage" comes from a French word that means "pledge to the death."
...Brad Pitt tore his Achilles tendon while filming a fight scene for Troy -- He played Achilles in the movie.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on September 07, 2013, 06:12:48 am
(http://i153.photobucket.com/albums/s223/jesmi2007/DisneyWorld1152.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/jesmi2007/media/DisneyWorld1152.jpg.html)

September 7th 1899
Over a dozen motorcars, decorated with hydrangeas, streamers, lights, and Japanese lanterns, lined up to take part in America's first automobile parade. A throng of spectators showed up in Newport, Rhode Island, to witness the event, arriving in cabs, private carriages, bicycles, and even by foot to witness the spectacle, attracted by the novelty and rumors surrounding the event. The nature of the motorcar decorations had been shrouded in mystery prior to the parade, for each participant had wished to surprise and outdo the others. Since then, car parades and car shows have been a part of every countries culture

September 7th 1993
The Chrysler Corporation introduced its new Neon at the Frankfurt Auto Show on this day. The sporty compact indicated a new direction for Chrysler and quickly gained fame through its multi-million dollar "Hi" campaign. The slick ads emphasized friendliness - friendly handling, comfortable seats, reliable safety features - punctuated with a simple "Hi. I'm Neon."

TODAYS TRIVIA:
...If a Google employee passes away, their spouse gets half of their pay for 10 years.
...Mary Gibbs (voice of Boo in Monsters Inc.) was too young to sit to record her lines, so they followed her around with a mic.
...Jackie Chan is actually a pop star in Asia, having released 20 studio albums - He often sings the theme songs of his own movies.
...Nintendo owned a chain of sex hotels in the 1950’s and 1960’s.
...Internet weighs about as much as a strawberry. The weight of all the electrons in motion that make up the internet at any given moment is equivalent to 50 grams.
...In 1939, The New York Times predicted that television would fail because people wouldn't have time to stop and stare at a screen.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on September 08, 2013, 11:24:16 am
(http://i195.photobucket.com/albums/z30/melbernero/Continental%20Trailways/ContinentalTrailwaysChicago8-1964JohnLeBeaucollection.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/melbernero/media/Continental%20Trailways/ContinentalTrailwaysChicago8-1964JohnLeBeaucollection.jpg.html)

On this day, September 8, 1953
Continental Trailways offered the first transcontinental express bus service in the U.S. The 3,154-mile ride from New York City to San Francisco lasted 88 hours and 50 minutes, of which only 77 hours was riding time. The cost was $56.70. Today Greyhound charges $183 for the same trip.

September 8, 1960
Aguri Suzuki, Japanese racing phenomenon, was born on this day. He is one of the most successful Japanese race car drivers in history, a favorite of fans around the world. He began his winning career in the Japanese Kart Championship, but eventually moved on to Formula 1 racing--achieving 1 podium, and scoring a total of 8 championship points. He is married with one son and enjoys ultra-light flying, golf, and water sports.

September 8, 1986
British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher and Yutaka Kume, the president of the Nissan Motor Company, officially open Nissan’s first European manufacturing plant in Sunderland, Britain. Sunderland is situated in the northeastern part of England, a region that was hit especially hard by the deindustrialization and economic strain of the 1970s and 80s. Many of its coal pits, shipyards, steel mills, and chemical factories had closed or were closing, and the Japanese company’s arrival gave many of the town’s residents hope for the future. Twenty-five thousand people applied for the first 450 jobs advertised at the plant.
Nissan brought a new kind of shop-floor culture to a place where labor-management relationships typically ranged from frosty to belligerent. The Sunderland factory was a different, more cooperative kind of workplace: Instead of enmity and strikes, it had kaizen, a Japanese philosophy of continual improvement that applied to workers and their bosses alike. Meanwhile, everyone wore the same blue coveralls and ate in the same lunchroom, and plant foreman received the same pay as design and manufacturing engineers. Likely as a result of this egalitarianism, at least in part, the factory soon became the most efficient and productive auto plant in Europe, and it exported 75 percent of the cars it made. (Some were even sent back to Japan.) It was also the largest car factory in England, building one of every five British-made cars.
With all this good will and productivity, it seemed like the plant would be successful forever. In June 2008, Sunderland’s 5 millionth Nissan rolled off the assembly line, and at the beginning of 2008 the factory was hiring hundreds more workers to keep up with increased demand for Nissan’s new hatchback, the Qashqai. Just one year later, however, the economic downturn had resulted in almost 1,500 layoffs at the Sunderland plant--25 percent of its workforce. This was a disaster for those workers, of course, but also for Sunderland itself: Five thousand people had worked at the plant, but 10,000 more--parts suppliers, service and support workers, supermarket operators--depended directly on Nissan for their livelihood.
At the same time it announced the Sunderland job cuts, Nissan unveiled a new product: a deluxe sports car that will, when it goes on sale, cost 107,000 pounds. It seems likely enough that no one in Sunderland will be buying.

TODAYS TRIVIA:
...During the filming of Casino Royale, three Aston Martin DBS cars valued at $300,000 each were destroyed for the car roll sequence.
...Google successfully tested an automated car that drove 300,000 miles with only one accident, a parking lot fender bender. That occurred when a human was driving.
...Spider-Man grew up at 20 Ingram Street in Queens. The address exists in real life, and the family that lives there is the Parkers.
...In the movie Jurassic Park, the roar of the T-Rex was actually a combination of the sounds by a baby elephant, an alligator and a tiger
...In 1985 a New Orleans man drowned at a party attended by 100 lifeguards who were celebrating a summer without any drownings at a city pool.
...Sloths can swim 3 times faster than they can move on land -- They can also hold their breath for up to 40 minutes.
...Japan's Okinawa Island has more than 450 people living above the age of 100 and is known as the healthiest place on Earth.
...Michael Jackson had cast actual gang members in his music video for “Beat It” and reformed them in the process of filming.
...Bank robber John Dillinger once escaped from jail by smuggling a potato from the prison cafeteria, carving in to the shape of a gun, and dyeing it black using iodine he took from the prison infirmary, then threatening a guard with it to obtain the keys and a real gun.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on September 09, 2013, 10:32:49 am

(http://i269.photobucket.com/albums/jj45/mms58/Internet/Ford%20People/RobertMcNamara1958.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/mms58/media/Internet/Ford%20People/RobertMcNamara1958.jpg.html)

On this day,September 9, 1982
Henry Ford II retired once and for all, swearing off all involvement with the Ford Motor Company.
When Henry Ford II, grandson and namesake of Henry Ford, succeeded his father as president of the Ford Motor Company in 1945, the firm, still recovering from the unexpected death of its president Edsel Ford, was losing money at the rate of several million dollars a month. The automotive giant was crumbling. Fortunately for the company, Henry Ford II turned out to be a genius of industrial management. He quickly set about reorganizing and modernizing the company, firing the powerful Personnel Chief Harry Bennett, whose strong-arm tactics and anti-union stance had made Ford notorious for its bad labor relations. He also brought in new talent, including a group of former U.S. Air Force intelligence officers, among them Robert McNamara, who quickly became known as the "Whiz Kids." During his tenure as president, Henry Ford II nursed the Ford Motor Company back to health, greatly expanding its international operations and introducing two classic models, the Mustang and the Thunderbird. Still, even an industrial management genius could grow tired of a president's demanding schedule.

(http://i875.photobucket.com/albums/ab317/jlgmx/HenryFordII.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/jlgmx/media/HenryFordII.jpg.html)
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on September 10, 2013, 08:21:08 am
(http://i1152.photobucket.com/albums/p497/Arek56/Drunk-O-Meter.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/Arek56/media/Drunk-O-Meter.jpg.html)

On this day, September 10, 1897
A London cabdriver named George Smith slams his taxi into a building and is the first person to be arrested for drunk driving. He pled guilty and was fined 25 shillings.
Police officers knew that Smith was drunk because he acted drunk (he had driven that cab into a wall, after all) and because he said he was, but what they lacked was a scientific way to prove someone was too intoxicated to drive, even if he or she wouldn’t admit it. Blood tests were soon introduced, but those were messy and needed to be performed by a doctor; there were urine tests, but those were even messier, not to mention unreliable and expensive. In 1931, a toxicologist at Indiana University named Rolla Harger came up with a solution--a device he called the Drunkometer. It was simple: all the suspected drinker had to do was blow into a balloon. The tester then attached the balloon to a tube filled with a purple fluid (potassium permanganate and sulfuric acid) and released its air into the tube. Alcohol on a person's breath changed the color of the fluid from purple to yellow; the quicker the change, the drunker the person.
The Drunkometer was effective but cumbersome, and it required a certain amount of scientific calculation to determine just how much alcohol a person had consumed. In 1954, another Indianan named Robert Borkenstein invented a device that was more portable and easier to use. Borkenstein’s machine, the Breathalyzer, worked much like Harger’s did--it measured the amount of alcohol in a person's breath--but it did the necessary calculations automatically and thus could not be foiled or tampered with. (One tipsy Canadian famously ate his underwear while waiting to take a Breathalyzer test because he believed that the cotton would somehow absorb the alcohol in his system. It did not.) The Breathalyzer soon became standard equipment in every police car in the nation.
Even in the age of the Breathalyzer, drunk driving remained a problem. In 2007, more than 1.4 million drivers were arrested for driving while intoxicated, and a Centers for Disease Control survey found that Americans drove drunk 159 million times. That same year, about 13,000 people--more than 30 percent of all traffic fatalities--died in accidents involving a drunk driver.

September 10, 1921
The Ayus Autobahn, the world's first controlled-access highway and part of Germany's Bundesautobahn system, opened near Berlin. Once regarded as a symbol of modernity and a model of German engineering, the autobahn system was nearly destroyed during World War II. At the start of the postwar era, the newly formed nations of East and West Germany set about repairing the superhighway network. The system was greatly extended and improved in West Germany, which had a higher growth rate of motor traffic than its Eastern neighbor, although repairs and extensions were also made to the system in East Germany. Over the years, the autobahn has regained its status as a model expressway, famed for its nonexistent speed limit.

September 10, 1942
Following the example of several European nations, President Franklin D. Roosevelt mandated gasoline rationing in the U.S. as part of the country's wartime efforts. Gasoline rationing was just one of the many measures taken during these years, as the entire nation was transformed into a unified war machine: women took to the factories, households tried to conserve energy, and American automobile manufacturers began producing tanks and planes. The gasoline ration was lifted in 1945, at the end of World War II.

TODAYS TRIVIA:
...A hacker group named UGNazi once completely disabled the US pizza franchise, Papa Johns website because their pizza was 2 hours late.
...Bill Gates intends to leave less than $10M for each of his three children "so they can make their own way"
...The average citizen of Liechtenstein doesn’t even lock their door because crime in the country is so low -- Their last murder was in 1997.
...While studying at Yale in the early 60's, Fred Smith proposed in a paper, the concept of a self-contained logistics company. The paper got a C. In 1971, he founded Federal Express.
...There are about 3 reported cases of dolphins raping humans every year.
...Martin Luther King Jr. received a C in public speaking at seminary school.
...In 2011, a 29-year-old man became Britain's youngest grandfather, when his 14-year-old daughter gave birth.
...Teenagers who spend much of their time listening to music are 8.3 times more likely to be depressed.
...In 1982 A Man Broke Into Buckingham Palace And Ate The Queens Cheese And Crackers.
...After watching Star Wars, James Cameron decided to quit his job as a truck driver, and entered the film industry.
...During the peak of his drug addiction EMINEM was taking "up to 60 Valium and 30 Vicodin pills a day."
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: LA PONY on September 11, 2013, 12:01:03 pm
I guess the obvious thing today would be 9/11 .... I'll say no more    :leaving:
cheers Rob
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on September 11, 2013, 01:33:02 pm
On this day, September 11, 1903
The oldest major speedway in the world, the Milwaukee Mile, opened today as a permanent fixture in the Wisconsin State Fair Park. The circuit had actually been around since the 1870s as a horseracing track, but the proliferation of the automobile brought a new era to the Milwaukee Mile. However, the horses stuck around until 1954, sharing the track with the automobiles until the mile oval was finally paved. At one point, the horses and autos also had to make room for professional football. The Green Bay Packers played in the track's infield for almost 10 years during the 1930s, winning the National Football League Championship there in 1939.

September 11, 1918
Often called the "war of the machines," World War I marked the beginning of a new kind of warfare, fought with steel and shrapnel. Automotive manufacturers led the way in this new technology of war, producing engines for planes, building tanks, and manufacturing military vehicles. Packard was at the forefront of these efforts, being among the first American companies to completely cease civilian car production. Packard had already been the largest producer of trucks for the Allies, but the company began devoting all of its facilities to war production on this day, just a few months before the end of the war. Even after Packard resumed production of civilian vehicles, its wartime engines appeared in a number of vehicles, from racing cars and boats to British tanks in the next world war.

September 11, 1970
The Ford Pinto was introduced at a cost of less than $2,000, designed to compete with an influx of compact imports. But it was not the Pinto's low cost that grabbed headlines. Ford's new best-selling compact contained a fatal design flaw: because of the placement of the gas tank, the tank was likely to rupture and explode when the car was involved in a rear end collision of over 20mph. In addition, it was eventually revealed that Ford knew about the design flaw before the Pinto was released. An internal cost-benefit analysis prepared by Ford calculated that it would take $11 per car to correct the flaw at a total cost of $137 million for the company. When compared to the lowly estimate of $49.5 million in potential lawsuits from the mistake, the report deemed it "inefficient" to go ahead with the correction. The infamous report assigned a value of $200,000 for each death predicted to result from the flaw. Ford's irresponsibility caused a public uproar, and it 1978, a California jury awarded a record-breaking $128 million to a claimant in the Ford Pinto case.

September 11, 2001
Coordinated attacks result in the collapse of the World Trade Center in New York City, destruction of the western portion of The Pentagon in Arlington, Virginia, and an unplanned passenger airliner crash in Shanksville, Pennsylvania, which happened after airplane passengers fought back on the plane. In total, 2,974 people are killed in the September 11, 2001 attacks.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on September 12, 2013, 11:10:26 am
(http://i645.photobucket.com/albums/uu176/MustangMayhem/This%20Day%20History/cannonball_indian1_zps4f71ecff.jpg) (http://s645.photobucket.com/user/MustangMayhem/media/This%20Day%20History/cannonball_indian1_zps4f71ecff.jpg.html)

September 12, 1918
Cannonball Baker, born Erwin G. Baker, discovered his special talent soon after buying his first motorcycle--he was capable of exceptional stamina and endurance on the road. His lean frame sat naturally atop his Indian V-twin, and his toughened stance and leather riding trousers seemed to announce to the world that he was ready to outride all challengers. Made a celebrity by his 3,379-mile cross-country motorcycle trek, "Cannonball" became a symbol of the American motorcycle rider, synonymous with wild cross-country journeys. His fame led to other tours and promotional trips, and he completed his most extensive tour on this day--a 17,000 mile, 77-day trip to all 48 state capitals--yet another testament to his legendary endurance.
PICTURED: Erwin Cannonball Baker on his Indian

September 12, 1988
Ford and Nissan announced plans to design and build a new minivan together in the hope of cashing in on an expanding market. The announcement came during the heyday of the minivan craze, when Dodge Caravans dotted the highways and station wagons became a thing of the past. Instantly popular, the spacious minivan replaced the wagon as the family car of choice, putting the old wood-paneled Country Squires to shame. But with the rise of the sport utility vehicle in the '90s, the minivan also began to fade.

TODAYS TRIVIA:
...More than 2,500 left-handed people are killed every year from using products made for right-handed people.
...Workers at Ground Zero found an 18th century ship underneath the World Trade Center rubble.
...Women speak nearly 7,000 words a day - Men average around 2,000.
...A tortoise lived 255 years. To put it into perspective, he was born before the US existed and his death was announced on CNN. (1750-2006)
...During sex, estrogen levels double -- effectively making women prettier.
...Bill Gates received an honorary knighthood from the Queen but as an American Citizen he cannot use the title "Sir".
...Due to the gender imbalance, by the year 2020, 24 million Chinese men will be unable to find a spouse.
...Someone who weighs 150 pounds on Earth would weigh 354 pounds on Jupiter.
...In the Shawshank Redemption, Andy actually crawls through chocolate syrup in the sewer scene, and the tunnel where it was filmed still smells like chocolate today.
...The four ghosts in Pacman are programmed to act differently: red chases you, pink just tries to position itself in a set way, blue tries to ambush you, orange is random.
...North Koreans are forced to choose 1 of 28 approved hair cuts.
...McDonald's feeds 68 million people every day - That's about 1% of the world's population.
...There's an unknown object in the nearby galaxy m82 that started sending out radio waves. The emission doesn't look like anything seen before
...There's a device that allows girls to pee standing up...called a shewee.
...In 1993, Tupac flew out to Maryland to meet a dying boy named Joshua. Tupac then renamed his publishing company to Joshua's Dream after the boy died.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on September 13, 2013, 10:48:36 pm
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On this day, September 13, 1916
The Hudson Motor Car Company's first engine, the "Super Six," was an astounding success. It was the auto industry's first balanced, high-compression L-head motor, and it became so popular that the name "Super Six" became the unofficial brand name of Hudson. Initially, Hudson launched a series of publicity stunts to promote its new engine, including a "Twice Across America" run from San Francisco to New York and back, which began on this day.
PICTURED: Hudson 1920 Hudson Super Six. Race car

September 13, 1899
The first recorded fatality from an automobile accident occurred, after an oncoming vehicle fatally struck Henry Bliss on the streets of New York. Bliss, a 68-year-old real estate broker, was debarking from a southbound streetcar at the corner of Central Park West and 74th Street when driver Arthur Smith ran him over. Smith was arrested and held on $1,000 bail while Henry Bliss was taken to Roosevelt hospital, where he died.

September 13, 1977
General Motors (GM) introduced the first diesel automobiles in America, the Oldsmobile 88 and 98 models. A major selling point of the two models was their fuel efficiency, which GM claimed to be 40 percent better than gasoline-powered cars. By compressing air, rather than an air-fuel mixture, the diesel engine achieves higher compression ratios, and consequently higher theoretical cycle efficiencies. In addition, the idling and reduced power efficiency of the diesel engine is much greater than that of its spark engine cousin. However, the diesel engine's greater efficiency is balanced by its higher emission of soot, odor, and air pollutants.

September 13, 2004
TV talk-show host Oprah Winfrey gives a brand-new Pontiac G-6 sedan, worth $28,500, to everyone in her studio audience: a total of 276 cars in all.) Oprah had told her producers to fill the crowd with people who “desperately needed” the cars, and when she announced the prize (by jumping up and down, waving a giant keyring and yelling “Everybody gets a car! Everybody gets a car!”), mayhem--crying, screaming, delirium, fainting--broke out all around her. It was, as one media expert told a reporter, “one of the great promotional stunts in the history of television.”
Alas, scandal wasn't far behind. For one thing, the gift wasn't really from Oprah at all. Pontiac had donated the cars, paying the hefty price tag out of its advertising budget, because the company hoped that that the giveaway would drum up some enthusiasm for its new G-6 line. (To this end, during the segment, Winfrey herself took a tour of a Pontiac plant, gushing over the cars' satellite radios and fancy navigation systems.) The car company also paid the state sales tax on each of the automobiles it donated. However, that still left the new-car recipients with a large bill for their supposedly free vehicles: Federal and state income taxes added up to about $6,000 for most winners. Some people paid the taxes by taking out car loans; others traded their new Pontiacs for cheaper, less souped-up cars. “It's not really a free car,” one winner said. “It's more of a 75 percent-off car. Of course, that's still not such a bad deal.”
Two months later, Oprah hosted another giveaway episode, this one for teachers from around the country. Their gifts were worth about $13,000 and included a $2,249 TV set, a $2,000 laptop, a $2,189 washer/dryer, sets of $38 champagne glasses and a $495 leather duffel bag. This time, the show’s producers had learned their lesson: they also gave each audience member a check for $2,500, which they hoped would cover the tax bill for all the loot. Unfortunately, it didn't quite--most people in the audience owed the Internal Revenue Service between $4,500 and $6,000--but the PR gimmick worked: Oprah’s giveaways have earned some of the highest ratings in the program’s history.

September 13, 1945,
The first post-war Pontiac was built. Pictured is the advertisement for the 1946 Pontiac:

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Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on September 14, 2013, 05:15:45 am
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On this day, September 14, 1927
Isadora Duncan, the controversial but highly influential American dancer, was instantly strangled to death in Nice, France, when her trademark long scarf got caught in the rear wheel of a Amilcar driven by factory mechanic Benoit Falchetto, whom she called 'Buggati' and this lead to misconception that the unfateful car was a Buggati, but in actual it was an Amilcar.
Duncan was 49. The scarf was hand painted silk from the Russian-born artist Roman Chatov. The accident gave rise to Gertrude Stein's mordant remark that "affectations can be dangerous." PICTURED: The Amilcar above and Isadora Duncan below

(http://i280.photobucket.com/albums/kk192/an_is/isadoraduncan1.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/an_is/media/isadoraduncan1.jpg.html)

September 14, 1960
The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries was founded at the Baghdad Conference of 1960, established by five core members: Iran, Iraq, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, and Venezuela. Originally made up of just these five, OPEC began as an attempt to organize and unify petroleum policies, securing stable prices for the petroleum producers. The organization grew considerably after its creation, adding eight other members and developing into one of the most influential groups in the world. The first real indication of OPEC's power came with the 1973 oil embargo, during which long lines and soaring gasoline prices quickly convinced Americans of the reach of OPEC's influence. OPEC's member countries currently supply more than 40 percent of the world's oil.

September 14, 1965
My Mother the Car, one of the shortest running television shows in history and first about a Car, premiered on this day. The show featured Ann Southern as the reincarnation of the main character's mother - in the form of a classic 1928 Porter Automobile. Apparently, the idea of automobile reincarnation didn't appeal to the public then, and the series was canceled a few weeks after its debut.

September 14, 1982
Princess Grace of Monaco, also known as Grace Kelly, died on this day of injuries sustained in a car crash. The accident was one of the most tragic in modern memory, the car plunged down a 45-foot embankment after the Princess suffered a stroke and lost control of the car. Known as America's princess, Kelly's life had been a true fairy tale. She was born into a rich Irish Catholic family in Philadelphia where she attended private schools before enrolling in the Academy of Dramatic Art in New York. She soon rose to stardom both on Broadway and in Hollywood, winning the public's affection in such films as Rear Window and The Country Girl. However, she abandoned her acting career in order to marry Prince Rainier of Monaco, making her a real-life princess

(http://i127.photobucket.com/albums/p138/gaga51/Grace%20Kelly/grace.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/gaga51/media/Grace%20Kelly/grace.jpg.html)

TODAYS TRIVIA:
...There is a rare neurological disorder known as Alien Hand Syndrome in which one hand functions involuntarily, with the victim completely unaware of its action.
...A 103 year old Taiwanese man who passed away in 2008 hired a stripper to dance at his funeral.
...A Croatian footballer(soccer) was placed on the transfer list by his club, after fulfilling his life long dream of having sex in the middle of the pitch.
...There is a statue of George Washington in Britain that sits on top of soil imported from Virginia, due to Washington exclaiming "I will never set foot in Britain again!"
...The reason for Sylvester Stallone's snarl/slurred speech was an accident at birth, during which his Obstetrician accidentally severed a nerve and caused semi-paralysis in parts of Stallone's face.
...There is a mass reservoir of water floating in space that is 100,000 times bigger than our sun and holds 140 trillion times more water than all of our oceans.
...There are about 50 serial killers free in the US killing about 300-400 people every year.
...Nicolas Cage convinced Johnny Depp to pursue acting while playing a game of Monopoly.
...In 1989 a computer game was released which could not be copied, and which deleted itself upon being completed. The last known copy was sold at auction for more than $700,000.
...In 1907 Kellogg's promoted their cornflakes with something called the Wink Day campaign. Women we're encouraged to "wink at your grocer and see what you get" , what they got was a free box of cereal.
...One of the best selling erotic novels of the 15 century was written by a Pope.
...Teen pregnancy rates are actually at their lowest since the 1970s.
...An orangutan named Fu Manchu repeatedly escaped from his cage at the zoo using a key he had fashioned from a piece of wire. Every time his zookeepers inspected him, he hid the key in his mouth.
...During the filming of a Breaking Bad episode, the introduction of Wendy the prostitute was briefly interrupted when a non-actor attempted to pick up actress Julia Minesci, mistaking her for a prostitute.
...In 1939, Hitler’s nephew wrote an article called “Why I Hate My Uncle.” He came to the U.S., served in the Navy, and settled on Long Island.
...400 million years ago, a day was 21 hours long instead of 24 hours long.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on September 15, 2013, 08:40:22 am

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On this day, September 15, 1969
The classic British heist movie The Italian Job is released in Swedish theaters. (It had opened in the U.K. in June and in the United States on September 3.) The film starred Michael Caine as Charlie Croker, the leader of a gang of goodhearted thieves determined to steal a 4-million-pound shipment of gold on its way from China to a bank in Turin, Italy. The film also featured three Mini Coopers--a red one, a blue one, and a white one--as getaway cars for the pilfered gold. The popular British-made “microcars” get Croker’s gang out of Turin in a spectacular chase through the city, across crowded shopping arcades and plazas, over rooftops, around a Fiat factory and even down the steps of a church during a wedding. In the end, the thieves escape Turin by zipping through its sewer pipes and head for the Alps.
But once the mobsters swap their Minis for a getaway bus en route to Switzerland, all does not end well. After taking a turn too fast on the twisting Alpine road, the bus winds up see-sawing on the edge of a great cliff, with the mobsters in the front end and their loot in the precariously swaying rear. The thieves are stuck: As Croker inches toward the gold, the gold slides closer to the door and the bus wobbles closer to the precipice. Just before the credits roll, in what director Peter Collinson thought would be the perfect setup for a sequel, Croker tells his accomplices to hold on: “I’ve got a great idea.” (Collinson’s sequel was never made; however, an updated remake of the film was released in 2003.)
In 2008, in honor of the film’s approaching 40th anniversary, the Royal Society of Chemistry proposed a contest to finish Croker’s thought. To the person who could come up with the most original and plausible way to save the gold and the crew before the bus tipped off the edge, the RSC promised an Italian holiday.
Early in 2009, the Society announced its winner: an information-technology manager named John Godwin, whose 6-page scientific proof proposed an elaborate scheme involving window-breaking, fuel-tank draining, tire-deflating, and rock-gathering, all to make the bus stable enough for one of the thieves to shimmy back and grab the gold.

September 15, 1909
Charles F. Kettering of Detroit, Michigan, applied for a patent on his ignition system. But the ignition system was only the first of Kettering's many automobile improvements, a distinguished list that includes lighting systems, lacquer finishes, antilock fuels, leaded gasoline, and the electric starter. His company Delco (Dayton Engineering Laboratories Company) was a leader in automotive technology and later became a subsidiary of General Motors. Kettering himself served as vice president and director of research for GM from 1920 to 1947.

September 15, 1909
Ford sues George B. Selden. George Selden is rarely mentioned in accounts of automobile history, often lost among names like Ford, Daimler, and Cugnot. However, Selden reigned as the "Father of the Automobile" for almost 20 years, his name engraved on every car from 1895 until 1911. He held the patent on the "Road Engine," which was effectively a patent on the automobile - a claim that went unchallenged for years, despite the many other inventors who had contributed to the development of the automobile and the internal combustion engine. Almost all of the early car manufacturers, unwilling to face the threat of a lawsuit, were forced to buy licenses from Selden, so almost every car on the road sported a small brass plaque reading "Manufactured under Selden Patent." Henry Ford was the only manufacturer willing to challenge Selden in court, and on this day a New York judge ruled that Ford had indeed infringed on Selden's patent. This decision was later overturned when it became plain that Selden had never intended to actually manufacture his "road engine." Selden's own "road engine" prototype, built in the hope of strengthening his case, only managed to stagger along for a few hours before breaking down.
PICTURED: Brayton / Selden engine diagram and George B Selden driving his automobile in 1905


(http://i38.photobucket.com/albums/e136/fattywagonman/seldednauto_zps36292280.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/fattywagonman/media/seldednauto_zps36292280.jpg.html) (http://i38.photobucket.com/albums/e136/fattywagonman/braytonseldenengine_zps28040f32.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/fattywagonman/media/braytonseldenengine_zps28040f32.jpg.html)

TODAYS TRIVIA:
...In the early years of the 20th century, horses were causing so much pollution with their poop that automobiles were seen as the "green" alternative.
...A woman jumped off of the Eiffel Tower and landed on a car and survived, then later married the car’s owner.
...The longest killshot from a sniper was from more that 1.5 miles away . . . and he did it twice.
...A woman fell in love with, has a sexual relationship with, and plans to marry, an amusement park ride.
...The Chocolate River in Willy Wonka and The Chocolate Factory was made from real chocolate, water and cream.
...While shooting Resident Evil there was an accident that injured 16 people. First responders to the scene thought there was a catastrophe and had trouble assessing the injuries due to the victims zombie costumes.
...A women fabricated a story about being on the 78th floor of the south WTC after it was hit. She became the president of the WTC Survivors Network. She was in Spain during 9/11.
...A man won a bet that he could have sex with 2 women for 12 hours but died shortly afterward due to ingesting an entire bottle of viagra.
...Gmail logo was designed the night before the service launched
...Men and women who listen to more music tend to be better communicators and even have longer lasting relationships.
...The price of admission for a zoo in 18th century England was a dog or a cat -- they were fed to the lions.
...New Yorkers bite 10 times more people than sharks do worldwide.
...Taking a short nap after learning something new can actually help your memory.
...Marijuana was used to treat absent-mindedness in Ancient China.
...An African tribe donated 14 cows to the US after the events of 9/11.
...At least 5 people have been murdered for unfriending someone on Facebook.

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Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on September 16, 2013, 10:58:35 pm

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September 16, 1908
William C. Durant founded the General Motors Corporation (GM), consolidating several motor car companies, including Buick, Oldsmobile, and Cadillac, to form this Goliath of the automotive industry. GM's success was assured in 1912 when Cadillac introduced the electric self-starter, quickly making the hand crank obsolete and propelling sales. Throughout the next few years, the company continued to grow, buying out Chevrolet, Delco, the Fisher Body Company, and Frigidaire. In 1929, GM surpassed Ford to become the leading American passenger-car manufacturer, and by 1941, the company was the largest automotive manufacturer in the world. But the 1970s and 1980s brought darker times, and the company suffered under severe competition from imports. GM responded with attempts at modernization, but its efforts have yielded mixed results thus far; the company was forced to close a large number of plants in the U.S. during the early 1990s after several years of heavy losses.
PICTURED: Durant Factory Muncie, Indiana

September 16, 1903
Frederick Henry Royce, of Rolls-Royce Ltd., successfully tested his first gasoline engine. The two-cylinder, 10hp engine was one of three experimental cars designed by Royce during the automobile's early years, when gasoline-powered engines competed on equal footing with electric and steam engines. In fact, Royce's first company, Royce Ltd., built electric motors.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on September 18, 2013, 01:10:13 am
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On this day, September 17, 1965
Four adventurous Englishmen arrive at the Frankfurt Motor Show in Germany after crossing the English Channel by Amphicar, the world’s only mass-produced amphibious passenger car. Despite choppy waters, stiff winds, and one flooded engine, the two vehicles made it across the water in about seven hours.
The Amphicar’s design, by the German engineer Hans Trippel, derived from the Schwimmwagen, the amphibious all-wheel-drive vehicle that Volkswagen had produced for the German armed forces during World War II. A company called the Quandt Group produced the Amphicars for seven years, from 1961 to1968; in all, they built about 3,900 of the little swimming convertibles.
Amphicars came in four colors--Beach White, Regatta Red, Lagoon Blue, and Fjord Green--and were powered from the rear by a 43-horsepower, four-cylinder Triumph Herald engine. On land, the cars used a four-speed-plus-reverse manual transmission. In the water, they used a transfer case that had two speeds: forward and backward. With the top and windows up, the Amphicar was remarkably seaworthy: Its front wheels acted as rudders and two nylon propellers chugged along in back. The car’s builders called it the “770,” because--in theory, at least--it could go 7 mph in the water and 70 mph on land. To see an Amphicar hit either one of these speeds was rare, however: According to one owner, it was “the fastest car on the water and the fastest boat on the road.”
The four Englishmen left London on the morning of September 16, rolled down the ramp at Dover, and headed for France. About halfway across the Channel, a blocked bilge pump flooded one of the Amphicars; the other towed it the rest of the way to shore. When they arrived at Calais, the four travelers (with the help of the crowd that had gathered to see them) managed to drag the cars over the beach and to the gas station. The next day, they headed off to Frankfurt.
About 3,000 Amphicars were imported into the United States. In fact, Quandt sold such a large proportion of the cars to Americans that in 1968, when the Motor Vehicle Air Pollution Act raised emissions standards to a level that the Amphicar couldn’t meet, the company just stopped building the cars altogether. Amphicar enthusiasts estimate that between 300 and 600 seaworthy vehicles remain on the road today.

September 17, 1903
First coast-to-coast tour was completed. At a time when driving across country was akin to climbing Mt. Everest, Lester L. Whitman and Eugene I. Hammond completed their coast-to-coast expedition on this day to national acclaim. Whitman and Hammond's journey, the third trans-U.S. automobile trip in history, contained a small detour, however. The two drivers decided to include a side trip from Windsor to Niagara Falls in Ontario, Canada, in order to dub their trek "international."

September 17, 1986
In 1985, a car that had evolved from a first-class chassis was introduced in the form of the Bentley Turbo R. Superior suspension for road handling, firmer shock absorbers, and crisper steering were meant to entice sporting motorists--just in case the Turbo R's top speeds were not enough. Still, Bentley's turbo-charged model needed nothing but speed on, breaking 16 records for speed and endurance at the Millbrook, Bedfordshire, high-speed circuit in England.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on September 18, 2013, 06:25:35 am
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On this day, September 18, 1904
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Glidden completed the first crossing of the Canadian Rockies by automobile, arriving exhausted from their 3,536-mile trip. The couple had driven from Boston, Massachusetts, to Vancouver, Canada, in their 24hp Napier.

September 18, 1955
The Ford Motor Company produced its 2,000,000th V-8 engine, 23 years after the first Ford V-8 was manufactured. The popularity of the V-8 engine began in the late 1940s, when the engines of the time failed to satisfy the industry trend toward increased horsepower, experiencing vibration and size problems at the high pressures that accompany high horsepower. Engineers began developing a stiff, V-shaped configuration to combat the new problems, and the V-8 became the preferred choice for auto manufacturers. Trends began to reverse somewhat during the late 1960s with the advent of smaller cars, and four and six cylinder engines began to gain on the popularity of the V-8.

September 18, 2006
Ford bought rights to Rover name from BMW for approximately £6 million. Ironically no Rover branded cars were produced whilst Ford owned the brand. As part of Ford's agreement to sell their Jaguar & Land Rover operations early this year to Tata Motors, the Rover brand name was included in the deal.

TODAYS TRIVIA:
...Volkswagen owns Bentley, Bugatti, Lamborghini, Audi, Ducati and Porsche.
...There is such a thing as one-way bulletproof glass. This allows you to return fire through the glass while still keeping you protected from the attacker (your shot leaves a bullet-sized hole, but doesn't compromise the rest of the shield)
...There is an Australian band called "The Beards". Every single one of their 38 songs is about beards.
...Rubik's Cube is the best-selling product of all time. It has outsold all iPhones by 100 million units.
...A teaspoon of honey is actually the lifework of 12 bees.
...There's a school in Russia for mastering “The Art of oral sex”
...World's oldest backpacker has been travelling around the world for the last 30 years.
...The phrase "Money is the root of all evil." is a misquotation of "The love of money is a root of all kinds of evil." which has quite a different meaning.
...In the 50's, the CIA tried to assassinate Fidel Castro by slipping an exploding cigar into his private supply
...In Japan, you can find Glowing Firefly Squids. They glow as they are pushed to the shore's edge.
...Animal Planet made a fake documentary about the existence of mermaids... twice. People fell for the trick both times.
...One of the first documented Internet purchases was a pepperoni pizza with mushrooms and extra cheese from Pizza Hut.
...People who are sad or depressed are likely to spend more money than those who are happy.
...Adolf Hitler was the first one to name a weapon an "assault rifle" (for the Nazi Army's StG 44 weapon)
...A husband and wife each won a lottery by playing numbers recommended by a fortune cookie.
...Google makes more money from iPhone users than Android users.
...If you squeezed out all the space inside an atom you could fit the entire human race into a sugar cube.
...2 years after Titanic sank, the Empress Of Ireland sank in the Gulf of St. Lawrence and lost 68.5% of all passengers (.5% more than Titanic!). The event was buried in the papers because of WWI.
...The worlds first smartphone was released in 1994 by IBM, and cost $899, and had only one 3rd party app.
...'Okay' is the most recognized word/phrase in the world. 'Coca Cola/Coke' is the second.
...60% (50 of 83) of the restaurants that appeared on Kitchen Nightmares have been sold or shutdown.
...Rivalry between Pizza Hut and Papa John's is so fierce, Pizza Hut reserves any phone numbers that spell out the letters P-A-P-A ...just so Papa John's can't get them.
...The word 'f@# k' was first used in 1568, but was most commonly used between 1700-1720. It disappeared from the English language for 150 years in the 18-1900s.
...Japan has a law that states any day that falls between two holidays shall become a holiday.
...Nicholas Cage once woke up in the middle of the night to find a naked man eating a Fudgesicle in front of his bed.
...Once Rowan Atkinson, known as Mr. Bean, saved a plane crash when the pilot of his private jet fainted mid-flight.
...Just like fingerprints, every person also has a unique tongue print!
...Hitler had only 1 testicle, the other was shot off in WW1, and medic Johan Jambor saved his life and regretted it until he died in 1985.
...We lose 6 seconds of visual information each minute from blinking. In a 150 minute long movie, our eyes are shut for 15 minutes.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on September 19, 2013, 10:56:02 am
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On this day, September 19, 1932
The Bonneville Salt Flats in Utah have been the site of dozens of world speed records, but Ab Jenkins set a new kind of record in Bonneville. Jenkins completed the first 24-hour solo run, driving 2,710 miles nonstop in a single day. His stock Pierce Arrow V-12 averaged 112.94mph.

September 19, 1887
Dr. Graham Edgar, developer of the octane rating system, was born in Fayetteville, Arkansas. Although he may not be a household name, evidence of Edgar's work lines every highway in America. His rating system measures a fuel's ability to resist any form of abnormal combustion, in other words, its ability to burn cleanly. Eighty-eight and 90 are the normal ratings for everyday unleaded gasoline, while racing gasoline will often have a rating as high as 115. Almost every gas pump in America sports an octane rating sticker.

September 19, 1919
Wary of the unpopularity of "German-sounding" names after World War I, August Beuck began using the name Buick rather than Beuck for the first time when he christened the new post office in his Colorado hometown. The new name of the General Motors marque seemed assuredly all-American in a time when anti-German feelings dominated the nation. The wave of intolerance had begun with the United States entrance into World War I, resulting in many a Schmidt becoming a Smith. Throughout the country, hundreds of German newspapers and publications were forced to shut down, and German language instruction came to an end in most states.

Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on September 20, 2013, 05:51:13 am
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On this day, September 20, 1960
California hot rodder Mickey Thompson takes another shot at the world land-speed record. A few weeks earlier, Thompson had become the first American to travel faster than 400 mph on land when he’d piloted his Challenger I (a car that he designed and built himself) across Utah’s Bonneville Salt Flats at 406.6 mph. This drive had made Thompson the fastest man on wheels, but not officially: In order to win a place in the land-speed record books, racers must make a return pass within the hour, and Thompson’s car broke down in the middle of his second run, necessitating a follow-up attempt.
At the time, the world land-speed record was 394 mph, set at Bonneville in 1947 by the British driver John Cobb. On his first run across the flats (403.135 mph), Cobb became the first man to go faster than 400 mph. (His second run only reached 388.019 mph; the record speed was an average of the two.) To set a world speed record, drivers must make two passes over the same measured mile, one out and one back (to account for wind assistance), and beat the previous average by at least 1 percent.
After Thompson’s first pass across the Utah flats on September 9, he refueled the 7,000-pound, 2,000 horsepower Challenger and pushed off for the return trip. As the car gathered speed, however, something went wrong. For years, Thompson told people that something was the driveline: It had snapped, he said, forcing him to stop accelerating and coast back across the desert. In fact, one of the car’s four supercharged engines blew when Thompson shifted into high gear.
On September 20, Thompson tried again. This time, he only managed to coax the Challenger up to about 378 mph on his first run and 368 mph on his second. But it hardly mattered: The Challenger’s speedy trips across the desert won worldwide fame for the car and its driver, and by the time Thompson retired in 1962, he had set more than 100 speed records.
In 1988, two hooded gunmen murdered Thompson and his wife in their driveway and fled the scene on bicycles. Almost 20 years later, one of Thompson’s business acquaintances was convicted of the killings; he is serving two life sentences without parole.

September 20, 1945
War production halts. Automotive manufacturers had been at the heart of a seamless war machine during World War II, producing trucks, tanks, and planes at astounding rates. But only after the last shots were fired did auto factories begin to produce cars again, focusing their sights on the booming postwar market. A month after the surrender of Japan, Packard followed the lead of every other company and ceased military production, turning out its last wartime Rolls-Royce Merlin engine on this day.

September 20, 1979
Legendary Lee Iacocca makes a comeback. After being fired from the Ford presidency, he was elected chairman of the failing Chrysler Corporation. Despite dire predictions from his critics, Iacocca succeeded in rebuilding Chrysler through layoffs, cutbacks, hard-selling advertising, and a government loan guarantee. He became the epitome of the "can-do" executive, famous for his strong work ethic and no-nonsense style. During Chrysler's crisis years, Iacocca reduced his salary to $1 per year to set an example for the rest of the company, explaining that everyone must be willing to sacrifice a little in order for Chrysler to survive. By 1983, Chrysler had moved from the verge of bankruptcy to a competitive force in the automobile market, paying back all of its government loans in less than four years. His autobiography Iacocca became a best-seller in 1984, breaking all records for a business book, which accounts all of his such ventures.

September 20, 1984
Twelve people were killed when a suicide car bomber attacked the U.S. embassy complex in Beirut, Lebanon. Car bombs have started to become the weapon of choice for terrorists from early 80s.. But car bombs has been used as early as 1920s. The car bomb method has sadly proven an effective way of achieving mass destruction, as it is much easier for a terrorist to find a parking space than bypass a building's internal security. From Beirut to Oklahoma City, entire buildings have been destroyed from car bomb blasts, and countless lives have been lost. Among the most noted in recent times were the dual U.S. embassy bombings in Kenya and Tanzania, where two car bombs killed 257 people, and reduced several buildings to rubble. Similar setup has been used extensively by insurgents in Iraq.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on September 21, 2013, 05:41:21 am
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On this day, September 21, 1959
No-name Plymouth produced in Michigan. The first Plymouth Valiant was produced on this day at a plant in Hamtramck, Michigan, although it was not known by that name until 1961. Originally code named "Falcon" after the 1955 Chrysler Falcon, plans for the new model went awry when the Chrysler marketing team found out at the last minute that Ford had already registered the name "Falcon" for its compact car. The news resulted in a wild scramble, for the logo castings had already been made and marketing plans finalized. A company-wide contest was held for a new name, and "Valiant" emerged the winner. However, there was no time to make new logo castings, so the car was simply introduced as the Valiant, featuring only a mylar sticker on the engine for identification. It wasn't until 1961 that the Valiant became the Plymouth Valiant, new logo castings and all.

September 21, 1921
The first Bentley was sold to Noel van Raalte, wealthy and influential playboy racecar driver.

September 21, 1945
Henry Ford II, grandson and namesake of Henry Ford, succeeded his father as president of the Ford Motor Company, inheriting a company that was losing money at the rate of several million dollars a month. After recovering from the shock of his father's unexpected death, Henry Ford II was effectively given a crash course in management, but fortunately for the company, he turned out to have the magic touch. He quickly set about reorganizing and modernizing the Ford Motor Company, firing the powerful Personnel Chief Harry Bennett, whose strong-arm tactics and anti-union stance had made Ford notorious for its bad labor relations. He also brought in new talent, including a group of former U.S. Air Force intelligence officers, among them Robert McNamara, who became known as the "Whiz Kids." During his tenure as president, Henry Ford II nursed the Ford Motor Company back to health, greatly expanding its international operations and introducing two classic models, the Mustang and the Thunderbird.

September 21, 1947
The Grand Prix returns after the World War II. Driving his Talbot-Lago across the finish line in Lyon-Parilly, Louis Chrion emerged victorious at the French Grand Prix of 1947. The race was a continuation of the Grand Prix's long history and France's first major post-World War II race. The event had been suspended for several years during the war, along with almost all other car racing. In a side note, the Albert Lory designed CTA-Arsenal made a disgraceful debut at the Grand Prix that year, and was never raced again.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on September 22, 2013, 04:53:36 pm
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On this day, September 22, 1893
America's first automobile was not built by a Henry Ford or Walter Chrysler, but by Charles and Frank Duryea, two bicycle makers. Charles spotted a gasoline engine at the 1886 Ohio State Fair and became convinced that an engine-driven carriage could be built. The two brothers designed and built the car together, working in a rented loft in Springfield, Massachusetts. After two years of tinkering, Charles and Frank Duryea showed off their home invention on the streets of Springfield, the first successful run of an automobile in the U.S.

September 22, 1953
The world's first four-level interchange structure, was opened in L.A. Los Angeles is widely known for its traffic and smog, miles of freeway stretching in every direction. The massive concrete structure connected the freeways of Hollywood, Harbor, Santa Ana, and Arroyo Seco.

September 22, 1989
Chrysler sells interest in Mitsubishi. In a move that sent ripples throughout the automotive world, the Chrysler Corporation sold 50 percent of its interest in the Mitsubishi Motors Corporation. The decision came at a time when most other American automobile manufacturers, including Chrysler's top rivals Ford and General Motors, were eagerly buying up shares of Japanese automobile stock and strengthening ties with Japanese manufacturers. Chrysler claimed that it was taking advantage of a bullish Japanese market at a potential gain of $310 million, but industry pundits speculated that the motive went much deeper. Chrysler's audacious move likely stemmed from disagreements between the two companies over Mitsubishi's U.S. sales and distribution. In many cases, Mitsubishi-made products were being sold under the Chrysler name, often in direct competition with the Mitsubishi marque.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on September 23, 2013, 08:41:18 pm
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On this day, September 23, 1939
A.P. MacArthur pulled across the finish line in Ballinascorney, Ireland, winning the last Irish hill climb before World War II. Hill-climbing events usually took place on a public road, and they became wildly popular in Great Britain and Ireland during the early days of the automobile. Cars of all shapes and sizes would race up a hill, with drivers gunning their engines and showing off the prowess of their new motor car. Cheered on by a crowd of onlookers, the fastest car up the hill won. World War II brought an end to hill climbs and car racing in general, as manufacturers funneled their efforts into military production. However, hill climbing returned after the war, more popular than ever, most popular being the Pikes Peak event.

September 23, 1969
Tapio Laukkanen, Finnish rally driver was born in Lahti, Southern Finland.
In 1996 he won the Finnish Rally Championship in a Volkswagen Golf GTi and in 1999 he won the British Rally Championship with a Renault Mégane Maxi twinned with fellow Finn, Kaj Lindström.

September 23, 1972
The famous Crystal Palace racing circuit in London, England, was closed by the Greater London Council, ending a 45-year racing tradition. The closing had been announced a few weeks before the beginning of the 1972 season, prompted by noise complaints and safety concerns. During its long history, the Crystal Palace circuit had hosted everything from the first televised auto race to a few demonstration laps by Chitty Chitty Bang Bang.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on September 24, 2013, 11:31:05 am
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On this day, September 24, 1948
The Honda Motor Company, one of the world's leading automobile manufacturers, began as a research institute founded by engineer Honda Soichiro. The institute focused on creating small, efficient internal combustion engines, before it began incorporating these engines into motorcycles under the Honda name. It was on this day that the Honda Technical Research Institute officially became the Honda Motor Company, establishing a corporation that would become the leading producer of motorcycles in the world.

September 24, 1908
The first factory-built Ford Model T was completed on this day, just one more step in Ford's affordable revolution. Affectionately known as the "Tin Lizzie," the Model T revolutionized the automotive industry by providing an affordable, reliable car for the average person. Ford was able to keep the price down by retaining control of all raw materials, and by employing revolutionary mass production methods. When it was first introduced, the "Tin Lizzie" cost only $850 and seated two people.

September 24, 1974
General Motors announced that the release of the "Monza," its rotary-engine sports compact, would be postponed due to problems complying with new EPA emissions standards. Environmental concerns had become an increasingly high priority with the American public, and the government had been responding accordingly. Pressures on the automotive industry had been riding high since the 1970 Clean Air Act, rising even higher with the new National Ambient Air Quality Standards of 1971. With both public opinion and the federal government against them, GM had no choice but to delay the new model's release.

TODAYS TRIVIA:
...whitehouse.com used to be a #### website, resulting in many schoolchildren in the late 1990s accidentally seeing adult content.
...In 1990, New Zealand became the first country in the modern world to appoint an Official Wizard.
...Russian scientists were able to bring back an arctic flower, extinct for 32,000 years, from a seed that's been borrowed by an ice age squirrel.
...Pringles chips are named after a street in Finneytown, a tiny Cincinnati suburb.
...A person of average size and weight burns about 60 to 70 calories each hour just by sitting and watching television.
...Owning a cat at home reduces the risk of heart attack by 40% and stroke by 30%.
...Emerson Moser retired after making 1.4 billion crayons for Crayola for 37 years, and then announced he was colorblind.
...IKEA stores are designed like mazes in order to prevent customers from leaving.
...None of the Beach Boys actually surfed except for Dennis who died drowning.
...There are 300 registered superheroes living in the US.
...Humans can't taste pure water, but it does have a taste.
...One Direction are the youngest band to ever perform at the Olympic Games.
...More people actually live in caves now than during the Stone Age.
...Google has been buying, on average, more than one company per week since 2010.
...Every year in Ancient Athens, citizens had the chance to vote their least favorite politician into exile.
...The Bible is the most shoplifted book in the world.
...The vibrations from the bass on a loud stereo can cause your lungs to collapse.
...Gandhi once wrote a letter to his "dear friend" urging him not to go to war. This friend was Hitler.
...During the 1960's, Robert F. Kennedy said he believed a black man could become President of the United States within 40 years.
...Even when adjusted for inflation, the movie Titanic cost more to make than the actual Titanic ship.
...You can hire an "evil birthday clown" to stalk your child around for a week.
...If you had one billion dollars and spent $10,000 every day, it would take 275 years for you to spend it all.
...Hearing sarcastic remarks makes you more creative.
...An Indian airline only hires women because they are lighter, so they save up to $500,000 per year in fuel.
...Drinking 16 ounces of cold water on an empty stomach will increase your metabolism by about 30%.
...A bite is taken out of the Apple logo to provide scale, so that the apple wouldn't be mistaken for a cherry.
...When you go swimming, it's estimated that you swallow as many viruses as there are people on Earth.
...If Twitter was a country, it would be the 12th most populated country in the world.
...Bill Gates has impersonators who take his place at events the real Bill Gates cannot or does not want to attend.
...A 2.5 GB disk drive in 1980 was the size of a fridge. Price: US$40,000.
...The letter 'L' is on the right side of the keyboard, and the letter 'R' is on the left side.
...If an ant was the same size as us, it would be twice as fast as a Lamborghini.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on September 25, 2013, 10:13:24 pm
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On this day, September 25, 1987
Ray Harroun's place in history was sealed when the U.S. Postal Service issued a stamp featuring the famous racing champion. Called "Racing Car 1911," the stamp depicted Harroun and the Marmon Wasp which he drove to victory in the first Indy 500. Harroun, an engineer, had built the car himself and was the only driver on the Indianapolis track without a riding mechanic. The mechanics usually accompanied the driver in order to warn him of the other cars in the race, but Harroun went the race alone after he rigged up a device that allowed him to see the cars behind him--the first rearview mirror. The race took over six hours to complete, with Harroun coming from 28th place to finish first. He died in 1968 at the age of 89.

September 25, 1926
Henry Ford of the Ford Motor Company announced the 8-hour, 5-day work week.

September 25, 1936
Bill Schindler, a race-car driver, met with misfortune, crashing during a sprint race in Mineola, New York. Three days after the accident, Schindler's left leg had to be amputated. However, this loss did not prevent him from continuing his career.

September 25, 2004
On September 25, 2004, Chinese officials gather at the brand-new Shanghai International Circuit racetrack in anticipation of the next day's inaugural Formula One Chinese Grand Prix. Though Formula One racing was traditionally a European sport, the builders and boosters of the state-sponsored Shanghai track--part of an elaborate complex called the Shanghai International Auto City--hoped that they could help the sport catch on in Asia. In particular, they hoped their high-tech raceway would draw attention and investment to the fledgling Chinese auto industry.
Formula One racing, in which drivers race around specially-designed circuits built to resemble twisting, irregular city streets is the offspring of European Grand Prix motor racing, an almost century-old sport in which drivers would zip from one town to the next on public roads. As the Grand Prix contests grew more popular, they grew more dangerous--to racers, spectators, and especially the ordinary drivers who happened to be on the roads during a race. Soon, race organizers decided to close the roads on the day of their events and to establish and enforce a set of official rules. In 1947, Grand Prix officials created the Federation Internationale de L'Automobile, which became the central governing authority of the championship races; its set of rules was known as the Formula One. Today, there are seventeen Formula One races every year, and they take place everywhere from Spain, Monaco, Belgium and Italy to Australia, Malaysia, Brazil, Abu Dhabi, Bahrain and, of course, China.
Shanghai's International Circuit raceway was designed to help China cash in on the skyrocketing international popularity of Formula One competitions. It is 3.3 miles long, with two long straightaways and 16 corners. It cost $300 million in public money--about $100 million per mile of track--and can seat 200,000 spectators. The day after the raceway opened, some 150,000 people filled the stands as the Brazilian driver Rubens Barrichello won its inaugural race.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on September 26, 2013, 08:36:09 am
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September 26, 1982
The first episode of the television show Knight Rider aired on this day, starring David Hasselhoff as private eye Michael Knight. However, the real star of the show was "KITT," his talking car. KITT, a modified Pontiac Firebird, complete with artificial intelligence and glowing red lights, assisted Michael in his detective work. During the show's four years, KITT attracted a loyal fan following, and a few episodes even featured "KARR," KITT's look-alike nemesis.
PICTURED: KARR

September 26, 1910
William C. Durant, carriage maker and entrepreneur, was the original patriarch of the corporate behemoth General Motors. But financial difficulties cost him control of the company. Determined to regain control of his brainchild, Durant joined forces with Louis Chevrolet to establish the Chevrolet Motor Company. Five years later, Durant and Chevrolet acquired control of GM and extended the massive umbrella of the General Motors Corporation, with Durant serving as president. Yet, he would go on to lose control of GM yet again in 1920, this time permanently.

September 26, 1910
Work begins at Chicago’s new Galvin Manufacturing Corporation. The company had officially incorporated the day before. In 1930, Galvin would introduce the Motorola radio, the first mass-produced commercial car radio. The name had two parts: “motor” evoked cars and motion, while “ola” derived from “Victrola” and was supposed to make people think of music.
In 1921, engineer Paul Galvin and his friend Edward Stewart started a storage-battery factory in Marshfield, Wisconsin; it went out of business two years later. In 1926, Galvin and Stewart re-started their battery-manufacturing company, this time in Chicago. That one went out of business too, but not before the partners figured out a way for home radios to draw power from an electrical wall outlet; they called it the dry-battery eliminator. Galvin bought back the eliminator part of his bankrupt company at auction for $750 and went right back into business, building and repairing eliminators and AC radio sets for customers like Sears, Roebuck.
Soon, however, Galvin’s attention turned to the car-radio business. The first car radios--portable “travel radios” powered by batteries, followed by custom-installed built-in radios that cost $250 apiece (about $2,800 in today’s dollars)--had appeared in 1926, but they were way too expensive for the average driver. If he could find a way to mass-produce affordable car radios, Galvin thought, he’d be rich. In June 1930, he enlisted inventors Elmer Wavering and William Lear to retrofit his old Studebaker with a radio and drove 800 miles to the Radio Manufacturers Association’s annual meeting in Atlantic City. He parked outside the convention, turned up the music (for this purpose, Wavering had installed a special speaker under the Studebaker’s hood), and waited for the RMAers’ orders to come rolling in.
A few did, and Galvin sold enough of his $110 5T71 car radios to come close to breaking even for the year. He changed his company’s name to Motorola and changed the way we drive--and ride in--cars forever.
For his part, William Lear went on to invent the eight-track cartridge-tape system, which came standard in every Ford car starting in 1966. Meanwhile, carmakers developed their own radio-manufacturing divisions, gradually squeezing Motorola out of the market it had built. The company stopped making car radios in 1984. Today, it’s best known for making cellular phones.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on September 27, 2013, 10:42:15 pm
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September 27, 1925
Construction on the infamous Nurburgring racing circuit, often referred to as a "green hell," began. The 12.9 mile course through the Eifel forests was considered the most dangerous segment of road on the planet, curving around 73 corners and covering a rise and fall of almost a 1,000 feet. The circuit held a strange spell over many drivers, beckoning the brave to test their skill. The "green hell" proved lethal to many, and was once rumored to average 20 accidents a day. Racing events are no longer officially held on the circuit, but the course is often used by auto manufacturers to test new models.

September 27, 1928
The first cornerstone of the Henry Ford Museum was laid today, the first step in establishing one of the most extensive collections of automotive history in the world. Although the museum is named after Henry Ford, its collection extends well beyond the Ford Motor Company. Its holdings include product literature, advertising and promotional materials, thousands of books, and almost 300 cars. The museum also hosts exhibits on everything from agriculture to industry and is located in Dearborn, Michigan.


September 27, 1990
Renault and Volvo signed an agreement of industrial cooperation, outlining plans for an eventual merger. The merger plans were abandoned three years later, leaving a lot of unanswered questions and speculations. Many industry experts suspect that Volvo backed out of the deal due to their lingering suspicion of the French government. Renault, a state-owned company, was slated for privatization, but critics found the plans too vague and saw the French government as susceptible to pressure from its workers. Economic pundits pointed to Europe's recession and double-digit unemployment. Some merely felt that Volvo, a symbol of Sweden's industrial prowess, was being bargained away too cheaply.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on September 28, 2013, 06:58:41 am
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On this day, September 28, 1938
Inventor Charles Duryea dies in Philadelphia at the age of 76. Duryea and his brother Frank designed and built one of the first functioning “gasoline buggies,” or gas-powered automobiles, in the United States. For most of his life, however, Charles insisted on taking full credit for the brothers’ innovation. On the patent applications he filed for the Duryea Motor Wagon, for instance, Charles averred that he was the car’s sole inventor; he also loftily proclaimed that his brother was “simply a mechanic” hired to execute Charles’ plans.
Charles Duryea was not the inventor of the first gasoline engine, nor was he the first person to build a gas-powered car. Instead, as his obituary in the New York Times put it, he “had the rare mechanical wit to see how the contributions of his predecessors could be combined into a sound invention.” In 1886, Charles was working as a bicycle mechanic in Peoria when he received a jolt of inspiration from a gasoline engine he saw at a state fair. There was no reason, he thought, why such a motor could not be used to power a lightweight quadricycle. He spent seven years designing and redesigning his machine, a one-cylinder, four-horsepower, tiller-steered car with a water-cooled gas engine, a buggy body, and narrow metal oak-spoked wheels turned by bicycle chains. The car also had an electric ignition and a spray carburetor, both designed by Frank.
In September 1893, Frank Duryea took the finally-completed Motor Wagon out for its first official spin. He only managed to splutter about 600 feet down his block before the car’s friction-belt transmission failed, but even so, it was clear that the Duryea auto was a promising machine. It’s worth noting that Charles missed all this excitement: Frank and the car were in Springfield, Massachusetts, while the elder Duryea was fixing bikes in Peoria.
Two years later, on Thanksgiving Day, an improved Duryea Motor Wagon with pneumatic rubber tires won the first auto race in the United States. In 1896, the brothers built and sold 13 identical Duryeas, making theirs the first American company to manufacture more than one automobile at a time. After that, the brothers parted ways: Frank went on to build and sell the Stevens-Duryea Limousine, while Charles (“unable,” his Times obituary said, “to adapt himself to the public taste”) worked on designing less practical vehicles like tiller-steered mechanical tricycles.
PICTURED: Frank Duryea in 1895

September 28, 1978
Car & Driver Editor Don Sherman set a Class E record at the Bonneville Salt Flats in Utah driving the Mazda RX7, the standard-bearer for the rotary engine in the U.S. market, and reaching 183.904mph. The RX7's unique rotary engine doesn't have the standard pistons, instead, two rounded "rotors" spin to turn the engine's flywheel. Although the rotary engine was not a new concept, the Mazda RX7 was one of the first to conquer the reliability issues faced by earlier rotary engines. Light and fun to drive, with 105hp from its 1.1 liter rotary engine, the RX7 was extremely popular.

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September 28, 1982
Ford took a major step in overcoming its history of poor labor relations opening the joint UAW (United Auto Workers) and Ford National Development and Training Center. The center, located in Dearborn, Michigan, provides education and training to workers, as well as community programs. Workers can participate in any of six major programs, learning about everything from math skills to pension plans. More importantly, the center also offers relocation assistance and several unemployment programs for laid-off workers. Ford subsidizes the training center with grants and tuition assistance.

September 28, 1988
The Ahrens Fox Model AC fire engine had its 15 minutes of fame when the U.S. Postal Service featured the 1913 fire engine as part of its transportation series. The Ahrens-Fox Company was one of the most successful fire engine manufacturers in the country, thriving on the competition between volunteer fire companies that developed in the early twentieth century. These rivalries spurred ingenuity and innovation, as well as sales of fancy new fire-fighting equipment. The Model AC depicted on the stamp was bought by the town of San Angelo, Texas, for its fire department and featured new technology like the steam pump and chemical tank.

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Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on September 29, 2013, 06:02:29 am
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On this day, September 29, 1888
Daimler cars managed to make it to New York long before other imports due to an auto enthusiast named William Steinway. Steinway, concluded licensing negotiations with Gottlieb Daimler, gaining permission to manufacture Daimler cars in the U.S. He founded the "Daimler Motor Company" and began producing Daimler engines, as well as importing Daimler boats, trucks, and other equipment to the North American market. Still, the U.S. was just a small portion of Daimler's market, and when he introduced a new line in 1901, he christened it Mercedes because he feared the German-sounding Daimler would not sell well.
PICTURED: Karl Benz received a patent for the first Automobile in 1866, which had three wheels. A year later, Gottlieb Daimler introduced the first four wheel automobile in the Industrial Age.

September 29, 1908
William Durrant merged Buick, Oldsmobile (Lansing, MI) into General Motors. He also added Cadillac (Detroit) for $4.4 million cash, Oakland (Pontiac predecessor), dozens of parts suppliers (AC Spark Plug) into GM.

September 29, 1913
Rudolf Diesel, inventor of the engine that bears his name, disappears from the steamship Dresden while traveling from Antwerp, Belgium to Harwick, England. On October 10, a Belgian sailor aboard a North Sea steamer spotted a body floating in the water; upon further investigation, it turned out that the body was Diesel’s. There was, and remains, a great deal of mystery surrounding his death: It was officially judged a suicide, but many people believed that Diesel was murdered.
Diesel patented a design for his engine on February 28, 1892,; the following year, he explained his design in a paper called “Theory and Construction of a Rational Heat Engine to Replace the Steam Engine and Contemporary Combustion Engine.” He called his invention a “compression ignition engine” that could burn any fuel--later on, the prototypes he built would run on peanut or vegetable oil--and needed no ignition system: It ignited by introducing fuel into a cylinder full of air that had been compressed to an extremely high pressure and was, therefore, extremely hot.
Such an engine would be unprecedentedly efficient, Diesel argued: In contrast to the other steam engines of the era, which wasted more than 90 percent of their fuel energy, Diesel calculated that his could be as much as 75 percent efficient. The most efficient engine that Diesel ever actually built had an efficiency of 26 percent--not quite 75 percent, but still much better than its peers.
By 1912, there were more than 70,000 diesel engines working around the world, mostly in factories and generators. Eventually, Diesel’s engine would revolutionize the railroad industry; after World War II, trucks and buses also started using diesel-type engines that enabled them to carry heavy loads much more economically.
At the time of Diesel’s disappearance , he was on his way to England to attend the groundbreaking of a new diesel-engine plant--and to meet with the British navy about installing his engine on their submarines. Conspiracy theories began to fly almost immediately: “Inventor Thrown Into the Sea to Stop Sale of Patents to British Government,” read one headline; another worried that Diesel was “Murdered by Agents from Big Oil Trusts.” It is likely that Diesel did throw himself overboard--as it turns out, he was nearly broke, but the mystery will probably never be solved.

September 29, 1983
Henry Ford II, grandson and namesake of Henry Ford, joined his grandfather today as a member of the Automotive Hall of Fame in Midland, Michigan. When he succeeded his father as president of the Ford Motor Company, the automotive giant was crumbling, losing several million dollars a month and mired in old-fashioned practices. Henry Ford II quickly set about modernizing the company and is often credited with its revitalization.

TODAYS TRIVIA:
...American school buses are yellow because you see yellow faster than any other color, 1.24 times faster than red in fact.
...There’s a man who is ‘allergic’ to Wi-Fi. It’s a condition called “Electromagnetic Sensitivity.”
...There are four people in USA with the name "Herp Derp."
...An elephant weighs less than a blue whale's tongue.
...In 1898 Bayer introduced diacetylmorphine, marketed as a cure for morphine addiction and cough suppressant. The drug is now known as Heroin.
...Krusty the Clown was originally supposed to be Homer Simpson's secret identity, which is why he looks like Homer with clown make-up.
...The famous ring announcer Michael Buffer has earnt over $400 million from his trademarked phrase "Let's get ready to rumble!"
...Adolf Hitler almost drowned in a river when he was 4 years old but was saved by a local priest.
...There's a word for mishearing a lyric for a different but similar sounding word in a song - it's "mondegreen."
...If Dr Seuss was stuck with his writing, he & his editor would go to a secret closet filled with 100s of hats & wear them till the words came
...Jerusalem Syndrome is when you visit Jerusalem and suddenly have religious delusions, believing that you are the next coming of Jesus.
...Bananas, pumpkins and watermelons are berries.
...Egypt isn't the country with the most pyramids. It's Sudan and they have approximately 255 pyramids.
...In France, by law a bakery has to make all the bread it sells from scratch in order to have the right to be called a bakery.
...Between Egypt + Sudan, there's a territory no one owns. It is is one of the few unclaimed regions on earth.
...Marilyn Monroe had six toes.
...No women or children die in any of the Jurassic Park movies.
...There is a place called 'Cat Island' where the ratio of cats to humans is 4 to 1.
...Domino's Pizza canceled their '30 minutes or less' guarantee because drivers caused accidents while rushing to deliver pizzas on time.
...A Megadeath is a unit of measurement. 1 Megadeath = 1 million deaths caused by nuclear explosion.
...Winston Churchill once defined tact as "the ability to tell someone to go to hell in such as way that they look forward to the trip."
...America's first slave owner was a black man.
...Every month, humans spend more than 35 billion hours on the Internet.
...Dolphins, whales and apes are the only animals, other than humans, known to commit suicide.
..."Limerence" = The technical term for having a crush on a person.
...The word “Android” refers only to a male looking robot. For one that looks like a female, the proper term is “Gynoid.”
...A man named Jack Ass tried to sue Jackass for $10 million.
...In television commercials, the icecream you see is actually mashed potatoes & the milk is just white glue.
...Cracking your knuckles does not actually hurt your bones or cause arthritis.
...A single sperm contains 37.5 MB of DNA information. One ejaculation represents a data transfer of 15,875 GB.
...Christopher Columbus, on the way to the New World, was stranded in Jamaica in 1503 A.D. Knowing that he was wearing out his welcome with the natives and that a lunar eclipse was near, Columbus warned the natives that moon would vanish if they did not continue to feed him and his sailors.
...In 1700 the average person consumed 4 pounds of sugar a year - today, most Americans consume that much every 8 days.
...The German word for 'birth control pill' is "antibabypille."
...Most professional soccer players run 7 miles in a game.
...Tupac danced ballet in high school and ended up portraying the Mouse King in a production of The Nutcracker.
...Not swinging your arms when you walk increases the effort of walking by 12%, that's equal of walking 20% faster or carrying a 10kg backpack.
...A Boeing 727 aircraft was stolen out of an airport in 2003. Neither the plane, nor the two men aboard were ever found.
...There was an experiment where three schizophrenic men who believed they were Jesus Christ were all put in one place to sort it out.
...An electric bell has been running off the same battery for 170 years and no one knows what the battery is made of.
...Beethoven's last words were "I shall hear in Heaven."
...People who can naturally detect when someone's lying, are called "Truth Wizards."
...Drinking too much water can kill you.
...The average computer user spends more time touching their computer keyboard than their spouse or partner.
...An internet addict is someone who spends more than 6 hours a day online, not doing anything important, regularly for 3 or more months.
...Everybody who carries the red-head gene is directly related to the 1st person ever to have red hair.
..."Eargasm" describes the chill and tingling sensation down your spine when listening to very good music.
...When a contestant leaves Hell’s Kitchen, they are immediately taken for a psychiatric evaluation.
...It takes 59 minutes to make an Oreo cookie.
...Japan has over 50,000 people that are over 100 years old.
...Lady Gaga and Brad Pitt were once strippers.
...Cooked tarantula spiders are considered a delicacy in Cambodia.
...China builds one skyscraper every five days.
...University of Oregon plagiarized the section on plagiarism in its student handbook from Stanford's teaching handbook.
...When asked why she had shot 11 people at her school, the shooter, 16-year old Brenda Ann Spencer, replied, "I don't like Mondays."
...Sid Vicious was such a poor bassist that when performing with the Sex Pistols his band mates would often unplug his amplifier mid-performance.
...Levi Strauss never wore a pair of jeans.
...King Shapur ll of Persia ruled longer than he lived, having been crowned king before his birth.
...Pitbulls and similar Pit breeds accounted for 61% of all serious dog attacks in the U.S. and Canada from 1982 through 2012.
...In Russia, it's now illegal to tell kids that gay people exist.
...People were confused how a Chinese couple managed to run a busy restaurant 21 hours a day without getting tired. Locals named it "robot couple restaurant". Turns out the restaurant is run by two couples … both the men and women are identical twins.
...Pac-Man is the highest grossing arcade game of all time - having sold 400,000 hardware units. If adjusted for inflation it made $7.61 billion in revenue.
..."siri" spelled backwards is "iris" who was the messenger between the gods and humans in Greek mythology
...Mountain Dew contains flame retardant.
...There are so many kind of apples, that if you ate a new one everyday, it would take over 20 years to try them all.
...14-year-old Kurt Cobain announced to a schoolmate that he'd be a superstar musician, get rich and famous, kill himself and go out in a blaze of glory like Jimi Hendrix.
...President Lyndon Johnson was infamous for having meetings while on the toilet.
...A Japanese customs officer planted marijuana in a traveller's suitcase, forgot who it was and the sniffer dogs missed it.
...Prisoners in the 1800s were fed lobster - and it was considered cruel and unusual punishment.
...Camel bites can cause your bones to dissolve.
...World's largest single food item on any menu is whole camel stuffed with sheep stuffed with chicken stuffed with fish.
...Stephen Hawking has survived for over fifty years after being diagnosed with a disease that only 4% of people survive 10 years with.
...The plural, gender-neutral term for "nieces and nephews" is "niblings"
...In Bulgarian legends, it is said that if you walk beneath a rainbow, you will change genders.
...An octopus's testicles are in its head.
...Coca-Cola only sold 25 bottles the first year but kept going.
...Jimi Hendrix failed his high school music class.
...The scientist who developed the vaccine to fight leprosy is almost 100 years old, and he is still working to find a vaccine for cancer.
...Brown eyes are actually blue underneath, and as a result you can actually get surgery to turn brown eyes blue

And Finally the best one

A man in Florida woke up with a severe headache. When he went to the hospital they found a bullet in his head. It turned out that his wife had shot him in the head while he was sleeping.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on September 30, 2013, 05:27:30 am
(http://i245.photobucket.com/albums/gg70/bleudaisymae/Moonlight%20Pics/james_dean_porsche_spyder.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/bleudaisymae/media/Moonlight%20Pics/james_dean_porsche_spyder.jpg.html)

On this day, September 30, 1955
24-year-old actor James Dean is killed in Cholame, California, when the Porsche he is driving hits a Ford Tudor sedan at an intersection. The driver of the other car, 23-year-old California Polytechnic State University student Donald Turnupseed, was dazed but mostly uninjured; Dean’s passenger, German Porsche mechanic Rolf Wütherich was badly injured but survived. Only one of Dean’s movies, “East of Eden,” had been released at the time of his death (“Rebel Without a Cause” and “Giant” opened shortly afterward), but he was already on his way to superstardom--and the crash made him a legend.
James Dean loved racing cars, and in fact he and his brand-new, $7000 Porsche Spyder convertible were on their way to a race in Salinas, 90 miles south of San Francisco. Witnesses maintained that Dean hadn’t been speeding at the time of the accident--in fact, Turnupseed had made a left turn right into the Spyder’s path--but some people point out that he must have been driving awfully fast: He’d gotten a speeding ticket in Bakersfield, 150 miles from the crash site, at 3:30 p.m. and then had stopped at a diner for a Coke, which meant that he’d covered quite a distance in a relatively short period of time. Still, the gathering twilight and the glare from the setting sun would have made it impossible for Turnupseed to see the Porsche coming no matter how fast it was going.
Rumor has it that Dean’s car, which he’d nicknamed the Little *******, was cursed. After the accident, the car rolled off the back of a truck and crushed the legs of a mechanic standing nearby. Later, after a used-car dealer sold its parts to buyers all over the country, the strange incidents multiplied: The car’s engine, transmission and tires were all transplanted into cars that were subsequently involved in deadly crashes, and a truck carrying the Spyder’s chassis to a highway-safety exhibition skidded off the road, killing its driver. The remains of the car vanished from the scene of that accident and haven’t been seen since.
Wütherich, whose feelings of guilt after the car accident never abated, tried to commit suicide twice during the 1960s--and in 1967, he stabbed his wife 14 times with a kitchen knife in a failed murder/suicide--and he died in a drunk-driving accident in 1981. Turnupseed died of lung cancer in 1981.

(http://i1011.photobucket.com/albums/af233/carl44s/motorsports%201920-1942/bspence.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/carl44s/media/motorsports%201920-1942/bspence.jpg.html)

September 30, 1937
The Duesenberg were considered the most luxurious cars in the world, hand-crafted and custom-made, heeded as the epitome of flamboyance and elegance. Their clientele included the great, the near-great, the famous, and the infamous. For almost 10 years, Duesenbergs were acknowledged as the ultimate in quality and value, inspiring the expression "it's a duesy." However, this symbol of opulence suffered during the hard times of the Great Depression, and Duesenberg was forced to close its doors forever on this day.
PICTURE: 1929, Bill Spence's Indianapolis-built Duesenberg special

September 30, 1901
Compulsory car registration for all vehicles driving over 18mph took effect throughout France.

TODAYS TRIVIA:
...When Nike approached Zach Galifianakis from The Hangover for advertising, Zach asked: Do you guys still have 7-year-olds making your stuff?
...3 years of your life will be spent on the toilet.
...The phrase "and they lived happily ever after" was originally "happily until they died."
...Worrying about getting sick can make you sick.
...Popcorn has been eaten for almost 7,000 years.
...Relationships that start during the spring to summer months are the most long lasting relationships!
...Crying releases extra stress hormones, which is why you feel better after crying!
...A study found that morning people are happier and more satisfied with life overall than night owls.
...Apple makes $302,000 per minute.
...The original Ronald McDonald was fired for being overweight.
...According to a study, most people are happiest at 7:26 PM on Saturday night.
...Prime Minister of India's salary is only $2,400 USD.
...1.5 billion people do not have access to electricity, 2.5 billion have no toilet, and 1 billion go hungry every day.
...Only 8% of the world's currency exists as physical cash; the rest is electronic.
...There were 53 kilobytes of digital memory worldwide in 1953.
...Studies show that it is harder to tell a convincing lie to someone you find sexually attractive.
...On an average working day, waiters and waitresses walk twice as much as lawyers and police officers do.
...The most abused drug in the world is caffeine
..."Batman" is actually the real name of a city in Turkey.
...Arnold Schwarzenegger was so into working out when he was young, that he broke into local gyms when they were closed on weekends.
...Broccoli is the only vegetable that is also a flower.
...The "Pinky Promise" originally indicated that the person who breaks the promise must cut off their pinky finger.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on October 01, 2013, 08:38:25 am
(http://i106.photobucket.com/albums/m242/crazeehorse_2006/1390096316_1d5afbe211.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/crazeehorse_2006/media/1390096316_1d5afbe211.jpg.html)

October 1, 1908
Beginning in 1903, Henry Ford and his engineers struggled for five difficult years to produce a reliable, inexpensive car for the mass market. It wasn't until their 20th attempt, christened the Model T after the 20th letter in the alphabet, that the fledgling Ford Motor Company hit pay dirt. The Ford Model T was introduced to the American public, and Ford's affordable revolution had begun. Affectionately known as the "Tin Lizzie," the Model T revolutionized the automotive industry by providing an affordable, reliable car for the average American. Ford was able to keep the price down by retaining control of all raw materials, and by employing revolutionary mass production methods. When it was first introduced, the "Tin Lizzie" cost only $850 and seated two people, and by the time it was discontinued in 1927, nearly 15,000,000 Model Ts had been sold. Who'd of thought that after 100 years, these cars would be modified into such cars as "Rat Rods"

Today's Trivia:
...People who are sad are likely to spend more money than those who are happy.
...It is possible to die from a broken heart -- This condition is called Stress Cardiomyopathy.
...James Bond killed 352 people in 22 films and Pierce Brosnan was the deadliest Bond (killed 47 people in GoldenEye)
...People who were born in September, October and November are the most likely to live to be 100 years old.
...According to an Oxford study, falling in love costs you two close friends.
...One Direction's band member, Harry Styles was born with 4 nipples.
...Leonardo da Vinci could draw with one hand and write with the other at the same time.
...A woman was found dead on the couch of her London apartment 3 years after her death. The TV was still on.
...When the Arctic Monkeys started their band, none of them could play instruments.
...We actually live about 80 milliseconds in the past because that's how long it takes our brains to process information.
...United States is the only country in the world where property owners own the rights to the underground resources beneath their property.
...Air Jordans were banned from the NBA, however Michael Jordan always wore them as Nike was willing to pay the fine for each game.
...When Charlie Chaplin met Einstein he said: They applaud me because everybody understands me. They applaud you because no one understands you
..."Never odd or even" spelled backwards is "Never odd or even"
...When any of your body parts fall asleep, wake it up by shaking your head.
...Cost of college degree in the U.S. has increased 1120% in only 30 years.
...Left-handers are more prone to certain diseases, such as dyslexia, but they are also more likely to be geniuses.
...One in five people in Singapore is a millionaire, making it the city/state with the most millionaires per capita.
...There's a Japanese movie called "Zombie ass" about zombie's which come out of toilet seats.
...The cost of being a real world Batman would be about $300 million dollars.
...20% of all Google searches done daily have never been done before.
...WiFi does not stand for Wireless Fidelity. It stands for... nothing. It's a made up catchy name developed by a marketing company.
...Sexually frustrated people are actually more likely to rip and tear the labels off of their drink bottles.
...You have a better chance of becoming President of the United States than winning Saturday's $600 million Powerball jackpot.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on October 02, 2013, 07:03:13 pm
(http://i386.photobucket.com/albums/oo306/Tarya/F1%20Nostalgia/1947belgiangpachillevarzv4.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/Tarya/media/F1%20Nostalgia/1947belgiangpachillevarzv4.jpg.html)

October 2, 1947
On this day, the Federation Internationale de l'Automobile (FIA) formally established F1 racing in Grand Prix competition for the first time. Technological leaps made during World War II had rendered pre-war racing rules obsolete, so the Formula One guidelines were established in order to encompass the new type of racing, faster and more furious than anything the racing world had ever seen. Formula One was initiated for cars of 1,500cc supercharged and 4,500cc unsupercharged, and the minimum race distance was reduced from 500km to 300km, a change that allowed the famous Monaco Grand Prix to be reintroduced into official Grand Prix racing. In 1950, Giuseppe "Nino" Farina, driving an Alfa Romeo 158, won the first Formula One World Championship at the Silverstone British Grand Prix, and racing's most thrilling tradition was born.
PICTURED: Achille Varzi leading the race. 1947 GP Spa - Varzi

October 2, 1948
Law student Cameron Argetsinger's vision of bringing European style racing competition to the place where he spent his summer vacations became a reality. Under the guidance of Argetsinger and the Sports Car Club of America (SCCA), the village of Watkins Glen, located in the scenic New York Finger Lakes region, hosted its first automobile races along a challenging course that encompassed asphalt, cement, and dirt roads. It was the first post-World War II road race in the United States, and Frank Griswold, driving a 2.9 liter prewar Alfa Romeo, won both events offered, a 26.4-mile Junior Prix, and the 52.8-mile Grand Prix. Cameron Argetsinger competed as well, driving an MG-TC, but proved to be a better racing organizer than actual participant. The Watkins Glen Grand Prix went on to have a prestigious history as a racing venue, hosting a variety of premium racing events through the years.

October 2, 1959
At a news conference broadcast to viewers in 21 cities on closed-circuit television, Henry Ford II introduces his company’s newest car--the 90-horsepower, 30 miles-per-gallon Falcon. The Falcon, dubbed “the small car with the big car feel,” was an overnight success. It went on sale that October 8 and by October 9, dealers had snapped up every one of the 97,000 cars in the first production run.
In 1959, each one of Detroit’s Big Three automakers began to sell a smaller, zippier, lower-priced car: Ford had the Falcon, while General Motors had the Corvair and Chevrolet had the Valiant. After years of building huge, gas-guzzling, lavishly be-finned cars, American companies entered the small-car market because European carmakers like Volkswagen, Fiat, and Renault were selling their little cars to American buyers by the thousands.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on October 03, 2013, 08:54:23 am
(http://i37.photobucket.com/albums/e81/KerryTrout/16-cylDuesenbergAirplaneEng.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/KerryTrout/media/16-cylDuesenbergAirplaneEng.jpg.html)

On this day, October 3, 1912
In the first professional racing victory for a car fitted with a Duesenberg engine, race car driver Mortimer Roberts won the 220-mile Pabst Blue Ribbon Trophy Race, held in and around the village of Wauwatosa, Wisconsin. The engine was designed by Duesenberg brothers who had immigrated to Iowa from Germany in the late-nineteenth century. After honing his mechanical talents by repairing early automobiles, Frederick Duesenberg became enthralled with the prospect of motor racing, and with his brother August opened an automobile shop. After establishing their reputation with engines and other racing parts, the Duesenberg brothers began construction of the first complete Duesenberg racing cars. The first great racing triumph of one of their cars came in 1921 when a Duesenberg was driven to victory in the 24-Hour event at Le Mans, France. The mid-1920s found the Duesenbergs in the racing world's spotlight, especially at the Indy 500, where their cars won the event outright in 1924, 1925, and 1927. But the Duesenberg's most significant contribution to automotive history came after automobile manufacturer E.L. Cord bought Duesenberg Motors in 1926, with the sole purpose of obtaining the design expertise of Fred Duesenberg. Cord wanted to produce the most luxurious car in the world, and in 1928, the Duesenberg-designed Model J was presented, widely considered to be one of the finest automobiles ever made.
PICTURED: A 16 Cylinder Duesenberg engine

October 3, 1961
The United Auto Workers (UAW) called the first company-wide strike against Ford Motor Company since the Ford's first union contract was signed in 1941. During the late 1930s, Ford was the last of the Big Three auto firms still holding out against unionization, and it employed strong-arm tactics to suppress any union activity. In 1937, tension between Ford and its workers came to a head at the "Battle of the Overpass," an infamous event where Ford's dreaded security force beat union organizers attempting to pass out UAW leaflets along the Miller Road Overpass in Dearborn, Michigan. Several people were brutally beaten while many other union supporters, including 11 women, were injured in the melee that followed. It took four more years of struggle and a 10-day strike before Ford agreed to sign its first closed-shop contract with the UAW, covering 123,000 employees. The ascension of Henry Ford II, Henry Ford's grandson, to the Ford leadership position in 1945 brought a period of stability in Ford-UAW relations, especially after Henry Ford II fired the powerful Personnel Chief Harry Bennett, whose anti-union stance had made Ford notorious for its bad labor relations. But in 1961, negotiations between the Ford Motor Company and the UAW fell apart again, and it took 17 days of striking before a tenuous three-year agreement was signed.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on October 04, 2013, 10:07:44 am
(http://i190.photobucket.com/albums/z276/RikMcCloud/Thrust2.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/RikMcCloud/media/Thrust2.jpg.html)

On this day, October 4, 1983
After nearly 20 years of domination by Americans, British racer Richard Noble raced to a new one-mile land-speed record in his jet-powered Thrust 2 vehicle. The Thrust 2, a 17,000-pound jet-powered Rolls-Royce Avon 302 designed by John Ackroyd, reached a record 633.468mph over the one-mile course in Nevada's stark Black Rock Desert, breaking the 631.367mph speed record achieved by Gary Gabelich's Blue Flame in 1970. Previous to Gary Gabelich there was Craig Breedlove, the American driver who recorded a series of astounding victories in jet-powered vehicles during the 1960s, breaking the 400mph, 500mph, and 600mph barriers in 1963, 1964, and 1965, respectively. In 1997, Breedlove and Noble returned to Black Rock Desert again, this time in a race to break the elusive 700mph barrier. On September 25, team leader Noble watched as British fighter pilot Andy Green set a new land-speed record in their Thrust SSC vehicle, jet-powering to an impressive 714.144mph over the one-mile course. But the greatest victory for the British team came on October 13 of that same year, when Andy Green roared across Black Rock Desert at 764.168mph, or 1.007 percent above the speed of sound. Appropriately, the first shattering of the sound barrier by a land vehicle came on the eve of the 50th anniversary of the first supersonic flight, achieved by American pilot Chuck Yeager in 1947.

October 4, 1946
Berna Eli "Barney" Oldfield, an automobile racer and pioneer died on this day at the age of 68. He was the first man to drive a car at 60 miles per hour (96 km/h). His accomplishments led to the expression "Who do you think you are? Barney Oldfield?"

October 4, 1983
Sarah Marie Fisher, an American professional race car driver competing in the IndyCar Series was born in Columbus, Ohio. She was the youngest woman to compete in the Indianapolis 500 at age 19 in 2000.

October 4, 1992
Denis Clive "Denny" Hulme, a New Zealand car racer who won the 1967 Formula One World Champion for the Brabham team died on this day, While competing in Bathurst 1000, held at the famous Mount Panorama track in Australia.
In the 1992 event he was sharing a Benson & Hedges-sponsored BMW M3 with Paul Morris. After complaining of blurred vision Hulme suffered a massive heart attack at the wheel whilst travelling part the way down the 200-mph Conrod Straight. After veering into the wall on the right side of the track, he managed to bring the car to a relatively controlled stop sliding against the safety railing and concrete wall. When marshals reached the scene they found Hulme still strapped in, dead.

TODAYS TRIVIA:
...There are tiny bugs closely related to spiders living in the pores of your face, which crawl about your face in the dark to mate.
...'Ultracrepidarian' is a person who doesn't know what they're talking about.
...Bill Cosby's son was murdered in 1997. His character "Little Bill" was based on his son.
...A Pennsylvania elementary school had and entire class made of 6 sets twins and 2 sets of triplets.
...A 15 year old hacked NASA computers and caused a 21 day shutdown of their computers.
...Eskimos use refrigerators to stop their food from freezing.
...From 1979 to 1992 Soviets drilled a super deep bore that reached 40,230 ft (12,262m) just to see how deep they could drill.
...Only 2% of women describe themselves as beautiful.
...The pleasant smell of earth after it has rained is call 'petrichor' and is caused by bacteria in the soil.
...Johnny Depp has played guitar for Marilyn Manson, Oasis, and Aerosmith.
...A greetings card that can play 'Happy Birthday' has more computing power than existed in the whole world in 1950
...The human body burns 3-6 calories when your nipples become hard.
...It's completely legal for women to walk around topless in New York State. (love New York)
...There is a mineral named Cummingtonite.
...The average person looks at their phone 150 times a day
...Every Harry Potter movie is on the list of top 50 highest grossing films of all time.
...Robert Downey Jr. only made 500k for Iron Man, but two years later made 10 million for Iron man 2.
...It is possible to die from a broken heart -- This condition is called Stress Cardiomyopathy.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on October 05, 2013, 06:32:54 am
(http://i596.photobucket.com/albums/tt42/MrM_-/ferrari20enzo.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/MrM_-/media/ferrari20enzo.jpg.html)

On this day, October 5, 1919
A young Italian car mechanic and engineer named Enzo Ferrari takes part in his first car race, a hill climb in Parma, Italy. He finished fourth. Ferrari was a good driver, but not a great one: In all, he won just 13 of the 47 races he entered. Many people say that this is because he cared too much for the sports cars he drove: He could never bring himself to ruin an engine in order to win a race.
In the mid-1920s, Ferrari retired from racing cars in order to pursue his first love: building them. He took over the Alfa Romeo racing department in 1929 and began to turn out cars under his own name. Annoyed with Ferrari's heavy-handed management style, Alfa Romeo fired him in 1939. After that, he started his own manufacturing firm, but he spent the war years building machine tools, not race cars.
In 1947, the first real Ferraris appeared on the market at last. That same year, Ferrari won the Rome Grand Prix, his first race as an independent carmaker. In 1949, a Ferrari won the Le Mans road race for the first time and in 1952 one of the team's drivers, Alberto Ascari, became the world racing champion: He won every race he entered that year.
That decade was Ferrari's most triumphant: Year after year, his cars dominated the field, winning eight world championships and five Grand Prix championships. Ferrari won so much because his cars were ruthless. They were bigger and stronger than everyone else's and (in part to compensate for their excess weight) they had much more powerful engines. He also ensured success by flooding races with his cars and by hiring the boldest, most daredevil drivers he could find. Unfortunately, this combination of reckless drivers and heavy, superpowered cars was a recipe for tragedy: Between 1955 and 1965, six of Ferrari's 20 drivers were killed in crashes and on five different occasions his cars careened into crowds of spectators, killing 50 bystanders in all. (In 1957, Ferrari was even tried for manslaughter after one of these bloody wrecks, but he was acquitted.)
Ferrari tended to scorn technological advances that he did not come up with himself, so he was slow to accept things like disc brakes, rear-mounted engines and fuel-injection systems. As a result, the stranglehold his cars had on races around the world began to loosen. Still, by the time he died in 1988, Ferrari cars had won more than 4,000 races.
Unique thing about Enzo is that he used to build and sell his car so that he could race. Unlike other's who enter racing to sell their cars.


Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on October 06, 2013, 07:09:33 pm
(http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v102/leadpoisoned/cars/1899_Daimler_Tonneau.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/leadpoisoned/media/cars/1899_Daimler_Tonneau.jpg.html)

Oon this day, October 6, 1888
William Steinway, car enthusiast, son of Heinrich Engelhard Steinweg (Henry Steinway, piano manufacturer), acquired licensing rights from Gottlieb Daimler to manufacture Daimler cars in U.S. He founded the "Daimler Motor Company", began producing Daimler engines, importing Daimler boats, trucks, other equipment to North American market.
PICTURED: 1899 Daimler Tonneau

October 6, 1926
Duesenberg Company was incorporated into the Auburn-Cord company. Frederick (design) and August Duesenberg began working toward E L. Cord's dream of the ultimate luxury automobile.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on October 08, 2013, 11:42:29 am
(http://i10.photobucket.com/albums/a108/thesigalafactor/Route_66.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/thesigalafactor/media/Route_66.jpg.html)

October 7, 1960
The first episode of the one-hour television drama "Route 66" airs on CBS. The program had a simple premise: It followed two young men, Buz Murdock and Tod Stiles, as they drove across the country in an inherited Corvette (Chevrolet was one of the show's sponsors), doing odd jobs and looking for adventure. According to the show's creator and writer, Stirling Silliphant, Buz and Tod were really on a journey in search of themselves.
"Route 66" was different from every other show on television. For one thing, it was shot on location all over the United States instead of in a studio. By the time its run was up in 1964, the show's cast and crew had traveled from Maine to Florida and from Los Angeles to Toronto: In all, they taped 116 episodes in 25 states. (Silliphant himself arrived at all the show's locations six weeks before anyone else. When he got there, he would acquaint himself with local culture and write the scripts on-site.) The show was a serious drama with social-realist pretensions, but its nomadic premise meant that it could tackle a new issue--war, mental illness, religion, murder, drug addiction, drought--every week. By contrast, police procedurals and hospital dramas necessarily had a more limited range. The show's stark black-and-white cinematography was likewise suited to its serious tone.
The real Route 66 was a two-lane highway that ran from Chicago to Los Angeles. From its completion in the late 1930s, it was one of the major routes across the American Southwest. It was also probably the most famous: John Steinbeck called it the "Mother Road" in his book "The Grapes of Wrath," and Nat King Cole's version of songwriter Bobby Troup's 1946 song "(Get Your Kicks On) Route 66" is still familiar to many people today.
In 1993, NBC developed a peppier, less gritty remake of the show--in fact, about the only thing the two "Route 66"s had in common was the Corvette--but it went off the air after just a few episodes.

October 7, 1913
Ford introduced continuously moving assembly line to assemble chassis in Highland Park automobile factory, assembly was divided into 29 operations performed by 29 men spaced along moving belt. This systems reduced man-hours to complete one "Model T" from 12 1/2 hours to six (reduced to 93 man-minutes in a year; eventually, one Model T produced every 24 seconds), drastically reduce the cost of the Model T, made car affordable to ordinary consumers.

October 7, 1976
Marc Coma, Spanish motorcycle racer was born in Avià, Barcelona He won the Dakar Rally in 2006 riding a KTM motorcycle. He is also the World Champion in the Rallies Cross Country Motorcycles Tournament in 2005, 2006 and 2007.

October 7, 2007
Norifumi "Norick" Abe, a Japanese Moto GP racer died in a traffic accident while riding a 500 cc Yamaha T-Max scooter in Kawasaki, Kanagawa. He collided with a truck, which made an illegal U-turn in front of him, at 6:20pm local time. He was pronounced dead two and a half hours later at 8:50pm at the hospital where he was taken for treatment.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on October 08, 2013, 11:43:15 am
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On this day, October 8, 1869
The inventor and mechanic Frank Duryea is born on a farm in Washburn, Illinois. When Duryea was just 24 years old, he and his older brother, Charles, designed and built the Duryea Motor Wagon, one of the first successful gas-powered motor vehicles in the United States. Ever since then, there has been a great deal of disagreement over exactly which brother was responsible for the invention of the Motor Wagon. Because he outlived Charles by almost 80 years, Frank had the last word. Until the day he died in February 1967, the younger Duryea brother insisted that the pioneering automobile was entirely his own creation (except, that is, for the troublesome steering tiller that never worked quite correctly).
What is beyond dispute is that Frank Duryea was the first automobile driver on the American road. In September 1893, he was behind the wheel as the Duryea car made its first successful trip, 600 yards down his street in Springfield, Massachusetts. When he tried to turn the corner, the Motor Wagon's transmission blew; however, Frank managed to patch it back together and putter down the road for another half-mile or so.
In September 1895 the two brothers organized the first car company in the United States, the Duryea Motor Wagon Company, to build and sell their gas-powered contraptions. On Thanksgiving Day of that year, in a brilliant promotional stunt, Frank won the country's first automobile race, the Chicago Times-Herald race from Chicago to Evanston. (The race unfolded despite an enormous snowstorm that made the roads nearly impassable; still, Frank managed to complete the 50-mile loop in a little more than 10 hours.)
Frank left the Duryea Motor Wagon Company in 1899 and two years later he helped start the Stevens-Duryea Company, another auto manufacturing concern in Chicopee Falls, Massachusetts. He retired in 1915 and spent the rest of his days living comfortably in Connecticut, traveling, gardening and puttering around his workshop.

October 8, 1955
William Clyde Elliott most famously known as Bill Elliot was born in Dawsonville, Georgia. Elliott was inducted into the Motorsports Hall of Fame of America on August 15, 2007. He won the 1988 NASCAR Winston Cup Championship and has garnered 44 wins in that series.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on October 10, 2013, 12:34:10 am
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On this day, October 9, 1915
Racer Gil Anderson set a new auto speed record on the opening day of races at the Sheepshead Bay Speedway, located in Brooklyn, New York. Driving a Stutz automobile, Anderson achieved an average speed of 102.6mph over a 350-mile course, breaking the 100mph barrier while setting a new speed record for such a distance. Anderson was participating in the celebrated Vincent Astor Cup event, an annual auto race that attracted thousands of auto enthusiasts to Sheepshead Bay for several decades.

October 9, 1992
Thousands of people in the Eastern United States witnessed an above-average-size meteorite enter the Earth's atmosphere with a sonic boom, and burst into flames as it streaked across the sky over several states. Photographed and videotaped by over a dozen people, the fireball flew over an open football stadium before crashing into Peekskill, New York, a small city 50 miles north of New York City. The 30 pound, football-size meteorite struck a 1980 Chevy Malibu parked in a driveway, penetrating the trunk of the car and missing the gas tank by inches. The owner of the totaled automobile reportedly expressed wonder at the fact that an object in orbit around the sun for millions of years ended up in the trunk of his Chevy, but worried if his insurance would cover the damage.

Video Link of Meteorite
http://fireball.meteorite.free.fr/meteor/fr/1/1992-10-09/peekskill/video (http://fireball.meteorite.free.fr/meteor/fr/1/1992-10-09/peekskill/video)
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on October 10, 2013, 11:14:31 pm
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On this day, October 10, 1948
Ted Horn, an American race car driver was involved in a serious accident at DuQuoin, Illinois during the second lap. He was taken to the hospital alive but died a short time later. He was 38. He was inducted in the Motorsports Hall of Fame of America in 1993.
PICTURED: TED Horn at the 1938 INDY 500

October 10, 1930
Eugenio Castellotti was born in Lodi, Italy. He used to race for Ferari and later for Lancia. Castellotti was considered the greatest Italian driver after Alberto Ascari.
PICTURED: At the Gran Premio del Valentino: Luigi Villoresi, Alberto Ascari, Eugenio Castellotti e Vittorio Jano

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October 10, 1974
Ralph Dale Earnhardt, Jr., a NASCAR driver was born in Kannaplois, North Carolina. He currently drives the #88 AMP Energy/National Guard Chevrolet Impala SS in the NASCAR Sprint Cup series for Hendrick Motorsports.

(http://i139.photobucket.com/albums/q309/deifan1/Ralph%20Dale%20Earnhardt/44dd.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/deifan1/media/Ralph%20Dale%20Earnhardt/44dd.jpg.html)
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on October 11, 2013, 11:35:02 am
(http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v142/Xena3802/CTS%2010_04/IMG018.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/Xena3802/media/CTS%2010_04/IMG018.jpg.html)

October 11, 1967
David Starr, a NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series driver was born in Houston, Texas. He made his first start in 1998 and got his first win in 2002 at Las Vegas Motor Speedway on his way to his best points finish, 5th. He grabbed 2 more wins in 2004. He currently drives for Red Horse Racing the #11 Toyota Tundra.

October 11, 1928
Spanish racer Don Alfonso Cabeza de Vaca y Leighton, Carvajal y Are, the 17th Marquis de Portago and 13th Conde de la Mejorada, was born in London, England. Better known as Marquis Alfonso de Portago, the Spanish nobleman became interested in motor racing as a young man, soon finding his way into some of the world's most prestigious and dangerous racing events, owning more to his social standing than his racing skills. For a two-year period beginning in 1956, the reckless Marquis Alfonso drove for the Lancia Ferrari team, managing to rack up four points in five Grand Prix starts, but failing to win any race. In 1957, Alfonso brought tragedy to the classic Mille Miglia event, a 1,600-kilometer race from Brescia to Rome and back, when he lost control of his Ferrari and plunged into a crowd of spectators. Alfonso, his co-driver Ed Nelson, and 10 spectators died in the accident, bringing to an end the 30-year tradition of the Mille Miglia. Twenty years after the Marquis' tragic run along the course, the event was revived, and to this day the Mille Miglia attracts thousands to the streets of Italy to watch a nostalgic run of classic racing cars.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on October 12, 2013, 07:31:28 am
(http://i280.photobucket.com/albums/kk171/crabber1967/NASCAR%201960-s/1965-nascar_Daytona-Feb-Ned-Jarrett.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/crabber1967/media/NASCAR%201960-s/1965-nascar_Daytona-Feb-Ned-Jarrett.jpg.html)

On this day, October 12, 1932
Ned Jarrett, two time NASCAR champion was born in Newton, North Carolina. Jarrett was best known for his calm demeanor, and he became known as "Gentleman Ned Jarrett".
PICCTURED: Ned Jarrett Feb-Daytona
(Ford Racing Archives) In Daytona FL 1965 Ned Jarrett posing with his Ford for that year's upcoming Daytona 500 Jarrett ran 352 stock car races over 13 years winning 50 of them while capturing 35 poles and 239 top tens He won two NASCAR championships (1960 1965) and retired in 1966 at the age of 34 the only NASCAR driver to retire as reigning champion Jarrett named one of NASCAR's 50 Greatest Drivers then went on to have a long career in race broadcasting Ned is of course the father of Dale Jarrett who earned his first NASCAR championship in 1999 and who is now a race broadcaster for ABCESPN Ned and Dale became only the second father-son combination to win championships in NASCAR's top division (Lee Petty and Richard Petty were the first)

October 12, 1940
Tom Mix, the highest-paid actor in silent films during the 1920s, and unquestionably the best-known cowboy star of the era, perished in a car accident in Arizona. Driving at about 80mph, Mix lost control of his car after hitting a dirt detour, and was instantly killed. Many took solace in the fact that Mix died in the Old West that he had depicted in film so many times, still wearing his cowboy costume from a performance the previous day.

October 12, 1993
The Camry was first introduced by the Toyota Motor Company in 1983 as a replacement for its Corona Sedan. Hoping to follow in the path of the popular Toyota flagship, the Cressida, the roomy and durable Camry immediately proved a best-seller, faring well against the likes of the Honda Accord and domestic U.S. compacts. In the late '80s, the Camry, now Toyota's most popular model, saw an upsized redesign, boasting a new twin-cam 2.0 liter 4-cylinder engine with 16 valves and a much greater horsepower potential than the previous model. In 1992, the Camry was again stylishly redesigned, approaching mid-size while maintaining its original efficiency. On this day, a decade after it was first introduced, the one-millionth Camry rolled off a Toyota assembly line. Four years later, in 1997, the Toyota Camry became the best-selling car in America.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on October 13, 2013, 10:26:19 pm


(http://i954.photobucket.com/albums/ae27/Chiltern-u3a/Visit%20to%20Coventry%2025%20July%202011%20Architecture%20Grp/075IMG_5500.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/Chiltern-u3a/media/Visit%20to%20Coventry%2025%20July%202011%20Architecture%20Grp/075IMG_5500.jpg.html)

On this day, October 13, 1997
Less than three weeks after breaking the elusive 700mph land-speed barrier, British fighter pilot Andy Green set a new land-speed record in the Thrust SuperSonic vehicle, jet-powering through the sound barrier along a one-mile course in Nevada's Black Rock Desert. Coached by previous land-speed record-holder and Thrust team leader Richard Noble, Green roared across Black Rock Desert at 764.168mph, or 1.007 percent above the speed of the sound. An hour later, Green flashed across the dusty desert floor again, moving 1.003 percent faster than the speed of sound. The second run was required before the feat could be officially entered into the record book, a requirement that may have prevented past records. In 1979, at Edwards Air Force Base, American Stan Barrett is reputed to have reached 739.666mph, or Mach 1.0106, in a rocket-engined three-wheeled car called the Budweiser Rocket. But the speed was unsanctioned by the United States Air Force, and the official record remained unbroken until Green's historic run. Appropriately, the first official breaking of the sound barrier by a land vehicle came on the eve of the 50th anniversary of the first supersonic flight, achieved by American pilot Chuck Yeager in 1947.

October 13, 2013, is "No Bra day"
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October 13, 1953
The "Artmobile," a novel way of exposing fine art to the public, was conceived of and designed by the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts located in Richmond, Virginia. The Artmobile, the world's first mobile art gallery, began touring Virginia with an exhibition of art objects, making its first stop in Fredericksburg. The Artmobile was an all-aluminum trailer, measuring over 30 feet in length with an interior height of nearly 80 feet.

Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on October 14, 2013, 11:45:59 pm
(http://i832.photobucket.com/albums/zz250/IN500trail/Howard%20County/elwoodfirstcar.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/IN500trail/media/Howard%20County/elwoodfirstcar.jpg.html)

On this day, October 14, 1857
Automotive pioneer Elwood Haynes was born in Portland, Indiana. After training as an engineer and a chemist at John Hopkins University, Haynes returned to his native Indiana and began experimenting on a carriage powered by an internal engine. In 1894, he completed construction on one of America's earliest automobiles, a one-horsepower, one-cylinder vehicle, and on Independence Day of that year drove it through the streets of Kokomo, Indiana, on its trial run. Today, this automobile is preserved in the Smithsonian Institution as the oldest U.S. automobile in existence. For the next few decades, Haynes continued to make improvements to the new science of automobile manufacturing, including a successful carburetor, the first use of aluminum in automobile engines, and the first muffler.

October 14, 1909
Bernd Rosemeyer, a German racing driver was born in Lingen, Lower Saxony, Germany. He used to race for Auto Union.
He was killed at an early eage of 28, during a world speed record attempt on the Autobahn between Frankfurt and Darmstadt, on January 28th 1938.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on October 15, 2013, 12:41:12 pm
(http://i268.photobucket.com/albums/jj31/stolarek/Land%20Speed%20Bonneville/Breedlove-2.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/stolarek/media/Land%20Speed%20Bonneville/Breedlove-2.jpg.html)

On this day, October 15, 1964
While trying to set a new one mile land-speed record, Craig Breedlove inadvertently set another kind of record after he lost control of the Spirit of America jet-powered car on the Bonneville Salt Flats testing area in Utah. The vehicle began a skid moments into the run, taking nearly six miles to decelerate from an initial speed of well over 400mph. When the dust cleared, Breedlove emerged shaken from the vehicle as the not-so-proud record-holder for the longest skid marks ever recorded. Nevertheless, Breedlove, who already held the land-speed record, did manage to break the 500mph speed barrier that year, just as he had broken the 400mph barrier the year before, and just as he would surpass 600mph in the year following.
PICTURED: Craig Breedlove 1999

October 15, 1978
Lee Iacocca was ousted from Ford.

October 15, 1978
The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration rules that hearse manufacturers no longer have to install anchors for child-safety seats in their vehicles. In 1999, to prevent parents from incorrectly installing the seats using only their cars' seat belts, the agency had required all car makers to put the standardized anchors on every passenger seat in every vehicle they built. Though it seemed rather odd, most hearse-builders complied with the rule and many thousands of their vehicles incorporated baby-seat latches on their front and back passenger seats.
However, the year after the agency issued the rule, one of the largest "funeral coach" manufacturers in the United States petitioned for an exemption. "Since a funeral coach is a single-purpose vehicle, transporting body and casket," the petition said, "children do not ride in the front seat." In fact, typically that seat is empty—after all, most people do try to avoid riding in hearses. On October 15, the agency agreed: All funeral coaches (now officially defined as "a vehicle that contains only one row of occupant seats, is designed exclusively for transporting a body and casket and that is equipped with features to secure a casket in place during the operation of the vehicle") were permanently exempt from all child-safety provisions. According to this formulation, those rare hearses that do have rear seats are not technically funeral coaches; therefore; they are subject to the same child-restraint rules as every other car maker.

TODAYS TRIVIA:
...When the U.S President is unmarried or his wife dies during his term, another female relative will become the First Lady. Three president's daughters, two president's sisters, two nieces and two daughters-in-law have been First Lady.
...The Romans used to use a plant called Silphium as contraception but, they had so much sex that they drove it into extinction.
...In 1970, there were half as many people in the world as there are now.
...Almost all pens, janitorial products, and other office supplies used by the US government are made by blind people.
...Regardless of how hard you try, it is always nearly impossible to remember how your dreams started.
...Smoking 1.4 cigarettes increases the statistical risk of death as much as flying a 1000 miles in a jet- or eating a thousand bananas.
...In 1885 a woman fell 240ft from the Clifton Suspension bridge and survived after her billowing skirt acted as a parachute.
...A man born premature with cerebral palsy, was unable to swallow on his own until the age of 1, is blind, was unable to speak or walk until the age of 16, began playing Tchaikovsky's Concerto No.1 on piano in the middle of the night at age 16. He now can play any song after hearing it only once.
...Christian Bale starved himself for over four months prior to filming The Machinist, consuming one cup of black unsweetened coffee and an apple or a can of tuna each day
...In 2002 NASA bought parts for the space shuttle on ebay because intel wouldn't make them anymore.
...On 5th April 2010 there were four women in space at the same time, the largest female gathering off planet to that point.
...There are 36 companies that spend over $1 Billion on advertising each year.
...Steve Jobs' had a habit of soaking his feet in the toilet and his hygiene was so bad that he was put on the night shift at Atari so he wouldn't have to interact with people.
...Teddy Roosevelt was shot prior to giving a speech. Noticing it missed his lung since he wasn't coughing up blood, he proceeded to give a ninety minute speech.
...1.5 billion people do not have access to electricity, 2.5 billion have no toilet, and 1 billion go hungry every day.
...The word "set" has 464 definitions, the most of any word in the English language.
...A suicidal painter was saved from death 3 times by the same "mysterious" monk. Nobody knew who the monk was; the painter didn't even know the monk's name.
...There was a woman named Veronica Seider had vision 20x better than average. She could identify people more than a mile (1.6km) away.
...The Hoover Dam was built to last 2,000 years. Its concrete will not be fully cured for another 500 years.
...Neil Armstrong's astronaut application arrived about a week past the deadline. His friend saw the late arrival of the application and slipped it into the pile before anyone noticed.
...A baby elephant will suck it's trunk like a baby sucks it's thumb for comfort.
...A Woman sues Google for showing her underwear on Street View.
...When Mel Blanc (Voice of Bugs Bunny, Porky Pig, Tweety and 100's of others) was in a coma the doctors asked him, "Bugs, can you hear me?" and he replied, "What's up Doc?" in Bugs' voice.
...In late 90s Will Smith told Eminem, "You'll either be the biggest flop, or the biggest thing we've ever seen".
...A man took 23 years to travel to every country and region in the world.
...In 2001 a man died from injuries caused by a shooting in 1966; his death was ruled a homicide, despite it occurring 35 years after the death of the shooter.
...Racism and homophobia is linked to having a lower IQ.
...Queen's "We Are the Champions" was scientifically proven to be the catchiest song in the history of pop music
...Hermit crabs form gangs to steal other hermit crabs' shells.
...On average, a person walks past 7 psychopaths a day.
...Napping improves stamina, boosts creativity, reduces stress, increases productivity, decision making ability, sex life and much more.
...Despite making up only 14.5% of the worlds population, Africa is believed to contain 69% of all people with HIV.
...There is a village in Wales called Llanfairpwllgwyngyllgogerychwyrndrobwllllantysiliogogogoch.
...The dolphin that played Flipper on the TV show committed suicide by refusing to breathe.
...A mentally ill young man who shot himself in the head in a suicide attempt suffered a brain injury that apparently eliminated his phobia of germs and his obsession with washing his hands.
...Although pancreatic cancer is usually deadly, Steve Jobs had the one variety that's curable. But for nine months, he refused treatment and instead tried a vegan diet, acupuncture, herbal remedies, psychics, juice fasts, and bowel cleansings. Many experts think it cost him his life.
...'Ultracrepidarian' is a person who doesn't know what they're talking about.
...Bill Cosby's son was murdered in 1997. His character "Little Bill" was based on his son.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on October 16, 2013, 11:09:54 pm
(http://i451.photobucket.com/albums/qq233/swinnyjr/53hudson.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/swinnyjr/media/53hudson.jpg.html)

On this day, October 16, 1951
Hudson launched its new Monobuilt design, an innovation that is still found in most cars to this day. The Monobuilt design consisted of a chassis and frame that was combined in a unified passenger compartment, producing a strong, light-weight design, and a beneficial lower center of gravity that didn't affect road clearance. Hudson coined this innovation "step-down design" because, for the first time, passengers had to step down in order to get into a car. Most cars today are still based on the step-down premise. Hudson introduced the Hornet, and put some sting into the step-down design. The Hornet was built with a 308 cubic-inch flat head in-line six cylinder motor, producing generous torque and a substantial amount of horsepower. And it was with this popular model that Hudson first entered stock car racing in 1951. After ending their first season in a respectable third place, Hudson began a three-year domination of the racing event. In 1952 alone, Hudson won 29 of the 34 events. A key factor in Hudson's racing success was the innovative step-down design of their cars. Because of their lower centers of gravity, Hornets would glide around corners with relative ease, leaving their clunky and unstable competitors in the dust.
The Hornet "dominated stock car racing in the early-1950s, when stock car racers actually raced stock cars." During 1952, Hornets driven by Marshall Teague, Herb Thomas and Tim Flock won 27 NASCAR races driving for the Hudson team. In AAA racing, Teague drove a stock Hornet that he called the Fabulous Hudson Hornet to 14 wins during the season. This brought the Hornet's season record to 40 wins in 48 events, a winning percentage of 83%.
Overall, Hudson won 27 of the 34 NASCAR Grand National races in 1952, followed by 22 of 37 in 1953, and 17 of 37 in 1954 — "an incredible accomplishment, especially from a car that had some legitimate luxury credentials."
The original Fabulous Hudson Hornet can be found today fully restored in Ypsilanti, Michigan at the Ypsilanti Automotive Heritage Museum. It is also depicted in the movie 'CARS' as Doc Hudson.

October 16, 1958
Chevrolet introduced the El Camino, a sedan-pickup (ute) created to compete with Ford's popular Ranchero model. Built on the full-size Chevrolet challis, the big El Camino failed to steal the Ranchero's market and was discontinued after two years. But four years later, in 1964, the El Camino was given a second life as a derivative of the Chevelle series, a line of cars commonly termed "muscle cars." The Chevelles were stylish and powerful vehicles that reflected the youthful energy of the 1960s and early 1970s, and sold well. The Chevelle Malibu Super Sport was the archetypal muscle car, featuring a V-8 as large as 454 cubic inches, or 7.4 liters. Chevelles came in sedans, wagons, convertibles, and hardtops, and, with the reintroduction of the El Camino in 1964, as a truck. The station wagon-based El Camino sedan-pickup had a successful run during its second manifestation as a Chevelle, and proved an attractive conveyance for urban cowboys and the horsey set.
Many El Caminos are still used as daily drivers, and some are used in various racing venues. The 1980s version is the most common of any of that generation of body styles, though the late 60s command the highest prices and inspire the most replicas from Hot Wheels, Matchbox and Johnny Lightning.
The Discovery Channel program Monster Garage once turned an El Camino into a Figure-8 racer (dubbed the "Hell-Camino").
The drift team Bubba Drift uses a 1986 El Camino as the only drifting truck. It is unusual in that it uses an automatic transmission instead of a manual transmission.
On a production note, it has been constantly rumored for years now that GM may bring back the El Camino. During the 1995 model year, GM had a concept El Camino based on the full-size Caprice station wagon using the grille of a 1994-96 Impala SS; this concept was destined for production but terminated due to GM's profitable SUV sales. GM already has a vehicle ready in Australia in the form of the Holden Ute.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on October 17, 2013, 08:06:20 am
(http://i967.photobucket.com/albums/ae158/monterey2013/Monterey%20Road%20trip/DSCN4145_zps64369df7.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/monterey2013/media/Monterey%20Road%20trip/DSCN4145_zps64369df7.jpg.html)

On this day, October 17, 1902
The first Cadillac was completed and was given its maiden test drive by Alanson P. Brush, the twenty-four-year-old Leland and Faulconer engineer who had contributed substantially to the car's design and who would later build the Brush Runabout. As you can see, Cadillac has come a long way

October 17, 1973
11 Arab oil producers increased oil prices and cut back production in response to the support of the United States and other nations for Israel in the Yom Kippur War. The same day, OPEC, (The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries), approved the oil embargo at a meeting in Tangiers, Morocco. Almost overnight, gasoline prices quadrupled, and the U.S. economy, especially its automakers, suffered greatly as a result. The U.S. car companies, who built automobiles that typically averaged less than 15 miles per gallon, were unable to satisfy the sudden demand for small, fuel-efficient vehicles. The public turned to imports in droves, and suddenly Japan's modest, but sturdy, little compacts began popping up on highways all across America. Even after the oil embargo crisis was resolved, American consumers had learned an important lesson about the importance of fuel efficiency, and foreign auto manufacturers flourished in the large American market. It took years for the Big Three to bounce back from the blow; eventually they gained ground with the introduction of their own Japanese-inspired compacts in the 1980s.

October 17, 1968.
The movie Bullitt, featuring a Dark Highland Green 68 Mustang GT 2+2 Fastback was premiered starring Steve McQueen

October 17, 1994
Taxicab driver Jeremy Levine returned to London, England, from a round-trip journey to Cape Town, South Africa. Passengers Mark Aylett and Carlos Aresse paid 40,000 pounds, or approximately $65,000, for the 21,691-mile trip, setting a world record for the longest known taxicab ride. The route, through Eastern Europe, Turkey, Syria, Jordan, and down into Africa, was recently adopted by the Historic Endurance Rallying Organization for their London to Cape Town Classic Reliability Trial. The race, held for the first time in 1998, is a competitive event for all types of classic and historic cars made before 1978. Divided into six age categories, from vintage to '70s, the event challenges racers to brave demanding terrain and conditions as they witness some of the most dramatic and breathtaking scenery in the world.

Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on October 18, 2013, 09:08:32 am
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On this day, October 18, 1919
Rolls-Royce America, Inc., was established, and their luxurious motor cars would prove a favorite means of transport for America's elite during the roaring 1920s.
PICTURED: Rolls-Royce Avon MK. 527B

October 18, 1939
Group of men who had dedicated their lives to the progress of the motor vehicle industry, met in New York City to create an organization that would perpetuate the memories of the early automotive pioneers as well as the contemporary leaders in the industry. From the beginning, this organization – originally called "Automobile Old Timers" -- was dedicated to honoring automotive people from all industry segments and from around the world. Now its more famously known as Automotive Hall of Fame. Over 200 individuals have been inducted into the Automotive Hall of Fame. Dedicated to: Recognizing outstanding achievement in the automotive and related industries; Preserving automotive heritage; Educating future generations of industry participants.

October 18, 1977
On September 5, Hanns Martin Schleyer, a Daimler-Benz executive and head of the West German employers' association, was kidnapped in Cologne by the Red Army Faction (RAF) during an assault in which his driver and three police were killed. The Red Army Faction was a group of ultra-left revolutionaries who terrorized Germany for three decades, assassinating at least 30 corporate, military, and government leaders in an effort to topple capitalism in their homeland. Six weeks after the kidnapping of Schleyer, Palestinian terrorists, who had close ties with the RAF, hijacked a Lufthansa airliner to Somalia, and demanded the release of 11 imprisoned RAF members. On October 17, after the pilot was killed, a German special forces team stormed the plane, releasing the captives and killing the hijackers. The RAF's imprisoned leaders responded by committing suicide in their jail cell in Stammheim, and Schleyer's murder was ordered. The next day, October 18, Hanns Martin Schleyer was found dead in Alsace, France.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on October 19, 2013, 07:45:43 am
(http://i211.photobucket.com/albums/bb92/mtwojs247/Harley-Davidson.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/mtwojs247/media/Harley-Davidson.jpg.html)

October 19, 1920
Harley-Davidson Motor Co. registered "Harley-Davidson" trademark first used in June 1906 for motorcycles, bicycles, side cars and parcel cars.

October 19, 1958
Briton Mike Hawthorn, driving a Ferrari Dino 246, clinched the Formula One World Championship at the Moroccan Grand Prix at Ain-Diab near Casablanca. But the triumph of Britain's first World Championship was marred by the death of British driver Stuart Lewis-Evans, who died a few days later from injuries sustained during an accident in the race, and by the tragic death of Hawthorn himself, who died in a road accident just two months later

October 19, 1982
John DeLorean began his automotive career with Packard in the 1950s, and was recruited to Pontiac in 1959. A rising star at Pontiac, DeLorean pioneered the successful GTO and Grand Prix, and by the late 1960s had risen to the top position in a company that was behind only Chevrolet and Ford in sales. In 1970, DeLorean was moved to manage the Chevrolet Division, and by 1973 Chevy was selling a record 3,000,000 cars and trucks, with DeLorean seeming a top candidate for General Motors' (GM) next presidency. But in late-1973, he walked away from his $650,000 job at GM, boasting he was "going to show them how to build cars." After raising nearly $200 million in financing, DeLorean formed the DeLorean Motor Company in 1974, and constructed a car factory in Northern Ireland. Interest in DeLorean's sleek and futuristic DMC-12 car was high, but by the early 1980s the company was in serious financial trouble. Failing to find additional investors, the proud DeLorean became involved in racketeering and drug trafficking in a desperate attempt to save his beleaguered company. On this day in 1982, after being caught on film during an FBI sting operation trying to broker a $24 million cocaine deal, DeLorean was arrested on charges of drug trafficking and money laundering. But two years later a federal jury ruled that he was a victim of entrapment, and DeLorean was acquitted of all charges. Nevertheless, the debacle ruined his credibility, and John DeLorean's fall from the top of the automotive industry was complete. He died from a stroke at the age of 80, on March 19, 2005.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on October 20, 2013, 09:35:34 am
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On this day, October 20, 1965
The last PV544 was driven off the Volvo assembly line at its Lundy plant in Sweden by longtime Volvo test driver Nils Wickstrom. Gustaf Larson, the engineer who had co-founded Volvo with businessman Assar Gabrielsson in 1927, was present at the ceremony. An impressive total of 440,000 Volvo PV544s had been produced during its eight-year run, over half of which had been exported. The Volvo PV544 was first introduced in 1958 as an updated version of its popular predecessor, the PV444. Like the PV444 with its laminated windscreen, the PV544 featured an important safety innovation--it was the first car to be equipped with safety belts as standard fitting. But the PV544 was also a powerful automobile, boasting a 4-speed manual transmission option and power up to 95bhp. Shortly after its introduction, the 544 became one of the most successful rally cars, dominating rally racing into the 1960s. Yet, the PV544 was also affordably priced, and its first-year sales put Volvo over the 100,000-exported automobiles mark. The PV544 was successfully reintroduced every year until 1965, when it was decided by Volvo that production of the model would cease.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on October 21, 2013, 06:29:10 pm
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On this day, October 21, 1891
A one-mile dirt track opened for harness races at the site of the present-day Tennessee State Fairgrounds in Nashville. Harness racing proved a popular event at the annual Tennessee State Fair, but it was nothing compared to the excitement generated by the fair's first automobile race, held at the fairgrounds in 1904. For the next 50 years, motor racing events were the highlight of the annual state fair, drawing top American drivers to compete, and launching the careers of others. In 1956, the track was paved and lighted, and the tradition of weekly Saturday night racing at the fairgrounds was born. And in 1958, NASCAR came to Nashville with the introduction of the NASCAR Winston Cup to be run on a brand-new half-mile oval. The legendary driver Joe Weatherly won the first Winston Cup, beating the likes of Fireball Turner, Lee Petty, and Curtis Turner in the 200-lap event. Between 1958 and 1984, the fairgrounds hosted 42 NASCAR Winston Cups, and Richard Petty and Darrell Waltrip were the overall leaders in victories, with nine and eight Winston Cups respectively. The last Winston Cup race to descend onto the Tennessee State Fairgrounds was a 420-lap event won by driver Geoff Bodine. But despite the departure of the Winston Cup, the Nashville Speedway continued to improve on its racetrack, and illustrious racing events such as the Busch Series are held on the historic track every year.
PICTURED: Joe Weatherly

October 21, 1891
The 50th birthday of the incandescent light bulb, Henry Ford throws a big party to celebrate the dedication of his new Thomas Edison Institute in Dearborn, Michigan. Everybody who was anybody was there: John D. Rockefeller Jr., Charles Schwab, Otto H. Kahn, Walter Chrysler, Marie Curie, Will Rogers, President Herbert Hoover—and, of course, the guest of honor, Thomas Edison himself. At the time, the Edison Institute was still relatively small. It consisted of just two buildings, both of which Henry Ford had moved from Menlo Park, New Jersey and re-constructed to look just as they had in 1879: Edison's laboratory and the boarding-house where he had lived while he perfected his invention. By the time the Institute opened to the public in 1933, however, it had grown much more elaborate and today the Henry Ford Museum (renamed after Ford's death in 1947) is one of the largest and best-known museums in the US.
Ford's museum was an epic expression of his own interpretation of American history, emphasizing industrial and technological progress and the "practical genius" of great Americans. Its collection grew to include every Ford car ever built, along with other advances in automotive and locomotive technology. There were also farm tools, home appliances, furniture and industrial machines such as the printing press and the Newcomen steam engine. On a 200-acre tract next door, Ford built a quaint all-American village by importing historic homes and buildings from across the United States.
Today, there are more than 200 cars on display at the Ford museum, including the 15 millionth Model T, the Ford 999 racer that set the world speed record in 1904, the first Mustang ever produced and a 1997 EV1 electric car made by General Motors. More than 2 million people visit "The Henry Ford," as it's now called, every year.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on October 22, 2013, 11:31:38 pm
(http://i424.photobucket.com/albums/pp325/rubioSS/porsche.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/rubioSS/media/porsche.jpg.html)

October 22, 1936
In 1934, German automaker Ferdinand Porsche submitted a design proposal to Adolf Hitler's new German Reich government, calling for the construction of a small, simple, and reliable car that would be affordable enough for the average German. Only about one in 50 Germans owned cars at the time, and the motor industry had only a minor significance in Germany's economy. Nazi propagandists immediately embraced the idea, coining "Volkswagen," which translates as "people's car," at an automobile show later in the year. Hitler himself hoped the "people's car" would achieve the kind of popularity in Germany as Ford's Model T had in the United States, and began calling the Volkswagen the "Strength Through Joy" car. Porsche received a development budget from the Reich's motor industry association, and began working on the Volkswagen immediately. Porsche completed the first prototype in secret in October of 1935. The simple, beetle-shaped automobile was sturdily constructed with a kind of utilitarian user-friendliness scarcely seen in an automobile before. On this day in 1936, the first test-drives of the Volkswagen vehicle began, and employees drove the VW 3-series model over 800 kilometers a day, making any necessary repairs at night. After three months of vigorous testing, Porsche and his engineers concluded, in their final test verdict, that the Volkswagen "demonstrated characteristics which warrant further development." In 1938, the first Volkswagen in its final form was unveiled, a 38-series model that The New York Times mockingly referred to as a "Beetle." However, the outbreak of World War II prevented mass-production of the automobile, and the newly constructed Volkswagen factory turned to war production, constructing various military vehicles for the duration of the conflict. After the war, the Allies approved the continuation of the original Volkswagen program, and, under the leadership of Heinrich Nordhoff in the late 1940s and 1950s, sales of the Volkswagen Beetle began to take off. In the 1960s and early 1970s, sales of the compact Volkswagen Beetle worried even America's largest automakers, as the Third Reich's simple people's car became a popular symbol of the growing American counterculture.
PICTURED: The Porsche of today's era

October 22, 1903
Association of Licensed Automobile Manufacturers (ALAM) filed suit against Ford Motor Company as an unlicensed (by ALAM) manufacturer of internal combustion vehicles (controlled 1895 Selden patent); claimed patent applied to all gasoline-powered automobiles; ALAM launched PR campaign, threatened to sue those who bought Ford automobiles.

October 22, 1906
Henry Ford became President of Ford Motor Company.

October 22, 1987
Canadian Garry Sowerby and American Tim Cahill completed the first trans-Americas drive, driving from Ushuaia, Tierra del Fuego, Argentina, to Prudhoe Bay, Alaska, in a total elapsed time of 23 days, 22 hours, and 43 minutes. The pair drove the 14,739-mile distance in a 1988 GMC Sierra K3500 four-wheel-drive pickup truck powered by a 6.2-liter V-8 Detroit diesel engine. Only on one occasion did Sowerby and Cahill trust another form of transportation to their sturdy Sierra: the vehicle and team were surface-freighted from Cartagena, Colombia, to Balboa, Panama, so as to bypass the dangerous Darien Gap of Colombia and Panama.

October 22, 2015
Marty McFly arrested for theft.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on October 23, 2013, 10:43:31 pm
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On this day, October 23, 1970
At the Bonneville Salt Flats in Utah, American Gary Gabelich attained a record 631.367mph average speed in The Blue Flame, a rocket-powered four-wheeled vehicle. Momentarily achieving 650mph, Gabelich's vehicle was powered by a liquid natural gas, hydrogen peroxide rocket engine that produced a thrust of up to 22,000 pounds. Gabelich's achievement ended the domination of Craig Breedlove, the American driver who set a series of astounding victories in jet-powered vehicles during the 1960s, breaking the 400mph, 500mph, and 600mph barriers in 1963, 1964, and 1965, respectively. The Blue Flame's land-speed record stood until 1983, when Briton Richard Noble raced to a new record in his jet-powered Thrust 2 vehicle. The Thrust 2, a 17,000-pound jet-powered Rolls-Royce Avon 302 designed by John Ackroyd, reached a record 633.468mph over the one-mile course in Nevada's stark Black Rock Desert.

October 23, 1973
Toyota U.S.A. held its first (three-day) national news conference in Los Angeles, CA to discuss the fuel efficiency of its automobiles (5 days after 11 Arab oil producers increased oil prices and cut back production in response to the support of the United States and other nations for Israel in the Yom Kippur War); American consumers suffered gasoline rationing, a quadrupling of prices, huge lines at gas stations - foreign auto manufacturers flourished in the large American market.

October 23, 1983
A suicide bomber drives a truck filled with 2,000 pounds of explosives into a U.S. Marine Corps barracks at the Beirut International Airport. The explosion killed 220 Marines, 18 sailors and three soldiers. A few minutes after that bomb went off, a second bomber drove into the basement of the nearby French paratroopers' barracks, killing 58 more people. Four months after the bombing, American forces left Lebanon without retaliating.
The Marines in Beirut were part of a multinational peacekeeping force that was trying to broker a truce between warring Christian and Muslim Lebanese factions. In 1981, American troops had supervised the withdrawal of the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) from Beirut and then had withdrawn themselves. They returned the next year, after Israel's Lebanese allies slaughtered nearly 1,000 unarmed Palestinian civilian refugees. Eighteen hundred Marine peacekeepers moved into an old Israeli Army barracks near the airport—a fortress with two-foot–thick walls that could, it seemed, withstand anything. Even after a van bomb killed 46 people at the U.S. Embassy in April, the American troops maintained their non-martial stance: their perimeter fence remained relatively unfortified, for instance and their sentries' weapons were unloaded.
At about 6:20 in the morning on October 23, 1983, a yellow Mercedes truck charged through the barbed-wire fence around the American compound and plowed past two guard stations. It drove straight into the barracks and exploded. Eyewitnesses said that the force of the blast caused the entire building to float up above the ground for a moment before it pancaked down in a cloud of pulverized concrete and human remains. FBI investigators said that it was the largest non-nuclear explosion since World War II and certainly the most powerful car bomb ever detonated.
After the bombing, President Ronald Reagan expressed outrage at the "despicable act" and vowed that American forces would stay in Beirut until they could forge a lasting peace. In the meantime, he devised a plan to bomb the Hezbollah training camp in Baalbek, Lebanon, where intelligence agents thought the attack had been planned. However, Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger aborted the mission, reportedly because he did not want to strain relations with oil-producing Arab nations. The next February, American troops withdrew from Lebanon altogether.
The first real car bomb—or, in this case, horse-drawn-wagon bomb—exploded on September 16, 1920 outside the J.P. Morgan Company's offices in New York City's financial district. Italian anarchist Mario Buda had planted it there, hoping to kill Morgan himself; as it happened, the robber baron was out of town, but 40 other people died (and about 200 were wounded) in the blast. There were occasional car-bomb attacks after that—most notably in Saigon in 1952, Algiers in 1962, and Palermo in 1963—but vehicle weapons remained relatively uncommon until the 1970s and 80s, when they became the terrifying trademark of groups like the Irish Republican Army and Hezbollah. In 1995, right-wing terrorists Timothy McVeigh and Terry Nichols used a bomb hidden in a Ryder truck to blow up the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on October 25, 2013, 12:17:56 am
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On this day, October 24, 1908
The Locomobile Old 16, driven by George Robertson, became the first American-made car to beat the European competition when it raced to victory in the fourth annual Vanderbilt Cup held in Long Island, New York. The Vanderbilt Cup, an early example of world-class motor racing in America, was created in 1904 to introduce Europe's best automotive drivers and manufacturers to the U.S. George Heath won the first Vanderbilt Cup in a French-made Panhard automobile, beginning a French domination of the event that would last until Old 16's historic victory. Old 16 was first built in 1906 by the Connecticut-based Locomobile Company, and showed promise when it raced to a respectable finish in the second Vanderbilt Cup. With some modifications, Old 16 was ready to race again in 1908. Americans pinned their hopes on the state-of-the-art road racer to end the European domination of early motor racing. Designed simply for speed and power, Old 16 had an 1032 cc, 4-cylinder, 120 hp engine with a copper gas tank, and a couple of bucket seats atop a simple frame with four wooden-spoked wheels completed the design. At the fourth Vanderbilt Cup, Robertson pushed Old 16 to an average speed of 64.38 mph, dashing around the 297-mile course to the cheers of over 100,000 rowdy spectators, who lined the track dangerously close to the speeding motor cars. With a thrown tire in the last lap and a frantic fight to the finish against an Italian Isotta, America's first major racing victory was a hair-raising affair. Old 16 is one of the oldest American automobiles still in existence, and is currently on display at the Henry Ford Museum in Dearborn, Michigan.
PICTURED: Old 16 Locomobile-winner of the 1908 Vanderbilt Cup Race at the Westbury Turn

October 24, 1944
French automaker and accused Nazi collaborator Louis Renault died in a Paris military prison hospital of undetermined causes. Born in Paris, Renault built his first automobile, the Renault Type A, in 1898. Inspired by the DeDion quadricycle, the Type A had a 270 cc engine (1.75hp), and could carry two people at about 30mph. Later in the year, Renault and his brothers formed the Societe Renault Freres, a racing club that achieved its first major victory when an automobile with a Renault-built engine won the Paris-Vienna race of 1902. After Louis' brother, Marcel, died along with nine other drivers in the Paris-Madrid race of 1903, Renault turned away from racing and concentrated on mass production of vehicles. During World War I, Renault served his nation with the "Taxis de la Marne," a troop-transport vehicle, and in 1918, with the Renault tank. Between the wars, Renault continued to manufacture and sell successful automobiles, models that became famous for their sturdiness and longevity. With the German occupation of France during World War II, the industrialist, who had served his country so well during World War I, mysteriously offered his Renault tank factory and his services to the Nazis, perhaps believing that the Allies' cause was hopeless. The liberation of France in 1944 saw the arrest of Louis Renault as a collaborator, and the Renault company was nationalized with Pierre Lefaucheux as the new director. The 67-seven-year-old Renault, who likely suffered torture during his post-liberation detainment, died soon after his arrest.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on October 25, 2013, 10:36:02 pm
(http://i280.photobucket.com/albums/kk171/crabber1967/Facebook/Ford%20Racing%20100%20Years/63291_10152244032745261_1311846187_n.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/crabber1967/media/Facebook/Ford%20Racing%20100%20Years/63291_10152244032745261_1311846187_n.jpg.html)

On this day, October 25, 1902
Racing was in Barney Oldfield's blood long before he ever had the opportunity to race an automobile. Born in Wauseon, Ohio, Oldfield's first love was bicycling, and in 1894, he began to compete professionally. In his first year of racing, the fearless competitor won numerous bicycling events and, in 1896, was offered a coveted position on the Stearns bicycle factory's amateur team. Meanwhile in Dearborn, Michigan, the entrepreneurial inventor Henry Ford had completed his first working automobile and was searching for a way to establish his name in the burgeoning automobile industry. In the early days, it was not the practical uses of the automobile that attracted the most widespread attention, but rather the thrill of motor racing. Recognizing the public's enthusiasm for the new sport, Ford built a racer with Oliver Barthel in 1901. Ford himself even served as driver in their automobile's first race, held at the Grosse Point Race Track in Michigan later in the year. Although he won the race and the kind of public acclaim he had hoped for, Ford found the experience so terrifying that he retired as a competitive driver, reportedly explaining that "once is enough." In 1902, he joined forces with Tom Cooper, the foremost cyclist of his time, and built a much more aggressive racer, the 999, that was capable of up to 80hp. On this day in 1902, the 23-year-old Barney Oldfield made his racing debut in the 999's first race at the Manufacturer's Challenge Cup in Grosse Point. The race was the beginning of a legendary racing career for Oldfield, who soundly beat his competition, including the famed driver Alexander Winton. The cigar-chomping Oldfield went on to become the first truly great American race-car driver, winning countless victories and breaking numerous speed and endurance records. But Oldfield's victory in the 999 was also Ford's first major automotive victory, and together they went on to become the most recognized figures in early American motoring--Ford as the builder and Oldfield as the driver.
PICTURED: 1902 Ford 999 and Oldfield -- Barney Oldfield in 999, the car that made him famous. [photo from Henry Ford Museum]

(http://i1011.photobucket.com/albums/af233/carl44s/motorsports%201920-1942/191720ascot20-20tommy20milton20eddie20hearne20barney20oldfield20miller20golden20submarine20louis20chevrolet20cliff20durant.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/carl44s/media/motorsports%201920-1942/191720ascot20-20tommy20milton20eddie20hearne20barney20oldfield20miller20golden20submarine20louis20chevrolet20cliff20durant.jpg.html)

October 25, 1910
White race car driver Barney Oldfield beats prize fighter Jack Johnson, the first African-American heavyweight champion of the world, in two five-mile car races in Sheepshead Bay, Brooklyn.
Oldfield and Johnson had a history: Oldfield's friend, the white heavyweight champ James J. Jeffries, had quit boxing in 1908 because he did not want to fight a black man for his title. In July 1910, Jeffries came out of retirement to fight Johnson at last, but lost in 15 rounds. (Twenty-six people were killed and hundreds were injured in the nationwide riots that followed the black fighter's victory.) After that, Johnson was unable to find anyone who would fight him—so, he turned to car racing instead. In October 1910, he challenged Oldfield to a race.
Oldfield, a flamboyant daredevil who had just set a new land-speed record (131 mph) in his Blitzen Benz, accepted the challenge at once. The competitors bet $5,000 on the contest—the driver who won two out of three five-mile heats would win the bet—and invited a Hollywood crew to film the race. But there was a problem: in order to make the race official, Johnson needed a license from the American Automobile Association, but the AAA refused to license black drivers. What's more, the organization told Oldfield that it would rescind his license if he went through with the race. But bets had been made and contracts signed, so the race was on!
Rain delayed the race several times, but on October 25 the skies were clear. Five thousand people gathered at the Brooklyn track, waving their hats and cheering for the movie cameras. Oldfield, driving a 60-horsepower Knox car, won the first heat by a half-mile, in 4:44. In the second, he slowed down a bit—he kept just ahead of Johnson's bright-red car, taunting the boxer as he drove--but won the race in 5:14. There was no need for a third heat: Barney Oldfield was the winner.
Eighteen months later, the AAA reinstated Oldfield and he began to race again. A few years later, he drove the first 100-mph lap in the history of the Indianapolis 500 race. Johnson's luck was not as good: Many people resented his success, and especially his habit of dating white women, and he was arrested several times on trumped-up violations of the Mann Act. As a result, he spent a year in federal prison. Johnson died in a car accident in 1946. He was 68 years old.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on October 27, 2013, 12:03:01 am
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On this day, October 26, 1955
Sammy Swindell, who becomes a star in the outlaw sport of sprint-car racing, is born in Germantown, Tennessee. In 1971, when he was just 15 years old, Swindell raced for the first time on a dirt track at the Riverside Speedway in Arkansas. Since he started dirt-track racing, Swidell has never finished a season outside the top 10.
When Swindell began his career, he was a member of a motley crew of drivers known as the Band of Outlaws. These men, according to the Los Angeles Times, were "a gypsy bunch of maverick sprint car drivers who made their mark racing… on seedy little tracks, running with virtually no rules, sometimes wearing only T-shirts and Levi's. They went where the money was and no questions asked." Their races were unsanctioned by the U.S. Auto Club, the organization that ran the Indianapolis 500 and other "respectable" paved-track races. Instead, the Band of Outlaws competed in catch-as-catch-can affairs put on at county fairgrounds and makeshift clay loops across the Midwest.
Outlaw-style racing, usually called sprint-car racing, was a throwback to the early, scrappy days of motorsports, when drivers like Barney Oldfield and A.J. Foyt careened around hard-packed dirt roads in big, open-topped cars. Sprint cars banged into one another as they screeched around the track; they churned giant grooves into the dirt and dared one another to clatter over them without flipping; they used oversized tires, called "humpers," on their right rear wheels to help them accelerate more flamboyantly; and they had wings, or huge canopies that held them down on the track and helped them go faster. And sprint-car racing was dangerous: in the 1970s and 1980s, at least one driver was killed almost every weekend. Today, sprint-car racing is a little safer but no less pugnacious.
In the 1980s, Sammy Swindell dabbled in more mainstream racing—he joined the Indy Car circuit first, then NASCAR—but his heart remained with the Outlaws. In 2009, he rejoined the sprint-car circuit full time. In all, he has won three Outlaw titles and 268 races.

October 26, 1908
Champion incorporated Champion Ignition Company, in Flint, MI, with backing of Buick Motor Co., for manufacturing of spark plugs. Spencer Stranahan, former partner refused to sell rights to "Champion" name.

October 26, 1954
Chevrolet introduced the V-8 engine.

October 26, 1980
General Motors announced a $567 million loss, biggest quarterly drop ever posted by an American company; pre-tax losses for quarter topped out at $953 million.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on October 27, 2013, 08:25:33 am
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On this day, October 27, 1945
After the Allied victory in the World War II, Porsche, like other German industrialists who participated in the German war effort, was investigated on war-crime charges. Ferdinand Porsche was arrested by U.S. military officials for his pro-Nazi activities, and was sent to France where he was held for two years before being released. Meanwhile, the Allies approved the continuation of the original Volkswagen program, and Volkswagen went on to become a highly successful automobile company. As his brainchild Volkswagen grew, Porsche himself returned to sports-car design and construction, completing the successful Porsche 356 in 1948 with his son Ferry Porsche. In 1951, Ferdinand Porsche suffered a stroke and died, but Ferry continued his father's impressive automotive legacy, achieving a sports car masterpiece with the introduction of the legendary Porsche 911 in 1963.

October 27, 2006
The last Ford Taurus rolls off the assembly line in Hapeville, Georgia. The keys to the silver car went to 85-year-old Truett Cathy, the founder of the Chick-fil-A fast-food franchise, who took it straight to his company's headquarters in Atlanta and added it to an elaborate display that included 19 other cars, including one of the earliest Fords.
When Ford added the Taurus to its lineup in 1985, the company was struggling. High fuel prices made its heavy, gas-guzzling cars unattractive to American buyers, especially compared to the high-quality foreign cars that had been flooding the market since the middle of the 1970s. The Taurus was smaller than the typical Ford family car, and its aerodynamic styling appealed to design-conscious buyers. Almost immediately, the car was a hit: Ford sold 263,000 in 1985 alone. Sales figures climbed higher each year, and in 1992, the Taurus became the best-selling passenger car in the United States. (It wrested this title away from the Honda Accord, and kept it for the next five years.) It was, according to the Henry Ford Museum, "a winner in the marketplace that saved Ford Motor from disaster."
But by the 2000s, the Taurus had lost much of its appeal. Even after a 1996 facelift, its once cutting-edge design now looked dated, and it still did not have the fuel efficiency of its Japanese counterparts. (In fact, in contrast to cars like the Accord and the Toyota Camry, which overtook the Taurus to become the nation's best-selling car, by the mid-1990s Ford was selling the majority of its Tauruses to rental-car companies, not individuals.) Ford discontinued the Taurus station wagon at the end of 2004, and idled the Hapeville plant—across the street from the original Chick-fil-A—two years later. Fifteen hundred workers lost their jobs.
In place of the Taurus, Ford pushed its full-size Five Hundred sedan along with its midsize Fusion. Neither sold especially well, however, and in 2007 the company re-released the Taurus (actually just a renamed version of the Five Hundred). It unveiled a revamped, sportier Taurus in July 2009.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on October 29, 2013, 12:02:26 am
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On this day, October 28, 1918
The Tatra was christened. The company later known as Tatra constructed its first automobile in 1897, a vehicle largely inspired by the design of an early Benz automobile. Based in the small Moravian town of Nesselsdorf in the Austro-Hungarian empire, Tatra began as Nesselsdorf Wagenbau, a carriage and railway company that entered automobile production after chief engineer Hugo von Roslerstamm learned of the exploits of Baron Theodor von Liebieg, an avid Austrian motorist who drove across Eastern Europe in a Benz automobile. The Baron himself took the Nesselsdorf Wagenbau's first automobile, christened the President, on a test drive from Nesselsdorf to Vienna. He was impressed with the design and pushed von Roslerstamm and Nesselsdorf Wagenbau to enter racing.
The company put its faith in the talented young engineer Hans Ledwinka, and under his leadership the Rennzweier and the Type A racers were produced, demonstrating modest racing success and encouraging the beginning of large-scale production of the Type S in 1909. The company continued to grow until 1914, when, with the outbreak of World War I, it shifted to railroad-car construction. On this day in 1918, just two weeks before the end of the war on the Western front, the Moravian town of Nesselsdorf in the old Austro-Hungarian empire became the city of Koprivnicka in the newly created country of Czechoslovakia, necessitating a name change for the Nesselsdorf Wagenbau.
Soon after the war, Hans Ledwinka and the newly named Koprivnicka Wagenbau began construction of a new automobile under the marque Tatra. The Tatra name came from the Tatra High Mountains, some of the highest mountains in the Carpathian mountain range. Ledwinka settled on Tatra in 1919 after an experimental model with 4-wheel brakes passed a sleigh on a dangerously icy road, prompting the surprised sleigh riders to reportedly exclaim: "This is a car for the Tatras." In 1923, the first official Tatra automobile, the Tatra T11, was completed, and Ledwinka's hope for an affordable "people's car" had come to fruition. The rugged and relatively small automobile gave many Czechoslovakians an opportunity to own an automobile for the first time, much as Ford's Model T had in the United States. In 1934, Tatra achieved an automotive first with the introduction of the Tatra 77, an innovative model that holds the distinction of being the world's first aerodynamically styled automobile powered by an air-cooled rear-mounted engine.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on October 29, 2013, 02:06:51 pm
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On this day, October 29, 1954
The last true Hudson was produced. The Hudson Motor Car Company was founded in 1909 by Joseph L. Hudson, and by its second year ranked 11th in the nation for automobile production. Although rarely a top-seller, Hudson was responsible for a number of important automotive innovations, including the placement of the steering wheel on the left side, the self-starter, and dual brakes. In 1919, the Hudson Essex was introduced, a sturdy automobile built on an all-steel body that sold for pennies more than Ford's Model T. Hudson production peaked in 1929 with over 300,000 units, including a line of commercial vehicles. During the early 1930s, Hudson became increasingly involved in motor sports, and the Hudson Essex-Terraplane cars set records in hill climbing, economy runs, and speed events. After World War II, the modest automobile company set its sights on stock racing, launching its new Monobuilt design in 1948. The Monobuilt design consisted of a chassis and frame that were combined in a unified passenger compartment, producing a strong, lightweight design, and a beneficial lower center of gravity that didn't effect road clearance. Hudson coined this innovation "step-down design" because, for the first time, passengers had to step down in order to get into a car. Most cars today are still based on the step-down premise.
In 1951, Hudson introduced the powerful Hornet, a model that would dominate stock car racing from 1952 to 1954. In 1952 alone, Hudson won 29 of the 34 events. A key factor in Hudson's racing success was the innovative step-down design of its cars. Because of their lower centers of gravity, Hornets would glide around corners with relative ease, leaving their clunky and unstable competitors in the dust. During this period, Hudson hoped that its stock-racing success would help its lagging sales, but the public preferred watching the likes of Marshall Teague racing around in a Hornet to actually purchasing one. In 1954, the Hudson Motor Company and the Nash-Kelvinator Corporation merged to form the American Motors Corporation, and Hudson, which had been suffering severe financial problems, signed on as the weaker partner. Soon after, it was announced that all 1955 models would be made in Nash's facilities, and that most of Hudson's recent innovations would be discontinued. On this day, the last step-down Hudson was produced. Although the Hudson name would live on for another two years, the cars no longer possessed the innovative elegance and handling of models like the Hornet of the early 1950s.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on October 30, 2013, 10:31:21 am
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On this day, October 30, 1963
The first Lamborghini, the 350GTV (made by tractor maker Ferruccio Lamborghi to compete with Ferrari) debuted at Turin auto show.
Sports car maker Ferruccio Lamborghini was born in Renazzo di Cento, Italy, on April 28, 1916. After studying mechanical engineering in Bologna, Lamborghini served as a mechanic for the Italian Army's Central Vehicle Division in Rhodes during World War II. Upon his return to Italy, he worked on converting military vehicles into agricultural machines, and, in 1948, began building and designing his own tractors. His well-designed agricultural machinery proved a success, and with this prosperity Lamborghini developed an addiction for luxury sports cars. In the early 1960s, he purchased a Ferrari 250 GT, made just a few miles away in Enzo Ferrari's factory. After encountering problems with the car, Ferruccio reportedly paid Enzo a visit, complaining to him about his new Ferrari's noisy gearbox. Legend has it that the great racing car manufacturer Ferrari responded in a patronizing manner to the tractor-maker Lamborghini, inspiring the latter to begin development of his own line of luxury sports cars--automobiles that could out perform any mass-produced Ferrari.
On this day in 1963, the Lamborghini 350GTV debuted at the Turin auto show. But Lamborghini had not completed the prototype in time for the deadline, and the 350GTV was presented with a crate of ceramic tiles in place of an engine. With or without the engine, Lamborghini's first car was not particularly well received, and only one GTV was ever completed. But the former tractor-maker was not discouraged, and in 1964 the drastically redesigned 350GT went into production, and Lamborghini managed to sell over 100 of the expensive cars. The GT was a quiet and sophisticated high-performance vehicle, capable of achieving 155mph with a maximum 320hp. The elegant Lamborghini 350GT indeed provided a smoother ride than most of its Ferrari counterparts, and Ferruccio's old tractor factory, located just a few miles from the Ferrari factory, began constructing some of the most exotic cars the world had ever seen, such as the Miura, the Espada, and the legendary Countach.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on October 31, 2013, 08:56:01 pm
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On this day, October 31, 1957
Two months after a three-man Toyota team flew to Los Angeles to survey the U.S. market, Toyota Motor Sales, U.S.A., Inc. was founded in California with Shotaro Kamiya as the first president. Toyota's first American headquarters were located in an auto dealership in downtown Hollywood, California, and by the end of 1958, 287 Toyopet Crowns and one Land Cruiser had been sold. Over the next decade, Toyota quietly made progress into the Big Three-dominated U.S. car market, offering affordable, fuel-efficient vehicles like the Toyota Corolla as an alternative to the grand gas-guzzlers being produced in Detroit at the time. But the real watershed for Toyota and other Japanese automakers came during the 1970s, when, after enjoying three decades of domination, American automakers had lost their edge.
On top of the severe quality issues that plagued domestic automobiles during the early 1970s, the Arab oil embargoes of 1973 and 1979 created a public demand for fuel-efficient vehicles that the Big Three were unprepared to meet. The public turned to imports in droves, and suddenly Japan's modest but sturdy little compacts began popping up on highways all across America. The Big Three rushed to produce their own fuel-efficient compacts, but shoddily constructed models like the Chevy Vega and Ford Pinto could not compete with the overall quality of the Toyota Corollas and Honda Civics. Domestic automakers eventually bounced back during the 1980s, but Japanese automakers retained a large portion of the market. In 1997, the Toyota Camry became the best-selling car in America, surpassing even Honda's popular Accord model.
PICTURED: Toyota's 2000 GT

October 31, 1951
Zebra crossing (broad white and black stripes across the road for visual impact vs. metal studs in the road) introduced in Slough, Berkshire, England to reduce casualties at pedestrian road crossings.

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Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on November 01, 2013, 09:57:43 pm

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On this day, November 1, 1927
Ford Model A production begins. For the first time since the Model T was introduced in 1908, the Ford Motor Company began production on a significantly redesigned automobile--the Model A. The hugely successful Model T revolutionized the automobile industry, and over 15,000,000 copies of the "Tin Lizzie" were sold in its 19 years of production. By 1927, the popularity of the outdated Model T was rapidly waning. Improved, but basically unchanged for its two-decade reign, it was losing ground to the more stylish and powerful motor cars offered by Ford's competitors. In May of 1927, Ford plants across the country closed, and the company began an intensive development of the more refined and modern Model A. The vastly improved Model A had elegant Lincoln-like styling on a smaller scale, and used a capable 200.5 cubic-inch four-cylinder engine that produced 40hp. With prices starting at $460, nearly 5,000,000 Model As, in several body styles and a variety of colors, rolled onto to America's highways before production ended in early 1932.

November 1, 1895
The first automobile club in the United States, the American Motor League, held its preliminary meeting in Chicago, Illinois, with 60 members on this day. Dr. J. Allen Hornsby was named president of the new organization, and Charles Edgar Duryea, the car manufacturer, and Hiram P. Maxim, car designer and inventor, were named vice presidents. Charles King, who constructed one of the first four-cylinder automobiles in the following year, was named treasurer.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on November 03, 2013, 10:16:22 pm
On this day, November 2, 1895
First gasoline-powered contest in America was organised
In early 1895, Chicago Times-Herald Publisher Herman H. Kohlstaat announced that his newspaper would sponsor a race between horseless carriages. It would be the first race in America to feature gasoline-powered automobiles. Kohlstaat, who was offering $5,000 in prizes, including a first-place prize of $2,000, received telegrams from European racing enthusiasts and from automobile tinkerers across America. After delaying the event for several months at the request of entrants who were still working on their racing prototypes, Kohlstaat finally settled on an official race date--November 2. When the day arrived, 80 automobiles had been entered, but only two showed up: a Benz car brought over from Germany by Oscar Bernhard Mueller, and an automobile built by Charles and Frank Duryea of Springfield, Massachusetts. The disappointed Kohlstaat agreed to delay the official race yet again until Thanksgiving, but approved an exhibition contest to be run on this day between the Duryea brothers and Mueller. Enthusiastic spectators gathered along the 90-mile course from Jackson Park in Chicago to Waukegan, Illinois, and back again, and the Duryea car, driven by Frank, took an early lead over Mueller's motor wagon. However, less than halfway through the race, a team of horses pulling a wagon, frightened by the racket from Frank's noisy car, bolted into the middle of the road and the Duryea automobile was forced off the road and into a ditch. The undriveable car was taken back to Springfield by railroad, and the brothers began hasty repair work for the official race on November 28. Mueller was declared the winner of the exhibition by default, but on Thanksgiving Day he would have to face the Duryeas again, in an event that would be known as the Great Chicago Race of 1895.

November 2, 1978
Chrysler hired Lee Iacocca as President.

November 2, 1989
Carmen Fasanella, a taxicab driver from Princeton, New Jersey, retired after 68 years and 243 days of service. Fasanella, who was continuously licensed as a taxicab owner and driver in the Borough of Princeton, New Jersey, since February 1, 1921, is the most enduring taxi driver on record.



November 3, 1897
Ransom E. Olds received his first patent for a "Motor Carriage" ("in which the motive power is produced by a gasolene-motor to produce a road vehicle which will meet most of the requirements for the ordinary uses on the road, without complicated gear or requiring engine of great power and to avoid all unnecessary weight").

November 3, 1900
The first significant car show in the United States began in New York City. The week-long event, held in Madison Square Garden, was organized by the Automobile Club of America. Fifty-one exhibitors displayed 31 automobiles along with various accessories. Among the fathers of the automobile present at the "Horseless Carriage Show" was automaker James Ward Packard, who had completed his first car the year before, and brought three of his Packards to exhibit to the public. In addition to Packard, the show introduced a number of other fledgling automobile companies that became significant industry players in the coming decades, although none of the makes present would still be in business by 1980. The event also featured automotive demonstrations, such as braking and starting contests, and a specially built ramp to measure the hill-climbing ability of the various automobiles. Spectators paid 50¢ each to attend the event.

November 3, 1995
A team of British soldiers from the 21st Engineer Regiment broke all speed records in the construction of a bridge capable of transporting military vehicles. The British soldiers, based in Nienberg, Germany, built the bridge across a 26-foot, three-inch gap located in Hameln, Germany. Their five-bay single-story medium-girder bridge was completed in eight minutes and 44 seconds.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on November 05, 2013, 12:37:44 am
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On this day, November 4, 1939
The 40th National Automobile Show opened in Chicago, Illinois, with a cutting-edge development in automotive comfort on display: air-conditioning. A Packard prototype featured the expensive device, allowing the vehicle's occupants to travel in the comfort of a controlled environment even on the most hot and humid summer day. After the driver chose a desired temperature, the Packard air-conditioning system would cool or heat the air in the car to the designated level, and then dehumidify, filter, and circulate the cooled air to create a comfortable environment. The main air-conditioning unit was located behind the rear seat of the Packard, where a special air duct accommodated two compartments, one for the refrigerating coils and one for the heating coils. The capacity of the air-conditioning unit was equivalent to 1.5 tons of ice in 24 hours when the car was driven at highway driving speeds. The innovation received widespread acclaim at the auto show, but the expensive accessory would not be within the reach of the average American for several decades. However, when automobile air-conditioning finally became affordable, it rapidly became a luxury that U.S. car owners could not live without.

November 4, 1965
Lee Ann Roberts Breedlove, wife of land speed record-holder Craig Breedlove, became the first female driver to exceed 300 mph when she sped to 308.50 mph in the Spirit of America - Sonic 1 vehicle over the Bonneville Salt Flats in Utah. The Sonic 1 was a four-wheel vehicle powered by a J79 jet engine. A few hours after Lee Ann jet-powered across the one-mile course, Craig Breedlove shattered his own record from the previous year when he reached 555.49 mph in the Spirit of America.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on November 05, 2013, 01:14:41 pm
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On this day, November 5, 1955
Is the date Michael J Fox returned to in the movie "Back to the Future"

November 5, 1895
Inventor George B. Selden received a patent for his gasoline-powered automobile, first conceived of when he was an infantryman in the American Civil War. After 16 years of delay, United States Patent No. 549,160 was finally issued to Selden for a machine he originally termed a "road-locomotive" and later would call a "road engine." His design resembled a horse-drawn carriage, with high wheels and a buckboard, and was described by Selden as "light in weight, easy to control and possessed of sufficient power to overcome any ordinary incline." With the granting of the patent, Selden, whose unpractical automotive designs were generally far behind other innovators in the field, nevertheless won a monopoly on the concept of combining an internal combustion engine with a carriage. Although Selden never became an auto manufacturer himself, every other automaker would have to pay Selden and his licensing company a significant percentage of their profits for the right to construct a motor car, even though their automobiles rarely resembled Selden's designs in anything but abstract concept. In 1903, the newly created Ford Motor Company, which refused to pay royalties to Selden's licensing company, was sued for infringement on the patent. Thus began one of the most celebrated litigation cases in the history of the automotive industry, ending in 1909 when a New York court upheld the validity of Selden's patent. Henry Ford and his increasingly powerful company appealed the decision, and in 1911, the New York Court of Appeals again ruled in favor of Selden's patent, but with a twist: the patent was held to be restricted to the particular outdated construction it described. In 1911, every important automaker used a motor significantly different from that described in Selden's patent, and major manufacturers like the Ford Motor Company never paid Selden another dime.

November 5, 1960
Country and rockabilly artist Johnny Horton was killed instantly in a head-on collision with a drunk driver on Highway 79 at Milano, Texas while he was returning home from a performance at the Skyline Club in Austin.

November 5, 1605
Gunpowder Plot; attempt to blow up King James I while he opened Parliament. Plot uncovered and leader Guy Fawkes tortured and later executed

November 5, 1935
Parker Brothers launches game of Monopoly
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on November 06, 2013, 02:12:17 am
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On this day, November 6, 1899
James Ward Packard, an electrical-wire manufacturer from Warren, Ohio, first demonstrated his interest in automobiles when he hired Edward P. Cowles and Henry A. Schryver to work on plans for a possible Packard automobile in 1896. Although a functional engine was completed in 1897, it would take another two years, and James Packard's purchase of a Winton horseless carriage, before his company fully flung itself into the burgeoning automobile industry. In 1898, James Packard purchased an automobile constructed by fellow Ohio manufacturer Alexander Winston, and Packard, a first-time car owner, experienced problems with his purchase from the start. Finally, in June of 1899, after nearly a year of repairing and improving the Winston automobile on his own, Packard decided to launch the Packard Motor Company. On this day, only three months after work on his first automobile began, the first Packard was completed and test-driven through the streets of Warren, Ohio. The Model A featured a one-cylinder engine capable of producing 12hp. Built around the engine was a single-seat buggy with wire wheels, a steering tiller, an automatic spark advance, and a chain drive. Within only two months, the Packard Company sold its fifth Model A prototype to Warren resident George Kirkham for $1,250. By the 1920s, Packard was a major producer of luxury automobiles, and this prosperity would continue well into the late 1950s.

November 6, 1986
The destitute Alfa Romeo company approved its acquisition by fellow Italian automobile manufacturer Fiat, shortly after rejecting a takeover bid by the Ford Motor Company. Alfa Romeo was founded by Nicola Romeo in 1908, and during the 1920s and 1930s produced elegant luxury racing cars like the RL, the 6C 1500, and the 8C 2900 B. Alfa Romeo saw its peak business years during the 1950s and 1960s, when Alfa Romeo chairman Giuseppe Luraghi oversaw a company shift toward more functional and affordable cars. The Giuletta, the Spider, and the Giulia series received enthusiastic responses from consumers, and Alfa Romeo flourished. However, during the 1970s, the company fell out of touch with a changing market, and, like many other automobile companies, failed to meet the demands of recession-era consumers who preferred fuel efficiency and reliability to luxury and design. By the mid-1980s, Alfa Romeo was bankrupt, and Fiat took over the company, assigning it to a new unit called Alfa Lancia Spa, which opened for business in 1997.

Did you know Australians fought in the US Civil War? We did, and on the losing side.
149 years ago this week the last of the Confederate forces – the warship CSS Shenandoah - surrendered seven months after the war officially ended.
It fired the last shots in anger in the Civil War and half of its crew were Australians. 42 Australians were picked up in Melbourne in January 1865 when the ship stopped in for repairs.

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Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on November 07, 2013, 05:46:21 am
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On this day, November 7, 1957
Before World War II, Audi-founder August Horch cranked out his innovative Audis in the Zwickau Automobile Factory in the eastern German state of Sachsen. It was here that Audi manufactured the first automobiles with four-wheel hydraulic brakes and front wheel drive, decades before these innovations became standard throughout the automobile industry. After World War II, Germany was separated into Eastern and Western occupation zones, and Audi, like most other significant German corporations, fled to the capitalist West. Among the deserted factories the Soviet occupiers faced in postwar East Germany was the former Horch-Audi works in Zwickau. Under the authority of the Soviet administrators, and later under the East German Communist government, the Zwickau factory went back into service in the late 1940s, producing simple, pre-war German automobiles like the Das Klein Wonder F8, and the P70, a compact car with a Duroplast plastic body. In 1957, the East German government approved the updated P50 model to enter the market under a new company name--Trabant. On this day, the first Trabant, which translates to servant in English, was produced at the former Horch auto works in Zwickau. For the Trabant's first marque, the designers settled on "Sputnik," to commemorate the Soviet Union's launching of the first artificial Earth satellite the month before. The Trabant Sputnik was the first in the P50 series, featuring a tiny engine for its time--a two-cylinder 500 cc engine capable of reaching only 18bhp. In design, the Trabant Sputnik was the archetypal eastern European car: small, boxy, and fragile in appearance. Yet, despite the lack of style or power found in the Sputnik and its descendants, these automobiles were affordable, and provided the citizens of East Germany and other Soviet bloc countries with a capable means of getting from here to there.

November 7, 1965
In 1964, Art Arfons, a drag racer from Ohio, built a land-speed racer in his backyard using a military surplus J79 jet aircraft engine with an afterburner. Arfons christened the vehicle Green Monster, and in September took the racer to the Bonneville Salt Flats in Utah to join in the race to set a new land- speed record. On October 5, the Green Monster jet powered to 434.022--a new land-speed record. However, Arfons' record would only stand for six days, for on October 13, Craig Breedlove set his second land-speed record when he reached 468.719 in his jet-powered Spirit of America. In 1965, Arfons returned to the Bonneville Salt Flats in a revamped Green Monster, and on this day shattered Breedlove's record from the previous year, when he raced to 576.553mph across the one-mile course.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on November 08, 2013, 04:22:39 am
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November 8, 1866
Herbert Austin, the founder of the Austin Motor Company, was born the son of a farmer in Little Missenden, Buckinghamshire, England. At the age of 22, Austin moved to Melbourne, Australia, where he served as an apprentice engineer at a foundry, before becoming the manager of the Wolseley Sheep Shearing Company. Long journeys into the wide-open spaces of Australia gave him insight into the benefits of gasoline-driven vehicles, and Austin decided to try his luck in the burgeoning automobile industry. In 1893, Austin returned to England with the Wolseley Company and began work on his first automobile. Like his American counterpart, Henry Ford, Austin hoped to produce an affordable motor car for the masses, and by 1895 the Wolseley Company completed its first vehicle, a three-wheeled automobile, followed by the first four-wheeled Wolseley vehicle in 1900. In 1905, Herbert Austin founded the Austin Motor Company in Birmingham, England, and by 1914, the company was producing over 1,000 automobiles a year. During World War II, Austin and his factories joined in the British war effort, a service for which he was knighted in 1917. In 1922, with the introduction of the Austin 7 Tourer, Sir Herbert Austin finally fulfilled his ambition to produce a mass-produced automobile. The diminutive vehicle, boasting four-wheel brakes and a maximum speed of 50mph, was an instant success in England. In 1930, the Austin 7 was introduced to America, and enjoyed five years of modest U.S. sales before falling prey to the hard times of the Depression in 1935.

November 8, 1895
Diamler returned to his own company as chief engineer. He received shares worth 30,000 marks that he was entitled to through 1882 contract with Daimler. In mid 1893 - Daimler was forced to sell his stake in company, rights to his inventions for 66,666 marks to avoid bankruptcy. In 1895 - group of British industrialists, fronted by Frederick R. Simms, looked to acquire license rights to Maybach-designed Phoenix engine for Britain for 350,000 marks only if Daimler and Maybach returned to company. Daimler returned as expert advisor, general inspector. His stake in company returned (worth 200,000 marks) additional 100,000 mark bonus was also paid.

November 8, 1918
McLaughlin Carriage and Motor Company Limited and Chevrolet Motor Company of Canada Limited merged and formed General Motors of Canada Limited. R.S. "Sam" McLaughlin) became president but GM already owned 49% of company.

November 8, 1956
The Ford Motor Company decided on the name "Edsel" for a new model in development for the 1958 market year. The new addition to the Ford family of automobiles would be a tribute to Edsel Bryant Ford, who served as company president from 1919 until his death in 1943. Edsel Ford was also the oldest son of founder Henry Ford and father to current company President Henry Ford II. The designer of the Edsel, Roy Brown, was instructed to create an automobile that was highly recognizable, and from every angle different than anything else on the road. In the fall of 1957, with great fanfare, the 1958 Edsel was introduced to the public. With its horse collar grill in the front and its regressed side-panels in the rear, the Edsel indeed looked like nothing else on the road. However, despite its appearance, the Ford Edsel was a high-tech affair, featuring state-of-the-art innovations such as the "Tele-Touch" push-button automatic transmission. Nevertheless, buyer appeal was low, and the Ford Edsel earned just a 1.5 percent share of the market in 1958. After two more years, the Edsel marque was abandoned, and its name would forever be synonymous with business failure.

November 8, 1992
Daredevil Jacky Vranken of Belgium set a record for the highest speed ever attained on the rear wheel of a motorcycle. At St. Truiden Military Airfield in Belgium, Vranken reached 157.87 while performing an extended "wheelie" with his Suzuki GSXR 1100 motorcycle. The year before, Yasuyuki Kudo of Japan had set the record for the longest wheelie when he covered 205.7 miles nonstop on the rear wheel of his Honda TLM 220 R motorcycle at the Japan Automobile Research Institute in Tsukuba, Japan.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on November 09, 2013, 02:47:44 am

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On this day, November 9, 1960
Robert McNamara becomes the president of the Ford Motor Company. He would hold the job for less than a month, heading to Washington in December to join President John F. Kennedy's cabinet. McNamara served as the secretary of defense under Presidents Kennedy and Johnson until he resigned in 1968. That year, he became the president of the World Bank, a job he held until 1981.
At the end of World War II, Ford was in tatters. Henry Ford was still in charge, but he was getting old and increasingly senile; furthermore, since he had made no secret of his pacifist, anti-Semitic and anti-union convictions, many people were reluctant to do business with him or to buy one of his cars. The company had been steadily losing money since the stock market crash of 1929, and by 1945 it was losing about $9 million every month.
At GM and Chrysler, by contrast, business was booming. In order to catch up, in September 1945 Henry Ford's wife and daughter-in-law presented the elderly man with an ultimatum: make 28-year-old Henry Ford II (the elder Ford's grandson) the company's president, or his mother would sell her controlling stake in the company to the highest bidder.
Left without much choice, the elder Ford gave in and put his grandson in charge. Right away, Ford II hired 10 "Whiz Kids," including McNamara, all straight out of the Army Air Corps and all with training in economics and statistics from places like Harvard, Stanford, Berkeley and Princeton. These "Whiz Kids" managed to streamline the company and make it profitable again, in part by creating a sleek new look for Ford cars. The company's '49 coupe, with its "spinner" grille, slab sides and integrated fenders, was an immediate hit.
In all, McNamara spent 14 years at Ford, before heading to Washington, D.C., where he served under both Kennedy and President Lyndon Johnson. McNamara was a key advisor to Kennedy during the Cuban Missile Crisis and is credited with using his management skills to help the Pentagon function more efficiently. He is also known as an engineer of America's Vietnam War policy under both Kennedy and Nixon, an often-criticized role that he later discussed in the 2003 documentary The Fog of War.
McNamara left the Pentagon in early 1968, and then spent 12 years as head of the World Bank.

He died on July 6, 2009 at 93 years old.
.

November 9, 1989
East German citizens were allowed to buy western cars.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on November 11, 2013, 01:38:20 am

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November 10, 1965
Formula One racer Eddie Irvine was born in Newtownards, Northern Ireland. In 1996, Irvine won a coveted place on the Ferrari team, racing alongside the likes of World Champion Michael Schumacher, but Irvine is also famous as one of the last of Formula One's most endangered species--the playboy racing driver. The popular bachelor, who maintains an impressive neutrality in regard to his British or Irish nationality, has not won a grand prix as of 1998, yet enjoyed seven career-podium finishes and reached a Formula One ranking of fourth in the world in 1998. Irvine got his start in racing at the young age of 17, competing in his father's Crossle FF 1600 Chassis, and by 1988 had worked his way up to British Formula Three series. 1990 saw him driving for the Jordan F3000 team, and he won his first race at Hockinheim that year, finishing third overall in the series. In the fall of 1993, Irvine made his Formula One debut driving for Sasol Jordan, and at the Suzuki racetrack in Japan he placed sixth, becoming the first driver since Jean Alesi to score points on a Formula One debut. In his first few years of Formula One racing, Irvine, a notoriously fearless and reckless driver, earned the nickname "Irv the Swerve." However, he also demonstrated enough driving potential to be offered the number-two position on the championship Ferrari team in 1996.

November 10, 1885
Paul Daimler, son of German engineer Gottlieb Daimler, became first motorcyclist when he rode his father's new invention for six miles; frame and wheels made of wood; leather belt transferred power from engine to large brass gears mounted to rear wheel; no suspension (front or rear); single cylinder engine had bore of 58mm, stroke of 100mm giving a displacement of 264cc's, gave 0.5hp at 700 rpm, top speed was 12 km/h.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on November 11, 2013, 08:18:03 am

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On this day, November 11, 1978
A stuntman on the Georgia set of "The Dukes of Hazzard" launches the show's iconic automobile, a 1969 Dodge Charger named the General Lee, off a makeshift dirt ramp and over a police car. That jump, 16 feet high and 82 feet long (its landing totaled the car), made TV history. Although more than 300 different General Lees appeared in the series, which ran on CBS from 1979 until 1985, this first one was the only one to play a part in every episode: That jump over the squad car ran every week at the end of the show's opening credits.
The General Lee was a neon-orange Charger with "01" painted on the doors, a Confederate flag on the roof, and a horn that played the first 12 notes of the song "Dixie." It belonged to the Dukes of Hazzard themselves, the cousins Bo (played by actor John Schneider) and Luke Duke (actor Tom Wopat), who used it to get out of dangerous scrapes and away from the corrupt county commissioner Boss Hogg. Scenes featuring the General Lee are some of the show's most memorable: Luke Duke sliding sideways across the car's hood; the boys hopping feet-first through the windows (the Charger's doors were welded shut, so the windows were the only way to get in and out); the General flying over ditches, half-open drawbridges and police cruisers.
Because practically every one of the General Lee's stunts ended up wrecking the car, the show's prop masters bought every 1969 Dodge Charger they could find (and there were plenty: the Chrysler Corporation sold about 85,000 in all). Then they outfitted each one for action, adding a roll cage to the inside, a protective push bar to the nose and heavy-duty shock absorbers and springs to the suspension. The prop masters also tampered with the brakes to make it easier to do the 180-degree "Bootleggers' Turn" that so often helped the Duke boys evade Boss Hogg. Cars used for jumps also got trunks full of concrete or lead ballast to keep them from flipping over in midair.
While "The Dukes of Hazzard" was on the air, the General Lee got about 35,000 fan letters each month. Fans bought millions of remote-controlled and toy versions of the car, and some even modified their real cars to look like the Dukes' Charger. Indianapolis DJ Travis Bell restored the original General Lee in 2006.

November 11, 1926
Official numerical designation 66 (Will Rogers Highway) assigned to the Chicago-to-Los Angeles Route (2,448 miles). It is one of nation's principal east-west arteries; diagonal course linked hundreds of predominately rural communities in Illinois, Missouri, Kansas to Chicago; enabled farmers to transport grain, produce for redistribution; diagonal configuration of Route 66 particularly significant to trucking industry (rivaled railroad for preeminence in American shipping) traversed essentially flat prairie lands, enjoyed more temperate climate than northern highways.

November 11, 1949
Rex Mays, a 1993 inductee into the International Motorsports Hall of Fame, earned his place among the all-time greats of motor racing as much for his willingness to put the welfare of others before his own as for his actual racing ability. Mays got his start on the West Coast midget racing circuit in the 1930s, winning numerous races before entering national competition where he added sprint and champ-car racing to his repertoire. In 1934, he entered the racing big leagues when he placed ninth in his first Indianapolis 500. Mays never managed to win the esteemed event, but he placed second in 1940 and 1941, the same two years that he won the national titles for champ-car racing. In 1941, Mays gave up the fame and fortune of motor racing to serve his country as an Air Force pilot during World War II. After the war, Mays returned to racing. Although he was not as winning a racer as before the war, two separate incidents demonstrated the distinction of his character, and guaranteed his venerable place in the racing history books. In June of 1948, while competing in a champ-car race at the Milwaukee Mile in Wisconsin, Mays deliberately crashed into a wall, nearly ending his life, in order to avoid hitting racer Duke Dinsmore, who was thrown from his car a moment before. And in the fall of 1949, at the New York State Fairgrounds in Syracuse, New York, May prevented a possible fan riot when he silently took to the racetrack alone after other racers refused to compete because of a dispute over prize money. One by one the other racers joined him and violence was prevented. A few months later, on November 11, 1949, Rex Mays was killed during a race held at Del Mar, California, when he was run over by another car after being thrown from his vehicle in a mishap. In addition to his place in the Motorsports Hall of Fame, Rex is honored with a special plaque at the Milwaukee Mile, at the exact spot on the Turn One wall where he nearly gave up his life to save another.

November 11, 1989
In 1935, British car designer William Lyons introduced the SS Jaguar 100 as a new marque for his Swallow Sidecar Company. Swallow Sidecar had been manufacturing complete luxury cars for four years, but the SS Jaguar 100 was Lyons' first true sports car. During World War II, Lyons dropped the Swallow Sidecar name, and the politically incorrect SS initials, and Jaguar Cars Ltd. was formally established. The first significant postwar Jaguar, the XK 120, was introduced in 1948 at the London Motor Show to great acclaim. Capable of speeds in excess of 120mph, the XK 120 was the fastest production car in the world, and is considered by many to be one of the finest sports cars ever made. Over the next three decades, Jaguar became the epitome of speed coupled with elegance, and the company flourished as its racing division racked up countless trophies. On this day in 1989, Jaguar entered a new era when the company became a subsidiary of the Ford Motor Company. The integrity of the Jaguar marque was recognized and maintained, and throughout the 1990s the company continued to produce distinguished automobiles such as the Jaguar XK8 and the luxurious Vanden Plas.

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Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on November 13, 2013, 07:18:56 am


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On this day, November 12, 1965
Brothers Bill and Bob Summers set a world land-speed record—409.277 miles per hour—on the Bonneville Salt Flats in Utah. They did it in an amazing, hemi-powered hot rod they called the Goldenrod. The car got its name from the '57 Chevy gold paint the brothers used. Today, the Goldenrod is on display at the Henry Ford Museum in Dearborn, Michigan.
The Summers brothers—Bill was the levelheaded engineer and Bob was the daredevil driver—had been hot-rod racing near their home in Southern California and at the Bonneville Salt Flats for years. In 1963, they decided to get serious: if they could find the parts and equipment they needed to build the right car, they agreed, they would try to go faster than any man had ever gone. (The land-speed record at that time, 394.196 miles per hour, had been set by Briton John Cobb in 1947.) But the Summers brothers weren't the only people to have this idea: In July 1964, Englishman Donald Campbell broke Cobb's record (403.10 mph), and in 1964 and 1965, two American drivers used jet engines to go more than 600 miles per hour.
But the Summers brothers thought that using jet engines was cheating: They believed, wrote one reporter, "that real cars were driven by friction between tires and the ground." The brothers wanted their car to be as fast as possible by being as aerodynamic as possible, and it was: The finished Goldenrod was the sleekest, lowest, narrowest racer in history. It was 32 feet long, 48 inches wide and 42 inches tall, with a pointed nose and four 426 cubic-inch V8 hemi engines on loan from Chrysler. Firestone Tire and Rubber donated the specially-built low-profile tires, and Mobil Oil provided the fuel.
The Goldenrod's first six-mile run across the Bonneville Salt Flats broke Campbell's record easily, averaging 417 miles per hour. To set an official record, however, a car must make two record-breaking runs, one out and one back, within an hour. With five minutes to spare, the yellow car headed across the desert for a second time. When she screamed past the timers, her achievement was official: she'd hit an average speed of 409.277 miles per hour.
Because the Summers brothers had to return the Goldenrod's engines to Chrysler, they never tried to break their own record. It stood until Al Teague's supercharged Spirit of '76 broke it until 1991. In 2002, the Henry Ford bought the Goldenrod, paying for the car's restoration with a grant from the federal Save America's Treasure's Fund. The car is on display at the museum today.

November 12, 1927
The Holland Tunnel between New York City and Jersey City, New Jersey, was officially opened when President Calvin Coolidge telegraphed a signal from the presidential yacht, Mayflower, anchored in the Potomac River. Within an hour, over 20,000 people had walked the 9,250-foot distance between New York and New Jersey under the Hudson River, and the next day the tunnel opened for automobile service. The double-tubed underwater tunnel, the first of its kind in the United States, was built to accommodate nearly 2,000 vehicles per hour. Chief engineer Clifford Milburn Holland resolved the problem of ventilation by creating a highly advanced ventilation system that changed the air over 30 times an hour at the rate of over 3,000,000 cubic feet per minute.

November 12, 1946
The Exchange National Bank of Chicago, Illinois, instituted the first drive-in banking service in America, and anticipated a cultural phenomenon that would sweep across America in the coming decade. In 1946, America's Big Three automobile companies were still engaged in the laborious process of retooling from war production to civilian automobile company. With the influx of returning soldiers, and economic signs pointing to a period of great American prosperity, market demand for automobiles was high. At first, U.S. carmakers responded by offering their old pre-war models, but beginning in 1949, the first completely redesigned postwar cars hit the market, and Americans embraced the automotive industry as never before. By the early 1950s, the U.S. was a nation on wheels. With a seemingly endless reserve of cheap gas available, drive-in culture--featuring everything from drive-in movie theaters to drive-in grocery stores--flourished alongside America's highways and main streets. In 1946, the Exchange National Bank of Chicago anticipated the rise of America's drive-in society by several years, featuring such drive-in banking innovations as tellers' windows protected by heavy bullet-proof glass, and sliding drawers that enabled drivers to conduct their business from the comfort of their vehicle.

November 12, 1998
Daimler-Benz completed merger with Chrysler to form Daimler-Chrysler.

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On this day, November 13, 1916
Errett Lobban Cord, the genius behind the Auburn, Cord, and Duesenberg family of automobiles, first became involved with automobiles as a racing car mechanic and driver. On this day, the 20-year-old Cord won his first motor race in Arizona. Cord, driving a Paige vehicle designed by Harry Jewett, won the 275-mile race from Douglas, Arizona, to Phoenix, Arizona. From his racing beginnings, Cord moved into automobile sales, and in 1924 came to Auburn, Indiana, to save the faltering Auburn Automobile Company. Cord, a brilliant salesman, rapidly pulled the company out of debt by clearing out hundreds of stockpiled Auburn vehicles and excess parts, and was subsequently named the vice president and general manager at Auburn. Under Cord's guidance, the Auburn line was entirely refashioned, and the new Auburns were known as some of the most luxurious and fashionable cars on the road. In 1926, Cord acquired the expert design skills of Fred Duesenberg, and in 1928, the Duesenberg Model J, one of the finest automobiles ever made, was introduced to the public. To make the family complete, the Auburn plant introduced the Cord L-29 in 1929, which was America's first successful front-wheel drive car. The Auburn, Cord, and Duesenberg automobiles that sold so well in the roaring 1920s also proved surprisingly resilient during the early years of the Depression, but by 1937, America's hard times were too much even for E. L. Cord, and manufacturing ceased as his entire corporation was sold.

November 13, 1940
Willys-Overland completes original Jeep prototype. In 1939, the U.S. Army asked America's automobile manufacturers to submit designs for a simple and versatile military vehicle. It would be two full years before the official U.S. declaration of war, but military officials, who knew this declaration to be inevitable, recognized the need for an innovative troop-transport vehicle for the global battlefields of World War II. The American Bantam Car Company, a small car manufacturer, submitted the first design approved by the army, but the production contract was ultimately given to Willys-Overland, a company that had a larger production capability and offered a lower bid. The Willys Jeep, as it would become known during the war, was similar to the Bantam design, and featured four-wheel drive, an open-air cab, and a rifle rack mounted under the windshield. On this day, the first Willys-Overland Jeep prototype was completed, and submitted to the U.S. Army for approval. One year later, with the U.S. declaration of war, mass production of the Willys-Overland Jeep began. By the war's end in 1945, some 600,000 Jeeps had rolled off the assembly lines and onto the battlefields of Asia, Africa, and Europe. The efficient and sturdy four-wheel drive Jeep became a symbol of the American war effort--no obstacle could stop its advance. Somewhere along the line the vehicle acquired the name "Jeep," likely evolving from the initials G.P. for "general purchase" vehicle, and the nickname stuck. In 1945, Willys-Overland introduced the first civilian Jeep vehicle, the CJ-2A--the forefather of today's sport utility vehicles
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on November 15, 2013, 12:22:03 am
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On this day, November 14, 1914
John and Horace Dodge completed their first Dodge vehicle, a car informally known as "Old Betsy." The same day, the Dodge brothers gave "Old Betsy" a quick test drive through the streets of Detroit, Michigan, and the vehicle was shipped to a buyer in Tennessee. John and Horace, who began their business career as bicycle manufacturers in 1897, first entered the automotive industry as auto parts manufacturers in 1901. They built engines for Ransom Olds and Henry Ford among others, and in 1910 the Dodge Brothers Company was the largest parts-manufacturing firm in the United States. In 1914, the intrepid brothers founded the new Dodge Brothers Motor Car Company, and began work on their first complete automobile at their Hamtramck factory. Dodge vehicles became known for their quality and sturdiness, and by 1919, the Dodge brothers were among the richest men in America. In early 1920, just as he was completing work on his 110-room mansion on the Grosse Point waterfront in Michigan, John fell ill from respiratory problems and died. Horace, who also suffered from chronic lung problems, died from pneumonia in December of the same year. The company was later sold to a New York bank, and in 1928, the Chrysler Corporation bought the Dodge name, its factories, and the large network of Dodge car dealers. Under Chrysler's direction Dodge became a successful producer of cars and trucks marketed for their ruggedness, and today Dodge sells a lineup of over a dozen cars and trucks.
PICTURED: John and Horace Dodge in "Ol Betsy"

November 14, 1899
August Horch founded A. Horch & Cie in Ehrenfeld, Cologne, Germany.

November 14, 1945
Tony Hulman purchased the Indianapolis Motor Speedway from Edward Rickenbacher for $750,000. The speedway was in deplorable condition after four years of disuse during World War II, and before Hulman made his offer Rickenbacher was considering tearing the facilities down and selling the land. Hulman installed himself as chairman of the board of the raceway and named Wilbur Shaw as president. The two hastily renovated the racetrack for the return of Indy racing in the next year, but also launched a long-range program of improvements that included replacing all of the old wooden grandstands with structures of steel and concrete. In May of 1946, the American Automobile Association ran its first postwar 500-mile race at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway. George Robson, driving a pre-war Adams-Sparks automobile, won the event with an average speed of 114.82mph, and, thanks to the efforts of Tony Hulman and Wilbur Shaw, a great American racing tradition was reborn.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on November 15, 2013, 02:14:41 pm
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On this day, November 15, 1977
At the Mahwah plant in New York, workers completed the 100,000,000th Ford to be built in America: a 1978 Ford Fairmont four-door sedan. The Fairmont series was introduced at the beginning of the 1978 model year, to replace the discontinued Ford Maverick. Several Fairmont models were available in the first year of the series, and the available power ran from a 140 cubic-inch, four-cylinder engine to a 302 cubic-inch V-8. The most popular Ford Fairmont was the Sporty Coupe, which was introduced midway through the 1978 model year, and featured styling reminiscent of the Thunderbird. The vehicle was two inches longer than the other Fairmont models, and featured quad headlights and a unique roof design featuring a decorative wrap-over. In the 1979 model year, the Fairmont Sporty Coupe became the Fairmont Futura Sport, and, by 1980, was available as a four-door sedan in addition to the original two-door coupe. By 1981, the Fairmont Futura series was more of a high-trim automobile than its original manifestation as a sporty vehicle, and a Futura station wagon became available. At the end of the 1983 model year, the entire Fairmont line was discontinued.

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November 15, 1965
Craig Breedlove, driving his jet-powered Spirit of America--Sonic 1 vehicle, raced to 600.601 mph over the Bonneville Salt Flats in Utah, and set a new land-speed record. Breedlove, a four-time land-speed record holder, was also the first driver to break the 400 mph and 500 mph land-speed barriers, in 1963 and 1964 respectively. Five years later, Gary Gabelich, in his Blue Flame rocket-powered vehicle, would break Breedlove's record by reaching 622.407 mph over the Bonneville Salt Flats.

PICTURED BELOW: Craig Breedlove's Spirit of America

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Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on November 16, 2013, 08:07:48 am
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On this day, November 16, 1901
A spare, low-slung car called the "Torpedo Racer"—basically a square platform on bicycle wheels—breaks the world speed record for electric cars in Coney Island, New York. The car's builder and pilot, an engineer named Andrew Riker, managed to coax his machine one mile down the straight dirt track in just 63 seconds, that's about 57 mph; today, by contrast, the world speed record for an electric vehicle is about 245 mph). The battery-powered Torpedo Racer held onto its record for ten years.
Riker's Torpedo Racer was the fastest, but not the first, working electric car in the U.S. The first one was built in 1891 by an Iowan named William Morrison. It had a 4-horsepower motor, a 24-cell battery that weighed almost 800 pounds (the whole car weighed about twice that), and could go about 14 miles per hour at top speed. The Morrison car was an amazing innovation, but not many people were ready to buy one. A few years later, however, the Pope Manufacturing Company of Connecticut sold quite a few of its Columbia Electric Phaetons, which were heavier than Morrison's machines but could still travel at a whopping 15 miles per hour.
Unlike Morrison and the engineers at the Pope Company, Riker concentrated on building electric racecars. In September 1896, one of his machines won the country's first-ever automobile race, five laps around a one-mile dirt horse-racing track in Cranston, Rhode Island. The Riker electric finished the race in a little more than 15 minutes. Riker cars could maintain reasonably fast speeds over long distances, too: In April 1900, a relative of the Torpedo Racer won a 50-mile cross-country race on Long Island. It was the only battery-powered car in the field of racers.
Likewise, Riker's was the only electric car in the 1901 Long-Island-Automobile-Club-sponsored race at Coney Island. Against eight gas-powered cars and six steam-powered ones, all stripped down to frames and wheels to eliminate unnecessary weight (Riker's navigator didn't even have a seat; he just sat on the back of the car, clinging to its side as it whisked down the track), the Torpedo Racer finished the race in third place.

November 16, 1916
Dario Resta, driving a Peugeot, won the last Vanderbilt Cup race, held in Santa Monica, California. In the same year, Resta also won the sixth Indianapolis 500 race. The Vanderbilt Cup, an early example of world-class motor racing in America, was organized in 1904 to introduce Europe's best automotive drivers and manufacturers to the U.S. Named after the event's founder, William K. Vanderbilt Jr., the grand prize of the race was the elegant Vanderbilt cup, crafted by Tiffany & Company, the famous American jewelers. Dozens of automotive pioneers traveled across the Atlantic to participate in the first major international racing competition held in the United States. The race, a 10-mile lap course over a 30-mile circuit, was held in Hicksville, New York, and had 18 entries. George Heath, a Frenchman, won the first Vanderbilt Cup in a Panhard automobile, edging out his competition with a brisk average speed of 52.2mph. French-built cars continued to dominate the Vanderbilt Cup until 1908, when daredevil George Robertson drove a 90hp Locomobile, known as "Old 16," to victory in the fourth Vanderbilt Cup. It was the first major international racing victory for an American car, and served notice that the U.S. could compete in motor racing and automobile production. The original Vanderbilt Cup event was held a total of 11 times between 1904 and 1916, at which point the demands of World War I brought an end to the tradition.

November 16, 1929
Enzo Anselmo Ferrari founded Scuderia Ferrari, an organization that began as a racing club but that by 1933 had absorbed the entire race-engineering division at Alpha Romeo.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on November 17, 2013, 09:21:53 am
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On this day, November 17, 1906
Honda Motor Company founder Soichiro Honda was born the son of a blacksmith in Hamamatsu, Japan, about 150 miles southwest of Tokyo. Honda, who displayed remarkable mechanical intuition even at a young age, began working in an auto repair shop in Tokyo at age 15. In 1928, Honda returned to Hamamatsu to set up another branch of the repair shop, and also began pursuing his youthful passion for motor car racing. In 1936, Honda won his first racing trophy at the All-Japan Speed Rally, but nearly died when his car crashed shortly after setting a speed record. After a prolonged recovery, Honda left racing, and during World War II constructed airplane propellers for his country. When the war was over, Japan's industry was in shambles, and Honda saw an opportunity to beat swords into plowshares by starting an automotive company of his own. He bought a surplus of small generator engines from the military at a bargain price and began attaching them to bicycle frames. Honda's fuel-efficient vehicles were popular in a time when fuel was scarce, and in September of 1948, with only $1,500, Honda formed the Honda Motor Company in Hamamatsu. The company began building a full line of powerful and well-made motorcycles that by 1955 led motorcycle production in Japan. Honda proved as effective a company manager as he was a talented engineer, and by the early 1960s, Honda was the world's largest manufacturer of motorcycles. From this immense success, Honda was inspired to begin automobile production in 1962. Honda's first vehicle, the pint-size S-360, failed to make a dent in the American market, and it was not until 1972, and the introduction of the Civic 1200, that Honda became a serious contender in the industry. The fuel crisis of 1973 was the catalyst that thrust Honda and other Japanese auto manufacturers into the forefront of the international market. Cars like the Honda Civic proved far more durable and fuel efficient than anything being produced in Detroit at the time, and American consumers embraced Japanese-made automobiles. In 1973, Soichiro Honda retired from the top position at Honda, but the company he founded went on to become an industry leader, establishing such successful marques as the Accord, which by 1989 was the best-selling car in America.

November 17, 1970
First wheeled-vehicle on the moon. An unmanned Soviet lunar probe, Luna 17, soft-landed in the Sea of Rains on the surface of the moon on this day. Hours later, Lunokhod 1, a self-propelled vehicle controlled by Soviet mission control on earth, rolled out of the Luna landing probe, and became the first wheeled vehicle to travel on the surface of the moon. Lunokhod, which explored the Mare Imbrium region of the Sea of Rains, sent back television images and took soil samples. Despite this notable space first, the Soviet space program was trailing considerably behind the U.S. program which, in 1969, had succeeded in putting an American on the moon with the Apollo 11 lunar mission. In August of 1971, during the fourth manned lunar landing, the United States achieved another first: astronauts David R. Scott and James B. Irwin drove the Lunar Rover--the first manned lunar automobile--on the surface of the moon.

November 17, 1998
The brand-new Daimler Chrysler began trading its shares on the New York Stock Exchange. The company had formed five days earlier, when the American Chrysler Corporation merged with the German conglomerate Daimler-Benz AG. As a result of the merger, DaimlerChrysler became the world's fifth-largest automaker behind General Motors, Ford, Toyota and Volkswagen.
The Daimler-Chrysler merger, for which Daimler-Benz AG paid $36 billion, was supposed to create a single powerhouse car company that could compete in all markets, all over the world. Daimler-Benz was known for its high-quality luxury cars and sturdy trucks, while Chrysler's minivans and Jeeps had a big chunk of the growing sport- utility vehicle market; meanwhile, the American company seemed to have mastered the art of high-volume, low-cost manufacturing. However, things did not quite work out that way. Chrysler actually lost so much money—$1.5 billion in 2006 alone—that in 2007 Daimler paid a private equity firm to take the company off its hands.
In 2009, Chrysler filed for bankruptcy again. In order to stay afloat, it merged with the Italian company Fiat.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on November 18, 2013, 10:15:27 pm
(http://i1245.photobucket.com/albums/gg592/JonCole56/1-1%20FERRARI-%20ALL/Ferrari250GTORacer196303.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/JonCole56/media/1-1%20FERRARI-%20ALL/Ferrari250GTORacer196303.jpg.html)

On this day, November 18, 1987
A special edition 1963 Ferrari 250 GTO hardtop was sold for $1,600,000 at an automobile auction in Italy, setting a new public auction record. Enzo Ferrari first introduced the GTO in 1954, and public demand for the series was so great that Ferrari was motivated to build its first assembly line. The 250 series, the most popular of which were the Testa Rossa and the GT Spyder, made Ferrari a legend. The 1963 Ferrari 250 GTO was a limited edition variant on the 1962 GTO. The engine featured a 12-cylinder engine with a maximum power output of 290bhp at 7,400rpm. The 1963 GTO variant featured larger tires and the hardtop design, and was significant because of its release during the 250 GTO's last major year of production.

November 18, 1960
Chrysler limits DeSoto production. The Chrysler DeSoto was a hit even before the first model was built in the summer of 1928. When Walter P. Chrysler announced that his Chrysler Corporation intended to build a mid-priced vehicle boasting six-cylinders, dealerships signed on immediately, and in the first 12 months of production the DeSoto set a sales record that stood for 30 years. The automobile, named after Spanish explorer Hernando de Soto, was a large and powerful vehicle marketed to the average American car buyer. The innovative designs of the DeSotos of the 1930s were as daring as their namesake--1934 saw the introduction of America's first affordable automobile with aerodynamic styling, and the 1937 DeSoto was hailed for its safety innovations. In the late 1930s, lackluster U.S. sales prompted Chrysler to introduce a more conservative line of DeSotos. The large and gracious 1940 DeSoto was advertised as "America's Family Car," and the American family agreed, giving DeSoto its best sales in the first few years after World War II. During the 1950s, the DeSoto became adventurous again, and the 1955 DeSoto featured power styling to match its powerful engine. By 1956, DeSoto was 11th in the industry, but the dynamics of its demise were already in motion at Chrysler. Disorganization in the management of the Chrysler Corporation, along with general quality issues in Detroit in the late 1950s, led to several years of popular but flawed DeSotos. In 1958, DeSoto's designers introduced their most flamboyant cars ever, the Firesweeps, Firedomes, and Fireflites, but the public failed to embrace these new models, and all but the Fireflite was dropped in 1959. In 1960, William C. Newberg, the new president at Chrysler, decided to limit the DeSoto program, and the uninspired 1961 DeSoto was doomed for failure. On this day, just two weeks after the 1961 DeSoto was introduced to an uninterested market, Chrysler announced the termination of the DeSoto marque.


November 18, 1853
Street signs authorized at San Francisco intersections

November 18, 1863
Lincoln begins 1st draft of his Gettysburg Address

November 18, 1889
Union Pacific begins daily through service, Chicago-Portland & SF

November 18, 1894
Daily Racing Form founded

November 18, 1945
New world air speed record 606 mph (975 kph) set by HJ Wilson of RAF

November 18, 1967
Surveyor 6 becomes 1st man-made object to lift off Moon

November 18, 1990
David Crosby breaks his left leg, ankle and shoulder in a motorcycle accident in Los Angles, CA

November 18, 1992
Dateline NBC airs a demonstration showing General Motors trucks, blowing up on impact, later revealed NBC rigged test

November 18, 2013
Sebastian Vettel wins a record breaking eighth consecutive Formula One race in the 2013 United States Grand Prix

November 18, 2013
Jimmie Johnson wins the NASCAR Sprint Cup for the sixth time
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on November 19, 2013, 01:27:06 pm
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On this day, November 19, 1954
The first automatic toll collection machine was placed in service at the Union Toll Plaza on New Jersey's Garden State Parkway. In order to pass through the toll area, motorists dropped 25¢ into a wire mesh hopper and then a green light would flash permitting passage through the toll. The automatic toll collection machine was an important innovation for America's modern toll highway, which first appeared in 1940 with the opening of the Pennsylvania Turnpike. For a three-hour reduction of travel time between Pittsburgh and Harrisburg, the turnpike asked travelers to pay tolls, creating revenues that helped cover the roadway's high construction and maintenance costs. The Pennsylvania Turnpike was a tremendous success, leading to the construction of toll highways across the country, including the Garden State Parkway, which opened its first toll section in early 1954, and was completed in 1955. However, a non-automotive toll road first appeared in the United States in 1795, when people traveling through the Blue Ridge Mountains along the Little River Turnpike found their way blocked by toll gates at Snicker's Gap, where they were asked to pay a toll.

November 19, 1993
On this day, Toyota and General Motors signed an historic agreement to sell the Chevy Cavalier in Japan as the Toyota Cavalier. In a sense, the U.S.-built but Japanese-inspired Cavalier was returning home. The popular Cavalier, which was first introduced in 1981, was Detroit's answer to Japan's fuel-efficient and well-made compacts. Japanese automakers had taken the U.S. automobile market by storm during the 1970s, largely due to consumer demand for fuel efficiency and durability during a time of oil crises and recession. It took a decade for the Big Three to bounce back from the blow, finally gaining ground in the early 1980s with Japanese-inspired compacts like the Chevy Cavalier. The Cavalier was the best-selling Chevy model in modern history, and the top-selling U.S. car in 1984. By the late 1980s, Detroit's relationship with Japanese automakers had stabilized--major Japanese plants opened across the United States and the Japanese government relaxed its tariff laws to allow free competition from American automakers. During the 1990s, cooperation became the rule of thumb, and cars can no longer be considered strictly "Japanese" or "American," as most automobiles today are constructed in any number of countries from parts made all around the world

November 19, 1861
The first petroleum shipment (1,329 barrels) from the U.S. to Europe leaves Philadelphia, USA, for London, England on the Elizabeth Watts

November 19, 1952
North American F-86 Sabre sets world aircraft speed record, 1124 KPH

November 19, 1969
Apollo 12's Conrad & Bean become 3rd & 4th humans on Moon

November 19, 1996
The 12.9 km Confederation Bridge, joining Borden-Carleton, Prince Edward Island and Cape Jourimain, New-Brunswick is completed and becomes the longest bridge over ice covered waters in the world
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on November 20, 2013, 09:50:42 pm
(http://i64.photobucket.com/albums/h185/brebaby22/ma%20pics/361px-Morgan_signal.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/brebaby22/media/ma%20pics/361px-Morgan_signal.jpg.html)

November 20, 1923
African-American Garrett A. Morgan, of Cleveland, OH, received patent for a "Traffic Signal"; automatic traffic signal to make streets safer for motorists and pedestrians (had seen an automobile crash into a horse-drawn carriage); sold technology to General Electric Corporation for
$40,000.

November 20, 1907
McLaughlin Motor Car Company Limited formed in Ontario with capital of 5,000 shares valued at C$100 each with R.S. "Sam" McLaughlin as President and signed manufacturing agreement with Billy Durant, a partner in Buick Motor Company.

November 20, 1959
British Anglia comes to America. In 1911, the Ford Motor Company, which had been importing Ford Model Ts for several years, opened its first overseas plant at Trafford Park in Manchester, England. In 1920, after a decade of brisk sales in Britain and all over Europe, Ford was faced with a crisis--a new British law established higher tax penalties for larger-engine cars, and Ford's market share was suffering. Ford of England responded by developing several prototypes for a Ford automobile small enough to avoid British tax penalties. Designers also predicted that the citizens of dense European cities would prefer a car smaller than the standard American Ford. The resulting Model Y Ford "8" went into production in 1932, and after a strong first year Ford's British market share began to rapidly expand. In 1938, the Ford E93A Prefect was introduced, the first marque in the United States--the first British Ford to be marketed to Americans on a large scale. Internally, the compact 105E Anglia had a brand new overhead-valve engine and a four-speed gearbox, and externally, it was like nothing else on the road with it distinctive rear-sloping back window, frog-like headlights, and stylish colors: light green and primrose yellow. Despite appreciation for the well-designed car by a few automobile enthusiasts in America, the Anglia, which was a best-seller on the world's markets, failed to make a noticeable impact in the general U.S. market.

November 20, 1817
First Seminole War begins in Florida

November 20, 1953
Scott Crossfield in Douglas Skyrocket, 1st to break Mach 2 (1,300 MPH)

November 20, 1962
USSR agrees to remove bombers from Cuba, & US lifts blockade

November 20, 1980
Steve Ptacek in Solar Challenger makes 1st solar-powered flight

November 20, 1985
Microsoft Windows 1.0 is released.

November 20, 1990
US 68th manned space mission STS 38 (Atlantis 7) returns from space

November 20, 1998
The first module of the International Space Station, Zarya, is launched.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on November 21, 2013, 10:43:26 am
(http://i984.photobucket.com/albums/ae325/teamdearborn/Members%20Vehicles/Boss351Darren.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/teamdearborn/media/Members%20Vehicles/Boss351Darren.jpg.html)

On this day, November 21, 1970
One of the rarest of Ford Mustangs--the Boss 351--debuted at the Detroit Auto Show in Detroit, Michigan. Ford first introduced the Mustang marque in 1964 and the car was an instant success, appearing on the covers of both Time and Newsweek. The car, known as a "pony car" for its small size, had the appearance of a sports car. However, the Mustang was far more reasonably prized than the average sports car, and it possessed a rare popular appeal that made it one of the greatest automotive success stories of the 1960s. By 1970, the Ford Mustang had grown considerably in size, and the Boss 351 could better be described as a "muscle car" than a "pony car." The car featured a powerful 8-cyclinder engine built on Ford's new "Cleveland" block, and was factory rated at 300bhp. The Boss 351 was also unquestionably one the rarest Mustangs ever released--it was manufactured for just a single production year, 1971, and only 1,806 units were made--compared with the 500,000 Mustangs manufactured and sold by Ford in 1965 alone.

November 21, 1937
Howard E. Coffin, who founded the Hudson Motor Company along with Joseph L. Hudson in 1909, died from an accidental gunshot wound at Sea Island Beach in Georgia at the age of 64. Coffin served as vice president and chief engineer of Hudson from 1909 to 1930, and was responsible for a number of Hudson's important automotive innovations, including the placement of the steering wheel on the left side, the self-starter, and dual brakes. Under Coffin's influence the Hudson Essex was introduced in 1919, a sturdy automobile built on an all-steel body that sold for pennies more than Ford's Model T. Coffin's last production year with Hudson was also the company's most prosperous--Hudson production peaked in 1929 with over 300,000 units.

November 21, 2005
General Motors Corp. announced it would close 12 facilities, lay off 30,000 workers in North America.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on November 22, 2013, 09:24:10 pm


On this day, November 22, 1985
Lee Iacocca, the chief executive officer of the Chrysler Corporation, presided over the largest swearing-in ceremony for new U.S. citizens in American history. At the end of six days of rallies around the country, Iacocca, the son of Italian immigrants himself, lead 38,648 people in a swearing of allegiance to the United States. Iacocca served as president of the Ford Motor Company during the 1970s, and was largely responsible for the extremely profitable Mustang marque. After a falling out with Henry Ford II in 1978, Iacocca moved to the struggling Chrysler Corporation, and steered the company back to profitability as president and later as CEO. Iacocca was also one of the most charismatic and influential men Detroit had ever known. After making massive but necessary cuts to Chrysler's workforce, Iacocca elected to pay himself only $1 for his first year as CEO, explaining that everyone had to make sacrifices in order for Chrysler to survive. He also appeared in Chrysler's commercials as himself, wrote a best-selling autobiography, and entertained the possibility of running for president of the United States. A self-made son of immigrants, America's immigration and ethnic heritage was always important to Iacocca. Three years before presiding over the record-breaking swearing-in ceremony, Iacocca helped form the Statue of Liberty-Ellis Island Foundation, a non-profit organization founded in 1982 to raise funds for the restoration and preservation of the Statue of Liberty and Ellis Island. Iacocca later became chairman emeritus of this organization.

November 22, 1927
Carl Eliason of Sayner, Wisconsin, was granted the first patent ever given for a snowmobile design. Eliason had actually completed his first working prototype three years before--a small vehicle with a front-mounted liquid-cooled 2.5 HP Johnson outboard engine, slide rail track guides, wooden cleats, rope-controlled steering skis, and running boards made out of two downhill skis. Eliason built his first snowmobile in a small garage behind his general store over a two-year period, and used everything from bicycle parks to a radiator from a used Model T Ford. During the 1930s, Eliason founded Eliason Motor Toboggan, continued improving on his snowmobiles, and the company was soon known around the world. A major purchaser of Eliason snowmobiles in the early years of the company was the U.S. Army, which ordered 150 all-white Eliason Motor Toboggans for use in the defense of Alaska during World War II.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on November 23, 2013, 08:37:59 am
(http://i1076.photobucket.com/albums/w452/Daniel_Paladini/Mercedes%20benz%20Postcards%201954/Mercedes_300SL.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/Daniel_Paladini/media/Mercedes%20benz%20Postcards%201954/Mercedes_300SL.jpg.html)

November 23, 1900
The first car to be produced under the Mercedes name is taken for its inaugural drive in Cannstatt, Germany. The car was specially built for its buyer, Emil Jellinek, an entrepreneur with a passion for fast, flashy cars. Jellinek had commissioned the Mercedes car from the German company Daimler-Motoren-Gesellschaft: it was lighter and sleeker than any car the company had made before, and Jellinek was confident that it would win races so handily that besotted buyers would snap it up. He was so confident that he bought 36 of them. In exchange for this extraordinary patronage, the company agreed to name its new machine after Jellinek's 11-year-old daughter, Mercedes.
In 1886, the German engineers Gottlieb Daimler and Wilhelm Maybach had built one of the world's first "horseless carriages," a four-wheeled carriage with an engine bolted to it. In 1889, the two men built the world's first four-wheeled automobile to be powered by a four-stroke engine. They formed Daimler-Motoren-Gesellschaft the next year.
In 1896, Emil Jellinek saw an ad for the D-M-G auto in a German magazine. Then, as the story goes, he traveled to D-M-G's Cannstatt factory, charged onto the factory floor wearing a pith helmet, pince-nez and mutton-chop sideburns and demanded that the company sell him the most spectacular car it had.
That car was sturdy, but it could only go 15 miles per hour--not even close to fast enough for Jellinek. In 1898, he ordered two more cars, stipulating that they be able to go at least 10 miles per hour faster than the first one could. Daimler complied; the result was the 8-horsepower Phoenix. Jellinek was impressed enough with the Phoenix that he began to sell them to his friends: 10 in 1899, 29 in 1900.
At the same time, he needed a racing car that could go even faster. Jellinek went back to D-M-G with a business proposition: if it would build him the world's best speedster (and name it the Mercedes), he would buy 36 of them.
The new Mercedes car was fast. It also introduced the aluminum crankcase, magnalium bearings, the pressed-steel frame, a new kind of coil-spring clutch and the honeycomb radiator (essentially the same one that today's Mercedes use). It was longer, wider, and lower than the Phoenix and had better brakes. Also, a mechanic could convert the new Mercedes from a two-seat racer to a four-seat family car in just a few minutes.
In 1902, the company legally registered the Mercedes brand name.
PICTURED: The Mercedes 300SL

November 23, 1897
On this day, Ransom Eli Olds of Lansing, Michigan, is issued a U.S. patent for his "motor carriage," a gasoline-powered vehicle that he constructed the year before. In 1887, when he was only 18, Olds built his first automobile, a steam-propelled three-wheeled vehicle. However, Olds soon recognized the advantages of an engine powered by gasoline, an abundant fuel source that was safer and more reliable than steam. Two months before receiving his patent, Olds had formed the Olds Motor Vehicle Company, a company that grew into the Olds Motors Works, in 1899, with the assistance of private investor Samuel L. Smith. After designing a number of prototypes, Olds and his company finally settled on the Olds Runabout in 1901. The Runabout was a small, motorized buggy with a curved dashboard and lightweight wheels, and was powered by a one-cylinder engine capable of reaching 20mph. Perhaps out of financial necessity, Olds contracted with other companies to construct various parts for the Runabout, a production technique that differed from the current industry practice of individually handcrafting each vehicle. Olds' new production method, a prototype of assembly line production, proved a great success, and Olds Motor Works sold 425 Oldsmobile Runabouts in the first year of business, 2,500 in the next, and peaked in 1904 with sales in excess of 5,000 vehicles.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on November 24, 2013, 11:43:49 pm
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On this day, November 24, 1849
John Froelich, the inventor of the first gasoline-powered farm tractor, was born in Froelich, Iowa. Froelich's tractor, completed in 1892, featured a Van Duzen one-cylinder gasoline engine mounted on wooden beams to operate a threshing machine. Froelich manufactured several more tractors of this type during the year, and in September shipped one of his engine-powered tractors to a farm in Langford, South Dakota, where it was employed in agriculture activity for the first time. Froelich established the Waterloo Gasoline Traction Engine Company in Waterloo, Iowa, in 1893, and began to manufacture tractors on a larger scale. In 1918, the Waterloo Traction Engine Company was purchased by the John Deere Plow Company. John Deere, a long-established plow company, mass-produced gasoline-powered tractors based on Froelich's designs. During the 1920s and 1930s, tractors rapidly changed the face of agriculture in America, and many traditional farmers were pushed off their land by the encroachment of large agricultural interests who utilized the efficient new farming technology.

November 24, 1900
The first gasoline-powered Pierce automobile was taken on a test drive through the streets of Buffalo, New York. George N. Pierce first founded the Pierce Company in 1878 as a manufacturer of household items, but in the late nineteenth century shifted to bicycle production. Pierce bicycles became known for their high quality, and after achieving a substantial capital base, Pierce and his company decided to try their hand in automobile production. The first few Pierce prototypes involved steam power, but in 1900 the designers shifted to gasoline engines. The first production Pierce, test driven on this day, featured a modified one-cylinder deDion engine capable of producing nearly three horsepower. The automobile would be christened the Pierce Motorette, and between 1901 and 1903 roughly 170 Pierce Motorettes were made. In 1903, Pierce began manufacturing its own engines, and later in the year, the Pierce Arrow was introduced, followed by the Pierce Great Arrow in 1904. By 1905, the George N. Pierce Company was producing some of the biggest and most expensive automobiles in America, with prices in excess of $5,000. In 1908, the Pierce-Arrow Motor Car Company was officially launched, and in 1909 U.S. president William Howard Taft ordered two of the prestigious automobiles, a Brougham and a Landaulette, for use by the White House.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on November 25, 2013, 10:40:41 pm


On this day, November 25, 1920
Gaston Chevrolet, the younger brother of famous automobile designer and racer Louis Chevrolet, was killed during a race in Beverly Hills, California. Gaston, born in La-Chauz-de-Fonds, Switzerland, came to America in the early nineteenth century to join his brothers Louis and Andre in the establishment of a racing car design company: the Frontenac Motor Corporation. Frontenac replaced Louis' earlier racing car design company, the Chevrolet Motor Company, which he sold to William C. Durant in 1915. After some initial success, the Chevrolet brothers were faced with obsolete vehicles after World War I, and not enough financial resources to make them competitive again. However, in 1920, the new management at the Monroe Motors Company asked Louis to run his racing team. The Chevrolets moved their operations to Indianapolis, and rapidly made the Monroe racers ready for the 1920 Indy 500, the first to be held since 1914. During the 1920s, the Indy 500 was the most important racing event in America, and Gaston Chevrolet, driving a Chevrolet-adapted Monroe, won the first post-war competition with an average race speed of 86.63mph. The Chevrolet brothers did not have long to enjoy their success, however, because just a few months later Gaston was killed along with his riding mechanic Lyall Jolls during the Beverly Hills race.

November 25, 1973
In response to the 1973 oil crisis, President Richard M. Nixon called for a Sunday ban on the sale of gasoline to consumers. The proposal was part of a larger plan announced by Nixon earlier in the month to achieve energy self-sufficiency in the United States by 1980. The 1973 oil crisis began in mid-October, when 11 Arab oil producers increased oil prices and cut back production in response to the support of the United States and other nations for Israel in the Yom Kippur War. Almost overnight, gasoline prices quadrupled, and the U.S. economy, especially its automakers, suffered greatly as a result. The Sunday gasoline ban lasted until the crisis was resolved in March of the next year, but other government legislation, such as the imposing of a national speed limit of 55mph, was extended indefinitely. Experts maintained that the reduction of speed on America's highways would prevent an estimated 9,000 traffic fatalities per year. Although many motorists resented the new legislation, one long-lasting benefit for impatient travelers was the ability to make right turns at a red light, a change that the authorities estimated would conserve a significant amount of gasoline. In 1995, the national 55mph speed limit was repealed, and legislation relating to highway speeds now rests in state hands.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on November 26, 2013, 03:44:24 am
(http://i614.photobucket.com/albums/tt223/hotrd32/HAMB%20Stuff/Darrel-Peterson-Model-A_zpsda6abf8d.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/hotrd32/media/HAMB%20Stuff/Darrel-Peterson-Model-A_zpsda6abf8d.jpg.html)

November 26, 1927
The Ford Motor Company announced the introduction of the Model A, the first new Ford to enter the market since the Model T was first introduced in 1908. The hugely successful Model T revolutionized the automobile industry, and over 15,000,000 million copies of the "Tin Lizzie" were sold in its 19 years of production. By 1927, the popularity of the outdated Model T was rapidly waning. Improved, but basically unchanged for its two-decade reign, it was losing ground to the more stylish and powerful motor cars offered by Ford's competitors. In May of 1927, Ford plants across the country closed, as the company began an intensive development of the more refined and modern Model A. The vastly improved Model A had elegant Lincoln-like styling on a smaller scale, and used a capable 200.5-cubic-inch four-cylinder engine that produced 40hp. With prices starting at $460, nearly 5,000,000 Model As, in several body styles and a variety of colors, rolled onto America's highways until production ended in early 1932.

November 26, 1980
Peter DePaolo, who won a dazzling victory at the 1925 Indy 500, died at the age of 82. DePaolo, who was the nephew of racing legend Ralph DePalma, first started racing for Duesenberg in the 1920s. During the first half of the 1920s, Fred and August Duesenberg's expertly crafted racing cars were dominant competitors at the Indianapolis 500. In 1922, a Duesenberg engine won the event, and in 1924 a complete Duesenberg, featuring cutting-edge centrifugal superchargers, blew the competition away. For the 1925 Indy, racing car designer Harry Miller showed up with a dramatic new supercharged front-drive Miller Junior Eight, and Peter DePaolo, who was set to drive for Duesenberg, had his work cut out from him. However, DePaolo had set a promising 135mph record on the Culver City boards that same year, and as the race got underway, he took an early lead over racer Dave Lewis in the Miller Junior Eight. By the halfway point of the race, the blisters on DePaolo's hands had become intolerable, and Fred Duesenberg replaced him with Norman Batten. When DePaolo returned from the track hospital, he learned with horror that Batten had fallen to fifth place, and Dave Lewis was leading in the Miller. DePaolo reentered the race, and slowly but surely, DePaolo fought his way to the front of the pack again. When the dust cleared on the Indianapolis Motor Speedway, Peter DePaolo had prevailed. It was a great victory for the Duesenberg team, made greater by DePaolo's passing of the 100mph Indy speed barrier with an average speed of 101.13mph.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on November 27, 2013, 12:45:36 pm
(http://i83.photobucket.com/albums/j288/burneevegas/Facebook/SEMA%202013/1465251_10151640856921157_893277638_n.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/burneevegas/media/Facebook/SEMA%202013/1465251_10151640856921157_893277638_n.jpg.html)

On this day, November 27, 1901
Clement Studebaker died in South Bend, Indiana. He was the co-founder of H & C Studebaker Company, which built Pennsylvania-German conestoga wagons and carriages during his lifetime, and automobiles after his death.
PICTURED: Customized Studebaker at SEMA Las Vegas

November 27, 1979
Ricky Carmichael a former professional motocross and supercross racer was born in Clearwater, Florida. He is now transitioning to a stock car career as a development driver with Ken Schrader. While racing pro motocross and supercross, his nickname was GOAT (Greate st of All Time).
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on November 28, 2013, 06:44:07 pm
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November 28, 1942
The first production Ford bomber, the B-24 Liberator, rolled off the assembly line at Ford's massive Willow Run plant in Ypsilanti, Michigan. Two years before, U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt had urged an isolationist America to prepare for its inevitable involvement in the war, declaring that U.S. industry must become "the great arsenal of democracy." Roosevelt established the Office of Production Management (OPM) to organize the war effort, and named a former automotive executive co-director of the OPM. Most Detroit automobile executives opposed the OAW during its first year, and were dubious of the advantages of devoting their entire production to war material. However, on December 7, 1941, the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor, and American citizens mobilized behind the U.S. declaration of war against the Axis powers. Since profit ruled Detroit, the government made Ford and America's other automakers an economic offer they could not refuse. For their participation in the war effort, automakers would be guaranteed profits regardless of production costs, and $11 billion would be allocated to the building of war plants--factories that would be sold to private industry at a substantial discount after the war. In February of 1942, the last Ford automobile rolled off the assembly line for the duration of the war, and soon afterward the Willow Run plant was completed in Michigan. Built specifically for Ford's war production, Willow Run was the largest factory in the world. Using the type of assembly line production that had made Ford an industrial giant, Ford hoped to produce 500 B-24 Liberator bombers a month. After a gradual start, that figure was reached in time for the Allied invasion of Western Europe, and by July of 1944, the Willow Plant was producing one B-24 every hour. By the end of the war, the 43,000 men and women who had worked at Ford's Willow Run plant had produced over 8,500 bombers, which unquestionably had a significant impact on the course of the war.

November 28, 1890
Max Duttenhofer, managing director of Köln-Rottweiler Pulverfabrik, Wilhelm Lorenz and Gottlieb Daimler formed Daimler-Motoren-Gesellschaft, joint-stock company. Wilhelm Maybach joined as chief engineer. He however left on February 11, 1891 over terms of contract.

November 28, 1895
The "Great Chicago Race", first automobile race first race featuring gasoline-powered automobiles, organized by Chicago Times-Herald Publisher Herman H. Kohlstaat, took place between Chicago and Waukegan, IL; six vehicles competed: two electric cars, three German Benz automobiles, one American-made two-cylinder Duryea automobile; $5,000 in prizes, first-place prize of $2,000; Frank Duryea = winner in 10 1/2 hours with no other car in sight, average speed of 7.5mph; 2nd place - German Oscar Mueller, completed the race an hour and a half later.

Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on November 30, 2013, 12:20:00 am
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On this day, November 29, 1948
Australian Prime Minister Ben Chifley and 1,200 hundred other people attended the unveiling of the first car to be manufactured entirely in Australia--an ivory-colored motor car officially designated the 48-215, but fondly known as the Holden FX. In 1945, the Australian government had invited Australia's auto-part manufacturers to create an all-Australian car. General Motors-Holden's Automotive, a car body manufacturer, obliged, producing the 48-215, a six-cylinder, four-door sedan. The 48-215 was an instant success in Australia, and 100,000 Holden FXs were sold in the first five years of production. During the next few decades, General Motors-Holden's Automotive went on to introduce a number of other successful marques, including the Torana and the Commodore. Four million Holdens, with their trademark "Lion-and-Stone" emblem, were sold in Australia and exported around the world by the 1980s. In 1994, General Motors-Holden's Automotive finally adopted Holden as its official company name, and today Holden continues its mission of meeting Australia's unique motoring needs.
PICTURED: Launch of the Holden 48-215 by Prime Minister Ben Chifley.

November 29, 1996
Volkswagen executive Jose Ignacio Lopez resigned under charges of industrial espionage from General Motors, his former employer. As part of a major lawsuit against Volkswagen, GM charged that Lopez, its former worldwide chief of purchasing, had stolen trade secrets from the company in 1993 when he defected to Volkswagen along with three other GM managers. Lopez's resignation was likely a result of pressure from the German carmaker, which sought to reach a settlement before the scheduled lawsuit began under U.S. jurisdiction. In January 1997, VW and GM announced a settlement in which Volkswagen would pay General Motors $100 million and agree to buy at least $1 billion in parts from GM. VW also confirmed that the three other former GM managers accused of industrial espionage had all either resigned or were due to take administrative leave. In return, GM agreed to drop all legal action.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on November 30, 2013, 11:37:44 pm
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On this day, Paul Walker dead at 40: 'Fast and Furious' star killed in fiery car crash
The star of 'The Fast and the Furious' movie franchise and a friend identified as Roger Rodas died in Southern California after the Porsche they were in crashed violently into a tree, his rep confirmed to the Daily News. Police said speed was a factor.
PICTURED: Vin Diesel (Left) Paul Walker (right)

November 30, 1866
Work on the first underwater highway tunnel in the United States began on this day in Chicago, Illinois. Over a three-year period, workers and engineers tunneled underneath the Chicago River, finally completing the 1,500-foot tunnel at a cost of over $500,000. The tunnel had two roadways, each 11-feet tall and 13-feet wide, and a separate footway 10-feet wide and 10-feet tall. In 1907, the tunnel was lowered to provide better air circulation, and for the first time it began to allow regular automobile traffic.

November 30, 1960
The first Scout all-terrain vehicle rolled off the assembly line at International Harvester's Fort Wayne plant. The history of International Harvester dates back to the early 1800s, when the company sold Cyrus McCormick's mechanical reaper. Around the turn of the century, the company took the name of International Harvester (IH), and, in 1907, produced the Auto Buggy, an early motorized truck marketed to farmers. During the next few decades, IH specialized in industrial vehicles and agricultural machinery. During the 1950s, IH truck production flourished with the rapid emergence of interstate highways. In 1959, IH began work on a new 4x4 utility vehicle, which would be offered to the average American as an alternative to the popular Jeep vehicle. Designed by Ted Ornas, the first Scout was introduced to the public as a versatile, affordable vehicle for both passenger and cargo transport. It was available in both two- and four-wheel drive and featured a four-cylinder engine, with three-speed, floor-mounted transmission. The Scout became the best-selling vehicle in IH history, enjoying a full 10 years of production before being replaced by the improved Scout II in 1971.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on December 01, 2013, 02:54:04 pm
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On this day, December 1, 1913
The Ford Motor Company introduced the continuous moving assembly line. Ford's new assembly line could produce a complete car every two-and-a-half minutes. The efficiency and speed of Ford's production lines allowed the company to sell cars for less than any competitor.

December 1, 1915
John D. Hertz founded original Yellow Cab taxicab service in Chicago. The color (and name) yellow selected as result of survey by University of Chicago which indicated it was easiest color to spot.

December 1, 1921
The Detroit Steam Motors Corporation announced the Trask steam car, a favorite project of automobile distributor O.C. Trask. A steam-driven automobile had reached the world-record speed of 127.66mph in 1906, causing a steam-car craze that lasted through the 1920s. The last steam-powered cars in the U.S. were made in 1926.

December 1, 1942
The U.S. government imposed gasoline quotas to conserve fuel during the shortages of World War II. The armed forces overseas had fuel aplenty, but stateside, gasoline became costly and hard to get. People started using bicycles and their own two feet to get around.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on December 02, 2013, 11:07:32 pm
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On this day, December 2, 1899
John R. Cobb, a dominant British racer and three-time land-speed record-holder, was born in Hackbridge, Surrey, south of London, England. During the early 1930s, Cobb dominated British racing, setting a series of lap records at the famous Brooklands racetrack in England, including an unbroken record of 143.44mph in 1935. In 1938, at the Bonneville Salt Flats in Utah, he set a new land speed record of 350.194mph in a Railton racer, breaking the 345.489mph record set by George Eyston two weeks before. Eyston, driving a Thunderbolt, went on to regain the land speed title that year. However, in 1938, Cobb returned to Bonneville to wrest the title from Eyston for good, this time racing to 369.741mph. Cobb's record speed stood until 1947, when Cobb himself returned to Utah in another Railton and set a new record of 394.196mph, although one of his unofficial runs was in excess of 400mph. In 1952, Cobb was killed at the age of 52 while trying to set a new water-speed record on Loch Ness in Scotland. His impressive land-speed record stood until 1963, when Craig Breedlove, driving a jet-propelled vehicle, broke a record that no other drivers of cars with internal combustion engines could touch.

December 2, 1902
The first working V-8 engine was patented in France by French engine designer Leon-Marie-Joseph-Clement Levavasseur. The engine block was the first to arrange eight pistons in the V-formation that allowed a crankshaft with only four throws to be turned by eight pistons. Today, V-8 engines are extremely common in automobiles that need powerful motors.

December 2, 1913
Henry Ford installs the first moving assembly line for the mass production of an entire automobile. His innovation reduced the time it took to build a car from more than 12 hours to two hours and 30 minutes.
Ford's Model T, introduced in 1908, was simple, sturdy and relatively inexpensive--but not inexpensive enough for Ford, who was determined to build "motor cars for the great multitude. In order to lower the price of his cars, Ford figured, he would just have to find a way to build them more efficiently.
Ford had been trying to increase his factories' productivity for years. The workers who built his Model N cars (the Model T's predecessor) arranged the parts in a row on the floor, put the under-construction auto on skids and dragged it down the line as they worked. Later, the streamlining process grew more sophisticated. Ford broke the Model T's assembly into 84 discrete steps, for example, and trained each of his workers to do just one. He also hired motion-study expert Frederick Taylor to make those jobs even more efficient. Meanwhile, he built machines that could stamp out parts automatically and much more quickly than even the fastest human worker could.
The most significant piece of Ford's efficiency crusade was the assembly line. Inspired by the continuous-flow production methods used by flour mills, breweries, canneries and industrial bakeries, along with the disassembly of animal carcasses in Chicago's meat-packing plants, Ford installed moving lines for bits and pieces of the manufacturing process: For instance, workers built motors and transmissions on rope-and-pulley–powered conveyor belts. In December 1913, he unveiled the pièce de résistance: the moving-chassis assembly line.
In February 1914, he added a mechanized belt that chugged along at a speed of six feet per minute. As the pace accelerated, Ford produced more and more cars, and on June 4, 1924, the 10-millionth Model T rolled off the Highland Park assembly line. Though the Model T did not last much longer--by the middle of the 1920s, customers wanted a car that was inexpensive and had all the bells and whistles that the Model T scorned--it had ushered in the era of the automobile for everyone.

Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on December 03, 2013, 10:27:25 pm
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On this day, December 3, 1979
The last Pacer is produced by the American Motor Company. The bubble-topped Pacer was a reasonably popular economy car, though its Jetson-styled body attracted flack from car critics and stand-up comedians alike.

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December 3, 2014
Australian Drag racer Joe "Buzzard" Gatt passes away. His funeral service was held at Sydney Dragway. Joe, along with his brother Benny have been involved in the sport of Drag Racing since the beginning. Most people will remember the days of Super Flow Heads and the Gatt EA Falcon that went on to set a World Record as the fastest FORD.
Joe was born on the 15th Nov 1941

December 3, 1917
Quebec Bridge opens near Quebec, Canada. At the time, it was the world's longest cantilever truss span in which stiff trusses extend from the bridge piers, without additional support.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on December 04, 2013, 06:45:12 pm
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On this day, December 4, 1991
Pan American World Airways, commonly known as Pan Am, was the principal and largest international air carrier in the United States from 1927 until its collapse on December 4, 1991. Founded in 1927 as a scheduled air mail and passenger service operating between Key West, Florida, and Havana, Cuba, the airline became a major company credited with many innovations that shaped the international airline industry, including the widespread use of jet aircraft, jumbo jets, and computerized reservation systems. It was also a founding member of the International Air Transport Association (IATA), the global airline industry association. Identified by its blue globe logo, the use of the word "Clipper" in aircraft names and call signs, and the white pilot uniform caps, the airline was a cultural icon of the 20th century. In an era dominated by flag carriers that were wholly or majority government-owned, it was also the unofficial flag carrier of the United States. During most of the jet era, Pan Am's flagship terminal was the Worldport located at John F. Kennedy International Airport in New York City.

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December 4, 1915
Automobile tycoon Henry Ford set sail for Europe from Hoboken, New Jersey, aboard the Ford Peace Ship. His mission: to end World War I. His slogan, "Out of the trenches and back to their homes by Christmas," won an enthusiastic response in the States, but didn't get very far overseas. Ford's diplomatic mission was not taken seriously in Europe, and he soon returned.

December 4, 1928
"Dapper Dan" Hogan, a St. Paul, Minnesota saloon keeper and mob boss, is killed when someone plants a car bomb under the floorboards of his new Paige coupe. Doctors worked all day to save him--according to the Morning Tribune, "racketeers, police characters, and business men" queued up at the hospital to donate blood to their ailing friend--but Hogan slipped into a coma and died at around 9 p.m. His murder is still unsolved.
As the newspaper reported the day after Hogan died, car bombs were "the newest form of bomb killing," a murderous technology perfected by New York gangsters and bootleggers. In fact, Hogan was one of the first people to die in a car bomb explosion. The police investigation revealed that two men had entered Dapper Dan's garage early in the morning of December 4, planted a nitroglycerine explosive in the car's undercarriage, and wired it to the starter. When Hogan pressed his foot to that pedal, the bomb went off, nearly severing his right leg. He died from blood loss.
The first real car bomb--or, in this case, horse-drawn-wagon bomb--exploded on September 16, 1920 outside the J.P. Morgan Company's offices in New York City's financial district. Italian anarchist Mario Buda had planted it there, hoping to kill Morgan himself; as it happened, the robber baron was out of town, but 40 other people died and about 200 were wounded in the blast. There were occasional car-bomb attacks after that--most notably in Saigon in 1952, Algiers in 1962, and Palermo in 1963--but vehicle weapons remained relatively uncommon until the 1970s and 80s, when they became the terrifying trademark of groups like the Irish Republican Army and Hezbollah. In 1995, right-wing terrorists Timothy McVeigh and Terry Nichols used a bomb hidden in a Ryder truck to blow up the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City.


December 4, 1971
General Motors recalled 6,700,000 vehicles that were vulnerable to motor mount failure. It was the largest voluntary safety recall in the industry's history.

December 4, 1984
General Motors (GM) announced that it would stop production of diesel engines. According to GM, diesel motors get excellent mileage and produce plenty of power, but tend to be noisy and produce heavy exhaust. Tightening emissions laws drove GM to abandon diesels altogether.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on December 05, 2013, 10:36:30 am
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On this day, December 5, 1932
The first Ford Model C automobile was introduced. It boasted the first four-cylinder engine made by Ford with a counter-balanced crankshaft. The Model C was largely eclipsed, however, by Ford's other 1932 offering: the Ford V-8. The V-8 was the first eight-cylinder Ford automobile, and boasted the first V-8 engine block ever cast in a single piece. The V-8 sold well, but Ford's fortunes had fallen from their peak. The one-time industry giant was trailing General Motors and Chrysler in sales.

December 5, 1951
Parking Services Inc. opened the first push button-controlled Park-O-Mat garage opened in Washington, DC (open building with 16 floors and 2 basement levels); no ramps, no aisles and no lanes; used a "vehicle parking apparatus" such that single attendant, without entering a car, could automatically park or return an auto in less than a minute; two elevators parked 72 cars on a lot 25 by 40 feet.

December 5, 1977
The Plymouth Horizon was introduced. It was the first American-made small car with front-wheel drive. Technical advances in drive technology had reduced the size and cost of front-wheel drive systems.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on December 06, 2013, 03:37:56 am
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On this day, December 6, 1955
Volkswagenwerk G.M.B.H. Corporation, Wolfsburg, Germany, registered "Volkswagen" trademark.
PICTURED: Sheri sitting in a 1960 Ratrod VW in Daytona (she likes)

December 6, 1955
The US Federal government standardized the size of license plates throughout the U.S. Previously, individual states had designed their own license plates, resulting in wide variations.

December 6, 1976
The professional stunt woman Kitty O'Neil sets the land-speed record for female drivers at the Alvord Desert in southeastern Oregon. The record hovered around 400 mph; O'Neil's two-way average speed was 512.710 mph. The rules that govern land-speed records require that a driver make two passes across a measured course, one out and one back; officials then average the two speeds. Observers reported that O'Neil's car actually reached a top speed of more than 618 miles per hour on her first pass, but she ran out of fuel and had to coast to the end of the course.
O'Neil's bravery was wide-ranging: She was born deaf; became a champion three-meter and platform diver whose Olympic aspirations were dashed by a bout of spinal meningitis that doctors said would permanently paralyze her; and survived two grueling sets of cancer treatment, all before her 28th birthday. In 1976, she became a Hollywood stuntwoman and was featured in TV shows like "Quincy," "Baretta" and "The Bionic Woman" and movies like "Smokey and the Bandit," "The Blues Brothers" and "Airport '77." When she took her shot at the land-speed record, she already held the record for the highest stunt fall by a woman (105 feet).
Through her husband, a stunt performer himself, O'Neil met Bill Fredrick, a jet-car builder who had just put the finishing touches on a hydrogen-peroxide–fueled machine called the "Motivator" and was looking for a driver who could make it famous. So, in early December 1976, O'Neil found herself squeezed into the tiny three-wheeled rocket car on Oregon's alkali flats. (Alkali flats, or salt flats, are dry lakebeds whose smooth, hard surfaces are perfect for driving low-slung cars very, very fast. For this reason, people pursuing land-speed records often travel to places like Alvord, the Bonneville Salt Flats in Utah and Nevada's Black Rock Desert.) On each of her practice runs, O'Neil pushed the car up to speed with ease, and when she officially broke the record, she was still only using 60 percent of the Motivator's power. "There is no doubt," Sports Illustrated reported, "that by dialing in more power...Kitty would have gone still faster"--past the overall land-speed record (638.388 mph, set by Californian Gary Gabelich in 1970) and maybe even past the sonic barrier.
But dialing in more power was not an option for O'Neil: under her contract, she was only permitted to drive the "Motivator" to a new women's record. The movie director Hal Needham had paid $25,000 for the chance to steer the car to a new overall world record, and he was determined not to lose that chance to a woman. So, after O'Neil set her record, Needham rather unceremoniously demanded that she be pulled from the drivers' seat. (His spokesman even told reporters that it would be "degrading" for a woman to hold the "man's" record.) While the lawyers squabbled, it began to snow, and Alvord was closed for the season. Needham never even got behind the wheel.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on December 07, 2013, 08:54:30 am
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December 7, 1965
Chevrolet produced its 3,000,000th car for the year. It was the first time Chevrolet had produced an annual total surpassing 3,000,000 vehicles.

December 7, 1931
The last Ford Model A was produced. The Ford motor works were then shut down for six months for retooling. On April 1, 1932, Ford introduced its new offering, the high-performance Ford V-8, the first Ford with an 8-cylinder engine
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on December 08, 2013, 10:22:12 am
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On this day, December 8, 1945
After World War II ended with Japan's surrender on September 3, 1945, Japan remained under Allied occupation ruled by an occupation government. Its war industries were shut down completely. The Toyota Motor Company received permission from the occupation government to start production of buses and trucks--vehicles necessary to keep Japan running. It was the first rumble of the postwar auto industry in Japan.
PICTURED: Toyota's sporty modern day flag ship, the Twin turbo Supra

December 8, 1964
Great Britain's worst auto accident ever killed three people and injured 120 in a pileup of more than 100 vehicles near Wigan, England.

December 8, 1981
Mitsubishi Motors Corporation, the automotive division of the huge Mitsubishi conglomerate of Japan, began selling cars in the U.S. under its own name. Previously, Mitsubishi had done business in the States only in partnerships with American automakers.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on December 10, 2013, 12:23:41 am
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December 9, 1963
The Studebaker Brothers Manufacturing Company, started during the Civil War, was the world's largest manufacturer of horse-drawn carriages. When automobiles came along, Studebaker converted its business, becoming a well-known automaker. But the brand couldn't keep up with its competitors, despite a 1954 merger with the Packard Motor Car Company. On this day in 1963, the last American-made Studebaker was produced, and the factory in South Bend, Indiana, closed forever. Three years later Studebaker's Canadian factories shut down, and the Studebaker passed into history.

December 9, 1921
A young engineer at General Motors named Thomas Midgeley Jr. discovers that when he adds a compound called tetraethyl lead (TEL) to gasoline, he eliminates the unpleasant noises known as "knock" or "pinging" that internal-combustion engines make when they run. Midgeley could scarcely have imagined the consequences of his discovery: For more than five decades, oil companies would saturate the gasoline they sold with lead--a deadly poison.
In 1911, a scientist named Charles Kettering, Midgeley's boss at GM, invented an electric ignition system for internal-combustion cars that made their old-fashioned hand-cranked starters obsolete. Now, driving a gas-fueled auto was no trouble at all. Unfortunately, as more and more people bought GM cars, more and more people noticed a problem: When they heated up, their engines made an alarming racket, banging and clattering as though their metal parts were loose under the hood.
The problem, Kettering and Midgeley eventually figured out, was that ordinary gasoline was much too explosive for spark-ignited car engines: that is, what we now call its octane, a measure of its resistance to detonation, was too low. To raise the fuel's octane level and make it less prone to detonation and knocking, Midgeley wrote later, he mixed it with almost anything he could think of, from "melted butter and camphor to ethyl acetate and aluminum chloride but most of these had no more effect
He found a couple of additives that did work, however, and lead was just one of them. Iodine worked, but producing it was much too complicated. Ethyl alcohol also worked, and it was cheap--however, anyone with an ordinary still could make it, which meant that GM could not patent it or profit from it. Thus, from a corporate point of view, lead was the best anti-knock additive there was.
In February 1923, a Dayton filling station sold the first tankful of leaded gasoline. A few GM engineers witnessed this big moment, but Midgeley did not, because he was in bed with severe lead poisoning. He recovered; however, in April 1924, lead poisoning killed two of his unluckier colleagues, and in October, five workers at a Standard Oil lead plant died too, after what one reporter called "wrenching fits of violent insanity." Almost 40 of the plant's workers suffered severe neurological symptoms like hallucinations and seizures.
Still, for decades auto and oil companies denied that lead posed any health risks. Finally, in the 1970s, the Environmental Protection Agency required that carmakers phase out lead-compatible engines in the cars they sold in the United States. Today, leaded gasoline is still in use in some parts of Eastern Europe, South America and the Middle East.

When the famous American mechanical engineer and chemist Thomas Midgley, Jr. contracted poliomyelitis at the age of 51, he became severely disabled. This situation led him to devise an elaborate system of strings and pulleys to help others lift him from bed.
On November 2, 1944, at the age of 55, Midgley died of strangulation due to the system He created when he was entangled in the ropes of his own device

December 9, 1941
The Automobile Racing Drivers Club of America (ARDCA) closed its doors due to World War II, which created shortages of fuel, tires, and other automotive necessities--including men to drive the cars. After the war, the ARDCA never got started again.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on December 10, 2013, 12:34:48 pm
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On this day, December 10, 1970
Lee Iacocca became president of Ford Motor Company. Iacocca joined Ford as an engineer in the 1940s, but quickly moved into marketing, where he gained influence quickly as a supporter of the Ford Mustang. Iacocca was eventually ousted from Ford on October 15, 1978. He went on to become president of the struggling Chrysler Corporation, which was saddled with an inventory of gas-guzzling road yachts, just as the fuel shortage began. Iacocca made history by talking the government into offering Chrysler $1.5 billion in loans. The bailout worked, with the help of Iacocca's streamlining measures. Chrysler recorded record profits in 1984.
PICTURED: Former Chrysler Chairman Lee Iacocca in one of the ads he made for Chrysler in the 1980s

December 10, 1845
English inventor R.W. Thompson received a British patent for his new carriage wheels, which had inflated tubes of heavy rubber stretched around their rims--the world's first pneumatic tires. They became popular on horse-drawn carriages, and later prevented the first motorcar passengers from being shaken to pieces.

December 10, 1868
First traffic control light in London used gas-lighted lantern.

December 10, 1915
The 1,000,000th Model T Ford was produced. It was a triumph of Henry Ford's assembly-line innovations, and the dawn of a new American era. The speed and efficiency of Ford's factories made automobiles cheaper than ever. Average families could afford their own cars. The modern motorized world was being born.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on December 11, 2013, 10:57:07 am
(http://i82.photobucket.com/albums/j253/WolfNL/nieuws/img_0007.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/WolfNL/media/nieuws/img_0007.jpg.html)

On this day, December 11,1844
was the 1st time nitrous oxide was to be used for dental purposes in Hartford, CT. How things have come along since then

December 11, 1894
The world's first auto show, the Exposition Internationale de Velocipidie et de Locomotion Automobile, opened in Paris, France. Four makes of automobiles were on display.

December 11,1901
Guglielmo Marconi, the Italian electrical inventor, sends the first transatlantic radio signal

December 11, 1941
Buick lowered its prices to reflect the absence of spare tires or inner tubes from its new cars. Widespread shortages caused by World War II had led to many quotas and laws designed to conserve America's resources. One of these laws prohibited spare tires on new cars. Rubber, produced overseas, had become almost impossible to get. People didn't mind the spare-tire law too much, though. They were too busy dealing with quotas for gasoline, meat, butter, shoes, and other essentials.

December 11, 1967
Supersonic airliner prototype "Concorde" 1st shown (France)
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on December 12, 2013, 01:08:41 pm
(http://i266.photobucket.com/albums/ii264/DONALD30_08/54COMMANDERSTARLINER.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/DONALD30_08/media/54COMMANDERSTARLINER.jpg.html)

On this day, December 12, 1916
The Studebaker Corporation, a leading automaker that began as the world's biggest manufacturer of horseless carriages, began construction of a new factory in South Bend, Indiana. Studebaker was a leading automaker throughout the first half of the twentieth century.

December 12, 1922
William L. Kissel and John F. Werner, of Hartford, WI, received a patent for a "Convertible Automobile Body", removable hard top that could turn a closed car into an open touring car (precursor to convertibles); assigned to Kissel Motor Car Company.

December 12, 1955
The Ford Foundation made the biggest donation to charity the world had yet seen: $500,000,000 to hospitals, medical schools, and colleges. The Ford Foundation supported many other charities, and is still active today.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on December 13, 2013, 08:15:49 pm
(http://i985.photobucket.com/albums/ae337/Gabriel-Vinicius/Blog-2/Lincoln_Continental_02.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/Gabriel-Vinicius/media/Blog-2/Lincoln_Continental_02.jpg.html)

On this day, December 13, 1939
The first production Lincoln Continental was finished on this day (prototypes of the touring car had already been driven). The Lincoln Continentals of the 1940s are commonly considered some of the most beautiful production cars ever made. Today, the Lincoln Continental remains one of the world's most popular luxury cars.
PICTURED: A custom Lincoln Convertible

December 13, 1957
The last two-seater T-bird was produced. Through 1957, Ford's Thunderbirds were jaunty, two-seater sports cars that boasted removable hard tops and powerful V-8 engines. The 1958 Thunderbird (nicknamed the "square bird") was a four-passenger car, 18 inches longer and half a ton heavier than the previous year's model. The new luxury Thunderbird packed a 300hp V-8, making it one of the most muscular cars on the road. And one of the most popular. It sold more cars in 1958 than 1957, despite a nationwide slump in auto sales. Ford discontinued the Thunderbird after the 1997 model year, by which time it bore little resemblance to the stylish early "Bird" versions. To the delight of Thunderbird aficionados, it was reintroduced in 2002, with a brand-new and noteworthy design that incorporated elements of 1955-57 and 1961-62 models, including "porthole" windows, rounded lights and a hood scoop.

December 13, 2003
Seattle preservationists load the city's iconic Hat 'n' Boots Tex Gas Station onto a tractor-trailer and drive it away from the spot where it had stood for almost 50 years. The hat, a 44-foot–wide Stetson, went first; the 22-foot–tall cowboy boots followed it one at a time. (The giant hat had always been mostly for show--it had perched atop the filling station's office, luring drivers off the highway. The boots, on the other hand, were eminently functional: The left one housed the men's restroom and the right one housed the women's.) The buildings were famous examples of mid-century roadside Pop Art--eagle-eyed viewers can even see them in the opening credits of the film "National Lampoon's Vacation"--and the move, to a nearby park, saved them from demolition.
Developer Buford Seals intended the Hat 'n' Boots (built in 1955) to be the centerpiece of a gigantic shopping center that he called the Frontier Village. It sat alongside Route 99, the Pacific Northwest's major north-south highway, and Seals was confident that people would flock to his mall if only he could find a way to attract their attention. So, he hired artist Lewis H. Nasmyth to design the enormous structure, and the two men built it themselves out of steel beams, plaster and chicken wire. It cost $150,000, almost all the money Seals had. After the filling station was finished, he managed to scrape together enough cash to build the (ordinary-looking) Frontier Village Supermarket, but the mall's remaining 184 stores never materialized.
For a while, the gas station had better luck than either the shopping center or the supermarket, which quickly went out of business. In fact, for the first five years it was open, the Hat 'n' Boots sold more gasoline than any other station in Washington. Rumor has it that Elvis even pumped gas there! But the completion of the bigger, more modern Interstate 5 just a few miles away drained most of Route 99's traffic, and the Hat 'n' Boots became more of a tourist curiosity than anything else. It closed in 1988.
When they reached their new home in Oxbow Park, the disintegrating boots were restored almost immediately. In 2007, Seattle city officials paid $150,000 to revitalize the hat as well.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on December 14, 2013, 09:08:14 pm
(http://i533.photobucket.com/albums/ee333/megelaineimages/10-05-27%20Indianapolis%20Motor%20Speedway/IMSBlog-0008.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/megelaineimages/media/10-05-27%20Indianapolis%20Motor%20Speedway/IMSBlog-0008.jpg.html)

On this day, December 14, 1909
The famous brick surface of the Indianapolis Motor Speedway (the "Brickyard") was finished on this day. The speedway had its grand opening three days later, when the brickwork was ceremoniously completed by Governor Thomas R. Marshall of Indiana, who cemented the last "golden" brick.

December 14, 1931
Bentley Motors was taken over by Rolls-Royce. Bentley Motors, a maker of luxury automobiles founded in 1920, was, like Rolls-Royce, one of the finest names in the business. As a Rolls-Royce subsidiary, Bentley was guided by the Rolls-Royce aesthetic. Gradually, Bentley automobiles acquired elements of classic Rolls-Royce design until automobiles of the two marques became virtually indistinguishable.

December 14, 1947
The National Association for Stock Car Auto Racing (NASCAR) was founded at the Streamline Hotel in Daytona Beach, Florida. It was the first formal organization for stock-car racing, a sport said to have begun with souped-up bootlegger hot rods during Prohibition. Starting in 1953, the major automakers invested heavily in racing teams, producing faster cars than ever before: good results on the stock-car circuit were believed to mean better sales on the showroom floor. In 1957, however, rising costs and tightened NASCAR rules forced the factories out of the sport, and the modern era of the NASCAR super speedway began.

December 14, 1983
Prime Minister Indira Gandhi handed over the keys of a white Maruti 800 to one Harpal Singh. Many especially political leaders and bureaucrats attended the launch ceremony of Maruti 800, but the person who dreamt of India's first people's car was missing, late Sanjay Gandhi. His smiling portrait lay hanged on the stage.

December 14, 1987
Chrysler pleads no contest to selling driven vehicles as new

December 14, 1793
1st state road authorized, Frankfort, Ky to Cincinnati

December 14, 1798
David Wilkinson of Rhode Island patents a nut & bolt machine
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on December 15, 2013, 09:33:49 pm
(http://i21.photobucket.com/albums/b263/SMSaul/Grand%20Canyon%202009/IMG_3839SilverBridge12-4-09em.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/SMSaul/media/Grand%20Canyon%202009/IMG_3839SilverBridge12-4-09em.jpg.html)

On this day, December 15, 1967
The Silver Bridge across the Ohio River collapsed during rush hour. Dozens of cars fell into the icy water. Forty-six people lost their lives in the accident, and many others were injured. Today, better construction and safety rules make accidents like this one less common.

December 15, 1854
First practical street cleaning machine put into operation in Philadelphia; chain driven by turning of cart's wheels turned series of brooms attached to cylinder mounted on cart.

December 15, 1941
An AFL council adopted a no-strike policy in war industries, which included automotive plants being converted to military production (domestic automobile manufacturing stopped completely from 1941 to 1944). The U.S. was gearing up for the worst years of World War II.

Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on December 16, 2013, 08:29:35 pm
(http://i847.photobucket.com/albums/ab40/b52asia/Saab/Saab-92.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/b52asia/media/Saab/Saab-92.jpg.html)

On this day, December 16, 1949
A Swedish company by the name of Svenska Aeroplan Aktiebolaget produced its first motorcar. In 1965, the company changed its name to Saab Aktiebolag, and a few years later simply to Saab. The first Saab automobiles were engineered with the precision of fighter planes--the company's other main product. Today Saab is known for producing safe, reliable, high-performing vehicles. In 1990, General Motors bought Saab's car operations, excluding its bus, truck, and military jet businesses. Ten years later, GM acquired the rest of Saab's automotive operations.
PICTURED: SAAB 92001, The first SAAB

December 16, 1979
Libya joined four other OPEC nations in raising the price of crude oil. Since the U.S. bought much of its oil from Libya, the price hike had an almost immediate effect on American gas prices. Gas became costly, and the cost of motoring rose. Heating-oil prices also jumped--a tough blow at the beginning of winter.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on December 17, 2013, 09:57:26 pm
(http://i1014.photobucket.com/albums/af266/zbee062/Talladega%20SUperspeedway/IMG_0385.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/zbee062/media/Talladega%20SUperspeedway/IMG_0385.jpg.html)

On this day, December 17, 1979
Driver Stan Barrett became the first person in the world to travel faster than sound on land. He drove the Budweiser Rocket car at a top speed of 739.666 in a one-way run at Rogers Dry Lake, California. The ultrasonic speed set an unofficial record, but an official record requires trips in both directions, whose speeds are averaged.

December 17, 1963
The U.S. Congress passed the Clean Air Act, a sweeping set of laws designed to protect the environment from air pollution. It was the first legislation to place pollution controls on the automobile industry.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on December 18, 2013, 07:51:38 pm
(http://i645.photobucket.com/albums/uu176/MustangMayhem/web/LaubatsJeantaudautomobile_zpsfba66bb6.jpg) (http://s645.photobucket.com/user/MustangMayhem/media/web/LaubatsJeantaudautomobile_zpsfba66bb6.jpg.html)

On this day, December 18, 1898
Count Gaston de Chasseloup-Laubat set the world's first official land-speed record in Acheres Park near Paris: 39.245mph in his Jeantaud automobile, powered by an electric motor and alkaline batteries. The Jeantaud is widely believed to be the first automobile steered by a modern steering wheel rather than a tiller. The tiller was quickly replaced by the steering wheel in the early 1900s.
PICTURED: Laubat's Jeantaud automobile

December 18, 1984
The first Chevy Nova is introduced by New United Motor Manufacturing, Inc., a joint venture between Toyota and General Motors. This car later met with marketing trouble in South America, where its name read as "No Go" to Spanish speakers.

(http://i63.photobucket.com/albums/h141/loco_argentino/2011-chevrolet-nova-1.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/loco_argentino/media/2011-chevrolet-nova-1.jpg.html)
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on December 19, 2013, 09:32:05 pm
(http://i1228.photobucket.com/albums/ee453/ac427dc/National%20Automobile%20Museum/SilverGhostfront.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/ac427dc/media/National%20Automobile%20Museum/SilverGhostfront.jpg.html)

On this day, December 19, 1924
The last Rolls-Royce Silver Ghost manufactured in England was sold in London. The Silver Ghost, a custom touring car, was introduced in 1906, and was called by some the "Best Car in the World." The Silver Ghost was followed by the Twenty, the Phantom, the Silver Cloud, the Silver Shadow, and the Silver Wraith.

December 19, 1979
Senate approved Chrysler Loan Guarantee Act of 1979, a $1.5 billion loan for Chrysler Corporation.

December 19, 1994
Great Britain's prestigious Rolls-Royce, a luxury automobile maker, announced that its future cars would feature 12-cylinder motors manufactured by Germany's BMW. It was an ironic change; in earlier years, Rolls-Royce made a name for itself in automobile and aircraft engines.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on December 20, 2013, 09:17:51 pm
(http://i1097.photobucket.com/albums/g348/7SOUL77/CART.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/7SOUL77/media/CART.jpg.html)

December 20, 1892
Alexander Brown and George Stillman of Syracuse, New York, patented an inflatable automobile tire. Before the pneumatic tire, wheels were often made of solid rubber. This made travel a bumpy experience. After all, the streets of 1892 were made of dirt or cobblestone. Some horse-drawn carriages had been made with inflatable tires, but Brown and Stillman got the first patent for pneumatic automobile tires.

December 20, 1945
Tire rationing in the U.S. ended on this day as World War II wound to a close, and widespread shortages in the States began to ease.

TODAYS TRIVIA:
...There are only 1,426 billionaires in the world....and Im not one of them
...American school buses are yellow because you see yellow faster than any other color, 1.24 times faster than red in fact.
...A man attempted to fly 300 miles into the Mojave desert by strapping a bunch of weather balloons to a lawn chair. At 16,000 feet, he was spotted by two pilots, who alerted air traffic controllers about "what appeared to be an unprotected man floating through the sky in a chair."
...Worlds smallest aquarium is only 3 x 2.4 x 1.4 cm large.
..."Schadenfreude" is a word for that feeling of joy and slight satisfaction you sometimes get from the misfortune of others
...Orcas can weigh 8 tons, and jump 15 feet out of the water
...The all time biggest winner in the history of Jeopardy is a college drop-out.
...People with blue eyes are better able to see in the dark.
...There is a 31 year old Chimpanzee named Kanzi that knows how to start fires and cook!
...Nearly 160 yrs ago, a Frenchman and a Russian fired at one another in the Crimean War and their bullets collided.
...A meth junkie crawled inside a 3,500 year old Florida tree, the fifth oldest tree, and burnt it down.
...People are 30 times more likely to laugh in social settings than when they are alone, according to a University of Maryland study. Laughter has also been shown in studies to reduce stress, improve the immune system, relieve pain, improve memory, and even burn calories.
...Christina Applegate attended the 1989 MTV Movies Awards with Brad Pitt, dumped him at the event and left with someone else.
...Horse-sized ducks (Dromornithidae) roamed Australia 50,000 years ago.
...In 2005, a Brazilian woman sued her partner for failing to give her orgasms!
...People with long legs are generally healthier than people with short legs.
...Luzon Island, Philippines: an island within a lake within an island within a lake within an island
...In 1140, when the Weibertreu Castle was defeated by King Konrad III, the women of the castle were granted free departure and allowed to take what they could carry. Thinking quickly, the women carried the men on their backs. The king kept his word and let the men live.
...Studies show Americans ages 18-29 are far more stressed out that anyone else in the country.
...When you tell someone a goal or a thing you're planning on doing, it chemically satisfies your brain in a manner that's similar to having actually completed the goal.
...Atelophobia is the fear of not being good enough or having imperfections.
...Farting can actually help reduce high blood pressure and is beneficial to your health.
...By balancing temperature, humidity and lighting, a Dutch artist created a cloud in the middle of a room
...Inhaling the air in Beijing is equal to smoking 21 cigarettes a day
...Joseph Stalin said at his first wife's funeral “This creature softened my heart of stone. With her, died my last warm feelings for humanity"
...In February 2006, Charles Tombe, a Sudanese man, was forced to take a goat as his "wife" and pay to the goat owner a dowry of 15,000 Sudanese dinars (US$75) after he was caught having sex with the animal.
...A 33 year old man has spent over $100,000 on plastic surgery to look like Justin Bieber
...A man in China pays part of his fine ($1600) in coins, 18 workers forced to spend all day counting the money.
...About 80% of all cats are infected with Toxoplasma gondii, a parasite that can cause depression, anxiety, and schizophrenia in humans.
...At the 2012 London Olympics, American athlete Manteo Mitchell broke his leg 200 meters into his 400 meter leg of the race. Despite this, he finished fast enough for his team to qualify for the finals.
...In France, by law a bakery has to make all the bread it sells from scratch in order to have the right to be called a bakery.
..."siri" spelled backwards is "iris" who was the messenger between the gods and humans in Greek mythology
...A blue Whale's heart is so big, a small child can swim through the veins.
...Jay-Z and Busta Rhymes went to the same high school and once had a rap battle in the cafeteria -- Jay-Z won.
...1 in 7 crimes committed in New York City now involves an Apple product being stolen.
...When Louis Rèard introduced the bikini in France in 1946, no models were willing to wear such revealing swimwear, so Rèard had to hire a stripper to model it.

Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on December 21, 2013, 09:48:36 pm
(http://i1231.photobucket.com/albums/ee505/peddie19/4.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/peddie19/media/4.jpg.html)

On this day, December 21, 1926
General Motors Corporation registered the "Pontiac" trademark.

December 21, 1937
The Lincoln Tunnel was officially opened to traffic, allowing motorists to drive between New Jersey and Manhattan beneath the Hudson River.

December 21, 1979
The U.S. Congress approved $1.5 billion in loans to the financially threatened Chrysler Corporation in an effort to save the battered automotive giant. President Jimmy Carter signed the bill on January 7, 1980. Under the stewardship of Lee Iacocca, Chysler rebounded quickly. By the late 1980s, the automaker was posting record profits.
Ironically, due to recent crisis not only Chrysler, other two automaker, Ford and GM, most famously known as if Big Three are in a similar situation. On December 19, George W. Bush announced that he had approved the bailout plan, which would give loans of $17.4 billion to U.S. automakers.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on December 22, 2013, 08:14:50 pm
(http://i1228.photobucket.com/albums/ee453/ac427dc/Car%20Dump/53Corvette.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/ac427dc/media/Car%20Dump/53Corvette.jpg.html)

On this day, December 22, 1952
The first Corvette, a production-ready prototype, is completed. The design of the sports car, which has since become an American classic, is said to have cost between $50,000 and $60,000 to build.
General Motors chief William Durant decided to produce a small sports car after a visit to Europe in 1951 during which he saw his European counterparts doing the same. In fact, the first Corvette is believed to have been modeled after a Jaguar. Legendary automobile stylist Harley Earl was tasked with the design project, which was originally codenamed “Opel.” The eventual name “Corvette” came from a type of small, lightly armed warship used by most Allied navies during World War II.
After completing production on December 22, the first Corvette was shipped to New York City, where it made its public debut at the GM Motorama show at the Waldorf Astoria Hotel on January 17. The first regular-production model was rolled out on June 30, 1953. Just over 300 Corvettes were assembled—-by hand—-in Flint, Michigan, that first year. Only about half of them sold; the rest were given away to company executives and VIPs.

December 22, 1900
A new 35hp car built by Daimler from a design by Emil Jellinke was completed. The car was named for Jellinek's daugher, Mercedes. As such the Mercedes was born on this very day.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on December 23, 2013, 09:19:02 pm
(http://i1228.photobucket.com/albums/ee453/ac427dc/National%20Automobile%20Museum/1923Rolls-RoyceSilverGhostSpringfieldPallMallPhaeton.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/ac427dc/media/National%20Automobile%20Museum/1923Rolls-RoyceSilverGhostSpringfieldPallMallPhaeton.jpg.html)

On this day, December 23, 1923
Former President Woodrow Wilson receives a a Rolls-Royce Silver Ghost Pall Mall touring car for his birthday. It's a gift from friends.
PICTURED: A 1923 Rolls-Royce Silver Ghost Springfield Pall Mall Phaeton

December 23, 1969
Gregory Jack Biffle was born Vancouver, Washington. He is a very sucessfull NASCAR Sprint Cup Series driver who drives the #16 3M Ford Fusion for Roush Fenway Racing. He now lives in Mooresville, North Carolina. His 34 combined wins is various... Nextel/WInston/Busch series Cup under his belt
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: unilec5544 on December 23, 2013, 10:22:20 pm
Hey Matt, just like to thank you for taking the time to post articles in 'This day in history'  I for one have enjoyed reading them, sad about the 53 Corvette, you would think they would have sold like wild fire.
Merry Christmas to you and your family mate and keep them coming in the new year. :thumb:

Cheers, Neil.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on December 24, 2013, 09:39:02 pm
(http://i1000.photobucket.com/albums/af124/Schneider357/British%20Car%20show%20Safty%20Harbor/406cc54e.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/Schneider357/media/British%20Car%20show%20Safty%20Harbor/406cc54e.jpg.html)

December 24, 1903
England issued its first automobile license plate, number A1. The plate was issued to Earl Russel, the brother of the philosopher Bertrand Russell.
PICTURED: My friend, Lyle Trudell's British Triumph (couldn't find a a pic of the first license plate)

December 24, 1801
Richard Trevithick drove three-wheeled steam-powered vehicle carrying seven passengers up a hill in Camborne, Cornwall, England; one of the first automobiles in history; high-pressure steam engine was lighter, more powerful than low-pressure engine invented by James Watt; used to hoist loads in mines, drive locomotives and ships, run rolling mills. Trevithick sometimes called "Father of the Steam Locomotive."

December 24, 1893
Henry Ford completed his first useful gas motor; at the time Ford was chief steam engineer at the main Detroit Edison Company plant with responsibility for maintaining electric service in the city 24 hours a day.

December 24, 1898
Louis Renault, then just 21, drove his A-type Voiturette, with first direct-drive variable-ratio transmission (3-speed gearbox allowed more power in lower gears, more speed in higher gears vs. chain - drive system), up steep (13% slope) Rue Lepic in Montmartre, Paris. It resulted in its first 12 orders.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on December 25, 2013, 08:00:56 am
(http://i875.photobucket.com/albums/ab317/jlgmx/LouisChevrolet.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/jlgmx/media/LouisChevrolet.jpg.html)

On this day, December 25, 1878
Louis-Joseph Chevrolet was born in La Chaux-de-Fonds, Canton of Neuchâtel, Switzerland.
PICTURED: Louis Chevrolet

December 25, 1909
Zora Arkus-Duntov, a Belgian-born U.S. automotive engineer was born in Brussels. His work on the Chevrolet Corvette earned him the nickname "Father of the Corvette".

December 25, 1985
On Christmas Day, David Turner and Tim Pickhard arrived in John o' Groat's, Scotland, the northernmost point in Great Britain. They had set out four days earlier from Land's End, the southernmost point in Britain, in a battery-powered Freight Rover Leyland Sherpa driven by a Lucas electric motor. They traveled 875 miles on a single battery charge, completing the longest battery-powered drive in history.

Merry Christmas to everyone from Matt & Sheri @ Shermatt International

(http://i645.photobucket.com/albums/uu176/MustangMayhem/web/308781_4400568806887_1170717041_n_zps0db1ff93.jpg) (http://s645.photobucket.com/user/MustangMayhem/media/web/308781_4400568806887_1170717041_n_zps0db1ff93.jpg.html)
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on December 26, 2013, 11:10:32 am
(http://i1119.photobucket.com/albums/k625/Weigert91/NissanGTR.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/Weigert91/media/NissanGTR.jpg.html)

On this day, December 26, 1933
The Nissan Motor Company was organized in Tokyo under the name Dat Jidosha Seizo Co. (It received its present name the next year). Nissan began manufacturing cars and trucks under the name Datsun. During World War II, Nissan was converted to military production, and after Japan's defeat operated in a limited capacity under the occupation government until 1955. Since then, Nissan has grown into one of the world's premier car companies.

December 26, 1985
The Ford Motor Company had trouble in the early 1980s. Its trucks were selling well, but its line of cars were unpopular and had terrible reputations. The company lost $3.3 billion from 1980 through 1982. As the losses piled up, Ford's engineers were working feverishly to redesign their line of mid-size cars. Ford turned out a redesigned Thunderbird and Tempo and managed a profitable year. And on this day in 1985, Ford introduced the Taurus, the product of years of engineering. The distinctively streamlined car became enormously popular, lifting Ford to record profits in the late 1980s. The rounded "jellybean" shape of the Taurus had a strong influence on the designs of other automakers in the next few years.

December 26, 1926
The first overland journey across Africa from south to north was completed when the expedition of Major C. Court Treatt arrived in Cairo, Egypt. Major Treatt had set out from Capetown, South Africa, some 27 months earlier in two military-style Crossley automobiles. After the difficult trek across unmapped regions, the hero's safe arrival in Cairo was a major treat for everyone.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on December 27, 2013, 07:53:54 pm
(http://i293.photobucket.com/albums/mm63/sadayo/Orphan%20and%20Discontinued%20Car%20Show%202011/1954HudsonHorneta.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/sadayo/media/Orphan%20and%20Discontinued%20Car%20Show%202011/1954HudsonHorneta.jpg.html)

December 28, 1954
During the early 1950s, the fastest stock car in the U.S. was the Hudson Hornet, the pride of the Hudson Motor Car Company. Drivers in Hudson Hornets took virtually every major NASCAR event, and the wins paid off in sales. That got the attention of the Big Three: Ford, Chrysler, and General Motors. They began supporting stock-car racers the way Hudson did, and soon began to win. In an effort to stay ahead, Hudson merged with the Nash-Kelvinator Corporation, which let Hudson replace the Hornet's old flat-six engine with the big Nash V-8, providing more power. The first Hudson Hornet with a Nash engine was offered on this day in 1954. But the new Hornet didn't handle as well, and the Big Three kept improving. After 1954 the Hudson Hornet's fortunes declined quickly.
PICTURED: A 1954 Hudson Hornet Convertible

December 28, 1957
The 2,000,000th Volkswagen was finished. Begun 30 years earlier by the Nazi regime, the German automaker and its economical Beetle overcame their unpleasant pasts and began selling in the United States.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on December 29, 2013, 08:47:50 pm
(http://i1090.photobucket.com/albums/i373/lifePR/Pressemeldungen%20-%202011-10-13/Goodyear_Blimp_1.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/lifePR/media/Pressemeldungen%20-%202011-10-13/Goodyear_Blimp_1.jpg.html)

On this day, December 29, 1800
Charles Goodyear was born. Today he is famous for the invention of vulcanized rubber. In its natural form, rubber is sticky, and gets runny when hot, and stiff when cold. Goodyear discovered accidentally that when rubber is mixed with sulfur and heat-treated, it loses its adhesiveness but keeps its elasticity, even at extreme temperatures. He called the process "vulcanization." The industrial use of rubber is possible only because of vulcanization. Goodyear's process made millions of dollars, but not for him. Widespread infringements on his patents, together with poor luck in business, left him deep in debt at his death in 1860.

December 29, 1908
Otto Zachow and William Besserdich of Clintonville, Wisconsin, received a patent for their four-wheel braking system, the prototype of all modern braking systems. Zachow and Besserdich were also the inventor of the very first successful four-wheel drive (4x4) car, the "Battleship", in 1908. The following year they opened their auto company, Badger Four-Wheel Drive Auto Company.

December 29, 1983
Arnold Schwarzenegger was cited for driving without a license after he drove his Jeep into a ditch with Maria Shriver aboard. No one was hurt.

December 29, 1989
Actor Christian Slater, stopped a second time for drunk driving, wrecked his car, fled from the police on foot, and, when caught, kicked a police officer

December 29, 2005
General Motors's stock traded at 20-year low of $18.33.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on December 31, 2013, 11:35:26 pm
Whoops...missed a day

(http://i270.photobucket.com/albums/jj103/GreginSD/Real%20Estate/d17cce22.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/GreginSD/media/Real%20Estate/d17cce22.jpg.html)

On this day, December 30, 1905
French driver Victor Hemery, driving a gasoline-powered Darracq automobile, set a new land-speed record in Arles-Salon, France. He reached a speed of 109.589mph. Hemery's record stood until 1906, when American Fred Marriot set a record of 121.573 in a steam-powered Stanley.

December 30, 1936
Strikes closed seven General Motors factories in Flint, Michigan. The giant automaker employed upwards of 200,000 men, and more than one in six of them stopped working during the strike. The United Automobile Workers of America, a labor union, was quarrelling with GM over the right to bargain collectively with manufacturers. The work stoppage was so large that it threatened to force layoffs in the steel, glass, and battery-manufacturing industries, due to reduced demand.

December 30, 1940
California's first freeway, the Arroyo Seco Parkway connecting Los Angeles and Pasadena, was officially opened.

(http://i967.photobucket.com/albums/ae154/deyeofbeautyl/Scenic/02manhattan.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/deyeofbeautyl/media/Scenic/02manhattan.jpg.html)

On this day, December 31, 1909
A graceful 1,470-foot span across the East River opened to traffic on this day. The Manhattan Bridge was the fourth bridge between Manhattan and the boroughs across the river.
PICTURED: The Manhattan Bridge

December 31, 1936
Sit-down strike at GM's Fisher Body Plant became center stage for all unskilled labor struggles as GM moved to legally block strike, evict workers from its facilities; state government, under direction of Governor Frank Murphy, protected rights of workers to bargain collectively; workers invoked Wagner Act, GM forced to settle, recognized union, signed contract; first victory by unskilled laborers in America's largest industry.

December 31, 1941
America's last automobiles with chrome-plated trim were manufactured. Starting in 1942, chrome plating became illegal. It was part of an effort to conserve resources for the American war effort. The chrome wasn't missed too much. Virtually no automobiles were produced in the U.S. from 1942 through the end of World War II.

December 31, 1955
General Motors announced net income of $1,189,477,082 for the year; first Auto Corporation to earn more than a billion dollars in a fiscal year.

Happy new years everyone
From Matt & Sheri
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on January 02, 2014, 05:22:07 am
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On this day, January 1, 1853
The first successful U.S. steam fire engine, named Uncle Joe Ross after city councilman who championed it, began service in Cincinnati, OH; invented by Abel Shawk and Alexander Latta took nine months to build at a cost of $10,000.

January 1, 1919
Edsel Ford succeeded his father, Henry Ford, as president of the Ford Motor Company. That same day, the company announced that it would increase its minimum wage to $6.00 per day. Henry Ford made history in 1914 by increasing the minimum wage in his factories to $5.00 per day, far more than his competitors were paying.

January 1, 1937
Safety glass in windshields became mandatory in Great Britain. Unlike ordinary glass, safety glass shatters into thousands of tiny pieces when it breaks, instead of large jagged sheets. In early automobile accidents, ordinary glass windows often turned into large, deadly blades. Broken safety glass is relatively harmless. The most common type of safety glass is a sandwich in which a layer of clear, flexible plastic is bonded between two layers of glass. It was first produced in 1909 by French chemist Edouard Benedictus, who used a sheet of clear celluloid between glass layers. Various plastics were tried over the years. In 1936, a plastic called polyvinyl butyral (PVB) was introduced. It was so safe and effective that it soon became the only plastic used in safety windows. The British government was so impressed by the safety record of PVB windows that it required their use by law.

January 1, 1942
The U.S. Office of Production Management prohibited sales of new cars and trucks to civilians. All automakers dedicated their plants entirely to the war effort. By the end of the month, domestic car manufacture had stopped. Automobile plants were converted wholesale to the manufacture of bombers, jeeps, military trucks, and other gear.

January 1, 1952
Colin Chapman founded Lotus Engineering Company in Norfolk, England; first production car - Lotus, the Mark VI.

January 1, 1961
McNamara resigned from Ford to become secretary of defense for the new administration of President John F. Kennedy.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on January 02, 2014, 10:07:34 pm
(http://i818.photobucket.com/albums/zz108/Methos2b/Dakar%20Rally%20Cards/Hummer/CPHummerH3Gordon2013_zps7710ed89.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/Methos2b/media/Dakar%20Rally%20Cards/Hummer/CPHummerH3Gordon2013_zps7710ed89.jpg.html)

On this day, January 2, 1969
Robert W. Gordon an American racing driver, was born in Bellflower, California. He competed in three Dakar rally, scoring over 8th in 2007 driving Hummer H3.

January 2, 1994
The Chrysler Corporation introduced the Neon compact car. The Neon, a sporty plastic-bodied economy car, quickly became a popular car, particularly among young drivers.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on January 03, 2014, 09:37:58 pm
(http://i233.photobucket.com/albums/ee33/frostydjc/GM%20Heritage%20Center%20Oct%202011/100_1697.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/frostydjc/media/GM%20Heritage%20Center%20Oct%202011/100_1697.jpg.html)

On this day, January 3, 1926
General Motors introduced the Pontiac brand name. The new Pontiac line was the descendant of the Oakland Motor Car Company, acquired by General Motors in 1909.
PICTURED: The first GM-built Pontiac "Chief of Sixes"

January 3, 1899
An editorial in the The New York Times made a reference to an "automobile" on this day. It was the first known use of the word.

January 3, 1921
The Studebaker Corporation announced that it would no longer build farm wagons. Studebaker began in 1852 as a horse-drawn wagon shop. Over the following years, the company became the world's single biggest manufacturer of horse-drawn carriages and carts. In 1897, Studebaker began experimenting with the newfangled "horseless carriage." By 1902, the company had produced several electric automobiles; and by 1904, gasoline-powered motorcars were rolling out of Studebaker factories. Throughout the early twentieth century, Studebaker remained one of the biggest names in the automobile business. In 1954, Studebaker merged with the Packard Motor Car Company. Production of Studebaker automobiles ended in 1963 in the U.S., and in 1966 in Canada.

Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on January 04, 2014, 12:16:13 pm
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On this day, January 4, 1996
General Motors announced that it would release an electric car, the EV-1, in the fall. The EV-1 was sold through GM's Saturn dealerships, and met with modest success. While sales have been quite modest by the standards of internal-combustion cars, the EV-1 is the best-selling electric consumer car of its time.

January 4, 1921
International Motor Company registered MACK trademark first used October 13, 1911 for trucks.

January 4, 1937
Nash Motors merged with Kelvinator Corporation, manufacturer of high-end refrigerators and kitchen appliances. The new company was named Nash-Kelvinator Corporation with George W. Mason as President.

January 4, 1955
The 1955 Packards were introduced to the public on this day. Corvettes and Thunderbirds were upping the horsepower ante, and Packard struck back with the Packard Caribbean, the first V-8 Packard and the debut of highly stylized cathedral taillights. The era of the mighty tailfin was beginning.

January 4, 1990
The Lincoln Town Car was named Car of the Year by Motor Trend magazine. It was the first luxury sedan to win that title in 38 years.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on January 06, 2014, 12:20:13 am
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On this day, January 5, 1924
Walter Chrylser, a General Motors executive who had pioneered the introduction of all-steel bodies in automobiles (instead of wood), introduced his first motorcar. After his departure from GM in 1920, Chrysler had breathed new life into the failing Maxwell Motor Company. The first Chrysler-built Maxwell was put on display in New York City's Commodore Hotel, where it drew admiring crowds. In 1925, the Maxwell Motor Company was renamed the Chrysler Corporation.

January 5, 1904
Ransom Eli Olds retired from Olds Motor Works. Olds had founded the company in 1899 with financial help from Samuel L. Smith, a lumber tycoon. Olds made the most profitable car in the early 1900s, the tiller-steered Oldsmobile Runabout. In 1904, Olds was approached by his head of engineering, Henry Leland, who had designed a lighter, more powerful engine that could improve the Runabout dramatically. Olds refused to use the new engine, to the dismay of his backer, Samuel Smith. Smith forced Ransom Olds out of the company. Olds went on to found the Reo Motor Car Company, and Oldsmobile went on without him. Henry Leland, the clever engineer, took his motor elsewhere: it powered the world's first Cadillac.

January 5, 1914
Henry Ford established a minimum wage of $5.00 per day in his automobile factories. These wages were twice what Ford had paid the year before, and much more than Ford's competitors were paying. The lofty minimum wage was made possible by Henry Ford's manufacturing breakthrough: the constant-motion assembly line, which carried moving cars past lines of workers. The first modern assembly line, Ford's process allowed him to build cars faster and cheaper than anyone else could. The profits rolled in, and Ford's workers shared in the wealth: an ironic beginning for an auto company that would go on to be a notorious enemy of labor in the 1930s and 1940s.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on January 06, 2014, 09:31:19 pm
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On this day, January 6, 1973
A Mercedes-Benz 770K sedan, supposedly Adolf Hitler's parade car, was sold at auction for $153,000.00, the most money ever paid for a car at auction at that time.

January 6, 1917
At the New York Automobile Show, Studebaker unveiled a Studebaker touring sedan that had been almost entirely gold-plated. The gold car became legendary.

January 6, 1980
Jimmy Carter signed a bill authorizing $1.2 billion in federal loans to save the failing Chrysler Corporation. It was the largest federal bailout in history until recently. The "Big Three" American car makers (Ford, GM, and Chrysler) had suffered through the 1970s, as Japanese competitors led by Honda and Toyota outperformed them in quality and price. Chrysler, which lacked the vast cash reserves of GM and Ford, was brought to the brink of bankruptcy by 1980. The federal bailout, which required Chrysler to find billions in private financing in order to receive the federal money, brought Chrysler back from the brink. Lee Iacocca, the charismatic executive largely responsible for Ford's successful Mustang, joined Chrysler in late 1979, and engineered the company's return to profitability during the 1980s. A similar scenario occured recently due to recent economic crisis.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on January 07, 2014, 05:20:08 am
(http://i1142.photobucket.com/albums/n613/slimshady_93/Cars/dodge_viper.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/slimshady_93/media/Cars/dodge_viper.jpg.html)

On this day, January 7, 1989
The Dodge Viper was introduced at the North American International Automobile Show. The Viper, a modernized tribute to the classic Shelby Cobra, won such rave reviews that the company delivered a production version in 1992, just three years later.

January 7, 1985
GM launched the Saturn Corporation as a wholly owned but independent subsidiary. The Saturn, a sporty and affordable plastic-bodied two-door, has since met with considerable success. A new mid-sized Saturn sedan and a station wagon was released in 1999.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on January 08, 2014, 10:44:50 am
(http://i740.photobucket.com/albums/xx47/spherebleue/photos-du-jour/Bugatti-royale.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/spherebleue/media/photos-du-jour/Bugatti-royale.jpg.html)

On this day, January 8, 1916
Rembrandt Bugatti, brother of race-car maker Ettore Bugatti, committed suicide. The Bugatti brothers were a talented crew: Carlo Bugatti was a noted furniture designer. Ettore, a self-taught engineer, produced some of the world's most striking early race cars. Rembrandt Bugatti was a sculptor noted for his depictions of wild animals.
PICTURED: The grill of the Bugatti Royale boasted a bronze sculpture designed by Rembrandt

January 8, 1927
The Little Marmon, later known as the Marmon Eight, was introduced in New York City.

January 8, 1942
The architect and engineer Albert Kahn--known as "the man who built Detroit"--dies at his home there. He was 73 years old. Kahn and his assistants built more than 2,000 buildings in all, mostly for Ford and General Motors. According to his obituary in The New York Times, Kahn "revolutionized the concept of what a great factory should be: his designs made possible the marvels of modern mass production, and his buildings changed the faces of a thousand cities and towns from Detroit to Novosibirsk."
Albert Kahn was born in Germany in 1869. When he was 11, his family moved to the United States and settled in Detroit, where the teenager took a job as an architect's apprentice. In 1902, after working at a number of well-known architectural firms in Detroit, Kahn started his own practice.
While building factories for Packard, the young architect found that swapping reinforced concrete for wood or masonry sped up the construction of manufacturing plants considerably. It also made them sturdier and less combustible. Moreover, reinforced-concrete buildings needed fewer load-bearing walls; this, in turn, freed up floor space for massive industrial equipment. Kahn's first concrete factory, Packard Shop No. 10, still stands today on East Grand Boulevard in Detroit.
"Architecture," Kahn liked to say, "is 90 percent business and 10 percent art." His buildings reflected this philosophy: they were sleek, flexible, and above all functional. Besides all that utilitarian concrete, they incorporated huge metal-framed windows and garage doors and acres of uninterrupted floor space for conveyor belts and other machines. Kahn's first Ford factory, the 1909 Highland Park plant, used elevators and dumbwaiters to spread the Model T assembly line over several floors, but most of his subsequent factories were huge single-story spaces: Ford's River Rouge plant (1916), the massive Goodyear Airdock in Akron (1929), the Glenn Martin aeronautics factory in Maryland (built in 1937 around an assembly floor the size of a football field) and, perhaps most famous of all, the half-mile–long Willow Run "Arsenal of Democracy," the home of Ford's B-29 bomber in Ypsilanti.
Though Kahn designed a number of non-factory buildings, including the Ford and GM office towers in downtown Detroit, he is best known for building factories that reflected the needs of the industrial age. We still celebrate his innovations today.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on January 09, 2014, 09:28:39 pm
(http://i613.photobucket.com/albums/tt211/iscanderro/volga_gaz_21.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/iscanderro/media/volga_gaz_21.jpg.html)

On this day, January 9, 1967
Construction of the Volga Automobile Works began in Togliatti in the Soviet Union. By April of 1970, Zhiguli automobiles (later known as "Lada" autos) were rolling off the assembly lines. In association with Fiat, the Volga works became (and remains) the largest producer of small European automobiles.

January 9, 1911
In 1895, George Selden was awarded the first American patent for an internal-combustion automobile, although Selden hadn't yet produced a working model. Other inventors, such as Ransom Olds and the Duryea brothers, were already driving their home-built automobiles through the streets. Beginning in 1903, however, the Selden patent began to make itself felt. The Association of Licensed Automobile Manufacturers (A.L.A.M.) was organized to gather royalties on the Selden patent from all auto makers. Soon, every major automobile manufacturer was paying royalties to the A.L.A.M. and George Selden, except for one major standout, a young inventor named Henry Ford. Ford refused to pay royalties. The A.L.A.M launched a series of lawsuits against Ford. The United States Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that the Ford Motor Company was not infringing on the Selden patent. It was the beginning of the end for the A.L.A.M. and Selden's royalties.

January 9, 1958
The Toyota and Datsun (later Nissan) brand names made their first appearances in the United States at the Imported Motor Car Show in Los Angeles, California. Previously, these auto makers had sold in the U.S. only under American-brand names, as part of joint ventures with Ford and GM.

Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on January 10, 2014, 10:12:38 pm
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On this day, January 10, 1901
In the town of Beaumont, Texas, a 100-foot drilling derrick named Spindletop produced a roaring gusher of black crude oil. The oil strike took place at 10:30 a.m, coating the landscape for hundreds of feet around in sticky oil. The first major oil discovery in the United States, the Spindletop gusher marked the beginning of the American oil industry. Soon the prices of petroleum-based fuels fell, and gasoline became an increasingly practical power source. Without Spindletop, internal combustion might never have replaced steam and battery power as the automobile power plant of choice, and the American automobile industry might not have changed the face of America with such staggering speed.

January 10, 1942
The Ford Motor Company signed on to make Jeeps, the new general-purpose military vehicles desperately needed by American forces in World War II. The original Jeep design was submitted by the American Bantam Car Company. The Willys-Overland company won the Jeep contract, however, using a design similar to Bantam's, but with certain improvements. The Jeep was in high demand during wartime, and Ford soon stepped in to lend its huge production capacity to the effort. By the end of the war, the Jeep had won a place in the hearts of Americans, and soon became a popular civilian vehicle. And that catchy name? Some say it comes from the initials G.P., for "General Purpose." Others say it was named for Jeep the moondog, the spunky and durable creature who accompanied Popeye through the comics pages.

January 10, 1979
The last convertible Volkswagen Beetle was produced. The VW "Bug" was a popular car throughout the 1970s, leading to innovations such as sun roofs and convertible tops, in an otherwise unchanging design.

January 10, 1996
As of this date, Albert Klein of Pasadena, California, held the world's record for automobile mileage: his 1963 VW Beetle had accumulated 1,592,503 miles, and was still running.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on January 11, 2014, 05:39:43 am
(http://i762.photobucket.com/albums/xx268/rodsratrods/54hudsonhornet002.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/rodsratrods/media/54hudsonhornet002.jpg.html)

On this day, January 11, 1913
The world's first closed production car was introduced: Hudson Motor Car Company's Model 54 sedan. Earlier automobiles had open cabs, or at most convertible roofs.
PICTURED: The Hudson Hornet

January 11, 1937
Twelve days into a general sit-down strike at the General Motors (GM) factory in Flint, Michigan, General Motors security forces and the Flint Police Department moved in to evict the strikers. A pitched battle broke out at Fisher body plant #2, as strikers held off police and GM security with fire hoses and jury-rigged slingshots, and the police responded with bullets and tear gas. The many picketers outside the plant assisted the strikers however they could, breaking windows to ventilate the factory when police filled it with tear gas, and creating barricades with their own vehicles to prevent police from driving past the plant's open doors. Finally, Governor Frank Murphy ordered the National Guard in to stem the violence. The sit-down strike lasted 44 days, and ended in GM's surrender to the demands of the United Auto Workers Union (UAW). GM was the first of the "Big Three" auto makers to make a deal with the UAW. The era of repressive labor practices in the auto industry was ending.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on January 13, 2014, 01:09:38 am
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On this day, January 12, 1904
Racing driver Barney Oldfield set a new speed record in a stripped-down Ford automobile. Driving across the frozen surface of Lake St. Clair, he reached a top speed of 91.37mph. Not bad, considering that the automobile was only invented a few years earlier. Oldenfield chose the frozen lake because it was wide and flat, and there was nothing to crash into. Luckily, the ice didn't break.
PICTURED: Barney Oldfield & Louis Mooers @ Cleveland.

January 12, 1900
The Detroit Automobile Company finished its first commercial vehicle, a delivery wagon. The wagon was designed by a young engineer named Henry Ford, who had produced his own first motorcar, the quadricycle, before joining the company. Ford soon quit the Detroit Automobile Company, frustrated with his employers, to start his own company.

Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on January 13, 2014, 07:49:30 pm

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On this day, January 13, 1906
The first automobile show of the American Motor Car Manufacturers Association (AMCMA) opened in New York City at the 69th Regiment Armory.

January 13, 1942
Henry Ford patented a plastic-bodied automobile. The car was 30 percent lighter than ordinary cars. Plastic, a relatively new material in 1942, was revolutionizing industry after industry in the United States. Today most car bodies are still made of metal, but plastic parts are becoming more and more common.

Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on January 14, 2014, 11:55:44 pm
(http://i645.photobucket.com/albums/uu178/Rich-photo/Dodge-Viper_SRT8psd.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/Rich-photo/media/Dodge-Viper_SRT8psd.jpg.html)

On this day, January 14, 1920
John Dodge, who with his brother Horace co-founded the Dodge Brothers Company, which was once America's third-largest automaker and later became part of Chrysler, dies at the age of 55.
John Francis Dodge was born on October 25, 1864, while his brother Horace Elgin Dodge arrived four years later, on May 17, 1868. The brothers grew up in Michigan and began their careers as machinists. In 1897, they co-founded a bicycle company; however, by 1900, they had sold the business and opened a machine shop in Detroit to make parts for the fledgling auto industry. In 1901, Ransom Olds hired the Dodges to produce engines for his new curved-dash Oldsmobile vehicles. Next, Henry Ford contracted with the brothers to build engines, transmissions and axles. Ford was unable to pay the Dodges fully in cash, so he gave them stock in his company. (In 1919, the brothers sold their Ford Motor Company stock back to Henry Ford for $25 million.)
After supplying parts to Ford for a decade, the Dodge brothers decided to start their own company. Dodge Brothers Motor Company was founded in 1913 and debuted its first automobile, a four-cylinder touring car, in 1914. The company sold almost 250 of these vehicles during its first year and 45,000 the next year, according to Chrysler.com. Three years later, Dodge added trucks to its repertoire. During World War I, the company supplied vehicles and parts to the U.S. military.
In January 1920, while in New York City to attend an auto expo, the brothers both became sick with the flu and pneumonia. John Dodge died that month, while Horace passed away later that same year, on December 10. In 1925, the brothers' widows sold the Dodge Brothers Company to an investment bank for $146 million. In 1928, Walter Chrysler, founder of the Chrysler Corporation, purchased the Dodge company for $170 million. The purchase made Chrysler the world's third-largest automaker overnight.
PICTURED: The SRT Dodge Viper

January 14, 1954
The Hudson Motor Car Company merged with Nash-Kelvinator, an automaker formed in turn by the merger of the Nash automobile firm and the Kelvinator kitchen-appliance company. The new concern was called the American Motors Corporation
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: boss69hogg on January 15, 2014, 11:52:08 am
January 15, 1999 - my eldest daughter made her way into this world - happy 15th birthday Sarah.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on January 15, 2014, 10:42:32 pm
January 15, 1999 - my eldest daughter made her way into this world - happy 15th birthday Sarah.

Happy Birthday Sarah



(http://i941.photobucket.com/albums/ad257/Pahavit/FieldTrips/RavenswoodOSP110305/09railbridge.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/Pahavit/media/FieldTrips/RavenswoodOSP110305/09railbridge.jpg.html)

On this day, January 15, 1927
The Dumbarton Bridge opened carrying the first automotive traffic across the San Francisco Bay.

January 15, 1909
A motorized hearse was used for the first time in a Chicago funeral procession by funeral director H.D. Ludlow. It was a sharp break with tradition: stately horse-drawn hearses had been in use for centuries.

January 15, 1936
Edsel Ford established the Ford Foundation, a philanthropic organization. The foundation was set up partly to allow the Ford family to retain control of the Ford Motor Company after Henry Ford's death, avoiding new inheritance laws. But its charitable works were very real. At its height, the Ford Foundation had assets of $4 billion. The foundation works to promote population control and to prevent famine; to promote the arts and educational media; and to work for peace and the protection of the environment.

January 15, 1942
The first "blackout" Cadillacs were completed. Due to restrictions on materials necessary to the war effort, these cars had painted trim rather than chrome. They also lacked spare tires and other luxuries.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on January 16, 2014, 11:07:35 pm


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On this day, January 16, 1953
The Chevrolet Corvette was introduced as a show car at New York's Waldorf-Astoria Hotel. The car became an American classic almost instantly. Its sporty fiberglass body didn't look like anything else on the road. Although some car buffs criticized the sportscar for being underpowered, that didn't stop Corvettes from speeding off the showroom floors.

January 16, 1913
The first closed car for four passengers was introduced by Frank Duryea at the Stanley Motor Show. All earlier cars had open cabs, or convertible tops. Frank Duryea and his brother, Charles, built the first American-made automobile in 1893. Duryea was one of the best-known names in automobile manufacturing into the early 1900s.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on January 18, 2014, 12:42:33 am
(http://i653.photobucket.com/albums/uu256/Jayburger72/VW.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/Jayburger72/media/VW.jpg.html)

On this day, January 17, 1949
The first Volkswagen Beetle in the U.S. arrived from Germany. The little Volkswagen was a sturdy vehicle designed by Ferdinand Porsche at the request of Adolf Hitler. The car was meant to be a durable workhorse car for the common German man. After the defeat of the Nazi government in Germany, the VW Beetle remained a popular car, and its reputation for affordable reliability made it a profitable export.

January 17, 1899
Camille Jenatzy captured the land speed record in an electric car of his own design: 41.425mph at Acheres Park, France. On the same day, however, previous record holder Gaston Chasseloup-Laubat raised the record again, posting a speed of 43.690mph in an electric Jeantaud automobile. The feud wasn't over yet. Jenatzy took the record again 10 days later, on January 27. Chasseloup-Laubat took it back on March 4, and Jenatzy reclaimed the record on April 29, the last time an electric car held the speed record. Until 1963, all other land-speed records were set by steam or internal-combustion power. In 1963, Craig Breedlove took the land-speed record in a jet-powered car, and all record-holding cars since then have been propelled by jet or rocket engines.

January 17, 1964
The first Porsche Carrera GTS, a lasting favorite in the world of luxury sports cars, was delivered to a Los Angeles customer.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on January 18, 2014, 08:31:22 am
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On this day, January 18, 1919
Bentley Motors was established in London, England. A manufacturer of sports cars and luxury automobiles, Bentley was acquired by Rolls-Royce in November, 1931. From that point forward, the Bentley line acquired more and more features of the Rolls-Royce, until the two makes became nearly indistinguishable.

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January 18, 1952
The Willys-Overland Company, the primary contractor that built the Jeep for the U.S. military during World War II, reentered the commercial automobile market. It offered the Willys Aero, a sporty two-seater.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on January 20, 2014, 12:27:14 am
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On this day, January 19, 1955
The Cadillac Park Avenue show car was displayed at the New York Motorama in Manhattan's Waldorf-Astoria Hotel. The Park Avenue served as the prototype for the lavish Eldorado Brougham, a costly car boasting every conceivable extra.
PICTURED: The Cadillac factory back in 1908

January 19, 1954
General Motors announced a $1 billion plan to expand its automobile operation. GM, like other major auto makers, had deep pockets due to the postwar boom in car sales, though sales were slackening in 1953.

January 19, 2007
Beijing, China, the capital city of the planet's most populous nation, gets its first drive-through McDonald's restaurant. The opening ceremony for the new two-story fast-food eatery, located next to a gas station, included traditional Chinese lion dancers and a Chinese Ronald McDonald. According to a report from The Associated Press at the time of the Beijing drive-through's debut: "China's double-digit economic growth has created a burgeoning market for cars, fast food and other consumer goods. The country overtook Japan last year to become the world's second-biggest vehicle market after the U.S., with 7.2 million cars sold, a 37 percent growth."
Fast-food chains from foreign countries first came to China in 1987, with the opening of a Kentucky Fried Chicken restaurant. The home of the Big Mac and Happy Meal arrived in China three years later. In 2005, McDonald's, the world's largest fast-food chain, launched its first drive-through restaurant in China, in the city of Shenzhen in Guangdong province, near Hong Kong. The Beijing drive-through was McDonald's 16th Chinese drive-through. In September 2008, Chinadaily.com reported that other than America, "China is the No. 1 growth market for McDonald's, with 960 restaurants and over 60,000 employees."
McDonald's opened its first drive-through in the U.S. in 1975. Before there were drive-throughs there were drive-in restaurants, where customers would place their orders at curbside speakers. Servers known as carhops, who often wore rollerskates, then would bring food orders directly to customers' cars. Standard drive-in fare included hamburgers, hotdogs, root beer and milkshakes. Drive-ins reached the height of their popularity in the 1950s. Today, America's largest chain of drive-in restaurants is Sonic, which started as a hamburger and root beer stand known as Top Hat Drive-In in 1953 in Shawnee, Oklahoma. It changed its named to Sonic in 1959 and today has more than 3,500 drive-ins.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on January 20, 2014, 10:08:14 pm
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On this day, January 20, 1971
The Jaguar XJ13 prototype was displayed in Lindley, England, by British Leyland, the automotive conglomerate that included Jaguar at that time. The XJ13 was destined to become the next luxury Jaguar, but bad luck changed its destiny: the prototype car was wrecked on its first test run by test-driver Norman Dewis, ending the XJ13 development program. The ruined car was kept and later restored by the company.

January 20, 1946
The first Kaiser-Frazer automobiles were introduced at New York's Waldorf-Astoria Hotel. The Kaiser-Frazer Corporation was formed after World War II by industrialist Henry J. Kaiser and Joseph W. Frazer, president of the Graham-Paige Motor Company. They produced several successful cars, most notably the 1951 Kaiser two-door. In 1953, however, the company was renamed the Kaiser Motors Corporation, and soon abandoned the passenger car business in favor of manufacturing commercial and military vehicles.

Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on January 21, 2014, 10:16:33 am
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On this day, January 21, 1954
General Motors introduced the Firebird XP-21 show car, the world's first gas-turbine powered car. It was named in imitation of the U.S. military's experimental jet-powered aircraft, which had code numbers like the XP-59A. (PICTURED)

January 21, 1899
In 1898, the five Opel brothers began converting the sewing machine and appliance factory of Adam Opel into an automobile works in Russelheim, Germany. They acquired the rights to the Lutzmann automobile, and began production. The Opel-Lutzmann was soon abandoned, and in 1902, Opel introduced its first original car, a 2-cylinder runabout. In the decades that followed, Opel became one of the premier forces in the European automobile industry, modernizing its factories relentlessly and adopting the continuous-motion assembly line before its European competitors. Today, Opel is a wholly owned subsidiary of General Motors. It produces about a quarter of all German cars, and exports heavily to South America and Africa.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on January 22, 2014, 10:45:29 am
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On this day, January 22, 2009
"Gran Torino," a movie named after the 1972 Ford muscle car, opens in Australia and New Zealand. The critically acclaimed film, which starred Clint Eastwood as a retired Detroit autoworker, had opened across the U.S. earlier that month and later premiered around the rest of the world, eventually grossing more than $263 million, making it among Eastwood's most commercially successful movies.

January 22, 1950
Throughout the twentieth century, independent automobile manufacturers have fallen again and again before the industrial power of the "Big Three"--Ford, General Motors, and Chrysler. Most often, these independent firms are swallowed, bought up, like Nash, Austin, Studebaker, Hudson, Packard, and many others. The story of Preston Tucker is a little darker. Tucker was a Chicago businessman who built 50 extraordinary automobiles in 1947 and 1948. His cars had many modern amenities and remarkable horsepower. But he was indicted on 31 counts of fraud; and as he fought for his freedom in court, his company failed. On this day in 1950, Preston Tucker was cleared of all fraud charges against him. But it was too little, too late. The Tucker automobile was history. Many believe that the legal actions against Tucker were sponsored by the Big Three auto makers, who feared his competition.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on January 24, 2014, 02:04:46 am
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On this day, January 23, 1912
William E. Stephens, of Chicago. IL, received a patent for an "Automobile Horn"; multiple-pipe horn powered by engine exhaust that played chord like a church organ, assigned to Aeromore Manufacturing Company.

January 23, 2006
William Clay Ford, CEO of Ford Motor Company, announced company's turnaround plan, called "Way Forward" (second time in four years Ford has restructured its North American auto division): 1) closing 14 plants (reduces North American production capacity by 1.2 million, or 26 percent, by 2008), 2) eliminating 30,000 jobs in the next six years, a quarter of Ford's North American workforce, 3) cutting at least $6 billion in annual costs by 2010 (Ford reported losses in North America for five of the past six quarters; hurt by: decreased sales of sport utility vehicles, increased health care and materials costs, increased competition and labor contracts that limit plant closures and job cuts, 10 straight years of U.S. market-share losses - 18.6% of the U.S. market in 2005, down from 25.7% a decade earlier, U.S. sales have dropped by more than 1 million units annually since 1999), 2003 - Toyota passed Ford as the world's No. 2 automaker.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on January 24, 2014, 10:22:50 pm
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On this day, January 24, 1907
In Ormond Beach, Florida, Glenn Curtiss, an engineer who got his start building motors for bicycles, set an unofficial land-speed record on a self-built V-8 motorcycle: 136.29mph. No automobile surpassed that speed until 1911. In 1907, four years after the Wilbur and Orville Wright accomplished the first successful airplane at Kitty Hawk, Curtiss established the Curtiss Aeroplane Company, the first airplane manufacturing company in the United States. In the next year, the "June Bug," an aircraft powered by a Curtiss engine, won the Scientific American Trophy for the first flight in the U.S. covering one kilometer. In 1909, Curtiss, piloting his own planes, won major flying events in Europe and America. Over the next five years, Curtiss continued to be an innovator in airplane design, and in January of 1911, built and demonstrated the world's first seaplane for the U.S. Navy.
PICTURED: Glenn Curtiss on his V8 motorcycle

January 24, 1860
French inventor Etienne Lenoir was issued a patent for the first successful internal-combustion engine. Lenoir's engine was a converted steam engine that burned a mixture of coal gas and air. Its two-stroke action was simple but reliable--many of Lenoir's engines were still working after 20 years of use. His first engines powered simple machines like pumps and bellows. However, in 1862, Lenoir built his first automobile powered by an internal-combustion engine--a vehicle capable of making a six-mile trip in two to three hours. It wasn't a practical vehicle, but it was the beginning of the automobile industry.

January 24, 1924
Kingsford, Michigan, the Ford Motor Company's planned community, was incorporated as a village. The company owned large tracts of timber in the area, which were used to produce wooden auto-body panels like those commonly seen on its station wagons in later decades.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on January 26, 2014, 02:08:51 am
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On this day, January 25, 1905
Arthur MacDonald of Great Britain set a new land speed record of 149.875mph at Daytona Beach, Florida.

January 25, 1991
The United States Postal Service issued a four-cent stamp commemorating the Dudgeon Steam Wagon, a steam-powered vehicle built in 1866 by steam pioneer Richard Dudgeon. Scottish-born Dudgeon completed his first steam wagon in 1857, and with the exception of its steering mechanism, the vehicle was essentially a steam locomotive, complete with a smokestack and exposed cylinders at the forward end of its boiler. The vehicle, capable of holding 10 passengers, was exhibited in New York City's Crystal Palace, where it was destroyed in October of 1857 when the Palace was leveled by fire. In 1866, Dudgeon built a second steam-powered vehicle similar to his 1857 prototype. However, unlike the first, this vehicle survived and is currently on display at the Smithsonian Institute's National Museum of American History in Washington, D.C. Artist Richard Schlecht commemorated Dudgeon's creation in a 1991 U.S. stamp.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on January 27, 2014, 12:10:04 am
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On this day, January 26, 1979
"The Dukes of Hazzard," a television comedy about two good-old-boy cousins in the rural South and their souped-up 1969 Dodge Charger known as the General Lee, debuts on CBS. The show, which originally aired for seven seasons, centered around cousins Bo Duke (John Schneider) and Luke Duke (Tom Wopat) and their ongoing efforts to elude their nemeses, the crooked county commissioner "Boss" Jefferson Davis Hogg (Sorrell Booke) and the bumbling Sheriff Rosco P. Coltrane (James Best).
"The Dukes of Hazzard" was known for its car chases and stunts and the General Lee, which had an orange paint job, a Confederate flag across its roof and the numbers "01" on its welded-shut doors, became a star of the show. The General Lee also had a horn that played the first 12 notes of the song "Dixie." Due to all the fast driving, jumps and crashes, it was common for several different General Lees to be used during the filming of each episode.
The General Lee also had a CB (Citizens Band) radio and Luke and Bo Duke's CB nicknames or "handles" were Lost Sheep #1 and Lost Sheep #2, respectively. "The Dukes of Hazzard" (along with the 1977 trucking movie "Smokey and the Bandit") helped promote the CB craze that swept America from the mid 1970s to the early 1980s.
Among the other cars featured on the show were Boss Hogg's white Cadillac Deville convertible, Uncle Jesse Duke's (Denver Pyle) Ford pickup truck and various tow trucks and vehicles belonging to Cooter Davenport (Ben Jones), the local mechanic. Bo and Luke's short-shorts wearing cousin Daisy Duke (Catherine Bach) drove a yellow Plymouth Roadrunner with black stripes and later a Jeep with a golden eagle emblem on the hood and the word "Dixie" on the doors.
The final episode of "The Dukes of Hazzard" originally aired on August 16, 1985. The show spawned several TV specials and a 2005 movie starring Johnny Knoxville, Seann William Scott and Jessica Simpson.
PICTURED: Cooter’s Place, Nashville, TN

January 26, 1906
American driver Fred Marriott set a new land speed record of 127.659mph in his steam-powered "Wogglebug" at Ormond Beach, Florida. It was the last time that a steam-powered vehicle would claim a new land speed record.

January 26, 1920
The Lincoln Motor Car Company was founded. It was acquired by the Ford Motor Company just two years later. Under Ford's protective wing, the Lincoln brand name flourished, and the Lincoln Continental would become one of the world's most famous luxury cars.

Happy Australia people

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Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on January 27, 2014, 08:34:28 pm
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On this day, January 27, 1965
The Shelby GT 350, a version of a Ford Mustang sports car developed by the American auto racer and car designer Carroll Shelby, is launched. The Shelby GT 350, which featured a 306 horsepower V-8 engine, remained in production through the end of the 1960s and today is a valuable collector's item.
Carroll Shelby was born in Texas in 1923 and gained fame in the racing world in the 1950s. Among his accomplishments was a victory at the 24 Hours of Le Mans in 1959, making him just the second American ever to win the iconic endurance race. By the early 1960s, Shelby had retired from racing for health reasons and was designing high-performance cars. He became known for his race cars, including the Cobra and the Ford GT40, as well as such muscle cars as the Shelby GT 350. According to The New York Times: "In the 60's, at the apex of the Southern California car efflorescence, his name was synonymous with muscle cars, relatively small vehicles with big, beefy engines. It was an era that many car buffs consider Detroit's golden age, and Mr. Shelby was arguably its prime mover."
The Shelby GT 350 was an iteration of the first Ford Mustang, which was officially unveiled by Henry Ford II at the World's Fair in Flushing Meadows, New York, on April 17, 1964. That same day, the new car also debuted in Ford showrooms across America and almost 22,000 Mustangs were immediately snapped up by buyers. Named for a World War II fighter plane, the Ford Mustang had a long hood and short rear deck. More than 400,000 Mustangs sold within its first year of production, far exceeding sales expectations. Over the ensuing decades, the Mustang has undergone numerous evolutions and remains in production today, with more than 9 million sold.
In addition to collaborating with Ford, Shelby partnered with other automakers, including Chrysler, for whom he designed the Dodge Viper sports car, which launched in 1992.
The Times in 2003 quoted comedian Jay Leno, an avid car collector who has owned several Shelby cars, as saying: "Carroll is sort of like the car world's Mickey Mantle or Willie Mays... Unlike so many racers, he didn't come from a rich family, so he signifies that everyman, common-sense ideal. When I was kid, American cars were big, clunky things, until Carroll used his ingenuity to make them compete with European cars. He was a populist, the kind of guy that other car buffs could emulate."
Carroll Shelby passed away on May 10, 2012 at the age of 89.

January 27, 1899
Frenchman Camille Jenatzy captured the land-speed record (49.932 miles per hour) in a battery-powered automobile of his own design.

January 27, 1904
American racer William K. Vanderbilt set a new land-speed record of 76.086mph in a gasoline-driven Mors automobile at Ablis, France. It was the first major speed record to be set by an internal-combustion car. All previous records had been set by steam- and battery-powered cars.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on January 28, 2014, 11:56:43 pm
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On this day, January 28, 1938
Driver Rudolf Caracciola set a new land-speed record (not recognized by all organizations) of 268.496 mph on the German Autobahn between Frankfurt and Darmstadt. His record remains the highest speed ever achieved on a public road. Later in the same day, a young driver named Bernd Rosemeyer died in a crash on the Autobahn in an attempt to surpass Caracciola's record.
PICTURED: SPEED RUNS February 9, 1939: record-breaking attempts on the Dessau - Bitterfeld Reichsautobahn by Rudolf Caracciola in the Mercedes-Benz W 154 12-cylinder record-breaking car. Rudi said that, at speed, the overpasses seemed like tunnels.

January 28, 1896
The first speeding fine handed to British motorist for exceeding 2mph in a built-up area.

January 28, 1937
The prototype of the Rolls-Royce Wraith made its first test run on this day. The first model of the postwar period was called the Rolls-Royce Silver Wraith, and it became the principal luxury sedan sold by Rolls-Royce in the decades following World War II.

January 28, 2009
Country singer/songwriter John Rich releases a song about the plight of autoworkers titled "Shuttin' Detroit Down." The song, which featured such lyrics as "While they're living it up on Wall Street in that New York City town, here in the real world they're shuttin' Detroit down," quickly became a hit in Michigan, where the U.S. auto industry began, as well as across America. Rich wrote the song after becoming frustrated by news reports of government bailouts for Wall Street companies whose CEOs received stratospheric paychecks while autoworkers struggled to keep their jobs amidst widespread layoffs. Rich, one-half of the country duo Big & Rich, whose hits include "Save a Horse (Ride a Cowboy)" and "Comin' to Your City," recorded "Shuttin' Down Detroit" for his 2009 solo album "Son of a Preacher Man." In January 2009, Michigan-based mlive.com reported that Rich said "Shuttin' Detroit Down" was about: "the working men and women of America, and how Washington and New York City are slinging billions of dollars over the tops of our heads, while hard working people are going down the drain." The song became a working-class anthem and had some fans calling up radio stations in tears after they heard it played.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on January 30, 2014, 12:45:46 am

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On this day, January 29, 1950
Jody David Scheckter, a South African former auto racing driver was born in East London, South Africa. He was the 1979 Formula One World Drivers Champion.
January 29, 1886
Karl Benz patents the first successful gasoline-driven automobile.

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January 29, 1940
Kunimitsu Takahashi, a former Japanese Grand Prix motorcycle road racer and racing driver was born in Tokyo. He is also considered as the "father of drifting". He was the chairman of the GT-Association, the organizers of the Super GT series, from 1993 to 2007.

January 29, 1987
Matthew Wilson, an English rally driver was born in Cockermouth, Cumbria. He is the son of M-Sport boss and former WRC driver Malcolm Wilson. Wilson currently competes in the World Rally Championship for the Stobart M-Sport Ford team. He achieved his best result at the 2007 Rally Japan, finishing in fourth place.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on January 31, 2014, 12:34:10 am
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On this day, January 30, 1920
Jujiro Matsuda (1875-1952) forms Toyo Cork Kogyo, a business that makes cork, in Hiroshima, Japan; just over a decade later the company produces its first automobile and eventually changes its name to Mazda. Today, Mazda is known for its affordable, quality-performance vehicles, including the Miata, the world's best-selling two-seat roadster.
In 1931, the company launched the Mazda-Go, a three-wheeled vehicle that resembled a motorcycle with a cargo-carrier at the back. The company's car development plans were halted during World War II and the bombing of Hiroshima. In the 1950s, Mazda began making small, four-wheel trucks. The company launched its first passenger car, the R360 Coupe, in 1960 in Japan. Seven years later, Mazda debuted the first rotary engine car, the Cosmo Sport 110S. Mazda entered the American market in 1970, with the R100 coupe, the first mass-produced, rotary-powered car in the U.S. In 1978, the Mazda RX-7, an affordable, "peak-performing" sports car debuted. The following year, the Ford Motor Company took a 25 percent stake in the company.
In 1989, at the Chicago Auto Show, Mazda unveiled the MX-5 Miata, a two-door sports car carrying a starting price tag of $13,800. According to Mazda, the concept for the car was: "affordable to buy and use, lightweight, Jinba Ittai ('rider and horse as one') handling, and classic roadster looks." The 2000 "Guinness Book of World Records" named the Miata the best-selling two-seat convertible in history.
In 1991, in another milestone for the company, a Mazda 787 B won the 24 Hours of Le Mans race, becoming the first rotary-powered car as well as the first Japanese-made auto to do so. However, Mazda was impacted by the economic slump in Japan in the 1990s and in 1996, Ford took a controlling stake in the automaker and rescued it from potential bankruptcy. The two companies shared manufacturing facilities in several countries along with vehicle platforms and other resources. In 2008, Ford, which had been hurt by the global economic crisis and slumping auto sales, relinquished control of Mazda by selling 20 percent of its controlling stake for around $540 million. (Also that year, General Motors sold its stake in Japan-based Suzuki Motor.)
In 2009, Mazda celebrated the 20th anniversary of the MX-5 Miata, whose sales by then had topped nearly 900,000 and which had won almost 180 major automotive awards.

January 30, 1942
The last pre-war automobiles produced by Chevrolet and DeSoto rolled off the assembly lines today. Wartime restrictions had shut down the commercial automobile industry almost completely, and auto manufacturers were racing to retool their factories for production of military gear.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on January 31, 2014, 11:13:53 pm

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On this day, January 31, 1942
The last pre-war automobiles produced by Chrysler, Plymouth, and Studebaker rolled off the assembly lines. Wartime restrictions had shut down the commercial automobile industry almost completely, and auto manufacturers were racing to retool their factories for military gear.
PICTURED: The Vultee BT-13 Valiant

January 31, 1897
The final stage of the Marseille-Nice automobile race posed an unusual challenge: a steep slope that motorists had to climb at speed. It was the first speed hill climb in auto-racing history. The uphill dash was won by M. Pary in a steam-powered DeDion-Bouton automobile.

January 31, 1960
In a special racing series for small-bodied cars at the Daytona International Speedway, the Valiant captured the top seven positions in the 10-lap race. The Valiant was introduced by Chrysler in 1959 (the 1960 models) as a separate make. Its light handling and curvaceous European styling set the Valiant apart from other American compact cars. Over the following years, the Valiant became part of the Plymouth line, and its styling became more typically American. It retained its record for reliability and speed, however, and still has a fan club today.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on February 01, 2014, 11:45:23 pm
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On this day, February 1, 1969
John DeLorean was named the top executive at Chevrolet. DeLorean had risen precipitously through the ranks at Pontiac, where he pioneered the successful GTO and Grand Prix models. As the general manager of Chevrolet, DeLorean sold a record 3,000,000 cars and trucks in 1973. Poised as a top candidate for the presidency of General Motors (GM), DeLorean walked away from Chevrolet in late 1973 to start his own company. He brashly predicted he would "show [GM] how to make cars." DeLorean raised nearly $200 million to finance his new venture, the DeLorean Motor Company. He built a factory in Northern Ireland and began production on the sleek, futuristic DMC-12 car. Interest in the car was high, but the company ran into serious financial trouble. Refusing to abandon his project, DeLorean involved himself in racketeering and drug trafficking in a desperate attempt to make the money that would save his company. In 1982, after being caught on film trying to broker a $24 million cocaine deal, DeLorean was arrested on charges of drug trafficking and money laundering. A federal jury later ruled that DeLorean had been the victim of entrapment, and he was acquitted of all charges. Nevertheless, DeLorean's career and reputation were ruined.
PICTURED: (ABOVE) John Delorean with the DMC "DeLorean. (BELOW) The Pontiac Banshee prototype built by John Delorean.

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February 1, 1898
The Travelers Insurance Company of Hartford, Connecticut, extended coverage to an automobile owner, making them the first company to issue an automobile insurance policy to an individual. Dr. Truman J. Martin of Buffalo, New York, paid a premium of $11.25 for the policy that covered $5,000 to $10,000 of liability. In 1925, Massachusetts became the first state to mandate automobile insurance, "requiring owners of certain motor vehicles and trailers to furnish security for their civil liabilities." Today, auto insurance is a fact of life for American drivers as nearly every state requires some insurance for the operator of a motor vehicle. In a country where the driver's license serves as the primary form of identification, the challenge of selecting a coverage policy and paying the car insurance premium has become a rite of passage for many young Americans.

February 1, 1921
Carmen Fasanella of Princeton, New Jersey, obtained his cab driver's license at the tender age of 17. Mr. Fasanella would go on to drive his taxi for the next 68 years and 243 days, setting an unofficial record for the longest continuous career for a cabbie. Incidentally, the term "cab" comes from "cabriolet," a single-horse carriage used by coach drivers.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on February 03, 2014, 12:10:16 am
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On this day, February 2, 1923
Gasoline mixed with Tetraethyl lead was first sold to the public at a roadside gas station owned by Willard Talbott in Dayton, Ohio. Coined "ethyl gasoline" by Charles Kettering of General Motors, the blend was discovered by General Motors laboratory technician Thomas Midgley to beneficially alter the combustion rate of gasoline. Reportedly, in seven years of research and development General Motors labs tested at least 33,000 compounds for their propensity to reduce knocks. Leaded gasoline would fill the world's gas tanks until emissions concerns lead to the invention of unleaded gasoline.

February 2, 1880
The first electric streetlight was installed in Wabash, Indiana. The city paid the Brush Electric Light Company of Cleveland, Ohio, $100 to install a light on the top of the courthouse. A month later the city commissioned four more lights to be installed. Residents of Wabash became the first Americans to wear their sunglasses at night.

February 2, 1922
Morris Markin established Checker Cab Manufacturing Company. He also moved to Kalamazoo, MI from Illinois and took over factories previously used by the Handley-Knight and Dort automobile companies.

February 2, 1992
A Nissan R91 became the first Japanese car to win an international 24-hour race, winning the "24 Hours of Daytona" event in Daytona Beach, Florida. Japanese engineering quality became the standard for consumer compact vehicles in the 1970s and early 1980s. It was not until the late 1980s and early 1990s, however, that Japanese manufacturers were able to compete with European and American manufacturers at the highest levels of automotive performance technology. Nissan's victory in the 24-hour race proved that Japanese automobiles had achieved the highest level of performance and engineering.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on February 03, 2014, 01:32:38 pm
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On this day, February 3, 1948
The first Cadillac with tailfins were produced, signaling the dawn of the tailfin era. Tailfins served no functional purpose, unless you consider attracting attention functional. General Motors increased the size of the Cadillac's "tailfeathers" every year throughout the 1950s. In 1959, the model's sales slumped dramatically, sounding the death knell for the tailfin. The 1960s, consumers announced, would be a practical decade.

February 3, 1881
Joseph A. Galamb, a Ford Motor Company engineer and a member of the team of engineers that developed the Model T, was born in Mako, Hungary. The Model T design would change automotive history with its reliability, affordability, and capacity for mass production. "If you freeze the design and concentrate on production," Ford explained, "as the volume goes up, the cars are certain to become cheaper." Thanks to men like Joseph Galamb, the design for the "Tin Lizzy" met her maker's expectation to bring automobiles to the masses and guaranteed that the New World would become even newer for the next wave of immigrants. On February 3, 1981, the citizens of Mako, Hungary, paid tribute to Galamb, honoring the 100th anniversary of his birth.

February 3, 1919
Clessie Lyle Cummins incorporated Cummins Engine.

February 3, 1959
Became one of the most mythic days in rock 'n' roll history. It's the day the 1947 Beechcraft Bonanza 35 carrying Buddy Holly, Ritchie Valens and J.P. "The Big Bopper" Richardson crashed in an Iowa cornfield. To many, it's simply the day the music died.

February 3, 1929
Major H.O.D. Seagrave set a new land speed record of 231.4mph at Daytona Beach, Florida, driving a car called the Golden Arrow. Seagrave and Sir Malcolm Campbell dueled for land speed supremacy from 1925 to 1935, when Campbell decisively ended the competition by driving his Bluebird III over the 300mph mark at the Bonneville Salt Flats in Utah. These two competitors established Great Britain as the dominant force in land speed technology, a supremacy it maintained until jet engine technology became the norm for land speed race cars.

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Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on February 04, 2014, 10:49:16 pm
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On this day, February 4, 1922
The Ford Motor accompany acquired the Lincoln Motor Company for $8 million. Henry Ford's son, Edsel, was subsequently named president of Lincoln. The move signaled Henry Ford's first acknowledgement of diversification as a desirable marketing strategy. Throughout the 1920s, Ford Motors suffered from its unwillingness to match the diverse range of automobiles offered by General Motors. Ford regained some of its market share in 1927 when it released the new Model A, a car whose styling leaned heavily on the traditional sleek look of the Lincoln automobile.
PICTURED: 1922 Lincoln signing February 4, 1922, the Ford Motor Company buys the Lincoln Motor Company. Standing: Henry Ford and Lincoln founder Henry Leland. Seated: Edsel Ford and Wilfred Leland. Pictured on the wall: Abraham Lincoln (Ford Times).

February 4, 1913
Louis Henry Perlman of New York received a patent for the first demountable tire-carrying rim. Until Perlman's invention, changing a tire meant changing the wheel. Today, demountable tire-carrying rims are fashionable accessories that express their driver's individuality.

February 4, 1941
76-year-old Ransom Eli Olds received his last automobile patent for an internal combustion engine design. An innovator throughout his career, Olds built the first American steam-powered vehicle as early as 1894. In 1897, Olds received a patent for his "motor carriage," a gasoline-powered vehicle that he built the year before. He is also credited with having developed the first automobile production line. In an effort to meet the production demands for the Olds Runabout, Olds contracted with the likes of the Dodge brothers for the parts to his cars, which he then assembled in his own factory space. Olds' assembly line was able to produce a higher volume of automobiles in a shorter period of time than was possible using the traditional method of building each vehicle individually. Olds Motor Works sold 425 Runabouts in its first year of business, 2,500 the next year, 5,000 in 1904, and the rest is automobile history.

February 4, 1971
Rolls Royce declared itself bankrupt (state ownership) due to early problems with three-shaft turbofan concept of RB211 aero-engine for Lockheed L-1011 Tri-Star wide body airliners.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on February 05, 2014, 11:06:57 pm
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On this day, February 5, 1878
Andre Citroen, later referred to as the Henry Ford of France for developing his country's first mass-produced automobiles, is born in Paris. Citroen revolutionized the European auto industry by making vehicles that were affordable to average citizens.
Before entering the auto business, Citroen studied engineering and later operated a gear manufacturing company. During World War I, he ran a munitions factory where he successfully implemented mass-production technology. Following the war, Citroen, who was inspired by the assembly-line innovations at Henry Ford's American auto plants, converted his munitions factory into a facility to make low-cost vehicles. At the time, only the wealthy in Europe had been able to afford automobiles. Citroen's first car, the Type A, debuted in 1919. The four-door, 10-horsepower vehicle featured an electric starter, lights and a spare tire and was capable of speeds of 40 mph. The Type A was a success, due in part to Citroen's talent as an innovative marketer. He allowed potential customers to take his vehicles for a test drive—then a new concept—and also let people buy on credit. He put the Citroen name in lights on the Eiffel Tower, launched skywriting ads to promote his products and masterminded attention-getting expeditions to Africa and Asia using Citroen vehicles.
In 1934, Citroen launched the Traction Avant, the first mass-produced passenger car to feature front-wheel drive. The car proved enormously popular, and more than 750,000 were built during the 23-year production run. At the time of the Traction Avant's release, however, the Citroen company was on the verge of bankruptcy due to Andre Citroen's heavy investments in new concepts and technology, as well as his alleged gambling debts. In 1935, Citroen was taken over by its largest creditor, the Michelin Tire Company. Andre Citroen, who had been forced out of the business he founded, became ill and died on July 3, 1935.
Citroen remained part of Michelin until the 1970s, when it was sold to the French automaker Peugeot. Today, Peugeot Citroen is one of Europe's leading auto manufacturers.
PICTURED: Citro&euml;n Traction Avant 11BN

February 5, 1918
Thomas A. Edison received a patent for a "Starting and Current-Supplying System for Automobiles".

February 5, 1947
NASCAR racer Darrell Waltrip was born in Owensboro, Kentucky. In 1986, Waltrip became the first stock-car driver to earn $7 million. Having gotten his start in the business racing go-carts at the tender age of 12, the 52-year-old Waltrip did not retire from the NASCAR circuit until 2000. Waltrip was Winston Cup champion three times and won 84 races in his career.

February 5, 1952
The first "Don't Walk" sign was installed in New York City. The city erected the signs in response to the growing awareness of pedestrian fatalities in the increasingly crowded Manhattan streets. Pedestrian fatalities are essentially an urban problem, so city dwellers, next time you see a Don't Walk sign, please don't run. In 1997, 5,307 pedestrians died as a result of automobile accidents. Fatal collisions between pedestrians and motor vehicles occur most often between six p.m. and nine p.m., a period that roughly coincides with rush hour. In 1998, in hopes of minimizing gridlock, New York City began strictly enforcing its jaywalking laws during rush hour. Pedestrians are subject to a $50 fine if they walk, or run, when faced with a Don't Walk sign.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on February 06, 2014, 11:01:57 pm
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On this day, February 6, 1954
Mercedes introduced their 300SL coupe to the public. A stylish sports car characterized by its gull-wing doors, the coupe was a consumer version of the 300SL race car. With a six-cylinder engine and a top speed of 155mph, the two-door coupe created a sensation among wealthy car buyers who were actually seen waiting in line to buy it. Because of the impracticality of the gull-wing doors, the company only manufactured 1,400 300SL coupes. Nevertheless, the 300SL is widely considered the most impressive sports car of the decade. Unfortunately, the 300SL race car also played an infamous role in car racing history. Careening out of control in the 1955 race at Le Mans, the SL crashed into the gallery. Eighty spectators died and Mercedes-Benz pulled its cars out of racing competition for nearly three decades

February 6, 1911
Rolls-Royce adopted the "Spirit of Ecstasy" mascot, the silver-winged hood ornament that has become the company's symbol.

February 6, 1985
Walter L. Jacobs, founder of the first car rental company, died. Although he was "not exactly" the founder of the Hertz Corporation, Jacobs' car rental business became the Hertz Corporation after it was purchased by John Hertz in 1923. At the age of 22, Jacobs opened a car-rental business with a dozen Model T Fords that he personally repaired and maintained. Within five years, his business generated an annual revenue of around $1 million. After he sold his business to Mr. Hertz, the president of the Yellow Cab and Yellow Truck and Coach Manufacturing Company, Jacobs remained Hertz's top executive. In addition to its innovations within the car rental industry, Hertz also maintains the unusual distinction of having been a subsidiary of both the General Motors Corporation and Ford Motor Company.


February 6, 2009
The Honda Insight, billed as "the world's first affordable hybrid," goes on sale in Japan. Honda took some 18,000 orders for the car within the first three weeks, pushing Toyota's Prius, known as the world's first mass-produced hybrid vehicle, out of the top-10-selling cars for that month, according to a March 2009 report in The New York Times.
The Insight, a five-door hatchback, went on sale in America on March 24, 2009, and carried a price tag of just under $20,000. In 1999, a three-door hatchback version of the Insight became the first-ever gas-electric hybrid vehicle sold in the U.S. The Toyota Prius, which debuted in Japan in 1997, arrived in America in July 2000 and went on to outsell the first-generation Insight, which was retired in 2006. By the time the second-generation Insight launched in 2009, Toyota controlled 70 percent of the hybrid market in the U.S. (the planet's biggest market for hybrid vehicles). Between 2000 and February 2009, Toyota had sold upward of 700,000 Priuses, or more than half of the 1.2 million purchased worldwide, in America. In March 2009, Toyota announced it had sold more than 1 million gas-electric hybrid vehicles in the U.S. under six Toyota and Lexus brands which in addition to the Prius, include the Highlander SUV and a hybrid Camry sedan, among others.
American automakers trailed behind the Japanese when it came to developing hybrid vehicles. The same week that Toyota announced it had sold its 1 millionth hybrid in America, Ford Motor Company reported that it had built its 100,000th hybrid vehicle in the U.S.
In 2008, Toyota passed General Motors to become the world's largest automaker, a title the American company had held since 1931. GM, which at the time had been hobbled along with the rest of the auto industry by a global economic crisis, received criticism for being the home of the gas-guzzling Hummer and for failing to develop a hybrid vehicle when Toyota first launched the Prius.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on February 07, 2014, 10:49:59 pm

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On this day, February 7, 1938
Automotive industry pioneer Harvey Samuel Firestone, founder of the major American tire company that bore his name, dies at the age of 69 in Miami Beach, Florida.
Firestone was born on a farm near Columbiana, Ohio, on December 20, 1868. As a young man, he worked as a salesman for a buggy company and later became convinced that rubber carriage tires would provide a more comfortable ride than steel tires or wooden wheels. Around 1895, Firestone met a young engineer in Detroit named Henry Ford, who was developing his first automobile. Firestone sold Ford a set of rubber carriage tires, an event that marked the start of an important business relationship and friendship between the two men. In 1900, believing that the horse-and-buggy era was ending and the auto age beginning, Firestone incorporated the Firestone Tire & Rubber Company in Akron, Ohio. (Akron, which would come to be known as the world's rubber capital, was also home to Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company, founded in 1898, and B. F. Goodrich, established in 1870.) Firestone began producing its own tires in 1903 and three years later sold 2,000 sets of detachable tires to Henry Ford, in what was then the world's largest tire order. In 1908, Ford launched his first factory-built Model T cars. (By the time production ended in 1927, more than 15 million Model T's had come off the assembly line; it was the all-time best-selling car until 1972, when it was surpassed by the Volkswagen Beetle.)
By 1910, Firestone's profits passed $1 million for the first time. The following year, the winner of the inaugural Indianapolis 500 auto race, Ray Harroun, drove a Marmon Wasp equipped with Firestone tires. By 1926, Firestone was manufacturing more than 10 million tires each year, which represented approximately 25 percent of America's total tire output. Around this time, Firestone established its own rubber plantations in Liberia, Africa, in order to break free of Britain and the Netherlands, who controlled the rubber market through production in their Asian colonies.
Harvey Firestone retired in 1932 and died in 1938. In 1988, the Firestone company was acquired by Japan-based Bridgestone Corporation, a leading global tire manufacturer founded in 1931.

February 7, 1942
The federal government ordered passenger car production stopped and converted to wartime purposes. In spite of President Franklin D. Roosevelt's exhortation that the U.S. auto industry should become the "great arsenal of democracy," Detroit's executives were reluctant to join the war cause. However, following the bombing of Pearl Harbor, the country mobilized behind the U.S. declaration of war. The government offered automakers guaranteed profits regardless of production costs throughout the war years. Furthermore, the Office of Production Management allocated $11 billion to the construction of war manufacturing plants that would be sold to the automobile manufacturers at remarkable discounts after the war. What had at first seemed like a burden on the automotive industry became a boon. The production demands placed on the industry and the resources allocated to the individual automobile manufacturers during the war would revolutionize American car making and bring about the Golden Era of the 1950s.

February 7, 1975
Canada imposed a 55 mph speed limit. In 1973, reacting to the ban of oil sales to the United States and other Western countries by 11 Arab oil producers, President Richard Nixon lowered the U.S. speed limit to 55 mph in hopes of conserving gasoline. An addition to a greater reserve of oil, a by-product of the mandate turned out to be a lower rate of highway automobile fatalities. Two years later, Canada followed suit in hopes of lowering their own rate of highway fatalities.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on February 08, 2014, 10:35:30 pm
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On this day, February 8, 1985
Sir William Lyons, the founder of the British luxury automaker Jaguar, dies at the age of 84 in Warwickshire, England.
Lyons was born in Blackpool, England, on September 4, 1901. In 1922, the motorcycle enthusiast co-founded the Swallow Sidecar Company with his neighbor William Walmsley. The company started out making motorcycle sidecars, then turned to producing its own cars. In the early 1930s, the company was renamed SS Cars Ltd.; its first Jaguar automobile, the SS Jaguar 100, debuted in 1935. During World War II, the company's plants were used to make airplane and auto parts for the British military. Following the war, the company changed its name again, to Jaguar Cars Ltd., to avoid any association with the Schutzstaffel, the Nazi paramilitary group also referred to by the initials "SS."
In 1948, Jaguar released the XK120, which was capable of reaching speeds of 120 mph and helped the company stake its claim as a sports car brand. By the 1950s, Jaguar was exporting its high-performance cars to America. In 1961, the automaker introduced the E-type, known as the XK-E in the U.S., a sleek two-seater with a bullet-like silhouette that was the fastest production sports car on the market at the time of its launch. The iconic roadster won accolades for its design and in 1996 an E-Type became part of the permanent collection of New York City's Museum of Modern Art (it was only the third car to do so yet).
In 1956, Lyons was knighted for his contributions to the British auto industry. A decade later, Jaguar merged with the British Motor Corporation to form British Motor Holdings, which later became part of British Leyland Ltd. Lyons retired from the business in 1972 and spent his remaining years raising livestock on his farm. He died in 1985. In 1990, Jaguar was acquired by the Ford Motor Company. Ford sold Jaguar, along with fellow British luxury brand Land Rover, to India-based Tata Motors in 2008, for approximately $2.3 billion. For Tata, the maker of the Nano, the world's cheapest car, the deal was referred to by some as a move from "mass to class."
PICTURED: The Jaguar Pirana

February 8, 1936
General Motors (GM) founder William Durant, filed for personal bankruptcy. Economic historian Dana Thomas described Durant as a man "drunk with the gamble of America. He was obsessed with its highest article of faith--that the man who played for the steepest stakes deserved the biggest winnings." GM reflected Durant's ambitious attitude toward risk-taking in its breathtaking expansionist policies, becoming in its founder's words "an empire of cars for every purse and purpose." However, Durant's gambling attitude had its down sides. Over a span of three years Durant purchased Oldsmobile, Oakland (later Cadillac and Pontiac), and attempted to purchase Ford. By 1910, GM was out of cash, and Durant was forced out of control of the company. Durant got back into the big game by starting Chevrolet, and eventually regained control of GM only to lose it a second time. Later in life, Durant attempted to start a bowling center and a supermarket, but met with little success. Durant's trials and tribulations are proof that, even in America's most successful industry, there were those who gambled and lost.

February 8, 1964
The Iraqi National Oil Company was incorporated in Baghdad. Oil wealth would make Iraq an important player in the politics of the Middle East for the next three decades. The fear of losing access to Arab oil--a fear that marked all U.S. policy to the Middle East following the 1973 Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) embargo--drove the U.S. government to heavily support Iraq's war effort against Iran during the 1980s. However, America's friendly relationship with Iraq ended in 1990 with the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait, another oil wealthy Persian Gulf state friendly to the United States.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on February 09, 2014, 08:54:12 pm
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On this day, February 9, 1846
Automotive industry pioneer Wilhelm Maybach, who founded the luxury car brand bearing his name, is born on February 9, 1846, in Heilbronn, Germany.
In 1885, Maybach and his mentor, the German engineer Gottlieb Daimler developed a new high-speed, four-stroke internal combustion engine. Maybach and Daimler fixed their engine to a bicycle to create what is referred to as the first-ever motorcycle. The two men later attached their engine to a carriage, producing a motorized vehicle. In 1890, Daimler and several partners established Daimler Motoren Gelleschaft to build engines and automobiles. Maybach, who served as the company's chief designer, developed the first Mercedes automobile in 1900. The Mercedes was commissioned by auto dealer and racer Emil Jellinek, who wanted a new car to sell to his rich clients in the French Riviera, and named after Jellinek's daughter.
Gottlieb Daimler died in March 1900 and Maybach left the Daimler company in 1907. He later went into business with his engineer son Karl and in 1921 they debuted their first car, the Maybach Type W3, at a Berlin auto show. During the 1920s and 1930s, Maybach became known for developing powerful, technologically sophisticated custom-built vehicles for the wealthy, including the super-luxurious, top-of-the-line Zeppelin model. Wilhelm Maybach died on December 29, 1929, at the age of 83.
During World War II, the company Maybach founded stopped making cars and built engines for German military vehicles. Auto production never resumed after the war, although the company continued to make engines for a variety of vehicles and eventually became part of Daimler-Benz. In the early 2000s, Daimler-Benz resurrected the Maybach nameplate, launching the Maybach 57 and the Maybach 62. Today, the Maybach brand is once again synonymous with opulence and exclusivity. Each car is hand-built to its buyer's specifications and carries a starting price tag in the eight figure range. Maybachs are known for their power and long list of optional luxury extras, including voice-activated controls, entertainment centers, lambswool carpeting and perfume-atomizing systems.
PICTURED: The Daimler history in one photo

February 9, 1909
The Indianapolis Motor Speedway Corporation incorporated with Carl G. Fisher as president. The speedway was Fisher's brainchild, and he would see his project through its inauspicious beginnings to its ultimate glorious end. The first race at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway took place on August 19, 1909, only a few months after the formation of the corporation. Fisher and his partners had scrambled to get their track together before the race, and their lack of preparation showed. Not only were lives lost on account of the track, but the surface itself was left in shambles. Instead of cutting losses on his investment in the speedway, Fisher dug in and upped the stakes. He built a brand new track of brick, which was the cheapest and most durable appropriate surface available to him. The Indianapolis Motor Speedway would later be affectionately called "the Brickyard." Fisher's track filled a void in the international racing world, as there were almost no private closed courses in Europe capable of handling the speeds of the cars that were being developed there. Open course racing had lost momentum in Europe due to the growing number of fatal accidents. Recognizing the supremacy of European car technology, but preserving the American tradition of oval-track racing, Fisher melded the two hemispheres of car racing into one extravagant event, a 500-mile race to be held annually. To guarantee the attendance of the European racers, Fisher arranged to offer the largest single prize in the sport. By 1912, the total prize money available at the grueling Indy 500 was $50,000, making the race the highest paying sporting event in the world. However, the Brickyard almost became a scrap yard after World War II, as it was in deplorable condition after four years of disuse. The track's owner, Eddie Rickenbacher, even considered tearing it down and selling the land. Fortunately, in 1945, Tony Hulman purchased the track for $750,000. Hulman and Wilbur Shaw hastily renovated the track for racing in the next year, and launched a long-term campaign to replace the wooden grandstand with structures of steel and concrete. In May of 1946, the American Automobile Association ran its first postwar Indy 500, preserving an American tradition. Today, the Indy 500 is the largest single-day sporting event in the world.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on February 10, 2014, 10:33:06 pm
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On this day, February 10, 1966
Ralph Nader testified before the Senate, reinforcing his earlier claims that the automobile industry was socially irresponsible and detailing the peculiar methods the industry used in attempting to silence him. Nader's 1965 book, Unsafe At Any Speed: The Designed-In Dangers of the American Automobile, had become a sensation a year earlier. Nader attacked the automotive industry's unwillingness to consider the safety of the consumer, or as Nader himself put it, "insisting on maintaining the freedom to rank safety wherever it pleases on its list of considerations." Nader's heaviest criticism was leveled at the Chevrolet Corvair, a car that had been involved in a high number of one-car accidents. General Motors (GM) responded to Nader's criticism by launching an investigation into his personal life and accusing Nader of being gay and anti-Semitic. Nader filed an invasion of privacy suit against GM, and ultimately extracted $425,000 from the automotive giant. By bringing the public's right to safe automobiles into the spotlight, and by directly challenging General Motors in court, Nader created the methodology for contemporary consumer advocacy. The National Traffic and Motor Vehicle Safety Act, which in 1966 mandated seatbelts, owed its existence to Nader's initiative, as do the other federally regulated safety standards which are common practice today.
PICTURED: A prototype built by John Fitch. It had a Corvair engine and was capable of 130MPH. Corvair was disbanded (thanks to Ralph Nader) before production began

February 10, 1941
The first highway post office service was established along the route between Washington, D.C., and Harrisonburg, Virginia. Mail was transported in buses equipped with facilities for sorting, handling, and dispatch of mail.

February 10, 1989
The Ford Motor Company announced a 1988 net income of $5.3 billion, a world's record for an automotive company. The record served to mark the return to triumph of the U.S. automotive industry after the doldrums of the 1970s and early 1980s.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on February 11, 2014, 09:08:32 pm
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On this day, February 11, 1951
Marshall Teague drove a Hudson Hornet to victory on the beach oval of the 160-mile Daytona Grand National at Daytona Beach, Florida, beginning Hudson's extraordinary run on the NASCAR circuit. In 1948, Hudson introduced the revolutionary "step-down" chassis design that is still used in most cars today. Until Hudson's innovation all car drivers had stepped up into the driver's seats. The "step-down" design gave the Hornet a lower center of gravity and, consequently, better handling. Fitted with a bigger engine in 1951, the Hudson Hornet became a dominant force on the NASCAR circuit. For the first time a car not manufactured by the Big Three was winning big. Excited by the publicity generated by their success on the track, Hudson executives began directly backing their racing teams, providing the team cars with everything they needed to make their cars faster. The Big Three, fearing that losses on the track would translate into losses on the salesroom floor, hurried to back their own cars. Thus was born the system of industry-backed racing that has become such a prominent marketing tool today. The Hudson Hornet would contend for nearly every NASCAR race between 1951 and 1955, when rule changes led to an emphasis on horsepower over handling.

February 11, 1958
Marshall Teague died at age 37 after attempting to raise the closed-course speed record at Daytona.

February 11, 1937
After a difficult 44-day sit-down strike at the Fisher Body plant in Flint, Michigan, General Motors (GM) President Alfred P. Sloan signed the first union contract in the history of the U.S. automobile industry. Organized by the Union of Auto Workers (UAW), the strike was intended to force GM to give ground to its workers. GM workers had protested before, and they'd been fired and replaced for it. The UAW decided they needed to achieve the total shutdown of a working plant in order to bring company executives to the negotiating table. On New Year's Eve, 45 minutes after lunch, union leaders ordered the assembly line halted. Executives kept the belts running, but the workers wouldn't work. GM turned to the courts, winning an injunction against the workers on the grounds that the sit-down strike was unconstitutional. The injunction was overturned when it was discovered that the judge who presided in the case owned over $200,000 of GM stock. Twelve days after the strike had begun, with the workers still dug in, Sloan ordered the heat in the building turned off and barred the workers access to food from the outside. Police, armed with tear gas and guns, surrounded the building. The police fired--first tear gas and later bullets--into the plant. Sympathetic picketers outside, many of them family members of the strikers, helped to break all the windows in the plant by hurling rocks from were they stood. Others, braver still, broke the picket line with their automobiles to form a barricade that prevented the police vehicles from overrunning the building the strikers occupied. Finally, days after the Battle of the Running Bulls, as the violent confrontation came to be known, Michigan Governor Frank Murphy called in the National Guard with the intention of quelling any further violence. The presence of the National Guard bolstered the strikers' confidence. Realizing the futility of their position, GM executives came to the bargaining table. After a week of negotiations over which Governor Murphy personally presided, an agreement between GM and the UAW was reached.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on February 12, 2014, 11:12:40 pm
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On this day, February 12, 1900
J.W. Packard received his first automotive patent a year after forming his company with partner George Weiss. Packard became interested in building cars after purchasing a Winton horseless carriage. The Winton proved unreliable and after nearly a year of fixing up his horseless carriage, Packard decided he would manufacture his own automobile.
PICTURED: The Winton

February 12, 1898
First car crash resulting in fatality happened in Great Britain to Henry Lindfield, Brighton business agent for International Cars; electric car's steering gear failed, ran through a wire fence, hit an iron post, cut main artery in his leg, died of shock from the operation the following day.

February 12, 1953
The Willys-Overland Company, which brought America the Jeep, celebrated its golden anniversary. The original design for an all-terrain troop transport vehicle--featuring four-wheel drive, masked fender-mount headlights, and a rifle rack under the dash--was submitted to the U.S. Armed Forces by the American Bantam Car Company in 1939. The Army loved Bantam's design, but the production contract was ultimately given to Willys-Overland on the basis of its similar design and superior production capabilities. Mass production of the Willys Jeep began after the U.S. declaration of war in 1941. By 1945, 600,000 Jeeps had rolled off the assembly lines and onto battlefields in Asia, Africa, and Europe. The name "Jeep" is supposedly derived from the Army's request to car manufacturers to develop a "General Purpose" vehicle. "Gee Pee" turned to "Jeep" somewhere along the battle lines. The Willys Jeep became a cultural icon in the U.S. during World War II, as images of G.I.s in Gee Pees liberating Europe saturated the newsreels in movie theaters across the country. Unlike the Hummer of recent years, the Jeep was not a symbol of technological superiority but rather of the courage of the American spirit, a symbol cartoonist Bill Mauldin captured when he drew a weeping soldier firing a bullet into his broken down Willys Jeep. In 1945, Willys-Overland introduced the first civilian Jeep vehicle, the CJ-2A.

February 12, 1973
Four metric distance road signs, first in U.S., erected along Interstate 71 in Ohio; showed distance in both miles, kilometers between Columbus and Cincinnati, Columbus and Cleveland

February 12, 2008
In an attempt to cut costs, struggling auto giant General Motors (GM) offers buyouts to all 74,000 of its hourly employees in the U.S. represented by the United Auto Workers (UAW) union. The move came after GM lost $38.7 billion in 2007, which at the time was the largest loss ever experienced by any car maker. Two weeks later, on February 26, the loss was adjusted by $4.6 billion, to $43.3 billion.
GM offered its employees a range of buyout options, including a $140,000 lump payment to those who worked at the company for at least 10 years and agreed to give up their health benefits and pension. GM's goal was to replace the employees who accepted buyouts with new workers brought in at a lower pay scale. At the time, a veteran GM worker (who belonged to the UAW) had an average base salary of $28.12 an hour, but once such benefits as health-care coverage and pension were added in, the cost to GM jumped to $78.21, according to a report by CNNMoney.com.
Some 19,000 GM workers ended up taking buyouts; however, the company's troubles were far from over, as gas prices reached record highs in the summer of 2008 and auto sales continued to slump amidst a growing global economic crisis. GM was criticized for focusing too heavily on its sport utility vehicles and small trucks and being slow to respond to an increasing consumer demand for smaller, more fuel-efficient vehicles. In December 2008, the federal government stepped in with a $13.4 billion loan to help keep GM afloat (Chrysler, the third-largest U.S. automaker, also received federal bailout funds). Also in 2008, Japan-based Toyota surpassed GM as the world's largest automaker, a title the American company, which was founded in 1908, had held since 1931. At its peak in the early 1960s, GM made more than half of all the cars and trucks purchased in the U.S.
In March 2009, President Barack Obama announced that in order to receive additional federal aid and avoid possible bankruptcy, both GM and Chrysler would be required to make deep concessions and develop radical restructuring plans. Additionally, GM's chief executive Rick Wagoner, who had held the top job since 2000, was forced to resign immediately. Nevertheless, on April 30, 2009, Chrysler filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy and announced it would enter a partnership with Italian automaker Fiat. GM filed for bankruptcy a month later, on June 1.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on February 13, 2014, 10:29:20 pm
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February 13, 1953
William C. Mack of Mack Trucks Inc. died at age 94. Mack trucks, with their hood-mounted bulldogs, are a symbol of durability and toughness in the commercial vehicle industry.
PICTURED:  A 1913 Mack truck

February 13, 1958
The first Ford Thunderbird with four seats was introduced. The four-passenger "square bird" converted the top-of-the-line Ford from a sports car to a luxury car. The new four-seater packed a 352-cubic-inch 300 horsepower V-8. Thirty-eight thousand cars were initially sold, making the T-Bird one of only two American cars to increase sales between 1957 and 1958. The T-Bird has become a symbol of 1950s American culture, immortalized in movies like Grease and rock songs like the Beach Boys' "I Get Around."
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on February 14, 2014, 10:31:33 pm
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On this day, February 14, 1929 (Valentines Day)
The mob hit known as the St. Valentine's Day Massacre took place in Chicago. In order to perpetrate the hit, members of Al Capone's gang reportedly fitted a Cadillac touring sedan to the speculations of the Chicago Police Department. Under the guidance of Capone's Lieutenant Ray Nitty, the murderers sought out the garage of one "Bugs" Moran with the intention of killing him. Fearing the possibility of misidentifying Mr. Moran, the henchman killed all seven of the men in the garage. Without the help of their modern-day Trojan Horse--the Cadillac Sedan which gang member Bryan Bolton claimed to have personally purchased from the Cadillac Car Company on Michigan Avenue in Chicago--the gang would not have been able to infiltrate "Bugs" Moran's garage with such veritable ease.
PICTURED: Al Capone

February 14, 1867
Sakichi Toyoda, whose textile machinery company spawned the Toyota Motor Corporation, is born in Japan on February 14, 1867. In 2008, Toyota surpassed the American auto giant General Motors (GM) to become the world's largest automaker.
Referred to as Japan's Thomas Edison, Sakichi Toyoda invented a variety of weaving machines, including an automatic power loom, and founded Toyoda Automatic Loom Works. By the late 1920s, Toyoda's son Kiichiro, who worked for the family business, had begun plans, with his father's support, to develop an automobile. Sakichi Toyoda died on October 30, 1930, at the age of 63. In 1933, Kiichiro Toyoda established an auto division within Toyoda Loom Works, which released a prototype vehicle two years later. In 1937, Toyota Motor Corporation was formed as a spinoff of Toyoda Loom Works.
The new car company initially looked to the U.S. auto industry for inspiration. According to The New York Times: "Over the years of its rise to the top, Toyota has made no secret of how much it has learned from Detroit. Its first car, the AA, was a blatant copy of a Chevrolet sedan. Its executives scoured every corner of the Ford Motor Company in the 1950s, taking home ideas to Japan that later inspired the Toyota Production System."
Kiichiro Toyoda died in 1952 at the age of 57, but his company continued to grow. In 1966, Toyota introduced its compact Corolla model, which in 1997 became the world's best-selling car, with more than 35 million sold at the time. The oil crisis of the 1970s made Toyota's small, fuel-efficient vehicles increasingly attractive in America. In the 1980s, the automaker launched the popular Camry and 4Runner sport utility vehicle. Toyota's luxury car line, Lexus, debuted in the U.S. in 1989. The automaker introduced the planet's first mass-produced hybrid vehicle, the Prius, in 1997 in Japan and worldwide in 2001. By the end of the 1990s, Toyota had produced over 100 million vehicles in Japan.
In 2008, Toyota reached another milestone when it sold more cars and trucks than General Motors--8.97 million vehicles versus 8.35 million vehicles--and claimed the sales crown that the American auto giant had held for more than 70 years. However, Toyota, like the rest of the auto industry, was hurt by the global financial crisis and in May 2009 reported the company's first-ever annual loss.

February 14, 1896
Edward Prince of Wales, who would later become King Edward VII, became the first member of the British Royal Family to ride in a motor vehicle.

February 14, 1948
A week before the organization was officially incorporated, NASCAR held its first race for modified stock cars on a 3.2 mile-course at Daytona Beach. In the 150-mile race that featured almost exclusively pre-war Fords, Red Byron edged Marshall Teague to become NASCAR's first champion. Stock car racing would become a tradition at Daytona, but pre-war Fords would not. By 1949 the Olds 88 had become NASCAR's dominant vehicle.

February 14, 1977
Elmer Symons, a motorcycle enduro racer was born in Ladysmith, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa on this day. He began enduro racing in 1996 and moved to the United States in 2003. He had placed well in numerous regional competitions and had participated in the 2005 and 2006 Dakar Rally as a support mechanic. He crashed his privateer KTM and died at the scene at 142 km into the fourth stage in his first attempt to complete the Rally as a rider. The emergency helicopter was with him within 8 minutes of his emergency alert beacon triggering, but was unable to do anything other than record his death. He was in 18th place for motorcycles overall, and leading the Marathon class after the previous stage. Symons is the rally's 49th fatality.


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Feb 14, 2014,
The Hennessey Venom GT hit 270.49mph at the Kennedy Space Center, thus becoming the fastest production car in the world by beating the Bugatti Veyron Super Sport's previous record of 269.86 mph.P
Bugatti and Hennessey has been fighting for the crown for quite some time now, and while this round goes to America, we all know car makers will only stop when people's heads are starting to explode. After all, the game has been on since 1894.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on February 15, 2014, 09:47:45 pm
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February 15, 1902
Oldsmobile ran its first national automobile advertisement in the Saturday Evening Post. Ransom Olds was no stranger to innovations in the field of publicity. A year earlier, Olds had sent one of his assistants, Roy Chapin, on a voyage from Detroit to New York in a 1901 Olds Runabout. In spite of the absence of proper roads, gas stations, or repair garages, nine days and 800 miles later, Chapin arrived at New York's Waldorf-Astoria Hotel unscathed. Newspaper accounts of the journey boosted publicity for the Runabout. In one year, Olds' company increased its sales of Runabouts from 425 to 2,500. With the help of newspaper advertisements annual sales would jump another 100 percent to 5,000 cars by 1904.
Olds also commissioned two popular songwriters of the day to write a song for advertising purposes. The result was “In My Merry Oldsmobile,” a song inspired by the Curved Dash Olds and now an all-time standard.
PICTURED: Roy Chapin, New York in the Olds Runabout

February 15, 1967
J. Frank Duryea, founder of the Duryea Motor Wagon Company with his brother Charles, died in Old Saybrook, Conneticut, at age 97. Seventy-four years earlier in the month of February, the Duryea brothers manufactured the first of 13 Duryea Motor Wagons, unofficially giving birth to the auto production line and the American automobile industry.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on February 17, 2014, 02:16:20 am


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On this day, February 16, 1852
Henry and Clement Studebaker founded H & C Studebaker, a blacksmith and wagon building business, in South Bend, Indiana. The brothers made their fortune manufacturing during the Civil War, as The Studebaker Brothers Manufacturing Company became the world's largest manufacturer of horse-drawn carriages.
With the advent of the automobile, Studebaker converted its business to car manufacturing, becoming one of the larger independent automobile manufacturers. During World War II, Studebaker manufactured airplanes for the war effort and emphasized its patriotic role by releasing cars called "The President," "The Champion," and "The Commander." Like many of the independents, Studebaker fared well during the war by producing affordable family cars.
After the war, the Big Three, bolstered by their new government-subsidized production facilities, were too much for many of the independents. Studebaker was no exception. Post World War II competition drove Studebaker to its limits, and the company merged with the Packard Corporation in 1954.
Financial hardship continued however as they continued to lose money over the next several years. Studebaker rebounded in 1959 with the introduction of the compact Lark but it was shortlived. The 1966 Cruiser marked the end of the Studebaker after 114 years.

February 16, 1997
25-year-old Jeff Gordon claims his first Daytona 500 victory, becoming the youngest winner in the history of the 200-lap, 500-mile National Association for Stock Car Auto Racing (NASCAR) event, dubbed the "Super Bowl of stock car racing." Driving his No. 24 Chevrolet Monte Carlo for the Hendrick Motorsports racing team, Gordon recorded an average speed of 148.295 mph and took home prize money of more than $377,000. According to NASCAR.com, Gordon was "a veritable babe in a field that included 27 drivers older than 35, 16 at least 40." Gordon's Hendrick teammates Terry Labonte and Ricky Craven finished the race second and third, respectively.
Gordon was born August 4, 1971, in Vallejo, California, and became involved in racing as a child. In 1993, he competed in his first full season of Winston Cup series (now known as the Sprint Cup), NASCAR's top racing series, and was named Rookie of the Year. He went on to win the Winston series championship in 1995, 1997, 1998 and 2001. Following his first victory at the Daytona 500 in 1997, Gordon won the prestigious race, which serves as the NASCAR season-opener, again in 1999 and 2005.
At the other end of the Daytona age spectrum from Gordon is 50-year-old Bobby Allison, who on February 14, 1988, became the oldest driver to win the Daytona 500. He had an average speed of 137.531 mph and collected over $202,000 in prize money. Allison's son Davey came in second place in that race. Bobby Allison, who was born on December 3, 1937, in Florida, drove in his first Daytona 500 in 1961 and went on to win the race in 1978 and 1982, in addition to his 1988 victory.
The first-ever Daytona 500 was held on February 22, 1959, at the then brand-new Daytona International Speedway in Daytona Beach, Florida. A crowd of more than 40,000 was on hand to witness the 59 cars that started the event. Lee Petty narrowly defeated Johnny Beauchamp to win the race with an average speed of 135.521 mph. He collected prize money of some $19,000. By comparison, Matt Kenseth won the 2009 Daytona 500 with an average speed of 132.816 mph, and took home prize money of more than $1.5 million.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on February 17, 2014, 11:13:52 pm
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On this day, February 17, 1911
The first self-starter, based on patented inventions created by General Motors (GM) engineers Clyde Coleman and Charles Kettering, was installed in a Cadillac. In the early years of fierce competition with Ford, the self-starter would play a key role in helping GM to keep pace. The Ford Model T's crank starter caused its share of borken jaws and ribs. Charles Kettering, the founder of Delco (Dayton Engineering Laboratories Company), devised countless improvements for the automobile, including lighting and ignition systems, lacquer finishes, antilock fuels, and leaded gasoline. Prior to his work with cars, Kettering also invented the electric cash register.
PICTURED: Charles F. Kettering, Alfred P. Sloan, Jr., and Nicholas Dreystadt, President of Cadillac Motor Car, looking over the first self starter

February 17, 1934
Pennsylvania State industrial engineer Amos Neyhart fitted his own car with dual brake, clutch linkages and began teaching driving to State College High School students in State College, PA, started American tradition of driver's education, provided both classroom and behind-the-wheel instruction. Students who completed Amos Neyhart's course received State of Pennsylvania driver's licenses.

February 17, 1972
The 15,007,034th Volkswagen Beetle rolled out of the Volkswagen factory in Wolfsburg, Germany, surpassing the Ford Model T's previous production record to become the most heavily produced car in history. The Beetle or the "Strength Through Joy" car, as the Germans initially called it, was the brainchild of Ferdinand Porsche. He developed the Volkswagen on orders from the German government to produce an affordable car for the people. Developed before World War II, the Beetle did not go into full-scale production until after the war. It became a counter-culture icon in the U.S. during the 1960s largely because it offered an alternative to the extravagant American cars of the time. In 1998, Volkswagen released the "New Beetle" to rave reviews.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on February 18, 2014, 08:44:12 pm
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On this day, February 18, 1898
Enzo Anselmo Ferrari was born in Modena, Italy. After fighting in World War I, where he lost both his brother and his father, Ferrari became a professional driver with the Costruzioni Meccaniche Nazional. The following year, Ferrari moved to Alpha Romeo, establishing a relationship that would span two decades and take Ferrari from test driver to the director post of the Alpha Racing Division. In 1929, Enzo founded Scuderia Ferrari, an organization that began as a racing club but that by 1933 had absorbed the entire race-engineering division at Alpha. For financial reasons, Alpha took back control of their racing division from Ferrari in 1939. His pride wounded, Ferrari left Alpha Romeo in 1940, transforming the Scuderia into an independent manufacturing company, the Auto Avio Costruzioni Ferrari. Construction of the first Ferrari vehicle was delayed until the end of World War II. Like Ferdinand Porsche, Enzo Ferrari suffered during the war, as his factory was bombed on numerous occasions. Still, Ferrari persisted with his work. In 1949, Ferrari's 166 won the 24 Hours at Le Mans, Europe's most famous car race. Ferrari would not look back. His passion for racing drove his company to become one of the world's premier race car builders. Ferrari cars would win 25 world titles and over 5,000 individual races during Enzo's 41-year reign. Off the track the company fared just as well. Responding to Ferrari's personal demand that his engineers create the finest sports car in the world, the company produced the F40 in 1987. With a top speed of 201mph and a 0 to 60 time of 3.5 seconds, the F40 may have been Ferrari's crowning achievement. Enzo Anselmo Ferrari died on August 14, 1988.
PICTURED: Enzo Anselmo Ferrari

February 18, 1973
Richard Petty, the "King of Stock Car Racing," won the Daytona 500 before a crowd of over 103,000 spectators, marking the first time a stock car race had drawn over 100,000 spectators. No longer would there be questions about NASCAR's mainstream popularity. On this same day in 1979, Petty became the first man to win six Daytona 500s. Winning the most prestigious event in any sport six times is enough to earn the nickname "The King," but Petty is perhaps most famous for his 1967 season in which he won 27 of 48 races, including a record 10 straight victories. In a sport where mechanical failure is commonplace, Petty's total domination was seen as superhuman. "The King" came from royal stock. His father, Lee Petty, was the first man to win the Daytona 500.

February 18, 2001
Dale Earnhardt Sr., one of the greatest drivers in NASCAR history, died in a last-lap crash at the 43rd Daytona 500 in Daytona Beach, Florida. He was 49. Earnhardt was about half a mile from the finish line when his car, the famous black No. 3 Chevrolet, spun out of control and then crashed into a wall while simultaneously colliding with driver Ken Schrader’s car. He died instantly of head injuries.
Earnhardt, whose tough, aggressive driving style earned him the nickname “The Intimidator,” was involved in another crash at the Daytona 500 in 1997, when his car flipped upside down on the backstretch. He managed to escape serious injury. In 1998, he went on to win the Daytona 500, his first and only victory in that race after 20 years of trying.
Earnhardt, a high-school dropout from humble beginnings in Kannapolis, North Carolina, said all he ever wanted to do in life was race cars. Indeed, he went on to become one of the sport’s most successful and respected drivers, with 76 career victories, including seven Winston Cup Series championships. In addition to his legendary accomplishments as a driver, Earnhardt was also a successful businessman and NASCAR team owner. The 2001 Daytona race which cost Earnhardt his life was won by Michael Waltrip, who drove for Dale Earnhardt, Inc. (DEI). Earnhardt’s son, Dale Jr., also a DEI driver, took second place in the race.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on February 19, 2014, 10:35:56 pm
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On this day, February 19, 1954
The Ford Thunderbird was born in prototype form. It wouldn't be released to the market on a wide scale until the fall of 1954, the beginning of the 1955 model year. The T-Bird was a scaled-down Ford built for two. It came with a removable fiberglass hard top and a convertible canvas roof for sunny days. Armed with a V-8 and sporty looks, the T-Bird was an image car. For $2,944 a driver could drop the top, turn the radio dial, and enter a more promising world. General Motors had created the Corvette two years earlier to meet the needs of the G.I. who had developed a taste for European sports cars. In keeping with Ford's cautious tradition, the T-Bird, its response to the Corvette, still looked like a Ford and was classified as a "personal car" and not a "sports car." But it was popular. Just as it had relied heavily on one car, the Model T, in its early stages, Ford would rely heavily on the T-Bird to bolster its image as a progressive car maker capable of keeping pace with GM. A decade later the Mustang would take the torch from the T-Bird, but to remember Ford in the 1950s one only needs to call to mind the stylish growl of the Thunderbird's V-8.
PICTURED: 1955 Ford Thunderbird (AKA - The Thunder Chicken)

February 19, 1961
Andy Wallace, a professional race car driver was born in Oxford, England. Wallace was the driver for the then record-setting speed of 240.14 mph (386.47 km/h) in a McLaren F1, which for over 11 years this was the world record for the fastest production car.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on February 20, 2014, 09:43:14 pm
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On this day, February 20, 1993
Ferrucio Lamborghini died, leaving behind a remarkable life story of a farm boy with big dreams. Born on his family's farm outside of Bologna, Italy, Lamborghini grew up tinkering with tractors. He enrolled in an industrial college near Bologna, where he studied machinery. Graduating just before World War II, Lamborghini then served as an engineer in the Italian Air Force. After the war he returned to his family's farm and began assembling tractors from leftover war vehicles. Lamborghini built such high-quality tractors that by the mid-1950s, the Lamborghini Tractor Company had become one of Italy's largest farm equipment manufacturers. But Ferrucio dreamt of cars. In 1963, he bought land, built an ultra-modern factory, and hired distinguished Alfa Romeo designer Giotti Bizzarini. Together they set out to create the ultimate automobile. In 1964, Lamborghini produced the 300 GT, a large and graceful sports car. By 1974, Ferrucio Lamborghini had sold out of the business bearing his name, but the company would never deviate from his initial mission to create exquisite vehicles at whatever cost.

February 20, 1937
Legendary driver and designer Roger Penske was born. While he drove and designed a variety of race-car models, Penske is most famous for his achievements in Indy car design, a field that he dominated for many years. Penske cars won three consecutive Indy 500s from 1987 to 1989 and 11 Indy 500s in 23 years. Overseeing the development of his team cars, Penske created an empire that would redefine Indy car racing. Asked why the Penske car was so successful, champion driver Emerson Fitipaldi explained, "The Penske is consistent and easy to adjust. That's why it wins." In addition to his achievements on the track, Roger Penske also changed the Indy game by founding CART (Championship Auto Racing Teams.) Penske created CART as an attempt to increase Indy car team owners' control over Indy 500 rule changes, then dictated by the USAC.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on February 21, 2014, 07:22:29 pm
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On this day, February 21, 1954
The 1954 Grand National at Daytona was a microcosm of early NASCAR history. The crowds gathered to see which of the two dominant models of stock car--the fast Olds 88 or the tight handling Hudson Hornet--would take control of the race. However, the first car into the last turn of the first lap wasn't a Hudson or an Olds, but rather Lee Petty's Chrysler New Yorker. Unfortunately, Petty was going faster, and he crashed through the wooden embankment at the back of the turn. Unperturbed, Petty got back in the race. Nineteen laps later his breaks failed. Driving the rest of the race with no breaks, Petty downshifted his way into a competitive position. A late stop for fuel, though, sealed his fate, as he overshot his pit and lost precious seconds. Petty crossed the finish line second to the favored Olds 88 car driven by Tim Flock. The next morning Petty, eating breakfast with his family in a hotel restaurant, learned that Flock's Olds had been disqualified. Petty had won Daytona with no brakes.
PICTURED: Lee Petty's Chrysler New Yorker (1954)

February 21, 1948
Six days after its first race was held, NASCAR was officially incorporated as the National Association for Stock Car Racing, with race promoter Bill France as president. From the beginning, stock car racing had a widespread appeal with its fan base. As the legend goes, the sport evolved from Southern liquor smugglers who souped up their pre-war Fords to outrun the police. NASCAR brought the sport organization and legitimacy. It was Bill France who realized that product identification would increase enthusiasm for the sport. He wanted the fans to see the cars they drove to the track win the races on the track. By 1949, all the postwar car models had been released, so NASCAR held a 150-mile race at the Charlotte Speedway to introduce its Grand National Division. The race was restricted to late-model strictly stock automobiles. NASCAR held nine Grand National events that year. By the end of the year, it was apparent that the strictly stock cars could not withstand the pounding of the Grand Nationals, so NASCAR drafted rules to govern the changes drivers could make to their cars. Modified stock car racing was born. Starting in 1953, the major auto makers invested heavily in stock car racing teams, believing that good results on the track would translate into better sales in the showroom. In 1957, rising production costs and tightened NASCAR rules forced the factories out of the sport. Today NASCAR racing is the fastest growing spectator sport in America.

Also on February 21,
1431 - England begins trial against Joan of Arc

1764 - John Wilkes thrown out of Engl House of Commons for "Essay on Women"

1804 - 1st locomotive, Richard Trevithick's, runs for 1st time, in Wales

1882 - NYC's 24 hour race begins, winner with most mileage in 24 hours

1937 - Initial flight of the first successful flying car, Waldo Waterman's Arrowbile.

1964 - UK flies 24,000 rolls of Beatles wallpaper to US

Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on February 23, 2014, 12:46:30 am
(http://i1011.photobucket.com/albums/af233/carl44s/Board%20Tracks%20US%201910%20-%201931/shb18.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/carl44s/media/Board%20Tracks%20US%201910%20-%201931/shb18.jpg.html)

On this day, February 22, 1923
The 1,000,000th Chevy was produced. Chevrolet began when William Durant hired Louis Chevrolet, a Swiss race-car driver and star of the Buick Racing Team, to design a new car. Durant hoped to challenge the success of the Ford Model T with an affordable, reliable car. Chevrolet wanted to design a finer sort of automobile, however. Their product, the Classic Six, was an elegant car with a large price tag. But Durant built two more models, sturdier and cheaper, and Chevy was on its way. Durant eventually made over a million dollars in profits on his Chevrolet marque, money that allowed him to reacquire a majority interest in General Motors stock. Durant eventually merged the two companies and created GM's current configuration. Louis Chevrolet left the company before the merger, leaving only his name to benefit from the company's success.
PICTURED: Sheepshead Bay 'Harkness Handicap' 1/6/18. A 2 mile lap consisting of 50 laps. Louis Chevrolet & Frontenac rolled 7th with a time of 50 laps @ 1:03:48

February 22, 1949
Stylish Austrian race-car driver Niki Lauda was born in Vienna, Austria. Lauda is also the founder of Air Lauda, a continental European airline that features flight attendants in denim jeans and Team Lauda baseball caps.

February 22, 1959
It's difficult to talk about NASCAR without talking about the Daytona 500, and it's difficult to talk about the Daytona 500 without mentioning the Petty family. On this day in 1959, Lee Petty won the first Daytona 500 at the brand-new Daytona International Speedway, driving a new hardtop Olds 88 to a photo finish with Johnny Beauchamp. The Petty family would switch to Plymouths midway through the season that year. Richard and Lee Petty drove Plymouths, Chryslers, and Dodges for most of their remaining careers. Together the father and son team combined for 254 wins, including eight Daytona 500s. The Daytona 500 would become the premier event in NASCAR racing.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on February 23, 2014, 11:37:50 pm

(http://i1149.photobucket.com/albums/o588/Goodwood95/Formel%201%20%201950-1959/IMG_0008.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/Goodwood95/media/Formel%201%20%201950-1959/IMG_0008.jpg.html)

On this day, February 23, 1958
In a bizarre twist, Argentine racing champion Juan Manuel Fangio was kidnapped by Communist guerrillas in Havana, Cuba, one day before the second Havana Grand Prix. Members of the July 26 Movement (M-26-7) and followers of Fidel Castro and Che Guevara, the kidnappers hoped to make a political statement by kidnapping the world-famous Fangio before he could defend his title at the Havana Grand Prix. "We wanted to show that Cuba was living in a situation of war against the Batista tyranny," explained Arnol Rodriguez, a member of the kidnapping team. Revolutionary Manuel Uziel, holding a revolver, approached Fangio in the lobby of his hotel and ordered the race-car driver to identify himself. Fangio reportedly thought it was a joke until Uziel was joined by a group of men carrying submachine guns. Fangio reacted calmly as the kidnappers explained to him their intention to keep him only until the race was over. After his release to the Argentine Embassy, Fangio revealed a fondness for his kidnappers, refusing to help identify them and relaying their explanation that the kidnapping was a political statement. In the meantime, the Havana Grand Prix had been marred by a terrible accident, leading Fangio to believe that he had been spared for a reason. Years later, Fangio would return to Havana on a work mission. He was received as a guest of the state, and he expressed his gratitude with quiet eloquence, "Two big dreams have come true for me: returning to Cuba and meeting Fidel Castro." Fangio was famous for winning races; he became legendary by missing one.

February 23, 1893
Rudolf Diesel received a German patent for the diesel engine. The diesel engine burns fuel oil rather than gasoline and differs from the gasoline engine in that it uses compressed air in the cylinder rather than a spark to ignite the fuel. Diesel engines were used widely in Europe for their efficiency and power, and are still used today in most heavy industrial machinery. In 1977, General Motors became the first American car company to introduce diesel-powered automobiles. The diesel-powered Olds 88 and 98 models were 40 percent more fuel-efficient than their gas-powered counterparts. The idling and reduced power efficiency of the diesel engine is much greater than that of the spark engine. Diesel cars never caught on in the U.S., partly because the diesel engine's greater efficiency is counter-balanced by its higher emissions of soot, odor, and air pollutants. Today, the argument over which engine is more environmentally friendly is still alive; some environmentalists argue that in spite of the diesel engine's exhaust pollution, its fuel efficiency may make it more environmentally sound than the gasoline engine in the long run.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: boss69hogg on February 24, 2014, 08:11:53 pm
 :flag:I was born! :thumb:
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on February 24, 2014, 10:46:39 pm
(http://i746.photobucket.com/albums/xx102/twinsix/ancient%20auto%20pix/Hudson.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/twinsix/media/ancient%20auto%20pix/Hudson.jpg.html)

February 24, 1909
The Hudson Motor Car Company, founded by Joseph Hudson, in Detroit, Michigan, was incorporated. Hudson is perhaps most famous for its impact on NASCAR racing, which it accomplished thanks to a revolutionary design innovation. In 1948, Hudson introduced the Monobuilt design. The Monobuilt consisted of a chassis and frame that were combined in a unified passenger compartment, producing a strong, lightweight design with a beneficial lower center of gravity that did not affect road clearance. Hudson called the innovation the "step-down design" because, for the first time, drivers had to step down to get into their cars. In 1951, Hudson introduced the Hornet. Fitted with a bigger engine than previous Hudson models, the Hudson Hornet became a dominant force on the NASCAR circuit. Because of its lower center of gravity, the Hornet glided around corners with relative ease, leaving its unstable competitors in the dust. For the first time a car not manufactured by the Big Three was winning big. In 1952, Hudson won 29 of 34 events. Excited by their success on the track, Hudson executives began directly backing their racing teams, providing the team cars with everything they needed to increase success. The Big Three responded, and in doing so brought about the system of industry-backed racing that has become such a prominent marketing tool today. The Hudson Hornet would dominate NASCAR racing until 1955 when rule changes led to an emphasis on horsepower over handling.

February 24, 1955
Formula 1 all-time victory leader Alain Prost was born in Saint-Chamond, France. Affectionately called "The Professor" by his fans for his cool, calculated driving style, Prost won 51 Grand Prix races during his F1 career. The French adore Prost for, among other things, his ability to uphold the country's national sporting tradition of winning on home soil. Prost won six French Grand Prix's, a record of national success second to none. Prost is perhaps best remembered for his late 1980s battles with British bulldog Nigel Mansel, and the late Brasilian superhero Ayrton Senna.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on February 24, 2014, 10:47:50 pm
:flag:I was born! :thumb:

happy Birthday Dave
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on February 25, 2014, 11:19:34 pm


(http://i891.photobucket.com/albums/ac114/MotorsportRevolution/Ashley%20Cooper/r227156_902376.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/MotorsportRevolution/media/Ashley%20Cooper/r227156_902376.jpg.html)

On this day, 25 February 2008
Ashley Alan Cooper, an Australian race car driver died from severe head and internal injuries after a high speed racing accident. Preliminary investigation suggests that his car may have clipped a guard rail at over 200 km/h at the Clipsal 500 meeting in Adelaide.
Cooper began his racing career in 1998 driving Holden HQ sedans. Leading the 2005 Commodore Cup championship for most of the year, Cooper finished fourth at the final round at Eastern Creek Raceway. In 2006, Cooper was crowned V8 Utes Rookie of the Year. He competed in three rounds of the 2007 Fujitsu V8 Supercar Series, with a top 15 finish at Queensland Raceway.

February 25, 1837
Thomas Davenport, of Brandon, VT, received a patent for an "Electric Motor" ("Improvement in Propelling Machinery by Magnetism and Electro-Magnetism"); probably the first commercially successful electric motor; first to secure a US patent for his direct current motor.

February 25, 1919
Oregon, USA became first state to impose 1% tax on gasoline. Collected funds used for road construction, maintenance.

25 February 1932
Charles Anthony Standish Brooks aka Tony Brooks, a British former racing driver was born in Dukinfield, Cheshire. He was also known as the "racing dentist". He participated in 39 Formula One World Championship Grands Prix, debuting on 14 July 1956, and scored the first win by a British driver in a British car in a Grand Prix since 1923, in 1955 driving a Connaught at Syracuse in a non World Championship race. He won 6 races for Vanwall and Ferrari, secured 4 pole positions, achieved 10 podiums, and scored a total of 74 championship points. He drove for BRM but retired from the team at the end of 1961, just before their most successful season.

February 25, 1961
David Carl "Davey" Allison, a NASCAR race car driver was born in Hollywood, Florida. He was best known as the driver of the Robert Yates Racing #28 Texaco-Havoline Ford. He was the eldest of four children born to NASCAR driver Bobby Allison and wife Judy. The family moved to Hueytown, Alabama and along with Bobby's brother Donnie Allison, family friend Red Farmer, and Neil Bonnett, became known in racing circles as the Alabama Gang. He died in his newly acquired Hughes 369HS helicopter crash while flying to Talladega Superspeedway.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on February 26, 2014, 11:00:50 pm
(http://i1252.photobucket.com/albums/hh579/adsofyesteryear/1909WINTONCAR.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/adsofyesteryear/media/1909WINTONCAR.jpg.html)

On this day, February 26, 1903
Alexander Winton, driving his Winton Bullet, set the first speed record ever achieved at Daytona Beach, Florida. Built in 1902 the "Bullet Number 1" drove a measured mile at over 65mph. The first automobile race at Daytona was held a year earlier when Winton and his Bullet took on Ransom Olds. The race was declared a tie as both cars reached a top speed of 57mph. For hardware lovers, the "Bullet 1" carried a massive water-cooled four-cylinder engine with a displacement of 792 cubic inches. It had automatic intake valves, operated by compressed air, and an overhead cam. Winton's "Bullet 2" carried two four-cylinder engines bolted together, creating a straight eight. Winton's cars were driven by legendary speed demon Barney Oldfield, whose celebrated competitions with Ralph DePalma carried car racing through its first decade. Oldfield was America's first racing icon. Fans loved to watch him speed to victory with an unsmoked cigar clamped in his teeth.

February 26, 1935
The Pontiac "Indian Maiden" mascot was patented by its designers Chris Klein and C. Karnstadt. Pontiac, the namesake of the General Motors manufacturing division, was a male war chief of the Ottawa tribe, who distinguished himself through his bravery in fighting the English during the French and Indian Wars. The "Indian Maiden" mascot, therefore, is either a cross-dressed representation of Pontiac or a thoughtful attempt by its designers to find him a compatible hood ornament.

February 26, 1936
Hitler introduced Ferdinand Porsche's "Volkswagen" a.k.a. Kdf-Wagen.

February 26, 1945
Australian race car legend Peter Brock was born

(http://i891.photobucket.com/albums/ac114/MotorsportRevolution/Peter%20Brock/Peter-Brock-6005003.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/MotorsportRevolution/media/Peter%20Brock/Peter-Brock-6005003.jpg.html)
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on February 27, 2014, 11:09:57 pm
(http://i98.photobucket.com/albums/l272/Oldspeedstuff/bonspeedboys/Brad_Boyd_Smoothster.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/Oldspeedstuff/media/bonspeedboys/Brad_Boyd_Smoothster.jpg.html)

February 27, 2008
Boyd Leon Coddington of American Hot Rod, TV series fame died due to diabetic complications. Coddington had been hospitalized in January 2008, shortly after New Year's Eve. He was discharged, but was readmitted just a few days later to Presbyterian Intercommunity Hospital in suburban California. After being readmitted, doctors performed surgery and Boyd was expected to make a complete recovery but died on February 27, 2008 due to complications that were brought on from a recent surgery along with liver and kidney complications.
Many of the next generation of customizers started their career with Coddington. Larry Erickson, later the Chief Designer of the Mustang and Thunderbird for Ford Motor Co. worked with Coddington early on, and specifically credits the CadZZilla collaboration for jump-starting his career. Legendary designer Chip Foose, and fabricator Jesse James both started their careers in his shop. Foose rose to become the president of Coddington's company Hot Rods by Boyd, but later departed to start his own firm. The two became fierce competitors, to the point that their personal relationship split. Coddington hosted the Discovery Channel show “American Hot Rod", where he competed fiercely as well with his former protegé.
Coddington's creations have won the Grand National Roadster Show's "America's Most Beautiful Roadster (AMBR)" award seven times, the Daimler-Chrysler Design Excellence award twice, and entry into both the Grand National Roadster Show Hall of Fame and the National Rod & Custom Museum Hall of Fame . In 1997, Coddington (along with Foose), was inducted into the Hot Rod Hall of Fame.
PICTURED: Brad Fanshaw and Boyd Coddington with the just finished "Smoothster" in 1995. Boyd and Brad were business partners in Boyds Wheels and Hot Rods by Boyd. Chip Foose standing on far left

February 27, 1914
In the first decade of automobile racing, one rivalry stood out above the others: the brash Barney Oldfield vs. the gentlemanly Ralph DePalma. It was DePalma who got the better of Oldfield in the 9th Vanderbilt Cup in Santa Monica, California. The Vanderbilt Cup was American racing's first tradition. The event was founded in 1904 to introduce Europe's best racers and manufacturers to the U.S. Named after the event's sponsor, William K. Vanderbilt Jr., the Vanderbilt Cup ran every year from 1904 to 1915, when race fatalities finally led Vanderbilt to shut down the event. With the amazing safety technology available in car racing today, it is hard for us to imagine just how dangerous racing was for men like Barney Oldfield and Ralph DePalma. Racers of their generation had more in common with Chuck Yeager and John Glenn than with the racers of today. Equipped with enormous engines and almost no suspension or steering technology, the pre-World War I race car was a hunk of metal on wheels capable of propelling itself over 60mph on dirt tracks. Guiding the cars through turns was as much a test of brute strength and raw courage as it was a test of skill. With death as a silent participant in every race, it is clear why a race between Barney Oldfield and Ralph DePalma was as fascinating to spectators. Oldfield, hard-nosed and streetwise would race anyone, anywhere, anytime. DePalma was a product of the system; deferential and quiet, but he was no less courageous. The rivalry would come to a head during the 1917 match races between the two men. Large-scale racing had been halted due to World War I, but head-to-head match races commanded considerable crowds. Oldfield, driving the Harry Miller designed "Golden Submarine," an aluminum-framed technological wonder, defeated DePalma and his more traditional Packard, powered by a 12-cylinder aircraft engine.

February 27, 1934
Ralph Nader was in Winsted, Connecticut. Nader would revolutionize consumer advocacy with his 1965 book, Unsafe at Any Speed: The Designed-In Dangers of the American Automobile, in which he lambasted the safety standards of the Big Three automotive manufacturers.

February 27, 1948
The Federal Trade Commission issued a restraining order, preventing the Willys-Overland Company from representing that it had developed the Jeep. Willys-Overland did, in fact, end up producing the Army vehicle that would come to be known as the Jeep; but it was the Bantam Motor Company that first presented the innovative design to the Army.

February 27, 1813 - Congress authorizes use of steamboats to transport mail

February 27, 1981 - Greatest passenger load on a commercial airliner-610 on Boeing 747

February 27, 1988 - Gulfstream G-IV goes around the world 36:08:34
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on February 28, 2014, 10:49:45 pm
(http://i301.photobucket.com/albums/nn72/rdpmtlsuperbird70/RICHARD%20PETTY/Daytona5001960.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/rdpmtlsuperbird70/media/RICHARD%20PETTY/Daytona5001960.jpg.html)

On this day, February 28, 1960
Richard Petty, the king of stock car racing, recorded his first Grand National victory at the old Charlotte, North Carolina, fairgrounds. Eight months earlier Richard had edged out his father, Lee, at the Grand National race in Lakewood, Georgia, only to watch his victory reviewed on the grounds of his own father's protest. The protest was upheld, and Lee Petty was awarded the win. It's not hard to tell how Richard developed the competitive instinct that would make him the winningest NASCAR race of all time.
PICTURE: Daytona 500 in 1960

February 28, 1903
Henry Ford hired John F. and Horace E. Dodge to supply the chassis and running gear for his 650 Ford automobiles. John and Horace, who began their business careers as bicycle manufacturers in 1897, first entered the automobile industry as manufacturers of auto parts in 1901. Manufacturing car bodies for Henry Ford and Ransom Olds, the Dodge Brothers had become the largest parts-manufacturing firm in the U.S. by 1910. In 1914, the brothers founded the Dodge Brothers Motor Car Company, and began work on their first automobiles. Dodge vehicles were known for their quality and sturdiness, and by 1919 the Dodge Brothers were among the richest men in America. Their good fortune didn't hold, however. Both brothers died of influenza in 1920. Their company was sold to a New York bank, before eventually being purchased by Chrysler in 1928. Under Chrysler's direction, Dodge became a successful producer of cars and trucks marketed for their ruggedness.

February 28, 1932
The last Ford Model A was produced, ending an era for the Ford Motor Company. The successor to the Model T, the Model A was an attempt to escape the image of bare bones transportation that had driven both the Model T's success and its ultimate failure in the market. The vastly improved Model A boasted elegant Lincoln-like styling, a peppy 40 horsepower four-cylinder engine, and, of course, a self-starting mechanism. The Model A was as affordable as its predecessor, however, and with a base price at $460, five million Model A's would roll onto American highways between 1927 and 1932.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on March 01, 2014, 08:15:02 pm
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On this day, February 29, 1908 (leap year)
At the Brooklands track in Weybridge, England, a standardization test of three random Cadillacs (famous 1908 parts interchangeability test) took place under the watchful eye of the Royal Automobile Club. This test was the first step towards a heightened reputation for American motor cars overall. Proving the concept of interchangeable parts to be a valid one was a leap towards mass-production and more ease in car repair. Three 1907 Model Ks were used in this test, more famously known as Dewar Trophy test of the Royal Automobile Club in England. They were disassembled, the parts mixed, and then reassembled without problems. This test cemented the Cadillac's reputation for precision and quality and brought fame to the marque.


February 29, 1964
William S. James, who designed cars for Hupmobile, Studebaker, and Ford, and who served as vice president for Research and Engineering with the Fram Corporation, died at the age of 71.

February 29, 1992
Earl Scheib, founder of a company that specializes in repainting and collision repair of automobiles died on this day.
He founded the company in Los Angeles in 1937, the company grew quickly following World War II and by 1975 had branches in Germany and England, all company owned, with Scheib manufacturing his own paint. Scheib's policy of one-day service and production line techniques flew directly into the face of state-of-the-art professional auto body standards.
After Scheib's death, the company was sold to a group of investors led by former college basketball champions Chris Bement and Dan Siegal, who made his fortune in Las Vegas winnings. The company was restructured, and improvements were made in the quality of paint.

Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on March 01, 2014, 08:29:08 pm
(http://i824.photobucket.com/albums/zz165/ainsworthIN/Miscellaneous/1910WintonSix.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/ainsworthIN/media/Miscellaneous/1910WintonSix.jpg.html)

On this day, March 1, 1897
The Winton Motor Carriage Company was organized in Cleveland, Ohio, with Alexander Winton as president. After 12 years in the bicycle manufacturing business, Winton began producing cars with his name on them in 1896. A fiery Scotsman, Winton took the challenge to build the world's fastest automobile personally. Like Ransom Olds, he raced his own cars. Racing at Daytona Beach is said to have begun with a match race between Winton and Olds in 1902, which the two men declared a draw. A year later, Winton won a multi-car race at Daytona, driving his Winton Bullet to an average speed of 68mph and becoming the first person to break the mile-per-minute barrier. Alexander Winton's personal rivalries did not stop with Ransom Olds. In 1901, Henry Ford, after being passed over for a mechanic's job with Winton's company, defeated Winton in his first and last car race. Ford's future notoriety would depend heavily on the publicity won in his encounter with his one-time potential employer. James Ward Packard also maintained a personal rivalry with Winton. After having purchased a Winton, Packard complained about the car's reliability. Winton reportedly politely urged Packard to build his own car. Packard responded by starting his own company. In the first decade of American car racing Wintons and Packards, driven by Barney Oldfield and Ralph DePalma, respectively, would fuel the sport's greatest rivalry. In 1903, Winton drove his car from San Francisco to New York to prove the reliability of his vehicles. It was the automotive industry's most dramatic achievement up to that point as such a long trip by an automobile was unheard of in 1897 but Mr. Winton believed he could do it.

A popular anecdote sums up Winton's involvment in the early automotive industry. Faced with mechanical problems in an early Winton, a Cleveland area resident reportedly towed his Winton through the streets of Cleveland with a team of mules exhibiting a sign reading, "This is the only way you can drive a Winton." In response, Winton hired a farm wagon carrying a jackass to follow his detractor, exhibiting a sign that read, "This is the only animal unable to drive a Winton."
A must read book on Winton and his acheivement is rightfully named 'Famous but forgotten' authored by Thomas Saal and Bernard Golias This 192-page book includes numerous photographs of vintage Winton automobiles and their accomplishments in performance races. Winton's career, from bicycle manufacturer to automotive innovator to diesel-engine developer for trains, illustrates the versatility which his prodigious creativity required.


March 1, 1973
The Honda Civic was introduced to the United States market. Luckily for Honda, the introduction of the small, fuel-efficient car coincided with the oil crisis of the early 1970s. This made car owners aware of the advantages of fuel economy and the Civic became a popular alternative to the inefficient cars offered by American car companies.
Civic is the second-longest continuously-running nameplate from a Japanese manufacturer, with Toyota Corolla, introduced in 1968, taking the first spot.

March 1, 1941
The first Ford general-purpose vehicles (jeeps) rolled off the assembly line in Dearborn, Michigan to support the Allied effort in World War II. Ford employees built more than 277,000 of these off-road military vehicles.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on March 02, 2014, 09:45:11 pm
(http://i493.photobucket.com/albums/rr299/Sport-GT-Monoplace/Ferrari%20Sport/1947-Maranellomars-125S-LuigiBazzi.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/Sport-GT-Monoplace/media/Ferrari%20Sport/1947-Maranellomars-125S-LuigiBazzi.jpg.html)

On this day, March 2, 1947
Enzo Ferrari drove his first 125S vehicle out of the factory gates.

March 2, 1918
Hans Ledwinka, the engineer who created the Tatra marquee, died in Munich, Germany, at the age of 89. Early in his career, Ledwinka took over engineering for Nesseldorf Wagenbau of Austria-Hungary when the founder of the company, Hugo von Roslerstamm, decided the company should enter racing. Under Ledwinka's leadership, the Rennzweier and the Type A racers were produced. The cars demonstrated modest racing success, and wide-scale production of the Type S began in 1909. Nesseldorf Wagenbau continued to grow until 1914, when, coinciding with the outbreak of WWI, it shifted to railroad production. On October 28, 1918, two weeks before the end of the war on the Western Front, the Moravian town of Nesseldorf of Austria-Hungary became the city of Koprivnicka in the newly created country of Czechoslovakia. Just after the war, Hans Ledwinka began construction of a new automobile to be marketed under the marquee Tatra, a division of the newly named Koprivnicka Wagenbau. The Tatra High Mountains are among the highest mountains in the Carpathian Mountain Range, the legendary home of Bram Stoker's Dracula. Ledwinka settled on the name Tatra in 1919 when an experimental model of his car with four-wheel brakes passed a sleigh on an icy mountain road, prompting the sleigh riders to exclaim, "This is a car for the Tatras." In 1923, the first official Tatra automobile, the Tatra T11, was completed, and Ledwinka's hope for an affordable "people's car" was realized. The reliable, rugged T11, like Ford's Model T, gave many Czechoslovakians their first opportunity to own an automobile. In 1934, Tatra achieved automotive notoriety with the introduction of the Tatra 77, the world's first aerodynamically styled automobile powered by a rear-mounted air-cooled engine.

March 2, 1925
The first nationwide highway numbering system was instituted by the joint board of state and federal highway officials appointed by the secretary of agriculture. In order to minimize confusion caused by the array of multiform state-appointed highway signs, the board created the shield-shaped highway number markers that have become a comforting sight to lost travelers in times since. Later, interstate highway numbering would be improved by colored signs and the odd-even demarcation that distinguishes between north-south and east-west travel respectively. As America got its kicks on Route 66, it did so under the aegis of the trusty shield.

March 2, 1949
The first automatic streetlight system in which the streetlights turned themselves on at dark was installed in New Milford, Connecticut, by the Connecticut Light and Power Company. Each streetlight contained an electronic device that contained a photoelectric cell capable of measuring outside light. By November of 1949, seven miles of New Milford's roads were automatically lit at dusk by a total of 190 photoelectric streetlights. No longer would the proud men of New Milford be forced to put on stilts in order to light their street lamps.

(http://i645.photobucket.com/albums/uu176/MustangMayhem/this%20day%20in%20HISTORY/10427230_10150515612309949_8236829490799356593_n_zpskb2kibrf.jpg) (http://s645.photobucket.com/user/MustangMayhem/media/this%20day%20in%20HISTORY/10427230_10150515612309949_8236829490799356593_n_zpskb2kibrf.jpg.html)

March 2, 1966
The millionth Ford Mustang rolled off Ford's assembly line
March 2, 2015
Australian racing legend, Leo Geoghegan passes away after a lengthy battle with prostate cancer. The motor racing champion, whose career began in 1956 in an early model Holden and captured an extensive range of titles including the Australian Drivers’ Championship 1970, the Australian GT Championship in 1960, the Australian Formula Junior Championship in 1963 and the Australian F2 Championship from 1973-74, also shared second place in the 1967 Gallaher 500 with his famous brother, ‘Pete’.
He capped an outstanding career with victory in the international Japan Grand Prix of 1969, driving the Lotus 39-Repco V8. Geoghegan and Lotus enjoyed a close association for many years and were renowned for the superb presentation of the team.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on March 03, 2014, 08:56:53 pm
(http://i865.photobucket.com/albums/ab215/woodburner802/Dealers/Tucker/1-PrestonTuckerautomagnateandwifefreedoffraudcharges1023AM12350.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/woodburner802/media/Dealers/Tucker/1-PrestonTuckerautomagnateandwifefreedoffraudcharges1023AM12350.jpg.html)

On this day, March 3, 1949
The postwar car market was so strong in the United States that a number of bold entrepreneurs formed independent car companies to challenge the established Big Three. Arguably the most remarkable such independent was the Tucker Corporation, founded by Preston "P.T." Tucker. Tucker, a gifted marketeer and innovator, created a phenomenon felt through the automotive industry when he released his car, the Tucker. Along with the cars, Preston Tucker sent a magazine called "Tucker Topics" along to dealers, hoping to increase the salesmen's enthusiasm for his automobile. The Tucker was equipped with a number of novel features. It had six exhaust pipes, a third headlight that rotated with the axle, and a "bomb shelter" in the backseat. Beyond the frills though, the Tucker packed a powerful punch, making 0-60mph in 10 seconds and reaching a top speed of 120mph. Great anticipation surrounded the awaited release of the Tucker, but in 1949, before his cars could reach their market, the Securities and Exchange Commission indicted Preston Tucker on 31 counts of investment fraud. Tucker had only produced 51 cars. On this day in 1949, the Tucker Corporation went into receivership, and the Tucker automobile became merely a historical footnote.
PICTURED: After the verdict : Preston Tucker, auto magnate, and wife, freed of fraud charges, 10.23 AM, 23rd Jan 1950

March 3, 1931 
"Star Spangled Banner" officially becomes US national anthem

March 3, 1932
Alfieri Maserati died at the age of 44 from complications resulting form injuries incurred in a 1927 racing accident.

March 3, 1937
Australia snatch series against England 3-2 after being 2-0 down

March 3, 1972
Sir William Lyons, founder of Jaguar Motors, retired as Chairman of Jaguar Cars Ltd. Lyons got his start making motorcycle sidecars in Blackpool, England. In 1926, he co-founded the Swallow Sidecar and Coachbuilding Company with William Walmsley. Recognizing the demand for automobiles, Lyons eventually built wooden frames for the Austin Seven Car, calling his creation the Austin Swallow. Spurred on by the warm reception of his Austin Swallows, Lyons began building his own cars, which he called Standard Swallows. In 1934, his company, now SS Cars Ltd., released a line of cars called Jaguars. After WWII, Lyons dropped the "SS" initials that reminded people of the Nazi SS soldiers. Jaguar Cars Ltd. went on to produce a number of exquisite sports cars and roadsters, among them the XK 120, the D Type, and the XK-E or E Type. Perhaps Lyons' most monumental achievement, the E Type was the fastest sports car in the world when it was released in 1961. With a top speed of 150mph and a 0-60mph of 6.5 seconds, the Jaguar made a remarkable 17 miles to the gallon and suffered nothing in its looks. In spite of Jaguar's distinguished record on the race track, the company is associated most with the beautiful lines of its car bodies appropriate considering Lyons's first offering to the automobile industry was a wooden frame bolted to another man's car. After a series of bouyouts by various auto companies, now its owned by Indian Conglomerate 'TATA'.

1943 - Battle of the Bismarck Sea during WWII: Australian and American airforces devastate Japanese navy convoy

1955 - Elvis Presley made his 1st TV appearance

1969 - Apollo 9 launched for 151 Earth orbits (10 days)

1991 - Boon completes 10th Test Cricket century, 109* v WI at Kingston

1991 - LA Police severly beat motorist Rodney King, captured on amateur video

1997 - The tallest free-standing structure in the Southern Hemisphere, Sky Tower in downtown Auckland, New Zealand, opens after two-and-a-half years of construction.

2005 - Steve Fossett becomes the first person to fly an airplane around the world solo without any stops without refueling - a journey of 40,234 km/25,000 mi completed in 67 hours and 2 minutes.

2013 - A 2 year old US girl becomes the first child born with HIV to be cured

Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on March 04, 2014, 10:52:29 pm
(http://i1107.photobucket.com/albums/h389/Archer46176/Studebaker%20Museum/783696087_photobucket_68341_.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/Archer46176/media/Studebaker%20Museum/783696087_photobucket_68341_.jpg.html)

On this day, March 4, 1888
Knute Kenneth Rockne, football coach at the University of Notre Dame and namesake of the Studebaker's Rockne brand, was born in Voss, Norway. Studebaker, based along with Notre Dame in South Bend, Indiana, named the Rockne brand after the winningest coach in college football history and arguably the most important man in town and was once a salesman for Studebaker. The low-priced Rockne was produced between 1932 to 1933. However, unlike Coach Rockne, the Rockne never enjoyed success as the Great Depression put the squeeze on all U.S. markets.
March 4, 1887
PICTURED: The 1932 Studebaker Rockne

The Daimler "benzin motor carriage" made its first test run in Esslingen and Cannstatt, Germany. It was Gottlieb Daimler's first four-wheel motor vehicle. The "benzin" has nothing to do with Carl Benz; at that time Gottlieb Daimler was Carl Benz's major competitor. Daimler, an engineer whose passion was the engine itself, had created and patented the first gasoline-powered, water-cooled, internal combustion engine in 1885. In Daimler's engine, water circulated around the engine block, preventing the engine from overheating. The same system is used in most of today's automobiles. Daimler's first four-wheel motor vehicle had a one-cylinder engine and a top speed of 10 miles per hour. By 1899, Daimler's German competitor, Benz and Company, had become the world's largest car manufacturer. In the same year, a wealthy Austrian businessman named Emile Jellinek saw a Daimler Phoenix win a race in Nice, France. So impressed was he with Daimler's car that he offered to buy 36 vehicles from Daimler should he create a more powerful model, but requested that the car be named after his daughter, Mercedes. Gottlieb Daimler would never see the result of his business deal with Jellinek, but his corporation would climb to great heights without him. The Mercedes began a revolution in the car manufacturing industry. The new car was lower to the ground than other vehicles of its time, and it possessed a wider wheelbase for improved cornering. It had four speeds, including reverse, and it reached a top speed of 47mph. The first Mercedes had a four-cylinder engine and is generally considered the first modern car. In the year of its birth, the Mercedes set a world speed record of 49.4mph in Nice, France--the very course that was responsible for its marque's conception. By 1905, Mercedes cars had reached speeds of 109mph. Forever reluctant to enter car racing, Carl Benz realized he must compete with Daimler's Mercedes to preserve his company's standing in the automotive industry. For 20 years, Mercedes and Benz competed on racetracks around the world. In 1926, the Daimler and Benz corporations merged. The two founders never met.

March 4, 1902
The American Automobile Association (AAA) was organized. The American Motor League (AML) had been the first organization to address the problems that commonly plague motorists, but it fell apart due to a diverse membership that featured powerful car makers who wanted to limit the AML only to issues that affected car manufacturing and engineering. However, soon trade groups such as the Association of Automotive Engineers took its place, paving the way for more specialized automobile organizations. AAA was formed to deal with the concerns of the motorists themselves, and has been America's largest organization of motorists since.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on March 05, 2014, 10:46:09 pm
(http://i787.photobucket.com/albums/yy156/BarryReeder/henryfordfirstcar.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/BarryReeder/media/henryfordfirstcar.jpg.html)

On this day, March 5, 1875
The Wisconsin state legislature offered a $10,000 reward to any man who could supply "a cheap and practical substitute for the use of horse and other animals on highway and farm," documenting that the search for a motorized wagon was officially under way by 1875. By 1879, George Selden had already sought a patent for his self-propelled gas-burning vehicle. Ransom Eli Olds, founder of Oldsmobile, created his first steam-propelled automobile in 1887. Frank and Charles Duryea drove their first motorized wagon in 1893. The Duryea brothers would eventually be credited with operating the first auto production line when they produced and sold 13 cars in 1896. Elwood Haynes of Kokomo, Indiana, claimed to have produced the first "real" car in 1894. Haynes contended that the Duryeas had only managed to attach an engine to a wagon. In short, the historical bounty for the creation of the automobile was a cup to be shared by all. Legally, however, and later financially, George Selden won the first prize. In 1895, Selden received U.S. Patent No. 549,160 for his "road engine." With the granting of the patent, Selden, whose designs were generally inferior to those of his contemporary automotive pioneers, won a monopoly on the concept of combining an internal combustion engine with a carriage. Although Selden never became an auto manufacturer, every automaker would have to pay him a percentage of their profits for the right to construct a motor car. In 1903, Henry Ford refused to pay Selden the percentage, arguing that his design had nothing to do with Selden's. After a long drawn-out legal case that ended in 1911, the New York Court of Appeals upheld Selden's patent for all cars of the particular out-dated construction he originally described, and in doing so ended Selden's profitable reign as the father of the automobile. Ironically, it wasn't until Ford's Model T that the car became a significant substitute for "the horse and other animals" as stipulated in the aforementioned challenge issued by the Wisconsin legislature. By that time, Henry Ford didn't need the $10,000.
PICTURED: Henry Ford's first car

March 5, 1658
Antoine de la Mothe, Le Sieur de Cadillac, namesake of Cadillac cars, was born in Gascogny, France. Cadillac was the explorer responsible for mapping the Great Lakes region of North America for the French crown. He is credited as the founder of Detroit, Michigan, which today is affectionately known as the Motor City.

March 5, 1929
Fire destroyed the Los Angeles Automobile Show. Over 320 new cars, including the Auburn Motor Company's only Auburn Cabin Speedster, were lost in the flames.

March 5, 1929
Erik Carlsson, aka "Carlsson på taket" ("Carlsson on the roof"), was born in Trollhättan, Sweden and was a rally driver for Saab. Because of his public relations work for Saab, he is also known as Mr. Saab.

March 5, 1929
David Dunbar Buick, a Scottish-born American inventor best known for founding the Buick Motor Company died. He was 74. He was born in Arbroath, Angus, Scotland moving to Detroit, Michigan at the age of two when his parents emigrated to the United States.

5 March 1977
Tom Price, British Grand Prix racer died during the racing accident of 1977 South African Grand Prix at Kyalami.

March 5, 1995
Gregg Hansford, Australian motorcycle and touring car racer died while competing in a Supertouring race in 1995 at Phillip Island. Hansford's Ford Mondeo slid off the track and hit a tyre wall at high speed. The car bounced back onto the track where he was hit by Mark Adderton's Peugeot 405 at over 200 km/h. Hansford died moments after the impact.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on March 06, 2014, 11:05:35 pm

(http://i865.photobucket.com/albums/ab215/woodburner802/34-dario-resta-peugeot-1916.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/woodburner802/media/34-dario-resta-peugeot-1916.jpg.html)

On this day, March 6, 1915
Dario Resta, driving a Peugeot, won the 10th Vanderbilt Cup Race at the Pan-Pacific International Speedway in San Francisco, California. The Vanderbilt Cup, the first international car race in America, was organized in 1904 to introduce Europe's best drivers and manufacturers to the U.S. Named after its founder, millionaire racing enthusiast William K. Vanderbilt Jr., the Vanderbilt Cup became the world's premier racing event after laws in Europe, designed to protect spectators, restricted the level of competition at venues there. The first Vanderbilt Cup was won by George Heath, a Frenchman, in a Panhard automobile. Heath averaged 52.2mph over the course of three 10-mile laps in Hicksville, New York. French cars dominated the event until 1908 when George Robertson drove the 90-horsepower Locomobile, a.k.a Old 16, to victory in the fourth Vanderbilt Cup. It was the first victory in an international racing event by an American car. The Vanderbilt Cup moved to Savannah, Georgia, in 1910, and later out to California. The race was christened with a French victory, and it would be laid to rest with a French victory. Dario Resta won the final Vanderbilt Cup in 1916 driving his Peugeot. That year Resta also won the Indianapolis 500 and the 100-mile Chicago Cup Challenge--during which he became the first man to average over 100mph over a race of that distance.
PICTURED: Dario Resta in his Peugeot Indy car

March 6, 1896
Charles B. King tested his automobile on the streets of Detroit, Michigan, becoming the first man to drive a car in the Motor City. While driving up and down Woodward Avenue his Horseless Carriage broke down, speculators responded by telling him to "get a horse".

March 6, 1936
American industrailist and race car driver Bob Akin was born in North Tarrytown, New York.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on March 07, 2014, 07:11:07 pm
(http://i1236.photobucket.com/albums/ff441/gameplaycheck/bmw.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/gameplaycheck/media/bmw.jpg.html)

On this day, March 7, 1916
The manufacturing firms of Karl Rapp and Gustav Otto merged to form the Bayerische Flugzeugwerke AG (Bavarian Aircraft Works). The company would later become the Bayerische Motor-Werke (Bavarian Motor Works or BMW). As the original name suggests, BMW began as a manufacturer of aircaft engines. In 1923, BMW built its first motorcycle. The BMW R12, a classic-looking BMW motorcycle, was the first motorcycle to have a telescopic hydraulic front fork, providing a smoother ride and better contact with the road. BMW is still the leader in motorcycle design and production in Europe. In 1929, BMW built its first car, the Dixi, in a factory in Eisenach, Germany. Prior to opening the factory in Eisenach, all BMW products had been manufactured in Munich. By 1938, BMW was racing in the biggest car races in Europe. The 328 won its class at the Mille Miglia Italian road race. The outbreak of World War II saw BMW, like its U.S. counterparts, switch production to war manufacturing. BMW facilities were destroyed by Allied bombing during World War II. After the peace, a three-year ban was imposed on BMW by the Allies for its part in the war. The BMW R24 motorcycle became, with its release in 1948, the company's first post-war product. BMW completed its first postwar car, the 501, in 1951. BMW is still one of the world's leading automobile manufacturers. The company is noted for its innovations in the field of ABS, Anti-Lock Breaking Systems.
PICRURED: Today's BMW on the track

March 7, 1903
C.S. Rolls, driving a Mors automobile on a private estate in Nottinghamshire, England, ran a record flying kilometer at 84.84mph. He himself disallowed the record, noting as an objection the favorable tailwind and gradual slope of the course.

March 7, 1932
The Communist Party of America organized the "March on Hunger"; the procession traveled from downtown Detroit to the Ford Motor Company's River Rouge Plant in order to protest the company's labor record. When police and firemen were unable to disperse the thousands gathered at River Rouge, Ford strongman Harry Bennet, notorious for his mob tactics of labor management, ordered his "servicemen" to quell the crowd with fire hoses. Defying the freezing temperatures and icy water, the crowd refused to give up its protest. Bennet, who ruled Ford's enterprise with nothing short of terrorist tactics, confronted the crowd, ordering them to disperse once and for all. The determined crowd, unaware that they were faced with their nemesis, began to shout, "We want Bennet. And he's in that building." Bennett corrected their mistake, and for his trouble he was showered with bricks and slag pieces. He was struck in the head during the barrage. Before he fell to the ground, the combat-ready Bennett pulled Joseph York, a Young Communist League organizer, to the ground on top of him. Seeing Bennett bleeding profusely from his head, the police opened fire on the unarmed protesters. York and three other protesters were killed. Ford's trouble with labor unions came to a head five years later when Roosevelt's New Deal guaranteed the workers the right to join a union. Again Bennett would be at the center of a violent confrontation at the River Rouge complex.

March 7, 1938
Janet Guthrie, the first woman race driver to qualify and compete in both the Indianapolis 500 and the Daytona 500. was born in Iowa.

7 March 1947
Walter Röhrl, German rally legend was born in Regensburg, Bavaria.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on March 08, 2014, 09:43:40 pm
(http://i280.photobucket.com/albums/kk171/crabber1967/Daytona%20Historic/1958-FireballFranceNewDaytona.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/crabber1967/media/Daytona%20Historic/1958-FireballFranceNewDaytona.jpg.html)

On this day, March 8, 1936
Daytona Beach, Florida, staged its first race strictly for stock cars on a combination beach and public roadway course. The race is remembered as the impetus for today's NASCAR. However, race or no race, NASCAR never would have come into being without the efforts of Bill France. Having moved to Daytona in 1934, Bill France opened a garage there. He fixed and raced cars, finishing fifth in Daytona's original race. The city claimed it lost money on the event and enthusiasm for city-sponsored racing waned. The next year the Daytona Elks persuaded the city to stage a Labor Day road race for stock cars. The city lost money again. At that point, Bill France and local club owner Charlie Reese took over the promotion for the Daytona race. With Reese's money and France's work, the race established itself as a successful enterprise. Racing halted during the war, but afterward France returned to Daytona Beach and persisted at race promotion. Reese died in 1945. France went on to promote races all over the South. In 1946, he staged a National Championship race at the Old Charlotte Speedway. A news editor objected to France's calling a race a National Championship without any organized sanctioning body. France responded by forming the National Championship Stock Car Circuit (NCSCC) in 1946. On December 14, 1947, France called a meeting to reorganize the growing NCSCC. Racing officials gathered at the Streamline Hotel in Daytona Beach to hear France call for major changes in the operation of the circuit. He demanded more professionalism and suggested that the organization provide insurance for drivers and strict rules for the race cars and tracks. A new organization to be incorporated later that year as the National Association for Stock Car Auto Racing (NASCAR) emerged from the meeting, with Bill France, former mechanic, as president.
PICTURED: 1959 Unfinished Daytona track - test - 2
Left [sitting] is Big Bill France and far right is Fireball Roberts with their two passengers [the gentleman in the suit appears to be Jim Stephens] who took a run in a 1959 Pontiac around the banks of the yet-to-be-paved Daytona Speedway.

March 8, 1969
The Pontiac Firebird Trans Am was introduced. The Firebird Trans Am was just one in a series of muscle cars released by Pontiac in the 1960s, including the Grand Prix and the GTO. It all began in 1959 when Pontiac hired a young car designer named John DeLorean. DeLorean's designs increased sales for Pontiac by 27 percent between 1962 and 1968. The Grand Prix and the Firebird accounted for half of the gain. On the basis of its muscle cars, Pontiac ruled the youth market of the late 1960s and early 1970s. The Trans Am, originally a limited model Firebird, would become a symbol in the muscle car niche of automobile manufacturing.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on March 10, 2014, 12:24:37 am
(http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v614/CaptainComet/MCCI%202011%20Roundup%20Dearborn%20Michigan/PICT0064-1.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/CaptainComet/media/MCCI%202011%20Roundup%20Dearborn%20Michigan/PICT0064-1.jpg.html)

On this day, March 9, 1964
The first regular production Mustangs rolled off the Dearborn Assembly Plant line in Michigan.
PICTURED: The Mustang concept that never made production along with a 1965 Mustang convertible at the rear

March 9, 1901
A fire destroyed the Olds Motor Works factory in Detroit, Michigan. Legend holds that Olds employee James Brady pushed a Regular Runabout, affectionately called the Curved Dash, out of the building to safety. Over the course of the previous year, Olds had developed over 11 models for cars, all of which varied greatly in price and design. He had reportedly not decided which Olds models on which to focus the company's production capability, but, as the fire destroyed all but one prototype, fate decided that the Runabout would be the first major production Olds. The Runabout, a small buggy with lightweight wheels and a curved dashboard powered by a one-cylinder engine, not dissimilar from today's lawnmower engines, became the Olds Motor Company's primary automobile. The Runabout maxed out at 20mph. Olds later viewed the fire as a miracle, a sign that the Runabout would make his fortune. He expressed his enthusiasm for the little car, "My horseless carriage is no passing fad. It never kicks, never bites, never tires on long runs, never sweats in hot weather, and doesn't require care when not in use. It eats only when it's on the road. And no road is too tough for the Olds Runabout." In preparation for his success, Olds contracted other companies for parts to comprise his Runabout and, in doing so, he revolutionized the automobile industry. Previously, all cars had been built from start to finish on one site. Olds' methods allowed for an assembly line in which parts were produced outside his factory and systematically assembled in his own factories. Among Olds subcontracted partners were the Dodge Brothers; Henry Leland, who founded Lincoln and Cadillac; and Fred Fisher, whose family produced bodies for General Motors. The Olds Runabout sold for $650.

March 9, 1950
Racer Danny Sullivan was born in Louisville, Kentucky. Sullivan dominated Indy Car racing in the 1980s driving Penske cars. Danny Sullivan won the 1985 Indy 500 after a full-circle spin on the track.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on March 10, 2014, 11:07:47 pm
(http://i921.photobucket.com/albums/ad60/postasu/Flash-of-Genius-418497-105.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/postasu/media/Flash-of-Genius-418497-105.jpg.html)

On this day, March 10, 1927
Robert Kearns, inventor who won suits against auto giants is born in Gary, Indiana. He patented a design for a type of windshield wiper and later won multi-million dollar judgments against Chrysler and Ford for using his concept without permission. Kearns’ invention, the intermittent windshield wiper, enabled wipers to move at timed intervals, rather than constantly swiping back and forth. Intermittent wipers aided drivers in light rain or mist and today are a standard feature of most cars. Kearns’ real-life David versus Goliath story about taking on the auto giants was made into a movie titled “Flash of Genius” that opened in 2008 and starred Greg Kinnear.

March 10, 1972
Matthew Roy Kenseth, an American stock car driver was born in Cambridge, Wisconsin. Matt currently drives the #17 DeWalt Ford in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series for Roush Fenway Racing. He is currently the defending Daytona 500 champion, having won a rain-shortened race in 2009, the first Daytona 500 win for the Roush Fenway Racing team. Kenseth followed that up with a win at California Speedway moving his win list up to 19 in Sprint Cup.

March 10, 1975
Lyne Bessette, a Canadian professional bicycle racer was born in Lac Brome, Quebec. A two-time member of the Canadian Olympic team (2000 and 2004), she has twice won the prestigious Tour de l'Aude Feminin (1999 and 2001) as well as the 2001 Women's Challenge.

March 10, 2003
Barry Sheene, a British former World Champion Grand Prix motorcycle road racer died of cancer of the stomach and esophagus.
Sheene is credited with the invention the motorcycle back protector, with a prototype model he made himself out of old helmet visors, arranged so they could curve in one direction, but not the other. Sheene gave the prototype along with all rights to the Italian company Dainese - they and other companies have manufactured back protectors since then.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on March 12, 2014, 02:28:21 am
(http://i146.photobucket.com/albums/r278/TUSK_1997/Daytona%20Experience/100_1607.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/TUSK_1997/media/Daytona%20Experience/100_1607.jpg.html)

On this day, March 11, 1885
Sir Malcolm Campbell, land-speed record holder, is born in Chiselhurst, Kent, England, on this day. Campbell's thirst for speed was evident early in his life. He won three gold medals in the London-Edinburgh motorcycle trials as a young man. However, Campbell gained his greatest fame by way of his quest to attain the landspeed record. Over the course of two decades, he battled with Major H. O. C. Segrave for sole possession of the land-speed title. He received worldwide attention when he flew his Bluebird to South Africa in search of a flat racing surface superior in safety to the beach at Daytona. He ended up at Verneuk Pan, a massive salt flat in South Africa's interior. Verneuk Pan, flat as it was, proved to be too rough a surface for Campbell's tires; but having already made the extraordinary trip, Campbell's people built a road on the flat and raced the car. Over the course of his career, Campbell set six land-speed records in various types of vehicles, all christened "Blue Bird." After eclipsing the 300mph barrier on land at the age of 50, Campbell turned his attention to boat racing and broke a number of water-speed records. For his lifetime of achievement in international speed events, Campbell was knighted by Queen Elizabeth II. Campbell passed his thirst for speed on to his son, Donald, who was the first person to set both land and water speed records in the same year.
PICTURED: The Blue Bird driven by the young Donald Campbell accompanied his father (Sir Malcolm Campbell) at the Bonneville Salt Flats of Utah on 3 September 1935 where the 300mph barrier fell by a bare mile-per-hour, crowning Sir Malcolm Campbell's record-breaking career

March 11, 1927
The Flatheads Gang staged the first armored truck holdup in U.S. history on the Bethel Road, seven miles out of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, on the way to Coverdale. The armored truck, carrying $104,250 of payroll money for the Pittsburgh Terminal Coal Company, drove over a mine planted under the roadbed by the road bandits. The car blew up and five guards were badly injured. It was staged by their ring leader, Paul Jaworski.

March 11, 1968
Jerod O. Shelby, the founder of the American supercar automobile manufacturer Shelby SuperCars, was born in Richland, Washington. He is not related to car designer Carroll Shelby.

March 11, 2009
The Toyota Motor Company announces that it has sold over 1 million gas-electric hybrid vehicles in the U.S. under its six Toyota and Lexus brands. The sales were led by the Prius, the world’s first mass-market hybrid car, which was launched in Japan in October 1997 and introduced in America in July 2000.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on March 12, 2014, 07:36:49 pm
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On this day, March 12, 1952
Mercedes introduced the 300SL to the press. With a sleek rounded body, gull-wing doors and a detachable steering wheel, the 300SL created quite a buzz. As a race car, the 300SL enjoyed paramount success, capturing victories at Le Mans, the German Grand Prix, and the Carrera PanAmericana in Mexico. However, despite its racing success, the 300SL race car will forever be remembered for its role in car racing's greatest tragedy. Careering out of control in the 1955 race at Le Mans, the 300SL crashed into the gallery. Eighty spectators died and, in respect to the victims of the accident, Mercedes-Benz pulled its cars out of racing competition for nearly three decades. Two years after the introduction of the 300SL, Mercedes introduced the 300SL coupe to the public. A stylish sports car also characterized by its gull-wing doors, the coupe was a consumer version of the 300SL race car. With a six-cylinder engine and a top speed of 155mph, the two-door coupe created a sensation among wealthy car buyers who actually waited in line to buy it. However, because of the impracticality of the gull-wing doors, the company only manufactured 1,400 300SL coupes. Nevertheless, the 300SL coupe is widely considered one of the most impressive sports cars of the decade.

March 12, 1831
Clement Studebaker was born in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania. Clement and his brother, Henry Studebaker, founded H. & C. Studebaker, a blacksmith and wagon building business in South Bend, Indiana. The Studebaker brothers made their fortune manufacturing carriages for the Union army during the Civil War. By the end of the war, the Studebaker Brothers Manufacturing Company had become the world's largest manufacturer of horse-drawn carriages. With the advent of the automobile, Studebaker converted its business to car manufacturing, becoming one of the larger independent automobile manufacturers. Another major war would affect the company's fortune almost a century after its founders had benefited from the demand caused by the Civil War. During World War II, Studebaker manufactured aircraft engines, trucks, and amphibious vehicles for the war effort and emphasized their patriotic role by releasing cars called "The President," "The Champion," and "The Commander." Like many of the independents, Studebaker fared well during the war by producing affordable family cars. As their advertisement claimed, "Studebaker is building an unlimited quantity of airplane engines, military trucks and other material for national defense... and a limited number of passenger cars which are the finest Studebaker has ever produced." However, after the war, the Big Three, bolstered by their new government-subsidized production facilities, were too much for many of the independents, and Studebaker was no exception. Post WWII competition drove Studebaker to its limits, and the company merged with the Packard Corporation in 1954. The merger did not help matters and production of Packards ended in 1958. After a brief respite with the introduction of the popular, compact Studebaker Lark in 1959, the company again suffered financial troubles. Finally, in late 1963, Studebaker was forced to close its South Bend, Indiana, plant. An Ontario plant remained open until 1966, when Studebaker produced its last car, a blue and white Cruiser.

March 12, 1921
Gianni Agnelli, Italian industrialist and grandson of FIAT founder Giovanni Agnelli was born in Villar Perosa, near Turin He was the principal shareholder of Fiat. As the head of Fiat, he controlled 4.4% of Italy's GNP, 3.1% of its industrial workforce, and 16.5% of its industrial investment in research.

March 12, 1755
1st steam engine in America installed, to pump water from a mine

March 12, 1904
1st main line electric train in UK (Liverpool to Southport)

March 12, 1913
Foundation stone of the Australian capital in Canberra was laid

March 12, 1935
England establishes 30 MPH speed limit for towns & villages

Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on March 13, 2014, 07:15:56 pm
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On this day, March 13, 1944
Charles Sorensen resigned as the vice president of the Ford Motor Company. Sorensen had been Henry Ford's longtime right-hand man. Tall and handsome, Sorensen became a darling of the national press corps during World War II. He was in charge of Ford's wartime production; and the Willow Run plant that produced B-24 Liberator bombers was Sorensen's project. Originally, Ford had been contracted to produce subassemblies for United Aircraft, but Sorensen demanded that Ford be able to produce entire planes. He promised the government 500 planes per month, a figure nearly three times as great as United Aircraft's production potential. In return, he was rewarded with a huge contract which included $200 million for the construction of the Willow Run facility. Willow Run, after a rocky beginning, became a heroic success story, a symbol of America's role as the "great arsenal of democracy." The plant eventually reached a production level of one bomber per hour. With Willow Run's success came attention for Sorensen. In 1940, he appeared in Time and Newsweek, and in 1942, Fortune Magazine ran a long adulatory article entitled "Sorensen of the Rouge." Sorensen himself admitted that his popularity may have caused his departure from Ford, "My ability to keep out of the public eye was one reason I stayed as long as I did at Ford while others left." In 1943, Henry Ford promoted Harry Bennet, his longtime labor enforcer, to a position above Sorensen. Realizing that he had fallen from favor, the graceful Sorensen resigned from Ford.

March 13, 1946
UAW and General Motors agreed to a settle a strike which had lasted from November 1945 until March of 1946; 175,00 strikers agreed to head back to work; walkout engineered by UAW chief Walter Reuther; agitated for higher pay for GM's 320,000 employees, looked to consolidate his power in auto union; in coming months leaders in various industries proved successful in drive for price increases, led to inflation, wiped out workers' wage gains.

March 13, 1969
The Walt Disney studio released The Love Bug. Directed by Robert Stevenson, the film starred "Herbie," a lovable Volkswagen bug with a personality. Abused by the evil race-car driver "Thorndyke" (David Thomlinson), Herbie is rescued by the young good-guy race-car driver "Jim" (Dean Jones). Grateful for his rescue, Herbie rewards the hapless Jim by winning one race after another on his driver's behalf. The excitement begins when the ruthless Thorndyke plots to get Herbie back by any means necessary. Based on a story by Gordon Buford, The Love Bug inspired several sequels, including Herbie Rides Again, Herbie Goes To Monte Carlo, Herbie Goes Bananas, and Herbie: Fully Loaded. By becoming one of the biggest grossing films of 1969, The Love Bug allayed any fears that the Disney Studio would collapse without the presence of the recently deceased Walt Disney. The movie became a children's film classic and enhanced the Volkswagen Beetle's image as a quirky car endowed with more than solid engineering.

March 13, 1980
Henry Ford II resigned as Chairman of the Ford Motor Company after naming Philip Caldwell his successor. With Ford's resignation, the era of the Ford family as an automotive dynasty temporarily ended. Henry II was, like his grandfather, a tough and formidable leader. He reorganized the company and instituted a modern bookkeeping system. His father, Edsel, had been considered a dreamer by Henry I. Edsel had spent much of his energy designing cars and improving Ford's labor relationships. He hadn't been a hard-edged businessman and often drew his father's criticism on those grounds. Like the archetypal ruling families of England, the Ford family followed its own generational legacy: Henry the Great, Edsel the Confessor, and Henry II. It sounds like Shakespeare.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on March 14, 2014, 05:43:31 pm
(http://i98.photobucket.com/albums/l267/richg1998/Misc/DadsMacktruckwithRichard.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/richg1998/media/Misc/DadsMacktruckwithRichard.jpg.html)

On this day, March 14, 1924
John “Jack” Mack, who co-founded Mack trucks along with his brothers, what would become one of North America’s largest makers of heavy-duty trucks is killed when his car collides with a trolley in Pennsylvania.
In the early afternoon of March 14, Jack Mack was enroute to a business meeting in Weatherly, Pennsylvania in his Chandler coupe. His car became involved in an accident with a trolley car of the Lehigh Valley Transit Company, which was crossing the road diagonally. Jack was killed almost instantly when his light car, being pushed off the road ahead of the trolley, was caught against a heavy pole and crushed like an egg shell. His body was interred in Fairview Cemetery in Allentown, just above the former Mack plant on 10th Street.

March 14, 1914
Stock-car racer Lee Arnold Petty was born near Randleman, North Carolina, on this day. Now famous as the father of Richard Petty--the all-time "winningest" racer in NASCAR history--Lee Petty was no slouch in his own day. In 1959, Lee Petty won the first Daytona 500 at the brand new Daytona International Speedway driving a new hardtop Olds 88 to a photo finish with Johnny Beauchamp. The Pettys would switch to Plymouths midway through the season that year. Lee and Richard Petty drove Plymouths, Chryslers, and Dodges for most of their remaining careers. Together the father-and-son team combined for 254 wins, including eight Daytona 500s. However, Lee and Richard also took father and son competition to its extremes. The embodiment of stock car racing's hard-nosed past, Lee Petty never lost a race on account of being too kind to his competitors, even if his competitors were family. Richard Petty remembers his quest to win his first NASCAR race at the Grand National Exposition in Toronto, "Cotton Owens was leading and daddy was second. They came up on me and I moved over to let them pass. Cotton went on, but daddy bumped me in the rear and my car went right into the wall." Richard finished in 17th place. In 1959, Richard thought he had won his first race after finishing first in the Grand National at Lakewood, Georgia. However, Lee, who finished second in the event, protested his son's victory. The protest was upheld, and Lee won the race. Before you call Richard Petty "The King," remember "The King" isn't an absolute monarch when his daddy is around. Richard's son Kyle is also a successful NASCAR racer, and no doubt benefits from the family's competitive edge.

March 14, 1962
GM produced 75-millionth US-made car.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on March 15, 2014, 10:23:34 pm
(http://i775.photobucket.com/albums/yy36/Montier33/1898_panhard_8hp_-_charles_rolls.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/Montier33/media/1898_panhard_8hp_-_charles_rolls.jpg.html)

On this day, March 15, 1906
Rolls-Royce Ltd. was officially registered with Charles S. Rolls and F. Henry Royce as directors. In 1904, Henry Royce, the founder of his self-titled electrical and mechanical engineering firm, built his first car. In May of that year, he met Charles Rolls, whose company sold cars in London. The two men agreed that Royce Limited would manufacture a line of cars to be sold exclusively by C.S. Rolls & Co. The cars bore the name Rolls-Royce. Success with their partnership led to the formation of the Rolls-Royce Company. In 1906, just after the company was
organized, it released the six-cylinder 40/50 horsepower Silver Ghost. The car was enthusiastically heralded by the British press as "the best car in the world." From its formation to the start of World War I in 1914, Rolls-Royce focused on one product--the Silver Ghost. The war forced new demands on the British economy, and Rolls-Royce shifted its manufacturing emphasis to airplane engines. Henry Royce's designs are credited with having provided half of the total horsepower used in the Allies' air war against Germany, and World War II transformed Rolls-Royce into a major force in aerospace engineering. In 1931, Rolls-Royce absorbed Bentley, and, since then, it has produced all cars bearing that name. Together Rolls-Royce and Bentley are synonymous with luxurious handmade cars.
PICTURED: Charles Rolls sitting on a 1898 PANHARD 8hp

March 15, 1911
Gustave Otto, the son of internal combustion engine pioneer Nikolaus Otto, organized Gustav Otto Flugmaschinenfabrik Muchen. Otto's Munich-based this aero-engineering firm would later merge with Karl Rapp's firm to form the Bayerische Motoren-Werke, or BMW.

March 15, 1968
Construction starts on the north tunnel of the Eisenhower/Johnson Memorial Tunnel on Interstate 70 in Colorado. Located at an altitude of more than 11,000 feet, the project was an engineering marvel and became the world’s highest vehicular tunnel when it was completed in 1979. Four months after opening, one million vehicles had passed through the tunnel; today, some 10 million vehicles drive through it each year.

March 15, 1990
The Ford Explorer was introduced to the public. One of the first generation sports utility vehicles released by the Big Three in the early 1990s, the Ford Explorer became one of the company's best-selling models almost immediately. Like sports cars before them, "Sport Utility Vehicles" (SUVs) became the chosen automobiles for the glamorous world of entertainment, and their virtues were even extolled in pop music. Ice Cube rapped, "I put the petal to the floor of my two-tone Ford Explorer," in his song "Down For Whatever." However, SUVs have come under fire recently for the relatively high proportion of deaths resulting from accidents involving them and their fuel guzzling habits.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on March 16, 2014, 11:48:31 pm


(http://i872.photobucket.com/albums/ab281/honkphotos/honk-vehicles/jaguar/xke/convertible/1971/69-jaguar-xke-1.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/honkphotos/media/honk-vehicles/jaguar/xke/convertible/1971/69-jaguar-xke-1.jpg.html)

On this day, March 16, 1961
Jaguar Cars Ltd. introduced the XK-E, or E-Type, at the Geneva Auto Show. The E-Type was the successor to the C- and D-Type Jaguar that had earned the company's reputation for racing excellence. The D-Type, with a top speed of 170mph, captured first place at the 24-hour race at Le Mans in 1955, 1956, and 1957. In 1956, Queen Elizabeth II knighted Sir William Lyons, Jaguar's founder, to recognize his achievement in bringing Jaguar to the heights of the international sports-car world. In 1957 a massive fire at the Jaguar factory halted the further development of Jaguar race cars. The disaster left many wondering whether Jaguar Motors had not already seen its best days in the successful 1950s. The release of the E-Type in 1961 signaled an impressive return by the British racing giant. The E-Type did everything the D-Type had done and more. With a top speed of 150mph and a 0 to 60 time of 6.5 seconds, the E-Type engine growled loudly. What's more, the E-Type averaged an unheard of 17 miles per gallon. By the mid 1960s, the E-Type had become the most famous sports car in the world; today the E-Type is cherished as a car of beautiful lines and precision engineering.

March 16, 2001
Robert "Bob" Wollek, nicknamed "Brilliant Bob", a race car driver from Strasbourg, France was killed in a road accident in Florida while riding a bicycle to prepare for the 12 Hours of Sebring. He was struck from behind by a van driven by an elderly driver from Okeechobee, Florida at approximately 4:30 p.m. He was 57, prior to his death, he announced he would retire from racing to serve as an ambassador for Porsche, and was due to sign this agreement upon returning home after Sebring. On race day, the organizers held a one minute silence in memory of Wollek. Wollek was due to start in the Porsche 996 GT3-RS with Johnny Mowlem and Michael Petersen, however out of respect the car was withdrawn from the race.

March 16, 2003
Race car driver Ricky Craven wins the Darlington 500, crossing the finish line .002 seconds ahead of Kurt Busch for the closest recorded finish in NASCAR history. In May 2009, more than 5,000 racing fans voted Craven’s victory the most memorable moment in the history of South Carolina’s challenging Darlington Raceway, nicknamed “The Track Too Tough to Tame.”
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on March 17, 2014, 11:32:46 pm
(http://i1064.photobucket.com/albums/u362/acerentacargreece/The%20Vintage%20Racer/1932avus.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/acerentacargreece/media/The%20Vintage%20Racer/1932avus.jpg.html)

On this day, March 17, 1949
The first car to carry the Porsche family name was introduced at the 19th International Automobile Show in Geneva, Switzerland. After serving a two-year prison sentence for his participation as an engineer in Hitler's regime, Ferdinand Porsche and his son Ferry went to work on a car that would carry the Porsche name. The Porsche prototype, named the 356, was a sports-car version of the Volkswagen that Porsche had designed at Hitler's request. Its rounded lines, rear engine, and open two-seater design set the standard for all Porsches to come. The classic design and the incomparable engineering of Porsche cars attracted loyal customers at a record pace. In 1950, Ferdinand Porsche celebrated his 75th birthday. He had risen to fame as an engineer for Mercedes; he had developed the Volkswagen; and he had finally put his name to his own automobile. One year later, Porsche suffered a stroke from which he would never recover. He died in January of 1952. Ferry Porsche, Ferdinand's son, built the Porsche Company into the empire it is today.
PICTURED: First rear engine car
Germany 1937 - This is said to be the first rear engine car, the legendary Tazio Nuvolari at the Karrussel curve (Carousel) at the old original North Nurburgring. Not only was this monster a true rear-engine car but it was a V-16 of 4.36 liters (about 262 cubic inches) designed by Dr. Ferdinand Porsche. Supercharged, it cranked out about 295 HP at 4,500 RPM. Nuvo and Hans Stuck were the few drivers who learned how to control this beast. They were run from about 1934 through 1939.

March 17, 1834
Gottlieb Daimler, who in 1890 founded an engine and car company bearing his name, is born in Schorndorf, Germany, on this day.

March 17, 1929
General Motors acquired 80% of German auto manufacturer Adam Opel AG for just under $26 million.

March 17, 1930
John North Willys of the Willys-Overland Corporation became the first U. S. ambassador to Poland. Willys had rescued the ailing Overland firm from its woeful production of 465 cars in 1908. By 1916, Willys-Overland produced over 140,000 cars per year. Willys subsequently left the day-to-day operations of the company, moving his personal offices to New York in order to pursue work related to World War I. During his absence, mismanagement nearly buried the company he had worked so hard to build up. Massive strikes, bloated inventories, and other troubles had cost Willys-Overland dearly. By 1920, the company was $46 million in debt. The briefly retired Walter Chrysler was called on to rework the company's daily operations, and in no time at all, he had cut the debt by nearly two-thirds to $18 million. Chrysler claimed, however, that without the release of a new model of automobile, the debt would decrease no further. Willys, who remained president of Willys-Overland, disagreed. He maintained that through the improvement of the existing models, the company could regain its original profit margins. Chrysler left. Continuing to pursue his political interests, Willys became the U.S. ambassador to Poland on this day in 1930. Eight years later Poland would be absorbed into the Third Reich. Three years after that, in 1941, Willys-Overland began mass production of the Willys Jeep, the "General Purpose" vehicle of the U.S. Army. In 1944, Willys' political and manufacturing legacies merged symbolically as Willys Jeeps carried U.S. troops across liberated Poland.

March 17, 1938
Mount Panorama Circuit (Australia), opened on this day
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on March 18, 2014, 10:47:16 pm
(http://i630.photobucket.com/albums/uu30/BenTruwe/1914Studebaker.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/BenTruwe/media/1914Studebaker.jpg.html)

On this day, March 18, 1933
American automaker Studebaker, then heavily in debt, goes into receivership. The company’s president, Albert Erskine, resigned and later that year committed suicide. Studebaker eventually rebounded from its financial troubles, only to close its doors for the final time in 1966.
Studebaker downfall lay in Albert Erskine failure to cut production and costs quickly in response to the slump of 1929 and 1930, which led to an insurmountable cash flow crisis. In 1930, Erskine had declared a dividend of $7,800,000 which was five times the actual net profits of that year. In 1931, he paid a dividend of $3,500,000—also out of capital—a ruinous procedure which he unsuccessfully sought to correct through a merger with White Motor Company. Working capital had fallen from $26 million in 1926 to $3.5 million in 1932 and the banks were owed $6 million, for which they demanded payment. Studebaker defaulted and went into receivership.

March 18, 1937
Mark Neary Donohue, Jr., nicknamed "Captain Nice", was born in Haddon Township, New Jersey.
He is the race car driver known for his ability to set up his own race car and drive it consistently on the absolute limit. Donohue is probably best-known as the driver of the 1500+ bhp “Can-Am Killer” Porsche 917-30, and as winner of the 1972 Indianapolis 500. Donohue's racing car pedigree is a veritable laundry list of great racing cars from the 1960s and 1970s. Cars that Donohue raced include: Elva Courier, Ferrari 250LM, Shelby Mustang GT350R, Lotus 20, Shelby Cobra, Ford GT-40 MK IV, Ferrari 512, Lola T70, Porsche 911, Chevrolet Camaro, AMC Javelin, AMC Matador, Porsche 917/10, Porsche 917/30, Eagle-Offy, McLaren M16, and Lola T330.

March 18, 1938
Legendary Timo Mäkinen was born in Helsinki, Finland. He was one of the original "Flying Finns" of motor rallying. He is most famous for his hat-trick of wins in the RAC Rally, at the wheel of a Ford Escort, preceded only by Erik Carlsson (Saab 96) in that feat.

March 18, 1947
William C. Durant, the founder of General Motors, died in New York City at the age of 85. Economic historian Dana Thomas described Durant as a man "drunk with the gamble of America". He was obsessed with its highest article of faith--that the man who played for the steepest stakes deserved the biggest winnings." General Motors reflected Durant's ambitious attitude toward risk-taking in its breathtaking expansionist policies, becoming in its founder's words "an empire of cars for every purse and purpose." But Durant's gambling attitude had its downside. Over a span of three years, Durant purchased Oldsmobile, Oakland (later Cadillac and Pontiac), and attempted to purchase Ford. By 1910, GM was out of cash, and Durant lost his controlling interest in the company. Durant would get back into the game by starting Chevrolet, and he would eventually regain control of GM--only to lose it a second time. Later in life, Durant attempted to start a bowling center and a supermarket; however, these ventures met with little success.

March 18, 1958
Plastone Company Inc. registered "Turtle Wax 'Hard Shell Finish' Auto Polish" trademark first used January 11, 1955 (automobile polish).

18 March 1964
Alessandro "Alex" Caffi, an Italian F1 driver was born in Rovato (province of Brescia), in Northern Italy.

March 18, 1977
José Carlos Pace, Brazilian F1 driver was killed in a light aircraft accident in 1977, this occurred days after the 1977 South African Grand Prix, in which Tom Pryce was killed after running over Jansen Van Vuuren. The track which currently hosts the Brazilian Grand Prix annually now, as a tribute to him, bears his name, Autódromo José Carlos Pace.

18 March 2003
Karl Kling, a German F1 driver died in Gaienhofen on Lake Constance, Germany due to natural causes He was 93.
Interesting thing about Kling is that, It is said, that he was born too late and too early. Too late to be in the successful Mercedes team of the '30s and too early to have a real chance in 1954 and 1955. Unusually, Kling found his way into motorsport via his first job as a reception clerk at Daimler-Benz in the mid-1930s, competing in hillclimb and trials events in production machinery in his spare time. During the Second World War he gained mechanical experience servicing Luftwaffe aircraft, and after the cessation of hostilities he resumed his motorsport involvement in a BMW 328.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on March 19, 2014, 07:41:52 pm
(http://i862.photobucket.com/albums/ab187/themotor_net/Supercar%20Sunday%202010%20at%20Gaydon/P1000976.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/themotor_net/media/Supercar%20Sunday%202010%20at%20Gaydon/P1000976.jpg.html)

On this day, March 19, 2005
John Zachary DeLorean, an American engineer and and founder of the DeLorean Motor Company died at Overlook Hospital in Summit, New Jersey from a stroke, aged 80.
At the time of his death, DeLorean was working on a business venture project known as DeLorean Time, a company that would sell high-end wristwatches. DeLorean's death caused the dissolution of the company, and no DeLorean Time products were ever offered to the public. His ashes are buried at the White Chapel Cemetery, in Troy, Michigan. At the request of his family, and in keeping with military tradition, he was interred with military honors for his service in WWII.
PICTURED: The DeLorean DMC-12 coupe that was made infamous with the movie Back to the Future starring Michael J Fox

March 19, 1952
The 1,000,000th Jeep was produced. In 1939, the American Bantam Car Company submitted its original design for an all-terrain troop transport vehicle--featuring four-wheel drive, masked fender-mount headlights, and a rifle rack under the dash to the U.S. Armed Forces. The Army loved Bantam's design, but the development contract for the vehicle was ultimately awarded to the Willys-Overland Company for its superior production capabilities. Bantam wound up fulfilling a government contract for 3,000 vehicles during the war; but the Jeep, as designed by Willys-Overland, would become the primary troop transport of the U.S. Army. Mass production of the Willys Jeep began after the U.S. declaration of war in 1941. The name "Jeep" is reportedly derived from the Army's request that car manufacturers develop a "General Purpose" vehicle. "Gee Pee" turned to "Jeep" somewhere along the battle lines. Another story maintains that the name came from a character in the Popeye cartoon who, like the vehicle, was capable of incredible feats. The Willys Jeep became a cultural icon in the U.S. during World War II, as images of G.I.'s in "Gee Pees," liberating Europe, saturated newsreels in movie theaters across the country. Unlike the Hummer of recent years, the Jeep was not a symbol of technological superiority but rather of the courage of the American spirit--a symbol cartoonist Bill Mauldin captured when he drew a weeping soldier firing a bullet into his broken down Willys Jeep. By 1945, 660,000 Jeeps had rolled off the assembly lines and onto battlefields in Asia, Africa, and Europe. Many remained abroad after the war, where their parts were integrated into other vehicles or their broken bodies were mended with colorful impromptu repairs. Wherever the Jeep roamed, it lived up to its design as a vehicle for general use. During the war, Jeep hoods were used as altars for field burials. Jeeps were also used as ambulances, tractors, and scout cars. After the war, surplus Jeeps found their way into civilian life as snowplows, field plows, and mail carriers. Willys-Overland released its first civilian Jeep model, called the CJ (Civilian Jeep) in 1945.

Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on March 20, 2014, 09:58:16 am
(http://i113.photobucket.com/albums/n228/jebbeansrgood/car%20####/Bugatti57.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/jebbeansrgood/media/car%20####/Bugatti57.jpg.html)

On this day, March 20, 1920
Bugatti delivered its first 16-valve car to a customer in Basel, Switzerland. Bugatti, a French luxury car company, was famous for its exquisite, powerful vehicles. In the 1920s and 1930s, the Bugatti car was a symbol of wealth and status, and its cars were equipped with massive racing engines. A bizarre footnote in Bugatti history, the renowned American dancer Isadora Duncan was driving in a 16-valve Bugatti when her trademark long scarf caught in the rear wheel of the vehicle, and she was instantly strangled to death.
PICTURED: The Bugatti 57

March 20, 1928
James Ward Packard, founder of the Ohio Automobile Company and the Packard Motor Car Company, died in Cleveland, Ohio, at the age of 64. A native of Warren, Ohio, James Packard and his brother, William, started their industrial careers manufacturing electric lamps. They entered the automobile business after James Packard purchased a Winton Motor Carriage. He was so dissatisfied with Winton's machine that he decided to build his own. Using the shops of a Packard Electric Company subsidiary, J.W. Packard completed his first automobile in 1899, driving through the streets of his hometown of Warren. Wishing to keep their automotive and electrical interests separate, the Packard brothers, along with fellow engineer George Weiss, started the Ohio Automobile Company in September 1900. That year the Packards boosted their company's profile by selling two cars to William D. Rockefeller. In 1901, an Ohio Automobile Company employee was arrested for speeding through the streets of Warren at 40mph. The nationally publicized speeding arrest also raised the company's profile. A shrewd promoter, Packard developed one of the car industry's first widely recognized slogans. Responding to a customer's inquiry about the performance of his car, Packard said, "Ask the man who owns one." Packard's deft promotion left the company with more customers than cars. A Detroit financier named Henry Joy volunteered his services to raise capital in order to raise the company's production capabilities. In 1902, the reorganized Ohio Automobile Company was incorporated as the Packard Motor Car Company. Packard cars would be the first to carry a steering wheel in the place of a tiller and the first to utilize the H-gear-shift configuration.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on March 21, 2014, 02:02:32 pm
(http://i746.photobucket.com/albums/xx107/m154cath/UK%20QUADS/P1010006-1-1.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/m154cath/media/UK%20QUADS/P1010006-1-1.jpg.html)

On this day, March 21, 1950
Preston Tucker filed suit against his former prosecutors. Tucker, made famous by the 1988 film Tucker starring Jeff Bridges in the title role, was one of the car industry's most spectacular postwar failures. Having built a reputation as an engineer during WWII, when he served as general manager of his company Ypsilanti Machine & Tool Company, Tucker looked to capitalize on the high demand that the postwar conditions offered. No new car model had been released since 1942, so the end of the war would bring four years worth of car buyers back to the market. Tucker intended to meet the new demand with a revolutionary automobile design. His 1945 plans called for an automobile that would be equipped with a rear-mounted engine as powerful as an aircraft engine, an hydraulic torque converter that would eliminate the necessity of a transmission, two revolving headlights at either side of the car's fender along with one stationary "cyclops" headlight in the middle, and a steering wheel placed in the center of the car and flanked by two passenger seats. In the end, only 51 Tuckers were produced, and none of them were equipped with the features Tucker had initially advertised. Still, loyal fans of Tucker claim that Tucker was the victim of industrial sabotage carried out by the Big Three. Tucker was indicted by the Securities and Exchange Commission before he could begin to mass-produce his automobiles. He was eventually acquitted of all charges. Emboldened by his acquittal, Tucker filed suit against his prosecutors. Historians who argue against the conspiracy theory maintain that post-war manufacturing conditions left small manufacturers little room for success. They suggest that, if anything, Tucker's acquittal was merciful. Tucker failed to meet the requirements for capital and production capability that his project demanded. After raising almost $15 million from stockholders, Tucker defaulted on federal deadlines for the production of car prototypes. When he finally did produce the cars, none of them were equipped with the technological breakthroughs he promised. Still, the Tucker was a remarkable car for its price tag. Whether as an innovator silenced by the complacent authorities or a charlatan better fit to build visions than cars, Preston Tucker made a personal impact in a post-war industry dominated by faceless goliaths.

21 March 1913
George Edgar Abecassis, an English racing driver, and co-founder of the HWM Formula One team was born in Chertsey, Surrey.
George Abecassis began racing in 1935 in a modified Austin Seven. However, he made a name for himself in English club racing during the 1938 and 1939 seasons with Alta and ERA machinery. In 1939 he won the Imperial Trophy Formula Libre race at Crystal Palace, his only major victory, driving his Alta, defeating Prince Bira, in the E.R.A. known as Romulus, in a wet race, "that being the only time it was beaten by a 1,500 c.c. car in the British Isles."
At one point Abecassis held the Campbell circuit lap record at Brooklands at 72.61 m.p.h. On July 3, 1938 Abecassis broke the Prescott Hill Climb record with a climb of 47.85 seconds in his supercharged 1½ litre Alta.
When World War II broke out he joined the Royal Air Force and became an experienced pilot, ultimately becoming a member of the secret "Moon Squadrons",ferrying secret agents in and out of France with Lysander aircraft. During the course of his wartime service Abecassis was awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross.

March 21, 1960
Ayrton Senna da Silva was born in Sao Paolo, Brazil. Senna was first given a 1 cc car by his father when he was only four years old. He raced throughout his childhood and began to compete at the age of 13 in local Brazilian KART races. Senna rose from the anonymity of KART racing to become one of the greatest Formula-1 drivers in history. He was worshipped in Brazil to an extent nearly unimaginable in the U.S. Senna, known for his belligerent competitive spirit, won 41 Grand Prix events, and remains second all-time to Alain Prost in Formula-1 victories. He was a key player in the golden years of F-1 racing when he, Nigel Mansel, Alain Prost, and Nelson Piquet battled for the top position in car racing's most glamorous circuit. Senna died in a crash in 1994 during the Grand Prix of San Monaco. A manslaughter investigation still shrouds Senna's death in mystery. It is presumed that Senna's fatal crash may have been caused by a faulty steering column on his Williams-Renault automobile. However, the cause of Senna's death has become a point of contention among Brazilian racing fans who hold the Williams team responsible for the death of their national hero.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on March 22, 2014, 11:22:08 pm
(http://i930.photobucket.com/albums/ad142/hmrh2/Car/hummer-0003.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/hmrh2/media/Car/hummer-0003.jpg.html)

March 22, 1983
The Pentagon awards a production contract worth more than $1 billion to AM General Corporation to develop 55,000 High Mobility Multipurpose Wheeled Vehicles (HMMWV). Nicknamed the Humvee and designed to transport troops and cargo, the wide, rugged vehicles entered the spotlight when they were used by the American military during the 1989 invasion of Panama and the Persian Gulf War in the early 1990s. Which in turn sparked the interest in Arnold Schwarzenegger, who went directly to AM General's Office and asked one for himself and do a similar version for Civilian use.

March 22, 1926
The Ford Motor Company renamed its massive River Rouge facility the Fordson Plant. The name River Rouge, synonymous with Ford history, would continue to be used. River Rouge was established in response to the massive demand for the Model T. In the spring of 1915, Henry Ford began buying huge tracts of land along the Rouge River, southwest of Detroit. He later announced his plans to construct a massive industrial complex which would include its own steel mills. Ford proclaimed he would no longer be "at the mercy of his suppliers." Ford Lieutenant William Knudsen disagreed with his boss's notion that bigger was better. The pugnacious Ford responded to his advice with typical urbanity, saying, "No, William, no. I want the Ford business all behind one fence so I can see it." The outbreak of war in Europe brought with it a scarcity of steel that threatened to halt production of the Model T. Ford ordered Knudsen to buy up all the steel he could. Henry Ford, a proclaimed pacifist, objected to the idea of preparing for war. He likened a war-ready nation to a man carrying a gun: bound for trouble. Nevertheless, once war was declared, Ford stood behind President Wilson and River Rouge became an "arsenal of democracy." The largest industrial complex of its day, River Rouge looked like a small city. After the war, the factory remained a primary character in the Ford drama. By 1937, General Motors (GM) and Chrysler recognized the United Auto Workers (UAW) as a labor union. But, despite the fact that the federal government, with the New Deal, guaranteed a worker's right to belong to a union, Ford refused to negotiate with the UAW. Instead, he ordered his strongman, Harry Bennett, to keep the workers in check. On May 26, 1937, union leader Walter Reuther led a group of men through the River Rouge Plant to distribute literature to the workers. Upon leaving the plant, Reuther and his companions were attacked by Bennett and his men. The event, named the "Battle of the Overpass," received national attention. Ford's reputation as a labor negotiator, already bad, grew worse. Amazingly, though, Bennett's fear tactics postponed the inevitable triumph of labor leaders for almost four years, when a massive sit-down strike finally succeeded in shutting the River Rouge plant down. The Ford River Rouge plant is also well-known for a Ford family controversy over a series of murals by artist Diego Rivera, which were commissioned by Edsel Ford on behalf of the Detroit Art Institute. Henry Ford objected strongly to the communist aesthetic of the murals and ordered their production ceased. Edsel, in a rare moment of defiance, refused his father's demands and the murals remained on display at the River Rouge Plant. Today, just as Henry Ford desired, the Fordson Plant at River Rouge really is "the Ford business all behind one fence," where we can see it.

March 22, 1958
South Carolina police pulled over Alabama boat and car racer J. Wilson Morris for exceeding the speed limit, as Morris attempted to race across the state in record time. The police held the 19-year-old Morris in jail for two days, scaring him so badly that he finished his trip on the bus.

March 22, 1974
Peter Jeffrey Revson, a racecar driver from United States who had successes in Formula One and the Indianapolis 500 lost his life during a practice run for the 1974 South African Grand Prix in Kyalami. He was just 35 years old. He was killed as a result of suspension failure on his Shadow Ford DN3. He was the second Revson to lose his life racing; his brother Douglas was killed in a crash in Denmark in 1967.

March 22, 2006
General Motors announced one of largest employee buyout plans in U.S. corporate history, agreed to finance buyouts, early-retirement packages offered to as many as 1,31,000 employees of GM, Delphi Corp., removed whole generation of workers hired in 1960's, 1970's from assembly line.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on March 23, 2014, 09:59:53 pm
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On this day, March 23, 1909
Wilhelm and Karl Maybach formed Luftfahrzeug-Motoren GmbH in Bissingen, Germany, to produce engines for the Zeppelin airships. The Maybach Motoren-Werke, a subsidiary of the aviation company, would produce the luxurious Maybach automobile between 1921 and 1941. Wilhelm Maybach designed the internal expanding brake in 1901. The internal brake operated by pressing shoes against the interior of the wheel or drive shaft. Maybach's design remained the model for most braking systems until the disc brake emerged as an alternative in the 1970s.
PICTURED: Maybach, then and now

March 23, 1921
Donald Malcolm Campbell, a British car and motorboat racer was born in Horley, Surrey. He broke eight world speed records in the 1950s and 60s. He remains the only person to set both land and water speed records in the same year (1964). His father Sir Malcolm Campbell is also the holder of 13 world speed records in the 1920s and 30s in the famous Bluebird cars and boats.

March 23, 1937
Craig Breedlove, the first person to reach land speeds of 400mph, 500 mph and 600 mph in a jet-powered vehicle, is born.
Breedlove was raised in Southern California, where as a teenager he built cars and was a drag racer. As a young man, he designed a three-wheeled, rocket-shaped vehicle powered by a surplus military J-47 plane engine and dubbed it the Spirit of America. On October 5, 1963, Breedlove became the fastest man on wheels when he recorded an average speed of more than 407 mph in the Spirit of America at Utah’s Bonneville Salt Flats. Located approximately 100 miles west of Salt Lake City, the Bonneville Salt Flats are a hard, flat 30,000-acre expanse formed from an ancient evaporated lake. In 1914, Teddy Tezlaff set an auto speed record at Bonneville, driving 141.73 mph in a Blitzen Benz. By the late 1940s, Bonneville had become the standard place for setting and breaking world land-speed records and has since attracted drivers from around the globe who compete in a number of automotive and motorcycle divisions.

March 23, 1956
The Studebaker-Packard Corporation halted merger talks with the Ford Motor Company to pursue talks with the Curtiss-Wright Corporation. Studebaker-Packard itself was the result of a merger in which the large Studebaker firm merged with the small and successful Packard line. After World War II the independent car manufacturers had a difficult time keeping pace with the production capabilities of the Big Three, who were able to produce more cars at lower prices to meet the demands of a population starved for cars. Independents began to merge with one another to remain competitive. Nash-Kelvinator and Hudson Motors merged successfully to become American Motors (AMC). Paul Hoffman, the manager of Studebaker, realized his company would have to merge or perish. He negotiated an arduous merger between his company and Detroit-based Packard Motors. The merger took over five months to come through, as unionized labor on both sides balked at the proposal. Finally, in October of 1954, Studebaker and Packard merged to become the country's fourth largest car company. Hoffman chose Packard President James Nance to lead the new operation. Nance, spiteful of the inefficiency that Studebaker brought to his company, generally ignored the input of his colleagues, instituting his own policies in an attempt to turn around the fortune of his new company. His policies failed, and renewed labor problems brought Studebaker-Packard to its knees. In 1956, Curtiss-Wright purchased Studebaker-Packard. The failed merger between Studebaker, which had been in operation since the 1890s, and Packard was emblematic of the post-war independent manufacturers' scramble to consolidate. While Studebaker-Packard failed, AMC was able to stay alive into the 1970s, when it was bought by French giant Renault.

March 23, 1986
Andrea Dovizioso, an Italian professional motorcycle road racer was born in born in Forlì. He won the 125cc World Championship in 2004.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on March 24, 2014, 10:51:18 pm
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On this day, March 24, 1898
Winton Motor Carriage Company made first commercial sale of an American-built automobile in the U.S.

March 24, 1954
Stockholders of the Nash-Kelvinator Corporation and the Hudson Motor Car Company approved the proposed merger of the two firms. The companies would form the American Motors Corporation (AMC). AMC is recognized as the most successful postwar independent manufacturer of cars. The deal was the largest corporate merger up to that point - worth $197,793,366 - but was just one phase of a planned mega merger of Hudson, Nash, Studebaker, and Packard. The combined company would cover all segments of the market, and their size and ability to share engineering would amortize costs nicely; at least, that was the plan of Kelvinator’s George Mason, whose company owned Nash. The name “American Motors” originated with Mason, who started working on the plan just after World War II.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on March 25, 2014, 10:34:14 pm
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March 25, 1899
Herbert (Burt) James Munro, a New Zealand motorcycle racer, was born in Invercargill. He is famous for setting an under-1000cc world record, 183.586 mph (295.453 km/h), at Bonneville in 26 August 1967. This record still stands today. Burt Munro was 68 and was riding a 47-year old machine when he set his last record.
Working from his home in Invercargill, he worked for 20 years to highly modify the 1920 Indian motorcycle which he had bought in 1920. Munro set his first New Zealand speed record in 1938 and later set seven more. He traveled to compete at the Bonneville Salt Flats, attempting to set world speed records. During his ten visits to the salt flats, he set three speed records, one of which still stands today. His efforts, and success, are the basis of the motion picture The World's Fastest Indian (2005), starring Anthony Hopkins, and an earlier 1971 short documentary film Burt Munro: Offerings to the God of Speed– both directed by Roger Donaldson.
PICTURED: Herbert (Burt) James Munro, the main character on whose life the move "The World Fastest Indian" is based.

March 25, 1901
The Mercedes was introduced by Gottlieb Daimler at the five-day "Week of Nice" in Nice, France. The car, driven by Willhelm Werner, dominated the events at the competition. Mercedes cars were conceived at the same venue in Nice two years earlier. After seeing a Daimler car win a race there, businessman Emile Jellinek approached Gottlieb Daimler with an offer. Jellinek suggested that if Daimler could produce a new car model with an even bigger engine then he would buy 30 of them. Jellinek also requested that the cars be named after his daughter, Mercedes. Daimler died before the Mercedes was released, but the car carried his name to the heights of the automotive industry. In 1904, a Mercedes clocked 97mph over a one-kilometer stretch, an astonishing feat in its day. Mercedes cars dominated the racing world for half a decade before Karl Benz's car company could catch up.

March 25, 1920
Walter P. Chrysler resigned as executive vice president in charge of automotive operations for General Motors. Born in the western Kansas railroad town of Wamego, Chrysler grew up around Union Pacific engineers. Early in life, he formed the idea of becoming a locomotive engineer himself. Working his way up from the position of janitor, he achieved his lifelong engineering dream by the time he was 20. Chrysler's attention gradually shifted to the automotive industry. In 1912, while employed by the American Locomotive Company, Chrysler was offered a position in Flint, Michigan by Buick President Charles Nash. The job promised only half of his current salary, but he took it anyway. As a manager at Buick, Chrysler revolutionized the company's mass production capabilities, and distinguished himself as an irreplaceable part of the GM team. However, in 1916, William C. Durant regained control of the company he had founded and Chrysler's mentor, Charles Nash, was forced out. Recognizing Chrysler's value, Durant offered him the presidency of Buick, a title worth $500,000 a year. Chrysler had previously made $25,000 a year. Heeding warnings from Nash that Durant was a micro-managing tyrant, Chrysler did not immediately accept the offer. Eventually, though, the money was too good to turn down. Among his many accomplishments as head of Buick, Chrysler's greatest achievement may have been initiating GM's purchase of the Fisher Body Plant, on which the company relied for its products. GM purchased 60 percent of Fisher's stock, and gained control over one of its most important components. Eventually, William Durant lived up to Nash's warnings. He began to meddle in Buick's affairs, infuriating Chrysler to the point of despair on numerous occasions. One day, Chrysler reached the boiling point during a board meeting and walked out. Longtime GM President Alfred Sloan later recalled, "I remember the day. He (Chrysler) banged the door on the way out, and out of that bang came eventually the Chrysler Corporation."

March 25, 1982
Danica Sue Patrick, American auto racing driver was born in Beloit, Wisconsin. She is currently competing in the IndyCar Series. Patrick was named the Rookie of the Year for both the 2005 Indianapolis 500 and the 2005 IndyCar Series season. Patrick became the first woman to win an Indy car race.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on March 26, 2014, 10:27:33 pm
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On this day, March 26, 1984
The Ford Escort was named the best-selling car in the world for the third year in a row. The Escort was the result of Ford's attempt to design a "world car," a car that could be sold with minor variations all over the world. It was Ford's first successful sub-compact car and its features have become standard for cars in that class all over the world. The Escort was one of the first successes of Ford's dramatic resurgence in the 1980s.
PICTURED: The original Ford Escort 1300 GT

March 26, 1932
Henry Martyn Leland, the founder of Cadillac and Lincoln, died in Detroit, Michigan at the age of 89. Leland was born in Vermont, the 8th child of New England farmer Leander Barton Leland and his wife Zilpha Tifft Leland. He began his industrial career as an apprentice engineer at Knowles Loom Works in Worcester, Massachusetts. With the outbreak of the Civil War, Leland began work at the U.S. Armory in Springfield, Massachusetts. After the war, Leland served as an engineer and mechanic in a series of manufacturing firms in New England. He distinguished himself as a tireless worker and an exacting supervisor only satisfied with his own high standard of quality. Leland was a real New Englander, a Presbyterian stickler with good manners and a titan's work ethic. He moved to Detroit to run a company with his old partner Charles Norton that was to be financed by Detroit lumber mogul Robert Faulconer. After successfully runnning, for a few years, as a supplier of various machine-shop products, Leland and Falconer gained entrance into the automobile industry at the request of Ransom Olds. Olds needed a supplier of transmissions for his Olds Runabouts. Leland wasn't the only major player in the automotive industry to get his start with Olds. Olds also hired the Dodge brothers to manufacture the bodies for his cars. After a successful run supplying Olds transmissions, Leland was asked by the Detroit Automobile Company to appraise their holdings, which they were preparing to liquidate. Leland surprised them by recommending that they hang on to their facilities; he offered to run their car company for them and revealed to them an engine design he had come up with which produced three times the horsepower of Olds' engines. The Cadillac Car Company was born, named after Antoine de la Mothe Cadillac, the founder of Detroit. The first Cadillacs came on the market as low-priced cars, but soon, due to Leland's high standards, the car was marketed as a luxury item. The car company that became a symbol of excess and ostentation in the 1950s began as the product of a puritanical perfectionist. Cadillac distinguished itself further by becoming the first car company to introduce a self-starting mechanism. Charles Kettering invented the system at the urging of Leland, who was said to be distraught over the death of a friend caused when an errant crank-shaft broke the man's arm and jaw. In 1908, William Durant and GM bought the Cadillac Motor Car Company for $4.4 million in cash. Leland continued to run Cadillac, and it became GM's most successful marque. Eventually, Leland and Durant fell out over GM's participation in World War I. Leland had been to Europe just before the war, become convinced that the war was inevitable, and that it would decide the future of Western Civilization. Durant's disinterest in the war cause infuriated Leland so much that he quit. He went on to found Lincoln, which he named after the man he admired most and for whom he had cast his first vote as a 21-year-old, Abraham Lincoln. Leland was never able to escape financial trouble with Lincoln, and he ended up selling the company to Henry Ford. Ford eventually ran Leland out of the business, most likely as a result of some personal jealousy on Ford's part. Nevertheless, Leland was responsible for creating the luxury marques for America's two largest automotive manufacturers.

March 26, 1934
Driving tests was introduced in Britain.

March 26, 1989
Boris Yeltsin was elected to the Soviet Parliament, defeating Communist Party candidate Yevgeny Brakov, manager of the Zavod Imieni Likhacheva, manufacuterers of the ZIL car. In spite of Brakov's close brush with history, he was destined to remain a car maker.

March 26, 2008
The Ford Motor Company announces the sale of its Jaguar and Land Rover divisions to the Tata Group, one of India’s oldest and largest business conglomerates, for some $2.3 billion--less than half of what Ford originally paid for the brands. The sale came at a time when Ford, along with much of the rest of the auto industry, was experiencing a sales slump as a result of the global economic crisis. For Tata, which earlier that year had unveiled the Nano, the world’s cheapest car, the purchase of the venerable British-based luxury brands was referred to by some observers as a “mass to class” acquisition.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on March 27, 2014, 11:19:27 pm
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March 27, 1939
Racer Cale Yarborough was born in Timmonsville, South Carolina. Yarborough became famous on the NASCAR circuit racing Mercury "fastback" Cyclones. In 1968 he won four races including the Daytona 500, tallying record annual winnings of $136,786. Yarborough remained a giant in NASCAR racing through the 1970s, becoming the first racer ever to win three consecutive Winston Cup Championships by winning the title in 1976, 1977, and 1978 driving for Chevy. Yarborough also holds the distinction of being the first man to qualify for the Daytona 500 at a speed of over 200 miles per hour, a feat he accomplished in 1984. He is a member of the Motor Sports Hall of Fame.
PICTURED: 1969.10.12 Charlotte National 500
After the Drivers vs. Bill France walkout at Talladega, the first real test for the new Charger Daytona came at the Charlotte Motor Speedway, in October 1969. Fords took the first two rows in qualifying. Cale Yarborough put the Wood Brothers Spoiler II on the pole at 162.162 mph. Cale was followed by the Torino Talladegas of Richard Petty, Donnie Allison and Lee Roy Yarbrough (no relation to Cale) The fastest of the still under development Daytonas were Buddy Baker, Bobby Allison and Charlie Glotzbach. In the race, just as at Talladega, the tires proved to be the deciding factor. Still coming to grips with rubber that wasn't quite up to the task of handling the Daytona's rear downforce, the Dodge teams ran very strong but still struggled with blistering tires. Pole sitter Cale Yarborough led early, but dropped out with a blown Shotgun 429 engine. Donnie Allison dominated the race, leading 161 of the 334 laps. Donnie took turns leading with Bobby Allison and Buddy Baker up front the rest of the time, but tire troubles slowed the winged Dodges. When it was all over, the brothers Allison finished 1-2 with Donnie out front. Baker and Glotzbach were third and fourth, still on the lead lap. David Pearson was fifth, two laps down. Notables in the did not finish catagory were Richard Petty, Lee Roy Yarbrough and Bobby Isaac, all retiring with engine failures.
photo: Ford Archives

March 27 1863
Sir Frederick Henry Royce, was born in Alwalton, Huntingdonshire, near Peterborough.

March 27, 1925
Cecil Kimber registered his first modified Morris, the prototype of the MG. Kimber's car is now known as "Old Number One", though design differences lead some to maintain that "Old Number One" was a different species from the MG. However you look at it, Kimber's modified Morris was the first in a line of successful automobiles known for their style and performance. Known for their zippy overhead cam engine's, MG's were hugely popular in the U.S. as sports cars.

March 27, 1947
Nanjing Automobile Group Corp. (NAC), a state-owned company was founded as military garage in Jiangsu. Its the oldest and currently fourth largest Chinese automobile manufacturer with 16,000 employees and annual production capacity of about 200,000 vehicles. Coincidently also on March 27, 2007 NAC revived MG brand and began production of MG sports cars.

March 27, 1952
Kiichiro Toyoda, founder of the Toyota Motor Corporation, which in 2008 surpassed America’s General Motors as the world’s largest automaker, dies at the age of 57
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on March 28, 2014, 09:00:44 pm
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On this day, March 28, 1941
Construction of Ford's Willow Run Plant began. Due both to his admiration of the German people and his philosophical alignment as a pacifist, Henry Ford was reluctant to convert all of his production facilities to war manufacturing. Compounding his anxiety was the fact that one of his former employees, William Knudsen, who had defected to General Motors headed the bureau in Washington in charge of administrating Detroit's war effort. But with the U.S. declaration of war in 1941, Ford had no choice but to participate. He contributed with his usual sense of competitive ambition. Before the war, Ford had boasted nonchalantly that Ford could produce 1,000 airplanes per day provided there was no interference from stockholders or labor unions. So when Ford was asked by Knudsen to build subassemblies for Consolidated Aircraft, it was no surprise that Ford Lieutenant Charles Sorensen pushed for a deal that would allow Ford to construct the entire B-24 Liberator bomber. The contract included $200 million toward the construction of a new production facility. In exchange, Sorensen promised Ford would manufacture 500 planes per month, a quote nearly 10 times what Consolidated Aircraft was then capable of producing. Ground was broken on a vast piece of land in Ypsilanti, Michigan, to begin a plant called Willow Run. Over the course of the next few years, Willow Run would be a source of problems for the Ford Motor Company. Squabbling within Ford over control of the company, government interference, the loss of much of the company's labor force to the draft, and other problems deterred Ford's war effort. By the end of 1942, Willow Run had only produced 56 B-24 bombers, and the plant had been saddled with the nickname "Willit Run?" The government considered taking over the operations at Willow Run. Just when it seemed that Sorensen's project would fail, Willow Run began rolling out B-24's at a remarkable rate. The plant produced 190 bombers in June of 1943, 365 in December. By the middle of 1944, Willow Run churned out a plane every 63 minutes. "Willow Run looked like a city with a roof on it," remembered Esther Earthlene, one of the many women who worked there during the war. Willow Run was the largest factory of its day. Its workers built planes around the clock, rotating three eight-hour shifts. They were provided with housing and entertainment. Willow Run had a 24-hour movie theater. By the end of the war, Willow Run had produced more than 8,500 bombers, and it had become a symbol of the American economy's successful response to war.
PICTURED: B-24J-1-FO, S/N 42-95559. Built At Ford's Willow Run Plant. Assigned to 221st Base Unit, Casper Army Air Force Base, Wyoming

March 28, 1892
Charles Duryea and Erwin Markham signed a contract to design and finance the construction of a gasoline-powered automobile.

March 28, 1900
The British Royal family receives its fist motor car, a Daimler Mail Phaeton.

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Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on March 29, 2014, 11:10:51 pm
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On this day, March 29, 1927
Major Henry O'Neil de Hane Segrave became the first man to break the 200mph barrier. Driving a 1,000 horsepower Mystery Sunbeam, Segrave averaged 203.79mph on the course at Daytona Beach, Florida. Segrave and his contemporary, British racer Malcolm Campbell, battled for land-speed supremacy throughout the 1920s. Segrave won the most historic victory in the long-standing competition when he broke the 200mph barrier and went on to set many more land-speed records. Between his efforts and Campbell's, Great Britain dominated the land-speed record books until jet engines usurped supremacy from internal combustion engines. Segrave died in 1930, attempting to set a new water speed record.
PICTURED: Henry Segrave @ The 1921 Le Mans GP de l'A.C.F.  in a SUNBEAM

March 29, 1806
US Congress appropriated $30,000 for Army's Corps of Engineers to begin surveying for construction of Great National Pike, also known as Cumberland Road, first highway funded by national treasury. The road stretched from Cumberland, MD through Appalachian Mountains to Wheeling, VA, on Ohio River.

March 29, 1919
The First Tatra vehicle, a TL4 truck, was completed. The truck was Tatra's first offering to the automotive world but it was the Tatra car that had inspired engineer Hans Ledwinka to found Tatra. Just after the war, Hans Ledwinka began construction of a new automobile to be marketed under the marque Tatra, a division of the newly named Koprivnicka Wagenbau of Czechoslovakia. The Tatra High Mountains are among the highest in the Carpathian Mountain Range, the legendary home of Bram Stoker's Dracula. Ledwinka settled on the name Tatra in 1919, when an experimental model of his car with four-wheel brakes passed a sleigh on an icy mountain road, prompting the sleigh riders to exclaim, "This is a car for the Tatras." In 1923, the first official Tatra automobile, the Tatra T11, was completed, and Ledwinka's hope for an affordable "people's car" was realized. The reliable, rugged T11, like Ford's Model T, gave many Czechoslovakians their first opportunity to own an automobile. In 1934, Tatra achieved automotive press with the introduction of the Tatra 77, the world's first aerodynamically styled automobile powered by a rear-mounted air-cooled engine.

March 29, 2009
Rick Wagoner, the chairman and chief executive of troubled auto giant General Motors (GM), resigns at the request of the Obama administration. During Wagoner’s more than 8 years in the top job at GM, the company lost billions of dollars and in 2008 was surpassed by Japan-based Toyota as the world’s top-selling maker of cars and trucks, a title the American automaker had held since the early 1930s.
On March 30, 2009, the day after the White House announced Wagoner had been asked to step aside, President Barack Obama stated that GM would have to undergo a fundamental restructuring in the next 60 days in order for the government to consider loaning it any more money. On June 1, 2009, GM filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on March 30, 2014, 10:21:15 pm
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On this day, March 30, 1947
Preston Tucker announced his concept for a new automobile to be named "the Tucker". Having built a reputation as an engineer during WWII when he served as general manager of his company, Ypsilanti Machine & Tool Company, Tucker looked to capitalize on the high demand for cars that post-war conditions offered. No new car model had been released since 1942, and so the end of the war would bring four years worth of car-buyers back to the market. Tucker intended to meet the demand with a revolutionary automobile design. His 1945 plans called for an automobile that would be equipped with a rear-mounted engine as powerful as an aircraft engine, an hydraulic torque converter that would eliminate the necessity of a transmission, two revolving headlights at either side of the carÝs fender, one stationary "cyclops" headlight in the middle, and a steering wheel placed in the center of the car and flanked by two passenger seats. However, a series of financial difficulties forced Tucker to tone down his own expectations for the cars. Production costs rose above his projections and investors became more cautious as the Big Three continued their astounding post-war success. To raise money for his project, Tucker sold franchises to individual car dealers who put up $50 in cash for every car they expected to sell during their first two years as a Tucker agent. The deposit was to be applied to the purchase price of the car upon delivery. The SEC objected to TuckerÝs strategy on the grounds that he was selling unapproved securities. It was just one intervention in a continuous battle between Tucker and federal regulatory bodies. Tucker loyalists espouse the theory that Tucker was the victim of a conspiracy planned by the Big Three to sabotage independent manufacturers. More likely, though, Tucker was the victim of an unfriendly market and his own recklessness. Unfortunately for his investors, the SEC indicted Tucker before he could begin mass production of his cars. He was acquitted on all counts, but his business was ruined. In the end, only fifty-one Tuckers were produced and none of them were equipped with the technological breakthroughs he promised. Still, the Tucker was a remarkable car for its price tag. Whether as an innovator silenced by the complacent authorities or a charlatan better fit to build visions than cars, Preston Tucker made a personal impact in a post-war industry dominated by faceless goliaths.
PICTURED: After the verdict 23rd Jan 1950: Preston Tucker, auto magnate, and wife, freed of fraud charges

March 30, 1998
German automaker BMW bought Rolls-Royce for $570 million. But the deal was not smooth and has a very interesting story behind it.
In 1998, owners Vickers decided to sell Rolls-Royce Motors. The most likely buyer was BMW, who already supplied engines and other components for Rolls-Royce and Bentley cars, but BMW's final offer of £340m was beaten by Volkswagen's £430m.
A stipulation in the ownership documents of Rolls-Royce dictated that Rolls-Royce plc, the aero-engine maker would retain certain essential trademarks (the Rolls-Royce name and logo) if the automotive division was sold. Rolls-Royce plc chose to license not to VW but to BMW, with whom it had recently had joint business ventures. VW had bought rights to the "Spirit of Ecstasy" bonnet (hood) ornament and the shape of the radiator grille, but it lacked rights to the Rolls-Royce name necessary to build the cars. Likewise, BMW lacked rights to the grille and mascot. BMW bought an option on the trademarks, licensing the name and "RR" logo for £40 million, a deal that many commentators thought was a bargain for possibly the most valuable property in the deal. VW claimed that it had only really wanted Bentley anyway.
BMW and VW arrived at a solution. From 1998 to 2002 BMW would continue to supply engines for the cars and would allow use of the names, but this would cease on 1 January 2003. From that date, only BMW would be able to name cars "Rolls-Royce", and VW's former Rolls-Royce/Bentley division would build only cars called "Bentley". The Rolls-Royce's Corniche ceased production in 2002.

March 30, 2009
U.S. President Barack Obama issues an ultimatum to struggling American automakers General Motors (GM) and Chrysler: In order to receive additional bailout loans from the government, he says, the companies need to make dramatic changes in the way they run their businesses. The president also announced a set of initiatives intended to assist the struggling U.S. auto industry and boost consumer confidence, including government backing of GM and Chrysler warranties, even if both automakers went out of business. In December 2008, GM (the world’s largest automaker from the early 1930s to 2008) and Chrysler (then America’s third-biggest car company) accepted $17.4 billion in federal aid in order to stay afloat. At that time, the two companies had been hit hard by the global economic crisis and slumping auto sales; however, critics charged that their problems had begun several decades earlier and included failures to innovate in the face of foreign competition and issues with labor unions, among other factors.
President Obama’s auto task force determined that Chrysler was too focused on its sport utility vehicle (SUV) lines and was too small a company to survive on its own. In his March 30 announcement, Obama gave Chrysler a month to complete a merger with Italian car maker Fiat or another partner. Shortly before its April 30 deadline, Chrysler said it had reached agreements with the United Auto Workers union as well as its major creditors; however, on April 30, Obama announced that Chrysler, after failing to come to an agreement with some of its smaller creditors, would file for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection, then form a partnership with Fiat. The move made Chrysler the first big automaker to file for bankruptcy and attempt to reorganize since Studebaker did so in 1933.
As for General Motors, according to the conditions Obama announced on March 30, the auto giant had 60 days to undergo a major restructuring, including cutting costs sharply and getting rid of unprofitable product lines and dealerships. Over the next two months, GM said it would shutter thousands of dealerships and a number of plants, as well as phase out such brands as Pontiac. Nevertheless, on June 1, 2009, GM, which was founded in 1908, declared bankruptcy. At the time, the company reported liabilities of $172.8 billion and assets of $82.3 billion, making it the fourth-biggest U.S. bankruptcy in history.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on March 31, 2014, 09:26:44 pm
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On this day, March 31, 1956
Ralph DePalma died in South Pasadena, California at age 72. DePalma, one of the premier racers of the century's second decade and winner of the 1915 Indy 500, is most famous for his rivalry with fellow racing legend Barney Oldfield. During World War I, car racing on a grand scale was not allowed because of the war effort. However, match races pitting two rivals against each other were deemed appropriate as they provided maximum entertainment with a relatively minimal allocation of resources. Race promoters naturally realized the appeal of starting DePalma and Oldfield on the same line with the same end in mind. Beyond their ordinary competitive relationship, Oldfield and DePalma embodied two contrasting archetypes of the champion. Brash and crude, Oldfield talked as much as he raced, cheated as much as he played fair. He ran his car with an unlit cigar clamped in the back of his teeth. DePalma, on the other hand, was a true gentleman, gracious both in victory and defeat, but no less competitive than his abrasive rival. The match race was originally set for June 23, 1917, but heavy rains postponed the event by a day. This gave the race promoters an extra day to magnify the publicity accompanying the personal rivalry between DePalma and Oldfield that had flared up after DePalma won an appeal for calcium chloride to be laid on the track to keep the dust down. An outraged Oldfield claimed dust was "part and parcel of dirt-track racing." Later he said, "I've been waiting a long time to get DePalma on a dirt track. I'll show him what racing is all about." Not to be outdone, DePalma in his characteristic style explained, "Modesty is a word Greek to Oldfield and he's probably been telling everybody how he is going to make me eat his dust." Following the heavy rains on the 23rd, the racetrack was pronounced to be in excellent condition. An estimated 15,000 fans turned out to watch the two men race. Unfortunately, the race didn't live up to its hype. Oldfield won all three heats. His car, the Golden Submarine, was so much lighter than DePalma's Packard that its speed through the turns more than made up for DePalma's bigger engine. Perhaps a credit to Oldfield's unconventional quest for victory, he had chosen to drive a car designed by Harry Miller. Miller's all-aluminum car had been mocked in the public, but he and Oldfield got the last laugh at the match races. Miller would go on to revolutionize race-car design, as his cars dominated the Indy 500 for over a decade.
PICTURED: Playa Del Rey -Los Angeles Motordrome
The world's first elevated wooden board track built for race cars took 16 days to build and cost $12,000. The Los Angeles Motordrome opened on April 8, 1910 near the present-day intersection of Culver and Jefferson boulevards in Playa del Rey. Promoters Fred Moskovics and Walter Hemple had taken notice of the success of automobile races involving now-legendary driver Barney Oldfield at Los Angeles tracks in the early 1900s, and hired velodrome designer Jack Prince to design a raised wooden track designed specifically for motorized racing. Construction on the one-mile round banked track began in Feb. 1910. According to Prince, more than 2 million square feet of lumber and 30 tons of nails were used in its construction. The Los Angeles Pacific Railway built a special spur to bring fans to the track, which held 12,000 spectators. Sportswriters immediately began referring to the structure as a "pie pan" due to its circular shape and banked track. Oldfield was the biggest name at its opening seven-day racing meet, which also featured racers Ralph DePalma, George Robertson, Lewis Strang, Roy Harroun and Caleb Bragg. The event was a success, and both automobile and motorcycle races were held regularly at the motordrome for the next three years. The motordrome at Playa del Rey was the first of several that eventually would be built in the Los Angeles area, including wooden tracks in Beverly Hills, Culver City, and the Los Angeles Coliseum motordrome at Hooper Avenue and 35th Street. On the afternoon of Aug. 11, 1913, a fire broke out under the wooden track in Playa del Rey. Though it did not fully destroy it, the damage was severe enough that rebuilding it wasn't feasible. A Los Angeles Times news story detailing the fire blamed it on vagrants sleeping beneath the track who were careless with matches. Wooden tracks eventually died out as other surfaces such as asphalt began to be used for auto racing tracks in the late 1920s, replacing the more dangerous wooden structures.

March 31, 1900
The first car advertisement to run in a national magazine appeared in the Saturday Evening Post. The W.E. Roach Company of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania ran an ad featuring its jingle, "Automobiles That Give Satisfaction."

March 31, 1931
Knute Rockne, famed Notre Dame football coach and the namesake of the Studebaker Rockne, was killed in a plane crash near Bazaar, Kansas at the age of 43.

March 31, 1932
Ford Motor Company publicly unveiled its "V-8" (eight-cylinder) engine.

March 31, 1998
Julius Timothy "Tim" Flock died of lung and liver cancer on 73. He is one of NASCAR's early pioneers, and a two time series champion. He was a brother to NASCAR's second female driver Ethel Mobley and NASCAR pioneers Bob Flock and Fonty Flock.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on April 01, 2014, 10:25:54 pm

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On this day, April 1, 1970
AMC, the company that first introduced the compact car in the 1950s, introduced the Gremlin, America's first sub-compact car. AMC was the only major independent car company to survive into the 1970s. AMC's success relied heavily on the vision of the company's first President George Romney, who strongly believed that to compete with the Big Three his company must offer smaller, more fuel-efficient alternatives to their cars. The AMC Rambler, a compact car, accounted for nearly all of AMC's profits through the 1950s, the era during which the company enjoyed its most substantial success. AMC's fortune faded rapidly after Romney left the company in 1962, and by the end of the ' 60s, the company's output had dropped to a dismal 250,000 sales per year. The release of the Gremlin in 1970 marked the company's return to Romney's vision. Designed to compete with the imported Volkswagens and Japanese sub-compacts, the Gremlin was essentially the AMC Hornet with its back end cut off. AMC President Roy Chapin attempted to re-create the vigorous personal campaign that Romney had used successfully to market the Rambler in the 50s. He appeared before the American public in advertisements to extol the virtues of the "first sub-compact" car. Unfortunately for AMC, the Gremlin was out on the market for only a short time before the Big Three released their own sub-compact models.

April 1, 1826
Samuel Morey of New Hampshire received a patent for the internal combustion engine. He was a pioneer in steamships who accumulated a total of 20 patents.

April 1, 1993
Alan Kulwicki, 1992 Winston Cup Champion, died in a plane crash near Bristol, Tennessee. Alan, son of USAC mechanic and engine builder Jerry Kulwicki, grew up in Milwaukee. His father didn't approve of his son racing cars, but Alan raced all the same. He became the youngest racer to start a late-model stock- car race in Wisconsin when, at the age of 18, he started a race at the Hales Corners Speedway. He took home $27. Little by little, Alan worked his way up the ranks of American stock-car racing. Continuing to pursue his dream to race on the NASCAR circuit, Alan owned, maintained, and raced his own cars throughout his career. He became the Winston Cup Circuit's "Rookie of the Year" in 1986, a remarkable feat considering he raced without heavy corporate sponsorship. Alan went on to win the Winston Cup Circuit in 1992, becoming the greatest stock-car racer in the world. His untimely death prevented him from defending his title. In an era of stock-car racing dominated by family dynasties, Alan Kulwicki was a self-made champion.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on April 02, 2014, 08:07:31 pm
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On thsi day, April 2, 1926
Grand Prix racer Jack Brabham was born in Hurstville, New South Wales, Australia. Brabham is credited with having rung in the "green decade" of Formula One racing. Between 1962 and 1973 British Formula One teams won 12 World Championships in cars painted British "racing green." Brabham won back-to-back championships in 1959 and 1960 driving the Cooper Team car equipped with a 2500 CC Coventry Climax engine and a revolutionary rear-engine design. Winning the World Championship for the third time in 1966, Brabham raced alongside British greats like Scotsmen Jim Clark and Jackie Stewart, Englishman Graham Hill, and Kiwi Denny Hulme. Jack's son Geoff Brabham is also an F1 racer.

April 2, 1875
Walter Percy Chrysler, the founder of the Chrysler Corporation, which for years was one of America’s Big Three automakers along with General Motors (GM) and Ford, is born on April 2, 1875, in Wamego, Kansas.

April 2, 1956
Alfred P. Sloan stepped down after 19 years as chairman of General Motors, with Albert Bradley elected as his successor. Sloan is recognized as the creator of the GM Corporation as it exists today. Brought on by William Durant by way of the purchase of the Hyatt Roller Bearing Corporation, Sloan worked his way into the position of vice president of GM. At that time, the company was a poorly planned and loosely configured extension of William Durant's vision. Sloan, with Durant's approval if not his undivided attention, set about centralizing GM. His first major step was to build a new corporate headquarters on the outskirts of Detroit. Methodical and calculating, Sloan was the model for the late twentieth century corporate leader in that he did not allow his ego, or his genius, to interfere with his shareholders' interests. When Durant was bought out of GM in 1920 by the DuPont family, Pierre DuPont, at the urging of Sloan, took his place as the company's head. The recession of the early 20s had damaged GM stock, and Sloan believed that DuPont's name at the head of the company would help to restore its investors' confidence. DuPont was not interested in running the company, and so the Sloan Era of General Motors began. Alfred Sloan reorganized the company and trimmed its financial sails, and before long GM was making headway. Gone were the days of Durant's mercurial and reckless expansionist policies. Sloan focused on consolidation and profit margin. He would effectively rule GM with an invisible hand for over three decades.

April 2, 1959
Juha Matti Pellervo Kankkunen, a Finnish rally driver was born in Laukaa, Finland. He made his name principally as a rally car driver. Aided partly by his record of 23 career victories on individual world rallies, he went on to drive Peugeot (1986), Lancia (1987 and 1991) and Toyota (1993) cars to four World Rally Championship driver's titles. He is currently 6th in the rankings of all time individual rally victories. However, only 2004-2008 World Champion Sébastien Loeb has thus far been successful in besting his tally of driver's world titles over the course of an entire career in the sport.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on April 03, 2014, 10:16:38 pm
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On this day, April 3, 2009
“Fast & Furious,” the fourth film in an action-movie franchise centered around the world of illegal street racing, debuts in U.S. theaters on April 3, 2009, kicking off a record-breaking $72.5 million opening weekend at the box office. “Fast & Furious,” starring Vin Diesel, Paul Walker, Jordana Brewster and Michelle Rodriguez, recorded the all-time highest-grossing opening of any car-themed film, besting the 2006 animated feature “Cars,” which raked in more than $60 million in its opening weekend and went on to earn more than $244 million at the box office.

April 3, 1885
Gottlieb Daimler was granted a German patent for his 1-cylinder water-cooled engine design. Daimler's invention was the breakthrough that other engine builders had been waiting for. Previously no one had been able to efficiently solve the problem posed by the tremendous heat produced by internal combustion engines. In Daimler's engine, cool water circulated around the engine block, preventing the engine from overheating. Today's engines still employ Daimler's basic idea. Before the water-cooled engine, cars were practical impossibilities, as the parts on which the engine was mounted could not sustain the heat generated by the engine itself. Daimler built himself his first whole automobile in the fall of 1896, and in doing so, took the first step in his self-named company's storied car-building history.

April 3, 1996
The Museum of Modern Art in New York City placed a Jaguar E-Type in its permanent exhibit. The E-Type was just the third car to be honored by the curators of the museum's permanent exhibit. Released in 1961, the E-Type was the first model released by Jaguar Motors after a disastrous fire destroyed the company's production facilities in 1957. The car's sleek lines made it an immediate success. Jaguar founder Sir William Lyons first made an impact in the automobile industry when he bolted a car body he designed onto the frame of an Austin Seven Car. His car, the Austin Swallow, was so successful that Lyons determined to manufacture his own automobiles. The E-Type is the epitome of Jaguar's exquisite feel for body design. The car is literally a work of art.


Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on April 04, 2014, 09:47:13 pm
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On this day, April 4, 2001
Ed "Big Daddy" Roth, an artist and cartoonist who created the hot-rod icon Rat Fink and other extreme characters died on this day at the age of 69. As a custom car builder, Roth was a key figure in Southern California's "Kustom Kulture" and Hot-rod movement of the 1960s. He grew up in Bell, California, attending Bell High School, where his classes included auto shop and art.

April 4, 1929
Karl Benz died at his home in Ladenburg, Germany at the age of 84 from a bronchial inflammation. Until her death on May 5, 1944 his wife, Bertha Benz continued to reside in their last home. Members of the family resided in the home for thirty more years. The Benz home now has been designated as historic and is used as a scientific meeting facility for a nonprofit foundation, the Gottlieb Daimler and Karl Benz Foundation, that honors both Bertha and Karl Benz for their roles in the history of automobiles.

April 4, 1944
Actor and car racer Craig T. Nelson was born in Spokane, Washington. Nelson is most famous for his title role in the long-running television show Coach, in which he portrayed Coach Hayden Fox of the struggling Minnesota State football team. Nelson, whose TV show was cancelled in 1997 after nine years, has been racing in Sports Cars premier division since 1994. "Coach" has been essentially footing the bill for his Nelson's Screaming Eagles Race Team. He refuses to accept the sponsorships of tobacco or alcohol companies. Having enjoyed limited success thus far on the circuit, Nelson consoles himself with the fact that he loves both the racing of the cars and the perspective the sport provides him. Nelson has not yet given up his career as an actor. He's appeared in Hollywood films such as The Devil's Advocate, stage productions like Eugene O'Neill's Ah, Wilderness!, and he continues to do work on television miniseries.

April 4, 1973
Loris Capirossi, an Italian Grand Prix motorcycle racer, was born in Castel San Pietro Terme, Bologna. He currently rides for the factory Suzuki MotoGP team. He is a former 250cc World Champion for Aprilia.

April 4, 1980
Björn Karl Michael Wirdheim is a racing driver born on in Växjö, Sweden. Wirdheim is son of Örnulf Wirdheim, a Swedish racing driver. He began racing karts competing in his first race at the age of 10. His main achievement to date is becoming the International Formula 3000 Champion in 2003.

April 4, 1996
Jaguar introduced its new SK8 convertible at the New York International Auto Show. The SK was the sports car version of the XK car released a few months before. The two models were Jaguar's first entirely new designs since the company became a Ford subsidiary in 1989. Powered by the Advanced Jaguar V-8 coupled with a five-speed automatic gearbox, the SK lives up to Jaguar's historic line of powerful sports cars. However, Jaguar purists argue that the lines of the car body itself are not Jaguar lines. Ford executives claim that they have not meddled with the integrity of the Jaguar marque, and so any lines that don't look like they came from Jaguar designs still came from Jaguar designers.


Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on April 05, 2014, 09:28:39 pm
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On this day, April 5, 1923
Firestone Tire and Rubber Company of Akron, Ohio, began balloon-tire production. The company had previously experimented with large-section, thin-walled tires with small bead diameters for special purposes, but none had been put on the commercial market. Firestone had become the largest producer of tires when it received the contract to supply Henry Ford's Model T's with tires. The company remained on top of the tire industry, challenged for supremacy only by Goodyear. Balloon tires provided better handling and a smoother ride for car drivers. In balloon tires an inner tube is fitted inside the tire and inflated. With Firestone's innovation came the era of the flat tire.

April 5, 1988
Tracy Chapman released the single "Fast Car" from her self-titled first album Tracy Chapman. The album went multi-platinum largely on the strength of the enormous popularity of "Fast Car." Chapman grew up in Cleveland, Ohio, and attended private school in Connecticut. She eventually attended Tufts University, where she graduated in 1986. She started her musical career, as did Rick Von Schmidt, playing the bars and coffeehouses of Harvard Square in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Chapman is often thought of in relation to human and civil rights issues. Many of her songs contain messages dealing with equality and/or the estrangement of minorities and women. Chapman was the only female performer listed on Amnesty International's Human Rights Tour, and she was also on the bill at Freedomfest, London, a concert that honored Nelson Mandela. In "Fast Car" Chapman follows in the tradition of American balladeers, singing the praises of the freedom afforded by the open road.

April 5, 2000
Lee Arnold Petty, one of the early pioneers and superstar of NASCAR died at the age of 86 due to complication of stomach aneurysm. He is buried at the Level Cross United Methodist Church Cemetery in Randleman, North Carolina.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on April 06, 2014, 10:20:56 pm
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On this day, April 6, 1853
Emil Jellinek, an entrepreneur who commissioned engineer Wilhelm Maybach to design the first Mercedes automobile, named after Jellinek’s daughter, is born in Leipzig, Germany, on this day in 1853.
PICTURED: 1938.07.03 - French GP start
French Grand Prix, July 3, 1938 - Caracciola from the standing start in the W154 - The Mercedes would win six out of the eight major races in 1938 with Auto Union taking the remaining two. Rudolf Caracciola was crowned European Champion for the third and last time.

April 6, 1898
Thirteen days after selling its first car, the Winton Motor Carriage Company became an international marque, selling a car to John Moodie of Hamilton, Ontario. The international sale was a testament to Alexander Winton's pioneering enthusiasm for car advertising. The Scotch-born Winton had undertaken the industry's first "publicity stunt" a year earlier when he and one of his mechanics had driven a 2-cylinder Winton Motor Carriage 800 miles from Cleveland, Ohio to New York City. Winton managed to gain enough attention for a small article in Horseless Age, the leading motor-car journal of the day. Over the next few years, Winton launched an advertising campaign that included regular print ads in Scientific American and the Saturday Evening Post. In 1899, Winton undertook his second publicity-oriented motorized trek to New York City, this time achieving his goal of reaching a broad audience of potential car buyers. In addition to the estimated 1,000,000 people who saw Winton drive into the city, the Cleveland Plain Dealer ran a series of articles covering the journey.

April 6, 1909
Hermann Lang, a German champion race car driver was born in the Bad Cannstatt district of Stuttgart, Germany.

April 6, 1934
The Ford Motor Company announced white sidewall tires as an option on its new vehicles at a cost of $11.25 per set. Whitewalls soon became associated with style and money. By the 1950s, whitewalls were standard on many cars, and it would be hard to imagine a '55 Corvette without a corresponding set of whitewall treads. The popularity of whitewalls continued well into the 1960s. Car companies offered different width white bands in a race to make their whitewalls whiter.

April 6, 1941
Don 'The Snake' Prudhomme, an American drag racer was born in San Fernando, California. He won the NHRA funny car championship four times in a thirty-five-year career. He was the first funny car driver to exceed 250 mph. He retired in 1994 to manage his own racing team with driver Larry Dixon, Prudhomme's team won the top fuel championship in 2002 and 2003. He gained wider public attention from Mattel's "Hot Wheels" toy versions of the cars that were released in 1970. Hot Wheels celebrated their 35th anniversary in 2005 with a two day event. Prudhomme retired from drag racing in 2010
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on April 07, 2014, 09:17:08 pm
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On this day, April 7, 1922
Racer Sig Haugdahl drove the Wisconsin Special over 180mph on a one-way run at the Daytona Beach racing oval. Haugdahl's speed was a remarkable 24mph faster than the previous world-land speed record. A Norwegian immigrant who settled in Minnesota, Sig Haugdahl began his racing career in 1918. He became the IMCA champion but was considered an outsider by the more influential USAC governing body. Eager to prove he could outrace anybody, Haugdahl built his own car with the specific aim of unseating then USAC champion Tommy Milton. The fruit of Haugdahl's endeavor was the Wisconsin Special, so named because of its massive 836 cubic-inch Wisconsin Airplane engine. Antique car restorer Paul Freehill explained the mechanics of the Wisconsin Special's engine, "It's World War I technology that's leftover. There wasn't a clutch or anything; the engine was hooked directly to the rear axle." But however primitive the propulsion system may have been, Haugdahl had to be an innovator to make the car stay on the ground. He tapered the exposed parts of his car to cut drag. Where structural tapering was impossible, he wrapped parts in tape to cut drag. Haugdahl was also the first man to balance the wheels and tires on his race car. It was essential that Haugdahl pay attention to the smallest details, as the size of his engine left little room for error. The Wisconsin Special was only 20 inches wide. Even the 5'3" Haugdahl had to squeeze to fit in. Imagine the thrill of racing at 180mph on a sand course with the Wisconsin Special roaring a few feet from your back. Haugdahl was the first man to travel three miles in a minute, but his record was never observed by the USAC governing body as none of its members were present to witness the event. Those who were present witnessed a veritable miracle. Haugdahl's unofficial record would go untouched for over a decade.

April 7, 1947
Henry Ford, founder of the Ford Motor Company and father of modern assembly lines died due to cerebral hemorrhage at age 83 in Fair Lane, his Dearborn estate. He is buried in the Ford Cemetery in Detroit.

April 7, 1968
Jim Clark, one of the greatest grand prix racers of all time, died in a tragic accident during a Formula 2 race in Hockenheim, Germany. Clark, widely regarded as the most naturally gifted F1 racer of all time, competed his entire career on behalf of Colin Chapman's Team Lotus. He won two World Championships, in 1963 and in 1965. Clark's 1965 season is undoubtedly the sport's greatest individual achievement. Clark led every lap of every race he finished, and he won the Indy 500. Known for his soft-spoken manor, Clark was known for his ability to win on all types of courses, including those that he personally detested. He won four straight Belgian GPs at his least favorite course, the arduous Spa-Francorchamps circuit. Clark died in a meaningless race at Hockenheim, when his car mysteriously left the track and collided with a tree. His death shocked the racing world.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on April 08, 2014, 09:17:44 pm
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April 8, 1916
Racer Bob Burman crashed through a barrier into the crowd at the last Boulevard Race in Corona, California. Burman, his riding mechanic Eric Scroeder, and a track policeman were killed, and five spectators were badly injured. The boulevard race started in 1913 as part of the AAA national championship schedule. The race was run on Grand Boulevard, a street that formed a perfect three-mile circle. Bob Burman was coming off an attempt at the world land-speed record at Brighton Beach, New York, where he had run 129mph. Burman led most of the race at Corona before his blue Peugot broke a wheel, sending the car over the curb and into a pole. The tragedy ended racing in inland Southern California for almost 40 years.
PICTURED: 1911 Bob Burman - Daytona
When the famous Barney Oldfield was suspended from racing, Bob Berman took over as Benz' driver. The Benz and Burman went to Daytona Beach in April 1911. Burman's speed was 141.732 MPH; a full ten miles an hour faster than Oldfield's runs. This is not to suggest that Burman was the better driver; Barney had typically held back during his Benz run so he could promote another "go-for-the-record" exhibition. Needless to say, Oldfield was furious and came out of retirement to seek vengeance. But the "fastest speed at which man has ever traveled over the earth's surface" belonged to Burman for eight years. So phenomenal was 141-plus mph that automobile makers throughout the world were loathing to consider building a car to attempt to top it.

April 8, 1910
The Los Angeles Motordome, the first speedway with a board track, opened near Playa Del Rey, California, under the direction of Fred Moskovics and Jack Prince. The track was made of wood and ran a circumference of 5,281 feet. Board tracks used the same engineering technology as the smaller wood velodromes used in France for bicycle racing. The tracks were paved with 2x4's and were steeply banked at angles as high as 45 degrees. On such a track, a car-racing daredevil could reach speeds up to 100mph with his hands off the steering wheel. The L.A. Motordome, affectionately known as "The Boards," was a huge success. By 1915, nearly a half-dozen board tracks had popped up around the country. By 1931, there were 24 board tracks in operation including tracks in Beverly Hills, Sheepshead Bay, Brooklyn, and Atlantic City. Incidentally, the Beverly Hills track stood approximately where the prime-time shopping blocks of Rodeo Drive are located now. No tracks have ever approximated the speeds allowed on the heavily banked boards. Board tracks began to fade from existence during the Depression. The lifetime for 2x4's exposed to racing tires is approximately five years after which deadly splinters and potholes begin to dot the track's smooth surface. During the Depression, the expensive upkeep of the board tracks made them impractical. The last decade of board racing was a sight to behold. Cars tore down straightaways at 120mph while carpenter's patched the tracks from beneath. It wasn't unheard of for mischievous children to peek their heads up through holes in the board tracks to watch their favorite racers with a squirrel's eye view.

April 8, 1979
In the Rebel 500 event at Darlington Raceway in South Carolina, drivers Darrell Waltrip and Richard Petty swap the lead four times in a last-lap battle before Waltrip finally wins the race.
The race also featured a pit stop mishap in which driver David Pearson, following a miscommunication with his crew, drove away with only two of his four tires properly changed. Pearson’s car flipped over and had to be removed from the race. The embarrassing incident led to Pearson, who was a top driver, being released from his team, Wood Brothers.
At the time of his defeat by Waltrip at the Rebel 500, Richard Petty was a NASCAR legend. That same year, he won his seventh NASCAR championship, a record later duplicated by just one other driver, Dale Earnhardt (1951-2001). Petty, who was born on July 2, 1937, in Level Cross, North Carolina, is the son of driver Lee Petty (1914-2000), a three-time NASCAR champ who won the first Daytona 500 in 1959. Richard Petty began his own NASCAR career in 1958 and was a dominant competitor before retiring in the early 1990s. Nicknamed “The King,” Petty won a record 200 races in his career, including a record seven victories at the Daytona 500. Petty’s son Kyle (1960- ) also became a well-known NASCAR driver; his grandson Adam (1980-2000), NASCAR’s first fourth-generation driver, was killed in an accident during a practice session at New Hampshire International Speedway.

April 8, 2005
MG Rover Group collapsed under debts of $1.7 billion with a loss of more than 5,000 jobs.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on April 09, 2014, 10:10:59 pm
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On this day, April 9, 2002
George Francis 'Pat' Flaherty, Jr., an American racecar driver who won the Indianapolis 500 in 1956 died. He was 77 years old.
Interesting thing about Pat Flaherty's win is that, In the Spring of 1956, Flaherty did not have a ride for the 1956 Indianspolis 500. While tending bar at the tavern he owned on Chicago's north side, Flaherty overheard from two racing insiders, that car owner Zink did not have a driver yet for his racecar. Flaherty quickly called him and the two agreed over the phone to a one race deal. He won.
PICTURED: Pat Flaherty

April 9, 1971
Jacques Joseph Charles Villeneuve, Canadian automobile F1 racing driver was born in Saint-Jean-sur-Richelieu, Quebec. He is the son of Formula One driver Gilles Villeneuve, and is the namesake of his uncle (also a racer).

April 9, 1986
The French government ruled against the privatization of leading French carmaker Renault. The privatization of Renault, France's second largest carmaker to PSA Peugot-Citroen, has remained a highly debated issue since the 1986 decision. In 1994, the government sold shares of Renault to the public for the first time at 165 francs per share. The sale dramatically increased the company's revenue, but the French government remained the majority shareholder. Between 1996 and 1997, the market for cars in Europe grew precipitously, with the most marked increases in France. Renault, often scorned for its "public sector" policies, failed to capitalize on the growing markets. Instead foreign competitors like Volkswagen and Fiat took advantage. In 1995, Renault lost over $800 million. Renault and Peugot were the two weakest of Europe's Big Seven carmakers. Economists blame the French carmakers lack of success on its protectionist policies, and more specifically on the unwillingness of PSA Peugot and Renault to merge, a maneuver that would radically lower production costs for both auto-making giants.
It was eventually decided in 1996 that the company's state-owned status was detrimental to its growth, and Renault was privatized. This new freedom allowed the company to venture once again into Eastern Europe and South America, including a new factory in Brazil and upgrades for the infrastructure in Argentina and Turkey. It also meant the end of the aforementioned successful Formula 1 campaign. In 1999 Renault merged with Nissan Motor Campany.

April 9, 2009
The Honda FCX Clarity, a four-door sedan billed as the planet’s first hydrogen-powered fuel-cell vehicle intended for mass production, wins the World Green Car award at the New York Auto Show.
The first FCX Clarity cars came off the assembly line at a Honda plant in Takanezawa, Japan, in June 2008.
According to Honda, which reportedly spent more than 15 years and millions of dollars developing its fuel-cell technology, the FCX Clarity is more fuel-efficient than a gas-powered car or hybrid and gets 74 miles per gallon of fuel. FCX Clarity are more eco-friendly than an electric car “whose batteries take hours to recharge and use electricity, which, in the case of the United States, China and many other countries, is often produced by coal-burning power plants.
One downside of fuel-cell technology, however, is its cost, which in the case of the FCX Clarity, added up to several hundred thousand dollars per vehicle. To combat this issue, Honda chose to initially lease rather than sell the cars, at a subsidized price of some $600 per month. In July 2008, the first FCX Clarity cars became available in California. In November of that same year, another fleet was leased to government employees in Japan.
At the time of the FCX Clarity’s debut in 2008, the Japanese auto industry, led by Honda and Toyota, was out in front of American car makers in developing green technologies. In 1997, Toyota launched the Prius, the world’s first mass-produced hybrid car. The Prius debuted in the U.S. in 2000 and went on to dominate the hybrid-vehicle market. American auto giants such as General Motors were criticized for maintaining a focus on producing gas-guzzling sport utility vehicles and small trucks for too long, even as consumer demand shifted toward more fuel-efficient, eco-friendly cars. Hence which eventually led to their decline.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on April 10, 2014, 10:53:46 pm
(http://i645.photobucket.com/albums/uu176/MustangMayhem/1938-Buick-Y-Job-Harley-Earl-ra-1280x960_zps18aeeb26.jpg) (http://s645.photobucket.com/user/MustangMayhem/media/1938-Buick-Y-Job-Harley-Earl-ra-1280x960_zps18aeeb26.jpg.html)

On this day, April 10, 1969
Harley Earl, an automotive stylist and engineer and industrial designer died due to a stroke in West Palm Beach, Florida. He was 75 years old. He is most famous for his time at General Motors from 1927 until 1959, where he was the first Vice President of Design. He is credited with heading the design team of Buick Y-job and Corvette.
PICTURED: 1938 Buick Y-Job with GM designer Harley Earl

April 10, 1863
Adam Opel founded Adam Opel AG to make household goods namely sewing machines. He advertised his first product to general public time for the first time on this day.

April 10, 1944
Henry Ford II was named executive vice president of the Ford Motor Company. His promotion confirmed his bid to become the heir to his grandfather's throne at Ford. Henry II despised his grandfather for tormenting his father, Edsel Ford. Nevertheless Henry II went on to display many of the leadership skills of his grandfather en route to becoming the head of the Ford Empire. After an unsatisfactory academic career at Yale University—where Henry spent four years without receiving a diploma—he returned to work at the River Rouge plant. There he familiarized himself with the operation of the company, and he witnessed the bitter struggle for the succession of Henry Ford's title as president of the company. After his father Edsel Ford's death-- the result of "stomach cancer, undulant fever, and a broken heart"-- Ford Lieutenants Harry Bennett and Charles Sorensen fought a silent battle for the Ford throne. Henry Ford Sr. had reassumed the title of president, although it was clear he was too old to stay in that position for long. The irritable Henry I wasn't dead yet though, and he intervened on behalf of his violent pet Harry Bennet, who had gained power at Ford for his suppression of organized labor. After being passed up for the vice presidency of the company, Sorensen left the company after over 40 years of service. Many attributed Ford's poor treatment of Sorensen to personal jealousy. Henry the Elder was reportedly even jealous of his grandson's presence at the Rouge Plant. At the outbreak of World War II, Henry II left Ford for military service, which he carried out in Salt Lake City, Utah, until his father died on May 26, 1943. At that time he returned to Ford to take the reigns of the company at the urging of the U.S Government. His grandfather was finally too old to run the company; and if he didn't name a successor, the company would fall out of the family's control for the first time in its existence. Realizing that Henry's presence would make his own accession to the company's presidency impossible, strongman Harry Bennett attempted to bring Henry II under his influence. His efforts were of no avail, though, as Henry Ford II refused to be influenced by his tyrannical grandfather's toady. His accession to the executive vice-presidency made him the inevitable successor to the presidency of the Ford Motor Company. Henry Ford II went on to lead his family's company back to greatness from its dubious position behind both GM and Chrysler after the war.

April 10, 1972
Italian Fiat executive Oberdan Sallustro was executed by Argentine Communist guerrillas 20 days after he was kidnapped in Buenos Aires. During the '60s and '70s, Argentina was a violent ideological battleground. Communist organizers resisted the oppression of the Fascist dictator Juan Peron. The era was famous for its "desaparecidos," the inexplicable disappearances of Peron's political opponents at the hands of his security forces. Unfortunately, it was not only Peron who was guilty of atrocities. Sallustro was very likely targeted as a member of Fiat because of Peron's strong love for Italy. A symbol of the established power, Sallustro fell victim to a battle over which he had no control. His murder was regarded as a tragedy. Communist revolutionaries tried to claim that his execution was "approved" by the people of Argentina, but the argument was hollow.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on April 11, 2014, 10:27:33 pm
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On this day, April 11, 1913
Ettore Bugatti first proposed designing the super car that would eventually emerge as the Bugatti Type 41 Royale. Eventually called the "car of kings," Bugattis were huge hand-crafted luxury cars that were affordable only for Europe's elite.
PICTURED: Bugatti Type 41 Royale at the Sinsheim Auto & Technik Museum.

April 11, 1888
Henry Ford married Clara Bryant in Greenfield, Michigan, on her 22nd birthday. When Clara Bryant married Henry Ford, he was living on a 40-acre plot of land that belonged to his father. Instead of farming the land Ford had it cleared and sold the lumber. Once the lumber was gone, he took a job as an engineer at the Edison Illuminating Company. The move was the beginning of Ford's precipitous rise through the ranks of the engineering world, a career that saw he and his wife move 11 times between 1892 and 1915, always to finer circumstances. Not many wives in that day would have approved of such a migrant lifestyle, but Clara Bryant Ford did. She is credited with backing her husband in all of his endeavors. There was a time when Henry Ford's success as a maker of cars was dubious at best. Indeed, Ford spent the years between 1895 and 1901 as a virtual unknown and unpaid tinkerer. In 1896, Ford met Thomas Edison for the first time. Edison encouraged him in his car-building mission, exhorting Ford to continue his work.
The union of Clara and Henry would reach its most celebrated stages after Henry had become a success. Clara Bryant stood by her man, it's true, but there were times when she objected to his practices, and on those occasions she intervened. She is often credited with forcing her reluctant husband to finally give in to labor negotiations. In 1941, most of the workers at Ford's colossal River Rouge Plant walked out on their jobs. Even after a successful strike, Henry Ford refused to negotiate with the UAW. He believed that Ford workers were essentially loyal and that the union had bullied them into striking. The stubborn Ford said, "let the union take over," meaning he wouldn't run the company if they were a part of it. The government informed Ford that they would take over if he to choose to close the plants. Ford was immovable. He insisted the government, by backing the unions, would hurt the American auto industry and not Henry Ford. Finally, though, Henry capitulated. Apparently, Clara warned him that should he close the plants, he would have to seek a new wife.

Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on April 13, 2014, 08:35:15 pm
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On this day, April 12, 1888
Cecil Kimber, the founder of MG, was born in Dulwich, England. MG stands for Morris Garages, which was the name for the Oxford distributor of Morris cars, a company owned by William Morris. When Kimber became general manager of Morris Garages in 1922, he immediately began work modifying Morris Cowleys, lowering the chassis and fitting sportier bodywork. In 1924, Morris Garages advertised the "MG Special four-seater Sports," the first car to bear the famous octagonal badge of MG. Old Number One, as the car was called, was actually the 48th body built for Morris by the manufacturing firm Carbodies, but it is still considered the grandfather of all true MG sports cars. Morris Garages outgrew its home in Oxford, and moved to Abingdon in 1929 under the name MG Car Company. The early 1930s were the glory years of MG sports cars during which time the company's road cars were promoted by its successful racing endeavors. For fiscal reasons, William Morris sold his private companies, which included MG, to the public holding company of Morris Motors. Purists contend that MG was never the same. Morris Motors diminished MG's racing activity, limited the variety of the company's products, and even placed the MG badge on company saloon cars. Cecil Kimber died in 1945 in a train crash. After his death, beautiful MG's were still produced, despite what the purists say. The Midget, the MGA, the TC, and the MGB were all good cars. Indeed, it wasn't until after Kimber's death that the MG caught on as a small sports car in the U.S. MG did, however, suffer after it was purchased by British Leyland, and the 1970s saw the company fall to pieces. Production at Abingdon stopped in 1980. In 1992, an MG revival was begun with the release of the MG RV8, a throwback to Kimber's earlier vision for MG sports cars.

April 12, 1968
Heinz Heinrich Nordhoff, a German automobile engineer died of heard failure at the age of 69. He is famous for his leadership of the Volkswagen company as it was rebuilt after World War II. Following the war, he was appointed Managing Director of Volkswagen, assuming the position on 2 January 1948. Nordhoff became legendary from turning the Volkswagen Beetle into a worldwide automotive phenomenon.

April 12, 1977
General Motors (GM) announced it had dropped plans to produce a Wankel rotary engine on the grounds that its poor fuel economy would hurt sales.



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On this day, April 13, 1925
Elwood Haynes died in Kokomo, Indiana, at the age of 67. Haynes, the founder of the Haynes Automobile Company, led a remarkable life that began in Portland, Indiana. The son of pioneer farmers Judge Jacob and Hillinda Haynes, Elwood thirsted for education at an early age. He eventually received degrees in engineering from Worcester Polytechnic Institute and from Johns Hopkins. He returned to Portland to become a high school teacher in his subjects. His career and life turned around as the result of the discovery of vast natural gas deposits near Portland. Forever curious, Haynes familiarized himself with natural gas containment and piping methods. He became the architect for the Indiana Natural Gas Company's pipe network that provided most of Chicago with natural gas. Haynes was the first man to suggest that natural gas should be dehydrated before it was piped, a principle still in use today. From his laboratory at the Indiana Natural Gas Company, Haynes began tinkering with internal combustion engines. He completed his first car in 1894, one year after Charles Duryea is credited with having built the first American car. Such was the dissemination of information at the time that Haynes, even until his death, was credited with building the first American car. After creating his prototype, Haynes started his own car company, which he ran for nearly three decades. He is credited with a number of automotive innovations, including the rotary engine. But Haynes' greatest achievements came as a metallurgist. He was the first American to pioneer the oxidization of steel and the use of chromium to retard nature's oxidization process. He eventually received a U.S. patent for "stainless steel," although the invention first surfaced in England under the name "rustless iron."
PICTURED: Haynes-Apperson 1896, Elwood Haynes

April 13, 1931
Daniel ***ton Gurney, an American racing driver was born in Port Jefferson, New York. Gurney is the first driver to win races in Formula One (1962), NASCAR (1963), and Indy Car (1967). The other two are Mario Andretti and Juan Pablo Montoya.

April 13, 1956
Peter Raymond George "Possum" Bourne, a three time APRC rally champion was born in in Pukekohe, Auckland. He died tragically under non-competitive circumstances while driving on a public road, that was to be the track for an upcoming race.
Bourne was best known for his exploits behind the wheel of Subaru, initially the RX, the turbocharged version of the Leone, then the Legacy. But it would be the Impreza WRX that he would become most associated with, driving for the Prodrive Subaru World Rally Team in Rally New Zealand, Australia and also in Indonesia, partnered by Kenneth Eriksson in the mid 1990s, before going on to win multiple Australian titles with his own team.
Subaru Japan even awarded him a black limited edition STi version of the Impreza for personal use.

April 13, 1974
Darren Turner, an English racing driver was born in Reading, Berkshire. He was McLaren Autosport BRDC Young Driver of the Year in 1996. He was also a former test driver for the McLaren Formula One team, but has raced primarily in touring cars and sportscars since 2000.

April 13, 2009
former Major League Baseball all-star pitcher Mark “The Bird” Fidrych is found dead at the age of 54 following an accident at his Massachusetts farm involving a Mack truck he was working on. Fidrych, the 1976 American League Rookie of the Year, suffocated when his clothes got tangled in the truck’s power takeoff shaft.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on April 15, 2014, 01:12:11 am
(http://i645.photobucket.com/albums/uu176/MustangMayhem/this%20day%20in%20HISTORY/724px-Volvo_OumlV4_vr_black_TCE_zps3b588f78.jpg) (http://s645.photobucket.com/user/MustangMayhem/media/this%20day%20in%20HISTORY/724px-Volvo_OumlV4_vr_black_TCE_zps3b588f78.jpg.html)

On this day, April 14, 1927
The first regular production Volvo, nicknamed "Jakob," left the assembly line in Goteborg, Sweden. Volvo was the result of a collaboration between Assar Gabrielsson and Gustaf Larson. Gabrielsson was an economist and a businessman who began his career at SKF Manufacturing in Goteborg. As head of SKF's subsidiary in France, he discovered that, due to the comparative labor costs, it was possible to sell Swedish ball bearings in France more cheaply than American ones. The realization planted the seed that it was also possible to supply cars to continental Europe at a lower cost than American car companies could. Enter Gustaf Larson, engineer and designer. He had been a trainee at White & Poppe in Coventry, England, where he had helped design engines for Morris. The two men met in 1923, and by the next year they already had plans to build cars. Larson gathered a team of engineers, and began work on a car design in his spare time. By July of 1926, the chassis drawings were complete. Meanwhile Gabrielsson had aroused the interest of SKF in his project, and he obtained guarantees and credit form the parent company to build 1,000 vehicles, 500 open and 500 covered. SKF provided the name, AB Volvo. Volvo is Latin for "I Roll." It wasn't until the 1930s that Volvo made a mark on the international automotive world. Volvo purchased its engine supplier, Pentaverken, and began production on a variety of car models, including the PV651 that enjoyed great success in the taxicab market. After weathering the lean years of the early '30s, Volvo released its first "streamlined car" the PV36, or Carioca, a car heavily influenced by American designs, in 1936. Also in line with American marketing strategies was Volvo's decision to release new car models in the autumn, a tradition it began in 1938. Volvo's fortunes would mirror those of the American car companies after the war. Because of Sweden's neutrality during the war its production facilities were left undamaged, allowing Volvo to meet the demand for cars in Sweden and Europe after the war.
PICTURED: Volvo ÖV 4 a.k.a. 'Jakob', the first Volvo.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on April 15, 2014, 09:14:43 pm
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On this day, April 15, 1965
The Chesapeake Bay Bridge-Tunnel opened. Connecting Kiptopeke and Chesapeake Beach, Virginia, the bridge-tunnel hybrid spans the entire mouth of the great Chesapeake Bay. It is the longest such structure in the world at 17.65 miles in length. The bridge-tunnel is essentially an artificial causeway raised on platforms. At the north end of the bay, a high extension bridge crosses a shipping lane. At the south end of the structure, two mile-long tunnels cross commercial shipping lanes.

April 15, 1912
Washington Augustus Roebling II, car racer and designer, perished in the RMS Titanic when the ship sank in the North Atlantic Ocean. Roebling was the son of John A. Roebling, president of Roebling and Sons Company of Trenton, New Jersey. Washington's namesake, Colonel Washington A. Roebling, had been one of the builders of the Brooklyn Bridge. Young Washington began work as an engineer at the Walter Automobile Plant, which was later taken over by the Mercer Automobile Company. While working for Mercer, Washington designed and built the Roebling-Planche race car that he raced to a second-place finish in the 1910 edition of the Vanderbilt Cup Race. In early 1912, Washington embarked on a tour of Europe with his friend Stephen Blackwell. Roebling's chauffeur Frank Stanley brought with him the Roebling's Fiat in which the group began their continental adventure. A week before the completion of their tour, Stanley fell ill, and returned to America with the family Fiat. Roebling and Blackwell booked passage on the RMS Titanic in the first-class cabin. On the night of April 14, according to Titanic survivor Edith Graham, Roebling alerted her and her daughter to the danger. He helped them to a lifeboat making no attempt to save his own life and reportedly remarked to them cheerfully, "You will be back with us on the ship again soon." Both Roebling and Blackwell perished.

April 15, 1924
Rand McNally released its first comprehensive road atlas. Today Rand McNally is the world's largest maker of atlases in print and electronic media.

April 15, 1943
An Allied bomber attack misses the Minerva automobile factory and hits the Belgian town of Mortsel instead, killing 936 civilians.

Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on April 16, 2014, 09:04:51 pm
(http://i645.photobucket.com/albums/uu176/MustangMayhem/this%20day%20in%20HISTORY/2007-10-3_Oakland29Web-Large_zps41bbe3ef.jpg) (http://s645.photobucket.com/user/MustangMayhem/media/this%20day%20in%20HISTORY/2007-10-3_Oakland29Web-Large_zps41bbe3ef.jpg.html)

On this day, April 16, 1908
The first Oakland car was sold to a private owner. Oakland Car Company was the creation of Edward Murphy, the founder of the Pontiac Buggy Company. Murphy was one of the most respected designers in the carriage industry. He decided to enter the car industry, and he invited Alanson Brush, the designer of the Brush Runabout to join him. Brush had been a chief engineer at Cadillac. His contract with Cadillac included a no-competition clause that had just ended when he met Murphy. Anxious to get back into the design race, Brush built a car for Murphy that was ready in 1908. Oakland ran independently for less than a year before it was purchased by William C. Durant and absorbed into Durant's holding company, General Motors. Durant's purchase of Oakland is often regarded as mysterious, considering the company had enjoyed little success and had produced less than a 1,000 cars at the time Durant purchased it. Often accused of "intuitive" business practices, Durant claimed that his purchase of Oakland, while exhausting his cash flow, provided GM with a more impressive portfolio on which to base their stock interest. Nevertheless, his decision to purchase Oakland, later called Pontiac, forced Durant out of control of GM.
PICTURED: The Oakland

April 16, 1946
Arthur Chevrolet, brother of Chevrolet namesake Louis Chevrolet, committed suicide at age 60 in Slidell, Louisiana. Louis and Arthur made their names as car racers in the first decade of the century. Known for their fearless driving styles, both brothers raced against American racing legend Barney Oldfield. The brothers came into contact with General Motors founder William Durant when Durant, impressed by their racing talents invited the brothers to audition for the job of chauffeur. He reportedly took the brothers to a track and raced them. Louis won the race, but Durant gave Arthur the chauffeur job. He offered Louis a position on GM's elite Buick Racing Team. Chevrolet raced and designed for Buick during the years of Durant's GM presidency. When Durant stepped down, new GM President Charles Nash took the money away from the Buick Racing Team. Durant asked Louis and Arthur to start a new venture. Born racers, Louis and Arthur designed a performance car that became the first Chevrolet. Durant wanted something to compete with GM's lower-priced models. Disappointed with Durant's demands for an economy car, Louis and Arthur eventually left Chevrolet to pursue their own racing and design endeavors. The brothers worked closely together for their entire careers. They designed aircraft engines, car engines, and continued to race. In spite of designing many successful engines, the Chevrolet brothers had little gift for finance, and they often were pushed out of their endeavors before they could reap the rewards due to them. By 1933, both men were broke, and their racing careers were over. Louis returned to Detroit to work as mechanic in GM's Chevrolet division. In the late '30s, he suffered a series of strokes which incapacitated him and finally killed him. With his brother dead and no fortune to speak of, Arthur was a broken man.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: MustangBob on April 17, 2014, 11:36:17 am
On this day, April 12th 1888, Cecil Kimber, founder of the British sports car company MG, is born in England.
In 1921, Kimber went to work for British auto tycoon William Morris. A year later, he was made general manager of Morris Garages, the Oxford, England-based distributor of Morris autos. Kimber soon began selling customized Morris cars, lowering the chassis and fitting sportier bodywork, and by 1924, these small, high-performance sports cars bore the now-famous octagonal MG logo. By 1929, the MG Car Company was headquartered in Abingdon, England.
Contrary to popular belief, “Old Number One” was not the first car Cecil Kimber built. It was however, the first car referred to as an M.G. (pictured below)



(http://i1044.photobucket.com/albums/b447/Sheri2go/This%20Day%20in%20History/oldno1b_zps8ba7315c.jpg) (http://s1044.photobucket.com/user/Sheri2go/media/This%20Day%20in%20History/oldno1b_zps8ba7315c.jpg.html)


A freind of mine actually made a replica( drivable ) of one of these, took him 10 years, but looked fantastic
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on April 17, 2014, 10:45:45 pm
(http://i645.photobucket.com/albums/uu176/MustangMayhem/this%20day%20in%20HISTORY/485058359_zps998036c0.jpg) (http://s645.photobucket.com/user/MustangMayhem/media/this%20day%20in%20HISTORY/485058359_zps998036c0.jpg.html)

April 17 1964
The Ford Mustang is officially unveiled by Henry Ford II at the World’s Fair in Flushing Meadows, New York, on April 17, 1964. That same day, the new car also debuted in Ford showrooms across America and almost 22,000 Mustangs were immediately snapped up by buyers. Named for a World War II fighter plane, the Mustang was the first of a type of vehicle that came to be known as a “pony car.” Ford sold more than 400,000 Mustangs within its first year of production, far exceeding sales expectations.
The Mustang was conceived as a “working man’s Thunderbird,” according to Ford. The first models featured a long hood and short rear deck and carried a starting price tag of around $2,300. Ford general manager Lee Iacocca, who became president of the company in October 1964 (and later headed up Chrysler, which he was credited with reviving in the 1980s) was involved in the Mustang’s development and marketing. The car’s launch generated great interest. It was featured on the covers of Newsweek and Time magazines and the night before it went on sale, the Mustang was featured in commercials that ran simultaneously on all three major television networks. One buyer in Texas reportedly slept at a Ford showroom until his check cleared and he could drive his new Mustang home. The same year it debuted, the Mustang appeared on the silver screen in the James Bond movie “Goldfinger.” A green 1968 Mustang 390 GT was famously featured in the 1968 Steve McQueen movie “Bullitt,” in a car chase through the streets of San Francisco. Since then, Mustangs have appeared in hundreds of movies.
Within three years of its debut, some 500 Mustang fan clubs had cropped up. In March 1966, the 1 millionth Mustang rolled off the assembly line. In honor of the Mustang’s 35th anniversary in 1999, the U.S. Postal Service issued a stamp commemorating the original model. In 2004, Ford built its 300 millionth car, a 2004 Mustang GT convertible 40th anniversary model. The 2004 Mustangs were the final vehicles made at the company’s Dearborn production facility, which had been building Mustangs since their debut. (Assembly then moved to a plant in Flat Rock, Michigan.)
Over the decades, the Mustang underwent numerous evolutions, and it remains in production today, with more than 9 million sold.
PICTURED: Ford Celebrates Mustang's 50th Anniversary From Top Of Empire State Building. Picture taken 22 hours ago

April 17 1937
Ferdinand Piëch, grandson of Ferdinand Porsche was born in Vienna, Austria. Piëch was the winner of the award of Car Executive of the Century in 1999.
His grandfather had developed a famous supercharged 16-cylinder engine for the Auto Union racing cars in the 1930s. Coincidentally, decades later when VW came up with a very ambitious project yet, Buggati Veyron, Piëch insisted putting a turbocharged W16-cylinder in it churning out nearly a 1000 horsepower and a top whack of 407 km/h.

April 17 1954
Riccardo Gabriele Patrese, an Italian F1 racing driver was born. He raced in Formula One from 1977 to 1993. He became the first Formula One driver to achieve 200 Grand Prix starts when he appeared at the 1990 British Grand Prix, and the first to achieve 250 starts at the 1993 German Grand Prix. Patrese entered 257 Formula One World Championship Grands Prix and started 256 races making him the second most experienced F1 driver in history, after Rubens Barrichello.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on April 18, 2014, 09:44:32 pm
(http://i51.photobucket.com/albums/f378/Weirdeaux/vehicles/TommyIvo1960.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/Weirdeaux/media/vehicles/TommyIvo1960.jpg.html)

On this day, 18th April, 1936
Tommy Ivo, also known as "TV Tommy" was born in Denver, Colorado He is an actor and drag racer, who was active in the 1950-60s racing community. In the late 1950s, Ivo raced a twin (side by side) Nailhead Buick engined dragster which was the first Gasoline Powered dragster to break the nine second barrier. The Twin Buick also was the first gas dragster to record speeds of 170, 175 and 180 mph.

April 18th, 1882
Gottlieb Daimler and Wilhelm Maybach reached an agreement to work towards the creation of a high-speed internal combustion engine. Daimler had purchased a house with 75k goldmark from his Deutz compensation. In its garden they added a brick extension to the roomy glass-fronted summerhouse which became their workshop.Working in Daimler's greenhouse, the two men finished their first gas-powered engine in 1883. Four years later the two men achieved a major breakthrough when they constructed the first water-cooled, gas-powered internal combustion engine. Their activities alarmed the neighbours who suspected they were engaged in counterfeiting and, in their absence, the police raided the property using the gardener's key, but found only engines.

18th April 1906
Sunset Automobile Company, a startup company in San Francisco was totally destroyed by fire. Production of the Sunset never resumed, and the firm was legally dissolved in 1909. Throughout the history of American automobile production no company ever succeeded on the West Coast. they developed one of the most silent engine of that time.

18th April, 1942
Karl Jochen Rindt was born in Mainz, Germany. He was a German racing driver who represented Austria over his entire career. He is the only driver to posthumously win the Formula One World Drivers' Championship (in 1970), after being killed in practice for the Italian Grand Prix. Away from Formula One, Rindt was highly successful in other single-seater formulae, as well as sports car racing. In 1965 he won the 24 Hours of Le Mans race, driving a Ferrari 250LM in partnership with Masten Gregory from the United States of America.

18th April, 1949
18 times Nascar winner Geoff Bodine was born.

18th April, 2009
Driver Mark Martin wins the Subway Fresh Fit 500 at the Phoenix International Speedway in Avondale, Arizona, and becomes the first 50-year-old to claim victory at a National Association for Stock Car Auto Racing (NASCAR) Sprint Cup race since Morgan Shepherd did so at a race in Atlanta in 1993. Besides Martin and Shepherd, only two other drivers age 50 or older have won Sprint Cup events.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on April 19, 2014, 10:09:06 pm
(http://i961.photobucket.com/albums/ae91/danny_galaga/karmann.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/danny_galaga/media/karmann.jpg.html)

19th April, 1955
Volkswagen of America, Inc. was established in Engelwood, New Jersey. Also 1955 was a banner year for Volkswagen as the company produced its 1 millionth car and exceeded, for the first time, the production benchmark of 1,000 cars per day on average. Less than five years after that the VW Bug had almost single-handedly ended the years of "virtual monopoly" that Detroit Big Three had previously enjoyed.
PICTURED: If you know your VW Karmann Ghia's...You know this is cool

April 19, 1962
Two time Indianapoli 500 winner Alfred Unser, Jr. was born in Albuquerque, New Mexico, He was famously known as "Little Al" and the Unser family has a history of Indianapolis wins. He also has video games on nintendo & PC named after him.

April 19, 1964
Mario Andretti competes in his inaugural Indy car race, in Trenton, New Jersey, finishing in 11th place. The following year, Andretti won the first of his four Indy car championships (also referred to as the U.S. National Championship) and was named Rookie of the Year at the prestigious Indianapolis 500, where he came in third. Andretti went on to become an icon in the world of motor sports. He is the only man to win the Formula One World Championship, the U.S. National Championship (1965, 1966, 1969, 1984), the Indianapolis 500, the Daytona 500, the 24 Hours of Daytona, the 12 Hours of Sebring (1967, 1970, 1972) and the Pikes Peak International Hill Club.
He also has video games on nintendo & PC named after him.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on April 20, 2014, 06:37:21 pm
(http://i579.photobucket.com/albums/ss237/katiexgetsxcrunk/danica_patrick.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/katiexgetsxcrunk/media/danica_patrick.jpg.html)

On this day, April 20, 2008
26-year-old Danica Patrick wins the Indy Japan 300 at Twin Ring Montegi in Montegi, Japan, making her the first female winner in IndyCar racing history.
Danica Patrick was born on March 25, 1982, in Beloit, Wisconsin. She became involved in racing as a young girl and as a teenager moved to England in pursuit of better training opportunities. In 2002, after returning to the United States, she began driving for the Rahal Letterman Racing team, owned by 1986 Indianapolis 500 champ Bobby Rahal and late-night talk-show host David Letterman. In 2005, Patrick started competing in IndyCar events, which include the famed Indianapolis 500 race at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway in Indiana.

April 20, 1925
Pete Depaolo, wins his first Indy 500 in cluver city, California for Dusenberg family averaging an impressive 135mph.

April 20, 1927
Phil Hill, american F1 racer was born in Miami Florida, He won the 1961 F1 championship racing for Scuderia ferari, driving the famous 'sharknose' Ferari 156

April 20, 1931
Matilda Dodge Wilson, the widow of John Dodge, was named to the board of the Graham-Paige Motors Corporation, becoming the first woman to sit on the board of a major auto-manufacturer. Graham-Paige was founded by the Graham brothers, whose initial car-making endeavor, Graham Brothers Truck Company, had been purchased by Dodge in 1926.

April 20, 1946
Gordon Smiley, another Indy 500 racer was born. Though he raced twiced in 1980,81 in Indy500 but never won. He tragically died during qualifying run in 1982 Indy500, and to date is the last driver ever to die during qualifying run.

April 20, 2003
Dajiro Kato, Japanese MotoGP racer died at Suzuka, crashing hard at 125mph to a wall at final chicane of the circuit.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on April 21, 2014, 10:26:10 pm
(http://i645.photobucket.com/albums/uu176/MustangMayhem/this%20day%20in%20HISTORY/download_zps2c2aa9c1.jpg) (http://s645.photobucket.com/user/MustangMayhem/media/this%20day%20in%20HISTORY/download_zps2c2aa9c1.jpg.html)

On this day, April 21, 1967
General Motors (GM) celebrates the manufacture of its 100 millionth American-made car. At the time, GM was the world’s largest automaker.
General Motors was established in 1908 in Flint, Michigan, by horse-drawn carriage mogul William Durant. In 1904, Durant invested in the Buick Motor Company, which was started in 1903 by Scottish-born inventor David Dunbar Buick. Within a few years of forming his company, Buick lost control of it and sold his stock, which would later be worth hundreds of millions of dollars. (In 1929, Buick died at age 74 in relative obscurity and modest circumstances). Durant made Buick Motors the cornerstone of his new holding company, General Motors, then acquired Oldsmobile, Cadillac and Reliance Motor Company, among other auto and truck makers.
In 1911, Durant founded Chevrolet Motor Company, which by 1918 was part of GM. By the early 1930s, GM had passed the Ford Motor Company to become the world’s biggest automaker. Although Ford sold more than 15 million Model Ts between 1908 and 1927, the company was criticized for not responding quickly enough to consumer demand for new models, as GM did. GM also offered financing options to consumers, while Henry Ford objected to credit.
GM went on to experience decades of growth. The company pursued a strategy of selling a vehicle “for every purse and purpose,” in the words of Alfred Sloan, who became GM’s president in 1923 and resigned as chairman in 1956. In 1940, the company commemorated its 25 millionth American-made car, and by its peak in 1962, GM produced 51 percent of all the cars in the U.S. Its 75 millionth U.S.-made car rolled off the assembly line that year, while the 100 millionth car followed in 1967.
However, according to The New York Times, during the 1960s the automaker “began a long and slow process of undermining itself,” as it failed to innovate fast enough in the face of competition from foreign car manufacturers. In 2008, GM, hard hit by the global economic crisis, lost its title as the world’s top-selling automaker; that year, GM sold 8.356 million cars and trucks compared with Toyota’s 8.972 million vehicles. On June 1, 2009, GM filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection. It was a move once considered unthinkable for the company that became a giant of the U.S. economy in the 20th century.
http://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=1955&dat=19670416&id=ewQrAAAAIBAJ&sjid=xZcFAAAAIBAJ&pg=5383,758730 (http://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=1955&dat=19670416&id=ewQrAAAAIBAJ&sjid=xZcFAAAAIBAJ&pg=5383,758730)

April 21, 1985
The legendary Ayrton Senna won his first of 41 F1 Championship victories driving a Lotus-Renault at the Portuguese Grand Prix in Estoril.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on April 22, 2014, 09:00:30 pm
(http://i645.photobucket.com/albums/uu176/MustangMayhem/this%20day%20in%20HISTORY/merlin_1766705b_zpsbc097b7b.jpg) (http://s645.photobucket.com/user/MustangMayhem/media/this%20day%20in%20HISTORY/merlin_1766705b_zpsbc097b7b.jpg.html)

On this day, April 22, 1967
Frederick Henry Royce, who with Charles Stewart Rolls founded the luxury British automaker Rolls-Royce, dies on this day in 1933 at the age of 70 in England.
Royce was born on March 27, 1863, near Peterborough, Cambridgeshire, England. He grew up in a family of modest means and worked a variety of jobs, eventually becoming an electrician. In the mid-1880s, he founded a business that made electric cranes and electrical generators. In the early 1900s, after purchasing his first car, Royce began designing cars of his own, deciding he could build something better. Royce met British automotive dealer Charles Rolls, who agreed to sell Royce’s cars; the two men later formed a company, Rolls-Royce Limited. Royce, who was known for his attention to detail and perfectionism, served as head engineer. The six-cylinder Rolls-Royce Silver Ghost, which debuted in 1906, was dubbed by the British press the world’s “best car.”
In 1910, Charles Rolls died at the age of 32 while piloting his own plane. Royce continued on with their company and during World War I, designed aircraft engines for the Allied forces. Following the war, Rolls-Royce returned to making cars, launching the Phantom I , a vehicle that was “powered by an all-new, pushrod-operated overhead valve engine with detachable cylinder heads--cutting-edge technology for its time,” according to the automotive information Web site Edmunds.com. In 1931, Rolls-Royce acquired rival luxury automaker Bentley. Frederick Henry Royce died on April 22, 1933, at West Wittering, West Sus***, England.
In 1950, Rolls-Royce introduced the powerful and highly exclusive Phantom IV. Only 18 of these cars were produced, according to Edmunds.com, and they all went to royalty and other VIPs. The automaker continued to thrive during the 1950s and 1960s; however, in 1971, Rolls-Royce Ltd. declared bankruptcy after financial troubles related to the development of a jet engine. The company was restructured into two separate businesses: automotive and aircraft. In 1980, the auto company was acquired by a British defense business, Vickers. The following year, the Rolls-Royce Silver Spirit, a car designed to attract a new generation of buyers, launched.
In the late 1990s, when Vickers decided to sell Rolls-Royce, German automakers Volkswagen and BMW each made a play for the business. VW ended up acquiring the Rolls-Royce production facilities in Crewe, England, while BMW got the rights to the Rolls-Royce car brand. BMW licensed the Rolls-Royce name to VW until the end of 2002, then BMW began producing Rolls-Royce cars in 2003. VW continued to make Bentleys at the Crewe plant.
PICTURED: Rolls-Royce handout photo of their Merlin engines being made
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on April 23, 2014, 09:31:53 pm
(http://i1245.photobucket.com/albums/gg592/JonCole56/1-1%20LAMBORGHINI/Lamborghini350GTV.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/JonCole56/media/1-1%20LAMBORGHINI/Lamborghini350GTV.jpg.html)

On this day, 23rd April 1987
The Chrysler Corporation purchases Nuova Automobili F. Lamborghini, the Bologna, Italy-based maker of high-priced, high-performance cars. Although the terms of the deal were not disclosed, the media reported that Chrysler paid $25 million for Lamborghini, which at the time was experiencing financial difficulties.
Lamborghini was established in 1963 by Ferruccio Lamborghini (1916-1993), a wealthy Italian industrialist who made his fortune building tractors and air-conditioning systems, among other ventures. Lamborghini owned a variety of sports cars, including Ferraris. According to legend, after experiencing mechanical problems with his Ferraris, he tried to meet with Enzo Ferrari, the carmaker’s founder. When Enzo Ferrari turned him down, Ferruccio Lamborghini decided to build cars that would be even better than Ferrari’s. Lamborghini’s first car, the 350 GTV, a two-seat coupe with a V12 engine, launched in 1963.
The company’s logo featured a bull, a reference to Ferruccio Lamborghini’s zodiac sign, Taurus the bull. Various Lamborghini models had names related to bulls or bullfighting, including the Miura, a mid-engine sports car that was released in mid-1960s and gained Lamborghini an international following among car enthusiasts and a reputation for prestige and cutting-edge design. The Miura was named for a breeder of fighting bulls, Don Eduardo Miura.
In the early 1970s, Lamborghini’s tractor business experienced problems and he eventually sold his interest in his sports car business and retired to his vineyard in the mid-1970s. Automobili Lamborghini changed hands several times and in 1987 was sold to Chrysler.
In 1994, Chrysler sold Lamborghini to a group of Indonesian investors. Four years later, German automaker Audi AG owned by Volkswagen took control of Lamborghini. The company has continued to build high-performance cars, including the Murcielago, the Gallardo LP560-4 and theSpyder.
PICTURED: The Lamborghini 350 GTV

April 23 1992
Smithsonian Museum bought one of Miller's 91 Packard Cable Special's. Harry Miller was one of the most famous race car builder's of his time. Cars and engines built by him won Indy500 12 times which was then dominated by Dusenberg family. This car bought was one of 12 racing cars built by Harry A. Miller. Its 1500cc supercharged V8 rated at 230 horsepower drives front wheel. Strangely it weighted only 108kgs. This particular car was driven by Ralph Hepburn in the 1929 Indianapolis 500 and set speed records of 143mph. In 1991 the car also won two of the most rigorous antique auto competitions in the world: the Pebble Beach Concours in California and the Bagatelle Concours Paris.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on April 24, 2014, 08:54:59 pm
(http://i46.photobucket.com/albums/f105/felixdk/Motorsports/Sports%20Cars%20and%20Prototypes/Watkins%20Glen%206%20Hour%201971/716hr_6.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/felixdk/media/Motorsports/Sports%20Cars%20and%20Prototypes/Watkins%20Glen%206%20Hour%201971/716hr_6.jpg.html)

On this day, April 24, 1983
Rolf Stommelen, a German race car driver fatally crashed in his porsche 935 while racing in Camel GT trophy on Riverside Raceway, California.
He was one of the best race car drivers of the '60s and '70s, He won the Daytona 4 times and the pole position for the 1969 Le Mans in a Porsche 917, during which he became the first person to reach speeds exceeding 350 km/h. In 1970, he made his Formula One debut with Brabham and raced both sportscars and F1 throughout the 1970s.
Unfortunately, he is also remembered for killing 5 spectators when he crashed his car, Embassy-Hill- Lola during the 1975 season Spanish Grand Prix in Barcelona.
PICTURED: Rolf Stommelen's, Alfa Romeo T33/3

April 24, 1995
After producing about 6939 cars Lotus tuned Chevy Corvette ZR1's production was ceased. The heart of this car was lotus built LT5 V8 engine, which had a very unique intake manifold. It had 4 valves per cylinder and 4 camshaft to control them. It could shut off half of the intake valves and fuel injectors when the engine was at part-throttle, It was rated at 375bhp-405bhp in later models. In 2009 Chevy again revived ZR1.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: stormin on April 25, 2014, 09:03:03 am
99 Years ago today the ANZAC legend was born. LEST WE FORGET>
Stormin
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on April 25, 2014, 10:40:37 pm
(http://i609.photobucket.com/albums/tt179/caddy-shack/Maserati/ViadPepoliBologna.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/caddy-shack/media/Maserati/ViadPepoliBologna.jpg.html)


April 25, 1926
Alfieri Maserati's first car, the Tipo 26, made its racing debut by winning its class at the Targa Florio. Alfieri Maserati drove the car himself.
PICTURED: The Original Maserati factory/showroom on the Via dé Pepoli, in the 'old town' of Bologna, (Not many people know that - most fans tend to associate Maserati with the now legendary 'Viale Ciro Menotti' but Maserati didn't start out there, they moved there in 1940) The picture is Circa 1928 as a Tipo 26 leaves the factory.

April 25, 1901
Registration of the first vehicle which is today mandatory for all cars, first started in the state of New York. The fee to register the vehicle was $1. Total registration fees collected amounted $954 for very first year.
However France is considered the first to introduce a license plate, in 1893, followed by Germany in 1896. The Netherlands was the first country to introduce a national license plate, called a "driving permit", in 1898. But uniform registration and charging the owner for it was first introduced in the city of New York.

April 25, 2001
44-year-old Italian race car driver Michele Alboreto is killed on a track in Germany during a test drive. Alboreto collected five Grand Prix wins on the Formula One (F1) circuit, where he competed during the 1980s and early 1990s, and also claimed victory at the 24 Hours of Le Mans endurance race in 1997.
Michele Alboreto was born in Milan, Italy, on December 23, 1956, and began his racing career in the mid-1970s. He made his F1 debut in 1981 and took home his first victory at the Caesars Palace Grand Prix Las Vegas in 1982. From 1984 to 1988, Alboreto drove for the Ferrari team, the first Italian to do so in more than a decade. In 1985, his most successful year, he won the Canadian Grand Prix and the German Grand Prix and came in second place for the F1 drivers’ championship behind the iconic French driver Alain Prost, who collected the crown again in 1986, 1989 and 1993.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on April 26, 2014, 10:03:38 pm
(http://i574.photobucket.com/albums/ss184/schrader_42/PIERCE1.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/schrader_42/media/PIERCE1.jpg.html)

April 26, 1906
Pierce Arrow purchased 16 acre's of land to create its new manufacturing unit. The factory that was constructed on it was of reinforced concrete and was absolutely fireproof. Albert Kahn, the architect of the factory, achieved a breakthrough with his single story, top-lit modular design. With its uniform lighting and physical flexibility, it rapidly became the prototype for American factory design, particularly in the emerging motor industry.
Pierce was the only luxury brand that did not create a lower price car. Its cars are collectors items world over.
PICTURED: The Pierce Arrow with a protective cover over the very intricate hood emblem

(http://i2.photobucket.com/albums/y17/wannabemustangjockey/SFIAS%20Nov%2009/100_0669.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/wannabemustangjockey/media/SFIAS%20Nov%2009/100_0669.jpg.html)

April 26, 2009
Chrysler and the United Auto Workers (UAW) union reach a tentative deal that meets government requirements for the struggling auto manufacturer to receive more federal funding.
As part of the deal, the UAW agreed to let Chrysler reduce the amount of money it would pay toward health care costs of its retired workers. The month before the deal was announced, President Barack Obama issued an ultimatum to Chrysler that it must undergo a fundamental restructuring and shrink its costs in order to receive future government aid. Obama also gave Chrysler a month to complete a merger with Italian car maker Fiat or another partner. Although Chrysler reached a deal with the UAW as well as its major creditors shortly before the one-month deadline, Obama announced on April 30 that Chrysler, after failing to come to an agreement with some of its smaller creditors, would file for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection, then form a partnership with Fiat. The move made Chrysler the first big automaker to file for bankruptcy and attempt to reorganize since Studebaker did so in 1933.
The current stake holders (as of 2009) are in New Chrysler are: Fiat, 20 %; U.S. government, 9.85 %; Canadian government, 2.46 %; and the UAW retiree medical fund 67.69 %.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on April 27, 2014, 09:38:27 pm
(http://i126.photobucket.com/albums/p83/okiedirt2/38Pontiac2.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/okiedirt2/media/38Pontiac2.jpg.html)

On this day, April 27, 2009
The struggling American auto giant General Motors (GM) says it plans to discontinue production of its more than 80-year-old Pontiac brand.
Pontiac’s origins date back to the Oakland Motor Car, which was founded in 1907 in Pontiac, Michigan, by Edward Murphy, a horse-drawn carriage manufacturer. In 1909, Oakland became part of General Motors, a conglomerate formed the previous year by another former buggy company executive, William Durant. The first Pontiac model made its debut as part of the Oakland line in the 1920s. The car, which featured a six-cylinder engine, proved so popular that the Oakland name was eventually dropped and Pontiac became its own GM division by the early 1930s.
Pontiac was initially known for making sedans; however, by the 1960s it had gained acclaim for its fast, sporty “muscle cars,” including the GTO, the Firebird and the Trans Am. The GTO, which was developed by auto industry maverick John DeLorean, was named after a Ferarri coupe, the Gran Turismo Omologato. Pontiacs were featured in such movies as 1977’s “Smokey and the Bandit,” in which actor Burt Reynolds drove a black Pontiac Trans Am, and the 1980s hit TV show “Knight Rider,” which starred a Pontiac Trans Am as KITT, a talking car with artificial intelligence, alongside David Hasselhoff as crime fighter Michael Knight.
By the mid-1980s, Pontiac’s sales reached their peak. Experts believe GM hurt the Pontiac brand in the 1970s and 1980s by opting for a money-saving strategy requiring Pontiacs to share platforms with cars from other divisions. In 2008, General Motors, which had been the world’s top-selling automaker since the early 1930s, lost the No. 1 position to Japan-based Toyota. That same year, GM, with sales slumping in the midst of a global recession, was forced to ask the federal government for a multi-billion-dollar loan to remain afloat. On April 27, 2009, as part of its reorganization plan, GM announced it would phase out the Pontiac brand by 2010. A little over a month later, on June 1, GM filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection, becoming the fourth-largest bankruptcy in U.S. history.
Pontiac became the second brand General Motors has eliminated in six years. Oldsmobile met the same fate in 2004 after being more slowly phased out over four years. Pontiac also became the ninth North American automobile brand since 1987 to be phased out, after Merkur, Passport, Asüna, Geo, Plymouth, American Motors (AMC) (renamed Eagle in 1988, only to be phased out a decade later), and Oldsmobile.
The last American Pontiac, a 2010 G6, was built on November 25, 2009 at the Orion Assembly plant. No public farewell took place, although a group of plant employees documented the event. In December 2009, the last Pontiac-branded vehicle to roll off an assembly line was in the Canadian-market Pontiac G3 Wave, manufactured in South Korea by GM Daewoo.

April 27, 1936
The United Auto Workers (UAW) gains autonomy from the American Federation of Labor.

April 27, 1952
Ari Vatanen, a Finnish rally driver turned politician was born in Tuupovaara. Vatanen won the World Rally Championship drivers' title in 1981 and the Paris Dakar Rally four times.

Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on April 28, 2014, 09:58:58 pm
(http://i209.photobucket.com/albums/bb57/HowardMu/Antique%20autos/LaneCrosleySuperSport.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/HowardMu/media/Antique%20autos/LaneCrosleySuperSport.jpg.html)

On this day, 28th April 1939
Powel Crosely, an American industrilaist produces the first American compact car, the Crosely. Initially it was offered as a two-door convertible that weighed just 450 kg and sold for $250. It was powered by a 580cc 2 cylinder air cooled engine. It was mated with a 3 speed gearbox The chassis had an 80-inch wheelbase, half elliptic springs with beam axle in front and quarter elliptic's in the rear.
Later many body style were released viz., four-passenger convertibles, a convertible sedan, a station wagon, a panel truck , a pickup , and two models called "Parkway Delivery" (a mini-panel with no roof over the front seat) and "Covered Wagon" (a convertible picion wagonkup truck with a removable back seat).

28th APril 1916
Legendary Ferruccio Lamborghini was born in a small Itallian village called Renazzo. His interest in automobile's began early, modding and racing his souped up Fiat Topolino. His racing career ended when he crashed his fiat in Milli Migelia.
After the WWII he achieved great success manufacturing tractors and air conditioners. Racing became his passion and collecting race cars became his hobby, including a bunch of Ferrari's.
Lamborghini jumped into making sports cars after a very ironic situation when he went to Enzo to give advice on Ferrari's clutch issue. Enzo insulted him by saying that he doesn't need any advice from a tractor maker.
In order to achieve his goal, he hired ex-Ferrari engineers Gianpaolo Dallara and Bob Wallace to design and develop his own sports cars. The output was an outstanding mid engined beauty like Lambo 350gt and Muira, which was way ahead of its time.
The company’s logo featured a bull, a reference to Ferruccio Lamborghini’s zodiac sign, Taurus the bull. Various Lamborghini models had names related to bulls or bullfighting, including the Miura (named for Don Eduardo Miura, a breeder of fighting bulls), a mid-engine sports car that was released in mid-1960s and gained Lamborghini an international following among car enthusiasts and a reputation for prestige and cutting-edge design.
In the early 1970s, Lamborghini’s tractor business experienced problems and he eventually sold his interest in his sports car business and retired to his vineyard. Automobili Lamborghini changed hands several times and in the late 1990s was purchased by German automaker Volkswagen. The company continued to build high-performance cars, including the Murcielago (capable of 250 mph) and the Gallardo. Ferruccio Lamborghini died on February 20, 1993, at the age of 76.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: malscar on April 28, 2014, 11:18:23 pm
Hey Matt, do I ask what the little green tonka car is?
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on May 01, 2014, 12:39:42 am
Hey Matt, do I ask what the little green tonka car is?

I have no idea mate but it looks cool

As for this day in history.....Been under the pump for days now and havent had a chance to breath...I will resume with the daily posts now and catch up a few days we have missed

Matt
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on May 01, 2014, 12:46:40 am
(http://i891.photobucket.com/albums/ac114/MotorsportRevolution/Lost%20Racing%20Legends%201/DaleEarnhardtSr-2.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/MotorsportRevolution/media/Lost%20Racing%20Legends%201/DaleEarnhardtSr-2.jpg.html)

April 29, 1951
Dale Earnhardt Sr., popularly known as "The Intimidator" was born in Kannapolis, North Carolina. He is considered as one of the greatest drivers in NASCAR history. He died on February 18, 2001, when he was fatally injured in a last-lap at the Daytona 500. Earnhardt, age 49, died instantly of head injuries.

April 29, 2004
The last Oldsmobile comes off the assembly line at the Lansing Car Assembly plant in Michigan, signaling the end of the 106-year-old automotive brand, America’s oldest. Factory workers signed the last Oldsmobile, an Alero sedan, before the vehicle was moved to Lansing’s R.E. Olds Transportation Museum, where it went on display. The last 500 Aleros ever manufactured featured “Final 500” emblems and were painted dark metallic cherry red.
In 1897, Ransom E. Olds (1864-1950), an Ohio-born engine maker, founded the Olds Motor Vehicle Company in Lansing. In 1901, the company, then known as Olds Motor Works, debuted the Curved Dash Oldsmobile, a gas-powered, open-carriage vehicle named for its curved front footboard. More than 400 of these vehicles were sold during the first year, at a price of $650 each (around $17,000 in today’s dollars). In subsequent years, sales reached into the thousands. However, by 1904, clashes between Olds and his investors caused him to sell the bulk of his stock and leave the company. He soon went on to found the REO (based on his initials) Motor Car Company, which built cars until 1936 and produced trucks until 1975.
In 1908, Oldsmobile was the second brand, after Buick, to become part of the newly established General Motors (GM). Oldsmobile became a top brand for GM and pioneered such features as chrome-plating in 1926 and, in 1940, the first fully automatic transmission for a mass-market vehicle. Oldsmobile concentrated on cars for middle-income consumers and from the mid-1970s to the early 1980s, the Oldsmobile Cutlass was America’s best-selling auto. However, in the decades that followed, sales began to decline, prompting GM to announce in 2000 that it would discontinue the Oldsmobile line with the 2004 models. When the last Oldsmobile rolled off the assembly line in April 2004, more than 35 million Oldsmobiles had been built during the brand’s lifetime. Along with Daimler and Peugeot, Oldsmobile was among the world’s oldest auto brands.

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30th April 1925
The Dodge widows sold Dodge Brothers Inc to the New York City banking firm of Dillon, Read & Company for $146 million plus $50 million for charity. It was the largest cash deal in history at that time. The sale of Dodge was not the result of a downturn in the company's fortune as Dodge was still selling well. The sale of the company was rather the result of the unwillingness of the Dodge Brothers' offspring to manage the company's affairs. Both Horace and John Dodge died in 1920. During their lifetimes, they had run the company personally, explicitly excluding their family members from participation in the company's management. After the brothers' deaths a brief depression in the stock market in 1921 scared the family members into "cashing out" of the company's affairs.
After running it unsuccessfully for three years Dillion Read & Company approached Chrysler for takeover.

April 30th 1948
Land Rover was unveiled for the first time in Amsterdam Motor Show. Land Rover was developed as a result of necesscity when Maurice Wilks, a Rover engineer was unable to procure parts for his constanly breaking WW2 american Jeep while working on his farm in Wales.
He thought there could be a huge demand of such vehcile, as there were a very limited option in that segment namely, Jeep and Kubelwagen only.
He had very limited resource, as Steel was rationed and available to company that exported and at that time Rover didn't. So he thought of using Alumunium, as they were plenty as WWII surplus used to built aircraft. Ironically this had added advantage, one it was cheap, other it was rust proof, just right for Britain's weather.
Its said that 75% of Landy that left the Solihull is still alive.

April 30th 1963
Micheal Waltrip, two time Daytona 500 champion was born in Kentucky. He is retired and currently lives in North Carolina. He owns a racing team, Michael Waltrip Racing and do ocassional commentary for race events.

April 30th 1975
Elliot Sadler, a Nascar race driver was born in Virginia. He currently drives No19 Dodge Charger for Gillett Evernham Motorsports.

April 30th 1991
The last Trabant rolled out of assembly line after 34 years of production and and nearly three million example produced. The model hardly had any significant change during its 34 years of lifecycle. It is commonly used as a handy symbol by the advocate of free market for everything wrong with government planned economies and communism.

April 30th 1993
Roland Ratzenberger, an Austrian racecar driver crashed fatally during the qualifying run for the San Marino Grand Prix at Imola, In the same event the very next day three-time Formula One world champion Ayrton Senna died.

April 30th 2003
Possum Bourne, A kiwi rally driver succumbed due to head injuries sustained on 18th April in non-competitive circumstances while driving on a public road, that was to be the track for an upcoming race. He was driving his Subaru Outback and collided with a Jeep Cherokee driven by another rally driver Mike Baltrop. At the time of his death, Possum had just re-entered the world stage, driving a production-class Subaru Impreza.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on May 01, 2014, 10:18:01 pm

(http://i645.photobucket.com/albums/uu176/MustangMayhem/this%20day%20in%20HISTORY/2302_zps013d53da.jpg) (http://s645.photobucket.com/user/MustangMayhem/media/this%20day%20in%20HISTORY/2302_zps013d53da.jpg.html)

On this day, May 1st 1994
Three time F1 World Champion, Aryton Senna died at Imola. Austrian driver Roland Ratzenberger was killed in a practice accident the previous day. Senna and the other drivers still opted to start the Grand Prix, but the race was interrupted by a huge accident at the start line. A safety car was deployed and the drivers followed it for several laps. On the restart Senna immediately set a quick pace with the third quickest lap of the race, followed by Schumacher. As Senna entered the high-speed Tamburello corner on the next lap, the car left the track at high speed, hitting the concrete retaining wall at around 135 mph. Senna was removed from the car by Sid Watkins and his medical team and treated by the side of the car before being airlifted to Bologna hospital where Senna was later declared dead.
PICTURED: Medics tend to a fatally injured Ayrton Senna at Imola

May 1st 1902
First gasoline powered Locomobile was produced.

May 1st 1925
Ettore Bugatti registered both the 'Pur Sangre Des Automobiles', and the thoroughbred racing horse profile, as French trademarks.

May 1st 1925
Ford Motor Company becomes one of the first companies in America to adopt a five-day, 40-hour week for workers in its automotive factories. The policy would be extended to Ford's office workers the following August.
Henry Ford's Detroit-based automobile company had broken ground in its labor policies before. In early 1914, against a backdrop of widespread unemployment and increasing labor unrest, Ford announced that it would pay its male factory workers a minimum wage of $5 per eight-hour day, upped from a previous rate of $2.34 for nine hours (the policy was adopted for female workers in 1916). The news shocked many in the industry--at the time, $5 per day was nearly double what the average auto worker made--but turned out to be a stroke of brilliance, immediately boosting productivity along the assembly line and building a sense of company loyalty and pride among Ford's workers.
The decision to reduce the workweek from six to five days had originally been made in 1922. According to an article published in The New York Times that March, Edsel Ford, Henry's son and the company's president, explained that "Every man needs more than one day a week for rest and recreation….The Ford Company always has sought to promote an ideal home life for its employees. We believe that in order to live properly every man should have more time to spend with his family."
Manufacturers all over the country, and the world, soon followed Ford's lead, and the Monday-to-Friday workweek became standard practice.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on May 02, 2014, 07:18:33 pm
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On this day, May 2nd 1918
The General Motors acquired the Chevrolet Motor Company for $32 million in GM stock. This is quite an interesting story. The deal was actually a merger engineered by William Durant rather than a buyout. The original founder of GM, Durant had been forced out of the company by stockholders who had disapproved of Durant's increasingly reckless policies to run the company. Durant after being kicked out of GM started Chevrolet with Swiss racer Louis Chevrolet and managed to make the company a successful competitor in a relatively short period of time. Still the owner of a considerable portion of GM stock, Durant began to purchase more stock in GM as his profits from Chevrolet allowed. In a final move to regain control of the company he founded, Durant offered GM stockholders five shares of Chevrolet stock for every one share of GM stock. Though GM stock prices were exorbitantly high, the market interest in Chevrolet made the five-for-one trade irresistible to GM shareholders. With the sale, Durant regained control of GM.

His revenge did not last long though. Only two years later, Durant’s control of the company was taken by Pierre S. DuPont (of the powerful chemical company by the same name) who had been buying GM stock for years. DuPont soon paid off all of Durant’s debt, and the controversial company founder left the company for good.

Durant refused to give up on the automotive industry, though. He founded Durant Motors in 1921 and produced a line of cars for the next decade. The Great Depression in the early 1930s put an end to his company, and Durant then operated bowling alleys near the Buick complex in Flint, Michigan. These flopped eventually, and he spent much of the remainder of his life in anonymity. Durant passed away on March 18, 1947, at the age of 85. Hats off to William C. “Billy” Durant from all of us at
PICTURED: Louis Chevrolet is shown driving Durant around a track in this photo.

May 2nd 1972
Buddy Baker became the first stock car driver to finish a 500-mile race in less than three hours en route to winning the Winston Select 500 at the Alabama International Motor Speedway in Talladega, Alabama. He also broke the 200mph barrier a few years ago on the same track.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on May 03, 2014, 08:41:37 pm
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On this day, May 3rd 1987
The late Davey Allison recorded his first NASCAR Winston Cup victory at Talladega, Alabama, driving his Ford Thunderbird. The very day and in the same race his father, legendary Bobby Allison suffered a near fatal crash.
After the crash, NASCAR made the use of restrictor plates mandatory in all
cars.

May 3rd 1980
13-year-old Cari Lightner of Fair Oaks, California, is walking along a quiet road on her way to a church carnival when a car swerves out of control, striking and killing her. Cari's tragic death compelled her mother, Candy Lightner, to found the organization Mothers Against Drunk Driving (MADD), which would grow into one of the country's most influential non-profit organizations.
When police arrested Clarence Busch, the driver who hit Cari, they found that he had a record of arrests for intoxication, and had in fact been arrested on another hit-and-run drunk-driving charge less than a week earlier. Candy Lightner learned from a policeman that drunk driving was rarely prosecuted harshly, and that Busch was unlikely to spend significant time behind bars. Furious, Lightner decided to take action against what she later called "the only socially accepted form of homicide." MADD was the result.


Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on May 04, 2014, 09:30:41 pm
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On this day, May 4th 1948
Three time le Mans winner Hurley Haywood was born in Chicago. He was drafted into Army and sent to Vietnam in 1970 before driving his Porsches' to victory.
PICTURED: Henn Porsche 935L, Paul Revere 250, Daytona 1983
Here's the Henn 935L in the 1983 Paul Revere 250 at Daytona. It was driven by A.J. Foyt and Hurley Haywood to 1st place overall after qualifying in 1st

May 4th 1904
Charles Stewart Rolls met Frederick Henry Royce in Midland Hotels, Manchester for the very first time and rest is history.

May 4th 1920
Harry Miller was issued a U.S. patent for a race car design that introduced many features later incorporated into race cars in the following decades.

May 4th 1946
British F1 racer John Watson was born in Northern Ireland.

May 4th 1949
14 time NHRA funny car drag race winner John Force was born in Bell Gardens, California.

May 4th 1984
New Jersey rocker Bruce Springsteen releases "Pink Cadillac" as a B-side to "Dancing in the Dark," which will become the first and biggest hit single off "Born in the U.S.A.," the best-selling album of his career.

May 4th 1987
Jorge Lorenzo, a two time 250cc class World champion was born in Mallorca, Spain. He is currently Rossi's partner in Fiat Yamaha Moto GP team. He previously rode Aprilla to both his victories.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on May 05, 2014, 10:19:20 pm
(http://i645.photobucket.com/albums/uu176/MustangMayhem/this%20day%20in%20HISTORY/cannonball2_zpse731f7e1.jpg) (http://s645.photobucket.com/user/MustangMayhem/media/this%20day%20in%20HISTORY/cannonball2_zpse731f7e1.jpg.html)

On this day, 5th May 1914
Erwin "Cannonball" Baker began his record setting cross-continental motorcycle trip. After this trip he received his nickname 'Canonball' by A New York newspaper reporter who compared him with Canonball Train.
Baker set 143 driving records from the 1910s through the 1930s. His first was set in 1914, riding coast to coast on an Indian motorcycle in 11 days. In 1915, Baker drove from Los Angeles to New York City in 11 days, 7 hours and fifteen minutes in a Stutz Bearcat, and the following year drove a Cadillac 8 roadster from Los Angeles to Times Square in seven days, eleven hours and fifty-two minutes while accompanied by an Indianapolis newspaper reporter. In 1926 he drove a loaded two-ton truck from New York to San Francisco in a record five days, seventeen hours and thirty minutes, and in 1928, he beat the 20th Century Limited train from New York to Chicago. Also in 1928, he competed in the Mount Washington Hillclimb Auto Race, and set a record time of 14:49.6 seconds, driving a Franklin.
His best-remembered drive was a 1933 New York City to Los Angeles trek in a Graham-Paige model 57 Blue Streak 8, setting a 53.5 hour record that stood for nearly 40 years. This drive inspired the later Cannonball Baker Sea-To-Shining-Sea Memorial Trophy Dash, better known as the "Cannonball Run", which itself inspired at least five movies and a television series. In 1941, he drove a new Crosley Covered Wagon across the nation in a 6,517-mile run to prove the economy and reliability characteristics of Crosley automobiles. Other record and near-record transcontinental trips were made in Model T Fords, Chrysler Imperials, Marmons, Falcon-Knights and Columbia Tigers, among others.
PICTURED: Erwin "Cannonball" Baker and crew

5th May 1944
Bertha Benz, the wife of inventor Karl Benz and the first person to drive an automobile over a long distance, dies in Ladenburg, Germany.
Born Bertha Ringer, she married Karl Benz around 1870. Karl Benz received a patent for his horseless carriage, called the Motorwagen, in January 1886. The wooden vehicle had two wheels in the back, one in the front, and a handle-like contraption as a steering wheel. Powered by a single-cylinder, 2.5-horsepower engine, it could reach speeds of up to 25 miles per hour. Benz was having trouble selling the Motorwagen, however: Early press reports were not altogether positive, and customers were reluctant to take a chance on a vehicle that had so far only been tested over short distances.
In early August 1888, Bertha and her two teenage sons, Richard and Eugen, hatched a plan to take the car on a surprise visit to her mother in Pforzheim, Germany. Knowing that Karl would never allow it, they left early in the morning, while he was still sleeping. The trio drove from their home in Mannheim to Pforzheim and back, a total distance of 106 kilometers. Though big streets in the cities were often paved, there were no real roads outside urban areas yet, and Bertha had to drive along railway lines in order to find her way. To refuel the car, she bought Ligroin, a detergent then used as fuel, at local pharmacies. When the car's fuel line clogged, she unclogged it using one of her hairpins. She also used the garter on her stocking to fix a broken ignition.
Bertha's history-making drive proved that the horseless carriage was suitable for regular use. The press covered it extensively, and Karl Benz began to field requests from potential buyers all over the world. By the end of the 19th century, Benz & Cie. was the world's largest automobile company, with 572 vehicles produced in 1899 alone. Karl Benz left the company several years later. He died in 1929, three years after Benz & Cie. merged with Daimler Motors to form Daimler-Benz, makers of the famous Mercedes-Benz. Bertha Benz continued to live at their home in Ladenburg until her death on May 5, 1944, at the age of 95.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on May 07, 2014, 12:34:29 am
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On this day, May 6th 1991
Harry Gant, aged 51, broke his own record to become the oldest man to win a NASCAR race when he won the Winston 500 in Talladega.

May 6th 1994
French President Mitterrand and Queen Elizabeth II jointly open the Channel Tunnel linking Britain and France underneath the English Channel. Eurotunnel Shuttle service, a roll-on roll-off shuttle service is used to transport road vehicles including freight lorries from France to UK and vice-versa.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on May 07, 2014, 09:32:18 pm
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On this day, May 7th 1967
Don Prudhomme, then 26, popularly known as 'The Snake' drove a modified Ford to became the first dragster to run the quarter mile in less than seven seconds when he reached 226 mph at the NHRA World Series.
PICTURED: Don Prudhomme - Southland - 1970

May 7th 1952
James J. Nance resigned form his position at Hotpoint, an appliance maker to become the president and general manager of the Packard Motor Company. There he was responsible for development of Packard's first V8 engine and automatic transmission popularly known as Ultramatic.

May 7th 1998
Dana Holding Corporation announces its participation in the largest-ever merger of automotive suppliers by its acquisition of Echlin Inc.

May 7th 1998
The German automobile company Daimler-Benz--maker of the world-famous luxury car brand Mercedes-Benz--announces a $36 billion merger with the United States-based Chrysler Corporation.
The purchase of Chrysler, America's third-largest car company, by the Stuttgart-based Daimler-Benz marked the biggest acquisition by a foreign buyer of any U.S. company in history. Though marketed to investors as an equal pairing, it soon emerged that Daimler would be the dominant partner, with its stockholders owning the majority of the new company's shares. For Chrysler, headquartered in Auburn Hills, Michigan, the end of independence was a surprising twist in a striking comeback story. After a near-collapse and a government bailout in 1979 that saved it from bankruptcy, the company surged back in the 1980s under the leadership of the former Ford executive Lee Iacocca, in a revival spurred in part by the tremendous success of its trendsetting minivan.
The new company, DaimlerChrysler AG, began trading on the Frankfurt and New York stock exchanges the following November. A few months later, according to a 2001 article in The New York Times, its stock price rose to an impressive high of $108.62 per share. The euphoria proved to be short-lived, however. While Daimler had been attracted by the profitability of Chrysler's minivans and Jeeps, over the next few years profits were up and down, and by the fall of 2003 the Chrysler Group had cut some 26,000 jobs and was still losing money.
In 2006, according to the Times, Chrysler posted a loss of $1.5 billion and fell behind Toyota to fourth place in the American car market. This loss came despite the company's splashy launch of 10 new Chrysler models that year, with plans to unveil eight more. The following May, however, after reportedly negotiating with General Motors about a potential sale, DaimlerChrysler announced it was selling 80.1 percent of Chrysler to the private-equity firm Cerberus Capital Management for $7.4 billion. DaimlerChrysler, soon renamed Daimler AG, kept a 19.9 percent stake in the new company, known as Chrysler LLC.
By late 2008, increasingly dismal sales led Chrysler to seek federal funds to the tune of $4 billion to stay afloat. Under pressure from the Obama administration, the company filed for bankruptcy protection in April 2009 and entered into a planned partnership with the Italian automaker Fiat.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on May 09, 2014, 02:04:39 am
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On this day, May 8th 1899
Olds Motor Works was incorporated by the merger of Olds Motor Vehicle and Olds Gasoline Engine Works.

May 8th 1933
The very first police radio system was installed in Eastchester Township, New York, by Radio Engineering Laboratories of Long Island.

May 8th 1956
Henry Ford II resigned as the chairperson of Ford Foundation. The Ford Foundation is a philanthropic institution incorporated in Michigan and based in New York City created to fund programs that was chartered in 1936 by Edsel Ford and Henry Ford. He resigned as a trustee in 1976 rendering it independent of Ford Motor Company and Ford family.

May 8th 1964
Bobby Labonte, an american Nascar driver for born in Texas. As of 2008, Labonte is the only driver to have won both the NASCAR Sprint Cup championship and the NASCAR Nationwide Series championship.

May 8th 1982
Gilles Villeneuve, Canadian race car driver died when he crashed his Ferrari during the Belgian Grand Prix.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on May 09, 2014, 07:03:39 pm
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On this day, May 9th 2008
"Speed Racer," the big-budget live-action film version of the 1960s Japanese comic book and television series "MachGoGoGo," makes its debut in U.S. movie theaters.
Christina Ricci, John Goodman, Susan Sarandon and Matthew Fox co-starred in "Speed Racer" alongside Hirsch. Another key cast member was not an actor but an automobile: the mighty Mach 5, a race car designed and built by Speed's father, Pops Racer. As in the American version of the comic, the sleek Mach 5 used in the film is white with red accents, bears similarities to an early Ferrari Testarossa and is outfitted with an array of special features, including jacks that automatically boost the car, allowing for easy repair; rotary saws that protrude from the front tires; and a deflector that seals the driver into a crash-proof container. As part of the publicity for the Wachowskis' "Speed Racer," the Mach 5 went on display in January 2008 at the North American International Auto Show in Detroit, Michigan. As reported in USA Today, however, the car saw little real action on the track. During filming, it was attached to a crane, and most of the effects for the racing scenes were computer generated.

May 9th 1911
Thomas H. Flaherty, of Pittsburgh, PA, received a patent for a "Signal for Crossing", first U. S. patent application for a traffic signal design.

May 9th 1992
Roberto Guerrero, a Colombian race car driver set an Indianapolis 500 qualifying record, driving his Lola-Buick to an average speed of 232.483mph and setting the single lap record at 232.618mph.


Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on May 10, 2014, 09:39:30 pm
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On this day, May 10th 1975
Hélio Castroneves, a two time Indy500 race car driver was born in Sao Paulo, Brazil.

May 10th 1841
James Gordon Bennett Jr., publisher of the New York Herald and one of the very first sponsor and patron of auto racing (Gordon Bennett Cup Races) was born in New York City.

May 10th 1923
Alfred P. Sloan, Jr. elected GM president, Chairman of Executive Committee.

Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on May 12, 2014, 03:54:18 am

(http://i645.photobucket.com/albums/uu176/MustangMayhem/this%20day%20in%20HISTORY/flat550x550075f_zps5e2f89d8.jpg) (http://s645.photobucket.com/user/MustangMayhem/media/this%20day%20in%20HISTORY/flat550x550075f_zps5e2f89d8.jpg.html)

May 11th 1947
Ferrari made its independent racing debut at a race in Piacenza, Italy. Enzo Ferrari had been designing race cars for Alpha Romeo since the late 1920s, After the WWII he decided to start his own brand. His debut car Tipo 125 featured a revolutionary V12 engine and way ahead of time but failed to finish due to fuel pump error. Still during the season he made and sold 3 Tipos. He adopted the now famous prancing horse logo in honour of Italian World War I ace Enrico Baracca, who used the logo on his fighter plane. Interesting thing about Enzo is that he manufactured and sold his cars to
fullfill his racing hobby.

May 11th 1916
Charles Kettering and Edward Deeds agreed to sell their Dayton Engineering Laboratories Company, famously known as DELCO to the United Motors Corporation, a holding company of William C. Durant at a record $9 million. Delco was responsible for several innovations in automobile electric systems, including the first battery ignition system and the first practical automobile self starter.

May 11th 1947
The B.F. Goodrich Company of Akron, Ohio, announces it has developed a tubeless tire, a technological innovation that would make automobiles safer and more efficient.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on May 12, 2014, 04:04:14 am
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On this day, May 12th 1847
William Clayton invented the odometer. During his trip across the plains from Missouri to Utah he was assigned to record the number of miles the company traveled each day. Clayton with the help of mathematecian Orson Pratt tired counting the revolutions of a wagon wheel and computing the day's distance by multiplying the count by the wheel's circumference. After consulting with Pratt, he developed a design consisting of a set of wooden cog wheels attached to the hub of a wagon wheel, with the mechanism "counting" or recording by position the revolutions of the wheel. The apparatus was built by the company's carpenter Appleton Milo Harmon.


(http://i493.photobucket.com/albums/rr299/Sport-GT-Monoplace/Ferrari%20Granturismo%20competizione/1956-tourdeFrance-250GT-DePortago-0577-3.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/Sport-GT-Monoplace/media/Ferrari%20Granturismo%20competizione/1956-tourdeFrance-250GT-DePortago-0577-3.jpg.html)

May 12th 1957
Alfonso de Portago fataly crashed his Ferrari during the Mili Miglia. He, his co-driver Edmund Nelson along with nine spectators were killed when his tire blew. Among the dead were five children. This accident also resulted in a long trial for Ferrari team owner Enzo Ferrari.
PICTURED: 1956-tour de France-250 GT-De Portago-0577

May 12th 1973
Art Portland, an american race car driver died during the practice session for the 1973 Indianapolis 500.

May 12th 2000
19-year-old Adam Petty, son of Winston Cup driver Kyle Petty and grandson of National Association for Stock Car Auto Racing (NASCAR) icon Richard Petty, is killed after crashing into a wall during practice for a Grand National race at Loudon, New Hampshire.

May 12th 2014
Russ Collins, one of the leading motorcycle drag racers and drag bike builders of the 1960s and ‘70s, passed away in Hawaii. He was 74.
http://www.cyclenews.com/664/24404/Racing-Article/Drag-Racing-Legend-Russ-Collins-Passes.aspx (http://www.cyclenews.com/664/24404/Racing-Article/Drag-Racing-Legend-Russ-Collins-Passes.aspx)
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on May 13, 2014, 09:26:35 pm
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On this day, May 13th 1958
During a goodwill trip through Latin America, Vice President Richard Nixon's car is attacked by an angry crowd and nearly overturned while traveling through Caracas, Venezuela. The incident was the dramatic highlight of trip characterized by Latin American anger over some of America's Cold War policies.

May 13th 1980
At the annual meeting of the Chrysler Corporation, stockholders vote to appoint Douglas Fraser, president of the United Automobile Workers (UAW), to one of 20 seats on Chrysler's board of directors. The vote made Fraser the first union representative ever to sit on the board of a major U.S. corporation.
Born in 1916 in Glasgow, Scotland, to a strongly unionist father, Fraser was brought to the United States at the age of six. After dropping out of high school, he was fired from his first two factory jobs for trying to organize his fellow workers. Fraser then got a job at a Chrysler-owned DeSoto plant in Detroit that was organized by the UAW. Quickly promoted through union ranks, Fraser caught the eye of UAW president Walter Reuther. He worked as Reuther's administrative assistant during the 1950s, a groundbreaking period during which the UAW solidified policies on retirement pensions and medical and dental care for its members. Well liked by Reuther, with whom he shared a similar philosophy of unionism as social action, Fraser became a member of the union's executive board in 1962 and a vice president in 1970. Reuther died in an airplane crash that year, and Leonard Woodcock won a narrow vote over Fraser to become UAW president. Fraser succeeded Woodcock in 1977.
The late 1970s were turbulent times for the American auto industry: Rising fuel prices and the popularity of fuel-efficient Japanese-made cars had crippled sales, and Chrysler--known for its big, gas-guzzling cars--faced possible bankruptcy. In 1979-80, Fraser played a key role in getting Chrysler a $1.5 billion bailout from the U.S. government, negotiating a deal that called for hourly workers at Chrysler to accept wage cuts of $3 per hour (to $17) and giving the company permission to shed nearly 50,000 of its U.S. jobs. In a controversial move that was viewed with trepidation from both sides of the labor-management divide, Chrysler's chief executive, Lee Iacocca, nominated Fraser to the company's executive board. The stockholders voted in Fraser on May 13, 1980--three days after U.S. Treasury Secretary G. William Miller announced the approval of the Chrysler bailout.
Chrysler's subsequent turnaround--the company paid off its government loans ahead of schedule and posted record profits of some $2.4 billion in 1984--seemed to justify Fraser's willingness to make compromises on the labor side. Some critics, however, saw the union leader's actions as opening the door to a wave of similar concessionary bargaining on the part of automakers that later spread to management in other industries. Fraser retired as UAW president in 1983 and left the Chrysler board the following year. He died in February 2008, at the age of 91.

Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on May 14, 2014, 10:15:24 pm
(http://i645.photobucket.com/albums/uu176/MustangMayhem/this%20day%20in%20HISTORY/cerberus-fiat-chry-daim_zpsd4719bb0.jpg) (http://s645.photobucket.com/user/MustangMayhem/media/this%20day%20in%20HISTORY/cerberus-fiat-chry-daim_zpsd4719bb0.jpg.html)

On this day, May 14, 2007
Cerebrus Capital Management, a private equity firm acquired 80.1% interest in Chrysler from Daimler A.G. for $7.4 billion. Daimler had bought it for $36 billion in 1998. The management renamed it Chrysler Holdings. Daimler paid $677 million in cash in return for release from $18 billion health/pension liabilities but retained 19.9% interest in Chrysler. This was the first private auto company in Detroit since 1956 (Ford went public).
On March 30, 2009, it was announced that Cerberus Capital Management will lose its equity stake and ownership in Chrysler as a condition of the Treasury Department’s bailout deal, but Cerberus will maintain a controlling stake in Chrysler’s financing arm, Chrysler Financial. Cerberus will utilize the first $2 billion in proceeds from its Chrysler Financial holding to backstop a $4 billion December 2008 Treasury Department loan given to Chrysler. In exchange for obtaining that loan, it promised many concessions including surrendering equity, foregoing profits, and giving up board seats.
Now Fiat is poised to assume a 35% stake in the company. So the question is, who holds controlling interest? Well in short, nobody does. Daimler holds nearly 20%, Fiat's taking over 35%, leaving Cerberus with 45% – the lion's share, but short of controlling interest.
But while the majority of Chrysler's shares may be back in Europe, Daimler isn't interested in holding onto its stake. Daimler and Cerberus had been talking about transferring ownership of the remaining 20% for a while already, but with America's financial institutions in shambles, who knows if the capital management company can even manage to find the capital to buy the rest of the company. In the meantime, it looks like Chrysler's at the whim of European automakers... yet again.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on May 15, 2014, 09:12:40 pm
(http://i645.photobucket.com/albums/uu176/MustangMayhem/this%20day%20in%20HISTORY/1_zpsc92761e9.jpg) (http://s645.photobucket.com/user/MustangMayhem/media/this%20day%20in%20HISTORY/1_zpsc92761e9.jpg.html)

May 15th 1981
The 20,000,000th Volkswagen Beetle was produced at the Volkswagen plant in Puebla, Mexico.

May 15th 1942
United States began gasoline rationing.

May 15th 1982
Gordon Smiley, an american race car driver was killed in Indianapolis Speedway

May15th 1986
Elio de Angelis an Italian F1 racer was killed during testing at the Paul Ricard circuit at Le Castellet

May 15th 1992
Edward Jovy Marcelo, a Filipino race car driver from Quezon City, Philippines was killed in practice for the 1992 Indianapolis 500.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on May 16, 2014, 09:19:16 pm
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On this day, May 16th 1903
George Wyman became the first motorcyclist to make a transcontinental trip across America. In fact, he was the first ever to make the trip by means of a motorized vehicle. Wyman’s trip was made on a 1.25-horsepower, 90cc California motorcycle designed by Roy Marks. Wyman’s arduous journey, which started in San Francisco on May 16, took 50 days and ended in New York City on July 6.
PS: not to be confused with a 19th century architect of the same name.

May 16th 1956
General Motors opens its brand-new $125 million GM Technical Center in Warren, Michigan. Today, the GM Technical Center is one of the landmarks of twentieth-century architecture. A $1 billion dollar renovation of the GM Technical Center was completed in 2003.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on May 18, 2014, 09:23:50 pm
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On this day, May 17th 2005
On this day in 2005, Toyota Motor Company announces its plans to produce a gasoline-electric hybrid version of its bestselling Camry sedan. Built at the company's Georgetown, Kentucky, plant, the Camry became Toyota's first hybrid model to be manufactured in the United States.
Toyota introduced the Camry--the name is a phonetic transcription of the Japanese word for "crown"--in the Japanese market in 1980; it began selling in the United States the following year. By the late 1980s and early 1990s, the success of the Camry and its Japanese competitor, the Honda Accord, had allowed Toyota and Honda to seize control of the midsize sedan market in the United States. By then, Toyota had adapted the Camry more to American tastes, increasing its size and replacing its original boxy design with a smoother, more rounded style. By 2003, as Micheline Maynard recorded in her book "The End of Detroit," apart from the early-'90s success of the Ford Taurus, the Camry and Accord had long maintained their position atop the list of the nation's best-selling cars overall, each selling around 400,000 units per year.
In 1997, Toyota's Prius--the world's first mass-produced gasoline-electric hybrid vehicle--went on sale in Japan. It was released worldwide in 2001. By using an electric motor to supplement power from the gasoline, hybrid technology resulted in greatly improved fuel efficiency and higher gas mileage. Honda launched its own hybrid lineup with the Insight in 1999 and continued with the hybrid Civic in 2002. By then, skyrocketing gas prices had combined with a backlash against gas-guzzling sport utility vehicles (SUVs) to make hybrids suddenly chic. Eco-conscious Hollywood celebrities such as Leonardo DiCaprio and Cameron Diaz proudly drove their Priuses around Los Angeles, and by 2003 Honda and Toyota were selling 50,000 hybrids a year in the United States. The plans to develop a hybrid Camry, announced in May 2005, brought the total number of Toyota-made hybrid models to four, including the Prius; the Lexus RX 400h, a midsize sport utility vehicle (SUV) released in April 2005; and a second SUV, the Toyota Highlander, released that June.

May 17th 1868
Horace Elgin Dodge, automobile manufacturing pioneer was born in Niles, Michigan.

May 17th 1890
Emile Levassor married Louise Sarazin, the widow of Edouard Sarazin and the French distributor of Daimler engines. The marriage set the stage for Levassor's business venture, Panhard et Levassor, which would use Daimler engines in its cars. Emile, France's premier car racer before the turn of the century, set an early record by driving from Paris to Bordeaux and back at an average of 14.9mph in 1895. His cutting-edge Panhard had a 2.4 liter engine and produced only 4hp. After two years of development Levassor's Daimler engine was capable of pushing the lightweight, wood-framed Panhard to over 70mph.

May 17th 1994
Al Unser Sr. announced his retirement from auto racing, ending one of the greatest Indy Car careers of all time.




(http://i98.photobucket.com/albums/l263/camberix/cars/Colin_Chapman_Lotus_Esprit_.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/camberix/media/cars/Colin_Chapman_Lotus_Esprit_.jpg.html)
Pictured: Colin Chapman


On this day, May 18th 1958
In Monaco, France, Team Lotus makes its Formula One debut in the Monaco Grand Prix, the opening event of the year's European racing season. Over the next four decades, Team Lotus will go on to become one of the most successful teams in Formula One history.
Team Lotus was the motor sport wing of the Lotus Engineering Company, founded six years earlier by the British engineer and race car driver Anthony Colin Bruce Chapman.
Chapman built his first car, a modified 1930 Austin Seven, while still a university student. His success building trial cars led to the completion of the first Lotus production model, the Mark 6, in 1952; 100 were produced by 1955, establishing Chapman's reputation as a innovator in the design of top-performing race cars. By 1957, Lotus had become a well-known name among car aficionados, while Team Lotus dominated the Le Mans racing circuit, winning the 750-cc class and the Index of Performance at Le Mans in 1957 with the Lotus Type 11.
On May 18, 1958, Team Lotus made its first entry in the Formula One circuit, entering two single-seat Type 12s, driven by Cliff Allison and Graham Hill, into the Monaco Grand Prix. Though Ferrari was the favorite going into the race, British-made cars dominated the qualifying rounds, with Vanwall, British Racing Motors (BRM) and Cooper all finishing in front of Ferrari. In the main event, Maurice Trintignant (driving a Cooper) took first place after Ferrari's Mike Hawthorn, that year's eventual Formula One champion, was forced to stop with a broken fuel pump. Allison finished sixth in his Lotus, 13 laps behind the leader; Hill finished in 26th place.
Chapman learned from the success of the midsize engine Cooper race cars, incorporating the layout into a refined version of the Lotus Type 12. In 1960, Stirling Moss drove the result--the Type 18--to victory in the Monaco Grand Prix, scoring the first of what would be many Grand Prix wins for Lotus. Jim Clark won the team's first World Driver's Championship in 1963, beginning a golden age of Lotus racing. Both Clark and Graham Hill won multiple Formula One titles, and Clark also drove a Lotus to victory in the Indianapolis 500 in 1965. In later years, virtuoso drivers like Emmerson Fittipaldi, Mario Andretti and Alessandro Zanardi all represented Lotus. In 1977, the low-slung Lotus Esprit had a starring turn in the James Bond movie "The Spy Who Loved Me"; another Esprit, the Turbo, was featured in the 1981 Bond film "For Your Eyes Only."
Chapman died in 1982, and Team Lotus left racing in the 1990s. It remains one of the most successful Formula One teams of all time, with more than 50 Grand Prix titles.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on May 19, 2014, 08:43:28 am
(http://i86.photobucket.com/albums/k85/AUPepBand/Spicer_car.jpg) (http://s86.photobucket.com/user/AUPepBand/media/Spicer_car.jpg.html)

On this day, May 19th 1903
Clarence Spicer received a patent for a "Casing for Universal Joints"; first practical universal joint to power automobile (vs. chain-and-sprocket drives
Pictured: First car utilizing Spicer's universal joint, built at Cornell in 1903. Spicer had attended Alfred Academy where he studied physiology, then applied human joint structure to the auto.

May 19th 1903
David Dunbar Buick, former plumbing inventor and manufacturer, incorporated Buick Motor Co. (formed in 1902) in Detroit, Michigan.

May19th 1928
Colin Chapman, the founder of Lotus Cars was born in the suburb of London.

May19th 1991
Willy T. Ribbs became the first African-American driver to qualify for the Indy 500.

May19th 2007
Los Angeles, California, is the first stop on a cross-country road show launched on this day in 2007 by Smart USA to promote the attractions of its "ForTwo" microcar, which it had scheduled for release in the United States in 2008.
In the early 1990s, Nicholas Hayek of Swatch, the company famous for its wide range of colorful and trendy plastic watches, went to German automaker Mercedes-Benz with his idea for an "ultra-urban" car. The result of their joint venture was the diminutive Smart (an acronym for Swatch Mercedes ART) ForTwo, which debuted at the Frankfurt Motor Show in 1997 and went on sale in nine European countries over the next year. Measuring just over eight feet from bumper to bumper, the original ForTwo was marketed as a safe, fuel-efficient car that could be maneuvered easily through narrow, crowded city streets. Despite its popularity among urban Europeans, Smart posted significant losses, and Swatch soon pulled out of the joint venture.
Undaunted, Mercedes maker DaimlerChrysler (now Daimler AG) launched the Smart ForTwo in Canada in 2004 as an initial foray into the North American market. In June 2006, DaimlerChrysler chairman Dieter Zetsche announced that the Smart would make its U.S. debut in early 2008. Between 2003 and 2006, as reported by the German newspaper Handelsblatt, DaimlerChrysler took a loss of some 3.9 billion euros (around $5.2 billion) on the Smart brand, and the company looked to the U.S. market as a way to bring the brand into profitability.
The cross-country road show that began in May 2007 allowed consumers in 50 cities nationwide to test-drive the ForTwo. On each stop on the tour, a large truck served as a mobile exhibit dedicated to the microcar, complete with interactive displays and virtual demonstrations. As Dave Schembri, president of Smart USA, put it: "The Smart ForTwo is all about urban independence and freeing people from the constraints of city driving." Under normal driving conditions, the ForTwo was designed to achieve 40 plus miles per gallon. The show was presumably a success: By September 2007, according to an article in MarketWatch, Smart USA said it had already received more than 30,000 registrations from potential buyers. The FortTwo went on sale in the United States in January 2008, at prices ranging from around $12,000 to around $21,000.

May19th, 2014
Three-time formula one world champion Sir Jack Brabham has passed away, aged 88.
A former Royal Australian Air Force mechanic, Brabham’s motorsport career started on Australian speedway dirt tracks in the late 1940s before he headed to the United Kingdom and joined the Cooper Racing Team, with which he won the 1959 and 1960 Formula One championships.
But it was his own Brabham racing cars – designed and engineered with friend and fellow Australian Ron Tauranac – that led to him winning the 1966 championship.
Brabham is the only person to have won the F1 world championship in his own car.
He was born John Arthur Brabham on April 2, 1926 but was known as Jack and later picked up the nickname Black Jack.
Brabham is survived by his second wife, Lady Margaret, and sons to his first wife Betty - Geoff, Gary and David, each of whom has enjoyed success in motorsport.



Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on May 20, 2014, 09:01:25 pm
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On this day, May 20th 1961
The Ford Motor Company completed a highly modified stretch Lincoln Continental convertible sedan for the U.S. Secret Service to be used as a presidential limousine. It was modified by Hess & Eisenhardt Company. The limo, later known as the SS-100-X, carried President John F. Kennedy down Elm Street in Dallas, Texas, when he was assassinated in 1963.

May 20th 1899
Jacob German, operator of a taxicab for the Electric Vehicle Company, became the first driver to be arrested for speeding when he was stopped by Bicycle Roundsman Schueller for driving at the speed of 12mph on Lexington Avenue in Manhattan. German was booked and held in jail at the East Twenty-second Street station house. He was, of course, not made to hand over his license and registration, as neither item was required until two years later in the State of New York.

May 20th 1971
Anthony Wayne "Tony" Stewart, a NASCAR driver was born in Columbus, Indiana.

May 20th 1973
Jarno Karl Keimo Saarinen, a Finnish Grand Prix motorcycle racer died during the fourth Moto GP season in Monza, Italy. A crash during the 350cc race left an oil slick on the track which the Race officials had failed to clean it properly between races. On the opening lap of the 250cc race, track marshals didn't wave the yellow and red stripe oil flag warning riders of the oil slicked surface. The race leader, Renzo Pasolini fell in front of Saarinen, who was in second place. He couldn't avoid the fallen rider and the resulting crash caused a multiple rider pile up. In all, 14 riders were embroiled in the mayhem that resulted. When the dust cleared, Jarno and Pasolini laid dead with many other riders seriously injured.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on May 21, 2014, 07:21:40 pm
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On this day, May 21st 2003
Alejandro de Tomaso an Argentinean racing driver and car maker died in Modena Italy. He participated in two F1 races winning no points but was a very successful car maker. He founded the Italian sports car company De Tomaso Automobili in 1959, and later built up a substantial business empire. Even Elvis Presly was fan of his car and owned himself a yellow one

May 21st 1901
Connecticut became the first state to enact a speeding-driver law. The State General Assembly passed a bill submitted by Representative Robert Woodruff that stipulated the speed of all motor vehicles should not exceed 12mph on country highways and eight mph within city limits.

May 21st 1950
Juan Manuel Fangio, Argentinean auto racer won the Monaco Grand Prix in an Alfa Romeo 158, the victory was the first of the 24-Grand Prix victories in his illustrious Formula One career.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on May 22, 2014, 10:56:31 pm
(http://i475.photobucket.com/albums/rr115/lagelinotte_2008/1952MarshallTeagueDaytona-2.jpg) (http://s475.photobucket.com/user/lagelinotte_2008/media/1952MarshallTeagueDaytona-2.jpg.html)

On this day, May 22nd 1921
Racer Marshall Teague was born in Daytona Beach, Florida. Teague was one of NASCAR's earliest heroes. Racing Hudson Hornets equipped with revolutionary step-down chassis, Teague won five races in 1951 alone.

May 22nd 1977
Janet Guthrie became the first female to qualify for the Indianapolis 500. However she failed to finish the 1977 race due to mechanical troubles.

May 22nd 2001
Ford Motor Co. announced plans to spend more than $2 billion to replace up to 13 million Firestone tires on its vehicles because of safety concerns and numerous law suits.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on May 23, 2014, 09:01:14 pm
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On this day, May 23rd 1934
Wanted outlaws Clyde Barrow and Bonnie Parker are shot to death by Texas and Louisiana state police officers as they attempt to escape apprehension in a stolen 1934 Ford Deluxe near Bienville Parish, Louisiana.
Beginning in early 1932, Parker and Barrow set off on a two-year crime spree, evading local police in rural Texas, Louisiana and New Mexico before drawing the attention of federal authorities at the Bureau of Investigation (as the FBI was then known). Though the couple was believed to have been responsible for 13 murders by the time they were killed, along with several bank robberies and burglaries, the only charge the Bureau could chase them on was a violation of the National Motor Vehicle Act, which gave federal agents the authority to pursue suspects accused of interstate transportation of a stolen automobile. The car in question was a Ford, stolen in Illinois and found abandoned in Pawhuska, Oklahoma. Inside, agents discovered a prescription bottle later traced to the Texas home of Clyde Barrow's aunt.
As authorities stepped up the pressure to catch the outlaw couple, the heavily armed Barrow and Parker were joined at various times by the convicted murderer Raymond Hamilton (whom they helped break out of jail in 1934), William Daniel Jones and Clyde's brother Ivan "Buck" Barrow and his wife, Blanche. In the spring of 1934, federal agents traced the Barrow-Parker gang to a remote county in southwest Louisiana, where the Methvin family was said to have been aiding and abetting the outlaws for over a year. Bonnie and Clyde, along with some of the Methvins, had staged a party at Black Lake, Louisiana, on the night of May 21. Two days later, just before dawn, a posse of police officers from Texas and Louisiana laid an ambush along the highway near Sailes, Louisiana. When Parker and Barrow appeared, going some 85 mph in another stolen Ford--a four-door 1934 Deluxe with a V-8 engine, the officers let loose with a hail of bullets, leaving the couple no chance of survival despite the small arsenal of weapons they had with them.
The bullet-ridden Deluxe, originally owned by Ruth Warren of Topeka, Kansas, was later exhibited at carnivals and fairs then sold as a collector's item; in 1988, the Primm Valley Resort and Casino in Las Vegas purchased it for some $250,000. Barrow's enthusiasm for cars was evident in a letter he wrote earlier in the spring of 1934, addressed to Henry Ford himself: "While I still have got breath in my lungs I will tell you what a dandy car you make. I have drove Fords exclusively when I could get away with one. For sustained speed and freedom from trouble the Ford has got every other car skinned and even if my business hasn't been strictly legal it don't hurt anything to tell you what a fine car you got in the V-8."
PICTURED: Iconic Image of Bonnie and Clyde, Check the Ford V8 at back

May 23 1945,
Heinrich Himmler, chief of the SS, assistant chief of the Gestapo, and architect of Hitler's program to exterminate European Jews, commits suicide one day after being arrested by the British.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on May 24, 2014, 09:29:37 pm
(http://i645.photobucket.com/albums/uu176/MustangMayhem/this%20day%20in%20HISTORY/1964DragRace4_zps1b15d362.jpg) (http://s645.photobucket.com/user/MustangMayhem/media/this%20day%20in%20HISTORY/1964DragRace4_zps1b15d362.jpg.html)

On this day, May 24th 2013
Aussie drag racer, John English passes away aged 89. John, along with Eddie Thomas, was one of the first real stars of Australian drag racing, a pioneer of the speed equipment industry and an all-round top bloke
PICTURED: John English in a Ford Side-Valve Dragster..... one of his earlier creations

May 24th 1991
On this day in 1991, the critically acclaimed road movie "Thelma and Louise" debuts in theaters, stunning audiences with a climactic scene in which its two heroines drive off a cliff into the Grand Canyon, in a vintage 1966 green Ford Thunderbird convertible.

May 24th 1899
W. T. McCullough, of Boston opened first public garage, Back Bay Cycle and Motor Company, as a "stable for renting, sale, storage, and repair of motor vehicles."

May 24th 1903
Marcel Renault, age 31, and his riding mechanic Vauthier, were killed in a crash during the Paris-to-Madrid Race. After another deadly crash, the race was canceled at the end of the first leg from Paris to Bordeaux, and the era of city-to-city races came to an end.

May 24th 1938
The very first patent was received for a "Coin Controlled Parking Meter" by Carl C. Magee of Dual Parking Meter Company of Oklahoma City

May 24th 1987
Al Unser Sr. won his fourth Indianapolis 500 driving the year-old March-Cosworth car. At 47 years and 360 days old, Al became the oldest winner in the event's history.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on May 25, 2014, 10:00:39 pm
(http://i645.photobucket.com/albums/uu176/MustangMayhem/web/GeorgeSwanson_zpse739f85a.jpg) (http://s645.photobucket.com/user/MustangMayhem/media/web/GeorgeSwanson_zpse739f85a.jpg.html)

On this day, May 25th 1985
On this day in 1994, the ashes of 71-year-old George Swanson are buried (according to Swanson's request) in the driver's seat of his 1984 white Corvette in Hempfield County, Pennsylvania.
Swanson, a beer distributor and former U.S. Army sergeant during World War II, died the previous March 31 at the age of 71. He had reportedly been planning his automobile burial for some time, buying 12 burial plots at Brush Creek Cemetery, located 25 miles east of Pittsburgh, in order to ensure that his beloved Corvette would fit in his grave with him. After his death, however, the cemetery balked, amid concerns of vandalism and worries that other clients would be offended by the outlandish nature of the burial. They finally relented after weeks of negotiations, but insisted that the burial be private, and that the car be drained of fluids to protect the environment.
According to the AP, Swanson's widow, Caroline, transported her husband's ashes to the cemetery on the seat of her own white 1993 Corvette. The ashes were then placed on the driver's seat of his 10-year-old car, which had only 27,000 miles on the odometer. Inside the car, mourners also placed a lap quilt made by a group of women from Swanson's church, a love note from his wife and an Engelbert Humperdinck tape in the cassette deck, with the song "Release Me" cued up and ready to play. The license plate read "HI-PAL," which was Swanson's go-to greeting when he didn't remember a name. As 50 mourners looked on, a crane lowered the Corvette into a 7-by-7-by-16-foot hole.

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May 25th 1898
Elwood Haynes and Elmer Apperson organized the Haynes-Apperson Company in Kokomo, Indiana. Credited with having built America's first gas-powered car for much of his lifetime, Elwood Haynes was one of the most brilliant inventors in the early car industry. The Haynes-Apperson Company was his first foray into the mass production of cars. Together, the pair expected to manufacture 50 cars per year. Most famous as a metallurgist, Haynes was the first man to outfit his cars with all-aluminum engines, and to build his car bodies of nickel-plated steel. Haynes and Apperson shocked the world when they fulfilled the terms of a buyer's agreement by delivering their car from Kokomo to New York City. It was the first 1,000-mile car trip undertaken in the United States.
PICTURED: Elwood Haynes first car

May 25th 1927
Ford Motor Company announced end of Model T and its replacement by Model A.

May 25th 1985
The Charlotte Motor Speedway, a k a the Mecca of Motorsports, held its first race. The Speedway, and the city of Charlotte itself, are symbols of the new era of NASCAR racing.

May 25th 1977
Memorial Day weekend opens with an intergalactic bang as the first of George Lucas' blockbuster Star Wars movies hits American theaters.

May 25, 1935, at Forbes Field in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, Babe Ruth hits his 714th home run, a record for career home runs that would stand for almost 40 years. This was one of Ruth’s last games, and the last home run of his career. Ruth went four for four on the day, hitting three home runs and driving in six runs.

May 25th 1895
Playwright Oscar Wilde is taken to Reading Gaol in London after being convicted of sodomy. The famed writer of Dorian Gray and The Importance of Being Earnest brought attention to his private life in a feud with Sir John Sholto Douglas, whose son was intimately involved with Wilde.

Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on May 26, 2014, 07:30:51 pm
(http://i645.photobucket.com/albums/uu176/MustangMayhem/this%20day%20in%20HISTORY/battle_overpass_32_zps52df0985.jpg) (http://s645.photobucket.com/user/MustangMayhem/media/this%20day%20in%20HISTORY/battle_overpass_32_zps52df0985.jpg.html)

On this day, May 26th 1937
Union leaders, Ford Service Department men clashed in violent confrontation on Miller Road Overpass outside Gate 4 of Ford River Rouge Plant in Dearborn, MI (three months after UAW achieved its first landmark victory at Ford, had forced company to negotiate policy toward organized labor by staging lengthy sit-down strike at Rouge complex); UAW organizers Walter Reuther, Bob Kanter, J.J. Kennedy, Richard Frankensteen were distributing leaflets among workers at Rouge complex when approached by gang of Bennett's men; Ford Servicemen brutally beat four unionists while many other union sympathizers, including 11 women, were injured in resulting melee - Battle of the Overpass.

May 26th 1923
First Le Mans Grand Prix d'Endurance is run.

May 26th 1927
Ford Motor Company manufactured its 15 millionth Model T automobile

May 26th 1897
The first copies of the classic vampire novel Dracula, by Irish writer Bram Stoker, appear in London bookshops

May 26th 1907
John Wayne, an actor who came to epitomize the American West, is born in Winterset, Iowa.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: MACH_ONE on May 26, 2014, 10:38:46 pm
this day in history 26/05 my daughter was born HAPPY BIRTHDAY SWEETHEART XO
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: boss69hogg on May 27, 2014, 05:57:48 pm
this day in history 26/05 my daughter was born HAPPY BIRTHDAY SWEETHEART XO

Happy birthday to her! Well done Andrew
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: MACH_ONE on May 27, 2014, 07:58:14 pm
Happy birthday to her! Well done Andrew

ty :)
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on May 27, 2014, 09:04:39 pm
(http://i645.photobucket.com/albums/uu176/MustangMayhem/this%20day%20in%20HISTORY/lemans19231371562444_zps29455b9f.jpg) (http://s645.photobucket.com/user/MustangMayhem/media/this%20day%20in%20HISTORY/lemans19231371562444_zps29455b9f.jpg.html)

On this day, May 27th 1923
First Le Mans Grand Prix d'Endurance is concluded. Winners Andre Lagache and Renee Leonard covered 1,372.928 miles in a Chenard-Walker car. Le Mans is the world's longest-running 24-hour event, a type of racing that's considered the ultimate test of sports car performance.

May 27th 1927
Production of the Ford Model T officially ended after 15,007,033 units had been built. The Model T sold more units than any other car model in history, until the Volkswagen Beetle eclipsed its record in the 1970s.

May 27th 1930
Chrysler Building in NYC. opened as world's tallest building.

Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on May 28, 2014, 09:05:59 pm
(http://i192.photobucket.com/albums/z34/tynewlin/kdf-wagen.jpg) (http://s192.photobucket.com/user/tynewlin/media/kdf-wagen.jpg.html)

On this day, May 28th 1937
The government of Germany--then under the control of Adolf Hitler of the National Socialist (Nazi) Party--forms a new state-owned automobile company, then known as Gesellschaft zur Vorbereitung des Deutschen Volkswagens mbH. Later that year, it was renamed simply Volkswagenwerk, or "The People's Car Company."
Originally operated by the German Labor Front, a Nazi organization, Volkswagen was headquartered in Wolfsburg, Germany. In addition to his ambitious campaign to build a network of autobahns and limited access highways across Germany, Hitler's pet project was the development and mass production of an affordable yet still speedy vehicle that could sell for less than 1,000 Reich marks (about $140 at the time). To provide the design for this "people's car," Hitler called in the Austrian automotive engineer Ferdinand Porsche. In 1938, at a Nazi rally, the Fuhrer declared: "It is for the broad masses that this car has been built. Its purpose is to answer their transportation needs, and it is intended to give them joy." However, soon after the KdF (Kraft-durch-Freude)-Wagen ("Strength-Through-Joy" car) was displayed for the first time at the Berlin Motor Show in 1939, World War II began, and Volkswagen halted production. After the war ended, with the factory in ruins, the Allies would make Volkswagen the focus of their attempts to resuscitate the German auto industry.
Volkswagen sales in the United States were initially slower than in other parts of the world, due to the car's historic Nazi connections as well as its small size and unusual rounded shape. In 1959, the advertising agency Doyle Dane Bernbach launched a landmark campaign, dubbing the car the "Beetle" and spinning its diminutive size as a distinct advantage to consumers. Over the next several years, VW became the top-selling auto import in the United States. In 1960, the German government sold 60 percent of Volkswagen's stock to the public, effectively denationalizing it. Twelve years later, the Beetle surpassed the longstanding worldwide production record of 15 million vehicles, set by Ford Motor Company's legendary Model T between 1908 and 1927.
With the Beetle's design relatively unchanged since 1935, sales grew sluggish in the early 1970s. VW bounced back with the introduction of sportier models such as the Rabbit and later, the Golf. In 1998, the company began selling the highly touted "New Beetle" while still continuing production of its predecessor. After nearly 70 years and more than 21 million units produced, the last original Beetle rolled off the line in Puebla, Mexico, on July 30, 2003.

May 28th 1916
Barney Oldfield ran a qualifying lap in his front-wheel-drive Christie at 102.6mph. It was the first time any driver had rounded the Indianapolis Motor Speedway in excess of 100mph. But Oldfield ended up finishing fifth on race day, as Dario Resta beat the field in his Peugeot.

May 28th 1937
The Golden Gate Bridge opened to vehicular traffic on this day in 1937. One of the world's largest single-span suspension bridges, the Golden Gate Bridge was designed by Clifford Paine.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on May 29, 2014, 08:44:55 pm
(http://i865.photobucket.com/albums/ab215/woodburner802/Dealers/Tucker/0000000tucker.jpg)

On this day, May 29th 1950
Preston Tucker's lawsuit against his former prosecutors was thrown out of court. Tucker had been indicted for stock fraud after managing to produce only 53 of his long-awaited Tucker cars. The court case ruined Tucker's chances of ever releasing the car on a grand scale. Tucker charged the Big Three with trumping up a conspiracy to ground his competitive operation. Eventually all the charges against Tucker were dropped. Hungry to clear his name, Preston Tucker sued his former prosecutors on various grounds related to the destruction of his reputation. It was generally believed that Tucker's initial acquittal was an act of charity granted to an overly-ambitious, failed entrepreneur. Tucker's case was dismissed after little consideration. It was Preston Tucker's last-gasp effort to save his name, and it failed. His reputation has fared far better in recent years with the help of the Hollywood movie Tucker: The Man and His Dream, starring Jeff Bridges, that portrays Tucker as a visionary in a practical age.

29th May 1971
Al Unser became the first racer to win a single-day purse of over $200,000 at the Indy 500. The only racer besides A.J. Foyt to win four Indy 500s, Al Unser, too, has a legitimate claim to the title of Indy's greatest.

29th May 2005
On this day in 2005, 23-year-old Danica Patrick becomes the first female driver to take the lead in the storied Indianapolis 500.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on May 31, 2014, 12:31:26 am
(http://i280.photobucket.com/albums/kk171/crabber1967/Indianapolis%20Earliest%20Years/1911_Indianapolis_Marmon_Wasp_winne.jpg) (http://s280.photobucket.com/user/crabber1967/media/Indianapolis%20Earliest%20Years/1911_Indianapolis_Marmon_Wasp_winne.jpg.html)

On this day, May 30th 1911
Ray Harroun won the inaugural Indianapolis 500, averaging 74.6mph in the Marmon Wasp. The Indy 500 was the creation of Carl Fisher. In the fall of 1909, Fisher replaced the ruined, crushed-stone surface of his 2.5-mile oval with a brand-new brick one. It was the largest paved, banked oval in the United States. Fisher then made two decisions vital to the success of the Indy 500. First, he determined to hold only one race per year on his Indianapolis Motor Speedway; second, he elected to offer the richest purse in racing as a reward for competing in his annual 500-mile event.

May 30th 1896
First recorded auto accident occurred: Duryea Motor Wagon, driven by Henry Wells from Springfield, MA, collided with bicycle ridden by Evylyn Thomas of New York City.

May 30th 2002
Trabant filed for insolvency protection.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on May 31, 2014, 07:43:16 pm
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On this day, May 31st 1929
After two years of exploratory visits and friendly negotiations, Ford Motor Company signs a landmark agreement to produce cars in the Soviet Union on this day in 1929.
The Soviet Union, which in 1928 had only 20,000 cars and a single truck factory, was eager to join the ranks of automotive production, and Ford, with its focus on engineering and manufacturing methods, was a natural choice to help. The always independent-minded Henry Ford was strongly in favor of his free-market company doing business with Communist countries.
Signed in Dearborn, Michigan, on May 31, 1929, the contract stipulated that Ford would oversee construction of a production plant at Nizhni Novgorod, located on the banks of the Volga River, to manufacture Model A cars. An assembly plant would also start operating immediately within Moscow city limits. In return, the USSR agreed to buy 72,000 unassembled Ford cars and trucks and all spare parts to be required over the following nine years, a total of some $30 million worth of Ford products. Valery U. Meshlauk, vice chairman of the Supreme Council of National Economy, signed the Dearborn agreement on behalf of the Soviets. To comply with its side of the deal, Ford sent engineers and executives to the Soviet Union.
At the time the U.S. government did not formally recognize the USSR in diplomatic negotiations, so the Ford agreement was groundbreaking. (A week after the deal was announced the Soviet Union would announce deals with 15 other foreign companies, including E.I. Du Pont de Nemours and RCA.) As Douglas Brinkley writes in "Wheels for the World," his book on Henry Ford and Ford Motor, the automaker was firm in his belief that introducing capitalism was the best way to undermine communism. In any case, Ford's assistance in establishing motor vehicle production facilities in the USSR would greatly impact the course of world events, as the ability to produce these vehicles helped the Soviets defeat Germany on the Eastern Front during World War II. In 1944, according to Brinkley, Stalin wrote to the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, calling Henry Ford "one of the world's greatest industrialists" and expressing the hope that "may God preserve him."
PICTURED: The Ford plant at Nizhni Novgorod

May 31st 1870
Professor Edward Joseph De Smedt of the American Asphalt Pavement Company, New York City, received two patents for his invention known as "French asphalt pavement." De Smedt had invented the first practical version of sheet asphalt. On July 29 of the same year, the first road pavement of sheet asphalt was laid on William Street in Newark, New Jersey.

May 31st 1898
Thomas A. Edison received a patent for a "Governor for Motors", a "means for adjusting the governor for any desired speed, and with the means, such as centrifugal governor-*****, for regulating the friction members to maintain a constant speed."

May 31st 1904
Byron J. Carter, of Jackson, MI, received a U.S. patent for "Transmission-Gearing"; "friction-drive" mechanism replaced conventional transmission to provide more precise control of a car's speed; never really caught on, proved susceptible to poor road conditions; technology involved in the friction-drive is, however, related to today's disc brakes.

May 31st, 1884 
Kellogg patents the cornflake
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on June 01, 2014, 10:28:49 pm
(http://i201.photobucket.com/albums/aa296/moefuzzz/COOL%20PICTURES/HENRY%20FORD/4486303242_6eaa2b407d_o.jpg)

On this day, June 1st 1917
Henry Leland, the founder of the Cadillac Motor Car Company, resigned as company president on this date in 1917. Ever since William Durant had arranged for General Motors (GM) to purchase Cadillac, Leland and Durant had endured a strained relationship. But Leland's electric starter had made Cadillac so successful early on that Durant had avoided meddling with the autonomy of his company. Leland's next great achievement at Cadillac was his supervision of his son's proposal that Cadillac should introduce a V-8 engine.
PICTURED: Left to Right, Edsel Ford, Henry Ford, Henry Leland, and Wilfred Leland

June 1st 1934
The Tokyo-based Jidosha-Seizo Kabushiki-Kaisha (Automobile Manufacturing Co., Ltd. in English) takes on a new name: Nissan Motor Company.
Jidosha-Seizo Kabushiki-Kaisha had been established in December 1933. The company's new name, adopted in June 1934, was an abbreviation for Nippon Sangyo, a "zaibatsu" (or holding company) belonging to Tobata's founder, Yoshisuke Aikawa. Nissan produced its first Datsun (a descendant of the Dat Car, a small, boxy passenger vehicle designed by Japanese automotive pioneer Masujiro Hashimoto that was first produced in 1914) at its Yokohama plant in April 1935. The company began exporting cars to Australia that same year. Beginning in 1938 and lasting throughout World War II, Nissan converted entirely from producing small passenger cars to producing trucks and military vehicles. Allied occupation forces seized much of Nissan's production operations in 1945 and didn't return full control to Nissan until a decade later.
In 1960, Nissan became the first Japanese automaker to win the Deming Prize for engineering excellence. New Datsun models like the Bluebird (1959), the Cedric (1960) and the Sunny (1966) helped spur Nissan sales in Japan and abroad, and the company experienced phenomenal growth over the course of the 1960s.
The energy crises of the next decade fueled the rise in exports of affordable, fuel-efficient Japanese-made cars: The third-generation Sunny got the highest score on the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's tests of fuel economy in 1973. Success in the United States and other markets allowed Nissan to expand its foreign operations, which now include manufacturing and assembly plants in as many as 17 countries around the world. Today, Nissan--which dropped the Datsun name in the mid-1980s--is the third-largest car manufacturer in Japan, behind first-place Toyota and just behind Honda. After struggling in the late 1990s, the company turned itself around by building an alliance with French carmaker Renault; overhauling its luxury car line, Infiniti; and releasing the Titan pickup truck as well as revamped versions of the famous Z sports car and mid-size Altima sedan.

Monday, June 1, 1829
Today is Foundation Day for Western Australia.
The first recorded sighting of Australia's western coastline came in 1611, when Dutch mariner Hendrik Brouwer experimented with a different route to the Dutch East Indies. As the route became more popular, the Dutch began to refer to the land as "New Holland".
Dutch captain Willem de Vlamingh named the Swan River in 1697 because of the black swans he saw in abundance there. In 1826, Edmund Lockyer was sent to claim the western half of the Australian continent for Britain. He arrived at King George Sound on Christmas Day in 1826, and established a military base which he named Frederick's Town (now Albany). However, this is not regarded as Western Australia's Foundation Day.
In 1829, Captain Charles Fremantle was sent to take formal possession of the remainder of New Holland which had not already been claimed for Britain under the territory of New South Wales. On 2 May 1829, Captain Fremantle raised the Union Jack on the south head of the Swan River, thus claiming the territory for Britain.
Western Australia's Foundation Day is considered to be 1 June as, on 1 June 1829, Western Australia's first non-military settlers arrived in the Swan River Colony aboard the Parmelia. The colony of Western Australia was then proclaimed on 8 June 1829, and two months later, Perth was also founded.

June 1, 1962.
Adolf Eichmann, 'Chief Executioner of the Third Reich', is hanged for his war crimes.
Adolf Eichmann was a member of the Austrian Nazi party in World War II. After his promotion to the Gestapo's Jewish section, he was essentially responsible for the extermination of millions of Jews during the war. He is often referred to as the 'Chief Executioner' of the Third Reich. After the war Eichmann escaped to Argentina in South America, but was located and captured by the Israeli secret service in 1960.
Eichmann's trial in front of an Israeli court in Jerusalem started on 11 April 1961. He faced fifteen criminal charges, including crimes against humanity, crimes against the Jewish people and war crimes. As part of Israeli criminal procedure, his trial was presided over by three judges instead of a jury, all of which were refugees from the Nazi regime in Germany. Eichmann was protected by a bulletproof glass booth and guarded by two men whose families had not suffered directly at the hands of the Nazis. Eichmann was convicted on all counts and sentenced to death on 15 December 1961. He was hanged a few minutes after midnight on 1 June 1962 at Ramla prison, the only civil execution ever carried out in Israel.

June 1, 1850.
The first convicts arrive in Fremantle, Western Australia, to help populate the waning Swan River colony.
The Swan River colony, established on Australia's western coast in 1829, was begun as a free settlement. Captain Charles Fremantle declared the Swan River Colony for Britain on 2 May 1829. The first ships with free settlers to arrive were the Parmelia on June 1 and HMS Sulphur on June 8. Three merchant ships arrived 4-6 weeks later: the Calista on August 5, the St Leonard on August 6 and the Marquis of Anglesey on August 23. Although the population spread out in search of good land, mainly settling around the southwestern coastline at Bunbury, Augusta and Albany, the two original separate townsites of the colony developed slowly into the port city of Fremantle and the Western Australian capital city of Perth.
For the first fifteen years, the people of the colony were generally opposed to accepting convicts, although the idea was occasionally debated, especially by those who sought to employ convict labour for building projects. Serious lobbying for Western Australia to become a penal colony began in 1845 when the York Agricultural Society petitioned the Legislative Council to bring convicts out from England on the grounds that the colony's economy was on the brink of collapse due to an extreme shortage of labour. Whilst later examination of the circumstances proves that there was no such shortage of labour in the colony, the petition found its way to the British Colonial Office, which in turn agreed to send out a small number of convicts to Swan River.
The first group of convicts to populate Fremantle arrived on 1 June 1850. Between 1850 and 1868, ultimately 9721 convicts were transported to Western Australia. The last convict ship to Western Australia, the Hougoumont, left Britain in 1867 and arrived in Western Australia on 10 January 1868.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on June 02, 2014, 07:40:11 pm
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On this day, June 2nd 1970
Car racer, designer, and manufacturer Bruce McLaren was killed when his McLaren M8D lost its back end at high speed and collided with an earthen embankment at the Goodwood racetrack in England.
PICTURED: Bruce McLaren and Juan Manual Fangio

June 2nd 1988
Consumer Reports called for ban on Suzuki Samurai automobile.

June 2, 1953
Queen Elizabeth II is crowned, watched by millions in the first televised coronation of a monarch.
Princess Elizabeth, who became Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom, was born Elizabeth Alexandra Mary Windsor on 21 April 1926. She was proclaimed queen on 6 February 1952, following the death of her father, George VI. She ascended the throne the following year, on 2 June 1953. The Queen was crowned in a lavish coronation ceremony attended by over 8,000 guests in Westminster Abbey, London. The ceremony included the Queen being handed the four symbols of authority - the orb, the sceptre, the rod of mercy and the royal ring of sapphire and rubies. The ceremony was completed as the Archbishop of Canterbury, Dr Geoffrey Fisher, placed St Edward's Crown on her head.
Whilst approximately three million people lined the streets of London to glimpse the new monarch travelling to and from Buckingham Palace in the golden state coach, millions more around the world watched the first ever televised coronation of a monarch in a broadcast made in 44 languages.
Queen Elizabeth II celebrated her Diamond Jubilee in 2012.

June 2, 1841.
Eyre's expedition across the Nullarbor is saved when he meets Captain Rossiter, of the whaler 'Mississippi'.
Edward John Eyre, born 5 August 1815, was the first white man to cross southern Australia from Adelaide to the west, travelling across the Nullarbor Plain to King George's Sound, now called Albany. Eyre originally intended to cross the continent from south to north, taking with him his overseer, John Baxter, and three Aborigines. He was forced to revise his plans when his way became blocked by the numerous saltpans of South Australia, leading him to believe that a gigantic inland sea in the shape of a horseshoe prevented access to the north.
Following this fruitless attempt, Eyre regrouped at Streaky Bay on the west coast of the Eyre Peninsula. He then continued west, which had never before been attempted, in a gruelling journey across the Nullarbor, during which his party faced starvation and thirst. Eyre's overseer, Baxter, was killed on the night of 29 April 1841, as he tried to stop two of the expedition's Aborigines from raiding the meagre supplies. After Baxter died, Eyre was left with just one loyal companion, the Aborigine, Wylie. The two continued on, trying to outrun the Aborigines whilst susbsisting on very few rations.
The pair faced starvation a number of times during their journey, in between rest stops in places when they found food was abundant. On 2 June 1841, Eyre and Wylie were travelling along the shore near Thistle Cove when they encountered the French whaler 'Mississippi'. Attracting the attention of the ship's crew by way of a fire, they were met at the beach and taken aboard the Mississippi as guests of Captain Rossiter. Here, they were given ample food and water, and their horses even shod by the ship's blacksmith. Loaded with supplies from the ship, Eyre continued his westward journey on 14 June. Eyre named the inlet Rossiter Bay after the ship's captain, though it was later renamed Mississippi Point.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on June 03, 2014, 08:59:21 pm
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On this day, June 3rd 1957
The U.S. Supreme Court rules that the chemical company E. I. Du Pont de Nemours & Co. must give up its large stock interest in the Detroit-based automobile company General Motors on the grounds that it constituted a monopoly, or a concentration of power that reduced competition or otherwise interfered with trade.
Between 1917 and 1919, Du Pont invested $50 million in GM, becoming the automaker's largest stockholder, with a 23 percent share. The chemical company's founder, Pierre S. Du Pont, served as GM's president from 1920 to 1923 and as chairman of the company's board from 1923 to 1929. By that time, GM had passed Ford Motor Company as the largest manufacturer of passenger cars in the United States, and had become one of the largest companies in the world, in any industry.
In 1949, the U.S. Justice Department brought suit against Du Pont, charging that the chemical giant's close relationship with GM gave it an illegal advantage over competitors in the sale of its automotive finishes and textiles. This advantage, according to the suit, violated the 1890 Sherman Antitrust Act, Congress' first attempt to regulate monopolies. The case dragged on for five years before Chicago's U.S. District Court Judge Walter J. LaBuy dismissed the government's suit, ruling that it had "failed to prove conspiracy, monopolization, a restraint of trade, or any reasonable probability of a restraint."
The Justice Department appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court, and on June 3, 1957, the Court handed down its decision. It based its reversal of LaBuy's verdict not on the Sherman Act but on Section 7 of the Clayton Act, which had been passed in 1914 to clarify and support the Sherman Act. This section, to which government lawyers had dedicated only a tiny portion of their case, prohibited any corporation from purchasing stock in another "where the effect of such acquisition may be to restrain commerce or tend to create a monopoly of any line of commerce."
The four justices in the majority were Chief Justice Earl Warren, William Brennan, Hugo Black and William Douglas; Brennan wrote the majority opinion, which stated that the "inference is overwhelming that Du Pont's commanding position [in the sale of automobile finishes and fabrics to GM] was promoted by its stock interest and was not gained solely on competitive merit." Justices Harold Burton and Felix Frankfurter dissented from the majority, while two justices--Tom Black and John Marshall Harlan--disqualified themselves from the case: Black had been attorney general in 1949, when the Justice Department brought the case, and Harlan had previously represented Du Pont as a lawyer.

June 3rd 1965
One hundred and 20 miles above the earth, Major Edward H. White II opens the hatch of the Gemini 4 and steps out of the capsule, becoming the first American astronaut to walk in space. Attached to the craft by a 25-foot tether and controlling his movements with a hand-held oxygen jet-propulsion gun, White remained outside the capsule for just over 20 minutes. As a space walker, White had been preceded by Soviet cosmonaut Aleksei A. Leonov, who on March 18, 1965, was the first man ever to walk in space.

June 3rd 1956
Rock and roll is banned in Santa Cruz, California
Santa Cruz, California, a favorite early haunt of author Ken Kesey and his Merry Pranksters, was an established capital of the West Coast counterculture scene by the mid-1960s. Yet just 10 years earlier, the balance of power in this crunchy beach town 70 miles south of San Francisco tilted heavily toward the older side of the generation gap. In the early months of the rock-and-roll revolution, in fact, at a time when adult authorities around the country were struggling to come to terms with a booming population of teenagers with vastly different musical tastes and attitudes, Santa Cruz captured national attention for its response to the crisis. On June 3, 1956, city authorities announced a total ban on rock and roll at public gatherings, calling the music "Detrimental to both the health and morals of our youth and community."

June 3rd 1864
Ransom Eli Olds, founder of Old Motor Vehicle Company was born to Pliny and Sarah Olds in the northeastern Ohio town of Geneva.

June 3rd 1921
Mack adopted Bulldog as symbol for Mack trucks.

June 3rd 1769 
Lieutenant James Cook observes the transit of Venus across the sun, on the trip during which he would chart Australia's eastern coast

June 3rd 1790
The Lady Juliana is the first ship of the Second Fleet to arrive in Sydney Cove

June 3rd 1787 
The First Fleet arrives in Tenerife, in the Canary Islands, to take on extra supplies

June 3rd 1862 
John McKinlay, during his relief expedition to locate the missing Burke and Wills, loses a horse to snake bite
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on June 04, 2014, 08:32:42 pm
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On this day, June 4th 1896
At approximately 4:00 a.m. on June 4, 1896, in the shed behind his home on Bagley Avenue in Detroit, Henry Ford unveils the "Quadricycle," the first automobile he ever designed or drove.
Ford was working as the chief engineer for the main plant of the Edison Illuminating Company when he began working on the Quadricycle. On call at all hours to ensure that Detroit had electrical service 24 hours a day, Ford was able to use his flexible working schedule to experiment with his pet project--building a horseless carriage with a gasoline-powered engine. His obsession with the gasoline engine had begun when he saw an article on the subject in a November 1895 issue of American Machinist magazine. The following March, another Detroit engineer named Charles King took his own hand-built vehicle--made of wood, it had a four-cylinder engine and could travel up to five miles per hour--out for a ride, fueling Ford's desire to build a lighter and faster gasoline-powered model.
As he would do throughout his career, Ford used his considerable powers of motivation and organization to get the job done, enlisting friends--including King--and assistants to help him bring his vision to life. After months of work and many setbacks, Ford was finally ready to test-drive his creation--basically a light metal frame fitted with four bicycle wheels and powered by a two-cylinder, four-horsepower gasoline engine--on the morning of June 4, 1896. When Ford and James Bishop, his chief assistant, attempted to wheel the Quadricycle out of the shed, however, they discovered that it was too wide to fit through the door. To solve the problem, Ford took an axe to the brick wall of the shed, smashing it to make space for the vehicle to be rolled out.
With Bishop bicycling ahead to alert passing carriages and pedestrians, Ford drove the 500-pound Quadricycle down Detroit's Grand River Avenue, circling around three major thoroughfares. The Quadricycle had two driving speeds, no reverse, no brakes, rudimentary steering ability and a doorbell button as a horn, and it could reach about 20 miles per hour, easily overpowering King's invention. Aside from one breakdown on Washington Boulevard due to a faulty spring, the drive was a success, and Ford was on his way to becoming one of the most formidable success stories in American business history.

June 4th 1959
Kihachiro Kawashima selected as Executive Vice President, General Manager of American Honda Motor Company (seven employees, operating capital of $250,000.); opened shop in small storefront office on Pico Boulevard in Los Angeles to serve consumers wanting small, light, easy to handle and maintain two-wheeled vehicles.

June 4th 1629 
Dutch trading ship 'The Batavia' is shipwrecked off Australia's western coast
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on June 05, 2014, 10:57:45 pm
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On this day, June 5th 1951
Gordon M. Buehrig, of South Bend, IN, received a patent for "Vehicle Top Construction", vehicle top with removable panels; appeared as "T-top" on 1968 Chevrolet Corvette Stingray.
Buehrig was one of 25 candidates for Car Designer of the Century, an international award given in 1999 to honor the most influential automobile designer of the 20th century.
PICTURED: The 1935 Auburn Speedster designed by Gordon Buehrig

June 5th 1937
Henry Ford initiated 32 hour work week.

June 5th 1998
3,400 members of the United Auto Workers (UAW) union walk out on their jobs at a General Motors (GM) metal-stamping factory in Flint, Michigan, beginning a strike that will last seven weeks and stall production at GM facilities nationwide.

Jun 5th, 1968:
Bobby Kennedy is assassinated
Senator Robert Kennedy is shot at the Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles after winning the California presidential primary. Immediately after he announced to his cheering supporters that the country was ready to end its fractious divisions, Kennedy was shot several times by the 22-year-old Palestinian Sirhan Sirhan. He died a day later.

(http://i1054.photobucket.com/albums/s500/JChry82/FerrisBuellersDayOffredcar.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/JChry82/media/FerrisBuellersDayOffredcar.jpg.html)

June 5th, 1985
It was on this day that Ferris Buellar skipped a day from school in the ever classic movie, "Ferris Buellar's Day Off" where he borrows his friends dad's 1961 Ferrari GT250 California to pick up his girls friend, Sloan. Later the Ferrari was accidentally kicked out of a 3 story plate glass window

Jun 5th 2004,
Ronald Wilson Reagan, the 40th president of the United States, dies, after a long struggle with Alzheimer's disease. Reagan, who was also a well-known actor and served as governor of California, was a popular president known for restoring American confidence after the problems of the 1970s and helping to defeat communism.

Jun 5th 1944,
more than 1,000 British bombers drop 5,000 tons of bombs on German gun batteries placed at the Normandy assault area, while 3,000 Allied ships cross the English Channel in preparation for the invasion of Normandy—D-Day.

Jun 5th 1866
Explorer John McDouall Stuart, first to successfully cross Australia from north to south, dies

Jun 5th 1988 
Kay Cottee returns to Sydney, the first woman to sail solo around the world.

Jun 5th 1823 
Explorer Allan Cunningham breaks through the Warrumbungle Range on his quest to find an overland route to the Liverpool Plains

jun 5th 1788 
First Fleet cattle from the government herds go bush, disappearing for seven years
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on June 06, 2014, 08:27:19 pm
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On this day, June 6th 1933
eager motorists park their automobiles on the grounds of Park-In Theaters, the first-ever drive-in movie theater, located on Crescent Boulevard in Camden, New Jersey.
Park-In Theaters--the term "drive-in" came to be widely used only later--was the brainchild of Richard Hollingshead, a movie fan and a sales manager at his father's company, Whiz Auto Products, in Camden. Reportedly inspired by his mother's struggle to sit comfortably in traditional movie theater seats, Hollingshead came up with the idea of an open-air theater where patrons watched movies in the comfort of their own automobiles. He then experimented in the driveway of his own house with different projection and sound techniques, mounting a 1928 Kodak projector on the hood of his car, pinning a screen to some trees, and placing a radio behind the screen for sound. He also tested ways to guard against rain and other inclement weather, and devised the ideal spacing arrangement for a number of cars so that all would have a view of the screen.
The young entrepreneur received a patent for the concept in May of 1933 and opened Park-In Theaters, Inc. less than a month later, with an initial investment of $30,000. Advertising it as entertainment for the whole family, Hollingshead charged 25 cents per car and 25 cents per person, with no group paying more than one dollar. The idea caught on, and after Hollingshead's patent was overturned in 1949, drive-in theaters began popping up all over the country. One of the largest was the All-Weather Drive-In of Copiague, New York, which featured parking space for 2,500 cars, a kid's playground and a full service restaurant, all on a 28-acre lot.
Drive-in theaters showed mostly B-movies--that is, not Hollywood's finest fare--but some theaters featured the same movies that played in regular theaters. The initially poor sound quality--Hollingshead had mounted three speakers manufactured by RCA Victor near the screen--improved, and later technology made it possible for each car's to play the movie's soundtrack through its FM radio. The popularity of the drive-in spiked after World War II and reached its heyday in the late 1950s to mid-60s, with some 5,000 theaters across the country. Drive-ins became an icon of American culture, and a typical weekend destination not just for parents and children but also for teenage couples seeking some privacy. Since then, however, the rising price of real estate, especially in suburban areas, combined with the growing numbers of walk-in theaters and the rise of video rentals to curb the growth of the drive-in industry. Today, fewer than 500 drive-in theaters survive in the United States.
The first movie Showing "Wife Beware"
Pictured: The reverse side of the world's first drive-in movie screen, in Camden, New Jersey. (front side also shown)

June 6th 1925
Walter Percy Chrysler renamed Maxwell Motor Company as the Chrysler Corporation.

June 6th 1932
The first gasoline tax levied by US Congress was enacted as a part of the Revenue Act of 1932. The Act mandated a series of excise taxes on a wide variety of consumer goods. Congress placed a tax of 1¢ per gallon on gasoline and other motor fuel sold.

June 6, 1980 
For the second time in a week, a computer error falsely warns US forces of an impending Soviet nuclear attack.

June 6, 1944
Although the term D-Day is used routinely as military lingo for the day an operation or event will take place, for many it is also synonymous with June 6, 1944, the day the Allied powers crossed the English Channel and landed on the beaches of Normandy, France, beginning the liberation of Western Europe from Nazi control during World War II. Within three months, the northern part of France would be freed and the invasion force would be preparing to enter Germany, where they would meet up with Soviet forces moving in from the east.

June 6, 1827
Explorer Allan Cunningham discovers the Darling Downs

June 6, 1835
John Batman, the native-born founder of Melbourne, signs a treaty with Aborigines entitling him to 250,000 hectares of land in Port Phillip Bay.

June 6, 1859 
Today is Queensland Day, marking the day that Queensland separated from the colony of New South Wales.

June 6, 1888 
The British Crown annexes Christmas Island

June 6, 1980 
For the second time in a week, a computer error falsely warns US forces of an impending Soviet nuclear attack.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on June 08, 2014, 07:41:26 pm
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On this day, June 7 1954
Ford Motor Company formed styling team to design entirely new car, later named Edsel. The car brand is best known as one of the most spectacular failures in the history of the United States automobile industry.
More than sixty years after its spectacular failure, Edsel has become a highly collectible item amongst vintage car hobbyists. A mint 1958 car can sell up to $100,000, while rare models, like 1960 convertible, may price up to $200,000. While the design was considered "ugly" fifty years ago, many other car manufacturers, such as Pontiac and Alfa Romeo, have employed similar vertical grille successfully on their car designs.

June 7 1962
The banking institution Credit Suisse, then known as Schweizerische Kreditanstalt (SKA), opens the first drive-through bank in Switzerland at St. Peter-Strasse 17, near Paradeplatz (Parade Square) in downtown Zurich.
Like many developments in automotive culture--including drive-through restaurants and drive-in movies--drive-through banking has its origins in the United States. Some sources say that Hillcrest State Bank opened the first drive-through bank in Dallas, Texas, in 1938; others claim the honor belongs to the Exchange National Bank of Chicago in 1946. Regardless of when exactly it began, the trend didn't reach its height until the car-crazy era of the late 1950s and early 1960s. Around that time, California-based Wells Fargo Bank introduced the "TV Auto Banker Service," where an image of the teller was broadcast to the customer in their car on a special closed-circuit television. Deposits, withdrawals and other transactions were completed using an underground pneumatic tube that whisked money and paperwork between the car and the teller station.
The SKA branch that opened in Zurich in June 1962 featured eight glass pavilions, seven outfitted for left-hand drive cars and one for vehicles with right-hand drive (such as those used in the United Kingdom and Ireland). Upon the opening of the large and modern facility, Zurich daily newspaper Neue Zurcher Zeitung advised motorists on how to enter the drive-through portion: "At the entrance to the bank, approaching cars trigger a sensor on the ground, activating a light trail that directs the driver to the next available counter."
The Paradeplatz drive-through was well received by the press, and in its first year of operation, the bank handled around 20,000 customers. By the 1970s, however, the automobile's popularity had led to a major traffic problem in downtown Zurich, and fewer and fewer drivers opted to stop to do their banking from their cars. After years without a profit, SKA closed the drive-through in 1983.
In the United States, by contrast, drive-through banking never lost its popularity. Nearly all major banks nationwide offer some type of drive-through option, from regular teller service to 24-hour automated teller machines (ATMs). In recent years, drive-through banking reached the previously untapped Asian market: Citibank opened China's first drive-through ATM at the Upper East Side Central Plaza in Beijing in August 2007.

June 7th 1976
Disco as a musical style predated the movie Saturday Night Fever by perhaps as many as five years, but disco as an all-consuming cultural phenomenon might never have happened without the 1977 film and its multi-platinum soundtrack featuring such era-defining hits as the Bee Gees' "Stayin' Alive" and Yvonne Elliman's "If I Can't Have You." What is absolutely certain is that Saturday Night Fever would never have been made were it not for a magazine article detailing the struggles and dreams of a talented, young, Italian-American disco dancer and his scruffy entourage in Bay Ridge, Brooklyn. That article—"The Tribal Rites of the New Saturday Night," by journalist Nik Cohn—was published on this day in 1976 in the June 7 issue of New York magazine.

June 7th, 1770
Lieutenant James Cook names Palm Island, off Australia's eastern coast.

June 7th 1825 
Van Diemen's Land (Tasmania) officially separates from New South Wales.

June 7th 1654 
Louis XIV is crowned King of France

June 7th 1942 
The Battle of Midway, between American and Japanese forces, ends with a US victory.

June 7th also marks "International Donut day" ...(9 things you didn’t know about donuts)
In honor of National Donut Day, we share some fun facts about the sweet treats you probably didn't know.
* In the U.S. alone, more than 10 billion donuts are made every year. Between 27 locations, Lamar’s Donuts produces 17 million donuts per year.
* The US donut industry is worth 3.6 billion dollars.
* The largest donut ever made was an American-style jelly donut weighing 1.7 tons, which was 16 feet in diameter and 16 inches high in the center.
* Per capita, Canada has more donuts shops than any other country.
* The hole in the donut’s center appeared in the first half of the 19th Century and allows the donut to cook more evenly.
* The Dutch are often credited with bringing donuts to the U.S. with their olykoeks, or oily cakes in the 1800s.
* Adolph Levitt invented the first donut machine in 1920.
* Ray’s Original Glazed Donut only has 220 calories, while a bagel and cream cheese averages 450 calories.
* The Guinness World record for donut eating is held by John Haight, who consumed 29 donuts in just over 6 minutes.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on June 08, 2014, 07:45:25 pm
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On this day,June 8th 1948,
A hand-built aluminum prototype labeled "No. 1" becomes the first vehicle to bear the name of one of the world's leading luxury car manufacturers: Porsche. Dr. Ferdinand Porsche test drove first Porsche two-seat roadster sports car, Project 356-1, built in a sawmill in Gmund, Austria (Tyrolean Alps).
Dr. Ferdinand Porsche debuted his first design at the World's Fair in Paris in 1900. The electric vehicle set several Austrian land-speed records, reaching more than 35 mph and earning international acclaim for the young engineer. He became general director of the Austro-Daimler Company (an outpost of the German automaker) in 1916 and later moved to Daimler headquarters in Stuttgart. Daimler merged with the Benz firm in the 1920s, and Porsche was chiefly responsible for designing some of the great Mercedes racing cars of that decade.
Porsche left Daimler in 1931 and formed his own company. A few years later, Adolf Hitler called on the engineer to aid in the production of a small "people's car" for the German masses. With his son, also named Ferdinand (known as Ferry), Porsche designed the prototype for the original Volkswagen (known as the KdF: "Kraft durch Freude," or "strength through joy") in 1936. During World War II, the Porsches also designed military vehicles, most notably the powerful Tiger tank.
At war's end, the French accused the elder Porsche of war crimes and imprisoned him for more than a year. Ferry struggled to keep the family firm afloat. He built a Grand Prix race car, the Type 360 Cisitalia, for a wealthy Italian industrialist, and used the money to pay his father's bail. When Porsche was released from prison, he approved of another project Ferry had undertaken: a new sports car that would be the first to actually bear the name Porsche. Dubbed the Type 356, the new car was in the tradition of earlier Porsche-designed race cars such as the Cisitalia. The engine was placed mid-chassis, ahead of the transaxle, with modified Volkswagen drive train components.
The 356 went into production during the winter of 1947-48, and the aluminum prototype, built entirely by hand, was completed on June 8, 1948. The Germans subsequently hired Porsche to consult on further development of the Volkswagen. With the proceeds, Porsche opened new offices in Stuttgart, with plans to build up to 500 of his company's own cars per year. Over the next two decades, the company would build more than 78,000 vehicles.

June 8th 1986
Tim Richmond won the first of his seven Winston Cup Series races in 1986, a total that would vault him to third place in the Series point race and solidify his reputation as one of NASCAR's greatest drivers. He had his career cut short when he contracted HIV and died of complications from AIDS on 19th Aug 1989.

June 8th 1770 
Lieutenant James Cook names Palm Island, off Australia's eastern coast

June 8th 1825 
Van Diemen's Land (Tasmania) officially separates from New South Wales

June 8th 1654 
Louis XIV is crowned King of France

June 8th 1942 
The Battle of Midway, between American and Japanese forces, ends with a US victory
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on June 09, 2014, 08:10:56 pm
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On this day, June 9th 2006
The animated feature film "Cars," produced by Pixar Animation Studios, roars into theaters across the United States.
For "Cars," which won the first-ever Academy Award for Best Animated Feature, Pixar's animators created an alternate America inhabited by vehicles instead of humans. The film's hero is Lightning McQueen (voiced by Owen Wilson), a Corvette-like race car enjoying a sensational debut on the National Association for Stock Car Auto Racing (NASCAR) circuit. Arrogant and foolish, with talent to burn, McQueen thinks of himself as a one-man show. After he refuses a tire change during the prestigious Piston Cup race, McQueen blows a huge lead, setting up a three-way tie-breaking race with The King, a longtime champion, and Chick Hicks, an intimidating competitor with a chip on his shoulder. On the way to the race site in California, however, McQueen goes off course (and off the interstate) and ends up in Radiator Springs, a forgotten town on the now-defunct Route 66.
At first desperate to escape, McQueen learns to appreciate Radiator Springs, especially after finding a best friend (the rusting tow-truck Mater, as in Tow-Mater), a love interest (Sally Carrera, a fetching Porsche) and a mentor (it turns out the town's gruff doctor-mechanic, Doc Hudson, is actually the Hudson Hornet, a real-life NASCAR legend). Among the other memorable inhabitants of Radiator Springs are an aging hippie VW van; a military Jeep named Sarge; Flo, a glamorous show car and proprietress of the V-8 Café (a gas station); Ramon, a Chevy Impala low rider; and Guido, a Fiat who owns a tire shop and is obsessed with Ferraris.
As director John Lasseter told The New York Times, he was inspired to make "Cars" by a cross-country road trip he took with his wife and five sons, as well as by a general love of automobiles. While researching the movie, the team of animators traveled along the historic Route 66, once the iconic route to the American West and now bypassed by interstate highways. (The "Mother Road" was decertified in 1985 and has been reborn as a tourist attraction.) In addition to the painstaking depictions of both classic and modern cars and their distinctive personalities, "Cars" features the voices of some of the leading figures in auto racing, beginning with the late Paul Newman, the legendary actor-turned-race car driver, as Doc Hudson. Racing legends Mario Andretti (as himself), Richard Petty (as The King) and Michael Schumacher (as a Ferrari) can also be heard, along with sports announcers Darrell Waltrip and Bob Costas.

June 9th 1903
Stanley Steamer received a patent for a "Steam Motor-Vehicle"; arrangement of engine on axle and housing.

June 9th 1909
Alice Huyler Ramsey, a 22-year-old housewife and mother from Hackensack, New Jersey, became the first woman to drive across the United States. With three female companions, none of whom could drive a car, for fifty-nine days she drove a Maxwell automobile the 3,800 miles from Manhattan, New York to San Francisco, California.
In later years, she lived in Covina, California, where in 1961 she wrote and published the story of her journey 'Veil, Duster, and Tire Iron'. Between 1909 and 1975, Ramsey drove across the country more than 30 times. On October 17, 2000, she became the first woman inducted into the Automotive Hall of Fame.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on June 10, 2014, 08:24:56 pm



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On this day, June 10th 1979
Paul Newman, the blue-eyed movie star-turned-race car driver, accomplishes the greatest feat of his racing career, roaring into second place in the 47th 24 Hours of Le Mans, the famous endurance race held annually in Le Mans, France.
Newman emerged as one of Hollywood's top leading men in the 1960s, with acclaimed performances in such films as "The Hustler" (1961), "Cool Hand Luke" (1967) and "Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid" (1969). Also in 1969, he starred in "Winning" as a struggling race car driver who must redeem his career and win the heart of the woman he loves--played by Newman's real-life wife, Joanne Woodward--at the Indianapolis 500. To prepare for the movie, Newman attended racing school, and he performed many of the high-speed racing scenes in the movie himself, without a stunt double. In 1972, Newman began his own racing career, winning his first Sports Club Car of America (SCCA) race driving a Lotus Elan. He soon moved up to a series of Datsun racing sedans and won four SCCA national championships from 1979 to 1986.
Newman's high point at the track came in June 1979 at Le Mans, where he raced a Porsche 935 twin-turbo coupe on a three-man team with Dick Barbour and Rolf Stommelen. His team finished second; first place went to two brothers from Florida, Don and Bill Whittington, and their teammate, Klaus Ludwig. Drama ensued during the last two hours of the race, when the Whittingtons' car--also a Porsche 935--was sidelined with fuel-injection problems and it looked like Newman's team could overtake them to grab the win. In the end, however, they had trouble even clinching second due to a dying engine. The Whittington team covered 2,592.1 miles at an average speed of 107.99 mph, finishing 59 miles ahead of Newman, Barbour and Stommelen.
After the race, The New York Times quoted the 54-year-old Newman as saying he might not race at Le Mans again: "I'm getting a bit long in the tooth for this. And my racing here places an unfortunate emphasis on the team. It takes it away from the people who really do the work." In fact, he continued racing into his eighties, making his last start at the Rolex 24 at Daytona International Speedway in 2006. He also found success as a race car owner, forming a team with Carl Haas that became one of the most enduring in Indy car racing. Newman died in September 2008 at the age of 83.

June 10th 1947
Saab introduced its first car, the model 92001, the Ursaab prototype. Saab had been primarily a supplier of military aircraft before and during World War II. With the end of the war, company executives realized the need to diversify the company's production capabilities. After an exhaustive planning campaign that at one point led to the suggestion that Saab manufacture toasters, But company executives decided to start building motor cars. Saab director Sven Otterbeck placed aircraft engineer Gunnar Ljungstrom in charge of creating the company's first car.

June 10th 1954
General Motors announced its research staff had built the GM Turbocruiser, a modifed GMC coach powered by a gas turbine; engine consisted of a single burner with two turbine wheels (one used to drive the centrifugal compressor, second delivered power for the transmission to the rear wheels of the vehicle).
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on June 11, 2014, 09:52:31 pm
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On this day, June 11th 1939
Racer Jackie Stewart, popularly know as the Flying Scotsman was born in Dumbarton, Scotland

June 11th 1994
TOYOTA Commemorative Museum of Industry and Technology was Established on the 100th anniversary of the birth of Kiichiro Toyoda, founder of Toyota Motor Corporation.

June 11th 1895
Charles E. Duryea received a patent for a "Road Vehicle", first US patent granted to an American inventor for a gasoline-driven automobile.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on June 12, 2014, 07:10:31 pm

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On this day, June 12th 1940,
Edsel Ford telephones William Knudsen of the U.S. Office of Production Management (OPM) to confirm Ford Motor Company's acceptance of Knudsen's proposal to manufacture 9,000 Rolls-Royce-designed engines to be used in British and U.S. airplanes.
By the spring of 1940, Nazi Germany had conquered Poland, Norway and Denmark and pushed France to the brink of defeat. An increasingly nervous General George C. Marshall, chief of staff of the U.S. Army, warned President Franklin D. Roosevelt that the United States needed to rearm in order to prepare for the possibility of a German attack on American shores. That May, Roosevelt called on Knudsen, a former Ford executive who became president of General Motors in 1937, to serve as director general of the OPM, the agency responsible for coordinating government purchases and wartime production. Knudsen had barely settled in Washington when he received an urgent appeal from the British government: The Royal Air Force (RAF) was in desperate need of new airplanes to defend Britain against an expected German offensive.
Unlike other automakers, Ford had already built a successful airplane, the Tri-Motor, in the 1920s. In two meetings in late May and early June 1940, Knudsen and Edsel Ford agreed that Ford would manufacture a new fleet of aircraft for the RAF on an expedited basis. One significant obstacle remained, however: Edsel's father Henry, who still retained complete control over the company he founded, was known for his opposition to the possible U.S. entry into World War II. Edsel and Charles Sorensen, Ford's production chief, had apparently gotten the go-ahead from Henry Ford by June 12, when Edsel telephoned Knudsen to confirm that Ford would produce 9,000 Rolls-Royce Merlin airplane engines (6,000 for the RAF and 3,000 for the U.S. Army). However, as soon as the British press announced the deal, Henry Ford personally and publicly canceled it, telling a reporter: "We are not doing business with the British government or any other government."
In fact, according to Douglas Brinkley's biography of Ford, "Wheels for the World," Ford had in effect already accepted a contract from the German government. The Ford subsidiary Ford-Werke in Cologne was doing business with the Third Reich at the time, which Ford's critics took as proof that he was concealing a pro-German bias behind his claims to be a man of peace. As U.S. entry into the war looked ever more certain, Ford reversed his earlier position, and in May of 1941 the company opened a large new government-sponsored facility at Willow Run, Michigan, for the purposes of manufacturing B-24E Liberator bombers (pictured above) for the Allied war effort. In addition to aircraft, Ford Motor plants produced a great deal of other war materiel during World War II, including a variety of engines, trucks, jeeps, tanks and tank destroyers.

June 12th 1952
Maurice Olley, Chevrolet's chief engineer, completed chassis, code-named Opel, for eventual use in 1953 Corvette.
Maurice Olley was the ultimate engineer. He had a passion for understanding engineering fundamentals and was committed to creating solutions to solve mechanical engineering problems related to automobiles. His entire career, from his time at Rolls-Royce to his 25 years at General Motors and Chevrolet, prepared him for the important role he was asked to play with the Corvette. But his contribution would have been just as passionate whether it had been applied to a Buick Roadmaster or to the Corvette. To Maurice Olley, it wasn’t the specific product that motivated him; it was how he could improve the function of the product while furthering the understanding of the engineering principle behind it.
Working along side Harley Earl and Bob McLean, Olley developed the chassis and suspension of the first-generation Corvette. Acting as head of Chevrolet Research and Development, he headed the engineering team that worked to perfect the early Corvettes and hired Zora Arkus-Duntov to continue the improvements.
Olley had a passion for making an automobile as good as it can be, along with an unmistakable influence on the development of the first Corvette.

June 12th 1931 
The territories of North Australia and Central Australia are reunited as the Northern Territory

June 12th 1948 
Donald Bradman scores 138 in the First Test at Trent Bridge.

June 12th 2003 
Optus launches the C1 satellite, the largest Australian hybrid communications and military satellite ever launched.

June 12th 1929 
WWII Holocaust diarist, Anne Frank, is born.

June 12th 1964 
Anti-apartheid leader, Nelson Mandela, is given a life sentence in jail
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on June 13, 2014, 08:14:38 pm
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On this day, June 13th 1895
Emile Levassor drives a Panhard et Levassor car with a two-cylinder, 750-rpm, four-horsepower Daimler Phoenix engine over the finish line in the world's first real automobile race. Levassor completed the 732-mile course, from Paris to Bordeaux and back, in just under 49 hours, at a then-impressive speed of about 15 miles per hour.
Levassor and his partner Rene Panhard operated one of the largest machine shops in Paris in 1887, when a Belgian engineer named Edouard Sarazin convinced Levassor to manufacture a new high-speed engine for the German automaker Daimler, for which Sarazin had obtained the French patent rights. When Sarazin died later that year, the rights passed to his widow, Louise. In 1889, visitors to the Paris exposition celebrating the 100th anniversary of the French Revolution were able to admire not only Gustave Eiffel's now-famous tower, but also a Daimler-produced automobile with one of the new Panhard et Levassor-constructed engines. The following year, Levassor married Louise Sarazin.

By 1891, Levassor had built a drastically different automobile, placing the engine vertically in front of the chassis rather than underneath or behind the driver--a radical departure from the carriage-influenced design of earlier vehicles--and put in a mechanical transmission that the driver engaged with a clutch, allowing him to travel at different speeds. In the years to come, this arrangement, known as the Systeme Panhard, would become the model for all automobiles. In 1895, a committee of journalists and automotive pioneers, including Levassor and Armand Peugeot, France's leading manufacturer of bicycles, spearheaded the Paris-Bordeaux-Paris race in order to capitalize on public enthusiasm for the automobile. Out of 46 entries, Levassor finished first but was later disqualified on a technicality; first place went to a Peugeot that finished 11 hours behind him.
The Paris-Bordeaux-Paris race highlighted France's superiority in automotive technology at the time, and established Panhard et Levassor as a major force in the fledgling industry. Its success spurred the creation of the Automobile Club de France in order to foster the development of the motor vehicle and regulate future motor sports events. Over the next century, these events would grow into the Grand Prix motor racing circuit, and eventually into its current incarnation: Formula One.

June 13th 1978
Ford Motor Company Chairman, Henry Ford II, fired Lee Iaccoca, the mustang designer, from the position of president, ending a bitter personal struggle between the two men.

June 13th 1980
Markus Winkelhock (born June 13, 1980 in Stuttgart Germany was a German Formula One driver. Winkelhock is the only driver in Formula One history to start last on the grid and lead the race in his first Grand Prix, and due to the red flag and restart, is also the only driver in Formula One history to start both last and first on the grid in the same Grand Prix.

Published Jul 13, 2004
Lee A. Iacocca, who gave the world the Ford Mustang and revived Chrysler by popularizing the modern minivan, left the automobile industry over a decade ago. But he is still pushing new ideas. His latest product was a spray-on version of Olivio, a butter substitute made from olive and canola oils. Mr. Iacocca, the founder and principal owner of Olivio Premium Products, joined some of his grandchildren that fall in testing the company's new spray pump on soda crackers.

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Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on June 14, 2014, 08:57:11 pm

On this day, June 14th 2002
In one of the most memorable scenes in the film "The Bourne Identity" the amnesiac assassin Jason Bourne (Matt Damon) drives a vintage Austin Mini Cooper through the traffic-heavy streets of Paris to evade his police and Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) pursuers.

June 14th 1928
Leon Duray drove his Miller 91 Packard Cable Special to a world close-coursed speed record, recording an astonishing top speed of 148.173mph, at the Packard Proving Ground in Utica, Michigan. Two weeks earlier, Duray had posted a record lap of 124mph at the Indy 500, a record that stood for 10 years until the track was banked.

Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on June 15, 2014, 08:41:20 pm
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June 15th 1924
Ford Motor Company manufactured its 10 millionth Model T automobile.

June 15th, 1844.
Vulcanised rubber is patented by Charles Goodyear.
Vulcanisation, or curing, of rubber is a chemical process in which rubber molecules become locked together to a greater or lesser extent, making the bulk material harder, more durable and more resistant to chemical attack. The process also alters the surface of the material from a stickiness that adheres to other materials, to a smooth soft surface.
Prior to the mid-19th century, natural or India rubber had limited usefulness because it melted in hot weather, froze and cracked in cold weather, and tended to stick to virtually everything. Charles Goodyear, a businessman who experimented with the properties of gum elastic, accidentally discovered the process of vulcanisation of rubber when he dropped some rubber mixed with sulfur on a hot stove. He received US Patent No. 3,633 on 15 June 1844 for his invention.
Goodyear did not benefit from his invention as Englishman Thomas Hancock copied his idea and attained a British patent for the process before Goodyear applied for a British patent. However, vulcanised rubber was later was made into tyres emblazoned with Goodyear's name. The Goodyear Tyre and Rubber Company adopted the Goodyear name because of its activities in the rubber industry, but it has no other links to Charles Goodyear and his family.

June 15th 1937
Harold T. Ames, of Chicago, IL, chief executive of Duesenberg, received a patent for a "Headlight Structure"; retractable headlamps (defining detail on Cord 810).

June 15th 1986
Driving legend Richard Petty makes the 1,000th start of his National Association for Stock Car Racing (NASCAR) career, in the Miller American 400 in Brooklyn, Michigan. He became the first driver in NASCAR history to log 1,000 career starts.

15th June 1966
Andrew Goldman was born to rich oil tycoon Marty Mcfly from the movie "back to the future". Andrew went on through the 20th century to become one of the most influential world leaders to prevent virginity gaining him the Nobel peace prize in 2019. Andrews statue to this day remains at the base of the Sydney Harbour bridge (not really...happy birthday Andy)
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on June 16, 2014, 09:37:10 pm
(http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v170/drfong/Cars/1917MillerGoldenSubmarine02a.jpg) (http://smg.photobucket.com/user/drfong/media/Cars/1917MillerGoldenSubmarine02a.jpg.html)

On this day, June 16th 1917
Harry Miller completed the Golden Submarine, the first of his expensive custom-made race cars that would change the shape of things to come in American auto racing. The Golden Submarine carried an unimaginable ticket price of $15,000 at its completion. Its gold color was the result of a combination of lacquer and bronze dust. Built for Barney Oldfield, America's most brash race-car driver, the Golden Submarine had an enclosed cockpit. Oldfield, who helped design the car, thought the closed cockpit would make the car safer if it rolled; he'd lost his close friend, Bob Burman, in a crash the year before. The Golden Submarine was the first American race car to possess an all electrically welded steel chassis. Also unique to the sub was the liberal use of aluminum in engine and body components. The engine--the component that would later define Miller's career--contained four cylinders and a single overhead cam. It put out 130hp at 290 cubic inches of piston displacement, and, most remarkable for its time, it only weighed 410 pounds. Consider that the car's competition carried engines that produced around 300hp at over 400 cubic inches of piston displacement.
Pictured: Harry Millers Golden Submarine

June 16th 1903
At 9:30 in the morning, Henry Ford and other prospective stockholders in the Ford Motor Company meet in Detroit to sign the official paperwork required to create a new corporation. Twelve stockholders were listed on the forms, which were signed, notarized and sent to the office of Michigan's secretary of state. The company was officially incorporated the following day, when the secretary of state's office received the articles of association.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on June 17, 2014, 07:46:41 pm
(http://i270.photobucket.com/albums/jj93/Blacquenhard/OJSimpsonInterstate405June171994.jpg) (http://s270.photobucket.com/user/Blacquenhard/media/OJSimpsonInterstate405June171994.jpg.html)

On this day, June 17th 1994
Viewers around the world are glued to their television screens, watching as a fleet of black-and-white police cars pursues a white Ford Bronco along Interstate-405 in Los Angeles, California. Inside the Bronco is Orenthal James "O.J." Simpson, a former professional football player, actor and sports commentator whom police suspected of involvement in the recent murders of his former wife, Nicole Brown Simpson, and her friend Ronald Goldman.
The bodies of Brown Simpson and Goldman were found outside her home in the exclusive Los Angeles neighborhood of Brentwood shortly after midnight on June 13, 1994. Bloodstains matching Simpson's blood type were found at the crime scene, and the star had become the focus of the Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD) investigation by the morning of June 17. When police arrived to arrest Simpson at the home of his friend and lawyer, Robert Kardashian, they found that Simpson had slipped out the back door with his former college and Buffalo Bills teammate Al Cowlings. The two men had then driven off in Cowlings' white Ford Bronco.
After a news conference--in which his lawyer, Howard Shapiro, announced that Simpson was distraught and might attempt suicide--the LAPD officially declared the former football star a fugitive. Around 7 p.m. PST, police located the white Bronco by tracing calls made from Simpson's cellular phone. Simpson was reported to be in the back seat of the vehicle, holding a gun to his head. With news helicopters following the chase from above and cameras broadcasting the dramatic events live to millions of astonished viewers, vehicles from the LAPD and California Highway Patrol pursued the Bronco for about an hour as it traveled at some 35 miles per hour along I-405. Finally, after about an hour, the Bronco pulled into the driveway of Simpson's Brentwood home. He emerged from the car close to 9 pm and was immediately arrested and booked on double murder charges.
The trial that followed gripped the nation, inspiring unprecedented media scrutiny along with heated debates about racial discrimination on the part of the police. Though a jury acquitted Simpson of the murder charges in October 1995, a separate civil trial in 1997 found him liable for the deaths and ordered him to pay $33.5 million in damages to the Brown and Goldman families.
PICTURED: Innocent O.J. Simpson being chased by LA Police.

June 17th 1903
Ford Motor Company was officially incorporated with capital of $28,000 and Ford's patents, knowledge and engine, John S. Gray was elected as President and Henry Ford as Vice President. Primary stockholders were Henry Ford, Alexander Malcomson, John W. Anderson, C.H. Bennett, James Couzens, Horace E. Dodge, John F. Dodge, Vernon C. Fry, John S. Gray, Horace H. Rackham, Albert Strelow and Charles J. Woodall.

June 17th 1923
On this day, Enzo Ferrari, who would go on to an historic career as a driver for Alpha Romeo before being put in charge of their racing division, won his first race, a 166-mile event at the Circuito del Savio in Ravenna, Italy.

June 17th 1962
Scotch racer Jim Clark won his first Formula One Grand Prix at Spa-Francorchamps in Belgium. Clark would go on to one of the most storied careers in F1 history. His 1965 season is his crowning achievement as the sport's most dominant racer. Clark led every lap of every race he competed in, and he became the first Briton to win the Indy 500. Clark died in a tragic accident in a Formula Two race in Germany.

June 17th 1990
"Handsome" Harry Gant became the oldest driver to win a Winston Cup race when he won the Miller Genuine Draft 500 in Long Pond, Pennsylvania, at the age of 50 years, 158 days.

June 17th 1867
Henry Lawson, one of Australia's best known writers, is born

June 17th 1703 
John Wesley, founder of Methodism, is born

June 17th 1893 
Gold is discovered at Kalgoorlie in Western Australia

June 17th 1928 
Amelia Earhart becomes the first woman to fly across the Atlantic

June 17th 1961 
Russian ballet legend Rudolf Nureyev breaks free from Russian guards and requests asylum in France

June 17th 1972 
The Watergate scandal begins.

June 17th 1999 
Removal of the entire Cape Hatteras lighthouse tower in the USA commences.

June 17th 1779
In support of the US, Spain declares war on England and the siege of Gibraltar begins

June 17th 1784 - Holland forbids orange clothes (also in the same year, Ben Franklin expresses unhappiness over eagle as America's symbol...Go figure!!)

USELESS FACTS

....The longest one-syllable word in the English language is "screeched."
... FACT, chevy badges dont belong on holdens
...Everytime the media uses the word "HOON" to describe a car enthusiast, a puppy dies
...The name for Oz in the "Wizard of Oz" was thought up when the creator, Frank Baum, looked at his filing cabinet and saw A-N, and O-Z, hence "Oz."
...The sentence, "The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog," uses every letter in the alphabet.
...The term "the whole 9 yards" came from WWII fighter pilots in the Pacific. When arming their airplanes on the ground, the .50 caliber machine gun ammo belts measured exactly 27 feet, before being loaded into the fuselage. If the pilots fired all their ammo at a target, it got "the whole 9 yards."
...The name Jeep came from the abbreviation used in the army for the "General Purpose" vehicle, G.P.
...Pound for pound, hamburgers cost more than new cars.
...Only FOUR automobiles were registered in the United States in 1895.
...a production car contains more than 20kgs (44lbs) of glue
...The first speeding ticket was issued in 1902
...The World’s Oldest Car was built in France in 1884 for French Count De Dion
...The engine in the Mclaren F1 is a distant cousin of the one found in the BMW 850CSi
...The porsche 911 Sc was supposed to be the last 911 so it was given the SC designation(Super Carrera)
...The RS Cosworth came about due to a fluke. Stuart Turner, head of motorsport at Ford Europe spotted a prototype 16v head on a pinto block during a visit to Cosworth. He suggested they turbocharge it and bung it in a Sierra to knock Rover off the top spot in touring car racing. The rest is history
...The Jaguar XK120 was designed on the roof of the Coventry factory during an air-raid in WW2
...Mazda is named after the Zoroastrian religion
...Subaru is named after the pleides constellation, which has six stars visible, plus Subaru was made up of 5 companies becoming one so the logo conveniently displays six stars to represent that
...The Hyundai (which means modernity in Korean) badge spells out an H but is also supposed to represent two people, the customer and company, shaking hands
...Ford was the second car company that Henry Ford started. The first was the Henry Ford Motor Company, which he sold, and which eventually evolved into Cadillac
...Ford was offered the Beetle after WWII. Their assessors sent a report back saying the car 'wasn't worth a damn'
...Ferrari originally wanted to be paid for the use of the Ferrari 308 in Magnum PI. They relented when the producers told them they would use a Porsche 911 instead
...Volvo have the patent on 3-point seatbelts, but have never enforced it
...The 3-letter abbreviation for Harley-Davidson on the NY Stock Exchange is HOG
...California has issued at least 6 drivers licenses to people named Jesus Christ.
...In 1910, magician Harry Houdini was the first solo pilot to fly a plane in Australia. He taught himself to drive a car just so he could drive out to the airfield then never drove again
...Nicolas Cugnot made a steam powered car in 1769, this car was driven into a wall in 1771 and is recorded as the first motor accident
...Volvo is Latin for - "I roll"
...The doorhandles on the Mazda 3/5 are the same as on a 2005-on Mustang.
...Pontiac is named after an Indian tribe
...the Renault Feugo was the first car to come with remote central locking
...Oldsmobile's 4-4-2 stands for four-barrel carb, four-speed manual transmission, and two exhausts
...The Ford Probe was destined to be the new Ford Mustang but after a public outcry and petition, Ford backed down and called it the Probe. The Probe is now long dead and the Mustang is one of Ford's best sellers
...The double "RR" on the front of a Rolls Royce used to be red in colour. When Mr Rolls or Mr Royce died (can't remember which), one of the "R"s was changed to black. So some Rolls have a black and red "RR". When the other one died both "R"s became black
...The Porsche 993 Turbo was the first production road Porsche to use forged finned cylinder barrels
...Porsche wanted to call the 911 the 901 but couldnt because Peugeot own the copyright of all 3 digit numbers with an zero in the middle. Hence the 911
...Henry Ford asked all companies supplying parts and components to send them in boxes and crates of his design and specification so he could use the packaging as part of the vehicle structure as a way to cut costs
...Henry Ford was illiterate and he named the two-door Model A, tudor because he couldn't spell two-door
...If you look at an older VW ignition key (say for a Golf Mk II) it has the intials AH stamped on it. As do all air-cooled VWS. The intials stand for Adolf Hitler
...The Cadillac car brand was named after Antoine Laumet, dit de La Mothe, sieur de Cadillac, a French pioneer who founded a trading post on what was to become Detroit
...Only Phase I Nissan GTI-R's were actually built by Nissan (at Tochigi), The remaining three production phases were assembled by Fuji Heavy Industries (ie: Subaru Automotive)
...The AstonMartin Vantage which at the time had the largest brakes fitted to a production car produced enough heat energy stopping from 200mph to heat a small 1 bed flat for a fortnight
...The doors on the sides of the AMC Pacer are different sizes
...The production car with the longest cambelt - Porsche 928.
...The tail lights fitted to the Mclaren F1 came from a coach.
...The worlds first v6 was produced by Lancia
...Adolf Hitler had a false floor fitted into his Mercedes 770K, making him look 5 inches taller, when he stood up in the car
...A 1973 Oldsmobile Delta 88 is featured in every single Sam Rami film
...The Aston Martin in Goldfinger was the last DB4 S5 Vantage off the line. Being pretty similar-looking to the DB5 meant that they changed its identity to keep the film 'current' when it was announced during filming. The only point where it's referred to as a 'DB5' is during Q's briefing
...The Rolls-Royce Silver Cloud in A View To A Kill actually belonged to producer Albert 'Cubby' Broccoli
...E.L Cord once ran the Auburn-Cord-Duesenberg empire which made some of the greatest American cars. When it went bankrupt in the thirties he founded a refrigerator firm and made a large fortune.He had no interest in the cars he had built and never talked about them or attneded any meeting afterwards
...The turbocharger on a Mitsubishi Lancer EVO spins in the oposite direction to the turbocharger fitted to a Subaru Impreza
...The O in GTO, as in Ferrari 250GTO, stands for Gran Turismo 'omologato' or homologated to conform to the rules of a specific motor race, so should only apply to race specification cars built to satisfy the numbers required for homologation
...Ferris Buellars Ferrari was NOT an MG with a Ferrari bodykit on it
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on June 18, 2014, 08:35:04 pm
(http://i359.photobucket.com/albums/oo33/69belair/other%20makes/nyc1946_zps3a058dee.jpg) (http://s359.photobucket.com/user/69belair/media/other%20makes/nyc1946_zps3a058dee.jpg.html)

On this day, June 18th 1923
The first Checker Cab rolls off the line at the Checker Cab Manufacturing Company in Kalamazoo, Michigan.
Morris Markin, founder of Checker Cab, was born in Smolensk, Russia, and began working when he was only 12 years old. At 19, he immigrated to the United States and moved to Chicago, where two uncles lived. After opening his own tailor's shop, Markin also began running a fleet of cabs and an auto body shop, the Markin Auto Body Corporation, in Joliet, Illinois. In 1921, after loaning $15,000 to help a friend's struggling car manufacturing business, the Commonwealth Motor Company, Markin absorbed Commonwealth into his own enterprise and completely halted the production of regular passenger cars in favor of taxis. The result was the Checker Cab Manufacturing Company, which took its name from a Chicago cab company that had hired Commonwealth to produce its vehicles.
By the end of 1922, Checker was producing more than 100 units per month in Joliet, and some 600 of the company's cabs were on the streets of New York City. Markin went looking for a bigger factory and settled on Kalamazoo, where the company took over buildings previously used by the Handley-Knight Company and Dort Body Plant car manufacturers. The first shipment of a Checker from Kalamazoo on June 18, 1923 stood out as a major landmark in the history of the company, which by then employed some 700 people.
During the Great Depression, Markin briefly sold Checker, but he bought it back in 1936 and began diversifying his business by making auto parts for other car companies. After converting its factories to produce war materiel during World War II, Checker entered the passenger car market in the late 1950s, with models dubbed the Superba and the Marathon. In its peak production year of 1962, Checker rolled out some 8,173 cars; the great majority of those were taxis. Over the course of the 1970s, however, as economic conditions led taxi companies to convert smaller, more fuel-efficient standard passenger cars into cabs, the 4,000-pound gas-guzzling Checker came to seem more and more outdated. Markin had died in 1970, and in April 1982 his son David announced that Checker would halt production of its famous cab that summer. Though the company still owns the Yellow and Checker cab fleets in Chicago and continued to make parts for other auto manufacturers, including General Motors, the last Checker Cab rolled off the line in Kalamazoo on July 12, 1982.
Pictured: 1946 checkered cab

18 June 1936
Denis Clive "Denny" Hulme, New Zealand car racer and the 1967 Formula One World Champion for the Brabham team was born in Moteuka, New Zealand.

18 June 1983 
America launches its first woman into space

18 June 1936
1st bicycle traffic court in America established, Racine, WI

18 June 1977
Sex Pistols Johnny Rotten & Paul Cook, beaten & robbed by London pub

18 June 1815 
Napoleon Bonaparte is defeated in the Battle of Waterloo

18 June 1928 
Arctic explorer Roald Amundsen disappears while on a rescue mission.

18 June 1972 
118 people are killed in the UK's worst air disaster

18 June 2000 
58 Chinese immigrants die from suffocation whilst trying to illegally enter Britain

18 June 1178
5 Canterbury monks report explosion on moon (only known observation)

18 June 1879
W H Richardson, a black inventor, patents the children's carriage
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on June 19, 2014, 07:52:31 pm
(http://i293.photobucket.com/albums/mm46/CarClassic/Blog-03/Lamborghini_Gallardo_05.jpg) (http://s293.photobucket.com/user/CarClassic/media/Blog-03/Lamborghini_Gallardo_05.jpg.html)

On this day, June 19th 1965
Luc Donckerwolke, famous Belgian car designer was born in Lima, Peru. He started his design career in 1990 with Peugeot. He also worked for Skoda (1994-98 where he helped design Octavia and Fabia. After that he shifted to Audi where he helped design Audi A4 and R8. He was head of design at Lamborghini from 1998, where he was responsible for the 2001 Lamborghini Diablo VT 6.0, 2002 Lamborghini Murciélago and 2003 Lamborghini Gallardo, winning the 'Red Dot Award' in 2003 in recognition for his work on them. He also worked with Walter de'Silva to produce the 2006 Lamborghini Miura concept. In September 2005, Donckerwolke was appointed SEAT Design Director overseeing the design of future SEAT models.
PICTURED: The Lamborghini Gallardo

June 19th 1949
NASCAR staged its first Grand National event at the Charlotte Fairgrounds, the event marked the birth of NASCAR racing as we know it today.

June 19, 1940
Shirley Muldowney, the "First Lady of Drag Racing" was born in Schenectady, New York. She was the first woman to receive a licence to drive a top fuel dragster by the NHRA. She won the NHRA Top Fuel championship in 1977, 1980 and 1982.

(http://i645.photobucket.com/albums/uu176/MustangMayhem/this%20day%20in%20HISTORY/11051871_10203848166275151_1706218519976333452_n_zpsg0ljvuax.jpg) (http://s645.photobucket.com/user/MustangMayhem/media/this%20day%20in%20HISTORY/11051871_10203848166275151_1706218519976333452_n_zpsg0ljvuax.jpg.html)

June 19, 35 years ago today the best movie ever made was released. The Blues Brothers

June 19th 2005
After 14 Formula One race car drivers withdraw due to safety concerns over the Michelin-made tires on their vehicles, German driver Michael Schumacher wins a less-than-satisfying victory at the United States Grand Prix. The race, held at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway in Indianapolis, Indiana, will go down one of the most controversial Formula One racing events in history.
Two days before the race, driver Ralf Schumacher (Michael's brother) crashed in practice while negotiating the speedway's banked right-hand 13th turn. Michelin, makers of Schumacher's tires, determined that the tires they had supplied for the Grand Prix could not withstand the high speed on the turn, and asked the Federation Internationale de l'Automobile (FIA), the sanctioning body for Formula One races, for permission to send another batch of tires. The FIA refused, citing its mandate that only one set of tires be used in a weekend. The organization also refused Michelin's petition to build a chicane, or series of turns, designed to slow down cars before the 13th turn--despite the fact that the speedway's chief executive and 9 out of the 10 teams in the race agreed that the track could be altered. The only team that didn't was Ferrari, the team of Michael Schumacher and Rubens Barrichello (who ended up finishing second) and one of three teams in the race that used Bridgestone tires instead of Michelin.
In the end, 14 cars stayed in the garage for the Grand Prix; the six remaining cars were from the Bridgestone-outfitted Ferrari, Minardi and Jordan teams. The race itself featured one moment of excitement, when Michael Schumacher almost collided with Barrichello after a pit stop, forcing Barrichello off the track briefly and onto the grass before he regained his bearings. Many disgruntled fans left early, while others threw beer bottles and other debris from the stands and booed the victory ceremony, during which a subdued Schumacher declined to spray the customary bottle of champagne into the crowd.
The teams that used Michelin tires issued a joint apology to fans and sponsors, while Michelin later reimbursed some ticket holders for the event. Though many faulted Michelin for not providing adequate tires and agreed that the FIA and Ferrari team had the right to insist that the race course not be changed, many felt a compromise would have benefited Formula One racing as a whole, especially in the United States, where it was still seeking to build a solid fan base. The 2005 Grand Prix had drawn a crowd of some 100,000 fans--far less than that attracted by the Indianapolis 500 or a regular NASCAR Nextel Cup event.

(http://i1010.photobucket.com/albums/af230/Seeking_uno/James-Gandolfini_zps6a65684d.jpg) (http://s1010.photobucket.com/user/Seeking_uno/media/James-Gandolfini_zps6a65684d.jpg.html)

June 19 2013
Sopranos star James Gandolfini best known as TV mob boss Tony Soprano dies of suspected heart attack in Italy, age 51. Already a well-travelled actor, Gandolfini shot to fame in 1999 as the head of a mob family on HBO TV series The Sopranos, the show that changed TV's reputation into a destination for quality drama and in turn, film actors.
Sept 18 1961 - June 19 2013

2012 - A man in Saudi Arabia is beheaded for witchcraft and sorcery

1835 - New Orleans gives US government Jackson Square to be used as a mint

1862 - Slavery outlawed in US territories

1889 - Start of the first Sherlock Holmes adventure "Man with the Twisted Lip"

1910 - 1st airship in service "Germany"

1910 - Father's Day celebrated for 1st time (Spokane, Wash)

1917 - After WW I King George V ordered members of British royal family to dispense with German titles & surnames, they take the name Windsor

1954 - Tasmanian Devil, debuts in "Devil May Hare" by Warner Bros

1956 - Jerry Lewis & Dean Martin end partnership after 16 films

1967 - Paul McCartney admits on TV that he took LSD

1973 - "Rocky Horror Picture Show," stage production opens in London

1978 - "Best Little Whorehouse..." opens at 46th St NYC for 1577 perfs

1978 - Garfield, created by Jim Davis, 1st appears as a comic strip

1981 - Heaviest known orange (2.5 kg) exhibited, Nelspruit, South Africa

1988 - World's Largest Sausage completed at 13 1/8 miles long

1992 - "Batman Returns," opens
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on June 20, 2014, 08:30:25 pm
(http://i163.photobucket.com/albums/t289/Eryk_PL/fs_7706921-1-1.jpg) (http://s163.photobucket.com/user/Eryk_PL/media/fs_7706921-1-1.jpg.html)

On this day, June 20th 1945
Shekhar Mehta, the only five-time winner of the Safari Rally, was born in Uganda. The most grueling rally race in the world, the Safari originated in 1953 at the behest of the Royal East African Automobile Association. He was born in 1945 to an Indian family of plantation owners in Uganda, and began rallying behind the wheel of a BMW aged 21. In 1972 he and his family fled Idi Amin's regime to Kenya.
Through the most successful period of his career he drove Nissan/Datsun 240Z car.
PICTURED: Shekhar Mehta in a Datsun 240Z - '73 Safari Rally

June 20th 1987
First Junior Go-Kart race was run at the three-quarter-mile cross-country course outside of Easton, Maryland. Racer William Smith won this event in his 50cc Yamaha Green Dragon.

June 20th 1941
After a long and bitter struggle on the part of Henry Ford against cooperation with organized labor unions, Ford Motor Company signs its first contract with the United Automobile Workers of America and Congress of Industrial Organizations (UAW-CIO)
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on June 21, 2014, 09:44:47 pm
(http://i200.photobucket.com/albums/aa56/AAinsworthNo2/Mille_Miglia_1955_Stirlingcopy.jpg) (http://s200.photobucket.com/user/AAinsworthNo2/media/Mille_Miglia_1955_Stirlingcopy.jpg.html)

On this day, June 21 1947
After an interim of seven years, during which World War II wreaked havoc across the European continent, the first post-war Mille Miglia auto race is held on this day in 1947 in Brescia, Italy.
The Mille Miglia ("Thousand Miles") was the brainchild of the Brescia Automobile Club, formed in 1926 under the leadership of Franco Mazzotti and Count Aymo Maggi. An important center for Italian motor sports since the turn of the century, Brescia was smarting over the fact that Monza (near Milan) had been chosen as the site of the prestigious Italian Grand Prix. Using its considerable political connections, the fledgling automobile club gained the approval of Italy's Fascist government to run a race from Brescia to Rome--a distance of some 1,600 kilometers (around 1,000 miles) on Italian public roads. The first race, held on March 26 and 27, 1927, featured all of the leading Italian drivers; foreign participation was limited to three tiny French-made Peugeots in the lower-power Class H field. Cars made by local manufacturer Officine Meccaniche (OM) captured the three top spots. The winner completed the course in a little more than 20 hours, at an average speed of more than 77 kilometers per hour.
After an entrant spun out of control during the 1938 Mille Miglia, killing 10 spectators--, including seven children--the Fascist government of Benito Mussolini banned the race. It resumed briefly during wartime but was suspended again after the 13th running in 1940. After World War II ended in 1945, much of Italy's infrastructure, including roads and bridges, had to be rebuilt, gasoline and rubber were still being rationed and the country's new government was struggling to demonstrate its effectiveness in the wake of the Fascist movement's demise. Mille Miglia organizers were forced to postpone the starting date from late April to June 1947; they also switched to a new 1,800-kilometer route. Finally, on June 21, 1947, 155 starters left the line for the 14th edition of the Mille Miglia. Aided by a violent rainstorm that hampered runner-up Tazio Nuvolari's small Cisitalia convertible, the driver Clemente Biondetti won the race in an Alfa Romeo.
Even in its new incarnation, Italian drivers and cars dominated the race, which popularized such powerhouse brands as Alfa Romeo, Ferrari and Maserati. Tragically, driver Alfonso de Portago blew a tire and spun off the road during the 1957 edition, killing himself, his co-driver and 10 spectators. Three days later, the Italian government banned the Mille Miglia and all other motor racing on Italian public road
PICTURED: Stirling Moss at 1955 Mille Miglia

June 21 1947
William Clay Ford married Martha Firestone, uniting two of the greatest fortunes in the American automotive industry. Henry Ford and Harvey Firestone had been close friends and allies during their lives after Firestone received the exclusive contract to supply tires for Ford's Model T. Neither man lived to see the union of their families.

June 21 1894
Workers in Pittsburgh strike Pullman sleeping car company

June 21 1938
Bradman scores 101* in 77 minutes, Australia v Lancashire

June 21 1954
John Landy runs world record mile (3:58.0)

June 21 1960
Armin Hary runs world record 100m (10.0)

June 21 1962
USAF Maj Robert M White takes X-15 to 75,190 m

(http://i166.photobucket.com/albums/u108/rnich172/X15a03R.jpg) (http://s166.photobucket.com/user/rnich172/media/X15a03R.jpg.html)

June 21 1982
John Hinckley found not guilty of 1981 attempted assassination of President Reagan by reason of insanity

June 21 2004
SpaceShipOne becomes the first privately funded spaceplane to achieve spaceflight.

June 21 2006
Pluto's newly discovered moons are officially named Nix & Hydra.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on June 22, 2014, 10:05:07 pm


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June 22nd 2001
"The Fast and the Furious," a crime drama based in the underground world of street racing in Southern California, debuts in theaters across the United States.
In the film, directed by Rob Cohen, Paul Walker starred as Brian O'Connor, an undercover cop who infiltrates the illegal late-night racing scene in Los Angeles to catch a gang suspected of hijacking big-rig trucks to get the parts to outfit their souped-up cars. As the movie opens, O'Connor is practicing his high-speed driving in order to blend in with his targets; his vehicle is a bright green 1995 Mitsubishi Eclipse, which he powers through an empty parking lot near Dodger Stadium. Later on, O'Connor loses the title to the Mitsubishi to Dominic Toretto (Vin Diesel), the leader of the gang of suspected thieves, after a street race. Toretto, the reigning "king of the streets," dominates the competition in his powerful fire-engine red 1993 Mazda RX-7 Twin Turbo. In another scene, Toretto drives a hulking vintage 1969/1970 Dodge Charger.
These were just three of the cars featured prominently in the high-speed, high-impact racing scenes that punctuate "The Fast and the Furious." The screenplay for the film was based on an article about the street-racing scene titled "Racer X," written by Kenneth Li and published in Vibe magazine in 1998. Street racing (an illegal practice that should not be confused with drag racing, which is a popular sport most commonly done on a track, along a straight "drag" strip) began in the early 1990s on the roads and highways of Southern California, mostly among young Asian Americans, but quickly spread; Li's article chronicled the adventures of a racer living in New York City. Like many street racers, the characters in "The Fast and the Furious" favor low-slung Acura Integras, Honda Civics, and other common Japanese-made compact cars that are modified so that they can reach speeds of around 160 mph.
Despite mixed reviews from critics, "The Fast and the Furious" was an unexpected hit at the box office. It spawned three sequels: "2 Fast 2 Furious" (2003), "The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift" (2006) and "Fast & Furious" (2009), in which the four main co-stars of the first film--Walker, Diesel, Michelle Rodriguez and Jordana Brewster--all reprised their roles.

June 22nd 1915
Joseph Lewinka, of Philadelphia, PA, received a patent for an "Automobile-Body"; design.

June 22nd 1934
Ferdinand Porsche contracted with Automobile Manufacturers Association of Germany (RDA) to build three prototype "people's cars". The contract was a direct result of Hitler's personal request to Porsche that he design such a car.
Also on this day, 1941 - Germany, Italy & Romania declares war on Soviet Union during WW II

June 22nd 1633 - Galileo Galilei forced to recant Earth orbits Sun by Pope (on Oct 31, 1992, Vatican admits it was wrong)

June 22nd 1870 - 1st Boardwalk in America invented

June 22nd 1910
1st airship with passengers sets afloat-Zeppelin Deutscheland

June 22nd1962
1st test flight of a Hoovercraft

June 22nd 1981
Mark David Chapman pleads guilty to killing John Lennon

June 22nd 1983
"Monty Python's The Meaning of Life," released in France

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June 22nd 1990
Florida passes a law that prohibits wearing a throng bathing suit (which has since been abolished)
which brings me to this
Also on this day 22nd June, is something that I was unaware of (but can see myself supporting), is International "No Panty Day"
"Who'd of thought"
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on June 23, 2014, 09:04:40 pm
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On this day, June 23rd 1902
German automaker Daimler-Motoren-Gesellschaft (DMG) first registers "Mercedes" as a brand name; the name will gain full legal protection the next September.
Mechanical engineer Gottlieb Daimler sold his first luxury gasoline-powered automobile to the sultan of Morocco in 1899; a year later, he formed DMG in his hometown [or whatever] of Cannstatt, Germany. Emil Jellinek, a prominent Austrian diplomat and businessman who was extremely enthusiastic about the development of the automobile, ordered a car from Daimler in 1897. The carmaker delivered a six-horsepower vehicle with a two-cylinder engine, but it was too slow for Jellinek; to replace it, he ordered two of a faster model--the four-cylinder Daimler Phoenix. Soon, Jellinek began to sell Daimler cars to high society customers and to drive them in racing events, including Nice Week on the French Riviera, in 1899. He entered these races using the pseudonym "Mercedes," the name of his elder daughter.
In April 1900, Jellinek signed an agreement with DMG to distribute and sell a new line of four-cylinder vehicles. He suggested they call the car Mercedes, feeling that the non-German name might sell better in France. On December 22, 1900, DMG delivered the first Mercedes to Jellinek. Designed by Wilhelm Maybach, chief engineer for DMG, the 35-horsepower vehicle featured a pressed-steel chassis (or frame), honeycomb radiator, mechanical intake valves and an improved gearbox; it could achieve a speed of 53 mph. For this combination of attributes, the 1901 Mercedes is considered to have been the first truly modern automobile.
At Nice Week in March 1901, Mercedes race cars nearly swept the field, and orders began pouring into DMG's Cannstatt factory. "Mercedes" was registered as a brand name on June 22, 1902, and legally protected the following September 26. In June 1903, Emil Jellinek obtained permission to take the name Jellinek-Mercedes, observing that it was "probably the first time that a father has borne the name of his daughter."
The famous Mercedes symbol, a three-point star, was registered as a trademark in 1909 and used on all Mercedes vehicles from 1910 onward. It had its origins in a story that Paul and Adolf Daimler, sons of Gottlieb Daimler and senior executives at DMG, remembered about their father, who died in 1900. On a postcard with a picture of Cologne and Deutz, where he was working at the time in the Deutz engine factory, the elder Daimler had drawn a star over the house where he was living. In the card's message, he told his wife the star represented the prosperity that would shine on them in the future, when he would have his own factory.

June 23rd 1951
Michèle Mouton was born in Grasse, France. She is the most successful and well-known female rally driver of all time, as well as arguably the most successful female in motor racing as a whole. She was the first and so far the only woman to win a round of the World Rally Championship, the Rallye Sanremo in 1981.

June 23rd 1991
Bertrand Gachot, Johnny Herbert, and Volker Wiedler won the 24-Hours of Le Mans driving a Mazda. It was the first time an automaker outside of Western Europe had won the prestigious title. The 1991 Mazda was also the first car to win Le Mans with a Wankel rotary engine. The engine consisted of four rotors with three sequential spark plugs per rotor. The Mazda drove 4,923 kilometers at an average speed of 295kmh.

June 23rd 1784
1st US balloon flight (13 year old Edward Warren)

June 23rd 1942
World War II: Germany's latest fighter, a Focke-Wulf FW190 is captured intact when it mistakenly lands at RAF Pembrey in Wales.

June 23rd 1961
USAF Maj Robert M White takes X-15 to 32,830 m

June 23rd 1972
Nixon & Haldeman agree to use CIA to cover up Watergate

June 23rd 1974
1st extraterrestrial message sent from Earth into space

June 23rd 1993
Lorena Gallo Bobbitt amputates husband's John Wayne Bobbitt's penis

June 23rd 1996
Nintendo 64 goes on sale in Japan
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on June 24, 2014, 06:08:37 pm
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On this day, JUNE 24rd, 1969 (reported)
A 1966 Mustang GT with vinyl top was crushed and burned when a DC4 airplane with a engine fire skipped across rooftops, spreading debris for four blocks and exploded in a used car lot in downtown Miami. One of the engines from the plane ended up on the Mustang. (11-people died)

June 24th 1900
Oliver Lippincott became the first motorist in Yosemite National Park, when he drove his Toledo Automobile Company-built car to the South Rim from Flagstaff. Lippincott would start a trend with his visit, as motorists increasingly chose to drive to National Parks, avoiding the more time-consuming train and coach rides. By 1901, a number of other motorists had made the trip to Yosemite, mostly in Locomobiles.

June 24th 1928
The rocket-powered Opel RAK 3 debuted on a section of railroad track near Hanover, Germany. With approximately 20,000 spectators looking on, the rocket car recorded a rail-speed record of 157mph on its first run. The result of a rather odd experiment, the RAK 3 carried a caged cat as its driver. Tragically, on the car's second run, too many of its rockets fired at once and the car crashed, killing its feline pilot.

June 24th 1939
Pan Am's 1st US to England flight

June 24th 1947
Flying saucers sighted over Mount Rainier by pilot Ken Arnold

June 24th 1968
Australia all out for 78 v England at Lord's

June 24th 1970
"Catch 22" opens in movie theaters

June 24th 1976
1975 movie "Rocky Horror Picture Show" released in Germany

June 24th 1997
USAF reports Roswell 'space aliens' were dummies

June 24th 1980
Darren "Serova" Powell (youth prodigy and forum member) from Adelaide Australia was born at 62,000ft by Russian cosmonaut "Elena Serova" (Im sure they have) as they re-entered the earths orbit over the city of Adelaide deeming him an Australian citizen
Throughout his distinctive career, he set 5 land speed records where he earned the nickname "The Sonic Boom"...several years later, game creators came up with the video game "Sonic Hedgehog" in honor of Darren and his achievements
Darren went on to study aeronautics and mechanical engineering in his later years where Nissan Japan offered him a top ranking position in their Top secret design K7 building in Kyoto of the R32 Nissan GTR Skyline in which Darren's revised design of just a fuel injected turbo 4 cyl, to his design of the twin turbo'd RB26 6cyl, 4WD that would be become of the most feared race cars in history earning its name on the race tracks as "Godzilla" where it eventually was banned from racing in most countries. It was deemed "to fast and years ahead of its time"
Darren was rewarded by the Japanese emperor the right to own land in japan. The first westerner ever to be awarded this and is to this day. Darren now owns 7 APEXI and 4 Turbo companies on this land aswell as 1 Planet Hollywood as a silent partner with his good friends, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Sylvester Stallone and Bruce Willis.
All of this, was done prior his 16th birthday
He finally came to the conclusion in 1996 and with his degrees and years of experience as a youth prodigy setting multiple land, air speed records, starring in films across the world as Chuck Norris's stunt double and assisting the United States government with with the modified drones and Top secret Stealth Black hawk helicopters that extracted Osama Bin Laden, that he would retire in Adelaide Australia and that his first US muscle car, would be a Ford mustang and continue with his passion of writing music for none other than George Micheal,..... to name a few. His best work is at 4am on his friends porch in O'Town, Florida
Happy birthday mate. Matt & Sheri

(http://i709.photobucket.com/albums/ww96/Uzivatel/Elena03.jpg) (http://s709.photobucket.com/user/Uzivatel/media/Elena03.jpg.html)
PICTURED: Darren's mum, Elena Serova
Elena went on to Marry Sir Kenneth Dover from England making her "Elena Dover" (I think theres a pattern here)
He was the first Chancellor in the St Andrews University's history to be neither a peer nor an archbishop. Dover stepped down from the position after twenty-five years of service, effective 31 December 2005. Sir Kenneth passed 7 March 2010.

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PICTURED: Darren's design of the R32 Nissan Skyline GTR, 2,6L fuel injected twin turbo (RB26) 4WD bearing its Australian racing colours "GODZILLA"
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on June 25, 2014, 09:35:09 pm
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On this day, June 25th 1956
The last Packard--the classic American luxury car with the famously enigmatic slogan "Ask the Man Who Owns One"--rolls off the production line at Packard's plant in Detroit, Michigan on this day in 1956.
Mechanical engineer James Ward Packard and his brother, William Dowd Packard, built their first automobile, a buggy-type vehicle with a single cylinder engine, in Warren, Ohio in 1899. The Packard Motor Car Company earned fame early on for a four-cylinder aluminum speedster called the "Gray Wolf," released in 1904. It became one of the first American racing cars to be available for sale to the general public. With the 1916 release of the Twin Six, with its revolutionary V-12 engine, Packard established itself as the country's leading luxury-car manufacturer. World War I saw Packard convert to war production earlier than most companies, and the Twin Six was adapted into the Liberty Aircraft engine, by far the most important single output of America's wartime industry.
Packards had large, square bodies that suggested an elegant solidity, and the company was renowned for its hand-finished attention to detail. In the 1930s, however, the superior resources of General Motors and the success of its V-16 engine pushed Cadillac past Packard as the premier luxury car in America. Packard diversified by producing a smaller, more affordable model, the One Twenty, which increased the company's sales. The coming of World War II halted consumer car production in the United States. In the postwar years, Packard struggled as Cadillac maintained a firm hold on the luxury car market and the media saddled the lumbering Packard with names like "bathtub" or "pregnant elephant."
With sales dwindling by the 1950s, Packard merged with the much larger Studebaker Corporation in the hope of cutting its production costs. The new Packard-Studebaker became the fourth largest manufacturer of cars. Studebaker was struggling as well, however, and eventually dropped all its own big cars as well as the Packard. In 1956, Packard-Studebaker's then-president, James Nance, made the decision to suspend Packard's manufacturing operations in Detroit. Though the company would continue to manufacture cars in South Bend, Indiana, until 1958, the final model produced on June 25, 1956, is considered the last true Packard.

June 25th 1964
John Paul Herbert was on born June 25, 1964 in Romford, London, England. He is a former racing driver from England. He competed in Formula One, winning three races, and also in sports cars winning the Le Mans 24 Hours in 1991 driving a Mazda 787B. They only non-european car to win Le-Mans that too with a rotary engine.

June 25th 1919
1st advanced monoplane airliner flight (Junkers F13)

June 25th 1953
1st passenger to fly commercially around the world < 100 hours

June 25th 1997
Christies auctions off Princess Di's clothing for $5.5 million
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on June 26, 2014, 10:22:21 pm
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On this day, June 26 1906
The first French Grand Prix, the first race of that kind to be held anywhere was staged in Le Mans by the Automobile Club of France and won by Hungarian driver Ferenc Szisz in a 90hp Renault. The race covered 1,200 kilometers over two days, and was run under a new set of rules that would become a standard element of Grand Prix racing.
PICTURED: 1st GP ever - 1906 LeMans, Ferenc Szisz and his riding mechanic winning the 1906 race

June 26th 1925
After two years of stock acquisitions by Walter Chrysler and Harry Bronner, Chrysler Corporation was incorporated in Delaware, Later it took over Maxwell Motor Corporation with Walter P. Chrysler as president and chairman of the board.

June 26th 1971
Massimiliano "Max" Biaggi, Italian motercycle racer was born in Rome, Italy. Biaggi is also known as the Roman Emperor and Mad Max and is notorious for his difficult relationship with the press, team personnel and other riders.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on June 27, 2014, 07:56:39 pm
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On this day, June 27th 1985
After 59 years, the iconic Route 66 enters the realm of history, when the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials de-certifies the road and votes to remove all its highway signs.
Measuring some 2,200 miles in its heyday, Route 66 stretched from Chicago, Illinois to Santa Monica, California, passing through eight states. According to a New York Times article about its decertification, most of Route 66 followed a path through the wilderness forged in 1857 by U.S. Navy Lieutenant Edward Beale at the head of a caravan of camels. Over the years, wagon trains and cattlemen eventually made way for trucks and passenger automobiles.
The idea of building a highway along this route surfaced in Oklahoma in the mid-1920s as a way to link the state to cities like Chicago and Los Angeles. Highway Commissioner Cyrus S. Avery touted it as a way of diverting traffic from Kansas City, Missouri and Denver. In 1926, the highway earned its official designation as Route 66. The diagonal course of Route 66 linked hundreds of mostly rural communities to the cities along its route, allowing farmers to more easily transport grain and other types of produce for distribution. The highway was also a lifeline for the long-distance trucking industry, which by 1930 was competing with the railroad for dominance in the shipping market.
Route 66 was the scene of a mass westward migration during the 1930s, when more than 200,000 people traveled from the poverty-stricken Dust Bowl to California. John Steinbeck immortalized the highway, which he called the "Mother Road," in his classic 1939 novel "The Grapes of Wrath."
Beginning in the 1950s, the building of a massive system of interstate highways made older roads increasingly obsolete, and by 1970, modern four-lane highways had bypassed nearly all sections of Route 66. In October 1984, Interstate-40 bypassed the last original stretch of Route 66 at Williams, Arizona, and the following year the road was decertified. According to the National Historic Route 66 Federation, drivers can still use 85 percent of the road, and Route 66 has become a destination for tourists from all over the world.
Often called the "Main Street of America," Route 66 became a pop culture mainstay over the years, inspiring its own song (written in 1947 by Bobby Troup, "Route 66" was later recorded by artists as varied as Nat "King" Cole, Chuck Berry and the Rolling Stones) as well as a 1960s television series. More recently, the historic highway was featured prominently in the hit animated film "Cars" (2006).

June 27th 1909
Mercedes Benz introduced three-pointed star symbol.

June 27th 1955
Illinois, the 21st state of United State enacted first automobile seat belt legislation.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on June 28, 2014, 08:52:30 pm
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On this day, June 28th 1914
Archduke Franz Ferdinand was assassinated by Gavrilo Princip in Sarajevo, Bosnia, while riding in an The 1911 Gräf & Stift Double Phaeton (Austro Daimler)that was chauffeured by Otto Merz, a Mercedes team driver. The assassination resulted in the outbreak of World War I.
PICTURED: The 1911 Gräf & Stift Double Phaeton in which the Archduke Franz Ferdinand was riding at the time of his assassination.

June 28th 1926
Benz & Cie. and Daimler Motoren Gesellschaft (DMG) merged to form Daimler-Benz AG.

June 28th 1931
Robert Glen Johnson Junior famously known as Junior Johnson was born in Wilkes County, North Carolina. He was a legendary moonshiner (bootlegger) in the rural South who became one of the early superstars of NASCAR in the 1950s and 1960s. He won 50 NASCAR races in his career before retiring in 1966. In the 1970s and 1980s he became a highly successful NASCAR racing team owner. He sponsored such NASCAR champions as Cale Yarborough and Darrell Waltrip. He is credited with discovering drafting/slipstreaming
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on June 29, 2014, 08:31:44 pm
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On this day, June 29th 1902
Marcel Renault won the four-day Paris-to-Vienna race, driving a car of his own design. The early city-to-city races were the largest sporting events of that era. Some three million people turned out to cheer Renault on to victory during the 15-hour, 615-mile race. These races were discontinued in large part due to Renault's fatal accident the following year at the Paris-Madrid race.
PICTURED: Marcel Renault and his mechanic, Vauthier

June 29th 1932
Audiwerke, Horchwerke, Zschopauer Motorenwerke - DKW, Automobile Division of Wanderer merged to formed Auto Union AG (second-largest motor vehicle manufacturer in Germany.). The new company's logo, four interlinked rings, one for each of founder companies was adopted. Horch was on supervisory board of Auto Union.

June 29th 1956
President Dwight Eisenhower signed into law the Highway Revenue Act of 1956 which outlined a policy of taxation with the aim of creating a fund for the construction of over 42,500 miles of interstate highways. The plan called for $50 billion over 13 years to pay for the project. A system of taxes, relying heavily on the taxation of gasoline, was implemented. Eisenhower thought of the Federal Interstate System as his greatest achievement.

June 29th 1957
Giuseppe Bacciagaluppi, managing director of the Autodromo Nazionale di Monza, staged the first race at his newly remodeled track, a match race between the top 10 Indy Car drivers and the top 10 Formula One drivers in the world. Monza enjoyed the reputation of being Europe's fastest racetrack. Jimmy Bryan of the United States won the Two Worlds Trophy in a Salih roadster at 160mph. The race did little to settle the dispute as to where the world's best drivers reside, on the high-speed ovals of the United States or on the curvy Grand Prix tracks of Europe. In those days, many racers bridged the gap between the two worlds-- like Jim Clark, who won at Indy in the same year he captured the F1 crown. Today it is widely held that the world's best drivers compete on the F1 circuit, though the specialized cars of today make the two types of racing more difficult to compare.

June 29th 1985
Jim Pattison purchased a custom-painted Rolls-Royce Phantom V limousine that had belonged to John Lennon for $2,229,000. Lennon had purchased the car in 1966 and asked a friend to paint the car with a period-typical psychedelic design pattern. The auction sale price was 10 times Sotheby's initial estimate.

1790  -    The inventer of the idea of dental floss, Levi Spear Parmly, is born
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on June 30, 2014, 08:01:50 pm
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On this day, June 30th 1953
The first production Corvette is built at the General Motors facility in Flint, Michigan. Tony Kleiber, a worker on the assembly line, is given the privilege of driving the now-historic car off the line.
Harley J. Earl, the man behind the Corvette, got his start in his father's business, Earl Automobile Works, designing custom auto bodies for Hollywood movie stars such as Fatty Arbuckle. In 1927, General Motors hired Earl to redesign the LaSalle, the mid-range option the company had introduced between the Buick and the Cadillac. Earl's revamped LaSalle sold some 50,000 units by the end of 1929, before the Great Depression permanently slowed sales and it was discontinued in 1940. By that time, Earl had earned more attention for designing the Buick "Y Job," recognized as the industry's first "concept" car. Its relatively long, low body came equipped with innovations such as disappearing headlamps, electric windows and air-cooled brake drums over the wheels like those on an airplane.
After scoring another hit with the 1950 Buick LeSabre, Earl headed into the 1950s--a boom decade for car manufacturers--at the top of his game. In January 1953, he introduced his latest "dream car," the Corvette, as part of GM's traveling Motorama display at the Waldorf Astoria Hotel in New York City. The sleek Corvette, the first all-fiberglass-bodied American sports car, was an instant hit. It went into production the following June in Flint; 300 models were built that year. All 1953 Corvettes were white convertibles with red interiors and black canvas tops. Underneath its sleek exterior, however, the Corvette was outfitted with parts standard to other GM automobiles, including a "Blue Flame" six-cylinder engine, two-speed Powerglide automatic transmission and the drum brakes from Chevrolet's regular car line.
The Corvette's performance as a sports car was disappointing relative to its European competitors, and early sales were unimpressive. GM kept refining the design, however, and the addition of its first V-8 engine in 1955 greatly improved the car's performance. By 1961, the Corvette had cemented its reputation as America's favorite sports car. Today, it continues to rank among the world's elite sports cars in acceleration time, top speed and overall muscle.

June 30th 1969
The last U.S. produced Rambler (an American Rambler) rolls off the production line in Kenosha. A total of 4,204,925 had been made.
The Nash Rambler had originally been developed by George Walter Mason after World War II. Mason realized before anyone else that the postwar "seller's market" would evaporate once the market was again saturated with cars. He foresaw the difficulty that independent car companies would experience once they were faced with head-to-head competition with the Big Three's massive production capabilities. It was Mason's theory that to compete with the Big Three, the independents needed to market a different product. He developed a number of smaller cars, including the Rambler, the Nash-Healey (a collaboration with British Healey), and the Metropolitan. None of the cars managed to capture the American market. But years later, after Nash-Kelvinator and Hudson merged to become AMC, the Rambler finally caught on as a sub-compact car. George Romney, Mason's protÉgÉ, coined the term "gas-guzzling dinosaur" to describe the Big Three's products. Romney led a personal ad campaign promoting the AMC Rambler as an efficient, reliable car. His campaign was immensely successful, and the Rambler single-handedly kept AMC alive during impossible times for independents.
The Rambler marque was continued in numerous international markets. Examples include AMC Hornets and AMC Matadors assembled by the Australian Motor Industries (AMI) from CKD kits that continued to be badged as Ramblers until 1978. The Rambler nameplate was last used on automobiles in 1983 by Vehiculos Automotores Mexicanos (VAM) in Mexico.
In Argentina, the Rambler American became the IKA Torino in 1967. It then became the Renault Torino and was offered until 1980.

June 30 1926
GM traded 667,720 shares of its own stock, at market value of $136 million to acquire remaining 40 percent of Fisher Body to make Fisher Body Division of GM.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on July 01, 2014, 08:06:05 pm
(http://i183.photobucket.com/albums/x207/Starcowboy/race%20trib/France/GrandPrix/grid-f34.jpg) (http://s183.photobucket.com/user/Starcowboy/media/race%20trib/France/GrandPrix/grid-f34.jpg.html)

On this day, July 1st 1948
Achille Varzi, an Italian Grand Prix driver who died during practice runs for the 1948 Swiss Grand Prix during light rain. His car skidded on the wet surface, flipping over and crushing him to death. Varzi's death resulted in the FIA mandating the wearing of crash helmets for racing, which had been optional previously. He used to race for Buggati and Alfa Romeo.
PICTURED: XL Louis Chiron (12), Achille Varzi (6), Rudolf Caracciola (8), Ren� Dreyfus (18), Hans Stuck (4) Scuderia Ferrari Alfa Romeo Tipo B, Scuderia Ferrari Alfa Romeo Tipo B, Mercedes-Benz W25, Bugatti T59, Auto Union A 1934

July 1st 1913
Carl Fisher, President of Prest-o-lite, formed Lincoln Highway Association with headquarters in Detroit, MI. Henry Joy, President of Packard Motor Cars, came up with the idea of naming the highway after Abraham Lincoln to build coast-to-coast paved road; envisioned improved, hard-surfaced road that would stretch almost 3400 miles from coast to coast, New York to San Francisco, over shortest practical route; promoted road using private, corporate donations; Henry Joy elected as president. Carl Fisher elected vice-president.

July 1st 2005
The last Thunderbird, Ford Motor Company's iconic sports car, emerges from a Ford factory in Wixom, Michigan.
Ford began its development of the Thunderbird in the years following World War II, during which American servicemen had the opportunity to observe sleek European sports cars. General Motors built the first American sports car: the Chevrolet Corvette, released in 1953. The undeniably sleek Corvette's initial engine performance was relatively underwhelming, but it was gaining lots of attention from the press and public, and Ford was motivated to respond, rushing the Thunderbird to the market in 1955. The 1955 Thunderbird was an immediate hit, selling more than 14,000 that year (compared to just 700 Corvettes). The success of the Thunderbird led Chevrolet to continue production of (and improve upon) the Corvette, which soon became a tough competitor in the sports car market.
In addition to the powerful V-8 engine that Ford was known for, the Thunderbird boasted all the conveniences consumers had become accustomed to, including a removable hard convertible top, soundproofing and the accessories standard to most Ford cars. In 1958, to satisfy critics who thought the T-Bird was too small, Ford released a four-seater version with a roomier trunk and bucket seats. The Beach Boys elevated the Thunderbird to pop- culture-icon status in 1964 by including it in the lyrics of their hit single "Fun Fun Fun" ("she'll have fun, fun, fun 'til her daddy takes the T-Bird away"). By that time, President John F. Kennedy had already included 50 Thunderbirds in his inaugural procession in 1961, and a T-Bird would also feature prominently in the 1973 film "American Graffiti."
Thunderbird sales slowed during the 1990s, and Ford discontinued the Thunderbird in 1997. In 2002, however, in an attempt to capitalize on car buyers' nostalgia, the company launched production of a retro T-Bird, a two-seater convertible that took some of its styling from the original classic. The luxury retailer Neiman Marcus offered an early special edition version in their 2000 Christmas catalog, priced at just under $42,000; their stock of 200 sold out in two hours and 15 minutes. Despite brisk early sales and good reviews, sales of the new Thunderbird couldn't justify continued production, and Ford discontinued it again in mid-2005.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on July 02, 2014, 08:25:19 pm
(http://i1011.photobucket.com/albums/af236/ricktrae/Atlanta%20High%20Art%20Museum%20Auto%20exhibit/ZorasVette.jpg) (http://s1011.photobucket.com/user/ricktrae/media/Atlanta%20High%20Art%20Museum%20Auto%20exhibit/ZorasVette.jpg.html)

On this day, June 2nd 1992
Original Corvette engineer Zora Arkus Duntov drove the one-millionth Chevrolet Corvette off of the assembly line in Bowling Green, Kentucky. The event was monumental to both America's first sports car and the man that made the car possible.
The color choice for the one millionth Corvette - white with red interior and black roof - was appropriate. This was a nod to the 1953 Corvette, whose entire production run of 300 units featured the same livery
PICTURED: Zora Arkus Duntov's Concept Vette

July 2nd 1910
Frank D. and Spencer Stranahan incorporated Champion Spark Plug Company in Toledo, Ohio in accordance with manufacturing contract with Willys-Overland Company.

July 2nd 1843
An alligator falls from sky during a Charleston SC thunderstorm

July 2nd 1940
Hitler orders invasion of England (Operation Sealion)

July 2nd 1956
Elvis Presley records "Hound Dog" & "Don't Be Cruel"

July 2nd 1970
1st Boeing 747 to land in Amsterdam & Brussels

July 2nd 1982
Larry Walters using lawn chair & 42 helium balloons, rose to 16,000'

July 2nd 2002
Steve Fossett becomes the first person to fly solo around the world nonstop in a balloon.

July 2nd 1993
F-28 crashes at Sorong Irian Barat, 41 die

July 2nd 1993
Muslem fundamentalists in Sivas Turkey, set hotel on fire, kill 36
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on July 03, 2014, 08:32:37 pm
(http://i267.photobucket.com/albums/ii294/friscodisco237/delorian.jpg) (http://s267.photobucket.com/user/friscodisco237/media/delorian.jpg.html)

On this day July 3rd 1985
The blockbuster action-comedy "Back to the Future"--in which John DeLorean's iconic concept car is memorably transformed into a time-travel device--is released in theaters across the United States.
"Back to the Future," directed by Robert Zemeckis, starred Michael J. Fox as Marty McFly, a teenager who travels back 30 years using a time machine built by the zany scientist Doc Brown (Christopher Lloyd). Doc's mind-blowing creation consists of a DeLorean DMC-12 sports car outfitted with a nuclear reactor. Once the car reaches a speed of 88 miles per hour, the plutonium-powered reactor achieves the "1.21 gigawatts" of power necessary to travel through time. Marty arrives in 1955 only to stumble in the way of his own parents (Crispin Glover and Lea Thompson) and keep them from meeting for the first time, thus putting his own life in jeopardy.
A veteran of the Packard Motor Company and General Motors, John DeLorean founded the DeLorean Motor Company in Detroit in 1975 to pursue his vision of a futuristic sports car. DeLorean eventually set up a factory in Dunmurry, near Belfast in Northern Ireland. There, he built his iconic concept car: the DMC-12, known simply as the DeLorean. An angular vehicle with gull-wing doors, the DeLorean had an unpainted stainless-steel body and a rear-mounted engine. To accommodate taller drivers (like its designer, who was over six feet tall), the car had a roomy interior compared to most sports cars.
Although it was built in Northern Ireland, the DeLorean was intended predominantly for an American audience, so it was built with the driver's seat on the left-hand side. The company built about 9,000 of the cars before it ran out of money and halted production in 1982; only 6,500 of those are still in existence. Despite its short lifespan, the DeLorean remains an object of great interest to car collectors and enthusiasts, no doubt largely due to the smashing success of "Back to the Future" and its two sequels, released in 1989 and 1990. John DeLorean died in March of 2005, at the age of 80.

July 3rd 1909
Hudson Motor Car Company in Detroit, Michigan began production with the Model 20. The company had several 'firsts' for the auto industry: self starter, dual brakes, first balanced crankshaft which allowed the Hudson straight-6 engine to work at a higher rotational speed while remaining smooth, developed more power than lower-revving engines.

July 3rd 1978
Ernest R. Breech, chairman of the Ford Motor Company from 1955-1960, died in Royal Oak, Michigan at the age of 81. Breech had been at the top of the accounting world when Henry Ford II had personally pleaded with him to join the ailing Ford Motor Company and take a chance at reviving one of America's historic corporations.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on July 04, 2014, 07:39:35 pm
(http://i832.photobucket.com/albums/zz250/IN500trail/Howard%20County/elwoodfirstcar.jpg) (http://s832.photobucket.com/user/IN500trail/media/Howard%20County/elwoodfirstcar.jpg.html)

On this day, July 4th 1894
Elwood Haynes successfully tested one-horsepower, one-cylinder vehicle at 6 or 7 mph at Kokomo, IN. It was one of the first automobiles built and oldest American-made automobile in existence. Currently it is on exhibition at the Smithsonian Institution, Washington DC.
PICTURED: Elwood Haynes & America's First Car

July 4th 1957
Fiat launched "Nuova 500", cinquecento in Turin. It was designed by Dante Giacosa. it was marketed as a cheap and practical town car. Measuring only 2.97 m (9 ft 9 in) long, and originally powered by a tiny 479 cc two-cylinder, air-cooled engine, the 500 redefined the term "small car" and is considered one of the first city cars.
During the filming of Italian Job (original), the boss of Fiat Motors offered to donate huge number of Fiat 500s in place of the Minis. The director however decided that as it was a very British film, it should be British Minis.

July 4th 2007
Fiat 500 Nuova was launched officially at Murazzi del Po, Turin lexactly 50 year after the launch of the original Fiat 500. With 250,000 in attendance it was the largest launch party held in the last ten years, a testament to the 500's huge popularity. The show was coordinated by Marco Balich, who was also responsible for Turin's 2006 Winter Olympic Games. Several artists performed during the show, including Lauryn Hill, Israeli dancing group Mayumana and others followed by huge firework spectacle. The car was also displayed in the squares of 30 cities in Italy for the launch.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on July 05, 2014, 09:45:19 pm
(http://i171.photobucket.com/albums/u316/WardAutomotiveGruppe/Mart_IMSpeedster.jpg)

On this day, July 5th 1933
Fritz Todt was appointed general inspector for German highways. His primary assignment was to build a comprehensive autobahn system. Todt, a civil engineer who was a proponent of a national highway system as a means of economic development, was handpicked for the position in 1932 by Adolf Hitler. The two men were close friends, and Todt remained a Nazi party member throughout World War II. By 1936, 100,000 kilometers of divided highways had been completed, leaving Germany with the most advanced transportation system in the world.
The autobahn inspired U.S. President Dwight D. Eisenhower to foster a similar American interstate highway system. Having been in Germany during the war, he returned to the United States deeply convinced that good highways were directly linked to economic prosperity.

July 5th 1937
Henry Ford initiated 32 hour work week for his factory workers.

July 5th 1951
Gordon M. Buehrig, of South Bend, Indiana, received a patent for "Vehicle Top Construction" ("to provide a vehicle top construction which is essentially the type providing an enclosed passenger compartment with the attendant advantages but which may be opened to a substantial degree to simulate an open passenger compartment"); vehicle top with removable panels; appeared as "T-top" on 1968 Chevrolet Corvette Stingray.

July 5th 1998
Strike at General Motors parts factory near Detroit closed five assembly plants which idled workers nationwide. This standoff lasted seven weeks

1902 - Australia won the one & only Test Cricket played at Sheffield

1937 - Spam, the luncheon meat, was introduced into the market by the Hormel Foods Corporation.

1954 - B-52A bomber made its maiden flight

1963 - 1st Beatle tune to hit US charts, Del Shannon "From Me to You" at #87

1968 - John Lennon sells his psychedelic painted Rolls-Royce

1973 - Isle of Man begins issuing their own postage stamps

1982 - Challenger flies to Kennedy Space Center via Ellington AFB, Texas

1985 - Nicholas Mark Sanders (England) begins circumnavigation of globe, covering 13,035 road miles in 78 days, 3 hr, 30 min

1993 - Richard Chelimo run world record 10 km (27:07.91)
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on July 07, 2014, 08:06:44 am
(http://i155.photobucket.com/albums/s301/redarmysoja/Drivers/JuanManuelFangio.jpg) (http://s155.photobucket.com/user/redarmysoja/media/Drivers/JuanManuelFangio.jpg.html)

On this day, July 6th 1958
The great Argentine race car driver Juan Manuel Fangio, winner of five Formula One driver's world championships, competes in his last Grand Prix race--the French Grand Prix held outside Reims, France.
Fangio left school at the age of 11 and worked as an automobile mechanic in his hometown of San Jose de Balcarce, Argentina before beginning his driving career. He won his first major victory in the Gran Premio Internacional del Norte of 1940, racing a Chevrolet along the often-unpaved roads from Buenos Aires to Lima, Peru. In 1948, Fangio was invited to race a Simca-Gordini in the French Grand Prix, also at Reims, which marked his European racing debut. After a crash during a road race in Peru that fall killed his co-driver and friend Daniel Urrutia, Fangio considered retiring from racing, but in the end returned to Europe for his first full Formula One season the following year.
In Formula One, the top level of racing as sanctioned by the Fédération International de l'Automobile (FIA), drivers compete in single-seat, open-wheel vehicles typically built by large automakers (or "constructors," in racing world parlance) and capable of achieving speeds of more than 230 mph. Individual Formula One events are known as Grands Prix. Fangio signed on in 1948 with Alfa Romeo, and won his first Formula One championship title with that team in 1951. Over the course of his racing career, he would drive some of the best cars Alfa-Romeo, Mercedes-Benz, Ferrari and Maserati ever produced. Capturing four more Formula One titles by 1957, Fangio won an impressive 24 of 51 total Grand Prix races.
Reims, famous for its 13th-century cathedral, hosted the oldest Grand Prix race, the French Grand Prix, at its Reims-Gueux course a total of 14 times (the last time in 1966). In the race on July 6, 1958, the British driver Mike Hawthorn--who would win the driver's world championship that season, but die tragically in a (non-racing) car accident the following January, at the age of 29--took the lead from the start in his 2.4-liter Ferrari Dino 246 and held on for the win. Fangio, driving a Maserati, finished fourth, in what would be the last race before announcing his retirement at the age of 47. The 1958 French Grand Prix also marked the Formula One debut of Phil Hill, who in 1960 would become the first American driver to win the world championship.
PICTURED: Juan Manuel Fangio

July 6th 1955
Federal Air Pollution Control Act was implemented and federal funds were allocated for research into causal analysis and control of car-emission pollution.

1919 - British R-34 lands in NY, 1st airship to cross Atlantic (108 hr)

1924 - 1st photo sent experimentally across Atlantic by radio, US-England

1947 - The AK-47 goes into production in the Soviet Union.

1964 - Beatles' film "Hard Day's Night" premieres in London

1965 - Rock group "Jefferson Airplane" forms

1969 - Filming begins on "Ned Kelly" starring Mick Jagger

2003 - The 70-meter Eupatoria Planetary Radar sends a METI message Cosmic Call 2 to 5 stars: Hip 4872, HD 245409, 55 Cancri, HD 10307 and 47 Ursae Majoris that will arrive to these stars in 2036, 2040, 2044, 2044 and 2049 respectively.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on July 07, 2014, 08:10:06 am
(http://i66.photobucket.com/albums/h257/jimsecor/Walter%20P%20Chrysler%20Museum/1928PlymouthModelQCoupe.jpg) (http://s66.photobucket.com/user/jimsecor/media/Walter%20P%20Chrysler%20Museum/1928PlymouthModelQCoupe.jpg.html)

On this day, July 7th 1928
The Chrysler Corporation introduced the Plymouth as its newest car. The Plymouth project had taken three years to complete, as Chrysler engineers worked to build a reliable and affordable car to compete with the cheaper offerings of Ford and General Motors. The Plymouth debuted with great fanfare in July of 1928, with renowned aviator Amelia Earhart behind the wheel. The publicity blitz brought 30,000 people to the Chicago Coliseum for a glimpse of the new car. With a delivery price of $670, the Plymouth was an attractive buy, selling over 80,000 units in its first year and forcing Chrysler to expand its production facilities drastically.
PICTURED: 1928 Plymouth

July 7th 2000
Eight weeks to the day after the fourth-generation NASCAR driver Adam Petty was killed during practice at the New Hampshire International Speedway in Loudon, New Hampshire--the driver Kenny Irwin Jr. dies at the same speedway, near the exact same spot, after his car slams into the wall at 150 mph during a practice run.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on July 08, 2014, 09:26:40 pm
(http://i645.photobucket.com/albums/uu176/MustangMayhem/this%20day%20in%20HISTORY/1969_amx-2_zps05758b38.jpg) (http://s645.photobucket.com/user/MustangMayhem/media/this%20day%20in%20HISTORY/1969_amx-2_zps05758b38.jpg.html)

July 8, 1907
George Wilcken Romney was born in Colonia Dublán, Galeana, in the Mexican state of Chihuahua. He was chairman of American Motors Corporation from 1954 to 1962. He then served as the 43rd governor of Michigan from 1963 to 1969 and then the 3rd United States Secretary of Housing and Urban Development from 1969 to 1973. Romney was a candidate for President in 1968, ultimately losing the Republican nomination to Richard Nixon.
He entered the car industry as a salesman and eventually became one of the most powerful men in the business, leading AMC in becoming the largest independent car company in the country.
PICTURED: American Motors AMX/3

July 8, 2004
Suzuki Motor Corporation and Consumers Union, publisher of Consumer Reports magazine, agree to a settlement in an eight-year-long lawsuit in which the automaker accused Consumer Reports of damaging its reputation with claims that its Samurai sport utility vehicle (SUV) was prone to rolling over.
In July 1988, a Consumer Reports product review judged the Samurai as unacceptable because of its propensity to tip during sharp turns. (The magazine based this conclusion on the car's performance in avoidance-maneuver tests.) Suzuki stopped making the Samurai in 1995. The following year, the company filed the lawsuit, accusing Consumer Union of rigging the test and perpetrating consumer fraud. The automaker sought $60 million in compensation and unspecified punitive damages. Suzuki's case included testimony from a former Consumers Union employee who served for 10 years as a technician in the company's auto testing group, as well as videotapes and records of automobile testing that date back to 1988. The videos showed, among other things, that the testing personnel had driven the Samurai through the course no fewer than 46 times before getting it to tip up on two wheels on the 47th, a result that was met by laughing and cheering from the group.
A federal judge dismissed Suzuki's lawsuit without a trial, but in September 2002 an appeals court ruled that a jury should hear the case. In April 2000, Consumers Union had won a jury trial over a lawsuit filed by Isuzu Motor, which claimed that Consumer Reports magazine had rigged a test involving its Trooper SUV in order to make the vehicle tip over. In November 2003, U.S. Supreme Court rejected a Consumers Union appeal in the Suzuki case, and the case was headed for a jury trial in California before the settlement was reached the next July.
No money changed hands in the agreement. Though Consumers Union did not issue an apology--"We stand fully behind our testing and rating of the Samurai," David Pittle, vice president for technical policy at Consumers Union, said--it made a "clarification," stating that the magazine's statement that the Samurai "easily" rolls over during turns may have been "misconstrued or misunderstood." The agreement also stated that Consumers Reports "never intended to imply that the Samurai easily rolls over in routine driving conditions" and had spoken positively of other Suzuki models such as the Sidekick and the Vitara/XL-7. For its part, Suzuki claimed the settlement as a win for its side: Company officials said it would allow them to concentrate on growing Suzuki's business in the United States, including building national sales to 200,000 vehicles by 2007, compared with 58,438 in 2003.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on July 09, 2014, 09:08:50 pm
(http://i1053.photobucket.com/albums/s462/Countach_fan/IMG_3600.jpg) (http://s1053.photobucket.com/user/Countach_fan/media/IMG_3600.jpg.html)

On this day, July 9th 1919
The Ford Motor Company was reorganized as a Delaware corporation with Edsel Ford as company president. The reorganization was the last step in Henry Ford's drive to gain 100% of the company's stock for his family. He borrowed heavily in order to buy out the minority shareholders. The extent to which the Ford family has maintained control over the company makes Ford unique in the annals of business history. Edsel Ford held the title of president until his death in 1943, but Henry effectively ran the company until 1945, when Henry Ford II took control of the company.
PICTURED: The Edsel Ford Speedster

July 9th 1979
A car bomb destroys a Renault owned by famed "Nazi hunters" Serge and Beate Klarsfeld at their home in France. Individuals purporting to represent the pro-Nazi ODESSA secret international organization took credit for the attack and demanded that the Klarsfelds stop pursuing (former) Nazis.
The Klarsfelds were involved in finding Klaus Barbie, René Bousquet, Jean Leguay, Maurice Papon and Paul Touvier and seeking prosecution for their war crimes committed during WWII.


July 9th 2006
The Fiat 500 Club Italia, an organization formed in appreciation of the iconic 500--"Cinquecento" in Italian--car produced by the automaker Fiat (Fabbrica Italiana Automobili Torino), holds what the Guinness Book of World Records will call the world's largest parade of Fiat cars on July 9, 2006, between Villanova d'Albenga and Garlenda, Italy.
Fiat, founded in 1899 by Giovanni Agnelli, released a 500-cc car known as "Il Topolino" (the Italian name for Mickey Mouse) before World War II; at the time, it was the smallest mass-produced car on the market. In the postwar years, the company sought to capitalize on the need for affordable family-size cars by revamping their 500 model. To that end, the Nuova Cinquecento, a two-cylinder rear-engined four-seater, made its debut on July 4, 1957. Some 3.5 million new 500s were sold between 1957 and 1975, when Fiat halted production. Like the Volkswagen Beetle in Germany, the diminutive but efficient 500 became an iconic symbol of postwar Italy and its people.
In 1984, a group of enthusiasts calling themselves the "Amici della 500" (Friends of the 500) unofficially organized as the Fiat 500 Club Italia in Garlenda, in the province of Savona. Some 30 participants attended the club's first rally on that July 15: the crowd included Dante Giacosa, the designer of the 500. The club was officially established in 1990 and today boasts more than 200,000 members and holds as many as 100 rallies per year. In July 2006, during the club's international meeting in Garlenda, a record-high number of participants (754 teams) gathered to make up a parade of 500 Fiats, later recorded by Guinness as a world record.
After struggling financially in the face of stiff competition from Volkswagen and other automakers, Fiat turned its fortunes around beginning in 2004, with the arrival of Sergio Marchionne as the company's head. A key part of Fiat's resurgence was was the launch of a redesigned Cinquecento in 2007. Italian Prime Minister Romano Prodi was among the more than 100,000 spectators who gathered in Turin on July 4, 2007--50 years to the day after the original Nuova 500 made its debut--to celebrate the new version's arrival. In 2009, Fiat completed an alliance with Chrysler after the struggling American automaker was forced to file for federal bankruptcy protection. Under the terms of the partnership, Fiat owns a 20 percent share of Chrysler (which could eventually grow to at least 35 percent).
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on July 10, 2014, 09:14:45 pm
(http://i233.photobucket.com/albums/ee155/djebrecina/trabant.jpg) (http://s233.photobucket.com/user/djebrecina/media/trabant.jpg.html)

On this day, July 10th 1958
The final production line of Trabant started at VEB Sachsenring factory in Zwickau, Saxony. It was considered to be East Germany's answer to Volkswagen. The Trabant was a steel monocoque design with roof, bootlid, bonnet, fenders and doors in Duroplast, a form of plastic containing resin strengthened by wool or cotton. This helped the GDR to avoid expensive steel imports, but in theory did not provide much crash protection, although in crash tests it has actually proven to be superior to some modern small hatchbacks. The duroplast was made of recycled material, cotton waste from Russia and phenol resins from the East German dye industry making the Trabant the first car with a body made of recycled material.
The engine for the Trabant was a small two-stroke engine with two cylinders, giving the vehicle modest performance of 25 horsepower from a 600 cc displacement. The car took 21 seconds from 0 to 100 km/h and the top speed was 112 km/h. There were two main problems with the engine: the smoky exhaust and the pollution it produced. The fuel consumption was a modest 7 liters/100 km. However later models of trabant did had bigger 1.1L VW engine until 1991 when its production ended.
The name Trabant means "fellow traveler" in German and was inspired by Soviet Sputnik. Since it could take years for a Trabant to be delivered from the time it was ordered, people who finally got one were very careful with it and usually became skillful in maintaining and repairing it. The lifespan of an average Trabant was 28 years.Used Trabants would often fetch a higher price than new ones, as the former were available immediately, while the latter had the aforementioned waiting period of several years.
PICTURED: The P50 Trabant mounted to a 80 foot tower....now used as a nest for wildlife.

July 10th 1962
The United States Patent Office issues the Swedish engineer Nils Bohlin a patent for his three-point automobile safety belt "for use in vehicles, especially road vehicles"
Four years earlier, Sweden's Volvo Car Corporation had hired Bohlin, who had previously worked in the Swedish aviation industry, as the company's first chief safety engineer. At the time, safety-belt use in automobiles was limited mostly to race car drivers; the traditional two-point belt, which fastened in a buckle over the abdomen, had been known to cause severe internal injuries in the event of a high-speed crash. Bohlin designed his three-point system in less than a year, and Volvo introduced it on its cars in 1959. Consisting of two straps that joined at the hip level and fastened into a single anchor point, the three-point belt significantly reduced injuries by effectively holding both the upper and lower body and reducing the impact of the swift deceleration that occurred in a crash.
On August 17, 1959, Bohlin filed for a patent in the United States for his safety belt design. The U.S. Patent Office issued Patent No. 3,043,625 to "Nils Ivar Bohlin, Goteborg, Sweden, assignor to Aktiebolaget Volvo" on July 10, 1962. In the patent, Bohlin explained his invention: "The object … is to provide a safety belt which independently of the strength of the seat and its connection with the vehicle in an effective and physiologically favorable manner retains the upper as well as the lower part of the body of the strapped person against the action of substantially forwardly directed forces and which is easy to fasten and unfasten and even in other respects satisfies rigid requirements."
Volvo released the new seat belt design to other car manufacturers, and it quickly became standard worldwide. The National Traffic and Motor Vehicle Safety Act of 1966 made seat belts a required feature on all new American vehicles from the 1968 model year onward. Though engineers have improved on seat belt design over the years, the basic structure is still Bohlin's.
The use of seat belts has been estimated to reduce the risk of fatalities and serious injuries from collisions by about 50 percent.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on July 11, 2014, 06:21:29 pm
(http://i283.photobucket.com/albums/kk308/area82/GianniAgnelli.jpg) (http://s283.photobucket.com/user/area82/media/GianniAgnelli.jpg.html)

On this day, July 11th 1899
Company charter of Societa Anonima "Fabbrica Italiana Automobili Torino” (FIAT) signed at Palazzo Bricherasio by Giovanni Agnelli with several of his investors.
Giovanni Agnelli founded and led the company until his death in 1945, while Vittorio Valletta administered the day-to-day activities of the company. Its first car the 3 ½ CV (of which only eight copies were built, all bodied by Alessio of Turin) strongly resembled contemporary Benz and had a 697 cc boxer twin engine.

July 11th, 1979
US Space laboratory, Skylab I, plunges back to earth, scattering debris across parts of Western Australia.
Skylab was the first space station the United States launched into orbit. Launched on 14 May 1973, it was designed to test various aspects of human endurance in space by having teams of astronauts living in Skylab for up to 84 days at a time. Each Skylab mission set a record for the duration of time astronauts spent in space.
In all, the space station orbited Earth 2,476 times during the 171 days and 13 hours of its occupation during the three manned Skylab missions. Astronauts performed ten spacewalks totalling 42 hours 16 minutes. Skylab logged about 2,000 hours of scientific and medical experiments, including eight solar experiments. Skylab had been in orbit for six years when it made its descent on 11 July 1979, with many chunks of hot debris falling across southern Western Australia. Most of the pieces were found on a 160km wide strip of land between the Perth-Adelaide highway and the Indian Pacific railway line.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on July 12, 2014, 08:26:59 pm
(http://i18.photobucket.com/albums/b136/TopEndSpeedShop/Teardrop%20cars/Dymaxion/dymaxion_car_1935.jpg) (http://s18.photobucket.com/user/TopEndSpeedShop/media/Teardrop%20cars/Dymaxion/dymaxion_car_1935.jpg.html)

On this day, July 12th 1933
The first three-wheeled, multi-directional Dymaxion car (PICTURED)--designed by the architect, engineer and philosopher Buckminster Fuller--is manufactured in Bridgeport, Connecticut.
Born in Massachusetts in 1895, Fuller set out to live his life as (in his own words) "an experiment to find what a single individual can contribute to changing the world and benefiting all humanity." After making up the world "Dymaxion" as a combination of the words "dynamic," "maximum" and "ion," he took the word as his own personal brand. Among his groundbreaking creations were the geodesic dome and the Dymaxion house, which was made of lightweight aluminum and could be shipped by air and assembled on site.
In 1927, Fuller first sketched the Dymaxion car under the name "4D transport." Part aircraft, part automobile, it had wings that inflated. Five years later, Fuller asked his friend, the sculptor Isamu Noguchi, to make more sketches of the car. The result was an elongated teardrop design, with a rear third wheel that lifted off the ground and a tail fin. Fuller set up production of the Dymaxion car in a former Locomobile factory in Bridgeport in March 1933. The first model rolled out of the Bridgeport factory on July 12, 1933--Fuller's 38th birthday. It had a steel chassis and a body made of ash wood, covered with an aluminum skin and topped with a painted canvas roof. It was designed to be able to reach a speed of 120 miles per hour and average 28 miles per gallon of gasoline.
Sold to Gulf Oil, the Dymaxion car went on display at the Century of Progress exposition in Chicago. That October, however, the professional driver Francis Turner was killed after the Dymaxion car turned over during a demonstration. An investigation cleared Dymaxion of responsibility, but investors became scarce, despite the enthusiasm of the press and of celebrities such as the novelist H.G. Wells and the painter Diego Rivera.
Along with the Nazi-built KdF-wagen (the forerunner of the Volkswagen Beetle), the Dymaxion was one of several futuristic, rear-engined cars developed during the 1930s. Though it was never mass-produced, the Dymaxion helped lead to public acceptance of new streamlined passenger cars, such as the 1936 Lincoln Zephyr. In 2008, the only surviving Dymaxion was featured in an exhibit dedicated to Fuller's work at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York City.

July 12th 1904
Driver Harry Harkness won the first Mount Washington, New Hampshire, hill-climb race driving a 60hp Mercedes Benz on this day in 1904 and placed the record figures for the year at twenty-four minutes, thirty seconds in his $18000 imported Mercedes.

July 12th 1946
Spicer Manufacturing Company was renamed Dana Holding Corporation recently emerged from Chapter 11 Bankruptcy.
The company has 35,000 workers and is listed on the Fortune 500. Originally incorporated in New Jersey in 1904 as the 'Spicer Universal Joint Manufacturing Company', named after Clarence W. Spicer, engineer, inventor, and founder of the company. It was renamed the 'Spicer Manufacturing Company' in 1909. It relocated to Toledo, Ohio in 1928 and was renamed the Dana Corporation after Charles Dana, who joined the company in 1914 and became president and treasurer in 1916.
Its key products include axles, driveshafts, frames, and sealing and thermal-management products.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on July 12, 2014, 09:44:34 pm
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On this day, July 13th 1978
Ford Motor Company chairman Henry Ford II fires Lee Iacocca as Ford's president, ending years of tension between the two men.
Born to an immigrant family in Pennsylvania in 1924, Iacocca was hired by Ford as an engineer in 1946 but soon switched to sales, at which he clearly excelled. By 1960, Iaccoca had become a vice president and general manager of the Ford division, the company's largest marketing arm. He successfully championed the design and development of the sporty, affordable Ford Mustang, an achievement that landed him on the covers of Time and Newsweek magazines in the same week in 1964.
In December 1970, Henry Ford II named Iacocca president of Ford, but his brash, unorthodox style soon brought him into conflict with his boss. According to Douglas Brinkley's history of Ford "Wheels for the World," Henry authorized $1.5 million in company funds for an investigation of Iacocca's business and private life in 1975. Suffering from a heart condition and aware that the time for his retirement was approaching, Ford made it clear that he eventually wanted to turn the company over to his son Edsel, then just 28. In early 1978, Iacocca was told he would report to another Ford executive, Philip Caldwell, who was named deputy chief executive officer. In his increasingly public struggle with Ford, Iacocca made an attempt to find support among the company's board of directors, giving Ford the excuse he needed to fire him. As Iacocca later wrote in his bestselling autobiography, Ford called Iacocca into his office shortly before 3 pm on July 13, 1978 and let him go, telling him "Sometimes you just don't like somebody."
News of the firing shocked the industry, but it turned into a boon for Iacocca. The following year, he was hired as president of the Chrysler Corporation, which at the time was facing bankruptcy. Iacocca went to the federal government for aid, banking on his belief that the government would not let Chrysler fail for fear of weakening an already slumping economy. The gamble paid off, with Congress agreeing to bail out Chrysler to the tune of $1.5 billion. Iacocca streamlined the company's operations, focused on producing more fuel-efficient cars and pursued an aggressive marketing strategy based on his own powerful personality. After showing a small profit in 1981, Chrysler posted record profits of more than $2.4 billion in 1984. By then a national celebrity, Iacocca retired as chief executive of Chrysler in 1992.

July 13th 1995
The Chrysler Corporation opened a car dealership in downtown Hanoi, Vietnam. One week later, Chrysler opened another dealership in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam, with the intention of marketing 200 import vehicles per year through the two dealerships. The openings were a part of Chrysler's long-term goal of implementing auto production in Vietnam--something that rivals Ford and Toyota were also pursuing at the time. On September 6, Chrysler received permission from the Vietnamese government to assemble vehicles in Vietnam, allowing Chrysler to construct a production facility in Dong Nai Province, Southern Vietnam, with the aim of manufacturing 500 to 1,000 Dodge Dakota pick-up trucks for the Vietnamese market annually.

July 13th 1998
General Motors announced recall of 800,000 vehicles due to malfunctioning airbags. A large number of Chevrolet and Pontiac cars displayed "an increased risk of airbag deployment in a low speed crash or when an object strikes the floor pan.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on July 14, 2014, 09:13:16 pm
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On this day, July 14th 1955
Volkswagen introduced the Karmann-Ghia coupe at the Kasino Hotel in Westfalia, Germany. As the European car market finally recovered from the war, Volkswagen felt that it needed to release an "image car" to accompany its plain but reliable "Bugs and Buses." Volkswagen was not the only automotive company looking for a flagship car at the time. Chevrolet had released the Corvette, and Ford the Thunderbird. The Chrysler Corporation had contracted with the Italian design firm Ghia to create designs for a Chrysler dream car; however, none of the designs came to fruition. Meanwhile, Volkswagen had contracted with German coach-builder Karmann for their own image car, and Karmann, in turn, had sub-contracted to Ghia for design offerings. Eventually Ghia supplied Karmann with a version of their Chrysler design, modified for the floor plan of the Volkswagen Beetle. The Karmann-Ghia was released as a 1956 model by Volkswagen. The car's sleek lines and hand craftsmanship attracted the attention Volkswagen had hoped for. Nevertheless, as sporty as the Karmann-Ghia looked, it suffered from its 36hp flat four engine in the area of power. Still, the Karmann-Ghia sold 10,000 units in its first full production year ,and with the release of the convertible in 1958, production reached 18,000 units for one year. Sales climbed steadily through the 1960s, peaking at 33,000 cars per year. While General Motors and Ford focused on their Corvette and Thunderbird, respectively, Volkswagen found that the Bug had increased in popularity, especially in the U.S. market. Executives decided to focus their marketing attention on the Bug, abandoning the Karmann-Ghia, which was last produced in 1

1853 - 1st US World's fair opens (Crystal Palace NY)

1912 - Kenneth McArthur runs Olympic record marathon (2:36:54.8)

1914 - 1st patent for liquid-fueled rocket design granted (Robert Goddard)

1927 - 1st commercial airplane flight in Hawaii

1945 - Battleship USS South Dakota is 1st US ship to bombard Japan

1949 - USSR explodes their 1st atom bomb

1955 - 2 killed, many dazed when lightning strikes Ascott racetrack, England

1959 - 1st atomic powered cruiser, Long Beach, Quincy Mass

1962 - US performs nuclear Test at Nevada Test Site

1964 - Jacques Anquetil wins his 5th Tour de France

1965 - Australian Ronald Clarke runs world record 10k (27:39.4)

1965 - US Mariner IV, 1st Mars probe, passes at 6,100 miles (9,800 km)

1967 - Surveyor 4 launched to Moon; explodes just before landing

1969 - "Soccer War" between El Salvador & Honduras begins, 1000 dead

1969 - The United States $500, $1,000, $5,000 and $10,000 bills are officially withdrawn from circulation.

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1972 - USSR performs underground nuclear Test

1975 - EPCOT Center (Florida) plans announced (This is right next door to our office)

1979 - USSR performs nuclear Test

1984 - USSR performs nuclear Test at Eastern Kazakh/Semipalitinsk USSR

1985 - Columbia returns to Kennedy Space Center via Offutt AFB, Neb

1986 - Motley Crue's Vince Neil begins 30 day sentence for vehicular homicide

1988 - WYHY radio offers $1M to anyone who can prove Elvis is still alive
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on July 15, 2014, 10:01:43 pm
(http://i269.photobucket.com/albums/jj45/mms58/Misc%20Ford%20Photos/Ford%20Canada%20Cenn/1903FordModelAFCC001.jpg) (http://s269.photobucket.com/user/mms58/media/Misc%20Ford%20Photos/Ford%20Canada%20Cenn/1903FordModelAFCC001.jpg.html)

On this day, July 15th 1903
The newly formed Ford Motor Company takes its first order from Chicago dentist Ernst Pfenning: an $850 two-cylinder Model A (Not to be confused with Model A of 1927) automobile with a tonneau (or backseat). The car, produced at Ford's plant on Mack Street (now Mack Avenue) in Detroit, was delivered to Dr. Pfenning just over a week later.
Henry Ford had built his first gasoline-powered vehicle--which he called the Quadricycle--in a workshop behind his home in 1896, while working as the chief engineer for the main plant of the Edison Illuminating Company in Detroit. After making two unsuccessful attempts to start a company to manufacture automobiles before 1903, Ford gathered a group of 12 stockholders, including himself, to sign the papers necessary to form the Ford Motor Company in mid-June 1903. As Douglas Brinkley writes in "Wheels for the World," his history of Ford, one of the new company's investors, Albert Strelow, owned a wooden factory building on Mack Avenue that he rented to Ford Motor. In an assembly room measuring 250 by 50 feet, the first Ford Model A went into production that summer.
Designed primarily by Ford's assistant C. Harold Wills, the Model A could accommodate two people side-by-side on a bench; it had no top, and was painted red. The car's biggest selling point was its engine, which at two cylinders and eight-horsepower was the most powerful to be found in a passenger car. It had relatively simple controls, including two forward gears that the driver operated with a foot pedal, and could reach speeds of up to 30 miles per hour (comparable to the car's biggest competition at the time, the curved-dash Oldsmobile).
Dr. Pfenning's order turned out to be the first of many, from around the country, launching Ford on its way to profitability. Within two months, the company had sold 215 Fords, and by the end of its first year the Mack Avenue plant had turned out some 1,000 cars. Though the company grew quickly in the next several years, it was the launch of the Model T in 1908 that catapulted Ford to the top of the automobile industry. The Lizzie's tremendous popularity kept Ford far ahead of the pack until dwindling sales led to the end of its production in 1927. That same year, Ford released the second Model A amid great fanfare; it enjoyed similar success, though the onset of the Great Depression kept its sales from equaling those of the Model T.
PICTURED: 1903 Ford Model A FCC 1

July 15th 1939
Carl Fisher, the founder of both the Indy 500 and Miami Beach, died in Miami at age 65. Born in Greensburg, Indiana, Fisher grew up racing cars and bicycles and aspired to be a successful inventor. He turned out to be a better businessman than an inventor, and left his first imprint on the business world when he partnered with Fred Avery, who held the patent for pressing carbide gas into tanks. Together, they manufactured car headlamps as the Presto-O-Lite Corporation. By 1910, six years after starting the business, Fisher was a multimillionaire. He bought land and built a track in Indianapolis, paving the track with local brick. By offering the largest single day purse in sport, Fisher guaranteed interest in his epic 500-mile race, and in less than five years "Indy" had become one of the premier car races in the world. In 1915, Fisher led the development effort for the Lincoln Highway, the nation's first continuous cross-continental highway from New York to California. Later, in the 1920s, Fisher developed the Dixie Highway, a road that ran from Michigan to Miami. Fisher fell in love with Miami, and in 1910 he bought a house there. It became his project to develop Miami Beach into a city. Fisher gave $50,000 of his own money to complete the longest wooden bridge in the state, stretching between Miami and Miami Beach. At that time Miami Beach was wild, and Fisher set about cleaning up the beach. He built lavish facilities near the water and invited the rich and famous to check out his creation. The Florida land bust of 1926 and the subsequent stock market crash of 1929 left Fisher penniless, and he lived in a small home on Miami Beach until his death.

TRIVIA
1869  -    Margarine is patented in Paris
1922  -    A platypus is displayed for the first time in the United States.
1964  -    Rupert Murdoch unveils 'The Australian' newspaper in Sydney.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on July 16, 2014, 10:34:07 pm
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On this day, July 16th 1955
Stirling Moss won his first Grand Prix race, the British Grand Prix in Aintree, driving a Mercedes Benz W196. Moss is considered the greatest racer that never won a World Driving Championship, having finished second to Juan Manuel Fangio for four consecutive years. Most impressive is Moss' record of having won 16 of 66 Grand Prix starts and 194 of his 466 starts in major events.

1985 - F-86 Sabre sets world aircraft speed record of 1152 kph (716 mph)

1935 - 1st automatic parking meter in US installed (Oklahoma City, Ok)

1945 - 1st test detonation of an atomic bomb, Trinity Site, Alamogordo, New Mexico

1969 - Apollo 11, carrying 1st men to land on Moon, launched

1999 - John F. Kennedy Jr., his wife Carolyn Bessette Kennedy, and sister-in-law Lauren Bessette are killed in a plane crash off the coast of Martha's Vineyard. The Piper Saratoga aircraft was piloted by Kennedy.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on July 17, 2014, 08:50:43 pm
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On this day, July 17th 1964
Donald Campbell, the son of Britain's most prolific land-speed record holder, Sir Malcolm Campbell, drove the Proteus Bluebird CN7 to a four-wheel, gasoline-powered land-speed record with two identical runs of 403mph (648.783 kph) at Lake Eyre, South Australia.

July 17th 1920
Nils Bohlin, the Swedish engineer and inventor responsible for the three-point lap and shoulder seat belt was born in Härnösand, Sweden. Seat belt is considered one of the most important innovations in automobile safety.

1879 - 1st railroad opens in Hawaii

1959 - Dr Leakey discovers oldest human skull (600,000 years old)

1962 - Robert White in X-15 sets altitude record of 108 km (354,300 ft)

1964 - Don Campbell sets record for turbine vehicle, 690.91 kph (429.31 mph)

1968 - Beatle's animated film "Yellow Submarine" premieres in London

1989 - 1st Test flight of US stealth-bomber

1993 - Graeme Obree bicycles world record time, 51,596 km

1994 - Hulk Hogan beats Ric Flair to win WCW wrestling championship
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on July 18, 2014, 08:03:51 pm
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On this day, July 18th 1948
Juan Manuel Fangio, a.k.a. "the Maestro," made his Formula One debut finishing 12th at the Grand Prix de l'ACF in France. Fangio was 37 years old at the start of his first Formula One race, but his late appearance onto the racing scene did not diminish his impact. Born to an Italian immigrant family outside of Buenos Aires, Argentina, Fangio learned to race on the death-trap tracks of Argentina for little reward. Finally, his excellence was recognized by Argentine dictator Juan Peron, who agreed to sponsor Fangio's racing career. Formula One Grand Prix racing began in 1950, and Fangio took second place in the World Driver's Championship driving for Alpha Romeo. The next year he won. A crash kept him out of the circuit for the next two years, but in 1954, he switched to the Mercedes team and won his first of four consecutive World Driver's Championships. He is the only man to ever have won five titles.

July 18th 1911
James D. Robertson, of Toledo, OH, received a patent for a "terminal Clamp"; assigned to Champion Spark Plug Company. It was the company's first patent.

1940 - 1st successful helicopter flight, Stratford, Ct

1942 - World War II: the Germans test fly the Messerschmitt Me-262 using only its jet engines for the first time.

1955 - 1st electric power generated from atomic energy sold commercially

1971 - Eddy Merckx wins his 3rd Tour de France

1976 - Lucien van Impe wins Tour de France
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on July 19, 2014, 11:01:27 am
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On this day, July 19th 1934
Harold T. Ames filed a patent application for his retractable headlamps. The design would later become one of the defining details on Ames' most triumphant project, the Cord 810. Ames, then the chief executive at Duesenberg, asked Cord designer Gordon Buehrig to make a "baby version" of the Duesenberg car. Buehrig's response, the Cord 810, is widely held to be one of the most influential cars in American automotive history. It was the last great offering of the Auburn, Cord, and Duesenberg triumvirate, as the company became insolvent at the end of the Depression. In 1952, the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) chose the 1937 Cord as one of eight automotive works of art for a year-long exhibition.
PICTURED: The 1936 Cord 810 Phaeton

July 19th 1935
The first automatic parking meter in the U.S., the Park-O-Meter invented by Carlton Magee, was installed in Oklahoma City by the Dual Parking Meter Company. Twenty-foot spaces were painted on the pavement, and a parking meter that accepted nickels was planted in the concrete at the head of each space. The city paid for the meters with funds collected from them. Today parking meters are big business. Companies offer digital parking meters, smart parking meters, and, even more remarkably, user-friendly parking meters. The user-friendly parking meters are an attempt to stem the tide of "violent confrontations" between users and their meters.

1860 - 1st railroad reaches Kansas

1879 - Doc Holliday kills for the first time after a man shoots up his New Mexico saloon.

1944 - 500 15th Air Force Liberators/Flying Fortresses bomb Munich vicinity

1957 - Don Bowden becomes 1st American to break 4 minute mile (3m58s7)

1958 - Charly Gaul wins Tour de France

1963 - NASA civilian Test pilot Joe Walker in X-15 reaches 105 km high

1965 - Shooting begins on Star Trek 2nd pilot "Where No Man Has Gone Before"

1969 - Apollo 11 goes into Moon orbit

1976 - Rock group Deep Purple disbands

1984 - 1st female to captain a 747 across Atlantic (Lynn Rippelmeyer)

1991 - Mike Tyson rapes a Miss Black America contestant (Desiree Washington)

1993 - Last day of 1st-class cricket for Ian Botham
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on July 21, 2014, 09:51:19 pm
(http://i645.photobucket.com/albums/uu176/MustangMayhem/this%20day%20in%20HISTORY/622x350_zpsae3fcd4c.jpg) (http://s645.photobucket.com/user/MustangMayhem/media/this%20day%20in%20HISTORY/622x350_zpsae3fcd4c.jpg.html)

On this day, July 20th
James Garner, the US star of hit TV series The Rockford Files and Maverick and films including The Great Escape, has died aged 86.

(http://i276.photobucket.com/albums/kk9/gperigo/American%20Cars%201930%201940/ErrettLobbanCord.jpg) (http://s276.photobucket.com/user/gperigo/media/American%20Cars%201930%201940/ErrettLobbanCord.jpg.html)

July 20th 1894
Errett Lobban Cord was born in Warrensburg, Missouri, on this day in 1894. Cord moved to Los Angeles while he was in high school and remained there after his graduation, starting a number of car dealerships. His prowess as a salesman led him to pursue bigger goals and to look for a way to invest the $100,000 he had managed to save in a few years of work. "Then I started looking around," he said, "I wanted to do something with that $100,000."
Cord was a leader in United States transport during the early and middle 20th century. Cord founded the Cord Corporation in 1929 as a holding company for over 150 companies he controlled, mostly in the field of transportation.
PICTURED: Errett Lobban Cord

1969 - 1st men on the Moon, Neil Armstrong and Edwin Aldrin Jr. from Apollo 11

1969 - Eddy Merckx wins Tour de France

1973 - Jack Brisco beats Harley Race in Houston, to become NWA champ

1976 - US Viking 1 lands on Mars at Chryse Planitia, 1st Martian landing

1977 - The Central Intelligence Agency releases documents under the Freedom of Information Act revealing it had engaged in mind control experiments.

1984 - Uwe Hohn of East Germany throws javelin a record 104.8 m

1991 - Mike Tyson is accused of raping a Miss Black America contestant

1992 - Round World Air Race begins in Paris

1994 - OJ Simpson offers $500,000 reward for evidence of ex-wife's klller

2000 - Terrorist Carlos the Jackal sues France in the European Court of Human Rights for allegedly torturing him.

2012 - 12 people are killed and 59 injured after a gunman opens fire at a Dark Knight movie premier in Aurora, Colorado
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on July 21, 2014, 09:54:34 pm
(http://i148.photobucket.com/albums/s26/DHotard/2007%20Concours%20de%20Elegance/1909GobronBrillieModel7090.jpg) (http://s148.photobucket.com/user/DHotard/media/2007%20Concours%20de%20Elegance/1909GobronBrillieModel7090.jpg.html)

On this day, July 21st 1904
Louis Rigolly, driving a 15-liter Gobron-Brillie on the Ostend-Newport road in Belgium, became the first man to break the 100mph barrier in a car by raising the land-speed record to 103.55mph. On the same day in 1925, Sir Malcolm Campbell was first to best the 150mph mark when he drove his Sunbeam to a two-way average of 150.33mph at the Pendine Sands in Wales.
PICTURED: A 1909 Gobron-Brillie

July 21st 1917
Rapp-Motorenwerke renamed Bayerische Motoren Werke GmbH (Bavarian Motor Works or BMW) Rapp Motorenwerke GmbH was one of the first aircraft engine manufacturers in Germany founded by Karl Rapp and Julius Auspitzer with a capital stock of Reich Mark 200,000 on 28 October 1913 on the site of Flugwerke Deutschland.


July 21st 1960
The German government passes the "Law Concerning the Transfer of the Share Rights in Volkswagenwerk Limited Liability Company into Private Hands," known informally as the "Volkswagen Law."
Founded in 1937 and originally under the control of Adolf Hitler's Nazi Party, Volkswagen would eventually grow into Europe's largest car manufacturer and a symbol of Germany's economic recovery after the devastation of World War II. The Volkswagen Law, passed in July 1960, changed the company to a joint stock corporation, with 20 percent held each by Germany and Lower Saxony, the region in which Volkswagen is still headquartered. By limiting the share of any other stockholder to 20 percent, regardless of how many shares owned, the law effectively protected the company from any attempt at a hostile takeover.
By 2007, the controversial legislation had come under full-blown attack from the European Commission as part of a campaign against protectionist measures in several European capitals. The commission objected not only to the 20 percent voting rights cap but to the law's stipulation that measures taken at the annual stockholders' meeting must be passed by more than four-fifths of VW shareholders--a requirement that gave Lower Saxony the ability to block any such measures as it saw fit.
In March of that year, fellow German automaker Porsche announced that it had raised its stake in Volkswagen to 30.9 percent, triggering a takeover bid under a German law requiring a company to bid for the entirety of any other company after acquiring more than 30 percent of its stock. Porsche announced it did not intend to take over VW, but was buying the stock as a way of protecting it from being dismantled by hedge funds. Porsche's history was already entwined with Volkswagen, as the Austrian-born engineer Ferdinand Porsche designed the original "people's car" for Volkswagen in 1938.
On October 23, 2007, the European Court of Justice formally struck down the Volkswagen Law, ruling that its protectionism illegally restricted the free movement of capital in European markets. The decision cleared the way for Porsche to move forward with its takeover, which it did, maintaining that it will still preserve the Volkswagen corporate structure. By early 2009, Porsche owned more than 50 percent of Volkswagen shares.

July 21st 1987
Enzo Ferrari (89), in ceremony commemorating his company's 40th year, unveiled Ferrari F40 at factory in Maranello, It had 2.9litre twin turbo v8 under the hood and Italy's first production sports car to top 200mph barrier and capable of 0-60mph in 3.5 seconds, could hold top speed of 201mph.

1884 - 1st Test Cricket match played at Lord's

1969 - Neil Armstrong steps on Moon at 2:56:15 AM (GMT)

1984 - 1st documented case of a robot killing a human in US

1985 - Bernard Hinault wins his 5th & last Tour de France

1989 - Greg LeMond (US) wins Tour de France in fastest time

1990 - Pink Floyds' "Wall" is performed where Berlin Wall once stood

2011 - NASA's Space Shuttle program ends with the landing of Space Shuttle Atlantis on mission STS-135.

1997 - Madelaine Clarke (my 1st daughter was born) Happy 17th birthday sweetheart
Who'd of thought that on this same day in 1969, Neil Armstrong would be the first human to put a footprint on the moon and 28 years later, you would be born to be the first to leave footprints on your Dads heart.
 I love you to the moon and back baby
 Happy 16th Birthday
 Dad xx
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on July 22, 2014, 08:39:34 pm
(http://i1137.photobucket.com/albums/n519/gerard1973/fisher-body_logo_30s.jpg) (http://s1137.photobucket.com/user/gerard1973/media/fisher-body_logo_30s.jpg.html)

July 22 1908
Albert Fisher and his nephews, Frederic and Charles Fisher, established the Fisher Body Company to manufacture carriage and automobile bodies. Albert Fisher personally supplied $30,000 of the company's total of $50,000 in initial capital. Charles and Frederic had been trained in their father's carriage building shop and supplied the technical know-how required at the company's inception. Fisher Body quickly abandoned carriage building to concentrate on car frames. By 1910, Fisher supplied some car bodies for General Motors (GM), and in 1919 GM purchased controlling interest in the company to shore up a supplier for its car bodies. At that time, Fisher was the largest supplier of car bodies in the world. The Fisher brothers were early advocates of closed-body, steel and wood frames, and they pre-empted their competition by creating more closed-bodied cars than open-bodied. They were also early in their adoption of aluminum and steel frames.

July 22nd 1911
General Motors organized General Motors Truck Company (later GMC) to handle sales of GM's Rapid and Reliance products.
In 1901, Max Grabowski established a company called the "Rapid Motor Vehicle Company", which developed some of the earliest commercial trucks ever designed. The trucks utilized one-cylinder engines. In 1909, the company was purchased by General Motors to form the basis for the General Motors Truck Company, from which GMC Truck was derived.
Another independent manufacturer purchased by GM that same year was Reliance Motor Car Company. Rapid & Reliance were merged in 1911 by GM, and in 1912 the marque "GMC Truck" was first shown at the New York International Auto Show.

July 22nd 1912
Edward G. Budd formed Edward G. Budd Mfg. Co., at 121 S. Broad Street, Philadelphia, with $75,000 of his own savings. He borrowed $15,000 from family friend named A. Robinson McIlvaine, $10,000 from another friend, J.S. Williams. Budd became president and appointed McIlvaine as secretary. Their first product was an all-metal truck body for Philadelphia coal distributor.

July 22nd 2005
MG Rover Group acquired by Nanjing Automobile for $97 million.

1933 - 1st solo flight round the world 7d 19hrs (Wiley Post)

1942 - Gasoline rationing using coupons begins in the United states

1980 - Scott Dixon, New Zealand racing driver was born

1983 - Dick Smith makes 1st solo helicopter flight around the world

1994 - William Sigei runs world record 10k (26:52.53)

2003 - Members of 101st Airborne of the United States, aided by Special Forces, attack a compound in Iraq, killing Saddam Hussein's sons Uday and Qusay, along with Mustapha Hussein, Qusay's 14-year old son, and a bodyguard.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on July 23, 2014, 08:23:53 pm
(http://i269.photobucket.com/albums/jj45/mms58/Misc%20Ford%20Photos/Ford%20Canada%20Cenn/1903FordModelAFCC001.jpg) (http://s269.photobucket.com/user/mms58/media/Misc%20Ford%20Photos/Ford%20Canada%20Cenn/1903FordModelAFCC001.jpg.html)

On this day, July 23rd 1903
The first two-cylinder Ford Model A was delivered to its owner, Dr. Ernst Pfenning of Chicago, on this day in 1903 (a week after the Dr. Ernst booked the car). The Model A was the result of a partnership between Henry Ford and Detroit coal merchant Alexander Malcomson. Ford had met Malcomson while working at Edison Illuminating Company: Malcomson sold him coal. The Model A, designed primarily by Ford's assistant C. Harold Wills, was the affordable runabout that Ford needed to begin marketing his company's stock. In the next year Ford raised enough stock to release a line of cars and to incorporate as the Ford Motor Company. Ford's company grew quickly, but it wasn't until the release of the Model T that Ford took the position of our nation's largest carmaker. The Model T kept Ford number one in the industry until production was stopped in 1927, and Ford relinquished its place to Chevrolet. The second Model A, released in November of 1927, was a great success. Between 1927 and 1931, 4.3 million Model A Fords were made. The stylish, dependable, and affordable Model A reaffirmed Ford's position as a premier automaker at the time. Sales for the Model A would never approach those of its forerunner the Model T, due to the onset of the Depression. As sales slumped, Henry Ford decided to release a new car model in 1932. He introduced the speedy Ford V-8, known as the fastest car in the land at the time.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on July 24, 2014, 09:45:16 pm
(http://i386.photobucket.com/albums/oo306/Tarya/F1%20Nostalgia/1939belgiangprichardseaow9.jpg) (http://s386.photobucket.com/user/Tarya/media/F1%20Nostalgia/1939belgiangprichardseaow9.jpg.html)

On this day, 24th July 1938
Richard "Dick" Seaman, driving a Mercedes-Benz 154 to victory at the German Grand Prix at Nurburgring, Germany, became the first Briton to win a major Grand Prix since Malcolm Campbell did it 15 years earlier. The race turned out to be a showdown between Mercedes--with their driving team of Seaman, Caracciola, von Brauchitsch and Lang; Auto Union--with newly acquired Italian great Tazio Nuvolari; and Alpha--with their team of Tartuffi and Farina. Mercedes qualified all three first row positions with Seaman in his British green helmet on the outside. After the typical lengthy Nazi parading, the race got underway in front of over 400,000 spectators. Midway through the race, in spite of Nuvolari's noble efforts, it was clear the race would be decided among the Mercedes drivers and that von Brauchtitsch and Seaman were the men to beat. Von Brauchtitsch led the race until he came into pit for tires and fuel. The crowd buzzed to see how fast the crew could change him, but in their rush the fuel tank was overfilled. The portable starter ignited the engine, the tank sucked in air and then shot a massive flame into the sky, igniting the back half of the car. Seaman pulled away unscathed, taking the lead for the first time. Von Brauchtitsch eventually returned to the race only to let his foul mood get the best of him as he took a corner too fast and crashed into a ditch. He is said to have walked back to the pits, black in the face, holding his detachable steering wheel that he claimed came off in the turn. His mechanic denied the possibility. Meanwhile, Seaman steamed to a comfortable victory ahead of Lang, Stuck, and Nuvolari.
PICTURED: Richard "Dick" Seaman (1939)

24th July 1998
South Korea's government opens the bidding for the Kia Motors Corporation, the country's third-largest car company, which went bankrupt during an economic crisis that gripped much of Asia.
Founded on the outskirts of Seoul in 1944, Kia began as a small manufacturer of steel tubing and bicycle parts. The name of the company was derived from the Chinese characters "ki" (meaning "to arise" or "to come out of") and "a" (which stood for Asia). By the late 1950s, Kia had branched out from bicycles to motor scooters, and in the early 1970s the company launched into automobile production. Kia's Sohari plant, completed by 1973, was Korea's first fully integrated automobile production facility; it rolled out the Brisa, the country's first passenger car, in 1974.
Kia's lineup by the late 1980s included the Concord, Capital, Potentia and Pride. Ford Motor Company brought the Pride to the United States, calling it the Ford Festiva; the company later sold the Kia Avella as the Ford Aspire. In the 1990s, Kia began selling cars in the United States under its own name, beginning with the Sephia. At first available in only a few states, Kia gradually rolled out across the country, jumping on the success of the sport-utility-vehicle (SUV) category in the mid-1990s with its Sportage, released in 1995.
By 1997, Kia was struggling financially, and that July it collapsed under $10 billion worth of debt. The automaker's failure marked the beginning of a full-blown economic crisis that eventually led South Korea to seek a record international bailout of some $57 billion. Auto sales plummeted nationwide, and by the time bidding for Kia opened in late July 1998, both Hyundai Motor and Daewoo Motor, South Korea's largest and second-largest automakers respectively, had suffered heavy losses as well. The two companies placed bids for Kia and its commercial-vehicle subsidiary, Asia Motors; the other bidders included another local company, Samsung, and Ford Motor, which along with its subsidiary Mazda already owned nearly 17 percent of Kia.
Hyundai managed to win the auction that October, having offered the highest bid; Daewoo was the runner-up. As a subsidiary of Hyundai, Kia made improvements in its cars' quality as well as their reliability, including the introduction of a new warranty program in 2001. It also began concentrating intently on the European market, building a sleek new $109 million design center in Frankfurt, Germany, in early 2008. At the Paris Motor Show that fall, Kia unveiled its new Soul, a subcompact mini multi-purpose-vehicle (MPV). Designed jointly by studios in California and South Korea, the Soul debuted on the global marketplace in early 2009.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on July 25, 2014, 09:39:16 pm
(http://i1232.photobucket.com/albums/ff365/IDriveA6K4/SFIAS%202011/100_6669.jpg) (http://s1232.photobucket.com/user/IDriveA6K4/media/SFIAS%202011/100_6669.jpg.html)

On this day, July 25th 1945
Henry Kaiser and Joseph Frazer announced plans to form a corporation to manufacture automobiles. The two men formed an unlikely pair. Frazer had great contacts in the auto industry and Kaiser had initial capital and experience with huge government contracts.
PICTURED: 1954 Kaiser Darrin Convertible

July 25th 1941
The American automaker Henry Ford sits down at his desk in Dearborn, Michigan and writes a letter to the Indian nationalist leader Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi. The letter effusively praises Gandhi and his campaign of civil disobedience aimed at forcing the British colonial government out of India.
By July of 1941, Ford's pacifist views led him to despair at the current global situation: Nazi Germany had invaded Poland, causing Britain and France to declare war against it. The United States, led by President Franklin D. Roosevelt, was firmly on the side of the Allies, but Ford was convinced that the country should remain neutral, despite mounting pressure from the government for his company to start mass-producing airplanes to help defeat the Nazis. The previous May, Ford had reluctantly bowed to this pressure, opening a massive production facility for airplane production at Willow Run, near Dearborn, to manufacture B-24E Liberator bombers for the Allied war effort. (Building 1 plane every 55 minutes)
As Douglas Brinkley writes in "Wheels for the World," his history of Ford Motor Company, the automaker disliked imperialism and was hopeful that Gandhi's campaign would succeed in pushing the British out of India and establishing Indian home rule. In addition, Ford Motor Company had long enjoyed healthy sales in the cities of Bombay (now Mumbai) and Calcutta. Ford's letter to Gandhi, now included in the Henry Ford Museum and Library, read: "I want to take this opportunity of sending you a message…to tell you how deeply I admire your life and message. You are one of the greatest men the world has ever known."
The letter was sent to the Mahatma (as Gandhi was known) via T.A. Raman, the London editor of the United Press of India. According to Raman, Brinkley recounts, Gandhi didn't receive the letter until December 8, 1941--the day after the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor. Greatly pleased, he sent in response a portable spinning wheel, one of the old-fashioned devices that Gandhi famously used to produce his own cloth. The wheel, autographed in Hindi and English, was shipped some 12,000 miles and personally delivered to Ford by Raman in Greenfield Village, Michigan. Ford kept it as a good luck charm, as well as a symbol of the principles of simplicity and economic independence that both he and Gandhi championed.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iKlt6rNciTo (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iKlt6rNciTo)
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on July 28, 2014, 06:55:26 am
(http://i1113.photobucket.com/albums/k504/ropat53/Duesenberg%20in%20Argentina/Duesenbergmechanic.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/ropat53/media/Duesenberg%20in%20Argentina/Duesenbergmechanic.jpg.html)

On this day, July 26th 1932
Frederick S. Duesenberg died in Johnstown, Pennsylvania, of complications from injuries suffered in an automobile accident on July 2, 1932. Frederick and his brother Augie created the Duesenberg Automobile and Motors Company. Born in Lippe, Germany, Frederick moved to the U.S. in 1885. In 1897 he started a bicycle business, and in 1899 he built a highly efficient gasoline engine to be used for motorcycles. This was the beginning of his automotive career. He took a job with the Rambler Motor Company and worked there, learning the business, until 1905, when he convinced his brother Augie to go into business selling engines. The two brothers designed the Mason engine, with its famous "walking beam" overhead valve design, and started the Mason Motor Car Company. When they sold the business in 1913, they were mature players in the automotive industry.
PICTURED: Augie and Fred Duesenberg 1916 (Fred on the left)

July 26th 1998
The U.S. 500, the most prestigious race in the Championship Auto Racing Teams (CART) series, dissolves into tragedy on this day in 1998, when three fans are killed and six others wounded by flying debris from a car at Michigan Speedway in Brooklyn, Michigan.
CART (later known as Champ Car) was an open-wheel racing circuit created in the late 1970s by racing team owners frustrated with the direction of the existing United States Automobile Club (USAC). Open-wheel cars, built specifically for racing, are sophisticated vehicles built for speed, with small, open cockpits and wheels located outside the car's main body. In CART races, as well as those of its rival open-wheel circuit, the Indy Racing League, drivers often achieved speeds of up to 230 mph in the straightaways. (In comparison, drivers in National Association for Stock Car Racing--better known as NASCAR--events reach some 200 mph.)
While rounding the fourth turn at Michigan Speedway (a two-mile oval) in the 1998 U.S. 500, driver Adrian Fernandez lost control of his car and crashed into one of the raceway's retaining walls. The car broke apart, and the right front tire and part of the suspension flew over the 15-foot-high wall and into the stands. Traveling nearly 200 mph, the debris hit fans in the eighth and 10th rows. Two people were killed instantly; another died moments later, and six others received minor injuries. To the outrage of Sports Illustrated reporter Rick Reilly, who wrote a scathing editorial about the incident in the magazine, race officials didn't stop the event, which was won by the young Canadian driver Greg Moore. (In a tragic twist of fate, Moore died in October 1999, after a fatal crash in the CART season finale, the Marlboro 500, in California.) In August 1998, Michigan Speedway announced that it would extend the protective fencing around all of its grandstand sections to a total of around 17 feet in an effort to prevent further accidents.
The CART circuit changed its name to Champ Car in 2004. Four years later, plagued by financial troubles, the Champ Car World Series declared bankruptcy and merged with the Indy Racing League.

1902 - Australia beat England by 3 runs at Old Trafford

1942 - RAF bombs Hamburg

1944 - The first German V-2 rocket hits Great Britain.

1983 - Light flashes seen on Jupiter moon Io

1991 - Paul Reubens (Pee Wee Herman) is arrested in Florida, for exposing himself at an adult movie theater

1993 - Mars Observer takes 1st photo of Mars, from 5 billion km

BIRTHDAYS

1939 - J W Howard, Prime Minister of Australia (Good Ol Lil Johny)

1949 - Roger Taylor, British rock drummer (Queen-Bohemian Rhapsody)

1957 - Wayne Grady, Brisbane, Australia, PGA golfer (1990 PGA Champion)

1964 - Sandra Bullock, Wash DC, actress

1970 - Phil Alley, cricketer (NSW left-arm pace bowler)

1981 - Abe Forsythe, Australian actor/director
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on July 28, 2014, 07:11:52 am


(http://i222.photobucket.com/albums/dd229/marcimark/My%20Cars/MyCars-12.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/marcimark/media/My%20Cars/MyCars-12.jpg.html)

On this day, July 27th 1990
The last Citroen 2CV, known as the "Tin Snail" for its distinctive shape, rolls off the production line at the company's plant in Mangualde, Portugal at four o'clock on the afternoon of July 27, 1990. Since its debut in 1948, a total of 5,114,959 2CVs had been produced worldwide.
The French engineer and industrialist Andre Citroen converted his munitions plant into an automobile company after World War I; beginning in 1919, it was the first automaker to mass-produce cars outside of the United States. As in Germany (the Volkswagen Beetle), Italy (the Fiat 500) and Britain (Austin Mini), the rise of mass car ownership in France in the 1930s led to a demand for a light, economical "people's car," which Citroen answered in the post-World War II years with the 2CV. The company actually began testing the 2CV before the war but kept the project under wraps when war broke out; the original production model was only discovered by chance in the late 1960s. When Citroen finally unveiled the car at the 1948 Paris Motor Show, it was an immediate success: At one point, the waiting time to buy one was five years.
The 2CV ("Deux Chevaux Vapeur" in French, or "two steam horses," a reference to France's policy of taxing cars based on their engine output) was a trailblazer among other small cars of its era. Its innovations included a sophisticated suspension system, front-wheel drive, inboard front brakes, a lightweight, air-cooled engine and a four-speed manual transmission. Its front and rear wings, doors, bonnet, fabric sunroof and trunk lid were all detachable. The 2CV's endearingly unfashionable form joined the Eiffel Tower as a quintessential symbol of France in popular culture. Citroen released a 2CV van in 1951 and a luxury version, the 2CV AZL, in 1956. New models came out over the years, including the 2CV4 and 2CV 6, capable of reaching speeds above 100 kilometers per hour, in 1970; and the popular "Charleston" model in 1981. That same year, Roger Moore--playing the superspy James Bond in "For Your Eyes Only"--drove a bright yellow, high-performance version of the 2CV, evading his pursuers (in Peugeots) in the requisite Bond movie high-speed car chase.
By the late 1980s, however, consumers were no longer wild about the 2CV's quirky, antiquated design. This fact, combined with poor performance according to crash-testing and anti-pollution standards, led to the Tin Snail's demise. In 1988, production moved from France to Portugal, and the last 2CV was produced two years later.

July 27th 1904
Dr. Herbert Hills of Flint, Michigan, purchased the first Buick automobile ever to be sold. Founder David Buick initially made his mark as an inventor and mechanic in the plumbing industry, but had sold out of his business in order to pursue building motor cars. Buick was a man with an innate gift for inventing and tinkering, but who cared little for financial matters. He reputedly was unable to sit still unless he was concentrating on some kind of mechanical problem. None of his contemporaries would have been surprised that his company eventually became more successful than he did. In 1902, after years of fiddling with an automobile design, Buick agreed to a partnership with the Briscoe Manufacturing Company, wherein Briscoe would write off Buick's debts while in turn establishing a $100,000 capitalization for Buick's car company. Buick ceded $99,700 of the company's stock to Briscoe until he repaid his standing debt of $3,500, at which point he could buy controlling interest in the stock. Still, Buick had yet to complete an automobile. When it became clear to Briscoe that Buick would neither be able to pay his debts nor complete his vehicle soon, they sold their interest in the company to the Flint Wagon Works for $10,000. Buick and his son were given stock, but their managerial roles shrunk. Finally, in July of 1904, the first Buick made its initial test run. During the test run, the Buick averaged 30mph on a trip around Flint, going so fast at one point that the driver "couldn't see the village six-mile-an-hour sign." Sixteen Buicks were sold in the next few months, but Flint Wagon Works remained troubled by the Buick venture. They had purchased the company in order to help the city of Flint adjust to a new economy of automobile production, but Buick was already heavily in debt to a number of Flint banks. At this point, David Buick owned only a small share of stock and held none of the business responsibilities, and the Wagon Works decided to bring in Flint whiz kid William Durant to turn the business around. Durant kept Buick on as a manager, a position he held with little impact until 1908. Durant turned Buick into a major player in the automotive industry before incorporating it into his General Motors project.

July 27th 1888
Philip W. Pratt demonstrated first electric automobile in Boston, a tricycle powered by six Electrical Accumulator Company cells. It weighed 90 pounds (about 41 kilograms).

1898 - Start of Sherlock Holmes "Adventure of Dancing Men"

1909 - Orville Wright tests 1st US Army airplane, flying 1h12m40s

1920 - Radio compass used for 1st time for aircraft navigation

1940 - Bugs Bunny debuts in "Wild Hare"

1944 - 1st British jet fighter used in combat (Gloster Meteor)

1948 - Australia set 404 to win v England at Headingley

1948 - Bradman's 29th & last Test Cricket century, part of winning 3-404

1949 - 1st jet-propelled airline (De Havilland Comet) flies

1956 - Jim Laker takes 9-37 in Australia's 1st innings at Manchester

1965 - Pres Johnson signs a bill requiring cigarette makers to print health warnings on all cigarette packages about the effects of smoking

1972 - The F-15 Eagle flies for the first time.

1977 - John Lennon is granted a green card for permanent residence in US

1987 - First expedited salvaging of Titanic wreckage begins by RMS Titanic, Inc.

1988 - Radio Shack announces Tandy 1000 SL computer

2002 - Ukraine airshow disaster: A Sukhoi Su-27 fighter crashes during an air show at Lviv, Ukraine killing 85 and injuring more than 100 others, the largest air show disaster in history.

2005 - STS-114: NASA grounds the Space shuttle, pending an investigation of the external tank's continued foam-shedding problem. During ascent, the external tank of the Space Shuttle Discovery sheds a piece of foam slightly smaller than the piece that caused the Space Shuttle Columbia disaster; this foam does not strike the spacecraft.

2007 - Phoenix News Helicopter Collision: News helicopters from Phoenix, Arizona television stations KNXV and KTVK collide over Steele Indian School Park in central Phoenix while covering a police chase; there were no survivors. This was the first known incidence of two news helicopters colliding in mid-air, and the worst civil aviation incident in Phoenix history.

BIRTHDAYS

1955 - Allan Border, cricket captain (Australia)

1973 - Gorden Tallis, Australian rugby league footballer

1976 - Scott Mason, Australian cricketer (d. 2005)

1980 - Allan Davis, Australian cyclist

1986 - Ryan Griffen, Australian rules footballer

1988 - Adam Biddle, Australian footballer

1990 - Indiana Evans, Australian actress
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on July 28, 2014, 10:05:56 pm
(http://i183.photobucket.com/albums/x207/Starcowboy/gran%20prix/Tazio/nuvolari.jpg) (http://s183.photobucket.com/user/Starcowboy/media/gran%20prix/Tazio/nuvolari.jpg.html)

On this day, July 28th 1935
The Italian race car driver Tazio Nuvolari wins the greatest victory of his career in the Grosser Preis von Deutschland (German Grand Prix) held on the Nurburgring racetrack in Nurburg, Germany 
Known to his fans as "Il Montavano Volante," or the Flying Mantuan, for his home city of Mantua, Nuvolari served as a driver in the Italian army before beginning his career racing motorcycles at the age of 28; he won the Italian championship in that sport in 1924 and 1928. His first major victory in a four-wheeled vehicle came in the 1930 Mille Miglia (Thousand Miles), Italy's most famous automobile road race. Over the course of his career, in addition to racing as part of the Alfa Romeo team (and later the German Auto Union teams), Nuvolari raced as an independent driver in cars constructed by Bugatti, Maserati and MG.
The German Grand Prix of 1935 is remembered as Nuvolari's greatest victory, and arguably one of the most impressive auto racing victories of all time. At the time, German automakers reigned supreme in the world of race car construction, and the "home team" at the Nurburgring that July day consisted of five Mercedes and four German Auto Union vehicles, all of which overpowered Nuvolari's older 330 bhp (brake horsepower is a unit used to measure the power of an engine by the energy needed to brake it) Alfa Romeo. An estimated 250,000 to 300,000 spectators turned up to watch the race on that rainy, foggy July day, and drama broke out from the beginning, when Nuvolari's longtime rival, Achille Varzi, driving for the German Auto Union, hit an auto mechanic working the race.
With one lap left to go, the German driver Manfred von Brauchitsch in his 445 bhp W25 Mercedes Benz--the most powerful car of the day--took a 35-second lead over Nuvolari; the rest of the field, competitive throughout, had fallen behind. Von Brauchitsch's left rear tire was fraying, however, and with Nuvolari in hot pursuit behind him he declined a pit stop: The tire blew, and von Brauchitsch was forced to slow to 40 mph and guide it to the rim of the track. Nuvolari blew past him for the win, to the great chagrin of the Nazi Party officials at the finish line who had already started to raise the flag of the Reich and prepare the celebration.
Though Nuvolari would later race for the German Auto Union himself, that day he broke German hearts in his little red Alfa Romeo, beating the most powerful cars on the planet on one of the world's most demanding tracks.

July 28th 1973
Bonnie and Clyde's bullet-riddled 1934 Ford V-8 sedan was sold at auction for $175,000 to Peter Simon of Jean, Nevada. The Ford V-8 model succeeded the new Model A, and it was well received due to its speed and power, perhaps this is why it seemed most popular among the criminal element. Henry Ford first received a personal letter congratulating him on the car's performance from famed outlaw gunman John Dillinger.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on July 29, 2014, 09:47:45 pm
(http://i1245.photobucket.com/albums/gg592/JonCole56/1-1%20CADILLAC%20and%20LaSALLE/CADILLAC195702.jpg) (http://s1245.photobucket.com/user/JonCole56/media/1-1%20CADILLAC%20and%20LaSALLE/CADILLAC195702.jpg.html)

On this day, July 29th 1909.
The newly formed General Motors Corporation (GM) acquires the country's leading luxury automaker, the Cadillac Automobile Company, for $4.5 million.
Cadillac was founded out of the ruins of automotive pioneer Henry Ford's second failed company (his third effort, the Ford Motor Company, finally succeeded). When the shareholders of the defunct Henry Ford Company called in Detroit machinist Henry Leland to assess the company's assets for their planned sale, Leland convinced them to stay in business. His idea was to combine Ford's latest chassis (frame) with a single-cylinder engine developed by Oldsmobile, another early automaker. To that end, the Cadillac Car Company (named for the French explorer Antoine Laumet de La Mothe Cadillac, who founded the city of Detroit in 1701) was founded in August 1902. Leland introduced the first Cadillac--priced at $850--at the New York Auto Show the following year.
In its first year of production, Cadillac put out nearly 2500 cars, a huge number at the time. Leland, who was reportedly motivated by an intense competition with Henry Ford, assumed full leadership of Cadillac in 1904, and with his son Wilfred by his side he firmly established the brand's reputation for quality. Among the excellent luxury cars being produced in America at the time--including Packard, Lozier, McFarland and Pierce-Arrow--Cadillac led the field, making the top 10 in overall U.S. auto sales every year from 1904 to 1915.
By 1909, William C. Durant had assembled Buick and Oldsmobile as cornerstones of his new General Motors Corporation, founded the year before. By the end of July, he had persuaded Wilfred Leland to sell Cadillac for $4.5 million in GM stock. Durant kept the Lelands on in their management position, however, giving them full responsibility for automotive production. Three years later, Cadillac introduced the world's first successful electric self-starter, developed by Charles F. Kettering; its pioneering V-8 engine was installed in all Cadillac models in 1915.
Over the years, Cadillac maintained its reputation for luxury and innovation: In 1954, for example, it was the first automaker to provide power steering and automatic windshield washers as standard equipment on all its vehicles. Though the brand was knocked out of its top-of-the-market position in the 1980s by the German luxury automaker Mercedes-Benz.
PICTURED: 1957 CADILLAC

July 29th 1904
Jehangir Ratanji Dadabhoy (J.R.D.) Tata was born in Paris, France to Ratanji Dadabhoy Tata and his French wife Suzanne Briere. Ratanji Tata was a first cousin of Jamsetji Tata.
He was a pioneer aviator and important businessman of India. He was one of the few people who were awarded Bharat Ratna during their life time.
J.R.D.Tata was inspired early by French aviation pioneer Louis Bleriot, and took to flying. In 1929 Tata got the first pilot licence issued in India. He later came to be known as the father of Indian civil aviation. He founded India's first commercial airline, 'Tata Airlines', in 1932, which in 1946 became Air India, now India's national airline.

1899 - 1st motorcycle race, Manhattan Beach, NY

1910 - JWEL Hilgers is 1st Dutchman to fly above Dutch territory

1930 - Airship R100, 1st passenger-carrying flight from England to Canada

1938 - Comic strip "Dennis the Menace," 1st appears

1945 - After delivering the Atomic Bomb across the Pacific, the cruiser USS Indianapolis is torpedoed & sunk by a Japanese submarine

1952 - 1st nonstop transpacific flight by a jet

1961 - Bob Dylan injured in car accident

1966 - Bob Dylan hurt in motorcycle accident near Woodstock NY
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on July 30, 2014, 10:15:55 pm
(http://i645.photobucket.com/albums/uu176/MustangMayhem/web/1stautoad_zps377002f9.jpg) (http://s645.photobucket.com/user/MustangMayhem/media/web/1stautoad_zps377002f9.jpg.html)

On this day, July 30th 1898
Scientific American magazine carried the very first automobile advertisement for Winton Motor Car Company of Cleveland, OH; invited readers to "dispense with a horse".

July 30th, 1863
Henry Ford was born. Ford was born on a prosperous farmstead a few miles outside of Detroit. He would love the American farm all his days, save for one thing: He detested farming. From his childhood on, he sought ways to shift labor from humans to machines. Unlike most farm boys, he had a strong dislike of horses, and by the time he was in his teens, he was in thrall to the idea of a self-propelled vehicle.
When he was 17, he went into Detroit, then a vigorous young industrial city with a thousand machine shops. Those shops were his college, and he proved a brilliant student. He returned to the farm only briefly, in 1888, to marry a woman named Clara Bryant, a most fortunate choice as she proved steadfast, brave and so convinced of her husband’s genius that he came to call her “the believer.”

July 30th 2003
The last of 21,529,464 Volkswagen Beetles built since World War II rolls off the production line at Volkswagen's plant in Puebla, Mexico. One of a 3,000-unit final edition, the baby-blue vehicle was sent to a museum in Wolfsburg, Germany, where Volkswagen is headquartered.
The car produced in Puebla that day was the last so-called "classic" VW Beetle, which is not to be confused with the redesigned new Beetle that Volkswagen introduced in 1998. (The new Beetle resembles the classic version but is based on the VW Golf.) The roots of the classic Beetle stretch back to the mid-1930s, when the famed Austrian automotive engineer Dr. Ferdinand Porsche met German leader Adolf Hitler's request for a small, affordable passenger car to satisfy the transportation needs of the German people Hitler called the result the KdF (Kraft-durch-Freude)-Wagen (or "Strength-Through-Joy" car) after a Nazi-led movement ostensibly aimed at helping the working people of Germany; it would later be known by the name Porsche preferred: Volkswagen, or "people's car."
The first production-ready Kdf-Wagen debuted at the Berlin Motor Show in 1939; the international press soon dubbed it the "Beetle" for its distinctive rounded shape. During World War II, the factory in Kdf-stat (later renamed Wolfsburg) continued to make Beetles, though it was largely dedicated to production of war vehicles. Production was halted under threat of Allied bombing in August 1944 and did not resume until after the war, under British control. Though VW sales were initially slower in the United States compared with the rest of the world, by 1960 the Beetle was the top-selling import in America, thanks to an iconic ad campaign by the firm Doyle Dane Bernbach. In 1972, the Beetle surpassed the longstanding worldwide production record of 15 million vehicles, set by Ford Motor Company's legendary Model T between 1908 and 1927. It also became a worldwide cultural icon, featuring prominently in the hit 1969 movie "The Love Bug" (which starred a Beetle named Herbie) and on the cover of the Beatles album "Abbey Road."
In 1977, however, the Beetle, with its rear-mounted, air-cooled-engine, was banned in America for failing to meet safety and emission standards. Worldwide sales of the car shrank by the late 1970s and by 1988, the classic Beetle was sold only in Mexico. Due to increased competition from other manufacturers of inexpensive compact cars, and a Mexican decision to phase out two-door taxis, Volkswagen decided to discontinue production of the classic bug in 2003. The final count of 21,529,464, incidentally, did not include the original 600 cars built by the Nazis prior to World War II.

1889 - Start of Sherlock Holmes adventure "Naval Treaty" (BG)

1898 - Will Kellogg invents Corn Flakes

1908 - Around the World Automobile Race ends in Paris

1909 - Wright Brothers deliver 1st military plane to the army

1956 - US motto "In God We Trust" authorized

1971 - Japanese Boeing 727 collides with an F-86 fighter killing 162

1971 - US Apollo 15 (Scott & Irwin) lands on Mare Imbrium on the Moon

1983 - Official speed record for a piston-driven aircraft, 832 kph, Calif

1990 - The first Saturn automobile rolls off the assembly line.

BIRTHDAYS

1945 - David Sanborn, jazz saxophonist (David Letterman Show)

1947 - Arnold Schwarzenegger, Austria, body builder/actor/politician (Terminator, 38th Governor of California)

1958 - Kate Bush, Plumstead England, singer/songwriter

1963 - Lisa Kudrow, Encino California, actress (Phoebe-Friends, Romy & Michele)

1982 - Yvonne Strahovski, Australian actress
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on July 31, 2014, 08:46:01 pm
(http://i49.photobucket.com/albums/f266/DMunroe48/TTM%20Autographs%20PC/img071.jpg) (http://s49.photobucket.com/user/DMunroe48/media/TTM%20Autographs%20PC/img071.jpg.html)

On this day. July 31st 1916
The future racing legend Louise Smith, who will become the first woman inducted into the International Motorsports Hall of Fame, is born in Barnesville, Georgia.
In the mid-1940s, the racing promoter Bill France was looking for a female driver as a way to attract spectators to some of the earliest events in what would become the National Association for Stock Car Auto Racing (NASCAR) circuit. Before a race near Greenville, South Carolina, in 1946, he heard of Louise Smith, a local resident who was famous for outrunning law enforcement on the roads. With France's encouragement, Smith entered the race at Greenville-Pickens Speedway in a 1939 Ford and finished third. Unaware that a checkered flag meant the finish line, she kept going beyond the end of the race until someone threw out a red flag.
Though her husband Noah, the owner of a junkyard, didn't approve of her new speed-demon career, Smith was hooked. In 1947, she famously "borrowed" Noah's new car, a Ford coupe, and drove it to watch races in Daytona Beach, Florida. She ended up entering the race herself and wrecking the car, a fact she tried to conceal from him, not knowing that the news had made the front page of the Greenville paper before she returned home. Smith subsequently became a regular on France's new circuit, appearing in NASCAR events throughout the United States and Canada for the next decade. She won 38 races and had some spectacular crashes, including one in which her car overturned, earning her 48 stitches and four pins in her left knee. Dubbed the "Good Ol' Gal" by her fellow drivers, Smith nonetheless struggled in the masculine world of NASCAR.
Smith retired in 1956 but remained active in the racing world: She sponsored various drivers, and was involved in the Miss Southern 500 Scholarship Pageant at Darlington Raceway in South Carolina. In 1999, she was inducted into the International Motorsports Hall of Fame in Talladega, Alabama. Smith died in April 2006, at the age of 89.

July 31st 1928
The Chrysler Corporation acquired Dodge Brothers, Inc. from Dillon Read for $170 million.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on August 01, 2014, 09:30:23 pm
(http://i145.photobucket.com/albums/r231/MrNappie/mb_01.jpg) (http://s145.photobucket.com/user/MrNappie/media/mb_01.jpg.html)

August 1st 1941
Jeep is born. Parade magazine called it "...the Army's most intriguing new gadget...a tiny truck which can do practically everything." During World War I, the U.S. Army began looking for a fast, lightweight all-terrain vehicle, but the search did not grow urgent until early 1940. At this time, the Axis powers had begun to score victories in Europe and Northern Africa, intensifying the Allies' need for an all-terrain vehicle. The U.S. Army issued a challenge to automotive companies, requesting a working prototype, fit to army specifications, in just 49 days. Willy's Truck Company was the first to successfully answer the Army's call, and the new little truck was christened "the Jeep." General Dwight D. Eisenhower said that America could not have won World War II without it. Parade was so enthusiastic about the Jeep, that, on this day, it devoted three full pages to a feature on the vehicle.

August 1st 1903
The first cross-country auto trip, from New York City to San Francisco, was completed on this day in 1903. The trail was blazed by a Packard, which finished in a mere 52 days. Since then, countless Americans have embarked on the cross-country trek, driving from coast to coast.

August 1st 1910
The state of New York issued its first license plates on this day in 1910. Massachusetts, the first state in the nation to issue plates, had been doing so since 1893, when it introduced iron plates with the registration number etched on top. The current New York plate, which features the Statue of Liberty, has been in use since 1986.

August 1st 2006
Market share of Detroit auto companies fell to 52% in July 2006, lowest point in history (52.2% in October 2005). Auto sales figures showed that Toyota passed Ford Motor Company to rank as the second-biggest-selling auto company in the U.S. Honda outsold DaimlerChrysler's Chrysler group for the first time. General Motors held a 27% share of the auto market and Chrysler - 10%.

August 1st 2007
Citibank opens China's first drive-through automated teller machine (ATM) at the Upper East Side Central Plaza in Beijing.
Like those of drive-through restaurants and drive-in movies, the origins of drive-through banking can be traced to the United States. Some sources say that Hillcrest State Bank opened the first drive-through bank in Dallas, Texas, in 1938; others claim the honor belongs to the Exchange National Bank of Chicago in 1946. The trend reached its height in the post-World War II boom era of the late 1950s. Today, nearly all major banks in the United States offer some type of drive-through option, from regular teller service to 24-hour ATMs.
Drive-through banking, like other developments in automobile-centered culture, caught on a bit later in the rest of the world. Switzerland, for example, didn't get its first drive-through bank until 1962, when Credit Suisse--then known as Schweizerische Kreditanstalt (SKA)--opened a branch in downtown Zurich featuring eight glass pavilions with drive-through banking services. Though popular at first, the branch faltered in the 1970s, when traffic problems in the city center made fewer people willing to do their banking from their cars. SKA closed the drive-through in 1983.
In December 2006, five years after joining the World Trade Organization, China opened its retail banking sector to foreign competition. Under the new regulations Citibank became one of four foreign banks--along with HSBC, Standard Chartered and Bank of East Asia--approved to provide banking services using the Chinese currency, renminbi. (Often abbreviated as RMB, renminbi literally means "people's money.") The agreement had been signed in the fall of 2006, and by early December Citi had already opened 70 regular ATMs across the Chinese mainland.
Initially, the Citibank drive-through ATM that opened in Beijing in August 2007 was available only to holders of bank cards issued abroad, as foreign banks were not yet allowed to issue their own cards in China. Other banks soon hopped on the drive-through banking bandwagon in China, including China Construction Bank, which opened the first drive-through ATM in the southern Chinese city of Guangzhou in May 2008.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on August 03, 2014, 03:33:30 am
(http://i645.photobucket.com/albums/uu176/MustangMayhem/hqdefault_zpsva8vw3jz.jpg) (http://s645.photobucket.com/user/MustangMayhem/media/hqdefault_zpsva8vw3jz.jpg.html)

On this day, August 2nd 1990
Sven-Erik Soderman, driving an Opel Kadett at Mora, Sweden, set a world's record in stunt driving. Soderman reached a speed of 102.14mph while driving his car on two side wheels.

Pretty cool video below
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JrNqAl_G-6g (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JrNqAl_G-6g)

August 2nd 1950
The Ford Motor Company created the Defense Products Division in order to handle the large number of government contracts related to the Korean War. The conversion from automobile manufacture to weapons production had already been made several times in history, including during World War II, when civilian automobile production in the U.S. virtually ceased as manufacturers began turning out tanks instead.

August 2nd 1987
This fateful day in 1987 witnessed the fastest race in Indy car history to that date, when Michael Andretti won the Marlboro 500 at the Michigan International Speedway with an average speed of 171.490mph. Andretti broke the record previously set by Bobby Rahal at 170.722mph. Incidentally, one of the drivers that Andretti sped past on that day was his father and fellow driver, Mario Andretti.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on August 03, 2014, 10:20:08 pm
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On this day, August 3rd 1900
The Firestone Tire & Rubber Company was established in Akron, Ohio. Thirty-one-year-old inventor and entrepreneur Harvey S. Firestone seized on a new way of making carriage tires and began production with only 12 employees. Eight years later, Firestone tires were chosen by Henry Ford for the Model T, and Firestone eventually became a household name. Firestone is now owned by Bridgestone.
In May 2000, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration contacted Ford and Firestone about the high incidence of tire failure on Ford Explorers, Mercury Mountaineers, and Mazda Navajos fitted with Firestone tires. Ford investigated and found that several models of 15" Firestone tires had very high failure rates, especially those made at Firestone's Decatur, Illinois plant. This was one of the leading factors to the closing of the Decatur plant.
In a 2001 letter to Ford Motor Company Chief Executive at the time Jacques Nassar, then Chairman / CEO of Bridgestone/Firestone announced that Bridgestone/Firestone would no longer enter into new contracts with Ford Motor Company, effectively ending a 100-year supply relationship.

August 3, 1926
The first traffic lights in Britain were installed at Piccadilly Circus.

August 3rd 1938
The famous English circuit Brooklands hosted its final race on this day in 1938, ending the track's 32-year history. It opened in 1907, and was the world's first oval-style motorsport venue and was also one of Britain's first airfields. Nowadays it plays host to an aviation and motoring museum, as well as various vintage car rallies.

August 3rd 1941
Although the U.S. had not yet entered World War II at this time, gasoline rationing began in parts of the eastern United States on this day in 1941. The rationing would spread to the rest of the country as soon as the U.S. joined the Allied forces, and the production of cars for private use halted completely in 1942. Measures of a similar sort had already taken place in most European countries.

August 3rd 1977
"The Spy Who Loved Me," starring Roger Moore as the suave superspy James Bond, known for his love of fast cars and dangerous women, is released in theaters across America. The film features one of the most memorable Bond cars of all time--a sleek, powerful Lotus Esprit sports car that does double duty as a submarine.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on August 04, 2014, 10:29:43 pm
(http://i1085.photobucket.com/albums/j439/82lebaronconv/Connecticut%20Packard%20Graveyard/070.jpg) (http://s1085.photobucket.com/user/82lebaronconv/media/Connecticut%20Packard%20Graveyard/070.jpg.html)

On this day, August 4th 1898
On a visit to the Winton plant with his brother James, William D. Packard was taken for a test-drive in one of the company's vehicles, accompanied by George L. Weiss, a Winton executive. Packard ended up purchasing the Winton, to his later regret. The Packards' disappointing experience with the Winton prompted them to build their own car and establish the Ohio Automobile Company in 1900, which would later become the Packard Motor Company.
PICTURED: Rear detail - 1953 Cavalier
Note Packard script on upper rear quarter panel. This was adopted from James Ward Packard's personal signature, who founded the Packard Motor Car Company in 1899. The last Packards were built in 1958

August 4th 1957
Juan Fangio won his last auto race and captured the world auto driving championship for the fifth consecutive year on this day in 1957. Fangio, born in Argentina and of Italian descent, won the World Championship a record five times, as well as capturing 24 Grand Prix titles. He began his career as a mechanic, but eventually started racing in South America with a car he built himself. After his retirement from racing, Fangio went to work for Mercedes-Benz in Argentina.

August 4th 1957
The Italian automaker Fiat (short for Fabbrica Italiana Automobili Torino) debuts the "Nuova Cinquecento," a redesigned version of a model that it first released in 1936.
Founded in 1899 by Giovanni Agnelli, Fiat had dominated the Italian auto industry since the early 20th century. When Fiat's first 500-cc car--known as "Il Topolino" (the Italian name for Mickey Mouse)--came on the scene, it was the smallest mass-produced car on the market, with space for two people, a tiny luggage capacity and a top speed of 53 mph. In the years following World War II (during which Fiat made many of the vehicles used by Italian forces under Benito Mussolini), the company sought to capitalize on the need for affordable family cars by revamping the 500. The Nuova Cinquecento was a two-cylinder rear-engined four-seater; like the German Volkswagen Beetle, it was intended as an Italian "people's car." Like the Beetle, the 500 was became a symbol of a country and a people, an emblem of "la dolce vita" in post-war Italy. Some 3.5 million new 500s were sold between 1957 and 1975, when Fiat halted production.
By 2004, Fiat--once the largest carmaker in Europe--was struggling financially due to stiff competition from Volkswagen and other companies. That year, Sergio Marchionne took over as the company's chief executive; he soon ended Fiat's largely unsuccessful five-year partnership with General Motors and would be praised by investors for the subsequent revival of the company's fortunes. A critical step in this turnaround was the launch of the new Cinquecento in 2007. Designed by Frank Stephenson (already famous for the redesign of another classic, the Mini Cooper), the new 500 was based on the mechanical elements of the popular Fiat Panda, but modified significantly. Though its retro styling evoked its iconic predecessor, the strong performance and extensive safety features (including seven airbags) were all its own.
On July 4, 2007--50 years to the day after Giacosa's famous car debuted--several thousand VIP guests, including Italian Prime Minister Romano Prodi, were among the 100,000 spectators who gathered in Turin to celebrate the launch of the Nuova Cinquecento. The lavish ceremony featured a fireworks display and a waterborne carnival procession along the Po River. Two years later, Fiat completed an alliance with Chrysler after the struggling American automaker was forced to file for federal bankruptcy protection. Under the terms of the partnership, Fiat owns a 20 percent share of Chrysler (which could eventually grow to at least 35 percent).

August 4th 1971
Jeff Gordon, a stock-car driver known as "The Kid," was born. Gordon raced onto the NASCAR scene in 1997 by winning the Winston Cup season points championship for a prestigious second time at the age of 26. "The Kid" was also the first driver to win the Southern 500, NASCAR's oldest race, three years in a row. His clean-cut California image was initially disliked by many racing fans, who tended to prefer the gritty personas of traditional stock-car drivers. However, Gordon had talent, an aggressive driving style, and a knack for publicity, which drew many new fans to the sport.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on August 05, 2014, 09:03:02 pm
(http://i25.photobucket.com/albums/c100/ericastar_/standardoilrefinery-richmondca-1911.jpg) (http://s25.photobucket.com/user/ericastar_/media/standardoilrefinery-richmondca-1911.jpg.html)

On this day, August 5th 1882
The Standard Oil Company of New Jersey was established as part of the giant Standard Oil Trust. The trust had been organized earlier in the year, bringing together John D. Rockefeller's oil empire under one central management, run by Rockefeller and an "inner circle." The Standard Oil Trust became the first great monopoly in American history, eventually acquiring 90 percent of the world's oil refining capacity before it was ordered to dissolve in 1892. Rockefeller was infamous for his ruthless business tactics, and it was rumored that he often threatened to put local merchants out of business unless they bought Standard Oil.

August 5th 1914
The first traffic light was installed at the intersection of Euclid Avenue and East 105th Street in Cleveland, Ohio. Earlier roads, shared by horses, cars, and streetcars, were chaotic. As accidents and traffic increased it became apparent that some rules of the road were required. The traffic light was only one of several improvements to arrive in this period--the traffic island was introduced in 1907, dividing lines appeared in 1911, and the "No Left Turn" sign debuted in 1916

August 5, 1947
Ferdinand Porsche was released from a French prison. Porsche had been arrested as a suspected Nazi collaborator by United States and French occupation authorities in the aftermath of World War II and held in custody for two years. He would live to see his 75th birthday

August 5, 1990
Amos Neyhart, an engineering professor who established the first driver education courses in the United States in the 1930s, dies in a Pennsylvania nursing home at the age of 91.
Neyhart joined the faculty of Pennsylvania State University in 1929 as an assistant professor of industrial engineering. (He earned his bachelor's and master's degrees at the same institution.) Around 1931, when a drunk driver hit Neyhart's parked car, he became convinced of the need for teenagers to be educated in how to drive properly. Parents lacked the necessary objectivity and patience to teach their children to drive, he believed, and they also often unknowingly passed along their own bad driving habits. Neyhart began by teaching volunteer students from State College High School; he used his own 1929 Graham-Paige automobile, which he had specially fitted with dual brake and clutch linkages. In 1933, he established a formal course at the high school, and he soon developed a teacher-preparation program. In 1934, Neyhart published "The Safe Operation of an Automobile," the first textbook on driver education.
Neyhart's pioneering work in Pennsylvania soon caught on across the country. By 1968, according to an article that year in The New York Times, accredited driver education courses were offered in more than 71 percent of the nation's high schools. A study completed at the time by the New York State Department of Motor Vehicles found that graduates of such courses were involved in 22 percent fewer accidents and had 50 percent fewer driving violations than non-graduates, and most insurance companies had begun granting discounts to accredited young drivers.
Beginning in the late 1930s, Neyhart served as a consultant on driver education for the American Automobile Association (AAA); he was also director of Penn State's Institute of Public Safety in Continuing Education. Presidents Harry S. Truman, John F. Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson all named him to national traffic safety committees during their administrations. In 1988, Neyhart was inducted into the Safety and Health Hall of Fame International.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on August 06, 2014, 10:38:11 pm
(http://i237.photobucket.com/albums/ff157/IDriveA6K2/Cars/103867.jpg) (http://s237.photobucket.com/user/IDriveA6K2/media/Cars/103867.jpg.html)

August 6th 1957
The Chevrolet Corporation registered the Corvair name for its new rear-engine compact car. Corvairs became quite controversial--people either loved them or hated them. The car was accused of being "unsafe at any speed," with much criticism directed toward its handling, even though a 1972 government study later exonerated the Corvair. Today, the Corvair is considered rare and collectible and has been called one of the most significant cars in automotive history.

August 6th 1928
Chung Se Yung, a cofounder of the Hyundai Motor Company, was born on this day in Kangwon Province, Korea. Hyundai, which was founded in 1967, is one of the largest auto manufacturers in the world, actively exporting to 160 countries. Its international network consists of 145 independent importers and distributors, as well as several subsidiaries, such as Hyundai Motor America.

August 6th 1932
Richard Hollingshead Jr. first registered his patent for the drive-in movie theater. Tired of ordinary movie houses, Hollingshead wanted to create a theater where parents could bring the children in their pajamas, avoid baby-sitters, and relax in the comfort of their own car while watching a Friday night film. Hollingshead was awarded the patent in May of the following year, though it was declared invalid in 1950. After the patent was revoked, thousands of drive-ins appeared on the American landscape, reaching a high of 4,063 in 1958.

August 6th 1958
The great Argentine race car driver Juan Manuel Fangio, winner of five Formula One driver's world championships, competes in his last Grand Prix race--the French Grand Prix held outside Reims, France.
Fangio left school at the age of 11 and worked as an automobile mechanic in his hometown of San Jose de Balcarce, Argentina before beginning his driving career. He won his first major victory in the Gran Premio Internacional del Norte of 1940, racing a Chevrolet along the often-unpaved roads from Buenos Aires to Lima, Peru. In 1948, Fangio was invited to race a Simca-Gordini in the French Grand Prix, also at Reims, which marked his European racing debut. After a crash during a road race in Peru that fall killed his co-driver and friend Daniel Urrutia, Fangio considered retiring from racing, but in the end returned to Europe for his first full Formula One season the following year.
In Formula One, the top level of racing as sanctioned by the Fédération International de l'Automobile (FIA), drivers compete in single-seat, open-wheel vehicles typically built by large automakers (or "constructors," in racing world parlance) and capable of achieving speeds of more than 230 mph. Individual Formula One events are known as Grands Prix. Fangio signed on in 1948 with Alfa Romeo, and won his first Formula One championship title with that team in 1951. Over the course of his racing career, he would drive some of the best cars Alfa-Romeo, Mercedes-Benz, Ferrari and Maserati ever produced. Capturing four more Formula One titles by 1957, Fangio won an impressive 24 of 51 total Grand Prix races.
Reims, famous for its 13th-century cathedral, hosted the oldest Grand Prix race, the French Grand Prix, at its Reims-Gueux course a total of 14 times (the last time in 1966). In the race on July 6, 1958, the British driver Mike Hawthorn--who would win the driver's world championship that season, but die tragically in a (non-racing) car accident the following January, at the age of 29--took the lead from the start in his 2.4-liter Ferrari Dino 246 and held on for the win. Fangio, driving a Maserati, finished fourth, in what would be the last race before announcing his retirement at the age of 47. The 1958 French Grand Prix also marked the Formula One debut of Phil Hill, who in 1960 would become the first American driver to win the world championship.

August 6th 1991
Peugeot SA announced its withdrawal from the United States market, due to lagging sales. The major French automotive manufacturer and holding company has been in existence since 1896 and is presently headquartered in Paris.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on August 07, 2014, 08:04:55 pm
(http://i1011.photobucket.com/albums/af233/carl44s/motorsports%201920-1942/dario-resta-peugeot-1916.jpg) (http://s1011.photobucket.com/user/carl44s/media/motorsports%201920-1942/dario-resta-peugeot-1916.jpg.html)

On this day, August 7th 1915
Driving a Peugeot, race-car driver Dario Resta broke the 100mph speed barrier. He broke the record while winning the 100-mile Chicago Cup Challenge Race at the Maywood Board Speedway in Chicago. With an average speed of 101.86mph, this was the first event in which such speeds had been attained for a race of this length in the U.S.

August 7th 1927
The last Dodge Convertible Cabriolet, produced as a sporty car, was discontinued on this day in 1927. The Cabriolet was in production for only four months after its debut.

August 7th 1974
French daredevil Philip Petit walked across a tightrope strung between the twin towers of the World Trade Center in New York City. The stunt caused a massive traffic jam on the streets below.

(http://i727.photobucket.com/albums/ww273/brendan022/petit.jpg) (http://s727.photobucket.com/user/brendan022/media/petit.jpg.html)

August 7th 2000
Eight weeks to the day after the fourth-generation NASCAR driver Adam Petty was killed during practice at the New Hampshire International Speedway, New Hampshire--the driver Kenny Irwin Jr. dies at the same speedway, near the exact same spot, after his car slams into the wall at 150 mph during a practice run.
At 19, Adam Petty was in his second season in the Busch Series and was planning to move to the Winston Cup circuit full time the following year. He finished 40th in his first Winston Cup race in April 2000, three days before the death of his great-grandfather, Lee Petty, a pioneer of NASCAR (the acronym stands for National Association for Stock Car Auto Racing). On May 12, during a practice session to qualify for the following day's Busch 200 in Loudon, the youngest Petty's car crashed head-on into a wall while traveling at 130 miles per hour. He was airlifted to Concord Hospital, where he was pronounced dead of head trauma.
A native of Indianapolois, Indiana, Kenny Irwin Jr. won Rookie of the Year honors for the NASCAR Winston Cup series in 1998, earning one fifth-place finish and four top-10s while driving the famous No. 28 Texaco Havoline Ford for the Robert Yates Racing team. (Among the celebrated previous drivers of the No. 28 were Ernie Irvan and Davey Allison.) After Irwin racked up three more top-five finishes in 1999, including third place in the Daytona 500, he Irwin left the Yates organization and joined a team owned by Felix Sabates. In a car sponsored by BellSouth, he ran a total of 17 races, still seeking a win.
On July 7, 2000, the 30-year-old Irwin was killed instantly when his car hit the wall on Turn 3 of the New Hampshire International Speedway; it flipped over and landed on its roof before coming to a halt. As in the case of Petty's crash, speculation as to the cause focused on a stuck accelerator, which would have prevented both drivers from slowing enough to make the turn. As The Chicago Tribune reported, some drivers pointed out that the track was one of the slickest on the NASCAR circuit, with no margin for error on the tight turns. On the other hand, Petty's grandfather, the NASCAR icon Richard Petty, dismissed those charges, attributing the two similar crashes to "circumstances beyond human control…circumstances with the way you stop that thing so quick. Your body just can't stand it."

(http://i891.photobucket.com/albums/ac114/MotorsportRevolution/Kenny%20Irwin%20Jr/nh0005.jpg) (http://s891.photobucket.com/user/MotorsportRevolution/media/Kenny%20Irwin%20Jr/nh0005.jpg.html)
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on August 08, 2014, 09:42:28 pm
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On this day, August 8th 1986
The last episode of the TV show Knight Rider aired on this day. The program featured David Hasselhoff as private eye Michael Knight, but the real star of the show was "KITT," his talking car. KITT was a modified Pontiac Firebird, complete with artificial intelligence and glowing red lights. KITT assisted Michael on his crime-fighting missions, communicating with him through a remote device Michael wore on his wrist.

August 8th 1907
The Rolls-Royce Silver Ghost passed its 15,000-mile official trial with flying colors, showing off its seven-liter engine and four-speed overdrive gearbox. It was this trial that made "the Ghost's" reputation and gave the Rolls-Royce the name "The Best Car in the World." A total of 6,173 Silver Ghosts were produced.

August 8th 1954
Nigel Mansell, the Formula-1 racer, was born on this day in Birmingham, West Midlands, England. Mansell won 29 Grand Prix titles between 1980 and 1992. He retired from Formula-1 racing in 1992 to join the Haas-Newman Indy car racing team in the U.S., becoming an Indy car champion within his first year. He later returned to Formula-1 racing.

August 8th 1991
James B. Irwin, pilot of the Lunar Roving Vehicle, died on this day. Irwin visited the surface of the moon during the Apollo 15 mission in 1971, during which he spent almost three days on the moon's surface investigating the Hadley-Apennine site, 462 miles north of the lunar equator. The Lunar Rover was a specially designed vehicle used to transport Irwin and David Scott around the moon's surface while collecting rocks and core samples. Irwin died at the age of 61.

August 8th 2004
On July 8, 2004, Suzuki Motor Corporation and Consumers Union, publisher of Consumer Reports magazine, agree to a settlement in an eight-year-long lawsuit in which the automaker accused Consumer Reports of damaging its reputation with claims that its Samurai sport utility vehicle (SUV) was prone to rolling over.
In July 1988, a Consumer Reports product review judged the Samurai as unacceptable because of its propensity to tip during sharp turns. (The magazine based this conclusion on the car's performance in avoidance-maneuver tests.) Suzuki stopped making the Samurai in 1995. The following year, the company filed the lawsuit, accusing Consumer Union of rigging the test and perpetrating consumer fraud. The automaker sought $60 million in compensation and unspecified punitive damages. Suzuki's case included testimony from a former Consumers Union employee who served for 10 years as a technician in the company's auto testing group, as well as videotapes and records of automobile testing that date back to 1988. The videos showed, among other things, that the testing personnel had driven the Samurai through the course no fewer than 46 times before getting it to tip up on two wheels on the 47th, a result that was met by laughing and cheering from the group.
A federal judge dismissed Suzuki's lawsuit without a trial, but in September 2002 an appeals court ruled that a jury should hear the case. In April 2000, Consumers Union had won a jury trial over a lawsuit filed by Isuzu Motor, which claimed that Consumer Reports magazine had rigged a test involving its Trooper SUV in order to make the vehicle tip over. In November 2003, U.S. Supreme Court rejected a Consumers Union appeal in the Suzuki case, and the case was headed for a jury trial in California before the settlement was reached the next July.
No money changed hands in the agreement. Though Consumers Union did not issue an apology--"We stand fully behind our testing and rating of the Samurai," David Pittle, vice president for technical policy at Consumers Union, said--it made a "clarification," stating that the magazine's statement that the Samurai "easily" rolls over during turns may have been "misconstrued or misunderstood." The agreement also stated that Consumers Reports "never intended to imply that the Samurai easily rolls over in routine driving conditions" and had spoken positively of other Suzuki models such as the Sidekick and the Vitara/XL-7. For its part, Suzuki claimed the settlement as a win for its side: Company officials said it would allow them to concentrate on growing Suzuki's business in the United States, including building national sales to 200,000 vehicles by 2007, compared with 58,438 in 2003.

August 8th 2013,
'Five Easy Pieces,' 'Easy Rider' actress Karen Black dies at 74
Karen Black, a versatile actress whose name became virtually synonymous with films that reflected and helped define America in the late 1960s and early 1970s, including “Five Easy Pieces,” died Thursday in Los Angeles. She was 74.
Family spokesman Elliot Mintz confirmed her death.
Diagnosed with ampullary cancer in 2010, Black had sought help from the public earlier this year to cover the cost of her
medical treatment. An appeal by her husband, Stephen Eckelberry, on a crowd-sourcing website raised more than $60,000.
Although she had a small part in Dennis Hopper’s groundbreaking 1969 counterculture movie, “Easy Rider,” Black was best known for her performance in “Five Easy Pieces,” the 1970 film in which she plays the clingy, ultimately abandoned girlfriend of Jack Nicholson’s character, a brooding dropout from an upper-class life who becomes an oilfield roughneck.

She also had roles in the 1974 version of “The Great Gatsby,” “The Day of the Locust” in 1975 and two Robert Altman films, “Nashville” and “Come Back to the Five and Dime, Jimmy Dean, Jimmy Dean.”
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on August 09, 2014, 09:50:39 pm
(http://i875.photobucket.com/albums/ab317/jlgmx/RudolfChristianKarlDiesel.jpg) (http://s875.photobucket.com/user/jlgmx/media/RudolfChristianKarlDiesel.jpg.html)

On this day, August 9th 1898
Rudolf Diesel, of Berlin, Germany, received a U.S. patent for an "Internal Combustion Engine" ("improvements in apparatus for regulating the fuel supply in slow-combustion motors and, in particular to internal combustion engines").
PICTURED: Rudolf Diesel

August 9th 1901
The first rally race in Ireland, sponsored by the Irish Automobile Club, was held on this day as 12 automobiles attempted an organized journey from Dublin to Waterford. A rally takes place over a specified public route with a driver and navigator straining to maintain a breakneck pace from checkpoint to checkpoint. The course is generally kept secret until the race begins. Rally racing became extremely popular after World War II, and weekend rallies became common worldwide. The longest rally took place in 1977, spreading over 19,239 miles from London to Sydney.

August 9th 1918
Following the lead of countries all over the world, the U. S. government ordered automobile production to halt by January 1, 1919, and convert to military production. Factories instead manufactured shells, and the engineering lessons of motor racing produced light, powerful engines for planes. Manufacturers turned out staff cars and ambulances by the hundreds. In fact, World War I has often been described as the war of the machines.

August 9th 1962
The Chrysler Corporation was the forst Auto Company to set an industry milestone by announcing for 1963 a five-year, 50,000-mile warranty covering all of its cars and trucks.

August 9th 2006
The Fiat 500 Club Italia, an organization formed in appreciation of the iconic 500--"Cinquecento" in Italian--car produced by the automaker Fiat (Fabbrica Italiana Automobili Torino), holds what the Guinness Book of World Records will call the world's largest parade of Fiat cars on July 9, 2006, between Villanova d'Albenga and Garlenda, Italy.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on August 10, 2014, 10:26:10 pm
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On this day, August 10th 1907
Stretching nearly 10,000 miles, this Peking-to-Paris race lasted for 62 days, and was won by the team of Prince Scipione Borghese and Ettore Guizzardi of Italy. Driving like a madman across Asia and Europe, Prince encountered brush fire, got stuck in a swamp, numerous crash and was pulled over by a policeman in Belgium. The policeman refused to believe that the prince was racing, rather than merely speeding.
There were no rules in the race, except that the first car to reach Paris would win the prize of a magnum of Mumm Champagne. The race went without any assistance through country where there were no roads or road-maps. For the race, camels carrying fuel left Peking and set up at stations along the route to give fuel to the racers. The race followed a telegraph route so that the race was well covered in newspapers at the time. Each car had one journalist as a passenger, with the journalists sending stories from the telegraph stations regularly through the race.
PICTURED: Peking to Paris & Prince Borghese

August 10th 1897
C. Harrington Moore and Frederick R. Simms founded Automobile Club of Great Britain and Ireland, later known as the Royal Automobile Club. Its the oldest auto club.

August 10th 1986
The Hungarian Grand Prix, the first such race held behind the Iron Curtain, was won by Nelson Piquet on this day driving the Williams-Honda. Held at the twisty Hungaroring near Budapest, the race has been a mainstay of the racing calendar. Run in the heat of a central European summer, it also holds the distinction of being the only current Grand Prix venue that had never seen a wet race up until the 2006 Hungarian Grand Prix. The first Grand Prix saw 200,000 people spectating even though the tickets were expensive at the time.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on August 11, 2014, 09:36:17 pm
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August 11th 1966
The first Chevy Camaro drove out of the manufacturing plant in Norwood, Ohio. The 1967 Camaro coupe was named just weeks before production. General Manager Elliot Estes, when publicly announcing the name saying, "I went into a closet, shut the door and came out with the name." Camaro is actually French for "comrade, pal, or chum." The Camaro was a hit with the public, sporting a base price of only $2,466 for a six-cylinder engine and three-speed manual transmission.
PICTURED: The Chevrolet Camaro

August 11th 1965
The Ford Bronco, intended to compete against Jeep's CJ-5 and International Harvester's Scout, was introduced on this day, feeding the burgeoning four-wheel-drive market. The first Broncos were very simple, without options such as power steering or automatic transmission. The classic Bronco was manufactured for 12 years, with 18,000 produced in 1966 alone. The Bronco's small size (92 in wheelbase) made it popular for off-roading and some other uses, but impractical for such things as towing. The Bronco was Ford's first compact SUV.

1897  -    British children's author, Enid Blyton, is born.
1824  -    New South Wales is constituted a Crown Colony.
1877  -    American astronomer Asaph Hall discovers Phobos and Deimos, the two moons of Mars.
1999  -    Up to 350 million people watch the last total solar eclipse of the twentieth century.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on August 12, 2014, 09:11:48 pm
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On this day, August 12, 1988
Director Francis Ford Coppola's critically acclaimed biopic "Tucker: The Man & His Dream" premieres in U.S. theaters, starring Jeff Bridges as the brash Chicago businessman-turned-car-designer Preston Tucker who shook up 1940s-era Detroit with his streamlined, affordable "Car of Tomorrow."
Remembered by some as a visionary and others as a flamboyant but failed opportunist, Preston Tucker was inspired to build cars by his friendship and pre-World War II business partnership with the race car driver and auto designer Harry Miller. In the renewed prosperity following the war, Tucker believed that Americans were ready to take a chance on a new kind of car, and that he, as an independent entrepreneur, was in the position to take risks that the big, established car companies were unwilling to take. He hired a skilled team including designer Alexander S. Tremulis and chief mechanic John Eddie Offuttas and leased an old Dodge aircraft engine plant in Chicago with plans to design and produce his dream cars.
Based on clay mock-ups built to scale, the Tucker team produced a metal prototype, dubbed the "Tin Goose," in June 1947. The following spring, the teardrop-shaped, 150-horsepower rear-engined Tucker "Torpedo" began rolling off the line, accompanied by the memorable advertising slogan "Don't Let a Tucker Pass You By." Among the Torpedo's innovations were a padded dashboard, a pop-out windshield and an innovative center-mounted headlight.
Despite rave reviews in the automotive press, Tucker's company fell under harsh scrutiny from the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), who investigated the automaker for mail fraud and other charges. The investigation caused a flood of negative publicity for the company, while Tucker struggled to keep producing cars with a fraction of his staff. His efforts were in vain; in March 1949 the company fell into receivership and its assets were seized.
Tucker was ultimately acquitted of all charges, but his dream car would never rise again; only 51 were produced after that initial prototype. Forty-seven of those still exist, and a number of them were used in the making of Coppola's movie, which revived interest in the Tucker '48 and the story of the man behind it. At the time of his death in 1956, Preston Tucker was working on plans for a sports car, the Carioca, to be produced in Brazil.
PICTURED: Henry Ford at a baseball game with Preston Tucker

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August 12th 1901
Charles A. Yont and W.B. Felker completed the first automobile trip to the summit of Pikes Peak, Colorado, on this day, driving an 1899 locomobile steamer. Climbing 14,110 feet to the top was quite a feat for the little steamer. Pikes Peak is well known because of its commanding location and easy accessibility. Today, an ascent to the top is made easy by a graded toll road.

August 12, 1908
Henry Ford's first Model T, affectionately known as the "Tin Lizzie," rolled off the assembly line in Detroit, Michigan. The Model T revolutionized the automotive industry by providing an affordable, reliable car for the average American. Prior to the invention of the Model T, most automobiles were viewed as playthings of the rich. Ford was able to keep the price down by retaining control of all raw materials, as well as his use of new mass production methods. When it was first introduced, the "Tin Lizzie" cost only $850 and seated two people. Though the price fluctuated in the years to come, dipping as low as $290 in 1924, few other changes were ever made to the Model T. Electric lights were introduced in 1915, and an electric starter was introduced as an option in 1919. Eventually, the Model T's design stagnancy cost it its competitive edge, and Ford stopped manufacturing the "Tin Lizzie" in 1927.
The Ford Model T car was designed by Childe Harold Wills and two Hungarian immigrants named Joseph A. Galamb and Eugene Farkas. Also, Harry Love, C. J. Smith, Gus Degner and Peter E. Martin were part of the team.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on August 13, 2014, 07:30:00 pm
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August 13, 1902
The German engineer Felix Wankel, inventor of a rotary engine that will be used in race cars, is born on this day in Lahr, Germany.
Wankel reportedly came up with the basic idea for a new type of internal combustion gasoline engine when he was only 17 years old. In 1924, Wankel set up a small laboratory where he began the research and development of his dream engine, which would be able to attain intake, compression, combustion and exhaust, all while rotating. He brought his knowledge of rotary valves to his work with the German Aeronautical Research Establishment during World War II, and to a leading German motorcycle company, NSU Motorenwerk AG, beginning in 1951. Wankel completed his first design of a rotary-piston engine in 1954, and the first unit was tested in 1957.
In other internal-combustion engines, moving pistons did the work of getting the combustion process started; in the Wankel rotary engine, an orbiting rotor in the shape of a curved equilateral triangle served this purpose. Fewer moving parts created a smoothly performing engine that was lightweight, compact, low-cost and required fewer repairs. After NSU officially announced the completion of the Wankel rotary engine in late 1959, some 100 companies around the world rushed to propose partnerships that would get the engine inside their products. Mazda, the Japanese automaker, signed a formal contract with NSU in July 1961, after receiving approval from the Japanese government.
In an attempt to experiment with the rotary engine and perfect it for use in its vehicles, Mazda formed an RE (Rotary Engine) Research Department in 1963. The Cosmo Sport, which Mazda released in May 1967, was the planet's first dual-rotor rotary engine car. With futuristic styling and superior performance, the Cosmo wowed car enthusiasts worldwide. Mazda began installing rotary engines in its sedans and coupes in 1968, and the vehicles hit the U.S. market in 1971. In the wake of a global oil crisis in 1973-74, Mazda continually worked on improving its rotary engines to improve fuel efficiency, and by the end of that decade its sports cars had become popular in both Europe and the United States In addition to Mazda, a number of other companies licensed the Wankel engine during the 1960s and 1970s, including Daimler-Benz, Alfa Romeo, Rolls Royce, Porsche, General Motors, Suzuki and Toyota.
Meanwhile, Wankel continued his own work with the rotary piston engine, forming his own research establishment in Lindau, Germany, in the mid-1970s. In 1986, he sold the institute for 100 million Deutschmarks (around $41 million) to Daimler Benz, maker of the Mercedes. Wankel filed a new patent as late as 1987; the following year, he died after a long illness.

August 13th 1898
After a visit to the Winton plant with his brother William, James W. Packard purchased a Winton automobile #12. However, the car turned out to be a poor purchase. Dissatisfaction with it would prompt Packard to build his own car and establish the Packard Motor Car Company. Packard Motor Car Company would later be acquired by Studebaker, and lagging sales eventually led to the discontinuation of the Packard in 1958.

August 13, 1907
The first taxicab took to the streets of New York City, marking the beginning of the love-hate relationship between New Yorkers and their cabbies. Motorized taxicabs had actually begun appearing on the streets of Europe in the late 1890s, and their development closely mirrors that of the automobile. The taxi is named after the taximeter, a device that automatically records the distance traveled or time consumed and used to calculate the fare. The term cab originated from the cabriolet, a one-horse carriage let out for hire.

August 13, 1955
Racer Hideo Fukuyama was born on this day in Owase, Japan. A NASCAR racer, he has contributed to the growing popularity of racing in Japan.

1888  -    John Logie Baird, inventor of television, is born
1817  -    Explorer John Oxley discovers the Bogan River in central western New South Wales
1806  -    Captain William Bligh becomes Governor of New South Wales.
1940  -    Three Parliamentary Ministers are killed when their aircraft crashes in Canberra.
1941  -    The Australian Women’s Army Service is formed, to enable more men to serve in fighting units.
1989  -    Thirteen people die in the world's worst hot-air balloon crash, near Alice Springs in central Australia.
World History
1961  -    East Berlin is cut off from the west by the Berlin Wall.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on August 14, 2014, 09:03:23 pm
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On this day, August 14th 1912
As part of a yearlong celebration of its 100th anniversary, a redesigned version of the Michelin Man, Bibendium, the corporate symbol of one of the world's largest tire manufacturers, makes an appearance at the Monterey Historic Automobile Races in Monterey, California, beginning on this day in 1998.
The history of Michelin dates back to 1889, when two brothers named Edouard and Andre Michelin took over a struggling rubber factory in the French industrial city of Clermont-Ferrand. The Michelins later became France's leading producer of pneumatic (inflatable) bicycle tires, and in June 1895 they entered the first car to be equipped with pneumatic tires in the historic Paris-Bordeaux-Paris auto race.
As the story goes, their now-iconic corporate symbol originated with Edouard Michelin's observation that a stack of tires resembled a human figure. A cartoonist named Maurice Rossillon, who signed his work O'Galop, created a series of sketches based on this idea. One depicted a man made of tires raising a glass of champagne and declaring "Nunc est bibendum" ("Now is the time to drink"). The figure's white color mirrored the pale hue of rubber tires at the time, before manufacturers began using carbon black as a preservative around 1912. The symbol subsequently became known as Bibendum (sometimes Bibidendum or Mr. Bib), or the Michelin Man.
The original poster, produced from 1898 to 1914, was followed by a variety of other posters and signs featuring Bibendum smoking a cigar, wearing gladiator garb, riding a bicycle and carrying a load of tires, among other activities. Ubiquitous in France, the logo's fame spread along with the popularity and success of Michelin tires around the world. In 1923, the Michelin Man was redesigned, losing some of his rings to reflect the introduction of wider, low-pressure tires. During the 1980s, he grew slimmer to conform to the healthy-living trend, a process that continued with the 1998 redesign. By that time, Bibendum was one of the oldest and most recognized advertising symbols in the world.
On January 1, 1998, the Michelin Man kicked off his centennial celebration by appearing on his own birthday float at the Tournament of Roses Parade in Pasadena, California. The Monterey Historic Automobile Races, held at the Laguna Seca Raceway in Monterey that August 14-16, welcomed the Michelin Man as part of its own 25th anniversary celebration. Two years later, an international jury of 22 designers, advertising executives and branding experts voted Bibendum the winner of a competition co-sponsored by The Financial Times, proclaiming him the "greatest logo in history."
PICTURED: The original 1898 poster featuring Bibendum

August 14th 1893
The world's first automobile license plates were issued in Paris, France. However, plates were not issued in the United States for a few more years, when they were finally instituted as a safety measure. The city of Boston was the first to require its motorists to hold a license and register their vehicle--the owner would make his own plate with the corresponding registration numbers. The rest of Massachusetts soon followed the trend and began issuing registration plates made of iron and covered with a porcelain enamel.

August 14th 1912
The first double-decker bus appeared on the streets of New York, travelling up and down Broadway. The double-decker originated in London as a two-story horse-drawn omnibus. The vehicles eventually added roof seating. Two-story buses can still be seen in the Big Apple, usually carrying a busload of tourists.

August 14th 1935
Mrs. M.S. Morrow of Whitestone, New York, had the last U.S.-built Rolls-Royce Phantom 1 delivered to her home. Manufactured at the Rolls-Royce plant in Springfield, Massachusetts, the U.S.-built Phantom I made its debut one year after its British counterpart. It featured elegant proportions and well-engineered coachwork, suitable for the successor of the Silver Ghost--the model that earned Rolls-Royce a reputation as "the best car in the world." A total of 1,241 Phantoms were produced.

MISC:
1861  -    William Landsborough organises a relief expedition to find the missing Australian explorers Burke and Wills.
Australian History
1875  -    ‘The Queenslander’ newspaper reports on the first ever game of Association Football, later Soccer, played in Australia.
1963  -    The Yirrkala Bark Petitions are presented to the Australian Parliament, becoming a catalyst to the recognition of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people in Commonwealth law.
World History
1945  -    Japan surrenders in WWII.
2000  -    An operation gets underway to rescue the men stranded in the sunk Russian submarine, the 'Kursk', in the Arctic Circle.
2003  -    North America suffers a power outage affecting over 50 million people.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on August 16, 2014, 09:57:24 pm
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August 15th 1899
Henry Ford resigned as chief engineer at the main Detroit Edison Company plant in order to concentrate on automobile production. On call at all times, Ford had no regular hours and could experiment in his free time. His tinkering was fruitful, for he completed his first horseless carriage by 1896. After turning to automobiles full time, he would revolutionize the automotive industry with the Model T, also known as the "Tin Lizzie."
PICTURED: The Ford Model T

August 15th 1945
World War II gasoline rationing in America ended on this day. Rationing was just one of the special measures taken in the U.S. during wartime. Civilian auto production virtually ceased after the attack on Pearl Harbor, as the U.S. automotive industry turned to war production. Automotive firms made almost $29 billion worth of military materials between 1940 and 1945, including jeeps, trucks, machine guns, carbines, tanks, helmets, and aerial bombs. After the war, rationing ended and the auto industry boomed.

August 15th 1947
On 3 June 1947, Viscount Louis Mountbatten, the last British Governor-General of India, announced the partitioning of the British Indian Empire into a secular India and a Muslim Pakistan. At midnight, on 15 August 1947, India became an independent nation. This is largest mass mobilization of people in India.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on August 16, 2014, 10:03:46 pm
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August 16th 1985
The last episode of the television show Dukes of Hazzard aired on this day, concluding a successful five-year run. Aside from Bo (John Schneider), Luke (Tom Wopat), and Daisy (Catherine Bach), the star of the show was General Lee, a 1969 Dodge Charger. The specially customized car became a favorite of fans as a large portion of each show was devoted to car chases and jumps. Several changes were made to the car, including custom orange paint, new manifolds, a special exhaust system, and a grill guard. Also, the stock horn was replaced by a special horn that played the first 12 notes of "Dixie."
On August 5, 2005, the General Lee made its big-screen debut in the release of the action comedy The Dukes of Hazard. The "Duke Boys," Bo (Seann William Scott) and Luke (Johnny Knoxville) Duke, elude authorities in the famed car while trying to help Daisy (Jessica Simpson) and moonshine running Uncle Jesse (Willie Nelson) save the family farm from being destroyed by Hazzard County's corrupt commissioner Boss Hogg (Burt Reynolds).

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August 16th 1984
After close to 30 hours of deliberation, a jury of six men and six women unanimously acquits the former automaker John Z. DeLorean of eight counts of drug trafficking in Los Angeles, California.
A Detroit native and the son of an autoworker, DeLorean began working for the Packard Motor Company as an engineer in 1952. He rose quickly at Packard and later at General Motors (GM), where he moved in 1956. At GM, he managed both the Pontiac and Chevrolet divisions before becoming a vice president in 1972. DeLorean's flashy style and self-promotional ability distinguished him in the staid culture of the auto industry, while his ambition and appetite for innovation seemed never to be satisfied: He claimed to hold more than 200 patents and was credited with such developments as the lane-change turn signal, overhead cam-engine and racing stripes.
In 1975, DeLorean left GM to found the DeLorean Motor Company and follow his dream of building a high-performance and futuristic but still economical sports car. With funds from the British government, DeLorean opened his car plant near Belfast in Northern Ireland in 1978 to manufacture his eponymous dream car: Officially the DMC-12 but often called simply the DeLorean, it had an angular stainless-steel body, a rear-mounted engine and distinctive "gull-wing" doors that opened upward. After skyrocketing production costs caused the DMC-12's price tag to top $25,000 (at a time when the average car cost just $10,000) sales were insufficient to keep the company afloat. Following an investigation into suspected financial irregularities, the British government announced the closing of the DeLorean Motor Company on October 19, 1982. That same day, John DeLorean was arrested and charged with conspiring to obtain and distribute $24 million worth of cocaine.
The prosecution's seemingly airtight case centered on a videotaped conversation about the drug deal between DeLorean and undercover FBI agents. If convicted, DeLorean faced up to 60 years in prison. DeLorean's defense team argued that he had been entrapped, or lured into a situation that made it look like he had committed a crime. On August 6, 1984, the jury issued its surprising acquittal verdict. Over the next 15 years, DeLorean saw his dream car shoot to Hollywood stardom (in the "Back to the Future" film trilogy) even as he battled nearly 40 legal cases relating to his failed auto company. He declared bankruptcy in 1999 and died in 2005, at the age of 80.

August 16th 1937
Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts, became the first school to institute graduate study courses in traffic engineering and administration.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on August 17, 2014, 09:42:51 pm
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On this day, August 17th 1915
Charles F. Kettering, co-founder of Dayton Engineering Laboratories Company (DELCO) in Dayton, Ohio, is issued U.S. Patent No. 1,150,523 for his "engine-starting device"--the first electric ignition device for automobiles
In the early years of the automobile, drivers used iron hand cranks to start the internal combustion process that powered the engines on their cars. In addition to requiring great hand and arm strength, this system was not without certain risks: If the driver forgot to turn his ignition off before turning the crank, the car could backfire or roll forward, as at the time most vehicles had no brakes. Clearly a better system was needed, and in 1911 Cadillac head Henry M. Leland gave Charles Kettering the task of developing one.
Before founding DELCO with his partner Edward Deeds in 1909, Kettering had worked at the National Cash Register Company, where he helped develop the first electric cash register. He drew on this experience when approaching his work with automobiles. Just as the touch of a button had started a motor that opened the drawer of the cash register, Kettering would eventually use a key to turn on his self-starting motor. The self-starter was introduced in the 1912 Cadillac, patented by Kettering in 1915, and by the 1920s would come standard on nearly every new automobile. By making cars easier and safer to operate, especially for women, the self-starting engine caused a huge jump in sales, and helped foster a fast-growing automobile culture in America.
United Motors Corporation (later General Motors) bought DELCO in 1916, and Kettering worked as vice president and director of research at GM from 1920 to 1947. Other important auto-related innovations developed during Kettering's tenure were quick-drying automotive paint, spark plugs, leaded gasoline, shock absorbers, the automatic transmission, four-wheel brakes, the diesel engine and safety glass. He helped develop the refrigerant Freon, used in refrigerators and air conditioners, and the Kettering home in Dayton was the first in the country to be air-conditioned. In the realm of medicine, Kettering created a treatment for venereal disease and an incubator for premature infants, and in 1945 he and longtime General Motors head Alfred P. Sloan established the Sloan-Kettering Institute for Cancer Research in New York City. Kettering died in 1958.

August 17th 1890
Ralph R. Teetor, inventor of the cruise control, was born in Hagerstown, Indiana. A mechanical engineer with a degree from the University of Pennsylvania, Teetor began working at the Light Inspection Car Company. This family business eventually evolved into the Perfect Circle Company, of which Teetor became president. Teetor had a knack for invention and continued to work on new ideas after his retirement. His accomplishments are even more remarkable because he was blinded at the age of six, but never let his handicap keep him from his dream of becoming an inventor.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on August 18, 2014, 09:17:21 pm
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August 18th 1940
Walter Percy Chrysler, the founder of the American automotive corporation that bears his name, dies on this day in 1940 at his estate in Great Neck, New York, after suffering a cerebral hemorrhage. He was 65 years old.
Born in 1875 in Kansas, Chrysler was the son of a locomotive engineer; he began working himself when he was 17, earning seven cents an hour as an apprentice in a railroad machine shop. He worked his way up quickly, becoming a plant manager for the American Locomotive Company by the time he was 33 years old. In the early years of the automobile, Chrysler became fascinated: At a 1905 automobile show in Chicago, he borrowed $5,000 to purchase his own car, taking it apart and putting it back together again before taking a single ride. In 1911, Chrysler accepted a job as a manager at the Buick Motor Company at half his former salary. Within five years, he rose to become the company's president, and to make Buick into the strongest unit of William C. Durant's General Motors (GM).
Durant and Chrysler clashed over policy, however, and Chrysler left GM in 1920 to work with the Willys-Overland Company and with Maxwell Motors Company. A car designed by Chrysler and featuring a high-compression engine sold $50 million worth in its first year replaced the existing Maxwell car. In 1925, he emerged as president of the Chrysler Corporation, consisting of the former Maxwell and Chalmers car companies. After acquiring Dodge in 1928 and introducing the Plymouth that same year, the Chrysler Corporation would go on to become one of the Big Three of American automakers, alongside Ford and GM.
Aside from automobiles, Chrysler was chiefly known for financing the 77-story Art Deco skyscraper in midtown Manhattan (at the corner of Lexington Avenue and 42nd Street) that bears his name. To complete the distinctive ornamentation around the spire of the building, its architects used elements from Chrysler's automobiles, including radiator caps, hubcaps and stainless steel that evoked the chrome shine on a car. When it was completed in 1930, the Chrysler building was the tallest building in the world and the first manmade structure to top 1,000 feet. Surpassed by the Empire State Building a year later, the building remains one of New York City's most distinctive skyscrapers.
PICTURED: One of the chrome features on the Chrysler building in Manhattan

August 18th 1905
Newell S. Wright, an attorney, filed to register the Cadillac crest as a trademark. The insignia has adorned Cadillac's luxury car for almost a century.

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August 18th 1937
The Toyota Motor Company, Ltd., began as a division of the Toyota Automatic Loom Works, was established on this day. The company underwent huge expansion in the 1960s and 1970s, exporting its smaller, more fuel-efficient cars to countless foreign markets. During this period, Toyota also acquired Hino Motors, Ltd., Nippondenso Company, Ltd., and Daihitsu Motor Company Ltd. Toyota has been Japan's largest automobile manufacturer for several decades.
PICTURED: A replica 1936 Model AA. Japan

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Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on August 19, 2014, 06:00:08 pm
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On this day, August 19th 1909
In front of some 12,000 spectators, automotive engineer Louis Schwitzer wins the two-lap, five-mile inaugural race at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway in Indianapolis, Indiana.
Conceived by local businessmen as a testing facility for Indiana's growing automobile industry, the Indianapolis Motor Speedway would later become famous as the home to the now world-famous Indianapolis 500 race, which was first held in 1911. In that inaugural race, Schwitzer (then the chief engineer at Stoddard-Dayton) drove a stripped-down Stoddard Dayton touring car with a four-cylinder engine. He achieved an average speed of 57.4 mph on the new track, which was then covered in macadam, or crushed pieces of rock layered and bound by tar. Later, the speedway would be covered with 3.2 million paving bricks, which earned it its enduring nickname, "The Brickyard."
Born in Silesia in northwestern Austria in 1881, Schwitzer earned advanced degrees in electrical and mechanical engineering before immigrating to America around the turn of the century. His first job in the auto industry was with Pierce Arrow, as an engineer, working on one of the very first six-cylinder engines; he then began working for Canada Cycle and Motor Company, designing the Russell motor car. There, he met the prosperous automaker Howard Marmon (of the Marmon Motor Car Company), and would later earn lasting fame as the designer of the famous "Marmon Yellow Jacket" engine, which powered the vehicle of Ray Harroun, winner of the first Indianapolis 500 in 1911.
After leaving racing, Schwitzer remained active in the sport's development, joining the Indianapolis Motor Speedway Technical Committee in 1912 (he was its chairman from 1919 through 1945). He served in the United States Army Motor Transport Corps during World War I, then returned to Indianapolis to start his own business, which later became Schwitzer-Cummins. After developing improved automotive cooling systems and water pumps, Schwitzer began producing superchargers for gasoline and diesel engines, which helped both truck and boat engines produce increased horsepower. He then moved on to so-called "turbochargers," the first of which was introduced on a Cummins diesel-powered racing car which won the pole position for the 1952 Indianapolis 500.
In 1965, Schwitzer suffered a stroke while riding a horse on his farm. He was paralyzed, and for a time lost his ability to speak English, reverting to Hungarian. He died in 1967.
To honor Schwitzer's legacy, the Society of Professional Engineers now presents an individual or group involved with the Indianapolis 500 with the annual Louis Schwitzer Award for Engineering Excellence.
PICTURED: Louis Schwitzer (center) led both laps, and won by a 150-foot margin

August 19th 1927
Henry and Edsel Ford drove the fifteen millionth Model T off the assembly line at the Highland Park plant in Michigan, officially ending Model T production. Production in England ended on August 19; in Ireland on December 31. After revolutionizing the automobile market, sales of the Model T had started to falter due to its failure to keep up with the competition. Total world Model T production: 15,458,781.

August 19th 1958
The production of the elegant Packard line came to a halt. Studebaker-Packard attributed the decision to lagging luxury car sales, but many Packard fans were disgruntled by the decision, which came shortly after Packard's merge with Studebaker. Many wondered why Packard, with its reputation for high-quality cars and knowledgeable management would join with the debt-ridden Studebaker Company. Studebaker management assumed the company reins after the merger, not Packard.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on August 20, 2014, 08:59:03 pm
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On this day, August 20th 2004
83 tow trucks roll through the streets of Wenatchee, Washington, in an event arranged by the Washington Tow Truck Association (WTTA). "The Guinness Book of World Records" dubbed it the world's largest parade of tow trucks.
According to the International Towing and Recovery Hall of Fame and Museum in Chattanooga, Tennessee, the first tow truck was the invention of a Chattanooga native named Ernest Holmes, who helped his friend retrieve his Model T Ford after the car slid into a creek. Holmes had previously assembled a system consisting of three poles, a pulley and a chain, all connected to the frame of a 1913 Cadillac. Holmes soon patented his invention, and began manufacturing the equipment to sell to garages and other interested customers out of a small shop on Chattanooga's Market Street. The Holmes brand went on to earn an international reputation for quality in the towing industry.
The WTTA organized the August 2004 tow-truck parade as part of its annual Tow Show & Road-E-O event. Wenatchee's tow-truck world record came under assault from at least two quarters in 2008. In Hampton Beach, New Hampshire, that May 18, more than 250 tow trucks took part in a single-file parade organized by the New Hampshire Towing Association (NHTA). According to an article in The Hampton Union newspaper, all kinds of trucks--"Flatbeds, wheel-hook tow trucks, massive, 72-ton big-rig wreckers"--participated in the parade, which was followed by a driving skills competition and a tow-truck "beauty" contest. Rene Fortin, president of the NHTA, said that his organization had unofficially broken Wenatchee's record in 2005 with a parade of 235 trucks, but as the parade didn't fit Guinness' long list of requirements, it hadn't been accepted. World records aside, Fortin told The Hampton Union, the central goal of the parade was to revamp the image of the towing industry: "People don't often like towers, so this is our chance to show our good side."
On September 20, 2008, the Metropolitan New York Towing Association threw its own hat into the ring. Two hundred and ninety-two tow trucks, including flatbeds, wreckers and 50-ton rotators, left Shea Stadium in Queens (previously the home of the New York Mets, the baseball park has since been demolished to make way for the Mets' new Citi Field) and traveled along the Van Wyck Expressway and the Belt Parkway before ending up at an abandoned airport tarmac at Floyd Bennett Field in Brooklyn. There, the trucks parked in a formation that spelled out the words "New York."

August 20th 1946
World War II civilian truck restrictions were lifted in the U.S. Truck restrictions were only the beginning of special regulations during the war. Civilian auto production virtually ceased after the attack on Pearl Harbor as the U.S. automotive industry turned to war production, and gas rationing began in 1942.

August 20th 1991
The Mazda Motor Corporation of Japan announced that it planned to enter the luxury car market in 1994 with the Amati. Several other high-end brands from Japan had already been introduced: Lexus, Infiniti, and Acura. But the plan never took off.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on August 21, 2014, 09:20:30 pm
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August 21st 1909
Barney Oldfield broke five world records on this day, pushing his Benz to new speeds on the Indianapolis Motor Speedway. However, the record-breaking feat was marred by tragedy. Three other drivers died on the same track as 20,000 spectators watched in disbelief, and the three-day meet was ended early.
PICTURED: Barney Oldfield in his 1907 CHRISTIE. 20 Liter V4

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August 21st 1897
Ransom Eli Olds of Lansing, Michigan, founds Olds Motors Works--which will later become Oldsmobile--on August 21, 1897.
Born in Geneva, Ohio, in 1864, Olds went to work for his family's machine-repair and engine-building business in 1883. In 1896, Olds completed his first gasoline-powered vehicle, and the following year he founded Olds Motor Works with financial backing from Samuel L. Smith, who had made his fortune in lumber. After the company moved from Lansing to Detroit in 1900, a fire destroyed all of its cars except its small, one-cylinder curved-dash model. Light, reliable and relatively powerful, the curved-dash Oldsmobile (as Olds had renamed his company) became a commercial sensation after appearing at the New York Auto Show in 1901. Olds returned to Lansing in 1902 and began large-scale production of the car.
The curved-dash Oldsmobile was the first American car to be produced using the progressive assembly-line system, and the first to become a commercial success. Olds soon split with Smith and his board of directors over the future direction of the company, however: Olds wanted to continue the focus on smaller cars, while the others favored the production of larger, more expensive automobiles. In 1904, Olds left to found the Reo Motor Car Company (for his initials, R.E.O.). After his departure, Oldsmobile struggled, and in 1908 it was swallowed up by the new General Motors (GM) conglomerate.
By the 1920s, Oldsmobile's six- and eight-cylinder models sat solidly in the middle of GM's lineup--less expensive than Buick or Cadillac, but still comfortably ahead of Chevrolet. Oldsmobile survived the Great Depression years and earned a reputation as GM's "experimental" division, introducing the so-called "safety automatic transmission" in 1938, a precursor to 1940's "Hydra-Matic," which was the first successful fully automatic transmission. The 135-horsepower "Rocket" engine, introduced in the new 88 model in 1949, made Oldsmobile one of the world's top-performing cars. In 1961, with the release of the upscale compact F-85 (powered by a V-8 engine), Oldsmobile launched its Cutlass, which would become one of the industry's longest-running and most successful names. The Cutlass Supreme would reign as the best-selling American car for much of the 1970s and early 1980s.
In the 1980s, however, Oldsmobile sales declined, and in 1992 a story in The Washington Post--denied by both Oldsmobile and GM--claimed that GM had seriously considered killing the brand. In August 1997, Oldsmobile celebrated the 100th anniversary of its founding. Despite efforts to compete with foreign imports with smaller, more fuel-efficient models like the Aurora, Intrigue, Alero and Bravada, Oldsmobile continued to struggle, and in 2004 GM finally discontinued the brand. At the time of its demise, Oldsmobile was America's oldest continuously operating automaker.
PICTURED: the Liberty engine with distinctive 45 degree angles between the banks used in WW1 designed by Ransom Olds

August 21st 1903
America's first transcontinental auto race, stretching from New York City to San Francisco, was completed on this day. The race was finished by Tom Fetch and M.C. Karrup in two Model F Packards, travelling an average of 80 miles per day for 51 days. They arrived covered in mud and exhausted. Along the way, the two travelers and their motorcars generated quite a bit of interest as they drove through many rural areas where automobiles were a rare sight. In one instance, a couple of Nebraska farmers, suspicious of the vehicles, threatened Fetch and Karrup with shotguns.

August 21st 1947
Ettore Bugatti, the French car manufacturer, died on this day. Born on September 15, 1881, in Brescia, Italy, Bugatti specialized in racing and luxury automobiles, and his factory in Alsace turned out some of the most expensive cars ever produced. The best-known Bugatti car was Type 41, known as the "Golden Bugatti" or "La Royale." It was produced in the 1920s, meticulously constructed and inordinately expensive--only a few were ever built. After Bugatti's death, the firm failed to survive, at least in part because Ettore's eldest son and chosen successor died before Bugatti himself.

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Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on August 22, 2014, 09:31:31 pm
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On this day, August 22nd 1902
President Theodore Roosevelt became the first U.S. chief executive to ride in an automobile. His first drive took place in Hartford, Connecticut, adding yet another first to Roosevelt's presidential accomplishments. He was also the first president to entertain an African-American in the White House. With a reputation for aggressiveness, righteousness, and pride, Roosevelt was not the kind of man to fear uncharted waters; he also wrote almost 40 books, cleared the building of the Panama Canal, and won a Nobel Peace Prize for his contributions toward the resolution of the Russo-Japanese War.

August 22nd 1647
Denis Papin, inventor of the piston steam engine (Steam digester), was born in Blois, France. This British physicist, who also invented the pressure cooker, got the first seedlings of an idea when he noticed the enclosed steam in the cooker raising the lid. Why couldn't one use steam to drive a piston? Though he never actually constructed an engine, nor had a practical design, his sketches were improved on by others and led to the development of the steam engine.

August 22nd 1901
The Cadillac Company, named after eighteenth century French explorer Antoine de la Mothe Cadillac, founder of the city of Detroit, was established. Henry Leland, a former mechanic and precision machinist, founded the company that would come to be known as the maker of America's luxury car. The Cadillac reached its height of popularity during the 1950s. The Cadillac Debutante, which debuted at the Waldorf-Astoria, was based on the play The Solid Gold Cadillac. Cadillac sales decreased during the 1970s as the American car market experienced an influx of smaller imports, but luxury car sales, Cadillac included, have rebounded in recent years.

August 22nd 1962
President Charles De Gaulle of France survives one of several assassination attempts against him thanks to the superior performance of the presidential automobile: The sleek, aerodynamic Citroen DS 19, known as "La Deesse" (The Goddess).
When the Citroen DS made its sensational debut at the 1955 Paris Motor Show, its streamlined, understated form stood out among the tail-finned and chrome-covered cars popular in that era. A far cry from Citroen's famous 2CV (dubbed the "ugly duckling"), the DS had a 1.9-liter engine and power-assisted gearshift, clutch, steering and brake systems. Its crowning aspect, however, was a hydropneumatic suspension system that Citroen would become known for, which automatically adjusted the height of the car to keep it level and enable the driver to maintain control more easily. Citroen took 12,000 orders for the DS by the end of that first day, and it soon became known as the preferred mode of transportation among France's wealthy and most powerful citizens.
In August 1962, a group called the OAS (Secret Army Organization in English) plotted an assassination attempt on President De Gaulle, who they believed had betrayed France by giving up Algeria (in northern Africa) to Algerian nationalists. Near dusk on August 22, 1962, De Gaulle and his wife were riding from the Elysee Palace to Orly Airport. As his black Citroen DS sped along the Avenue de la Liberation in Paris at 70 miles per hour, 12 OAS gunmen opened fire on the car. A hail of 140 bullets, most of them coming from behind, killed two of the president's motorcycle bodyguards, shattered the car's rear window and punctured all four of its tires. Though the Citroen went into a front-wheel skid, De Gaulle's chauffeur was able to accelerate out of the skid and drive to safety, all thanks to the car's superior suspension system. De Gaulle and his wife kept their heads down and came out unharmed.
Frederick Forsyth dramatized the events of that August in his best-selling novel "The Day of the Jackal," later made into a film. In 1969, De Gaulle--knowing that he owed his life to that Citroen--attempted to prevent the outright sale of France's premier auto manufacturer (owned by the Michelin family of tire fame) to the Italian automaker Fiat by limiting the stake Fiat could buy to 15 percent. In 1975, to avert potential bankruptcy, the French government funded Citroen's sale to a group that included its French rival, Peugeot; the result was PSA Peugeot Citroen SA, formed in 1976.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on August 23, 2014, 08:38:49 pm
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On this day, August 23rd 1922
A 23-litre car named "Chitty Chitty Bang Bang" won the first Southsea Speed Carnival in 1922, driven by Count Louis Zborowski at 73.1mph. It is to be noted that the name "Chitty Chitty Bang Bang" reappeared much later in Ian Fleming's book about a magical car, and again in the 1968 movie of the same name starring Dick Van Dyke.

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August 23rd 1904
Harold D. Weed of Canastota, New York, is issued U.S. Patent No. 768,495 for his "Grip-Tread for Pneumatic Tires," a non-skid tire chain to be used on automobiles in order to increase traction on roads slick with mud, snow or ice.
At the time, Weed worked for the Marvin and Casler Company, a Canastota machine shop that made a range of products including automobile engines, name plate machines, automatic palm readers and motion picture equipment. He reportedly drew inspiration for his tire chain from the habit of some local motorists who wrapped rope around their tires to increase traction on muddy country roads. In his patent, Weed said that his invention aimed to "provide a flexible and collapsible grip or tread composed entirely of chains linked together and applied to the sides and periphery of the tire and held in place solely by the inflation of the tire, and which is reversible." The tire chain was assembled around a tire when it was partially deflated; after hooks on either end of the chain were fastened, the tire was then reinflated. Weed's tire chains were soon found to work just as well on snow and ice as on mud.
In 1908, in a promotional effort, representatives of the Weed Chain Tire Grip Company challenged the master magician Harry Houdini to escape from a prison created by their product. According to "The Secret Life of Houdini," by William Kalush and Larry Sloman, Houdini was enmeshed in a series of looped, locked tire chains, then chained into two steel-rimmed automobile tires. At one point during the escape, the chains had to be moved lower, as Houdini was turning blue from one of them binding his throat; he was then able to release himself. Houdini performed this famous stunt during a weeklong engagement at Hammerstein's Theatre in New York.
Harry Weed eventually sold his tire chain patents to the American Chain and Cable Company, the successor to the Weed Chain Tire Grip Co. After serving as a lieutenant colonel in the U.S. Army during World War I, he held patents for devices related to the tire chain and was honored by the Army Ordnance Committee for his work in designing bomb-release mechanisms and machine gun synchronizing devices for use in aircraft. He died in Palm Beach, Florida, in 1961, at the age of 89.

August 23rd 1913
Automobiles were legally allowed to enter Yosemite National Park, California, for the first time; marked huge change in national park system.

August 23rd 1967
Georges Berger, a Belgian racing driver was killed racing a Porsche 911 in the 1967 Marathon de la Route at Nürburgring.
He raced a Gordini Type 15/16 in his two World Championship Formula One Grands Prix.

August 23rd 1987
Didier Pironi, a racing driver from France who decided to take powerboat racing crashed his powerboat near the Isle of Wight. The accident also took the life of his two crew members, journalist Bernard Giroux and his old friend Jean-Claude Guenard.
During his career he competed in 72 Formula One World Championship Grands Prix, mostly driving for Tyrrell and Ferrari, and won the 24 Hours of Le Mans in 1978 driving a Renault Alpine A442B.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on August 23, 2014, 09:55:59 pm
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On this day, August 24th 1958
Maria Teresa de Filippis--the first woman ever to compete in Formula One racing--drives a Maserati in the Portuguese Grand Prix at Oporto on August 24, 1958.
In Formula One (also known as F1), the highest class of automobile racing sanctioned by the Federation Internationale de l'Automobile, drivers compete in single-seat, open-wheel vehicles capable of speeds above 230 mph and typically built by large automakers, or "constructors" in racing parlance. The F1 season consists of a series of events known as Grand Prix races; since 1950, the circuit has awarded a driver's world championship title, and since 1958, it has given one for the top constructor. From 1958 to 2009, only five women have ever competed in F1 racing; in 1980, the South African driver Desire Wilson became the only female driver to win a F1 race, at Britain's Brands Hatch circuit.
Born in Naples, Italy, in 1926, De Filippis got her start racing small Fiat 500s when she was around 22. As she told the British newspaper The Observer during a 2006 interview, she began her racing career after two of her brothers made a bet with each other that she couldn't drive fast. De Fillipis won her first race at Salerno-Cava dei Tirreni in a 500. After she finished second in the 1954 Italian sports car championship, the Italian automaker Maserati hired her as a works driver, testing their high-performance cars, and in 1958 she became the first woman to compete in a Formula One world championship race.
De Filippis raced in three Grand Prix events for Maserati that year, posting her best finish--10th place, two laps behind the winner--in her first race, the Belgian Grand Prix. At Oporto that August 24, she was forced to quit the race due to engine troubles. The British driver Stirling Moss, driving a Vanwall, won the event after his countryman Mike Hawthorn (the year's eventual world champion) spun out and stalled his Ferrari and was forced to push-start it in order to get back in the race.
De Filippis used the same Maserati that the great Argentine driver Juan Manuel Fangio drove when he won his then-record fifth world championship title in 1957. As De Filippis told The Observer, Fangio had warned her of her tendency to drive too fast, to take risks: "I wasn't frightened of speed, you see, and that's not always a good thing. He worried I might have an accident." As it turned out, De Filippis quit the sport the following year and started a family. In 1979, she joined the International Club of Former F1 Grand Prix Drivers; she became its vice president in 1997, and was also president of the Maserati Club.
August 24th 1832
Nicolas Carnot, a pioneer in the development of the internal combustion engine, died in Paris at age 36. The import of advanced British engines dismayed Carnot, for he saw how far behind French design had fallen. However, his own work would change that. He would go on to develop the Carnot cycle and Carnot efficiency, improving the efficiency of all types of engines.

August 24th 1945
The last Cadillac-built M-24 tank was produced on this day, ending the company's World War II effort. Civilian auto production virtually ceased after the attack on Pearl Harbor, as the U.S. automotive industry turned to war production. Between 1940 and 1945, automotive firms made almost $29 billion worth of military materials, including jeeps, trucks, machine guns, carbines, tanks, helmets, and aerial bombs.
August 24th 1967
The famous industrialist Henry J. Kaiser passed away in Honolulu, Hawaii, at the age of 85 on this day. Along with a construction company, a shipyard, an aircraft company, and an aluminum manufacturing plant, Kaiser owned an automobile company. Co-founded with Joseph W. Frazer in 1945, the company produced only a few models before production was ceased in 1954.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on August 25, 2014, 10:14:18 pm
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On this day, August 25, 1991
The German race car driver Michael Schumacher makes his Formula One (Europe's top racing circuit) debut in the Belgian Grand Prix at Spa Francorchamps.
Schumacher was born in Hurth-Hermulhein, West Germany, in 1969. His father managed a go-kart track in the town of Kerpen, and young Michael won the German junior karting championship in 1984 and 1985 and the German and European titles in 1987. He left school to work as a car mechanic and in 1988 began racing on the Formula Three circuit, which features less-powerful vehicles than those of Formula One. After winning the German Formula Three championship in 1990, Schumacher made the move to the big time: The next August, he made his Formula One debut at Spa, racing for Irish businessman Eddie Jordan's team.
Though Schumacher retired during the first lap of that first Grand Prix (as individual Formula One events are called) with clutch problems, he drew the attention of Benetton, another Formula One constructor owned by the same family as the international clothing store chain. Benetton soon snapped up the rising young star (he and Jordan had not signed a contract), beginning a successful five-year collaboration. Schumacher won the drivers' world championship, Formula One's top honor, for the team in 1994--a season marred by the death of the Brazilian driver Ayrton Senna in the San Marino Grand Prix and accusations of technical irregularities against the Benetton team--and 1995.
Schumacher signed with the venerable Ferrari team before the 1996 season. Things began well, despite an incident in 1997 when Schumacher tried in vain to ram the car of his top rival, Jacques Villeneuve, off the road during the final race, at Jerez in Spain; he was stripped of his second-place finish as punishment. After crashing his Ferrari during the 1999 British Grand Prix--he emerged with a broken leg, the only injury of his career to date--Schumacher won the 2000 drivers' world championship (Ferrari's first since 1979). He went on to win the title another four years in a row, racking up nine Grand Prix wins in 2001 and 11 in 2002. His sixth drivers' title in 2003 broke the previous record, held by the Argentine driver Juan Manual Fangio. In 2004, Schumacher won 13 of 18 total Grand Prix races held that year, easily securing his seventh championship.
At the age of 41, still at the top of his game, Schumacher retired from racing. During his final season in 2006, he won seven Grand Prix races, bringing his career total to 91, and making him by far the winningest driver in Formula One history (his closest rival, the French driver Alain Prost, had 51).
August 25th 1910
Walden W. Shaw and John D. Hertz formed the Walden W. Shaw Livery Company, which later became the Yellow Cab Company. In 1907, the Shaw Livery Company purchased a number of small taxicabs equipped with meters. The first yellow cab (the Model J) hit the streets in 1915, and its distinctive color became the company's trademark. The company was also the first to use automatic windshield wipers, ultrahigh frequency two-way radios, and passenger seat belts.

August 25th 1910
Horch Automobil-Werke GmbH forced to change company name due to legal dispute over Horch trademark. It was renamed Audi Automobilwerke GmbH. Audi in Latin translation to Horch.

August 25th 1921
Six-Cylinder Love, the first full-length play based on the motor car, opened at the Sam H. Harris Theatre in New York City. The play traces a family's purchase of an expensive car and their resulting woes. A silent film version of the play was produced in 1923, and a talkie starring Spencer Tracy followed in 1931.

August 25, 1954
The United States Postal Service began issuing a Classic Cars booklet of stamps. The special edition stamps, designed by Ken Dallison, featured five different designs: a 1928 Locomobile, a 1929 Pierce-Arrow, a 1931 Cord, a 1932 Packard, and a 1935 Dusenberg.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on August 26, 2014, 09:13:55 pm
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On this day, August 26th 1940
The LaSalle, manufactured by Cadillac, was discontinued after 14 years of production. Intended to boost profits during a lag in luxury car sales, the LaSalle was a moderately priced alternative to the opulence of the Cadillac. The company chose to market the car under a new name so as not to lessen the value of the Cadillac name.
PICTURED: 1934 LaSalle Convertible Coupe

August 26th 1957
The Ford Motor Company rolled out the first Edsel automobile. The car was named after Henry Ford's son, Edsel Bryant Ford. 110,847 Edsels were built before the company pulled the plug after three years due to lack of sales and negative press. Ironically, market research conducted just a few years earlier had pointed to the Edsel's success; consumers had said they wanted more horsepower, tailfins, three-tone paint jobs, and wraparound windshields. However, by 1957, fickle consumers had changed their minds, and despite a relatively low price, Edsel sales lagged. Today, due to the limited number produced, the Edsel has become a collector's item.

August 26th 1959
The British Motor Corporation (BMC) launches its newest car, the small, affordable–at a price tag of less than $800–Mark I Mini. The diminutive Mini went on to become one of the best-selling British cars in history.
The story behind the Mini began in August 1956, when President Gamal Abdel Nasser of Egypt nationalized the Suez Canal in response to the American and British decision to withdraw funding for a new dam's construction due to Egypt's Communist ties. The international crisis that followed led to fuel shortages and gasoline rationing across Europe. Sir Leonard Lord, head of BMC--formed by the merger of automakers Austin and Morris in 1952--wanted to produce a British alternative to the tiny, fuel-efficient German cars that were cornering the market after the Suez Crisis. He turned to Alec Issigonis, a Turkish immigrant who as chief engineer at Morris Motors had produced the Morris Minor, a teapot-shaped cult favorite that had nonetheless never seriously competed with the Volkswagen "Beetle" or Fiat's 500 or Cinquecento.
Mini development began in 1957 and took place under a veil of secrecy; the project was known only as ADO (for Austin Drawing Office) 15. After about two and a half years–a relatively short design period–the new car was ready for the approval of Lord, who immediately signed off on its production.
Launched on August 26, 1959, the new front-wheel-drive car was priced at around $800 and marketed under two names: Austin Seven and Morris Mini-Minor. The two vehicles were the same except for each had a different radiator grille, and by 1962 both were known simply as the Mini. Issigonis' design, including an engine mounted sideways to take up less space, had created a surprising amount of space for a small-bodied car: At only 10 feet long, the Mini could sit four adults, and had a trunk big enough for a reasonable amount of luggage. With a starting price of around $800, the Mini was truly a "people's car," but its popularity transcended class, and it was also used by affluent Londoners as a second car to easily maneuver in city traffic.
By the time production was halted in 2000, 5.3 million Minis had been produced. Around that same time, a panel of 130 international journalists voted the Mini "European Car of the Century." A high-performance version of the Mini engineered by the race car builder John Cooper had first been released in 1961; known as the Mini Cooper, it became one of the favorites of Mini enthusiasts worldwide. In 2003, the Mini Cooper was updated for a new generation of buyers by the German automaker BMW.

August 26th 1985
The Yugo, manufactured in Yugoslavia, was first introduced to the U.S. market. Originally marketed as a lower-cost alternative, the Yugo quickly became infamous for its poor quality of construction.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on August 27, 2014, 06:36:21 pm
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On this day, August 27th 1938
Captain George E. T. Eyston breaks his own automobile land speed record at the Bonneville Salt Flats in Utah, raising the mark to 345.49 mph.
Located approximately 80 miles west of Salt Lake City, Utah, the Bonneville Salt Flats were formed by the evaporation of a huge Ice Age-era lake. Near the end of the 19th century, the flats hosted a bicycle competition arranged as a publicity stunt by the publishing magnate William Randolph Hearst. Then, in 1914, the daredevil racer Teddy Tezlaff drove his Blitzen Benz vehicle at 141.73 mph to set an unofficial land speed record at the flats. Bonneville truly took off as a racing destination thanks to the efforts of Utah native Ab Jenkins, who set several endurance speed records there beginning in 1925, driving a Studebaker dubbed the Mormon Meteor. In 1935, the British racing legend Sir Malcolm Campbell set a world land speed record of 301.126 mph in his famous Bluebird, and since then the flats became the standard course for land speed record attempts.
Drivers who attempted to set the world land speed record, or the fastest speed traveled on land in a wheeled vehicle, had to complete two mile-long runs in opposite directions, within a space of sixty minutes. George Eyston, an engineer and retired British Army captain, had set the previous record of 311.42 mph at Bonneville in November 1936. On his August 27 run, he hit 347.49 mph on the outbound trip and 343.51 on the return; his new record, 345.49, was the average of the two. As Eyston told the press at the time, he did not even bring his vehicle, the Thunderbolt, to full throttle to achieve the record-setting speed: "I had a very comfortable ride and not once did I feel there was any danger….I wanted to be certain I set a new record, but I also wanted to be sure that the car and I got through in good shape."
By September 1938, Eyston had raised the land speed record to 357.5 mph. In a lecture he delivered that month, Eyston described his built-for-speed Thunderbolt as having two 2,000-horsepower Rolls Royce motors geared together; the vehicle measured 35 feet long and weighed nearly 7 tons. One of Eyston's rivals, John Cobb, set a new world land speed record of 394.194 mph in 1947 at Bonneville in a car with a piston engine; thereafter, most record holders have driven jet- or rocket-powered vehicles. In October 1997, a twin turbofan jet-powered car dubbed ThrustSSC achieved 763.035 mph (the first supersonic world land speed record) over one mile at Nevada's Black Rock Desert.

August 27th 1904
Newport, Rhode Island, imposed the first jail sentence for a speeding violation on this day. This was a harsh sentence in 1904 because traffic laws were still relatively new--the first traffic code wasn't implemented until 1903, when New York introduced a two-page book of regulations. Early traffic regulations varied drastically from state to state, some having no speed limits at all.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on August 28, 2014, 10:09:12 pm
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On this day, August 28th 1877
Charles Stewart Rolls, the pioneering British motorist, aviator and co-founder (with Henry Royce) of the Rolls-Royce Ltd. luxury automobile company, is born in London's upscale Mayfair district.
The third son of Lord and Lady Llangattock, who had their ancestral seat in Monmouth, Wales, Rolls was a card-carrying member of the British aristocracy. He was educated at Eton and at Cambridge University's Trinity College, where he first developed his love for the new sport of motoring. His first vehicle, a Peugeot with 3.75 horsepower, was the first car to be seen at Cambridge, and enabled him to drive home to Monmouth in an astonishingly quick time of two days. In 1900, Rolls drove a 12-horsepower Panhard car in the famous British auto race the Thousand Mile Trial; he also took part in a number of other early long-distance European races. Considered the best driver in Wales, he was reportedly responsible for changing the national speed limit at the time from 4 to 12 miles per hour.
In 1902, Rolls went into the business of selling cars. Two years later, at the Midland Hotel in Manchester, England, he met with Frederick Henry Royce, an electrical engineer of modest background who had his own engineering business, Royce Ltd., and had built several experimental cars of his own design. After that historic meeting, Rolls and Royce merged their firms in 1906 to form Rolls-Royce Ltd. The Rolls-Royce Silver Ghost, produced that year, became one of the world's most admired cars. While Royce was responsible for every aspect of car design, Rolls provided the bulk of the financing, as well as the social connections that helped make sales.
In addition to automobiles, Rolls became passionate about aviation, including hot air balloons and early airplanes. In February 1910, Rolls wrote to the inventor Wilbur Wright to complain about the Wright plane he had bought in Europe. In the letter, Rolls told Wright he had resigned his former position at Rolls Royce and taken another, which "does not require any regular attendance at the office," in order "to devote myself to flight." That June, Rolls became the first aviator to fly nonstop across the English Channel and back. Tragically, on July 12, 1910, Rolls was killed when the tail of his plane snapped off in mid-air during a flying exhibition in Bournemouth, England. He was 32 years old.
PICTURED: Charles with the 1898 PANHARD 8hp

August 28th 1921
Construction of the Paragon Motor Company factory began in Cumberland, Maryland. The company's production was limited to only four prototypes, and the factory was never completed.

August 28th 1922
The famous Autodromo, an automobile-racing track, was opened in Monza, Italy. Set in a busy industrial center along the Lambro River, this track, with its elliptical shape and concrete banked curves, is said to be the fastest in the world.

August 28th 1937
The Toyota Motor Company, Ltd., originally a division of the Toyota Automatic Loom Works, became a corporation. The company underwent huge expansion in the 1960s and 1970s, exporting its smaller, more fuel-efficient cars to countless foreign markets. During this period, Toyota also acquired Hino Motors, Ltd., Nippondenso Company Ltd., and Daihitsu Motor Company, Ltd. Toyota has been Japan's largest automobile manufacturer for several decades and is headquartered in Toyota City, Japan.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on August 29, 2014, 08:52:00 pm
(http://i216.photobucket.com/albums/cc312/ctlr600/Gottlieb_Daimler_motorcycle_580x.jpg) (http://s216.photobucket.com/user/ctlr600/media/Gottlieb_Daimler_motorcycle_580x.jpg.html)

On this day, August 29th 1885
The world's first motorcycle, made by Gottlieb Daimler, was patented. The two-wheeled vehicle gained immense popularity after 1910, when it was used heavily by all branches of the armed forces during World War I. The motorcycle's popularity lagged during the Great Depression, but came back with a vengeance after World War II and remains popular today. Often associated with a rebellious image, the vehicle is often used for high-speed touring and sport competitions.
PICTURED: The first motorcycle, made by Gottlieb Daimler, at the Deutsches Zweirad-und NSU-Museum in Neckarsulm, Germany.

August 29th 1876
Charles F. Kettering, inventor of the electric starter, was born on this day in Detroit. Kettering, along with Edward A. Deeds, founded Delco (Dayton Engineering Laboratories Company). He and his company invented countless improvements for the automobile, including lighting and ignition systems, lacquer finishes, antilock fuels, and leaded gasoline. The Cadillac was the first car to use the electric starter, and Delco would later become a subsidiary of General Motors. Incidentally, Kettering also invented the first electric cash register before he started working on cars.

August 29th 1898
The Goodyear Tire and Rubber Co. was incorporated in Ohio. Originally founded as a rubber company by the Seiberling brothers, the company began manufacturing tires shortly after its establishment. Today, Goodyear makes passenger and industrial tires, in addition to producing rubber, chemical, and plastic products. The company also is well-known for its marketing skill--its Goodyear blimp is one of the most recognizable corporate symbols in America.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on August 30, 2014, 10:10:28 pm
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August 30th 1945
A pale green Super Six coupe rolled off the Hudson Company's assembly line, the first post-World War II car to be produced by the auto manufacturer. Like all other U.S. auto manufacturers, Hudson had halted production of civilian cars in order to produce armaments during the war. The Super Six boasted the first modern, high-compression L-head motor, though it garnered its name from the original Hudson-manufactured engine produced in 1916. The name stayed, though the engines became more sophisticated

August 30th 1898
Henry Ford, of Detroit, Michigan, received a patent for a "Carbureter" (fuel injector) especially designed for use in connection with gas or vapor engines.

August 30th 1916
Studebaker announced the release of the Heaslet Special, a semi-custom touring car. The car was named in honor of Studebaker's vice president of engineering, James G. Heaslet.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on August 31, 2014, 08:50:58 am
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On this day, August 31st 1899
A Stanley Steamer, driven by F.O. Stanley, became the first car to reach the summit of Mount Washington, New Hampshire. Stanley was one of the Stanley twins, founders of the Stanley Motor Company, which specialized in steam-driven automobiles. The steamers not only climbed mountains, but often beat larger, gasoline-powered cars in races. In 1906, a Stanley Steamer would break the world record for the fastest mile when it reached 127mph.
PICTURED: A Stanley Steamer racer 1907

August 31st 1903
Packard automobile completed a 52-day journey from San Francisco to New York, became first car to cross U.S. under its own power.

August 31st 1951
James E. Lynch, the stunt driver, died in Texarkana, Arkansas, at age 50. He was founder of the "Jimmie Lynch Daredevils" stunt drivers show.

August 31st 1955
William G. Cobb of the General Motors Corp. (GM) demonstrates his 15-inch-long "Sunmobile," the world's first solar-powered automobile, at the General Motors Powerama auto show held in Chicago, Illinois.
Cobb's Sunmobile introduced, however briefly, the field of photovoltaics--the process by which the sun's rays are converted into electricity when exposed to certain surfaces--into the gasoline-drenched automotive industry. When sunlight hit 12 photoelectric cells made of selenium (a nonmetal substance with conducting properties) built into the Sunmobile, an electric current was produced that in turn powered a tiny motor. The motor turned the vehicle's driveshaft, which was connected to its rear axle by a pulley. Visitors to the month-long, $7 million Powerama marveled at some 250 free exhibits spread over 1 million square feet of space on the shores of Lake Michigan. In addition to Cobb's futuristic mini-automobile, Powerama visitors were treated to an impressive display of GM's diesel-fueled empire, from oil wells and cotton gins to submarines and other military equipment.
Today, more than a half-century after Cobb debuted the Sunmobile, a mass-produced solar car has yet to hit the market anywhere in the world. Solar-car competitions are held worldwide, however, in which design teams pit their sun-powered creations (also known as photovoltaic or PV cars) against each other in road races such as the 2008 North American Solar Challenge, a 2,400-mile drive from Dallas, Texas, to Calgary, Alberta, Canada.
In early 2009, The Nikkei, a Japanese business daily, reported that Toyota Motor Corp. was secretly developing a vehicle that would be powered totally by solar energy. Hurt by a growing global financial crisis and a surge in the Japanese yen relative to other currencies, Toyota had announced in late 2008 that it was expecting its first operating loss in 70 years. Despite hard economic times, Toyota (which in 1997 launched the Prius, the world's first mass-produced hybrid vehicle) has no plans to relinquish its reputation as an automotive industry leader in green technology. The company uses solar panels to produce some of its own electricity at its Tsutsumi plant in central Japan, and in mid-2008 announced that it would install solar panels on the roof of the next generation of its groundbreaking electric-gasoline hybrid Prius cars. The panels would supply part of the 2 to 5 kilowatts needed to power the car's air conditioning system.
According to The Nikkei, Toyota's planned solar car is not expected to hit the market for years. The electric vehicle will get some of its power from solar cells on the vehicle, and will be recharged with electricity generated from solar panels on the roofs of car owners' homes.

August 31st 2003
Harley-Davidson 100th Anniversary Party held in Milwaukee's Veterans Park.
PICTURED: The original Harley Davidson workshop

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Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on September 02, 2014, 06:54:25 pm
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On this day, September 1st 1950
A new chapter in Porsche history began with the company's return to Zuffenhausen, Germany, and the completion of the first Porsche. The first car to bear the Porsche name had actually been built two years earlier by Ferry Porsche and his design team, but this Porsche was the first car to boast a Porsche-made engine. Porsche became an independent automobile manufacturer during this year and soon sealed its success with a stunning victory at Le Mans in 1951.
PICTURED: Glaser coachworks 1950 Porsche Cabriolet

September 1st 1989
The federal government passed new car safety legislation, requiring all newly manufactured cars to install an air bag on the driver's side. While air bags have proven to be life-saving devices in most cases, concern over the safety of the air bags themselves arose during the 1990s. Several instances in which small children were seriously injured or killed by an air bag caused a public clamor for further investigation of the devices, which can explode out of the dashboard at up to 200mph. Air bags are still installed in all newly manufactured models.

September 1st 1989
The first Lexus was sold, launching Toyota's new luxury division. However, Lexus' story had begun six years earlier in a top secret meeting of Toyota's elite. Surrounded by the company's top-level management, Chairman Eiji Toyota proposed the company's next challenge - a luxury car that could compete with the world's best. The project was given the code name "F1," with F for "flagship," and the numeral 1 recalling the high performance of Formula 1 race cars. Designed by chief engineers Shoiji Jimbo and Ichiro Suzuki, the F1 prototype was completed just two years later. The top secret project was finally unveiled after extensive testing in 1987, and officially launched in 1989.

Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on September 02, 2014, 06:55:25 pm
(http://i645.photobucket.com/albums/uu176/MustangMayhem/web/1965-four-door-mustang_zpsba8533b1.jpg) (http://s645.photobucket.com/user/MustangMayhem/media/web/1965-four-door-mustang_zpsba8533b1.jpg.html)

On this day, September 2nd 1959
At a news conference broadcast to viewers in 21 cities on closed-circuit television, Henry Ford II introduces his company’s newest car--the 90-horsepower, 30 miles-per-gallon Falcon. The Falcon, dubbed “the small car with the big car feel,” was an overnight success. It went on sale that October 8 and by October 9, dealers had snapped up every one of the 97,000 cars in the first production run.
In 1959, each one of Detroit’s Big Three automakers began to sell a smaller, zippier, lower-priced car: Ford had the Falcon, while General Motors had the Corvair and Chevrolet had the Valiant. After years of building huge, gas-guzzling, lavishly be-finned cars, American companies entered the small-car market because European carmakers like Volkswagen, Fiat, and Renault were selling their little cars to American buyers by the thousands. (Foreign-car sales in the United States had jumped 1,060 percent since 1954 and accounted for about 10 percent of the nation’s new-car sales.) Executives in Detroit hoped that cars like the Falcon would “drive the imports back to their shores.”
Mostly, people liked these smaller cars because they were inexpensive. The Falcon cost about $1,900 (about $14,029 in today’s dollars)--still much more expensive than even the priciest of the European imports (the Triumph and the Simca sold for about $1,600, while a Fiat, the cheapest car you could buy, cost about $1,000), but more affordable than any other American car. In addition, more fuel-efficient cars like the Falcon also saved their drivers money on gas.
Many people believed that the introduction of American compact cars would permanently transform the automobile industry. The “desire of American car buyers for sensible automobiles,” one industry executive told a reporter, would soon make big, inefficient cars obsolete. Unfortunately, though the Falcon was an immediate sensation--Ford sold more than a million of them in the car’s first two years on the market, and its design went on to inspire the iconic Ford Mustang which at the time was also going to be offered in a 4 door--this did not prove to be the case for the falcon. Today, small cars account for less than 20 percent of new-car sales.
PICTURED: The 1965 Ford Mustang 4 door concept (1962)

September 2nd 1969
Willy Mairesse, race-car driver for the Ferrari team, died in Ostend, Belgium, from an overdose of sleeping pills. His career had been a continuing disappointment, with zero wins from 12 grand prix starts and only seven points. He left the Ferrari team in 1963 and was only 40 years old at the time of his death.

September 2nd 1992
The Southern California Gas Company purchased the first motor vehicles powered by natural gas. Spurred on by a new California law promoting the commercialization of alternative fuel vehicles, the company put 50 of the new vehicles into service and began promoting the natural gas vehicles (NGVs) as a viable option for the future. Compressed natural gas costs 25-30 percent less than gasoline and has an octane rating of 130 - meaning it burns much cleaner than even premium unleaded gasoline. The NGVs can also go 10,000 miles between oil changes, 40,000 miles between tune-ups, and 75,000 miles between spark plugs. However, the most compelling argument for natural gas is its environmental advantages. NGVs reduce NOX emissions and reactive hydrocarbons by as much as 95 percent. The new vehicles also reduce carbon monoxide by 85 percent and carcinogenic particulate emissions by 99 percent.

TODAYS TRIVIA:
The first man to survive going over Niagara Falls later died from slipping on an orange peel.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on September 03, 2014, 08:49:48 pm
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On this day, 3 rd Sept 1967
Chaos reigned on the day that Sweden switched from driving on the left side of the road to driving on the right side of the road, also known as Dagen H, caused confusion in the streets all over the country.
PICTURED: photo appears to have been taken on Kungsgatan in Stockholm

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3rd Sept 1951.
Southern 500 starting field
Looking toward turn four. The photo shows from the third row to the end of the starting field. Notice the huge starting field! A starting field of 82! The pole sitter, Frank Mundy in a 1951 Studebaker dropped out after 12 laps due to oil pressure and finished last. The second place starter Herb Thomas in a Hudson Hornet won, quite a difference! The white car shown near the right in the photo is Frank Gise, driving the #38 B. R. Waller owned 1951 Studebaker V8 Commander Starlight coupe [Redmond Motors (Studebaker) Knoxville, TN] started 9th and finished 65th, reason out: "wheel". The cars were lined up in rows of three.

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September 3rd 1875
Ferdinand Porsche, engineer and patriarch of Porsche cars, was born on this day in Maffersdorf, Austria. He began his career at the Daimler Company, rising to general director, but he eventually left in 1931 to design his own sports and racing cars. Perhaps his most famous project was Hitler's "car for the people," the Volkswagen. Together with his son, Porsche was responsible for the initial Volkswagen plans, but his involvement with Hitler was to cost him dearly. He was arrested by the French after World War II and held for several years before finally being released.

September 3rd 1900
The first car ever made in Flint, Michigan makes its debut in the town’s Labor Day parade. Designed and built by a county judge and weekend tinkerer named Charles H. Wisner, the car was one of the only cars built in Flint that did not end up being produced by General Motors. In the end, only three of the Wisner machines were ever built.
Wisner’s car, nicknamed the “Buzz-Wagon,” was a somewhat ridiculous contraption: it was “very noisy,” according to The Flint Journal; its only door was in the rear; and it had no brakes. In order to stop, Wisner had to collide with something sturdy, usually the side wall of his machine shop. At the Labor Day parade, however, he didn’t have a problem with the brakes; instead, in front of 10,000 spectators, the car stalled and had to be pushed off the parade route.
Wisner’s lemon notwithstanding, Flint soon became the cradle of the American auto industry. GM was formed there in 1908, and the city quickly became known for all the Chevrolets and Buicks--not to mention the engine parts and electronics--produced and assembled there. The sit-down strikes at Flint’s GM plants in 1936 and 1937 won union recognition for autoworkers along with a 30-hour workweek and a 6-hour day, overtime pay, seniority rights, and “a minimum rate of pay commensurate with an American standard of living.” These victories guaranteed a middle-class existence for generations of autoworkers. In fact, for a long time, Flint had the highest average per-household income of any city in the United States.
But GM has been declining painfully since the 1970s, and Flint has suffered along with it. The 1988 film Roger & Me, which told the story of 30,000 layoffs at one of Flint’s GM plants, made the city’s woes famous. In July 1999, GM closed its Buick City complex, the last assembly plant in the city. And in the beginning of 2009, as a financial crisis enveloped the auto industry and the nation as a whole, Michigan’s Genesee County (which includes Flint) had an unemployment rate of nearly 15 percent--higher than it had been in 18 years and almost twice the national average.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on September 04, 2014, 09:37:47 pm
(http://i998.photobucket.com/albums/af102/photax/Edsel.jpg) (http://s998.photobucket.com/user/photax/media/Edsel.jpg.html)

On this day, September 4th 1957
--“E-Day,” according to its advertising campaign--the Ford Motor Company unveils the Edsel, the first new automobile brand produced by one of the Big Three car companies since 1938. (Although many people call it the “Ford Edsel,” in fact Edsel was a division all its own, like Lincoln or Mercury.) Thirteen hundred independent Edsel dealers offered four models for sale: the smaller Pacer and Ranger and the larger Citation and Corsair.
To many people, the Edsel serves as a symbol of corporate hubris at its worst: it was an over-hyped, over-sized, over-designed monstrosity. Other people believe the car was simply a victim of bad timing. When Ford executives began planning for the company’s new brand, the economy was booming and people were snapping up enormous gas-guzzlers as fast as automakers could build them. By the time the Edsel hit showrooms, however, the economic outlook was bad and getting worse. People didn’t want big, glitzy fin cars anymore; they wanted small, efficient ones instead. The Edsel was just ostentatious and expensive enough to give buyers pause.
At the same time, there is probably no car in the world that could have lived up to the Edsel’s hype. For months, the company had been running ads that simply pictured the car's hood ornament and the line “The Edsel Is Coming.” Everything else about the car was top-secret: If dealers failed to keep their Edsels hidden, they’d lose their franchise. For the great E-Day unveiling, promotions and prizes--like a giveaway of 1,000 ponies--lured shoppers to showrooms.
When they got there, they found a car that had a distinctive look indeed--but not necessarily in a good way. Thanks to the big impact ring or “horse collar” in the middle of its front grille, it looked (one reporter said) like “a Pontiac pushing a toilet seat.” (Another called it “an Oldsmobile sucking a lemon.”) And its problems were more than cosmetic. Drivers changed gears by pushing buttons on the steering wheel, a system that was not easy to figure out. In addition, at highway speeds that famous hood ornament had a tendency to fly off and into the windshield.
In its first year, Edsel sold just 64,000 cars and lost $250 million ($2.5 billion today). After the 1960 model year, the company folded.

September 4th 1997
The very last Ford Thunderbird rolled off the assembly line in Lorain, Ohio, leaving many of the car's fans disappointed. One Ford dealer even held a wake for the beloved Thunderbird, complete with flowers and a RIP plaque. Originally conceived as Ford's answer to the Corvette, the Thunderbird has enjoyed an illustrious place among American cars. It was promoted as a "personal" car, rather than a sports car, so it never had to compete against the imports that dominated the sports car market. The name of the enormously successful car was eventually shortened to "T-Bird".

September 4th 1891
Fritz Todt, the head designer of the German autobahn, was born in Pforzheim, Germany. Todt's creation was the first true system of national superhighways, and was held up by Germany as a proud symbol of the modernity of their engineering. However, the autobahn system emerged from World War II as a battered version of its earlier self. The newly formed nations of East and West Germany set about repairing the old system, though at different rates. Booming increases in motor traffic propelled extensions and enhancements in West Germany, while improvements were more gradual in East Germany. Over the years, the autobahn regained its status as a model expressway and became famous for its nonexistent speed limit.

September 4th 1922
William Lyons (21) and William Walmsley (9) launched Swallow Sidecar Company in Blackpool, UK, to produce sidecars for motorcycles; financed with bank overdraft of £1000 guaranteed by their respective fathers.

TODAYS TRIVIA:
All blue eyed people can be traced back to one person who lived near the Black Sea about 10,000 years ago.
Mark Wahlberg had a cocaine addiction by age 13, and was convicted of attempted murder at the age of 16.
About 159,635 people will die on the same day as you.
In North Korea, it's not 2014. The year is 103, because North Korea marks years from the birth of Kim Il-sung, not Jesus.
Since the earth's rotation is slowing down, today is about 0.00000002 seconds longer than yesterday.
The sentence "Are you as bored as I am?" can be said backwards and still make sense.
There is an evil counterpart to Santa named Krampus. Krampus physically beats bad children before sacking them away to Hell.
Darrell, from the reality show "Storage Wars" once found a plastic-wrapped human corpse in a storage locker.
25,000,000 of your cells died while you were reading this status.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on September 05, 2014, 09:18:04 pm
(http://i1293.photobucket.com/albums/b582/laherrera/FinalAssemblyof1932FordModelAV8AutomobilesFordRougePlantDearbornMichigan_zps0ab50876.jpg~original) (http://s1293.photobucket.com/user/laherrera/media/FinalAssemblyof1932FordModelAV8AutomobilesFordRougePlantDearbornMichigan_zps0ab50876.jpg.html)

On this day, September 5th 1930
Cross-country trips were no longer considered big news in 1930, but Charles Creighton and Jam Hargises ' unique journey managed to make headlines. The two men from Maplewood, New Jersey, arrived back in New York City, having completed a 42-day round trip to Los Angeles - driving their 1929 Ford Model A the entire 7,180 miles in reverse gear.
PICTURED: Final Assembly of a Ford Model A V8, Ford Rouge Plant, Dearborn, Michigan

TODAYS TRIVIA
...75% of cars that Rolls Royce has ever produced are still on the road today.
...Arnold Schwarzenegger did not accept his governor's salary of $175,000 per year because of his already substantial wealth from acting.
...Boris Yeltsin, when he was president of Russia, was found by White House secret service drunk and in his underwear on Pennsylvania Ave, trying to hail a cab to get some pizza.
...In 1962, Bruce Lee landed 15 punches and a kick that knocked out his opponent in a fight which lasted 11 seconds.
...There's an area of the universe a billion light years away that has virtually nothing in it, not even dark matter.
...The colors blue, yellow, red, green and black were chosen for the Olympic rings because at least one of them appears on every nation's flag.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on September 07, 2014, 01:16:18 am
(http://i1011.photobucket.com/albums/af233/carl44s/motorsports%201920-1942/189620narragansett20park20rhode20island20first20auto20race20on20closed20circuit2.jpg) (http://s1011.photobucket.com/user/carl44s/media/motorsports%201920-1942/189620narragansett20park20rhode20island20first20auto20race20on20closed20circuit2.jpg.html)

On this day, September 6th 1900
Andrew L. Riker set a new speed record, driving an electric car. His time of 10 minutes, 20 seconds established a new low for the five-mile track in Newport, Rhode Island, proving that the electric car could compete with its noisier petroleum-fueled cousins. In fact, the electric car remained competitive until 1920, often preferred for its low maintenance cost and quiet engine. However, developments in gasoline engine technology, along with the advent of cheaper, mass-produced non-electrics like the Model T, proved to be the death knell of the electric car. However, rising fuel costs in the late 1960s and 1970s renewed interest in the electric car, and several working models have recently been sold in small numbers.
PICTURED: The first US oval track events took place in early September 1896 at Narragansett Park Rhode Island They consisted of three 5 mile sprint events The first two were won by Andrew Lawrence Riker (1862-1930) in an electric car of his own design and the third race was won by an electric also dubbed the Electrobat

September 6th 1915
The first tank prototype was completed and given its first test drive, developed by William Foster & Company for the British army. Several European nations had been working on the development of a shielded, tracked vehicle that could cross the uneven terrain of World War I trenches, but Great Britain was the first to succeed. Lightly armed with machine guns, the tanks made their first authoritative appearance at the Battle of Cambrai in 1917, when 474 British tanks managed to break through the German lines. The Allies began using the vehicles in increasing numbers throughout the rest of the war. After World War I, European nations on all sides continued to build tanks at a frantic pace, arming them with even heavier artillery and plating. This competitive stockpiling came to a lethal head on the battlefields of World War II.

September 6th 1949
By the end of World War II, Germany's Volkswagen factory was in shambles, along with much of Europe. The machines stood silent, the assembly lines lay still, and rubble littered the hallways. It was in this state that the British occupation forces took control of the Volkswagen factory and the town of Wolfsburg. The next four years were spent in an attempt to return to normal life, and the wheels of industry eventually began to turn in the old Volkswagen factory. With Heinrich Nordhoff as managing director and the German economy rejuvenated by currency reform, Volkswagen had become the largest car producer in Europe by 1949. On this day, the Allied military authorities relinquished control of the former Nazi regime's assets, including the Volkswagen factory - marking the final transition back to everyday life.

September 6th 1995
Chrysler Corporation received permission from Vietnamese government to assemble vehicles in Vietnam, allowed Chrysler to construct production facility in Dong Nai Province, Southern Vietnam, with aim of manufacturing 500 to 1,000 Dodge Dakota pick-up trucks for Vietnamese market annually.

TODAYS TRIVIA:
...If you are 6 feet 2 inches tall, then you are taller than 94% of the world.
...Today is National Be Late for Something Day!
...There were no cats on the Titanic. Cats were often brought on ships as a form of good luck.
...Women in ancient Rome wore the sweat of Gladiators to improve their beauty and complexion.
...PG-13 movies are allowed one non-sexual use of the word "f@#k" per script.
...George W. Bush was the head cheerleader at Phillips Academy Boarding school during his senior year of high school.
...The word "mortgage" comes from a French word that means "pledge to the death."
...Brad Pitt tore his Achilles tendon while filming a fight scene for Troy -- He played Achilles in the movie.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on September 07, 2014, 10:19:19 pm
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September 7th 1899
Over a dozen motorcars, decorated with hydrangeas, streamers, lights, and Japanese lanterns, lined up to take part in America's first automobile parade. A throng of spectators showed up in Newport, Rhode Island, to witness the event, arriving in cabs, private carriages, bicycles, and even by foot to witness the spectacle, attracted by the novelty and rumors surrounding the event. The nature of the motorcar decorations had been shrouded in mystery prior to the parade, for each participant had wished to surprise and outdo the others. Since then, car parades and car shows have been a part of every countries culture

September 7th 1993
The Chrysler Corporation introduced its new Neon at the Frankfurt Auto Show on this day. The sporty compact indicated a new direction for Chrysler and quickly gained fame through its multi-million dollar "Hi" campaign. The slick ads emphasized friendliness - friendly handling, comfortable seats, reliable safety features - punctuated with a simple "Hi. I'm Neon."

TODAYS TRIVIA:
...If a Google employee passes away, their spouse gets half of their pay for 10 years.
...Mary Gibbs (voice of Boo in Monsters Inc.) was too young to sit to record her lines, so they followed her around with a mic.
...Jackie Chan is actually a pop star in Asia, having released 20 studio albums - He often sings the theme songs of his own movies.
...Nintendo owned a chain of sex hotels in the 1950’s and 1960’s.
...Internet weighs about as much as a strawberry. The weight of all the electrons in motion that make up the internet at any given moment is equivalent to 50 grams.
...In 1939, The New York Times predicted that television would fail because people wouldn't have time to stop and stare at a screen.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on September 08, 2014, 09:12:44 am
(http://i195.photobucket.com/albums/z30/melbernero/Continental%20Trailways/ContinentalTrailwaysChicago8-1964JohnLeBeaucollection.jpg) (http://s195.photobucket.com/user/melbernero/media/Continental%20Trailways/ContinentalTrailwaysChicago8-1964JohnLeBeaucollection.jpg.html)

On this day, September 8, 1953
Continental Trailways offered the first transcontinental express bus service in the U.S. The 3,154-mile ride from New York City to San Francisco lasted 88 hours and 50 minutes, of which only 77 hours was riding time. The cost was $56.70. Today Greyhound charges $183 for the same trip.

September 8, 1960
Aguri Suzuki, Japanese racing phenomenon, was born on this day. He is one of the most successful Japanese race car drivers in history, a favorite of fans around the world. He began his winning career in the Japanese Kart Championship, but eventually moved on to Formula 1 racing--achieving 1 podium, and scoring a total of 8 championship points. He is married with one son and enjoys ultra-light flying, golf, and water sports.

September 8, 1986
British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher and Yutaka Kume, the president of the Nissan Motor Company, officially open Nissan’s first European manufacturing plant in Sunderland, Britain. Sunderland is situated in the northeastern part of England, a region that was hit especially hard by the deindustrialization and economic strain of the 1970s and 80s. Many of its coal pits, shipyards, steel mills, and chemical factories had closed or were closing, and the Japanese company’s arrival gave many of the town’s residents hope for the future. Twenty-five thousand people applied for the first 450 jobs advertised at the plant.
Nissan brought a new kind of shop-floor culture to a place where labor-management relationships typically ranged from frosty to belligerent. The Sunderland factory was a different, more cooperative kind of workplace: Instead of enmity and strikes, it had kaizen, a Japanese philosophy of continual improvement that applied to workers and their bosses alike. Meanwhile, everyone wore the same blue coveralls and ate in the same lunchroom, and plant foreman received the same pay as design and manufacturing engineers. Likely as a result of this egalitarianism, at least in part, the factory soon became the most efficient and productive auto plant in Europe, and it exported 75 percent of the cars it made. (Some were even sent back to Japan.) It was also the largest car factory in England, building one of every five British-made cars.
With all this good will and productivity, it seemed like the plant would be successful forever. In June 2008, Sunderland’s 5 millionth Nissan rolled off the assembly line, and at the beginning of 2008 the factory was hiring hundreds more workers to keep up with increased demand for Nissan’s new hatchback, the Qashqai. Just one year later, however, the economic downturn had resulted in almost 1,500 layoffs at the Sunderland plant--25 percent of its workforce. This was a disaster for those workers, of course, but also for Sunderland itself: Five thousand people had worked at the plant, but 10,000 more--parts suppliers, service and support workers, supermarket operators--depended directly on Nissan for their livelihood.
At the same time it announced the Sunderland job cuts, Nissan unveiled a new product: a deluxe sports car that will, when it goes on sale, cost 107,000 pounds. It seems likely enough that no one in Sunderland will be buying.

TODAYS TRIVIA:
...During the filming of Casino Royale, three Aston Martin DBS cars valued at $300,000 each were destroyed for the car roll sequence.
...Google successfully tested an automated car that drove 300,000 miles with only one accident, a parking lot fender bender. That occurred when a human was driving.
...Spider-Man grew up at 20 Ingram Street in Queens. The address exists in real life, and the family that lives there is the Parkers.
...In the movie Jurassic Park, the roar of the T-Rex was actually a combination of the sounds by a baby elephant, an alligator and a tiger
...In 1985 a New Orleans man drowned at a party attended by 100 lifeguards who were celebrating a summer without any drownings at a city pool.
...Sloths can swim 3 times faster than they can move on land -- They can also hold their breath for up to 40 minutes.
...Japan's Okinawa Island has more than 450 people living above the age of 100 and is known as the healthiest place on Earth.
...Michael Jackson had cast actual gang members in his music video for “Beat It” and reformed them in the process of filming.
...Bank robber John Dillinger once escaped from jail by smuggling a potato from the prison cafeteria, carving in to the shape of a gun, and dyeing it black using iodine he took from the prison infirmary, then threatening a guard with it to obtain the keys and a real gun.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on September 09, 2014, 09:17:25 pm
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On this day,September 9, 1982
Henry Ford II retired once and for all, swearing off all involvement with the Ford Motor Company.
When Henry Ford II, grandson and namesake of Henry Ford, succeeded his father as president of the Ford Motor Company in 1945, the firm, still recovering from the unexpected death of its president Edsel Ford, was losing money at the rate of several million dollars a month. The automotive giant was crumbling. Fortunately for the company, Henry Ford II turned out to be a genius of industrial management. He quickly set about reorganizing and modernizing the company, firing the powerful Personnel Chief Harry Bennett, whose strong-arm tactics and anti-union stance had made Ford notorious for its bad labor relations. He also brought in new talent, including a group of former U.S. Air Force intelligence officers, among them Robert McNamara, who quickly became known as the "Whiz Kids." During his tenure as president, Henry Ford II nursed the Ford Motor Company back to health, greatly expanding its international operations and introducing two classic models, the Mustang and the Thunderbird. Still, even an industrial management genius could grow tired of a president's demanding schedule.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on September 10, 2014, 07:24:25 pm
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On this day, September 10, 1897
A London cabdriver named George Smith slams his taxi into a building and is the first person to be arrested for drunk driving. He pled guilty and was fined 25 shillings.
Police officers knew that Smith was drunk because he acted drunk (he had driven that cab into a wall, after all) and because he said he was, but what they lacked was a scientific way to prove someone was too intoxicated to drive, even if he or she wouldn’t admit it. Blood tests were soon introduced, but those were messy and needed to be performed by a doctor; there were urine tests, but those were even messier, not to mention unreliable and expensive. In 1931, a toxicologist at Indiana University named Rolla Harger came up with a solution--a device he called the Drunkometer. It was simple: all the suspected drinker had to do was blow into a balloon. The tester then attached the balloon to a tube filled with a purple fluid (potassium permanganate and sulfuric acid) and released its air into the tube. Alcohol on a person's breath changed the color of the fluid from purple to yellow; the quicker the change, the drunker the person.
The Drunkometer was effective but cumbersome, and it required a certain amount of scientific calculation to determine just how much alcohol a person had consumed. In 1954, another Indianan named Robert Borkenstein invented a device that was more portable and easier to use. Borkenstein’s machine, the Breathalyzer, worked much like Harger’s did--it measured the amount of alcohol in a person's breath--but it did the necessary calculations automatically and thus could not be foiled or tampered with. (One tipsy Canadian famously ate his underwear while waiting to take a Breathalyzer test because he believed that the cotton would somehow absorb the alcohol in his system. It did not.) The Breathalyzer soon became standard equipment in every police car in the nation.
Even in the age of the Breathalyzer, drunk driving remained a problem. In 2007, more than 1.4 million drivers were arrested for driving while intoxicated, and a Centers for Disease Control survey found that Americans drove drunk 159 million times. That same year, about 13,000 people--more than 30 percent of all traffic fatalities--died in accidents involving a drunk driver.

September 10, 1921
The Ayus Autobahn, the world's first controlled-access highway and part of Germany's Bundesautobahn system, opened near Berlin. Once regarded as a symbol of modernity and a model of German engineering, the autobahn system was nearly destroyed during World War II. At the start of the postwar era, the newly formed nations of East and West Germany set about repairing the superhighway network. The system was greatly extended and improved in West Germany, which had a higher growth rate of motor traffic than its Eastern neighbor, although repairs and extensions were also made to the system in East Germany. Over the years, the autobahn has regained its status as a model expressway, famed for its nonexistent speed limit.

September 10, 1942
Following the example of several European nations, President Franklin D. Roosevelt mandated gasoline rationing in the U.S. as part of the country's wartime efforts. Gasoline rationing was just one of the many measures taken during these years, as the entire nation was transformed into a unified war machine: women took to the factories, households tried to conserve energy, and American automobile manufacturers began producing tanks and planes. The gasoline ration was lifted in 1945, at the end of World War II.

TODAYS TRIVIA:
...A hacker group named UGNazi once completely disabled the US pizza franchise, Papa Johns website because their pizza was 2 hours late.
...Bill Gates intends to leave less than $10M for each of his three children "so they can make their own way"
...The average citizen of Liechtenstein doesn’t even lock their door because crime in the country is so low -- Their last murder was in 1997.
...While studying at Yale in the early 60's, Fred Smith proposed in a paper, the concept of a self-contained logistics company. The paper got a C. In 1971, he founded Federal Express.
...There are about 3 reported cases of dolphins raping humans every year.
...Martin Luther King Jr. received a C in public speaking at seminary school.
...In 2011, a 29-year-old man became Britain's youngest grandfather, when his 14-year-old daughter gave birth.
...Teenagers who spend much of their time listening to music are 8.3 times more likely to be depressed.
...In 1982 A Man Broke Into Buckingham Palace And Ate The Queens Cheese And Crackers.
...After watching Star Wars, James Cameron decided to quit his job as a truck driver, and entered the film industry.
...During the peak of his drug addiction EMINEM was taking "up to 60 Valium and 30 Vicodin pills a day."
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on September 11, 2014, 09:50:05 pm
On this day, September 11, 1903
The oldest major speedway in the world, the Milwaukee Mile, opened today as a permanent fixture in the Wisconsin State Fair Park. The circuit had actually been around since the 1870s as a horseracing track, but the proliferation of the automobile brought a new era to the Milwaukee Mile. However, the horses stuck around until 1954, sharing the track with the automobiles until the mile oval was finally paved. At one point, the horses and autos also had to make room for professional football. The Green Bay Packers played in the track's infield for almost 10 years during the 1930s, winning the National Football League Championship there in 1939.

September 11, 1918
Often called the "war of the machines," World War I marked the beginning of a new kind of warfare, fought with steel and shrapnel. Automotive manufacturers led the way in this new technology of war, producing engines for planes, building tanks, and manufacturing military vehicles. Packard was at the forefront of these efforts, being among the first American companies to completely cease civilian car production. Packard had already been the largest producer of trucks for the Allies, but the company began devoting all of its facilities to war production on this day, just a few months before the end of the war. Even after Packard resumed production of civilian vehicles, its wartime engines appeared in a number of vehicles, from racing cars and boats to British tanks in the next world war.

September 11, 1970
The Ford Pinto was introduced at a cost of less than $2,000, designed to compete with an influx of compact imports. But it was not the Pinto's low cost that grabbed headlines. Ford's new best-selling compact contained a fatal design flaw: because of the placement of the gas tank, the tank was likely to rupture and explode when the car was involved in a rear end collision of over 20mph. In addition, it was eventually revealed that Ford knew about the design flaw before the Pinto was released. An internal cost-benefit analysis prepared by Ford calculated that it would take $11 per car to correct the flaw at a total cost of $137 million for the company. When compared to the lowly estimate of $49.5 million in potential lawsuits from the mistake, the report deemed it "inefficient" to go ahead with the correction. The infamous report assigned a value of $200,000 for each death predicted to result from the flaw. Ford's irresponsibility caused a public uproar, and it 1978, a California jury awarded a record-breaking $128 million to a claimant in the Ford Pinto case.

September 11, 2001
Coordinated attacks result in the collapse of the World Trade Center in New York City, destruction of the western portion of The Pentagon in Arlington, Virginia, and an unplanned passenger airliner crash in Shanksville, Pennsylvania, which happened after airplane passengers fought back on the plane. In total, 2,974 people are killed in the September 11, 2001 attacks.

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Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on September 12, 2014, 09:05:29 pm
(http://i645.photobucket.com/albums/uu176/MustangMayhem/This%20Day%20History/cannonball_indian1_zps4f71ecff.jpg) (http://s645.photobucket.com/user/MustangMayhem/media/This%20Day%20History/cannonball_indian1_zps4f71ecff.jpg.html)

September 12, 1918
Cannonball Baker, born Erwin G. Baker, discovered his special talent soon after buying his first motorcycle--he was capable of exceptional stamina and endurance on the road. His lean frame sat naturally atop his Indian V-twin, and his toughened stance and leather riding trousers seemed to announce to the world that he was ready to outride all challengers. Made a celebrity by his 3,379-mile cross-country motorcycle trek, "Cannonball" became a symbol of the American motorcycle rider, synonymous with wild cross-country journeys. His fame led to other tours and promotional trips, and he completed his most extensive tour on this day--a 17,000 mile, 77-day trip to all 48 state capitals--yet another testament to his legendary endurance.
PICTURED: Erwin Cannonball Baker on his Indian

September 12, 1988
Ford and Nissan announced plans to design and build a new minivan together in the hope of cashing in on an expanding market. The announcement came during the heyday of the minivan craze, when Dodge Caravans dotted the highways and station wagons became a thing of the past. Instantly popular, the spacious minivan replaced the wagon as the family car of choice, putting the old wood-paneled Country Squires to shame. But with the rise of the sport utility vehicle in the '90s, the minivan also began to fade.

TODAYS TRIVIA:
...More than 2,500 left-handed people are killed every year from using products made for right-handed people.
...Workers at Ground Zero found an 18th century ship underneath the World Trade Center rubble.
...Women speak nearly 7,000 words a day - Men average around 2,000.
...A tortoise lived 255 years. To put it into perspective, he was born before the US existed and his death was announced on CNN. (1750-2006)
...During sex, estrogen levels double -- effectively making women prettier.
...Bill Gates received an honorary knighthood from the Queen but as an American Citizen he cannot use the title "Sir".
...Due to the gender imbalance, by the year 2020, 24 million Chinese men will be unable to find a spouse.
...Someone who weighs 150 pounds on Earth would weigh 354 pounds on Jupiter.
...In the Shawshank Redemption, Andy actually crawls through chocolate syrup in the sewer scene, and the tunnel where it was filmed still smells like chocolate today.
...The four ghosts in Pacman are programmed to act differently: red chases you, pink just tries to position itself in a set way, blue tries to ambush you, orange is random.
...North Koreans are forced to choose 1 of 28 approved hair cuts.
...McDonald's feeds 68 million people every day - That's about 1% of the world's population.
...There's an unknown object in the nearby galaxy m82 that started sending out radio waves. The emission doesn't look like anything seen before
...There's a device that allows girls to pee standing up...called a shewee.
...In 1993, Tupac flew out to Maryland to meet a dying boy named Joshua. Tupac then renamed his publishing company to Joshua's Dream after the boy died.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on September 13, 2014, 09:46:33 pm
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On this day, September 13, 1916
The Hudson Motor Car Company's first engine, the "Super Six," was an astounding success. It was the auto industry's first balanced, high-compression L-head motor, and it became so popular that the name "Super Six" became the unofficial brand name of Hudson. Initially, Hudson launched a series of publicity stunts to promote its new engine, including a "Twice Across America" run from San Francisco to New York and back, which began on this day.
PICTURED: Hudson 1920 Hudson Super Six. Race car

September 13, 1899
The first recorded fatality from an automobile accident occurred, after an oncoming vehicle fatally struck Henry Bliss on the streets of New York. Bliss, a 68-year-old real estate broker, was debarking from a southbound streetcar at the corner of Central Park West and 74th Street when driver Arthur Smith ran him over. Smith was arrested and held on $1,000 bail while Henry Bliss was taken to Roosevelt hospital, where he died.

September 13, 1977
General Motors (GM) introduced the first diesel automobiles in America, the Oldsmobile 88 and 98 models. A major selling point of the two models was their fuel efficiency, which GM claimed to be 40 percent better than gasoline-powered cars. By compressing air, rather than an air-fuel mixture, the diesel engine achieves higher compression ratios, and consequently higher theoretical cycle efficiencies. In addition, the idling and reduced power efficiency of the diesel engine is much greater than that of its spark engine cousin. However, the diesel engine's greater efficiency is balanced by its higher emission of soot, odor, and air pollutants.

September 13, 2004
TV talk-show host Oprah Winfrey gives a brand-new Pontiac G-6 sedan, worth $28,500, to everyone in her studio audience: a total of 276 cars in all.) Oprah had told her producers to fill the crowd with people who “desperately needed” the cars, and when she announced the prize (by jumping up and down, waving a giant keyring and yelling “Everybody gets a car! Everybody gets a car!”), mayhem--crying, screaming, delirium, fainting--broke out all around her. It was, as one media expert told a reporter, “one of the great promotional stunts in the history of television.”
Alas, scandal wasn't far behind. For one thing, the gift wasn't really from Oprah at all. Pontiac had donated the cars, paying the hefty price tag out of its advertising budget, because the company hoped that that the giveaway would drum up some enthusiasm for its new G-6 line. (To this end, during the segment, Winfrey herself took a tour of a Pontiac plant, gushing over the cars' satellite radios and fancy navigation systems.) The car company also paid the state sales tax on each of the automobiles it donated. However, that still left the new-car recipients with a large bill for their supposedly free vehicles: Federal and state income taxes added up to about $6,000 for most winners. Some people paid the taxes by taking out car loans; others traded their new Pontiacs for cheaper, less souped-up cars. “It's not really a free car,” one winner said. “It's more of a 75 percent-off car. Of course, that's still not such a bad deal.”
Two months later, Oprah hosted another giveaway episode, this one for teachers from around the country. Their gifts were worth about $13,000 and included a $2,249 TV set, a $2,000 laptop, a $2,189 washer/dryer, sets of $38 champagne glasses and a $495 leather duffel bag. This time, the show’s producers had learned their lesson: they also gave each audience member a check for $2,500, which they hoped would cover the tax bill for all the loot. Unfortunately, it didn't quite--most people in the audience owed the Internal Revenue Service between $4,500 and $6,000--but the PR gimmick worked: Oprah’s giveaways have earned some of the highest ratings in the program’s history.

September 13, 1945,
The first post-war Pontiac was built. Pictured is the advertisement for the 1946 Pontiac:

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Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on September 14, 2014, 05:08:04 pm
(http://i235.photobucket.com/albums/ee113/carslinger/amilcar.jpg) (http://s235.photobucket.com/user/carslinger/media/amilcar.jpg.html)

On this day, September 14, 1927
Isadora Duncan, the controversial but highly influential American dancer, was instantly strangled to death in Nice, France, when her trademark long scarf got caught in the rear wheel of a Amilcar driven by factory mechanic Benoit Falchetto, whom she called 'Buggati' and this lead to misconception that the unfateful car was a Buggati, but in actual it was an Amilcar.
Duncan was 49. The scarf was hand painted silk from the Russian-born artist Roman Chatov. The accident gave rise to Gertrude Stein's mordant remark that "affectations can be dangerous." PICTURED: The Amilcar

September 14, 1960
The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries was founded at the Baghdad Conference of 1960, established by five core members: Iran, Iraq, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, and Venezuela. Originally made up of just these five, OPEC began as an attempt to organize and unify petroleum policies, securing stable prices for the petroleum producers. The organization grew considerably after its creation, adding eight other members and developing into one of the most influential groups in the world. The first real indication of OPEC's power came with the 1973 oil embargo, during which long lines and soaring gasoline prices quickly convinced Americans of the reach of OPEC's influence. OPEC's member countries currently supply more than 40 percent of the world's oil.

September 14, 1965
My Mother the Car, one of the shortest running television shows in history and first about a Car, premiered on this day. The show featured Ann Southern as the reincarnation of the main character's mother - in the form of a classic 1928 Porter Automobile. Apparently, the idea of automobile reincarnation didn't appeal to the public then, and the series was canceled a few weeks after its debut.

September 14, 1982
Princess Grace of Monaco, also known as Grace Kelly, died on this day of injuries sustained in a car crash. The accident was one of the most tragic in modern memory, the car plunged down a 45-foot embankment after the Princess suffered a stroke and lost control of the car. Known as America's princess, Kelly's life had been a true fairy tale. She was born into a rich Irish Catholic family in Philadelphia where she attended private schools before enrolling in the Academy of Dramatic Art in New York. She soon rose to stardom both on Broadway and in Hollywood, winning the public's affection in such films as Rear Window and The Country Girl. However, she abandoned her acting career in order to marry Prince Rainier of Monaco, making her a real-life princess

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TODAYS TRIVIA:
...There is a rare neurological disorder known as Alien Hand Syndrome in which one hand functions involuntarily, with the victim completely unaware of its action.
...A 103 year old Taiwanese man who passed away in 2008 hired a stripper to dance at his funeral.
...A Croatian footballer(soccer) was placed on the transfer list by his club, after fulfilling his life long dream of having sex in the middle of the pitch.
...There is a statue of George Washington in Britain that sits on top of soil imported from Virginia, due to Washington exclaiming "I will never set foot in Britain again!"
...The reason for Sylvester Stallone's snarl/slurred speech was an accident at birth, during which his Obstetrician accidentally severed a nerve and caused semi-paralysis in parts of Stallone's face.
...There is a mass reservoir of water floating in space that is 100,000 times bigger than our sun and holds 140 trillion times more water than all of our oceans.
...There are about 50 serial killers free in the US killing about 300-400 people every year.
...Nicolas Cage convinced Johnny Depp to pursue acting while playing a game of Monopoly.
...In 1989 a computer game was released which could not be copied, and which deleted itself upon being completed. The last known copy was sold at auction for more than $700,000.
...In 1907 Kellogg's promoted their cornflakes with something called the Wink Day campaign. Women we're encouraged to "wink at your grocer and see what you get" , what they got was a free box of cereal.
...One of the best selling erotic novels of the 15 century was written by a Pope.
...Teen pregnancy rates are actually at their lowest since the 1970s.
...An orangutan named Fu Manchu repeatedly escaped from his cage at the zoo using a key he had fashioned from a piece of wire. Every time his zookeepers inspected him, he hid the key in his mouth.
...During the filming of a Breaking Bad episode, the introduction of Wendy the prostitute was briefly interrupted when a non-actor attempted to pick up actress Julia Minesci, mistaking her for a prostitute.
...In 1939, Hitler’s nephew wrote an article called “Why I Hate My Uncle.” He came to the U.S., served in the Navy, and settled on Long Island.
...400 million years ago, a day was 21 hours long instead of 24 hours long.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on September 15, 2014, 08:06:28 pm
(http://i784.photobucket.com/albums/yy124/Ayhankirca/My%20Movie%20Collection/italian_job_ver2.jpg) (http://s784.photobucket.com/user/Ayhankirca/media/My%20Movie%20Collection/italian_job_ver2.jpg.html)

On this day, September 15, 1969
The classic British heist movie The Italian Job is released in Swedish theaters. (It had opened in the U.K. in June and in the United States on September 3.) The film starred Michael Caine as Charlie Croker, the leader of a gang of goodhearted thieves determined to steal a 4-million-pound shipment of gold on its way from China to a bank in Turin, Italy. The film also featured three Mini Coopers--a red one, a blue one, and a white one--as getaway cars for the pilfered gold. The popular British-made “microcars” get Croker’s gang out of Turin in a spectacular chase through the city, across crowded shopping arcades and plazas, over rooftops, around a Fiat factory and even down the steps of a church during a wedding. In the end, the thieves escape Turin by zipping through its sewer pipes and head for the Alps.
But once the mobsters swap their Minis for a getaway bus en route to Switzerland, all does not end well. After taking a turn too fast on the twisting Alpine road, the bus winds up see-sawing on the edge of a great cliff, with the mobsters in the front end and their loot in the precariously swaying rear. The thieves are stuck: As Croker inches toward the gold, the gold slides closer to the door and the bus wobbles closer to the precipice. Just before the credits roll, in what director Peter Collinson thought would be the perfect setup for a sequel, Croker tells his accomplices to hold on: “I’ve got a great idea.” (Collinson’s sequel was never made; however, an updated remake of the film was released in 2003.)
In 2008, in honor of the film’s approaching 40th anniversary, the Royal Society of Chemistry proposed a contest to finish Croker’s thought. To the person who could come up with the most original and plausible way to save the gold and the crew before the bus tipped off the edge, the RSC promised an Italian holiday.
Early in 2009, the Society announced its winner: an information-technology manager named John Godwin, whose 6-page scientific proof proposed an elaborate scheme involving window-breaking, fuel-tank draining, tire-deflating, and rock-gathering, all to make the bus stable enough for one of the thieves to shimmy back and grab the gold.

September 15, 1909
Charles F. Kettering of Detroit, Michigan, applied for a patent on his ignition system. But the ignition system was only the first of Kettering's many automobile improvements, a distinguished list that includes lighting systems, lacquer finishes, antilock fuels, leaded gasoline, and the electric starter. His company Delco (Dayton Engineering Laboratories Company) was a leader in automotive technology and later became a subsidiary of General Motors. Kettering himself served as vice president and director of research for GM from 1920 to 1947.

September 15, 1909
Ford sues George B. Selden. George Selden is rarely mentioned in accounts of automobile history, often lost among names like Ford, Daimler, and Cugnot. However, Selden reigned as the "Father of the Automobile" for almost 20 years, his name engraved on every car from 1895 until 1911. He held the patent on the "Road Engine," which was effectively a patent on the automobile - a claim that went unchallenged for years, despite the many other inventors who had contributed to the development of the automobile and the internal combustion engine. Almost all of the early car manufacturers, unwilling to face the threat of a lawsuit, were forced to buy licenses from Selden, so almost every car on the road sported a small brass plaque reading "Manufactured under Selden Patent." Henry Ford was the only manufacturer willing to challenge Selden in court, and on this day a New York judge ruled that Ford had indeed infringed on Selden's patent. This decision was later overturned when it became plain that Selden had never intended to actually manufacture his "road engine." Selden's own "road engine" prototype, built in the hope of strengthening his case, only managed to stagger along for a few hours before breaking down.
PICTURED: Brayton / Selden engine diagram and George B Selden driving his automobile in 1905

(http://i38.photobucket.com/albums/e136/fattywagonman/seldednauto_zps36292280.jpg) (http://s38.photobucket.com/user/fattywagonman/media/seldednauto_zps36292280.jpg.html) (http://i38.photobucket.com/albums/e136/fattywagonman/braytonseldenengine_zps28040f32.jpg) (http://s38.photobucket.com/user/fattywagonman/media/braytonseldenengine_zps28040f32.jpg.html)

TODAYS TRIVIA:
...In the early years of the 20th century, horses were causing so much pollution with their poop that automobiles were seen as the "green" alternative.
...A woman jumped off of the Eiffel Tower and landed on a car and survived, then later married the car’s owner.
...The longest killshot from a sniper was from more that 1.5 miles away . . . and he did it twice.
...A woman fell in love with, has a sexual relationship with, and plans to marry, an amusement park ride.
...The Chocolate River in Willy Wonka and The Chocolate Factory was made from real chocolate, water and cream.
...While shooting Resident Evil there was an accident that injured 16 people. First responders to the scene thought there was a catastrophe and had trouble assessing the injuries due to the victims zombie costumes.
...A women fabricated a story about being on the 78th floor of the south WTC after it was hit. She became the president of the WTC Survivors Network. She was in Spain during 9/11.
...A man won a bet that he could have sex with 2 women for 12 hours but died shortly afterward due to ingesting an entire bottle of viagra.
...Gmail logo was designed the night before the service launched
...Men and women who listen to more music tend to be better communicators and even have longer lasting relationships.
...The price of admission for a zoo in 18th century England was a dog or a cat -- they were fed to the lions.
...New Yorkers bite 10 times more people than sharks do worldwide.
...Taking a short nap after learning something new can actually help your memory.
...Marijuana was used to treat absent-mindedness in Ancient China.
...An African tribe donated 14 cows to the US after the events of 9/11.
...At least 5 people have been murdered for unfriending someone on Facebook.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on September 16, 2014, 06:55:39 pm
(http://i90.photobucket.com/albums/k268/rbotti/Factory-Star.jpg)

September 16, 1908
William C. Durant founded the General Motors Corporation (GM), consolidating several motor car companies, including Buick, Oldsmobile, and Cadillac, to form this Goliath of the automotive industry. GM's success was assured in 1912 when Cadillac introduced the electric self-starter, quickly making the hand crank obsolete and propelling sales. Throughout the next few years, the company continued to grow, buying out Chevrolet, Delco, the Fisher Body Company, and Frigidaire. In 1929, GM surpassed Ford to become the leading American passenger-car manufacturer, and by 1941, the company was the largest automotive manufacturer in the world. But the 1970s and 1980s brought darker times, and the company suffered under severe competition from imports. GM responded with attempts at modernization, but its efforts have yielded mixed results thus far; the company was forced to close a large number of plants in the U.S. during the early 1990s after several years of heavy losses.
PICTURED: Durant Factory Muncie, Indiana

September 16, 1903
Frederick Henry Royce, of Rolls-Royce Ltd., successfully tested his first gasoline engine. The two-cylinder, 10hp engine was one of three experimental cars designed by Royce during the automobile's early years, when gasoline-powered engines competed on equal footing with electric and steam engines. In fact, Royce's first company, Royce Ltd., built electric motors.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on September 17, 2014, 06:43:51 pm
(http://i72.photobucket.com/albums/i188/dburdyshaw/Z%20Misc%205%20FEP/AmphiCar.jpg) (http://s72.photobucket.com/user/dburdyshaw/media/Z%20Misc%205%20FEP/AmphiCar.jpg.html)

On this day, September 17, 1965
Four adventurous Englishmen arrive at the Frankfurt Motor Show in Germany after crossing the English Channel by Amphicar, the world’s only mass-produced amphibious passenger car. Despite choppy waters, stiff winds, and one flooded engine, the two vehicles made it across the water in about seven hours.
The Amphicar’s design, by the German engineer Hans Trippel, derived from the Schwimmwagen, the amphibious all-wheel-drive vehicle that Volkswagen had produced for the German armed forces during World War II. A company called the Quandt Group produced the Amphicars for seven years, from 1961 to1968; in all, they built about 3,900 of the little swimming convertibles.
Amphicars came in four colors--Beach White, Regatta Red, Lagoon Blue, and Fjord Green--and were powered from the rear by a 43-horsepower, four-cylinder Triumph Herald engine. On land, the cars used a four-speed-plus-reverse manual transmission. In the water, they used a transfer case that had two speeds: forward and backward. With the top and windows up, the Amphicar was remarkably seaworthy: Its front wheels acted as rudders and two nylon propellers chugged along in back. The car’s builders called it the “770,” because--in theory, at least--it could go 7 mph in the water and 70 mph on land. To see an Amphicar hit either one of these speeds was rare, however: According to one owner, it was “the fastest car on the water and the fastest boat on the road.”
The four Englishmen left London on the morning of September 16, rolled down the ramp at Dover, and headed for France. About halfway across the Channel, a blocked bilge pump flooded one of the Amphicars; the other towed it the rest of the way to shore. When they arrived at Calais, the four travelers (with the help of the crowd that had gathered to see them) managed to drag the cars over the beach and to the gas station. The next day, they headed off to Frankfurt.
About 3,000 Amphicars were imported into the United States. In fact, Quandt sold such a large proportion of the cars to Americans that in 1968, when the Motor Vehicle Air Pollution Act raised emissions standards to a level that the Amphicar couldn’t meet, the company just stopped building the cars altogether. Amphicar enthusiasts estimate that between 300 and 600 seaworthy vehicles remain on the road today.

September 17, 1903
First coast-to-coast tour was completed. At a time when driving across country was akin to climbing Mt. Everest, Lester L. Whitman and Eugene I. Hammond completed their coast-to-coast expedition on this day to national acclaim. Whitman and Hammond's journey, the third trans-U.S. automobile trip in history, contained a small detour, however. The two drivers decided to include a side trip from Windsor to Niagara Falls in Ontario, Canada, in order to dub their trek "international."

September 17, 1986
In 1985, a car that had evolved from a first-class chassis was introduced in the form of the Bentley Turbo R. Superior suspension for road handling, firmer shock absorbers, and crisper steering were meant to entice sporting motorists--just in case the Turbo R's top speeds were not enough. Still, Bentley's turbo-charged model needed nothing but speed on, breaking 16 records for speed and endurance at the Millbrook, Bedfordshire, high-speed circuit in England.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on September 18, 2014, 08:00:19 pm
(http://i294.photobucket.com/albums/mm82/slidingpillar/Napier_Bentley4.jpg) (http://s294.photobucket.com/user/slidingpillar/media/Napier_Bentley4.jpg.html)

On this day, September 18, 1904
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Glidden completed the first crossing of the Canadian Rockies by automobile, arriving exhausted from their 3,536-mile trip. The couple had driven from Boston, Massachusetts, to Vancouver, Canada, in their 24hp Napier.
PICTURED: The evolved Bently - Napier

September 18, 1955
The Ford Motor Company produced its 2,000,000th V-8 engine, 23 years after the first Ford V-8 was manufactured. The popularity of the V-8 engine began in the late 1940s, when the engines of the time failed to satisfy the industry trend toward increased horsepower, experiencing vibration and size problems at the high pressures that accompany high horsepower. Engineers began developing a stiff, V-shaped configuration to combat the new problems, and the V-8 became the preferred choice for auto manufacturers. Trends began to reverse somewhat during the late 1960s with the advent of smaller cars, and four and six cylinder engines began to gain on the popularity of the V-8.

September 18, 2006
Ford bought rights to Rover name from BMW for approximately £6 million. Ironically no Rover branded cars were produced whilst Ford owned the brand. As part of Ford's agreement to sell their Jaguar & Land Rover operations early this year to Tata Motors, the Rover brand name was included in the deal.

TODAYS TRIVIA:
...Volkswagen owns Bentley, Bugatti, Lamborghini, Audi, Ducati and Porsche.
...There is such a thing as one-way bulletproof glass. This allows you to return fire through the glass while still keeping you protected from the attacker (your shot leaves a bullet-sized hole, but doesn't compromise the rest of the shield)
...There is an Australian band called "The Beards". Every single one of their 38 songs is about beards.
...Rubik's Cube is the best-selling product of all time. It has outsold all iPhones by 100 million units.
...A teaspoon of honey is actually the lifework of 12 bees.
...There's a school in Russia for mastering “The Art of oral sex”
...World's oldest backpacker has been travelling around the world for the last 30 years.
...The phrase "Money is the root of all evil." is a misquotation of "The love of money is a root of all kinds of evil." which has quite a different meaning.
...In the 50's, the CIA tried to assassinate Fidel Castro by slipping an exploding cigar into his private supply
...In Japan, you can find Glowing Firefly Squids. They glow as they are pushed to the shore's edge.
...Animal Planet made a fake documentary about the existence of mermaids... twice. People fell for the trick both times.
...One of the first documented Internet purchases was a pepperoni pizza with mushrooms and extra cheese from Pizza Hut.
...People who are sad or depressed are likely to spend more money than those who are happy.
...Adolf Hitler was the first one to name a weapon an "assault rifle" (for the Nazi Army's StG 44 weapon)
...A husband and wife each won a lottery by playing numbers recommended by a fortune cookie.
...Google makes more money from iPhone users than Android users.
...If you squeezed out all the space inside an atom you could fit the entire human race into a sugar cube.
...2 years after Titanic sank, the Empress Of Ireland sank in the Gulf of St. Lawrence and lost 68.5% of all passengers (.5% more than Titanic!). The event was buried in the papers because of WWI.
...The worlds first smartphone was released in 1994 by IBM, and cost $899, and had only one 3rd party app.
...'Okay' is the most recognized word/phrase in the world. 'Coca Cola/Coke' is the second.
...60% (50 of 83) of the restaurants that appeared on Kitchen Nightmares have been sold or shutdown.
...Rivalry between Pizza Hut and Papa John's is so fierce, Pizza Hut reserves any phone numbers that spell out the letters P-A-P-A ...just so Papa John's can't get them.
...The word 'f@# k' was first used in 1568, but was most commonly used between 1700-1720. It disappeared from the English language for 150 years in the 18-1900s.
...Japan has a law that states any day that falls between two holidays shall become a holiday.
...Nicholas Cage once woke up in the middle of the night to find a naked man eating a Fudgesicle in front of his bed.
...Once Rowan Atkinson, known as Mr. Bean, saved a plane crash when the pilot of his private jet fainted mid-flight.
...Just like fingerprints, every person also has a unique tongue print!
...Hitler had only 1 testicle, the other was shot off in WW1, and medic Johan Jambor saved his life and regretted it until he died in 1985.
...We lose 6 seconds of visual information each minute from blinking. In a 150 minute long movie, our eyes are shut for 15 minutes.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on September 19, 2014, 09:13:53 pm
(http://i280.photobucket.com/albums/kk171/crabber1967/Facebook/Duesenberg/934860_10152791783120261_1760316030_n.jpg) (http://s280.photobucket.com/user/crabber1967/media/Facebook/Duesenberg/934860_10152791783120261_1760316030_n.jpg.html)

On this day, September 19, 1932
The Bonneville Salt Flats in Utah have been the site of dozens of world speed records, but Ab Jenkins set a new kind of record in Bonneville. Jenkins completed the first 24-hour solo run, driving 2,710 miles nonstop in a single day. His stock Pierce Arrow V-12 averaged 112.94mph.

September 19, 1887
Dr. Graham Edgar, developer of the octane rating system, was born in Fayetteville, Arkansas. Although he may not be a household name, evidence of Edgar's work lines every highway in America. His rating system measures a fuel's ability to resist any form of abnormal combustion, in other words, its ability to burn cleanly. Eighty-eight and 90 are the normal ratings for everyday unleaded gasoline, while racing gasoline will often have a rating as high as 115. Almost every gas pump in America sports an octane rating sticker.

September 19, 1919
Wary of the unpopularity of "German-sounding" names after World War I, August Beuck began using the name Buick rather than Beuck for the first time when he christened the new post office in his Colorado hometown. The new name of the General Motors marque seemed assuredly all-American in a time when anti-German feelings dominated the nation. The wave of intolerance had begun with the United States entrance into World War I, resulting in many a Schmidt becoming a Smith. Throughout the country, hundreds of German newspapers and publications were forced to shut down, and German language instruction came to an end in most states.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on September 20, 2014, 08:26:15 pm
(http://i36.photobucket.com/albums/e46/ChevyGirlRox/2009%20Events/LA%20Roadster%20show%20trip/Day%20Ten-%20LA%20Roadster%20show%20Sunday/32Homecomingtrip868.jpg) (http://s36.photobucket.com/user/ChevyGirlRox/media/2009%20Events/LA%20Roadster%20show%20trip/Day%20Ten-%20LA%20Roadster%20show%20Sunday/32Homecomingtrip868.jpg.html)

On this day, September 20, 1960
California hot rodder Mickey Thompson takes another shot at the world land-speed record. A few weeks earlier, Thompson had become the first American to travel faster than 400 mph on land when he’d piloted his Challenger I (a car that he designed and built himself) across Utah’s Bonneville Salt Flats at 406.6 mph. This drive had made Thompson the fastest man on wheels, but not officially: In order to win a place in the land-speed record books, racers must make a return pass within the hour, and Thompson’s car broke down in the middle of his second run, necessitating a follow-up attempt.
At the time, the world land-speed record was 394 mph, set at Bonneville in 1947 by the British driver John Cobb. On his first run across the flats (403.135 mph), Cobb became the first man to go faster than 400 mph. (His second run only reached 388.019 mph; the record speed was an average of the two.) To set a world speed record, drivers must make two passes over the same measured mile, one out and one back (to account for wind assistance), and beat the previous average by at least 1 percent.
After Thompson’s first pass across the Utah flats on September 9, he refueled the 7,000-pound, 2,000 horsepower Challenger and pushed off for the return trip. As the car gathered speed, however, something went wrong. For years, Thompson told people that something was the driveline: It had snapped, he said, forcing him to stop accelerating and coast back across the desert. In fact, one of the car’s four supercharged engines blew when Thompson shifted into high gear.
On September 20, Thompson tried again. This time, he only managed to coax the Challenger up to about 378 mph on his first run and 368 mph on his second. But it hardly mattered: The Challenger’s speedy trips across the desert won worldwide fame for the car and its driver, and by the time Thompson retired in 1962, he had set more than 100 speed records.
In 1988, two hooded gunmen murdered Thompson and his wife in their driveway and fled the scene on bicycles. Almost 20 years later, one of Thompson’s business acquaintances was convicted of the killings; he is serving two life sentences without parole.

September 20, 1945
War production halts. Automotive manufacturers had been at the heart of a seamless war machine during World War II, producing trucks, tanks, and planes at astounding rates. But only after the last shots were fired did auto factories begin to produce cars again, focusing their sights on the booming postwar market. A month after the surrender of Japan, Packard followed the lead of every other company and ceased military production, turning out its last wartime Rolls-Royce Merlin engine on this day.

September 20, 1979
Legendary Lee Iacocca makes a comeback. After being fired from the Ford presidency, he was elected chairman of the failing Chrysler Corporation. Despite dire predictions from his critics, Iacocca succeeded in rebuilding Chrysler through layoffs, cutbacks, hard-selling advertising, and a government loan guarantee. He became the epitome of the "can-do" executive, famous for his strong work ethic and no-nonsense style. During Chrysler's crisis years, Iacocca reduced his salary to $1 per year to set an example for the rest of the company, explaining that everyone must be willing to sacrifice a little in order for Chrysler to survive. By 1983, Chrysler had moved from the verge of bankruptcy to a competitive force in the automobile market, paying back all of its government loans in less than four years. His autobiography Iacocca became a best-seller in 1984, breaking all records for a business book, which accounts all of his such ventures.

September 20, 1984
Twelve people were killed when a suicide car bomber attacked the U.S. embassy complex in Beirut, Lebanon. Car bombs have started to become the weapon of choice for terrorists from early 80s.. But car bombs has been used as early as 1920s. The car bomb method has sadly proven an effective way of achieving mass destruction, as it is much easier for a terrorist to find a parking space than bypass a building's internal security. From Beirut to Oklahoma City, entire buildings have been destroyed from car bomb blasts, and countless lives have been lost. Among the most noted in recent times were the dual U.S. embassy bombings in Kenya and Tanzania, where two car bombs killed 257 people, and reduced several buildings to rubble. Similar setup has been used extensively by insurgents in Iraq.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on September 21, 2014, 11:06:08 pm
(http://i351.photobucket.com/albums/q465/64Val/mopar%20sunday/PB160008.jpg) (http://s351.photobucket.com/user/64Val/media/mopar%20sunday/PB160008.jpg.html)

On this day, September 21, 1959
No-name Plymouth produced in Michigan. The first Plymouth Valiant was produced on this day at a plant in Hamtramck, Michigan, although it was not known by that name until 1961. Originally code named "Falcon" after the 1955 Chrysler Falcon, plans for the new model went awry when the Chrysler marketing team found out at the last minute that Ford had already registered the name "Falcon" for its compact car. The news resulted in a wild scramble, for the logo castings had already been made and marketing plans finalized. A company-wide contest was held for a new name, and "Valiant" emerged the winner. However, there was no time to make new logo castings, so the car was simply introduced as the Valiant, featuring only a mylar sticker on the engine for identification. It wasn't until 1961 that the Valiant became the Plymouth Valiant, new logo castings and all.

September 21, 1921
The first Bentley was sold to Noel van Raalte, wealthy and influential playboy racecar driver.

September 21, 1945
Henry Ford II, grandson and namesake of Henry Ford, succeeded his father as president of the Ford Motor Company, inheriting a company that was losing money at the rate of several million dollars a month. After recovering from the shock of his father's unexpected death, Henry Ford II was effectively given a crash course in management, but fortunately for the company, he turned out to have the magic touch. He quickly set about reorganizing and modernizing the Ford Motor Company, firing the powerful Personnel Chief Harry Bennett, whose strong-arm tactics and anti-union stance had made Ford notorious for its bad labor relations. He also brought in new talent, including a group of former U.S. Air Force intelligence officers, among them Robert McNamara, who became known as the "Whiz Kids." During his tenure as president, Henry Ford II nursed the Ford Motor Company back to health, greatly expanding its international operations and introducing two classic models, the Mustang and the Thunderbird.

September 21, 1947
The Grand Prix returns after the World War II. Driving his Talbot-Lago across the finish line in Lyon-Parilly, Louis Chrion emerged victorious at the French Grand Prix of 1947. The race was a continuation of the Grand Prix's long history and France's first major post-World War II race. The event had been suspended for several years during the war, along with almost all other car racing. In a side note, the Albert Lory designed CTA-Arsenal made a disgraceful debut at the Grand Prix that year, and was never raced again.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on September 22, 2014, 06:00:00 pm
(http://i645.photobucket.com/albums/uu176/MustangMayhem/this%20day%20in%20HISTORY/duryea-auto-5_zps81fa43bc.jpg) (http://s645.photobucket.com/user/MustangMayhem/media/this%20day%20in%20HISTORY/duryea-auto-5_zps81fa43bc.jpg.html)

On this day, September 22, 1893
America's first automobile was not built by a Henry Ford or Walter Chrysler, but by Charles and Frank Duryea, two bicycle makers. Charles spotted a gasoline engine at the 1886 Ohio State Fair and became convinced that an engine-driven carriage could be built. The two brothers designed and built the car together, working in a rented loft in Springfield, Massachusetts. After two years of tinkering, Charles and Frank Duryea showed off their home invention on the streets of Springfield, the first successful run of an automobile in the U.S.

September 22, 1953
The world's first four-level interchange structure, was opened in L.A. Los Angeles is widely known for its traffic and smog, miles of freeway stretching in every direction. The massive concrete structure connected the freeways of Hollywood, Harbor, Santa Ana, and Arroyo Seco.

September 22, 1989
Chrysler sells interest in Mitsubishi. In a move that sent ripples throughout the automotive world, the Chrysler Corporation sold 50 percent of its interest in the Mitsubishi Motors Corporation. The decision came at a time when most other American automobile manufacturers, including Chrysler's top rivals Ford and General Motors, were eagerly buying up shares of Japanese automobile stock and strengthening ties with Japanese manufacturers. Chrysler claimed that it was taking advantage of a bullish Japanese market at a potential gain of $310 million, but industry pundits speculated that the motive went much deeper. Chrysler's audacious move likely stemmed from disagreements between the two companies over Mitsubishi's U.S. sales and distribution. In many cases, Mitsubishi-made products were being sold under the Chrysler name, often in direct competition with the Mitsubishi marque.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on September 23, 2014, 09:20:31 pm
(http://i645.photobucket.com/albums/uu176/MustangMayhem/this%20day%20in%20HISTORY/Monster-Tajima-Suzuki-Pikes-Peak-Hill-Climb-02_zps4bdc2356.jpg) (http://s645.photobucket.com/user/MustangMayhem/media/this%20day%20in%20HISTORY/Monster-Tajima-Suzuki-Pikes-Peak-Hill-Climb-02_zps4bdc2356.jpg.html)

On this day, September 23, 1939
A.P. MacArthur pulled across the finish line in Ballinascorney, Ireland, winning the last Irish hill climb before World War II. Hill-climbing events usually took place on a public road, and they became wildly popular in Great Britain and Ireland during the early days of the automobile. Cars of all shapes and sizes would race up a hill, with drivers gunning their engines and showing off the prowess of their new motor car. Cheered on by a crowd of onlookers, the fastest car up the hill won. World War II brought an end to hill climbs and car racing in general, as manufacturers funneled their efforts into military production. However, hill climbing returned after the war, more popular than ever, most popular being the Pikes Peak event.

September 23, 1969
Tapio Laukkanen, Finnish rally driver was born in Lahti, Southern Finland.
In 1996 he won the Finnish Rally Championship in a Volkswagen Golf GTi and in 1999 he won the British Rally Championship with a Renault Mégane Maxi twinned with fellow Finn, Kaj Lindström.

September 23, 1972
The famous Crystal Palace racing circuit in London, England, was closed by the Greater London Council, ending a 45-year racing tradition. The closing had been announced a few weeks before the beginning of the 1972 season, prompted by noise complaints and safety concerns. During its long history, the Crystal Palace circuit had hosted everything from the first televised auto race to a few demonstration laps by Chitty Chitty Bang Bang.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on September 24, 2014, 03:35:53 pm
(http://i245.photobucket.com/albums/gg78/badbowtie-blown572/Honda-NSX-040ajrdesigns.jpg) (http://s245.photobucket.com/user/badbowtie-blown572/media/Honda-NSX-040ajrdesigns.jpg.html)

On this day, September 24, 1948
The Honda Motor Company, one of the world's leading automobile manufacturers, began as a research institute founded by engineer Honda Soichiro. The institute focused on creating small, efficient internal combustion engines, before it began incorporating these engines into motorcycles under the Honda name. It was on this day that the Honda Technical Research Institute officially became the Honda Motor Company, establishing a corporation that would become the leading producer of motorcycles in the world.

September 24, 1908
The first factory-built Ford Model T was completed on this day, just one more step in Ford's affordable revolution. Affectionately known as the "Tin Lizzie," the Model T revolutionized the automotive industry by providing an affordable, reliable car for the average person. Ford was able to keep the price down by retaining control of all raw materials, and by employing revolutionary mass production methods. When it was first introduced, the "Tin Lizzie" cost only $850 and seated two people.

September 24, 1974
General Motors announced that the release of the "Monza," its rotary-engine sports compact, would be postponed due to problems complying with new EPA emissions standards. Environmental concerns had become an increasingly high priority with the American public, and the government had been responding accordingly. Pressures on the automotive industry had been riding high since the 1970 Clean Air Act, rising even higher with the new National Ambient Air Quality Standards of 1971. With both public opinion and the federal government against them, GM had no choice but to delay the new model's release.

TODAYS TRIVIA:
...whitehouse.com used to be a #### website, resulting in many schoolchildren in the late 1990s accidentally seeing adult content.
...In 1990, New Zealand became the first country in the modern world to appoint an Official Wizard.
...Russian scientists were able to bring back an arctic flower, extinct for 32,000 years, from a seed that's been borrowed by an ice age squirrel.
...Pringles chips are named after a street in Finneytown, a tiny Cincinnati suburb.
...A person of average size and weight burns about 60 to 70 calories each hour just by sitting and watching television.
...Owning a cat at home reduces the risk of heart attack by 40% and stroke by 30%.
...Emerson Moser retired after making 1.4 billion crayons for Crayola for 37 years, and then announced he was colorblind.
...IKEA stores are designed like mazes in order to prevent customers from leaving.
...None of the Beach Boys actually surfed except for Dennis who died drowning.
...There are 300 registered superheroes living in the US.
...Humans can't taste pure water, but it does have a taste.
...One Direction are the youngest band to ever perform at the Olympic Games.
...More people actually live in caves now than during the Stone Age.
...Google has been buying, on average, more than one company per week since 2010.
...Every year in Ancient Athens, citizens had the chance to vote their least favorite politician into exile.
...The Bible is the most shoplifted book in the world.
...The vibrations from the bass on a loud stereo can cause your lungs to collapse.
...Gandhi once wrote a letter to his "dear friend" urging him not to go to war. This friend was Hitler.
...During the 1960's, Robert F. Kennedy said he believed a black man could become President of the United States within 40 years.
...Even when adjusted for inflation, the movie Titanic cost more to make than the actual Titanic ship.
...You can hire an "evil birthday clown" to stalk your child around for a week.
...If you had one billion dollars and spent $10,000 every day, it would take 275 years for you to spend it all.
...Hearing sarcastic remarks makes you more creative.
...An Indian airline only hires women because they are lighter, so they save up to $500,000 per year in fuel.
...Drinking 16 ounces of cold water on an empty stomach will increase your metabolism by about 30%.
...A bite is taken out of the Apple logo to provide scale, so that the apple wouldn't be mistaken for a cherry.
...When you go swimming, it's estimated that you swallow as many viruses as there are people on Earth.
...If Twitter was a country, it would be the 12th most populated country in the world.
...Bill Gates has impersonators who take his place at events the real Bill Gates cannot or does not want to attend.
...A 2.5 GB disk drive in 1980 was the size of a fridge. Price: US$40,000.
...The letter 'L' is on the right side of the keyboard, and the letter 'R' is on the left side.
...If an ant was the same size as us, it would be twice as fast as a Lamborghini.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on September 25, 2014, 07:32:29 pm
(http://i304.photobucket.com/albums/nn182/dragon5616/Diaries/Indy%20500/42-20Ray20Harroun20winner20at20Indy201911.jpg) (http://s304.photobucket.com/user/dragon5616/media/Diaries/Indy%20500/42-20Ray20Harroun20winner20at20Indy201911.jpg.html)

On this day, September 25, 1987
Ray Harroun's place in history was sealed when the U.S. Postal Service issued a stamp featuring the famous racing champion. Called "Racing Car 1911," the stamp depicted Harroun and the Marmon Wasp which he drove to victory in the first Indy 500. Harroun, an engineer, had built the car himself and was the only driver on the Indianapolis track without a riding mechanic. The mechanics usually accompanied the driver in order to warn him of the other cars in the race, but Harroun went the race alone after he rigged up a device that allowed him to see the cars behind him--the first rearview mirror. The race took over six hours to complete, with Harroun coming from 28th place to finish first. He died in 1968 at the age of 89.

September 25, 1926
Henry Ford of the Ford Motor Company announced the 8-hour, 5-day work week.

September 25, 1936
Bill Schindler, a race-car driver, met with misfortune, crashing during a sprint race in Mineola, New York. Three days after the accident, Schindler's left leg had to be amputated. However, this loss did not prevent him from continuing his career.

September 25, 2004
On September 25, 2004, Chinese officials gather at the brand-new Shanghai International Circuit racetrack in anticipation of the next day's inaugural Formula One Chinese Grand Prix. Though Formula One racing was traditionally a European sport, the builders and boosters of the state-sponsored Shanghai track--part of an elaborate complex called the Shanghai International Auto City--hoped that they could help the sport catch on in Asia. In particular, they hoped their high-tech raceway would draw attention and investment to the fledgling Chinese auto industry.
Formula One racing, in which drivers race around specially-designed circuits built to resemble twisting, irregular city streets is the offspring of European Grand Prix motor racing, an almost century-old sport in which drivers would zip from one town to the next on public roads. As the Grand Prix contests grew more popular, they grew more dangerous--to racers, spectators, and especially the ordinary drivers who happened to be on the roads during a race. Soon, race organizers decided to close the roads on the day of their events and to establish and enforce a set of official rules. In 1947, Grand Prix officials created the Federation Internationale de L'Automobile, which became the central governing authority of the championship races; its set of rules was known as the Formula One. Today, there are seventeen Formula One races every year, and they take place everywhere from Spain, Monaco, Belgium and Italy to Australia, Malaysia, Brazil, Abu Dhabi, Bahrain and, of course, China.
Shanghai's International Circuit raceway was designed to help China cash in on the skyrocketing international popularity of Formula One competitions. It is 3.3 miles long, with two long straightaways and 16 corners. It cost $300 million in public money--about $100 million per mile of track--and can seat 200,000 spectators. The day after the raceway opened, some 150,000 people filled the stands as the Brazilian driver Rubens Barrichello won its inaugural race.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on September 26, 2014, 08:34:37 pm
(http://i282.photobucket.com/albums/kk250/davejellyman/KARR2007.jpg) (http://s282.photobucket.com/user/davejellyman/media/KARR2007.jpg.html)

September 26, 1982
The first episode of the television show Knight Rider aired on this day, starring David Hasselhoff as private eye Michael Knight. However, the real star of the show was "KITT," his talking car. KITT, a modified Pontiac Firebird, complete with artificial intelligence and glowing red lights, assisted Michael in his detective work. During the show's four years, KITT attracted a loyal fan following, and a few episodes even featured "KARR," KITT's look-alike nemesis.
PICTURED: KARR

September 26, 1910
William C. Durant, carriage maker and entrepreneur, was the original patriarch of the corporate behemoth General Motors. But financial difficulties cost him control of the company. Determined to regain control of his brainchild, Durant joined forces with Louis Chevrolet to establish the Chevrolet Motor Company. Five years later, Durant and Chevrolet acquired control of GM and extended the massive umbrella of the General Motors Corporation, with Durant serving as president. Yet, he would go on to lose control of GM yet again in 1920, this time permanently.

September 26, 1910
Work begins at Chicago’s new Galvin Manufacturing Corporation. The company had officially incorporated the day before. In 1930, Galvin would introduce the Motorola radio, the first mass-produced commercial car radio. The name had two parts: “motor” evoked cars and motion, while “ola” derived from “Victrola” and was supposed to make people think of music.
In 1921, engineer Paul Galvin and his friend Edward Stewart started a storage-battery factory in Marshfield, Wisconsin; it went out of business two years later. In 1926, Galvin and Stewart re-started their battery-manufacturing company, this time in Chicago. That one went out of business too, but not before the partners figured out a way for home radios to draw power from an electrical wall outlet; they called it the dry-battery eliminator. Galvin bought back the eliminator part of his bankrupt company at auction for $750 and went right back into business, building and repairing eliminators and AC radio sets for customers like Sears, Roebuck.
Soon, however, Galvin’s attention turned to the car-radio business. The first car radios--portable “travel radios” powered by batteries, followed by custom-installed built-in radios that cost $250 apiece (about $2,800 in today’s dollars)--had appeared in 1926, but they were way too expensive for the average driver. If he could find a way to mass-produce affordable car radios, Galvin thought, he’d be rich. In June 1930, he enlisted inventors Elmer Wavering and William Lear to retrofit his old Studebaker with a radio and drove 800 miles to the Radio Manufacturers Association’s annual meeting in Atlantic City. He parked outside the convention, turned up the music (for this purpose, Wavering had installed a special speaker under the Studebaker’s hood), and waited for the RMAers’ orders to come rolling in.
A few did, and Galvin sold enough of his $110 5T71 car radios to come close to breaking even for the year. He changed his company’s name to Motorola and changed the way we drive--and ride in--cars forever.
For his part, William Lear went on to invent the eight-track cartridge-tape system, which came standard in every Ford car starting in 1966. Meanwhile, carmakers developed their own radio-manufacturing divisions, gradually squeezing Motorola out of the market it had built. The company stopped making car radios in 1984. Today, it’s best known for making cellular phones.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on September 27, 2014, 07:53:51 pm
(http://i108.photobucket.com/albums/n9/madyoukai/cars/nurburgring.png) (http://s108.photobucket.com/user/madyoukai/media/cars/nurburgring.png.html)

September 27, 1925
Construction on the infamous Nurburgring racing circuit, often referred to as a "green hell," began. The 12.9 mile course through the Eifel forests was considered the most dangerous segment of road on the planet, curving around 73 corners and covering a rise and fall of almost a 1,000 feet. The circuit held a strange spell over many drivers, beckoning the brave to test their skill. The "green hell" proved lethal to many, and was once rumored to average 20 accidents a day. Racing events are no longer officially held on the circuit, but the course is often used by auto manufacturers to test new models.

September 27, 1928
The first cornerstone of the Henry Ford Museum was laid today, the first step in establishing one of the most extensive collections of automotive history in the world. Although the museum is named after Henry Ford, its collection extends well beyond the Ford Motor Company. Its holdings include product literature, advertising and promotional materials, thousands of books, and almost 300 cars. The museum also hosts exhibits on everything from agriculture to industry and is located in Dearborn, Michigan.

September 27, 1990
Renault and Volvo signed an agreement of industrial cooperation, outlining plans for an eventual merger. The merger plans were abandoned three years later, leaving a lot of unanswered questions and speculations. Many industry experts suspect that Volvo backed out of the deal due to their lingering suspicion of the French government. Renault, a state-owned company, was slated for privatization, but critics found the plans too vague and saw the French government as susceptible to pressure from its workers. Economic pundits pointed to Europe's recession and double-digit unemployment. Some merely felt that Volvo, a symbol of Sweden's industrial prowess, was being bargained away too cheaply.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on September 29, 2014, 10:40:47 am
(http://i764.photobucket.com/albums/xx289/kuretic/American%20Autoracing/1895_chicago-evanston_-_frank__left.jpg) (http://s764.photobucket.com/user/kuretic/media/American%20Autoracing/1895_chicago-evanston_-_frank__left.jpg.html)

On this day, September 28, 1938
Inventor Charles Duryea dies in Philadelphia at the age of 76. Duryea and his brother Frank designed and built one of the first functioning “gasoline buggies,” or gas-powered automobiles, in the United States. For most of his life, however, Charles insisted on taking full credit for the brothers’ innovation. On the patent applications he filed for the Duryea Motor Wagon, for instance, Charles averred that he was the car’s sole inventor; he also loftily proclaimed that his brother was “simply a mechanic” hired to execute Charles’ plans.
Charles Duryea was not the inventor of the first gasoline engine, nor was he the first person to build a gas-powered car. Instead, as his obituary in the New York Times put it, he “had the rare mechanical wit to see how the contributions of his predecessors could be combined into a sound invention.” In 1886, Charles was working as a bicycle mechanic in Peoria when he received a jolt of inspiration from a gasoline engine he saw at a state fair. There was no reason, he thought, why such a motor could not be used to power a lightweight quadricycle. He spent seven years designing and redesigning his machine, a one-cylinder, four-horsepower, tiller-steered car with a water-cooled gas engine, a buggy body, and narrow metal oak-spoked wheels turned by bicycle chains. The car also had an electric ignition and a spray carburetor, both designed by Frank.
In September 1893, Frank Duryea took the finally-completed Motor Wagon out for its first official spin. He only managed to splutter about 600 feet down his block before the car’s friction-belt transmission failed, but even so, it was clear that the Duryea auto was a promising machine. It’s worth noting that Charles missed all this excitement: Frank and the car were in Springfield, Massachusetts, while the elder Duryea was fixing bikes in Peoria.
Two years later, on Thanksgiving Day, an improved Duryea Motor Wagon with pneumatic rubber tires won the first auto race in the United States. In 1896, the brothers built and sold 13 identical Duryeas, making theirs the first American company to manufacture more than one automobile at a time. After that, the brothers parted ways: Frank went on to build and sell the Stevens-Duryea Limousine, while Charles (“unable,” his Times obituary said, “to adapt himself to the public taste”) worked on designing less practical vehicles like tiller-steered mechanical tricycles.
PICTURED: Frank Duryea in 1895

September 28, 1978
Car & Driver Editor Don Sherman set a Class E record at the Bonneville Salt Flats in Utah driving the Mazda RX7, the standard-bearer for the rotary engine in the U.S. market, and reaching 183.904mph. The RX7's unique rotary engine doesn't have the standard pistons, instead, two rounded "rotors" spin to turn the engine's flywheel. Although the rotary engine was not a new concept, the Mazda RX7 was one of the first to conquer the reliability issues faced by earlier rotary engines. Light and fun to drive, with 105hp from its 1.1 liter rotary engine, the RX7 was extremely popular.

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September 28, 1982
Ford took a major step in overcoming its history of poor labor relations opening the joint UAW (United Auto Workers) and Ford National Development and Training Center. The center, located in Dearborn, Michigan, provides education and training to workers, as well as community programs. Workers can participate in any of six major programs, learning about everything from math skills to pension plans. More importantly, the center also offers relocation assistance and several unemployment programs for laid-off workers. Ford subsidizes the training center with grants and tuition assistance.

September 28, 1988
The Ahrens Fox Model AC fire engine had its 15 minutes of fame when the U.S. Postal Service featured the 1913 fire engine as part of its transportation series. The Ahrens-Fox Company was one of the most successful fire engine manufacturers in the country, thriving on the competition between volunteer fire companies that developed in the early twentieth century. These rivalries spurred ingenuity and innovation, as well as sales of fancy new fire-fighting equipment. The Model AC depicted on the stamp was bought by the town of San Angelo, Texas, for its fire department and featured new technology like the steam pump and chemical tank.

(http://i162.photobucket.com/albums/t251/BronzeGiant/2009%20SPAAMFAA%20National%20Muster/P7180161.jpg) (http://s162.photobucket.com/user/BronzeGiant/media/2009%20SPAAMFAA%20National%20Muster/P7180161.jpg.html)
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on September 29, 2014, 04:50:20 pm
(http://i1142.photobucket.com/albums/n609/socialstudiesproject3/Industrial%20Revolution/doble_and_houses1.jpg) (http://s1142.photobucket.com/user/socialstudiesproject3/media/Industrial%20Revolution/doble_and_houses1.jpg.html)

On this day, September 29, 1888
Daimler cars managed to make it to New York long before other imports due to an auto enthusiast named William Steinway. Steinway, concluded licensing negotiations with Gottlieb Daimler, gaining permission to manufacture Daimler cars in the U.S. He founded the "Daimler Motor Company" and began producing Daimler engines, as well as importing Daimler boats, trucks, and other equipment to the North American market. Still, the U.S. was just a small portion of Daimler's market, and when he introduced a new line in 1901, he christened it Mercedes because he feared the German-sounding Daimler would not sell well.
PICTURED: Karl Benz received a patent for the first Automobile in 1866, which had three wheels. A year later, Gottlieb Daimler introduced the first four wheel automobile in the Industrial Age.

September 29, 1908
William Durrant merged Buick, Oldsmobile (Lansing, MI) into General Motors. He also added Cadillac (Detroit) for $4.4 million cash, Oakland (Pontiac predecessor), dozens of parts suppliers (AC Spark Plug) into GM.

September 29, 1913
Rudolf Diesel, inventor of the engine that bears his name, disappears from the steamship Dresden while traveling from Antwerp, Belgium to Harwick, England. On October 10, a Belgian sailor aboard a North Sea steamer spotted a body floating in the water; upon further investigation, it turned out that the body was Diesel’s. There was, and remains, a great deal of mystery surrounding his death: It was officially judged a suicide, but many people believed that Diesel was murdered.
Diesel patented a design for his engine on February 28, 1892,; the following year, he explained his design in a paper called “Theory and Construction of a Rational Heat Engine to Replace the Steam Engine and Contemporary Combustion Engine.” He called his invention a “compression ignition engine” that could burn any fuel--later on, the prototypes he built would run on peanut or vegetable oil--and needed no ignition system: It ignited by introducing fuel into a cylinder full of air that had been compressed to an extremely high pressure and was, therefore, extremely hot.
Such an engine would be unprecedentedly efficient, Diesel argued: In contrast to the other steam engines of the era, which wasted more than 90 percent of their fuel energy, Diesel calculated that his could be as much as 75 percent efficient. The most efficient engine that Diesel ever actually built had an efficiency of 26 percent--not quite 75 percent, but still much better than its peers.
By 1912, there were more than 70,000 diesel engines working around the world, mostly in factories and generators. Eventually, Diesel’s engine would revolutionize the railroad industry; after World War II, trucks and buses also started using diesel-type engines that enabled them to carry heavy loads much more economically.
At the time of Diesel’s disappearance , he was on his way to England to attend the groundbreaking of a new diesel-engine plant--and to meet with the British navy about installing his engine on their submarines. Conspiracy theories began to fly almost immediately: “Inventor Thrown Into the Sea to Stop Sale of Patents to British Government,” read one headline; another worried that Diesel was “Murdered by Agents from Big Oil Trusts.” It is likely that Diesel did throw himself overboard--as it turns out, he was nearly broke, but the mystery will probably never be solved.

September 29, 1983
Henry Ford II, grandson and namesake of Henry Ford, joined his grandfather today as a member of the Automotive Hall of Fame in Midland, Michigan. When he succeeded his father as president of the Ford Motor Company, the automotive giant was crumbling, losing several million dollars a month and mired in old-fashioned practices. Henry Ford II quickly set about modernizing the company and is often credited with its revitalization.

TODAYS TRIVIA:
...American school buses are yellow because you see yellow faster than any other color, 1.24 times faster than red in fact.
...There’s a man who is ‘allergic’ to Wi-Fi. It’s a condition called “Electromagnetic Sensitivity.”
...There are four people in USA with the name "Herp Derp."
...An elephant weighs less than a blue whale's tongue.
...In 1898 Bayer introduced diacetylmorphine, marketed as a cure for morphine addiction and cough suppressant. The drug is now known as Heroin.
...Krusty the Clown was originally supposed to be Homer Simpson's secret identity, which is why he looks like Homer with clown make-up.
...The famous ring announcer Michael Buffer has earnt over $400 million from his trademarked phrase "Let's get ready to rumble!"
...Adolf Hitler almost drowned in a river when he was 4 years old but was saved by a local priest.
...There's a word for mishearing a lyric for a different but similar sounding word in a song - it's "mondegreen."
...If Dr Seuss was stuck with his writing, he & his editor would go to a secret closet filled with 100s of hats & wear them till the words came
...Jerusalem Syndrome is when you visit Jerusalem and suddenly have religious delusions, believing that you are the next coming of Jesus.
...Bananas, pumpkins and watermelons are berries.
...Egypt isn't the country with the most pyramids. It's Sudan and they have approximately 255 pyramids.
...In France, by law a bakery has to make all the bread it sells from scratch in order to have the right to be called a bakery.
...Between Egypt + Sudan, there's a territory no one owns. It is is one of the few unclaimed regions on earth.
...Marilyn Monroe had six toes.
...No women or children die in any of the Jurassic Park movies.
...There is a place called 'Cat Island' where the ratio of cats to humans is 4 to 1.
...Domino's Pizza canceled their '30 minutes or less' guarantee because drivers caused accidents while rushing to deliver pizzas on time.
...A Megadeath is a unit of measurement. 1 Megadeath = 1 million deaths caused by nuclear explosion.
...Winston Churchill once defined tact as "the ability to tell someone to go to hell in such as way that they look forward to the trip."
...America's first slave owner was a black man.
...Every month, humans spend more than 35 billion hours on the Internet.
...Dolphins, whales and apes are the only animals, other than humans, known to commit suicide.
..."Limerence" = The technical term for having a crush on a person.
...The word “Android” refers only to a male looking robot. For one that looks like a female, the proper term is “Gynoid.”
...A man named Jack Ass tried to sue Jackass for $10 million.
...In television commercials, the icecream you see is actually mashed potatoes & the milk is just white glue.
...Cracking your knuckles does not actually hurt your bones or cause arthritis.
...A single sperm contains 37.5 MB of DNA information. One ejaculation represents a data transfer of 15,875 GB.
...Christopher Columbus, on the way to the New World, was stranded in Jamaica in 1503 A.D. Knowing that he was wearing out his welcome with the natives and that a lunar eclipse was near, Columbus warned the natives that moon would vanish if they did not continue to feed him and his sailors.
...In 1700 the average person consumed 4 pounds of sugar a year - today, most Americans consume that much every 8 days.
...The German word for 'birth control pill' is "antibabypille."
...Most professional soccer players run 7 miles in a game.
...Tupac danced ballet in high school and ended up portraying the Mouse King in a production of The Nutcracker.
...Not swinging your arms when you walk increases the effort of walking by 12%, that's equal of walking 20% faster or carrying a 10kg backpack.
...A Boeing 727 aircraft was stolen out of an airport in 2003. Neither the plane, nor the two men aboard were ever found.
...There was an experiment where three schizophrenic men who believed they were Jesus Christ were all put in one place to sort it out.
...An electric bell has been running off the same battery for 170 years and no one knows what the battery is made of.
...Beethoven's last words were "I shall hear in Heaven."
...People who can naturally detect when someone's lying, are called "Truth Wizards."
...Drinking too much water can kill you.
...The average computer user spends more time touching their computer keyboard than their spouse or partner.
...An internet addict is someone who spends more than 6 hours a day online, not doing anything important, regularly for 3 or more months.
...Everybody who carries the red-head gene is directly related to the 1st person ever to have red hair.
..."Eargasm" describes the chill and tingling sensation down your spine when listening to very good music.
...When a contestant leaves Hell’s Kitchen, they are immediately taken for a psychiatric evaluation.
...It takes 59 minutes to make an Oreo cookie.
...Japan has over 50,000 people that are over 100 years old.
...Lady Gaga and Brad Pitt were once strippers.
...Cooked tarantula spiders are considered a delicacy in Cambodia.
...China builds one skyscraper every five days.
...University of Oregon plagiarized the section on plagiarism in its student handbook from Stanford's teaching handbook.
...When asked why she had shot 11 people at her school, the shooter, 16-year old Brenda Ann Spencer, replied, "I don't like Mondays."
...Sid Vicious was such a poor bassist that when performing with the Sex Pistols his band mates would often unplug his amplifier mid-performance.
...Levi Strauss never wore a pair of jeans.
...King Shapur ll of Persia ruled longer than he lived, having been crowned king before his birth.
...Pitbulls and similar Pit breeds accounted for 61% of all serious dog attacks in the U.S. and Canada from 1982 through 2012.
...In Russia, it's now illegal to tell kids that gay people exist.
...People were confused how a Chinese couple managed to run a busy restaurant 21 hours a day without getting tired. Locals named it "robot couple restaurant". Turns out the restaurant is run by two couples … both the men and women are identical twins.
...Pac-Man is the highest grossing arcade game of all time - having sold 400,000 hardware units. If adjusted for inflation it made $7.61 billion in revenue.
..."siri" spelled backwards is "iris" who was the messenger between the gods and humans in Greek mythology
...Mountain Dew contains flame retardant.
...There are so many kind of apples, that if you ate a new one everyday, it would take over 20 years to try them all.
...14-year-old Kurt Cobain announced to a schoolmate that he'd be a superstar musician, get rich and famous, kill himself and go out in a blaze of glory like Jimi Hendrix.
...President Lyndon Johnson was infamous for having meetings while on the toilet.
...A Japanese customs officer planted marijuana in a traveller's suitcase, forgot who it was and the sniffer dogs missed it.
...Prisoners in the 1800s were fed lobster - and it was considered cruel and unusual punishment.
...Camel bites can cause your bones to dissolve.
...World's largest single food item on any menu is whole camel stuffed with sheep stuffed with chicken stuffed with fish.
...Stephen Hawking has survived for over fifty years after being diagnosed with a disease that only 4% of people survive 10 years with.
...The plural, gender-neutral term for "nieces and nephews" is "niblings"
...In Bulgarian legends, it is said that if you walk beneath a rainbow, you will change genders.
...An octopus's testicles are in its head.
...Coca-Cola only sold 25 bottles the first year but kept going.
...Jimi Hendrix failed his high school music class.
...The scientist who developed the vaccine to fight leprosy is almost 100 years old, and he is still working to find a vaccine for cancer.
...Brown eyes are actually blue underneath, and as a result you can actually get surgery to turn brown eyes blue

And Finally the best one

A man in Florida woke up with a severe headache. When he went to the hospital they found a bullet in his head. It turned out that his wife had shot him in the head while he was sleeping.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on September 30, 2014, 08:50:33 pm
(http://i245.photobucket.com/albums/gg70/bleudaisymae/Moonlight%20Pics/james_dean_porsche_spyder.jpg) (http://s245.photobucket.com/user/bleudaisymae/media/Moonlight%20Pics/james_dean_porsche_spyder.jpg.html)

On this day, September 30, 1955
24-year-old actor James Dean is killed in Cholame, California, when the Porsche he is driving hits a Ford Tudor sedan at an intersection. The driver of the other car, 23-year-old California Polytechnic State University student Donald Turnupseed, was dazed but mostly uninjured; Dean’s passenger, German Porsche mechanic Rolf Wütherich was badly injured but survived. Only one of Dean’s movies, “East of Eden,” had been released at the time of his death (“Rebel Without a Cause” and “Giant” opened shortly afterward), but he was already on his way to superstardom--and the crash made him a legend.
James Dean loved racing cars, and in fact he and his brand-new, $7000 Porsche Spyder convertible were on their way to a race in Salinas, 90 miles south of San Francisco. Witnesses maintained that Dean hadn’t been speeding at the time of the accident--in fact, Turnupseed had made a left turn right into the Spyder’s path--but some people point out that he must have been driving awfully fast: He’d gotten a speeding ticket in Bakersfield, 150 miles from the crash site, at 3:30 p.m. and then had stopped at a diner for a Coke, which meant that he’d covered quite a distance in a relatively short period of time. Still, the gathering twilight and the glare from the setting sun would have made it impossible for Turnupseed to see the Porsche coming no matter how fast it was going.
Rumor has it that Dean’s car, which he’d nicknamed the Little *******, was cursed. After the accident, the car rolled off the back of a truck and crushed the legs of a mechanic standing nearby. Later, after a used-car dealer sold its parts to buyers all over the country, the strange incidents multiplied: The car’s engine, transmission and tires were all transplanted into cars that were subsequently involved in deadly crashes, and a truck carrying the Spyder’s chassis to a highway-safety exhibition skidded off the road, killing its driver. The remains of the car vanished from the scene of that accident and haven’t been seen since.
Wütherich, whose feelings of guilt after the car accident never abated, tried to commit suicide twice during the 1960s--and in 1967, he stabbed his wife 14 times with a kitchen knife in a failed murder/suicide--and he died in a drunk-driving accident in 1981. Turnupseed died of lung cancer in 1981.

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September 30, 1937
The Duesenberg were considered the most luxurious cars in the world, hand-crafted and custom-made, heeded as the epitome of flamboyance and elegance. Their clientele included the great, the near-great, the famous, and the infamous. For almost 10 years, Duesenbergs were acknowledged as the ultimate in quality and value, inspiring the expression "it's a duesy." However, this symbol of opulence suffered during the hard times of the Great Depression, and Duesenberg was forced to close its doors forever on this day.
PICTURE: 1929, Bill Spence's Indianapolis-built Duesenberg special

September 30, 1901
Compulsory car registration for all vehicles driving over 18mph took effect throughout France.

TODAYS TRIVIA:
...When Nike approached Zach Galifianakis from The Hangover for advertising, Zach asked: Do you guys still have 7-year-olds making your stuff?
...3 years of your life will be spent on the toilet.
...The phrase "and they lived happily ever after" was originally "happily until they died."
...Worrying about getting sick can make you sick.
...Popcorn has been eaten for almost 7,000 years.
...Relationships that start during the spring to summer months are the most long lasting relationships!
...Crying releases extra stress hormones, which is why you feel better after crying!
...A study found that morning people are happier and more satisfied with life overall than night owls.
...Apple makes $302,000 per minute.
...The original Ronald McDonald was fired for being overweight.
...According to a study, most people are happiest at 7:26 PM on Saturday night.
...Prime Minister of India's salary is only $2,400 USD.
...1.5 billion people do not have access to electricity, 2.5 billion have no toilet, and 1 billion go hungry every day.
...Only 8% of the world's currency exists as physical cash; the rest is electronic.
...There were 53 kilobytes of digital memory worldwide in 1953.
...Studies show that it is harder to tell a convincing lie to someone you find sexually attractive.
...On an average working day, waiters and waitresses walk twice as much as lawyers and police officers do.
...The most abused drug in the world is caffeine
..."Batman" is actually the real name of a city in Turkey.
...Arnold Schwarzenegger was so into working out when he was young, that he broke into local gyms when they were closed on weekends.
...Broccoli is the only vegetable that is also a flower.
...The "Pinky Promise" originally indicated that the person who breaks the promise must cut off their pinky finger.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on October 01, 2014, 05:32:35 pm
(http://i106.photobucket.com/albums/m242/crazeehorse_2006/1390096316_1d5afbe211.jpg) (http://s106.photobucket.com/user/crazeehorse_2006/media/1390096316_1d5afbe211.jpg.html)

October 1, 1908
Beginning in 1903, Henry Ford and his engineers struggled for five difficult years to produce a reliable, inexpensive car for the mass market. It wasn't until their 20th attempt, christened the Model T after the 20th letter in the alphabet, that the fledgling Ford Motor Company hit pay dirt. The Ford Model T was introduced to the American public, and Ford's affordable revolution had begun. Affectionately known as the "Tin Lizzie," the Model T revolutionized the automotive industry by providing an affordable, reliable car for the average American. Ford was able to keep the price down by retaining control of all raw materials, and by employing revolutionary mass production methods. When it was first introduced, the "Tin Lizzie" cost only $850 and seated two people, and by the time it was discontinued in 1927, nearly 15,000,000 Model Ts had been sold. Who'd of thought that after 100 years, these cars would be modified into such cars as "Rat Rods"

Today's Trivia:
...People who are sad are likely to spend more money than those who are happy.
...It is possible to die from a broken heart -- This condition is called Stress Cardiomyopathy.
...James Bond killed 352 people in 22 films and Pierce Brosnan was the deadliest Bond (killed 47 people in GoldenEye)
...People who were born in September, October and November are the most likely to live to be 100 years old.
...According to an Oxford study, falling in love costs you two close friends.
...One Direction's band member, Harry Styles was born with 4 nipples.
...Leonardo da Vinci could draw with one hand and write with the other at the same time.
...A woman was found dead on the couch of her London apartment 3 years after her death. The TV was still on.
...When the Arctic Monkeys started their band, none of them could play instruments.
...We actually live about 80 milliseconds in the past because that's how long it takes our brains to process information.
...United States is the only country in the world where property owners own the rights to the underground resources beneath their property.
...Air Jordans were banned from the NBA, however Michael Jordan always wore them as Nike was willing to pay the fine for each game.
...When Charlie Chaplin met Einstein he said: They applaud me because everybody understands me. They applaud you because no one understands you
..."Never odd or even" spelled backwards is "Never odd or even"
...When any of your body parts fall asleep, wake it up by shaking your head.
...Cost of college degree in the U.S. has increased 1120% in only 30 years.
...Left-handers are more prone to certain diseases, such as dyslexia, but they are also more likely to be geniuses.
...One in five people in Singapore is a millionaire, making it the city/state with the most millionaires per capita.
...There's a Japanese movie called "Zombie ass" about zombie's which come out of toilet seats.
...The cost of being a real world Batman would be about $300 million dollars.
...20% of all Google searches done daily have never been done before.
...WiFi does not stand for Wireless Fidelity. It stands for... nothing. It's a made up catchy name developed by a marketing company.
...Sexually frustrated people are actually more likely to rip and tear the labels off of their drink bottles.
...You have a better chance of becoming President of the United States than winning Saturday's $600 million Powerball jackpot.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on October 02, 2014, 08:08:49 pm
(http://i386.photobucket.com/albums/oo306/Tarya/F1%20Nostalgia/1947belgiangpachillevarzv4.jpg) (http://s386.photobucket.com/user/Tarya/media/F1%20Nostalgia/1947belgiangpachillevarzv4.jpg.html)

October 2, 1947
On this day, the Federation Internationale de l'Automobile (FIA) formally established F1 racing in Grand Prix competition for the first time. Technological leaps made during World War II had rendered pre-war racing rules obsolete, so the Formula One guidelines were established in order to encompass the new type of racing, faster and more furious than anything the racing world had ever seen. Formula One was initiated for cars of 1,500cc supercharged and 4,500cc unsupercharged, and the minimum race distance was reduced from 500km to 300km, a change that allowed the famous Monaco Grand Prix to be reintroduced into official Grand Prix racing. In 1950, Giuseppe "Nino" Farina, driving an Alfa Romeo 158, won the first Formula One World Championship at the Silverstone British Grand Prix, and racing's most thrilling tradition was born.
PICTURED: Achille Varzi leading the race. 1947 GP Spa - Varzi

October 2, 1948
Law student Cameron Argetsinger's vision of bringing European style racing competition to the place where he spent his summer vacations became a reality. Under the guidance of Argetsinger and the Sports Car Club of America (SCCA), the village of Watkins Glen, located in the scenic New York Finger Lakes region, hosted its first automobile races along a challenging course that encompassed asphalt, cement, and dirt roads. It was the first post-World War II road race in the United States, and Frank Griswold, driving a 2.9 liter prewar Alfa Romeo, won both events offered, a 26.4-mile Junior Prix, and the 52.8-mile Grand Prix. Cameron Argetsinger competed as well, driving an MG-TC, but proved to be a better racing organizer than actual participant. The Watkins Glen Grand Prix went on to have a prestigious history as a racing venue, hosting a variety of premium racing events through the years.

October 2, 1959
At a news conference broadcast to viewers in 21 cities on closed-circuit television, Henry Ford II introduces his company’s newest car--the 90-horsepower, 30 miles-per-gallon Falcon. The Falcon, dubbed “the small car with the big car feel,” was an overnight success. It went on sale that October 8 and by October 9, dealers had snapped up every one of the 97,000 cars in the first production run.
In 1959, each one of Detroit’s Big Three automakers began to sell a smaller, zippier, lower-priced car: Ford had the Falcon, while General Motors had the Corvair and Chevrolet had the Valiant. After years of building huge, gas-guzzling, lavishly be-finned cars, American companies entered the small-car market because European carmakers like Volkswagen, Fiat, and Renault were selling their little cars to American buyers by the thousands.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on October 03, 2014, 09:51:31 pm
(http://i37.photobucket.com/albums/e81/KerryTrout/16-cylDuesenbergAirplaneEng.jpg) (http://s37.photobucket.com/user/KerryTrout/media/16-cylDuesenbergAirplaneEng.jpg.html)

On this day, October 3, 1912
In the first professional racing victory for a car fitted with a Duesenberg engine, race car driver Mortimer Roberts won the 220-mile Pabst Blue Ribbon Trophy Race, held in and around the village of Wauwatosa, Wisconsin. The engine was designed by Duesenberg brothers who had immigrated to Iowa from Germany in the late-nineteenth century. After honing his mechanical talents by repairing early automobiles, Frederick Duesenberg became enthralled with the prospect of motor racing, and with his brother August opened an automobile shop. After establishing their reputation with engines and other racing parts, the Duesenberg brothers began construction of the first complete Duesenberg racing cars. The first great racing triumph of one of their cars came in 1921 when a Duesenberg was driven to victory in the 24-Hour event at Le Mans, France. The mid-1920s found the Duesenbergs in the racing world's spotlight, especially at the Indy 500, where their cars won the event outright in 1924, 1925, and 1927. But the Duesenberg's most significant contribution to automotive history came after automobile manufacturer E.L. Cord bought Duesenberg Motors in 1926, with the sole purpose of obtaining the design expertise of Fred Duesenberg. Cord wanted to produce the most luxurious car in the world, and in 1928, the Duesenberg-designed Model J was presented, widely considered to be one of the finest automobiles ever made.
PICTURED: A 16 Cylinder Duesenberg engine

October 3, 1961
The United Auto Workers (UAW) called the first company-wide strike against Ford Motor Company since the Ford's first union contract was signed in 1941. During the late 1930s, Ford was the last of the Big Three auto firms still holding out against unionization, and it employed strong-arm tactics to suppress any union activity. In 1937, tension between Ford and its workers came to a head at the "Battle of the Overpass," an infamous event where Ford's dreaded security force beat union organizers attempting to pass out UAW leaflets along the Miller Road Overpass in Dearborn, Michigan. Several people were brutally beaten while many other union supporters, including 11 women, were injured in the melee that followed. It took four more years of struggle and a 10-day strike before Ford agreed to sign its first closed-shop contract with the UAW, covering 123,000 employees. The ascension of Henry Ford II, Henry Ford's grandson, to the Ford leadership position in 1945 brought a period of stability in Ford-UAW relations, especially after Henry Ford II fired the powerful Personnel Chief Harry Bennett, whose anti-union stance had made Ford notorious for its bad labor relations. But in 1961, negotiations between the Ford Motor Company and the UAW fell apart again, and it took 17 days of striking before a tenuous three-year agreement was signed.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on October 04, 2014, 10:02:08 pm
(http://i190.photobucket.com/albums/z276/RikMcCloud/Thrust2.jpg) (http://s190.photobucket.com/user/RikMcCloud/media/Thrust2.jpg.html)

On this day, October 4, 1983
After nearly 20 years of domination by Americans, British racer Richard Noble raced to a new one-mile land-speed record in his jet-powered Thrust 2 vehicle. The Thrust 2, a 17,000-pound jet-powered Rolls-Royce Avon 302 designed by John Ackroyd, reached a record 633.468mph over the one-mile course in Nevada's stark Black Rock Desert, breaking the 631.367mph speed record achieved by Gary Gabelich's Blue Flame in 1970. Previous to Gary Gabelich there was Craig Breedlove, the American driver who recorded a series of astounding victories in jet-powered vehicles during the 1960s, breaking the 400mph, 500mph, and 600mph barriers in 1963, 1964, and 1965, respectively. In 1997, Breedlove and Noble returned to Black Rock Desert again, this time in a race to break the elusive 700mph barrier. On September 25, team leader Noble watched as British fighter pilot Andy Green set a new land-speed record in their Thrust SSC vehicle, jet-powering to an impressive 714.144mph over the one-mile course. But the greatest victory for the British team came on October 13 of that same year, when Andy Green roared across Black Rock Desert at 764.168mph, or 1.007 percent above the speed of sound. Appropriately, the first shattering of the sound barrier by a land vehicle came on the eve of the 50th anniversary of the first supersonic flight, achieved by American pilot Chuck Yeager in 1947.

October 4, 1946
Berna Eli "Barney" Oldfield, an automobile racer and pioneer died on this day at the age of 68. He was the first man to drive a car at 60 miles per hour (96 km/h). His accomplishments led to the expression "Who do you think you are? Barney Oldfield?"

October 4, 1983
Sarah Marie Fisher, an American professional race car driver competing in the IndyCar Series was born in Columbus, Ohio. She was the youngest woman to compete in the Indianapolis 500 at age 19 in 2000.

October 4, 1992
Denis Clive "Denny" Hulme, a New Zealand car racer who won the 1967 Formula One World Champion for the Brabham team died on this day, While competing in Bathurst 1000, held at the famous Mount Panorama track in Australia.
In the 1992 event he was sharing a Benson & Hedges-sponsored BMW M3 with Paul Morris. After complaining of blurred vision Hulme suffered a massive heart attack at the wheel whilst travelling part the way down the 200-mph Conrod Straight. After veering into the wall on the right side of the track, he managed to bring the car to a relatively controlled stop sliding against the safety railing and concrete wall. When marshals reached the scene they found Hulme still strapped in, dead.

TODAYS TRIVIA:
...There are tiny bugs closely related to spiders living in the pores of your face, which crawl about your face in the dark to mate.
...'Ultracrepidarian' is a person who doesn't know what they're talking about.
...Bill Cosby's son was murdered in 1997. His character "Little Bill" was based on his son.
...A Pennsylvania elementary school had and entire class made of 6 sets twins and 2 sets of triplets.
...A 15 year old hacked NASA computers and caused a 21 day shutdown of their computers.
...Eskimos use refrigerators to stop their food from freezing.
...From 1979 to 1992 Soviets drilled a super deep bore that reached 40,230 ft (12,262m) just to see how deep they could drill.
...Only 2% of women describe themselves as beautiful.
...The pleasant smell of earth after it has rained is call 'petrichor' and is caused by bacteria in the soil.
...Johnny Depp has played guitar for Marilyn Manson, Oasis, and Aerosmith.
...A greetings card that can play 'Happy Birthday' has more computing power than existed in the whole world in 1950
...The human body burns 3-6 calories when your nipples become hard.
...It's completely legal for women to walk around topless in New York State. (love New York)
...There is a mineral named Cummingtonite.
...The average person looks at their phone 150 times a day
...Every Harry Potter movie is on the list of top 50 highest grossing films of all time.
...Robert Downey Jr. only made 500k for Iron Man, but two years later made 10 million for Iron man 2.
...It is possible to die from a broken heart -- This condition is called Stress Cardiomyopathy.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on October 06, 2014, 02:12:15 am
(http://i645.photobucket.com/albums/uu176/MustangMayhem/Ferrari/10460410_933623929996828_3755712931250437996_n_zps9cfed106.jpg) (http://s645.photobucket.com/user/MustangMayhem/media/Ferrari/10460410_933623929996828_3755712931250437996_n_zps9cfed106.jpg.html)

On this day, October 5, 1919
A young Italian car mechanic and engineer named Enzo Ferrari takes part in his first car race, a hill climb in Parma, Italy. He finished fourth. Ferrari was a good driver, but not a great one: In all, he won just 13 of the 47 races he entered. Many people say that this is because he cared too much for the sports cars he drove: He could never bring himself to ruin an engine in order to win a race.
In the mid-1920s, Ferrari retired from racing cars in order to pursue his first love: building them. He took over the Alfa Romeo racing department in 1929 and began to turn out cars under his own name. Annoyed with Ferrari's heavy-handed management style, Alfa Romeo fired him in 1939. After that, he started his own manufacturing firm, but he spent the war years building machine tools, not race cars.
In 1947, the first real Ferraris appeared on the market at last. That same year, Ferrari won the Rome Grand Prix, his first race as an independent carmaker. In 1949, a Ferrari won the Le Mans road race for the first time and in 1952 one of the team's drivers, Alberto Ascari, became the world racing champion: He won every race he entered that year.
That decade was Ferrari's most triumphant: Year after year, his cars dominated the field, winning eight world championships and five Grand Prix championships. Ferrari won so much because his cars were ruthless. They were bigger and stronger than everyone else's and (in part to compensate for their excess weight) they had much more powerful engines. He also ensured success by flooding races with his cars and by hiring the boldest, most daredevil drivers he could find. Unfortunately, this combination of reckless drivers and heavy, superpowered cars was a recipe for tragedy: Between 1955 and 1965, six of Ferrari's 20 drivers were killed in crashes and on five different occasions his cars careened into crowds of spectators, killing 50 bystanders in all. (In 1957, Ferrari was even tried for manslaughter after one of these bloody wrecks, but he was acquitted.)
Ferrari tended to scorn technological advances that he did not come up with himself, so he was slow to accept things like disc brakes, rear-mounted engines and fuel-injection systems. As a result, the stranglehold his cars had on races around the world began to loosen. Still, by the time he died in 1988, Ferrari cars had won more than 4,000 races.
Unique thing about Enzo is that he used to build and sell his car so that he could race. Unlike other's who enter racing to sell their cars.
PICTURED:Sheri's 1961 Ferrari GT250 california
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on October 06, 2014, 10:57:55 pm
(http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v102/leadpoisoned/cars/1899_Daimler_Tonneau.jpg) (http://smg.photobucket.com/user/leadpoisoned/media/cars/1899_Daimler_Tonneau.jpg.html)

On this day, October 6, 1888
William Steinway, car enthusiast, son of Heinrich Engelhard Steinweg (Henry Steinway, piano manufacturer), acquired licensing rights from Gottlieb Daimler to manufacture Daimler cars in U.S. He founded the "Daimler Motor Company", began producing Daimler engines, importing Daimler boats, trucks, other equipment to North American market.
PICTURED: 1899 Daimler Tonneau

October 6, 1926
Duesenberg Company was incorporated into the Auburn-Cord company. Frederick (design) and August Duesenberg began working toward E L. Cord's dream of the ultimate luxury automobile.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on October 07, 2014, 10:42:32 pm
(http://i10.photobucket.com/albums/a108/thesigalafactor/Route_66.jpg) (http://s10.photobucket.com/user/thesigalafactor/media/Route_66.jpg.html)

October 7, 1960
The first episode of the one-hour television drama "Route 66" airs on CBS. The program had a simple premise: It followed two young men, Buz Murdock and Tod Stiles, as they drove across the country in an inherited Corvette (Chevrolet was one of the show's sponsors), doing odd jobs and looking for adventure. According to the show's creator and writer, Stirling Silliphant, Buz and Tod were really on a journey in search of themselves.
"Route 66" was different from every other show on television. For one thing, it was shot on location all over the United States instead of in a studio. By the time its run was up in 1964, the show's cast and crew had traveled from Maine to Florida and from Los Angeles to Toronto: In all, they taped 116 episodes in 25 states. (Silliphant himself arrived at all the show's locations six weeks before anyone else. When he got there, he would acquaint himself with local culture and write the scripts on-site.) The show was a serious drama with social-realist pretensions, but its nomadic premise meant that it could tackle a new issue--war, mental illness, religion, murder, drug addiction, drought--every week. By contrast, police procedurals and hospital dramas necessarily had a more limited range. The show's stark black-and-white cinematography was likewise suited to its serious tone.
The real Route 66 was a two-lane highway that ran from Chicago to Los Angeles. From its completion in the late 1930s, it was one of the major routes across the American Southwest. It was also probably the most famous: John Steinbeck called it the "Mother Road" in his book "The Grapes of Wrath," and Nat King Cole's version of songwriter Bobby Troup's 1946 song "(Get Your Kicks On) Route 66" is still familiar to many people today.
In 1993, NBC developed a peppier, less gritty remake of the show--in fact, about the only thing the two "Route 66"s had in common was the Corvette--but it went off the air after just a few episodes.

October 7, 1913
Ford introduced continuously moving assembly line to assemble chassis in Highland Park automobile factory, assembly was divided into 29 operations performed by 29 men spaced along moving belt. This systems reduced man-hours to complete one "Model T" from 12 1/2 hours to six (reduced to 93 man-minutes in a year; eventually, one Model T produced every 24 seconds), drastically reduce the cost of the Model T, made car affordable to ordinary consumers.

October 7, 1976
Marc Coma, Spanish motorcycle racer was born in Avià, Barcelona He won the Dakar Rally in 2006 riding a KTM motorcycle. He is also the World Champion in the Rallies Cross Country Motorcycles Tournament in 2005, 2006 and 2007.

October 7, 2007
Norifumi "Norick" Abe, a Japanese Moto GP racer died in a traffic accident while riding a 500 cc Yamaha T-Max scooter in Kawasaki, Kanagawa. He collided with a truck, which made an illegal U-turn in front of him, at 6:20pm local time. He was pronounced dead two and a half hours later at 8:50pm at the hospital where he was taken for treatment.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on October 08, 2014, 11:35:01 pm
(http://i645.photobucket.com/albums/uu176/MustangMayhem/this%20day%20in%20HISTORY/duryea_zps80986dc3.jpg) (http://s645.photobucket.com/user/MustangMayhem/media/this%20day%20in%20HISTORY/duryea_zps80986dc3.jpg.html)

On this day, October 8, 1869
The inventor and mechanic Frank Duryea is born on a farm in Washburn, Illinois. When Duryea was just 24 years old, he and his older brother, Charles, designed and built the Duryea Motor Wagon, one of the first successful gas-powered motor vehicles in the United States. Ever since then, there has been a great deal of disagreement over exactly which brother was responsible for the invention of the Motor Wagon. Because he outlived Charles by almost 80 years, Frank had the last word. Until the day he died in February 1967, the younger Duryea brother insisted that the pioneering automobile was entirely his own creation (except, that is, for the troublesome steering tiller that never worked quite correctly).
What is beyond dispute is that Frank Duryea was the first automobile driver on the American road. In September 1893, he was behind the wheel as the Duryea car made its first successful trip, 600 yards down his street in Springfield, Massachusetts. When he tried to turn the corner, the Motor Wagon's transmission blew; however, Frank managed to patch it back together and putter down the road for another half-mile or so.
In September 1895 the two brothers organized the first car company in the United States, the Duryea Motor Wagon Company, to build and sell their gas-powered contraptions. On Thanksgiving Day of that year, in a brilliant promotional stunt, Frank won the country's first automobile race, the Chicago Times-Herald race from Chicago to Evanston. (The race unfolded despite an enormous snowstorm that made the roads nearly impassable; still, Frank managed to complete the 50-mile loop in a little more than 10 hours.)
Frank left the Duryea Motor Wagon Company in 1899 and two years later he helped start the Stevens-Duryea Company, another auto manufacturing concern in Chicopee Falls, Massachusetts. He retired in 1915 and spent the rest of his days living comfortably in Connecticut, traveling, gardening and puttering around his workshop.

October 8, 1955
William Clyde Elliott most famously known as Bill Elliot was born in Dawsonville, Georgia. Elliott was inducted into the Motorsports Hall of Fame of America on August 15, 2007. He won the 1988 NASCAR Winston Cup Championship and has garnered 44 wins in that series.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on October 09, 2014, 09:59:17 pm
(http://i1011.photobucket.com/albums/af233/carl44s/motorsports%201920-1942/dario-resta-peugeot-1916.jpg) (http://s1011.photobucket.com/user/carl44s/media/motorsports%201920-1942/dario-resta-peugeot-1916.jpg.html)

On this day, October 9, 1915
Racer Gil Anderson set a new auto speed record on the opening day of races at the Sheepshead Bay Speedway, located in Brooklyn, New York. Driving a Stutz automobile, Anderson achieved an average speed of 102.6mph over a 350-mile course, breaking the 100mph barrier while setting a new speed record for such a distance. Anderson was participating in the celebrated Vincent Astor Cup event, an annual auto race that attracted thousands of auto enthusiasts to Sheepshead Bay for several decades.

October 9, 1992
Thousands of people in the Eastern United States witnessed an above-average-size meteorite enter the Earth's atmosphere with a sonic boom, and burst into flames as it streaked across the sky over several states. Photographed and videotaped by over a dozen people, the fireball flew over an open football stadium before crashing into Peekskill, New York, a small city 50 miles north of New York City. The 30 pound, football-size meteorite struck a 1980 Chevy Malibu parked in a driveway, penetrating the trunk of the car and missing the gas tank by inches. The owner of the totaled automobile reportedly expressed wonder at the fact that an object in orbit around the sun for millions of years ended up in the trunk of his Chevy, but worried if his insurance would cover the damage.

Video Link of Meteorite
http://fireball.meteorite.free.fr/meteor/fr/1/1992-10-09/peekskill/video (http://fireball.meteorite.free.fr/meteor/fr/1/1992-10-09/peekskill/video)
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on October 10, 2014, 10:41:16 pm
(http://i764.photobucket.com/albums/xx289/kuretic/American%20Autoracing/1938_indy_500_-_ted_horn__wetteroth.jpg) (http://s764.photobucket.com/user/kuretic/media/American%20Autoracing/1938_indy_500_-_ted_horn__wetteroth.jpg.html)

On this day, October 10, 1948
Ted Horn, an American race car driver was involved in a serious accident at DuQuoin, Illinois during the second lap. He was taken to the hospital alive but died a short time later. He was 38. He was inducted in the Motorsports Hall of Fame of America in 1993.
PICTURED: TED Horn at the 1938 INDY 500

October 10, 1930
Eugenio Castellotti was born in Lodi, Italy. He used to race for Ferari and later for Lancia. Castellotti was considered the greatest Italian driver after Alberto Ascari.
PICTURED: At the Gran Premio del Valentino: Luigi Villoresi, Alberto Ascari, Eugenio Castellotti e Vittorio Jano

(http://i183.photobucket.com/albums/x207/Starcowboy/Enzo/D50_012.jpg) (http://s183.photobucket.com/user/Starcowboy/media/Enzo/D50_012.jpg.html)

October 10, 1974
Ralph Dale Earnhardt, Jr., a NASCAR driver was born in Kannaplois, North Carolina. He currently drives the #88 AMP Energy/National Guard Chevrolet Impala SS in the NASCAR Sprint Cup series for Hendrick Motorsports.

(http://i139.photobucket.com/albums/q309/deifan1/Ralph%20Dale%20Earnhardt/44dd.jpg) (http://s139.photobucket.com/user/deifan1/media/Ralph%20Dale%20Earnhardt/44dd.jpg.html)
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on October 11, 2014, 11:06:11 pm
(http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v142/Xena3802/CTS%2010_04/IMG018.jpg)

October 11, 1967
David Starr, a NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series driver was born in Houston, Texas. He made his first start in 1998 and got his first win in 2002 at Las Vegas Motor Speedway on his way to his best points finish, 5th. He grabbed 2 more wins in 2004. He currently drives for Red Horse Racing the #11 Toyota Tundra.

October 11, 1928
Spanish racer Don Alfonso Cabeza de Vaca y Leighton, Carvajal y Are, the 17th Marquis de Portago and 13th Conde de la Mejorada, was born in London, England. Better known as Marquis Alfonso de Portago, the Spanish nobleman became interested in motor racing as a young man, soon finding his way into some of the world's most prestigious and dangerous racing events, owning more to his social standing than his racing skills. For a two-year period beginning in 1956, the reckless Marquis Alfonso drove for the Lancia Ferrari team, managing to rack up four points in five Grand Prix starts, but failing to win any race. In 1957, Alfonso brought tragedy to the classic Mille Miglia event, a 1,600-kilometer race from Brescia to Rome and back, when he lost control of his Ferrari and plunged into a crowd of spectators. Alfonso, his co-driver Ed Nelson, and 10 spectators died in the accident, bringing to an end the 30-year tradition of the Mille Miglia. Twenty years after the Marquis' tragic run along the course, the event was revived, and to this day the Mille Miglia attracts thousands to the streets of Italy to watch a nostalgic run of classic racing cars.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on October 13, 2014, 12:58:56 am
(http://i280.photobucket.com/albums/kk171/crabber1967/NASCAR%201960-s/1965-nascar_Daytona-Feb-Ned-Jarrett.jpg) (http://s280.photobucket.com/user/crabber1967/media/NASCAR%201960-s/1965-nascar_Daytona-Feb-Ned-Jarrett.jpg.html)

On this day, October 12, 1932
Ned Jarrett, two time NASCAR champion was born in Newton, North Carolina. Jarrett was best known for his calm demeanor, and he became known as "Gentleman Ned Jarrett".
PICCTURED: Ned Jarrett Feb-Daytona
(Ford Racing Archives) In Daytona FL 1965 Ned Jarrett posing with his Ford for that year's upcoming Daytona 500 Jarrett ran 352 stock car races over 13 years winning 50 of them while capturing 35 poles and 239 top tens He won two NASCAR championships (1960 1965) and retired in 1966 at the age of 34 the only NASCAR driver to retire as reigning champion Jarrett named one of NASCAR's 50 Greatest Drivers then went on to have a long career in race broadcasting Ned is of course the father of Dale Jarrett who earned his first NASCAR championship in 1999 and who is now a race broadcaster for ABCESPN Ned and Dale became only the second father-son combination to win championships in NASCAR's top division (Lee Petty and Richard Petty were the first)

October 12, 1940
Tom Mix, the highest-paid actor in silent films during the 1920s, and unquestionably the best-known cowboy star of the era, perished in a car accident in Arizona. Driving at about 80mph, Mix lost control of his car after hitting a dirt detour, and was instantly killed. Many took solace in the fact that Mix died in the Old West that he had depicted in film so many times, still wearing his cowboy costume from a performance the previous day.

October 12, 1993
The Camry was first introduced by the Toyota Motor Company in 1983 as a replacement for its Corona Sedan. Hoping to follow in the path of the popular Toyota flagship, the Cressida, the roomy and durable Camry immediately proved a best-seller, faring well against the likes of the Honda Accord and domestic U.S. compacts. In the late '80s, the Camry, now Toyota's most popular model, saw an upsized redesign, boasting a new twin-cam 2.0 liter 4-cylinder engine with 16 valves and a much greater horsepower potential than the previous model. In 1992, the Camry was again stylishly redesigned, approaching mid-size while maintaining its original efficiency. On this day, a decade after it was first introduced, the one-millionth Camry rolled off a Toyota assembly line. Four years later, in 1997, the Toyota Camry became the best-selling car in America.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on October 13, 2014, 10:43:12 pm
(http://i954.photobucket.com/albums/ae27/Chiltern-u3a/Visit%20to%20Coventry%2025%20July%202011%20Architecture%20Grp/075IMG_5500.jpg) (http://s954.photobucket.com/user/Chiltern-u3a/media/Visit%20to%20Coventry%2025%20July%202011%20Architecture%20Grp/075IMG_5500.jpg.html)

On this day, October 13, 1997
Less than three weeks after breaking the elusive 700mph land-speed barrier, British fighter pilot Andy Green set a new land-speed record in the Thrust SuperSonic vehicle, jet-powering through the sound barrier along a one-mile course in Nevada's Black Rock Desert. Coached by previous land-speed record-holder and Thrust team leader Richard Noble, Green roared across Black Rock Desert at 764.168mph, or 1.007 percent above the speed of the sound. An hour later, Green flashed across the dusty desert floor again, moving 1.003 percent faster than the speed of sound. The second run was required before the feat could be officially entered into the record book, a requirement that may have prevented past records. In 1979, at Edwards Air Force Base, American Stan Barrett is reputed to have reached 739.666mph, or Mach 1.0106, in a rocket-engined three-wheeled car called the Budweiser Rocket. But the speed was unsanctioned by the United States Air Force, and the official record remained unbroken until Green's historic run. Appropriately, the first official breaking of the sound barrier by a land vehicle came on the eve of the 50th anniversary of the first supersonic flight, achieved by American pilot Chuck Yeager in 1947.

October 13, 2013, is International "No Bra day"

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October 13, 1953
The "Artmobile," a novel way of exposing fine art to the public, was conceived of and designed by the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts located in Richmond, Virginia. The Artmobile, the world's first mobile art gallery, began touring Virginia with an exhibition of art objects, making its first stop in Fredericksburg. The Artmobile was an all-aluminum trailer, measuring over 30 feet in length with an interior height of nearly 80 feet.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on October 14, 2014, 10:56:34 pm
(http://i832.photobucket.com/albums/zz250/IN500trail/Howard%20County/elwoodfirstcar.jpg) (http://s832.photobucket.com/user/IN500trail/media/Howard%20County/elwoodfirstcar.jpg.html)

On this day, October 14, 1857
Automotive pioneer Elwood Haynes was born in Portland, Indiana. After training as an engineer and a chemist at John Hopkins University, Haynes returned to his native Indiana and began experimenting on a carriage powered by an internal engine. In 1894, he completed construction on one of America's earliest automobiles, a one-horsepower, one-cylinder vehicle, and on Independence Day of that year drove it through the streets of Kokomo, Indiana, on its trial run. Today, this automobile is preserved in the Smithsonian Institution as the oldest U.S. automobile in existence. For the next few decades, Haynes continued to make improvements to the new science of automobile manufacturing, including a successful carburetor, the first use of aluminum in automobile engines, and the first muffler.

October 14, 1909
Bernd Rosemeyer, a German racing driver was born in Lingen, Lower Saxony, Germany. He used to race for Auto Union.
He was killed at an early eage of 28, during a world speed record attempt on the Autobahn between Frankfurt and Darmstadt, on January 28th 1938
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on October 15, 2014, 09:54:44 pm
(http://i268.photobucket.com/albums/jj31/stolarek/Land%20Speed%20Bonneville/Breedlove-2.jpg) (http://s268.photobucket.com/user/stolarek/media/Land%20Speed%20Bonneville/Breedlove-2.jpg.html)

On this day, October 15, 1964
While trying to set a new one mile land-speed record, Craig Breedlove inadvertently set another kind of record after he lost control of the Spirit of America jet-powered car on the Bonneville Salt Flats testing area in Utah. The vehicle began a skid moments into the run, taking nearly six miles to decelerate from an initial speed of well over 400mph. When the dust cleared, Breedlove emerged shaken from the vehicle as the not-so-proud record-holder for the longest skid marks ever recorded. Nevertheless, Breedlove, who already held the land-speed record, did manage to break the 500mph speed barrier that year, just as he had broken the 400mph barrier the year before, and just as he would surpass 600mph in the year following.
PICTURED: Craig Breedlove 1999

October 15, 1978
Lee Iacocca was ousted from Ford.

October 15, 1978
The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration rules that hearse manufacturers no longer have to install anchors for child-safety seats in their vehicles. In 1999, to prevent parents from incorrectly installing the seats using only their cars' seat belts, the agency had required all car makers to put the standardized anchors on every passenger seat in every vehicle they built. Though it seemed rather odd, most hearse-builders complied with the rule and many thousands of their vehicles incorporated baby-seat latches on their front and back passenger seats.
However, the year after the agency issued the rule, one of the largest "funeral coach" manufacturers in the United States petitioned for an exemption. "Since a funeral coach is a single-purpose vehicle, transporting body and casket," the petition said, "children do not ride in the front seat." In fact, typically that seat is empty—after all, most people do try to avoid riding in hearses. On October 15, the agency agreed: All funeral coaches (now officially defined as "a vehicle that contains only one row of occupant seats, is designed exclusively for transporting a body and casket and that is equipped with features to secure a casket in place during the operation of the vehicle") were permanently exempt from all child-safety provisions. According to this formulation, those rare hearses that do have rear seats are not technically funeral coaches; therefore; they are subject to the same child-restraint rules as every other car maker.

TODAYS TRIVIA:
...When the U.S President is unmarried or his wife dies during his term, another female relative will become the First Lady. Three president's daughters, two president's sisters, two nieces and two daughters-in-law have been First Lady.
...The Romans used to use a plant called Silphium as contraception but, they had so much sex that they drove it into extinction.
...In 1970, there were half as many people in the world as there are now.
...Almost all pens, janitorial products, and other office supplies used by the US government are made by blind people.
...Regardless of how hard you try, it is always nearly impossible to remember how your dreams started.
...Smoking 1.4 cigarettes increases the statistical risk of death as much as flying a 1000 miles in a jet- or eating a thousand bananas.
...In 1885 a woman fell 240ft from the Clifton Suspension bridge and survived after her billowing skirt acted as a parachute.
...A man born premature with cerebral palsy, was unable to swallow on his own until the age of 1, is blind, was unable to speak or walk until the age of 16, began playing Tchaikovsky's Concerto No.1 on piano in the middle of the night at age 16. He now can play any song after hearing it only once.
...Christian Bale starved himself for over four months prior to filming The Machinist, consuming one cup of black unsweetened coffee and an apple or a can of tuna each day
...In 2002 NASA bought parts for the space shuttle on ebay because intel wouldn't make them anymore.
...On 5th April 2010 there were four women in space at the same time, the largest female gathering off planet to that point.
...There are 36 companies that spend over $1 Billion on advertising each year.
...Steve Jobs' had a habit of soaking his feet in the toilet and his hygiene was so bad that he was put on the night shift at Atari so he wouldn't have to interact with people.
...Teddy Roosevelt was shot prior to giving a speech. Noticing it missed his lung since he wasn't coughing up blood, he proceeded to give a ninety minute speech.
...1.5 billion people do not have access to electricity, 2.5 billion have no toilet, and 1 billion go hungry every day.
...The word "set" has 464 definitions, the most of any word in the English language.
...A suicidal painter was saved from death 3 times by the same "mysterious" monk. Nobody knew who the monk was; the painter didn't even know the monk's name.
...There was a woman named Veronica Seider had vision 20x better than average. She could identify people more than a mile (1.6km) away.
...The Hoover Dam was built to last 2,000 years. Its concrete will not be fully cured for another 500 years.
...Neil Armstrong's astronaut application arrived about a week past the deadline. His friend saw the late arrival of the application and slipped it into the pile before anyone noticed.
...A baby elephant will suck it's trunk like a baby sucks it's thumb for comfort.
...A Woman sues Google for showing her underwear on Street View.
...When Mel Blanc (Voice of Bugs Bunny, Porky Pig, Tweety and 100's of others) was in a coma the doctors asked him, "Bugs, can you hear me?" and he replied, "What's up Doc?" in Bugs' voice.
...In late 90s Will Smith told Eminem, "You'll either be the biggest flop, or the biggest thing we've ever seen".
...A man took 23 years to travel to every country and region in the world.
...In 2001 a man died from injuries caused by a shooting in 1966; his death was ruled a homicide, despite it occurring 35 years after the death of the shooter.
...Racism and homophobia is linked to having a lower IQ.
...Queen's "We Are the Champions" was scientifically proven to be the catchiest song in the history of pop music
...Hermit crabs form gangs to steal other hermit crabs' shells.
...On average, a person walks past 7 psychopaths a day.
...Napping improves stamina, boosts creativity, reduces stress, increases productivity, decision making ability, sex life and much more.
...Despite making up only 14.5% of the worlds population, Africa is believed to contain 69% of all people with HIV.
...There is a village in Wales called Llanfairpwllgwyngyllgogerychwyrndrobwllllantysiliogogogoch.
...The dolphin that played Flipper on the TV show committed suicide by refusing to breathe.
...A mentally ill young man who shot himself in the head in a suicide attempt suffered a brain injury that apparently eliminated his phobia of germs and his obsession with washing his hands.
...Although pancreatic cancer is usually deadly, Steve Jobs had the one variety that's curable. But for nine months, he refused treatment and instead tried a vegan diet, acupuncture, herbal remedies, psychics, juice fasts, and bowel cleansings. Many experts think it cost him his life.
...'Ultracrepidarian' is a person who doesn't know what they're talking about.
...Bill Cosby's son was murdered in 1997. His character "Little Bill" was based on his son.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on October 16, 2014, 11:08:30 pm
(http://i451.photobucket.com/albums/qq233/swinnyjr/53hudson.jpg) (http://s451.photobucket.com/user/swinnyjr/media/53hudson.jpg.html)

On this day, October 16, 1951
Hudson launched its new Monobuilt design, an innovation that is still found in most cars to this day. The Monobuilt design consisted of a chassis and frame that was combined in a unified passenger compartment, producing a strong, light-weight design, and a beneficial lower center of gravity that didn't affect road clearance. Hudson coined this innovation "step-down design" because, for the first time, passengers had to step down in order to get into a car. Most cars today are still based on the step-down premise. Hudson introduced the Hornet, and put some sting into the step-down design. The Hornet was built with a 308 cubic-inch flat head in-line six cylinder motor, producing generous torque and a substantial amount of horsepower. And it was with this popular model that Hudson first entered stock car racing in 1951. After ending their first season in a respectable third place, Hudson began a three-year domination of the racing event. In 1952 alone, Hudson won 29 of the 34 events. A key factor in Hudson's racing success was the innovative step-down design of their cars. Because of their lower centers of gravity, Hornets would glide around corners with relative ease, leaving their clunky and unstable competitors in the dust.
The Hornet "dominated stock car racing in the early-1950s, when stock car racers actually raced stock cars." During 1952, Hornets driven by Marshall Teague, Herb Thomas and Tim Flock won 27 NASCAR races driving for the Hudson team. In AAA racing, Teague drove a stock Hornet that he called the Fabulous Hudson Hornet to 14 wins during the season. This brought the Hornet's season record to 40 wins in 48 events, a winning percentage of 83%.
Overall, Hudson won 27 of the 34 NASCAR Grand National races in 1952, followed by 22 of 37 in 1953, and 17 of 37 in 1954 — "an incredible accomplishment, especially from a car that had some legitimate luxury credentials."
The original Fabulous Hudson Hornet can be found today fully restored in Ypsilanti, Michigan at the Ypsilanti Automotive Heritage Museum. It is also depicted in the movie 'CARS' as Doc Hudson.

October 16, 1958
Chevrolet introduced the El Camino, a sedan-pickup (ute) created to compete with Ford's popular Ranchero model. Built on the full-size Chevrolet challis, the big El Camino failed to steal the Ranchero's market and was discontinued after two years. But four years later, in 1964, the El Camino was given a second life as a derivative of the Chevelle series, a line of cars commonly termed "muscle cars." The Chevelles were stylish and powerful vehicles that reflected the youthful energy of the 1960s and early 1970s, and sold well. The Chevelle Malibu Super Sport was the archetypal muscle car, featuring a V-8 as large as 454 cubic inches, or 7.4 liters. Chevelles came in sedans, wagons, convertibles, and hardtops, and, with the reintroduction of the El Camino in 1964, as a truck. The station wagon-based El Camino sedan-pickup had a successful run during its second manifestation as a Chevelle, and proved an attractive conveyance for urban cowboys and the horsey set.
Many El Caminos are still used as daily drivers, and some are used in various racing venues. The 1980s version is the most common of any of that generation of body styles, though the late 60s command the highest prices and inspire the most replicas from Hot Wheels, Matchbox and Johnny Lightning.
The Discovery Channel program Monster Garage once turned an El Camino into a Figure-8 racer (dubbed the "Hell-Camino").
The drift team Bubba Drift uses a 1986 El Camino as the only drifting truck. It is unusual in that it uses an automatic transmission instead of a manual transmission.
On a production note, it has been constantly rumored for years now that GM may bring back the El Camino. During the 1995 model year, GM had a concept El Camino based on the full-size Caprice station wagon using the grille of a 1994-96 Impala SS; this concept was destined for production but terminated due to GM's profitable SUV sales. GM already has a vehicle ready in Australia in the form of the Holden Ute.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on October 17, 2014, 09:46:02 pm
(http://i967.photobucket.com/albums/ae158/monterey2013/Monterey%20Road%20trip/DSCN4145_zps64369df7.jpg) (http://s967.photobucket.com/user/monterey2013/media/Monterey%20Road%20trip/DSCN4145_zps64369df7.jpg.html)

On this day, October 17, 1902
The first Cadillac was completed and was given its maiden test drive by Alanson P. Brush, the twenty-four-year-old Leland and Faulconer engineer who had contributed substantially to the car's design and who would later build the Brush Runabout. As you can see, Cadillac has come a long way

October 17, 1973
11 Arab oil producers increased oil prices and cut back production in response to the support of the United States and other nations for Israel in the Yom Kippur War. The same day, OPEC, (The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries), approved the oil embargo at a meeting in Tangiers, Morocco. Almost overnight, gasoline prices quadrupled, and the U.S. economy, especially its automakers, suffered greatly as a result. The U.S. car companies, who built automobiles that typically averaged less than 15 miles per gallon, were unable to satisfy the sudden demand for small, fuel-efficient vehicles. The public turned to imports in droves, and suddenly Japan's modest, but sturdy, little compacts began popping up on highways all across America. Even after the oil embargo crisis was resolved, American consumers had learned an important lesson about the importance of fuel efficiency, and foreign auto manufacturers flourished in the large American market. It took years for the Big Three to bounce back from the blow; eventually they gained ground with the introduction of their own Japanese-inspired compacts in the 1980s.

October 17, 1994
Taxicab driver Jeremy Levine returned to London, England, from a round-trip journey to Cape Town, South Africa. Passengers Mark Aylett and Carlos Aresse paid 40,000 pounds, or approximately $65,000, for the 21,691-mile trip, setting a world record for the longest known taxicab ride. The route, through Eastern Europe, Turkey, Syria, Jordan, and down into Africa, was recently adopted by the Historic Endurance Rallying Organization for their London to Cape Town Classic Reliability Trial. The race, held for the first time in 1998, is a competitive event for all types of classic and historic cars made before 1978. Divided into six age categories, from vintage to '70s, the event challenges racers to brave demanding terrain and conditions as they witness some of the most dramatic and breathtaking scenery in the world.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on October 18, 2014, 10:40:56 pm
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On this day, October 18, 1919
Rolls-Royce America, Inc., was established, and their luxurious motor cars would prove a favorite means of transport for America's elite during the roaring 1920s.
PICTURED: Rolls-Royce Avon MK. 527B

October 18, 1939
Group of men who had dedicated their lives to the progress of the motor vehicle industry, met in New York City to create an organization that would perpetuate the memories of the early automotive pioneers as well as the contemporary leaders in the industry. From the beginning, this organization – originally called "Automobile Old Timers" -- was dedicated to honoring automotive people from all industry segments and from around the world. Now its more famously known as Automotive Hall of Fame. Over 200 individuals have been inducted into the Automotive Hall of Fame. Dedicated to: Recognizing outstanding achievement in the automotive and related industries; Preserving automotive heritage; Educating future generations of industry participants.

October 18, 1977
On September 5, Hanns Martin Schleyer, a Daimler-Benz executive and head of the West German employers' association, was kidnapped in Cologne by the Red Army Faction (RAF) during an assault in which his driver and three police were killed. The Red Army Faction was a group of ultra-left revolutionaries who terrorized Germany for three decades, assassinating at least 30 corporate, military, and government leaders in an effort to topple capitalism in their homeland. Six weeks after the kidnapping of Schleyer, Palestinian terrorists, who had close ties with the RAF, hijacked a Lufthansa airliner to Somalia, and demanded the release of 11 imprisoned RAF members. On October 17, after the pilot was killed, a German special forces team stormed the plane, releasing the captives and killing the hijackers. The RAF's imprisoned leaders responded by committing suicide in their jail cell in Stammheim, and Schleyer's murder was ordered. The next day, October 18, Hanns Martin Schleyer was found dead in Alsace, France.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on October 19, 2014, 10:54:28 pm
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October 19, 1920
Harley-Davidson Motor Co. registered "Harley-Davidson" trademark first used in June 1906 for motorcycles, bicycles, side cars and parcel cars.

October 19, 1958
Briton Mike Hawthorn, driving a Ferrari Dino 246, clinched the Formula One World Championship at the Moroccan Grand Prix at Ain-Diab near Casablanca. But the triumph of Britain's first World Championship was marred by the death of British driver Stuart Lewis-Evans, who died a few days later from injuries sustained during an accident in the race, and by the tragic death of Hawthorn himself, who died in a road accident just two months later

October 19, 1982
John DeLorean began his automotive career with Packard in the 1950s, and was recruited to Pontiac in 1959. A rising star at Pontiac, DeLorean pioneered the successful GTO and Grand Prix, and by the late 1960s had risen to the top position in a company that was behind only Chevrolet and Ford in sales. In 1970, DeLorean was moved to manage the Chevrolet Division, and by 1973 Chevy was selling a record 3,000,000 cars and trucks, with DeLorean seeming a top candidate for General Motors' (GM) next presidency. But in late-1973, he walked away from his $650,000 job at GM, boasting he was "going to show them how to build cars." After raising nearly $200 million in financing, DeLorean formed the DeLorean Motor Company in 1974, and constructed a car factory in Northern Ireland. Interest in DeLorean's sleek and futuristic DMC-12 car was high, but by the early 1980s the company was in serious financial trouble. Failing to find additional investors, the proud DeLorean became involved in racketeering and drug trafficking in a desperate attempt to save his beleaguered company. On this day in 1982, after being caught on film during an FBI sting operation trying to broker a $24 million cocaine deal, DeLorean was arrested on charges of drug trafficking and money laundering. But two years later a federal jury ruled that he was a victim of entrapment, and DeLorean was acquitted of all charges. Nevertheless, the debacle ruined his credibility, and John DeLorean's fall from the top of the automotive industry was complete. He died from a stroke at the age of 80, on March 19, 2005.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on October 20, 2014, 11:10:01 pm
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On this day, October 20, 1965
The last PV544 was driven off the Volvo assembly line at its Lundy plant in Sweden by longtime Volvo test driver Nils Wickstrom. Gustaf Larson, the engineer who had co-founded Volvo with businessman Assar Gabrielsson in 1927, was present at the ceremony. An impressive total of 440,000 Volvo PV544s had been produced during its eight-year run, over half of which had been exported. The Volvo PV544 was first introduced in 1958 as an updated version of its popular predecessor, the PV444. Like the PV444 with its laminated windscreen, the PV544 featured an important safety innovation--it was the first car to be equipped with safety belts as standard fitting. But the PV544 was also a powerful automobile, boasting a 4-speed manual transmission option and power up to 95bhp. Shortly after its introduction, the 544 became one of the most successful rally cars, dominating rally racing into the 1960s. Yet, the PV544 was also affordably priced, and its first-year sales put Volvo over the 100,000-exported automobiles mark. The PV544 was successfully reintroduced every year until 1965, when it was decided by Volvo that production of the model would cease.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on October 22, 2014, 12:19:38 am
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On this day, October 21, 1891
A one-mile dirt track opened for harness races at the site of the present-day Tennessee State Fairgrounds in Nashville. Harness racing proved a popular event at the annual Tennessee State Fair, but it was nothing compared to the excitement generated by the fair's first automobile race, held at the fairgrounds in 1904. For the next 50 years, motor racing events were the highlight of the annual state fair, drawing top American drivers to compete, and launching the careers of others. In 1956, the track was paved and lighted, and the tradition of weekly Saturday night racing at the fairgrounds was born. And in 1958, NASCAR came to Nashville with the introduction of the NASCAR Winston Cup to be run on a brand-new half-mile oval. The legendary driver Joe Weatherly won the first Winston Cup, beating the likes of Fireball Turner, Lee Petty, and Curtis Turner in the 200-lap event. Between 1958 and 1984, the fairgrounds hosted 42 NASCAR Winston Cups, and Richard Petty and Darrell Waltrip were the overall leaders in victories, with nine and eight Winston Cups respectively. The last Winston Cup race to descend onto the Tennessee State Fairgrounds was a 420-lap event won by driver Geoff Bodine. But despite the departure of the Winston Cup, the Nashville Speedway continued to improve on its racetrack, and illustrious racing events such as the Busch Series are held on the historic track every year.
PICTURED: Joe Weatherly

October 21, 1891
The 50th birthday of the incandescent light bulb, Henry Ford throws a big party to celebrate the dedication of his new Thomas Edison Institute in Dearborn, Michigan. Everybody who was anybody was there: John D. Rockefeller Jr., Charles Schwab, Otto H. Kahn, Walter Chrysler, Marie Curie, Will Rogers, President Herbert Hoover—and, of course, the guest of honor, Thomas Edison himself. At the time, the Edison Institute was still relatively small. It consisted of just two buildings, both of which Henry Ford had moved from Menlo Park, New Jersey and re-constructed to look just as they had in 1879: Edison's laboratory and the boarding-house where he had lived while he perfected his invention. By the time the Institute opened to the public in 1933, however, it had grown much more elaborate and today the Henry Ford Museum (renamed after Ford's death in 1947) is one of the largest and best-known museums in the US.
Ford's museum was an epic expression of his own interpretation of American history, emphasizing industrial and technological progress and the "practical genius" of great Americans. Its collection grew to include every Ford car ever built, along with other advances in automotive and locomotive technology. There were also farm tools, home appliances, furniture and industrial machines such as the printing press and the Newcomen steam engine. On a 200-acre tract next door, Ford built a quaint all-American village by importing historic homes and buildings from across the United States.
Today, there are more than 200 cars on display at the Ford museum, including the 15 millionth Model T, the Ford 999 racer that set the world speed record in 1904, the first Mustang ever produced and a 1997 EV1 electric car made by General Motors. More than 2 million people visit "The Henry Ford," as it's now called, every year.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on October 22, 2014, 08:47:46 pm
(http://i424.photobucket.com/albums/pp325/rubioSS/porsche.jpg) (http://s424.photobucket.com/user/rubioSS/media/porsche.jpg.html)

October 22, 1936
In 1934, German automaker Ferdinand Porsche submitted a design proposal to Adolf Hitler's new German Reich government, calling for the construction of a small, simple, and reliable car that would be affordable enough for the average German. Only about one in 50 Germans owned cars at the time, and the motor industry had only a minor significance in Germany's economy. Nazi propagandists immediately embraced the idea, coining "Volkswagen," which translates as "people's car," at an automobile show later in the year. Hitler himself hoped the "people's car" would achieve the kind of popularity in Germany as Ford's Model T had in the United States, and began calling the Volkswagen the "Strength Through Joy" car. Porsche received a development budget from the Reich's motor industry association, and began working on the Volkswagen immediately. Porsche completed the first prototype in secret in October of 1935. The simple, beetle-shaped automobile was sturdily constructed with a kind of utilitarian user-friendliness scarcely seen in an automobile before. On this day in 1936, the first test-drives of the Volkswagen vehicle began, and employees drove the VW 3-series model over 800 kilometers a day, making any necessary repairs at night. After three months of vigorous testing, Porsche and his engineers concluded, in their final test verdict, that the Volkswagen "demonstrated characteristics which warrant further development." In 1938, the first Volkswagen in its final form was unveiled, a 38-series model that The New York Times mockingly referred to as a "Beetle." However, the outbreak of World War II prevented mass-production of the automobile, and the newly constructed Volkswagen factory turned to war production, constructing various military vehicles for the duration of the conflict. After the war, the Allies approved the continuation of the original Volkswagen program, and, under the leadership of Heinrich Nordhoff in the late 1940s and 1950s, sales of the Volkswagen Beetle began to take off. In the 1960s and early 1970s, sales of the compact Volkswagen Beetle worried even America's largest automakers, as the Third Reich's simple people's car became a popular symbol of the growing American counterculture.
PICTURED: The Porsche of today's era

October 22, 1903
Association of Licensed Automobile Manufacturers (ALAM) filed suit against Ford Motor Company as an unlicensed (by ALAM) manufacturer of internal combustion vehicles (controlled 1895 Selden patent); claimed patent applied to all gasoline-powered automobiles; ALAM launched PR campaign, threatened to sue those who bought Ford automobiles.

October 22, 1906
Henry Ford became President of Ford Motor Company.

October 22, 1987
Canadian Garry Sowerby and American Tim Cahill completed the first trans-Americas drive, driving from Ushuaia, Tierra del Fuego, Argentina, to Prudhoe Bay, Alaska, in a total elapsed time of 23 days, 22 hours, and 43 minutes. The pair drove the 14,739-mile distance in a 1988 GMC Sierra K3500 four-wheel-drive pickup truck powered by a 6.2-liter V-8 Detroit diesel engine. Only on one occasion did Sowerby and Cahill trust another form of transportation to their sturdy Sierra: the vehicle and team were surface-freighted from Cartagena, Colombia, to Balboa, Panama, so as to bypass the dangerous Darien Gap of Colombia and Panama.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on October 23, 2014, 01:35:59 pm
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On this day, October 23, 1970
At the Bonneville Salt Flats in Utah, American Gary Gabelich attained a record 631.367mph average speed in The Blue Flame, a rocket-powered four-wheeled vehicle. Momentarily achieving 650mph, Gabelich's vehicle was powered by a liquid natural gas, hydrogen peroxide rocket engine that produced a thrust of up to 22,000 pounds. Gabelich's achievement ended the domination of Craig Breedlove, the American driver who set a series of astounding victories in jet-powered vehicles during the 1960s, breaking the 400mph, 500mph, and 600mph barriers in 1963, 1964, and 1965, respectively. The Blue Flame's land-speed record stood until 1983, when Briton Richard Noble raced to a new record in his jet-powered Thrust 2 vehicle. The Thrust 2, a 17,000-pound jet-powered Rolls-Royce Avon 302 designed by John Ackroyd, reached a record 633.468mph over the one-mile course in Nevada's stark Black Rock Desert.

October 23, 1973
Toyota U.S.A. held its first (three-day) national news conference in Los Angeles, CA to discuss the fuel efficiency of its automobiles (5 days after 11 Arab oil producers increased oil prices and cut back production in response to the support of the United States and other nations for Israel in the Yom Kippur War); American consumers suffered gasoline rationing, a quadrupling of prices, huge lines at gas stations - foreign auto manufacturers flourished in the large American market.

October 23, 1983
A suicide bomber drives a truck filled with 2,000 pounds of explosives into a U.S. Marine Corps barracks at the Beirut International Airport. The explosion killed 220 Marines, 18 sailors and three soldiers. A few minutes after that bomb went off, a second bomber drove into the basement of the nearby French paratroopers' barracks, killing 58 more people. Four months after the bombing, American forces left Lebanon without retaliating.
The Marines in Beirut were part of a multinational peacekeeping force that was trying to broker a truce between warring Christian and Muslim Lebanese factions. In 1981, American troops had supervised the withdrawal of the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) from Beirut and then had withdrawn themselves. They returned the next year, after Israel's Lebanese allies slaughtered nearly 1,000 unarmed Palestinian civilian refugees. Eighteen hundred Marine peacekeepers moved into an old Israeli Army barracks near the airport—a fortress with two-foot–thick walls that could, it seemed, withstand anything. Even after a van bomb killed 46 people at the U.S. Embassy in April, the American troops maintained their non-martial stance: their perimeter fence remained relatively unfortified, for instance and their sentries' weapons were unloaded.
At about 6:20 in the morning on October 23, 1983, a yellow Mercedes truck charged through the barbed-wire fence around the American compound and plowed past two guard stations. It drove straight into the barracks and exploded. Eyewitnesses said that the force of the blast caused the entire building to float up above the ground for a moment before it pancaked down in a cloud of pulverized concrete and human remains. FBI investigators said that it was the largest non-nuclear explosion since World War II and certainly the most powerful car bomb ever detonated.
After the bombing, President Ronald Reagan expressed outrage at the "despicable act" and vowed that American forces would stay in Beirut until they could forge a lasting peace. In the meantime, he devised a plan to bomb the Hezbollah training camp in Baalbek, Lebanon, where intelligence agents thought the attack had been planned. However, Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger aborted the mission, reportedly because he did not want to strain relations with oil-producing Arab nations. The next February, American troops withdrew from Lebanon altogether.
The first real car bomb—or, in this case, horse-drawn-wagon bomb—exploded on September 16, 1920 outside the J.P. Morgan Company's offices in New York City's financial district. Italian anarchist Mario Buda had planted it there, hoping to kill Morgan himself; as it happened, the robber baron was out of town, but 40 other people died (and about 200 were wounded) in the blast. There were occasional car-bomb attacks after that—most notably in Saigon in 1952, Algiers in 1962, and Palermo in 1963—but vehicle weapons remained relatively uncommon until the 1970s and 80s, when they became the terrifying trademark of groups like the Irish Republican Army and Hezbollah. In 1995, right-wing terrorists Timothy McVeigh and Terry Nichols used a bomb hidden in a Ryder truck to blow up the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City.

October 23, 2014
One of the best people I have had the pleasure of meeting and also a fellow car man "Rod Frencham" AKA Rocket, passed away in his sleep. A man that was greatly appreciated by his family and a man that will be greatly missed by all. Rest in Peace brother...we will keep the love alive in your family through us
Matt N Sheri
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on October 24, 2014, 09:08:19 pm
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On this day, October 24, 1908
The Locomobile Old 16, driven by George Robertson, became the first American-made car to beat the European competition when it raced to victory in the fourth annual Vanderbilt Cup held in Long Island, New York. The Vanderbilt Cup, an early example of world-class motor racing in America, was created in 1904 to introduce Europe's best automotive drivers and manufacturers to the U.S. George Heath won the first Vanderbilt Cup in a French-made Panhard automobile, beginning a French domination of the event that would last until Old 16's historic victory. Old 16 was first built in 1906 by the Connecticut-based Locomobile Company, and showed promise when it raced to a respectable finish in the second Vanderbilt Cup. With some modifications, Old 16 was ready to race again in 1908. Americans pinned their hopes on the state-of-the-art road racer to end the European domination of early motor racing. Designed simply for speed and power, Old 16 had an 1032 cc, 4-cylinder, 120 hp engine with a copper gas tank, and a couple of bucket seats atop a simple frame with four wooden-spoked wheels completed the design. At the fourth Vanderbilt Cup, Robertson pushed Old 16 to an average speed of 64.38 mph, dashing around the 297-mile course to the cheers of over 100,000 rowdy spectators, who lined the track dangerously close to the speeding motor cars. With a thrown tire in the last lap and a frantic fight to the finish against an Italian Isotta, America's first major racing victory was a hair-raising affair. Old 16 is one of the oldest American automobiles still in existence, and is currently on display at the Henry Ford Museum in Dearborn, Michigan.
PICTURED: Old 16 Locomobile-winner of the 1908 Vanderbilt Cup Race at the Westbury Turn

October 24, 1944
French automaker and accused Nazi collaborator Louis Renault died in a Paris military prison hospital of undetermined causes. Born in Paris, Renault built his first automobile, the Renault Type A, in 1898. Inspired by the DeDion quadricycle, the Type A had a 270 cc engine (1.75hp), and could carry two people at about 30mph. Later in the year, Renault and his brothers formed the Societe Renault Freres, a racing club that achieved its first major victory when an automobile with a Renault-built engine won the Paris-Vienna race of 1902. After Louis' brother, Marcel, died along with nine other drivers in the Paris-Madrid race of 1903, Renault turned away from racing and concentrated on mass production of vehicles. During World War I, Renault served his nation with the "Taxis de la Marne," a troop-transport vehicle, and in 1918, with the Renault tank. Between the wars, Renault continued to manufacture and sell successful automobiles, models that became famous for their sturdiness and longevity. With the German occupation of France during World War II, the industrialist, who had served his country so well during World War I, mysteriously offered his Renault tank factory and his services to the Nazis, perhaps believing that the Allies' cause was hopeless. The liberation of France in 1944 saw the arrest of Louis Renault as a collaborator, and the Renault company was nationalized with Pierre Lefaucheux as the new director. The 67-seven-year-old Renault, who likely suffered torture during his post-liberation detainment, died soon after his arrest.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on October 26, 2014, 01:49:27 am
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On this day, October 25, 1902
Racing was in Barney Oldfield's blood long before he ever had the opportunity to race an automobile. Born in Wauseon, Ohio, Oldfield's first love was bicycling, and in 1894, he began to compete professionally. In his first year of racing, the fearless competitor won numerous bicycling events and, in 1896, was offered a coveted position on the Stearns bicycle factory's amateur team. Meanwhile in Dearborn, Michigan, the entrepreneurial inventor Henry Ford had completed his first working automobile and was searching for a way to establish his name in the burgeoning automobile industry. In the early days, it was not the practical uses of the automobile that attracted the most widespread attention, but rather the thrill of motor racing. Recognizing the public's enthusiasm for the new sport, Ford built a racer with Oliver Barthel in 1901. Ford himself even served as driver in their automobile's first race, held at the Grosse Point Race Track in Michigan later in the year. Although he won the race and the kind of public acclaim he had hoped for, Ford found the experience so terrifying that he retired as a competitive driver, reportedly explaining that "once is enough." In 1902, he joined forces with Tom Cooper, the foremost cyclist of his time, and built a much more aggressive racer, the 999, that was capable of up to 80hp. On this day in 1902, the 23-year-old Barney Oldfield made his racing debut in the 999's first race at the Manufacturer's Challenge Cup in Grosse Point. The race was the beginning of a legendary racing career for Oldfield, who soundly beat his competition, including the famed driver Alexander Winton. The cigar-chomping Oldfield went on to become the first truly great American race-car driver, winning countless victories and breaking numerous speed and endurance records. But Oldfield's victory in the 999 was also Ford's first major automotive victory, and together they went on to become the most recognized figures in early American motoring--Ford as the builder and Oldfield as the driver.
PICTURED: 1902 Ford 999 and Oldfield -- Barney Oldfield in 999, the car that made him famous. [photo from Henry Ford Museum]

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October 25, 1910
White race car driver Barney Oldfield beats prize fighter Jack Johnson, the first African-American heavyweight champion of the world, in two five-mile car races in Sheepshead Bay, Brooklyn.
Oldfield and Johnson had a history: Oldfield's friend, the white heavyweight champ James J. Jeffries, had quit boxing in 1908 because he did not want to fight a black man for his title. In July 1910, Jeffries came out of retirement to fight Johnson at last, but lost in 15 rounds. (Twenty-six people were killed and hundreds were injured in the nationwide riots that followed the black fighter's victory.) After that, Johnson was unable to find anyone who would fight him—so, he turned to car racing instead. In October 1910, he challenged Oldfield to a race.
Oldfield, a flamboyant daredevil who had just set a new land-speed record (131 mph) in his Blitzen Benz, accepted the challenge at once. The competitors bet $5,000 on the contest—the driver who won two out of three five-mile heats would win the bet—and invited a Hollywood crew to film the race. But there was a problem: in order to make the race official, Johnson needed a license from the American Automobile Association, but the AAA refused to license black drivers. What's more, the organization told Oldfield that it would rescind his license if he went through with the race. But bets had been made and contracts signed, so the race was on!
Rain delayed the race several times, but on October 25 the skies were clear. Five thousand people gathered at the Brooklyn track, waving their hats and cheering for the movie cameras. Oldfield, driving a 60-horsepower Knox car, won the first heat by a half-mile, in 4:44. In the second, he slowed down a bit—he kept just ahead of Johnson's bright-red car, taunting the boxer as he drove--but won the race in 5:14. There was no need for a third heat: Barney Oldfield was the winner.
Eighteen months later, the AAA reinstated Oldfield and he began to race again. A few years later, he drove the first 100-mph lap in the history of the Indianapolis 500 race. Johnson's luck was not as good: Many people resented his success, and especially his habit of dating white women, and he was arrested several times on trumped-up violations of the Mann Act. As a result, he spent a year in federal prison. Johnson died in a car accident in 1946. He was 68 years old.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on October 26, 2014, 11:12:23 pm
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On this day, October 26, 1955
Sammy Swindell, who becomes a star in the outlaw sport of sprint-car racing, is born in Germantown, Tennessee. In 1971, when he was just 15 years old, Swindell raced for the first time on a dirt track at the Riverside Speedway in Arkansas. Since he started dirt-track racing, Swidell has never finished a season outside the top 10.
When Swindell began his career, he was a member of a motley crew of drivers known as the Band of Outlaws. These men, according to the Los Angeles Times, were "a gypsy bunch of maverick sprint car drivers who made their mark racing… on seedy little tracks, running with virtually no rules, sometimes wearing only T-shirts and Levi's. They went where the money was and no questions asked." Their races were unsanctioned by the U.S. Auto Club, the organization that ran the Indianapolis 500 and other "respectable" paved-track races. Instead, the Band of Outlaws competed in catch-as-catch-can affairs put on at county fairgrounds and makeshift clay loops across the Midwest.
Outlaw-style racing, usually called sprint-car racing, was a throwback to the early, scrappy days of motorsports, when drivers like Barney Oldfield and A.J. Foyt careened around hard-packed dirt roads in big, open-topped cars. Sprint cars banged into one another as they screeched around the track; they churned giant grooves into the dirt and dared one another to clatter over them without flipping; they used oversized tires, called "humpers," on their right rear wheels to help them accelerate more flamboyantly; and they had wings, or huge canopies that held them down on the track and helped them go faster. And sprint-car racing was dangerous: in the 1970s and 1980s, at least one driver was killed almost every weekend. Today, sprint-car racing is a little safer but no less pugnacious.
In the 1980s, Sammy Swindell dabbled in more mainstream racing—he joined the Indy Car circuit first, then NASCAR—but his heart remained with the Outlaws. In 2009, he rejoined the sprint-car circuit full time. In all, he has won three Outlaw titles and 268 races.

October 26, 1908
Champion incorporated Champion Ignition Company, in Flint, MI, with backing of Buick Motor Co., for manufacturing of spark plugs. Spencer Stranahan, former partner refused to sell rights to "Champion" name.

October 26, 1954
Chevrolet introduced the V-8 engine.

October 26, 1980
General Motors announced a $567 million loss, biggest quarterly drop ever posted by an American company; pre-tax losses for quarter topped out at $953 million.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on October 27, 2014, 10:07:06 pm
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On this day, October 27, 1945
After the Allied victory in the World War II, Porsche, like other German industrialists who participated in the German war effort, was investigated on war-crime charges. Ferdinand Porsche was arrested by U.S. military officials for his pro-Nazi activities, and was sent to France where he was held for two years before being released. Meanwhile, the Allies approved the continuation of the original Volkswagen program, and Volkswagen went on to become a highly successful automobile company. As his brainchild Volkswagen grew, Porsche himself returned to sports-car design and construction, completing the successful Porsche 356 in 1948 with his son Ferry Porsche. In 1951, Ferdinand Porsche suffered a stroke and died, but Ferry continued his father's impressive automotive legacy, achieving a sports car masterpiece with the introduction of the legendary Porsche 911 in 1963.

October 27, 2006
The last Ford Taurus rolls off the assembly line in Hapeville, Georgia. The keys to the silver car went to 85-year-old Truett Cathy, the founder of the Chick-fil-A fast-food franchise, who took it straight to his company's headquarters in Atlanta and added it to an elaborate display that included 19 other cars, including one of the earliest Fords.
When Ford added the Taurus to its lineup in 1985, the company was struggling. High fuel prices made its heavy, gas-guzzling cars unattractive to American buyers, especially compared to the high-quality foreign cars that had been flooding the market since the middle of the 1970s. The Taurus was smaller than the typical Ford family car, and its aerodynamic styling appealed to design-conscious buyers. Almost immediately, the car was a hit: Ford sold 263,000 in 1985 alone. Sales figures climbed higher each year, and in 1992, the Taurus became the best-selling passenger car in the United States. (It wrested this title away from the Honda Accord, and kept it for the next five years.) It was, according to the Henry Ford Museum, "a winner in the marketplace that saved Ford Motor from disaster."
But by the 2000s, the Taurus had lost much of its appeal. Even after a 1996 facelift, its once cutting-edge design now looked dated, and it still did not have the fuel efficiency of its Japanese counterparts. (In fact, in contrast to cars like the Accord and the Toyota Camry, which overtook the Taurus to become the nation's best-selling car, by the mid-1990s Ford was selling the majority of its Tauruses to rental-car companies, not individuals.) Ford discontinued the Taurus station wagon at the end of 2004, and idled the Hapeville plant—across the street from the original Chick-fil-A—two years later. Fifteen hundred workers lost their jobs.
In place of the Taurus, Ford pushed its full-size Five Hundred sedan along with its midsize Fusion. Neither sold especially well, however, and in 2007 the company re-released the Taurus (actually just a renamed version of the Five Hundred). It unveiled a revamped, sportier Taurus in July 2009.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on October 28, 2014, 09:32:13 pm
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On this day, October 28, 1918
The Tatra was christened. The company later known as Tatra constructed its first automobile in 1897, a vehicle largely inspired by the design of an early Benz automobile. Based in the small Moravian town of Nesselsdorf in the Austro-Hungarian empire, Tatra began as Nesselsdorf Wagenbau, a carriage and railway company that entered automobile production after chief engineer Hugo von Roslerstamm learned of the exploits of Baron Theodor von Liebieg, an avid Austrian motorist who drove across Eastern Europe in a Benz automobile. The Baron himself took the Nesselsdorf Wagenbau's first automobile, christened the President, on a test drive from Nesselsdorf to Vienna. He was impressed with the design and pushed von Roslerstamm and Nesselsdorf Wagenbau to enter racing.
The company put its faith in the talented young engineer Hans Ledwinka, and under his leadership the Rennzweier and the Type A racers were produced, demonstrating modest racing success and encouraging the beginning of large-scale production of the Type S in 1909. The company continued to grow until 1914, when, with the outbreak of World War I, it shifted to railroad-car construction. On this day in 1918, just two weeks before the end of the war on the Western front, the Moravian town of Nesselsdorf in the old Austro-Hungarian empire became the city of Koprivnicka in the newly created country of Czechoslovakia, necessitating a name change for the Nesselsdorf Wagenbau.
Soon after the war, Hans Ledwinka and the newly named Koprivnicka Wagenbau began construction of a new automobile under the marque Tatra. The Tatra name came from the Tatra High Mountains, some of the highest mountains in the Carpathian mountain range. Ledwinka settled on Tatra in 1919 after an experimental model with 4-wheel brakes passed a sleigh on a dangerously icy road, prompting the surprised sleigh riders to reportedly exclaim: "This is a car for the Tatras." In 1923, the first official Tatra automobile, the Tatra T11, was completed, and Ledwinka's hope for an affordable "people's car" had come to fruition. The rugged and relatively small automobile gave many Czechoslovakians an opportunity to own an automobile for the first time, much as Ford's Model T had in the United States. In 1934, Tatra achieved an automotive first with the introduction of the Tatra 77, an innovative model that holds the distinction of being the world's first aerodynamically styled automobile powered by an air-cooled rear-mounted engine.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on October 29, 2014, 08:11:39 pm
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On this day, October 29, 1954
The last true Hudson was produced. The Hudson Motor Car Company was founded in 1909 by Joseph L. Hudson, and by its second year ranked 11th in the nation for automobile production. Although rarely a top-seller, Hudson was responsible for a number of important automotive innovations, including the placement of the steering wheel on the left side, the self-starter, and dual brakes. In 1919, the Hudson Essex was introduced, a sturdy automobile built on an all-steel body that sold for pennies more than Ford's Model T. Hudson production peaked in 1929 with over 300,000 units, including a line of commercial vehicles. During the early 1930s, Hudson became increasingly involved in motor sports, and the Hudson Essex-Terraplane cars set records in hill climbing, economy runs, and speed events. After World War II, the modest automobile company set its sights on stock racing, launching its new Monobuilt design in 1948. The Monobuilt design consisted of a chassis and frame that were combined in a unified passenger compartment, producing a strong, lightweight design, and a beneficial lower center of gravity that didn't effect road clearance. Hudson coined this innovation "step-down design" because, for the first time, passengers had to step down in order to get into a car. Most cars today are still based on the step-down premise.
In 1951, Hudson introduced the powerful Hornet, a model that would dominate stock car racing from 1952 to 1954. In 1952 alone, Hudson won 29 of the 34 events. A key factor in Hudson's racing success was the innovative step-down design of its cars. Because of their lower centers of gravity, Hornets would glide around corners with relative ease, leaving their clunky and unstable competitors in the dust. During this period, Hudson hoped that its stock-racing success would help its lagging sales, but the public preferred watching the likes of Marshall Teague racing around in a Hornet to actually purchasing one. In 1954, the Hudson Motor Company and the Nash-Kelvinator Corporation merged to form the American Motors Corporation, and Hudson, which had been suffering severe financial problems, signed on as the weaker partner. Soon after, it was announced that all 1955 models would be made in Nash's facilities, and that most of Hudson's recent innovations would be discontinued. On this day, the last step-down Hudson was produced. Although the Hudson name would live on for another two years, the cars no longer possessed the innovative elegance and handling of models like the Hornet of the early 1950s.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on October 30, 2014, 10:52:21 pm
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On this day, October 30, 1963
The first Lamborghini, the 350GTV (made by tractor maker Ferruccio Lamborghi to compete with Ferrari) debuted at Turin auto show.
Sports car maker Ferruccio Lamborghini was born in Renazzo di Cento, Italy, on April 28, 1916. After studying mechanical engineering in Bologna, Lamborghini served as a mechanic for the Italian Army's Central Vehicle Division in Rhodes during World War II. Upon his return to Italy, he worked on converting military vehicles into agricultural machines, and, in 1948, began building and designing his own tractors. His well-designed agricultural machinery proved a success, and with this prosperity Lamborghini developed an addiction for luxury sports cars. In the early 1960s, he purchased a Ferrari 250 GT, made just a few miles away in Enzo Ferrari's factory. After encountering problems with the car, Ferruccio reportedly paid Enzo a visit, complaining to him about his new Ferrari's noisy gearbox. Legend has it that the great racing car manufacturer Ferrari responded in a patronizing manner to the tractor-maker Lamborghini, inspiring the latter to begin development of his own line of luxury sports cars--automobiles that could out perform any mass-produced Ferrari.
On this day in 1963, the Lamborghini 350GTV debuted at the Turin auto show. But Lamborghini had not completed the prototype in time for the deadline, and the 350GTV was presented with a crate of ceramic tiles in place of an engine. With or without the engine, Lamborghini's first car was not particularly well received, and only one GTV was ever completed. But the former tractor-maker was not discouraged, and in 1964 the drastically redesigned 350GT went into production, and Lamborghini managed to sell over 100 of the expensive cars. The GT was a quiet and sophisticated high-performance vehicle, capable of achieving 155mph with a maximum 320hp. The elegant Lamborghini 350GT indeed provided a smoother ride than most of its Ferrari counterparts, and Ferruccio's old tractor factory, located just a few miles from the Ferrari factory, began constructing some of the most exotic cars the world had ever seen, such as the Miura, the Espada, and the legendary Countach.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on October 31, 2014, 09:34:56 pm
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On this day, October 31, 1957
Two months after a three-man Toyota team flew to Los Angeles to survey the U.S. market, Toyota Motor Sales, U.S.A., Inc. was founded in California with Shotaro Kamiya as the first president. Toyota's first American headquarters were located in an auto dealership in downtown Hollywood, California, and by the end of 1958, 287 Toyopet Crowns and one Land Cruiser had been sold. Over the next decade, Toyota quietly made progress into the Big Three-dominated U.S. car market, offering affordable, fuel-efficient vehicles like the Toyota Corolla as an alternative to the grand gas-guzzlers being produced in Detroit at the time. But the real watershed for Toyota and other Japanese automakers came during the 1970s, when, after enjoying three decades of domination, American automakers had lost their edge.
On top of the severe quality issues that plagued domestic automobiles during the early 1970s, the Arab oil embargoes of 1973 and 1979 created a public demand for fuel-efficient vehicles that the Big Three were unprepared to meet. The public turned to imports in droves, and suddenly Japan's modest but sturdy little compacts began popping up on highways all across America. The Big Three rushed to produce their own fuel-efficient compacts, but shoddily constructed models like the Chevy Vega and Ford Pinto could not compete with the overall quality of the Toyota Corollas and Honda Civics. Domestic automakers eventually bounced back during the 1980s, but Japanese automakers retained a large portion of the market. In 1997, the Toyota Camry became the best-selling car in America, surpassing even Honda's popular Accord model.
PICTURED: Toyota's 2000 GT

October 31, 1951
Zebra crossing (broad white and black stripes across the road for visual impact vs. metal studs in the road) introduced in Slough, Berkshire, England to reduce casualties at pedestrian road crossings.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on November 02, 2014, 01:21:10 am

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On this day, November 1, 1927
Ford Model A production begins. For the first time since the Model T was introduced in 1908, the Ford Motor Company began production on a significantly redesigned automobile--the Model A. The hugely successful Model T revolutionized the automobile industry, and over 15,000,000 copies of the "Tin Lizzie" were sold in its 19 years of production. By 1927, the popularity of the outdated Model T was rapidly waning. Improved, but basically unchanged for its two-decade reign, it was losing ground to the more stylish and powerful motor cars offered by Ford's competitors. In May of 1927, Ford plants across the country closed, and the company began an intensive development of the more refined and modern Model A. The vastly improved Model A had elegant Lincoln-like styling on a smaller scale, and used a capable 200.5 cubic-inch four-cylinder engine that produced 40hp. With prices starting at $460, nearly 5,000,000 Model As, in several body styles and a variety of colors, rolled onto to America's highways before production ended in early 1932.

November 1, 1895
The first automobile club in the United States, the American Motor League, held its preliminary meeting in Chicago, Illinois, with 60 members on this day. Dr. J. Allen Hornsby was named president of the new organization, and Charles Edgar Duryea, the car manufacturer, and Hiram P. Maxim, car designer and inventor, were named vice presidents. Charles King, who constructed one of the first four-cylinder automobiles in the following year, was named treasurer.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on November 02, 2014, 10:05:29 pm
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On this day, November 3, 1897
Ransom E. Olds received his first patent for a "Motor Carriage" ("in which the motive power is produced by a gasolene-motor to produce a road vehicle which will meet most of the requirements for the ordinary uses on the road, without complicated gear or requiring engine of great power and to avoid all unnecessary weight").

November 2, 1895
First gasoline-powered contest in America was organised
In early 1895, Chicago Times-Herald Publisher Herman H. Kohlstaat announced that his newspaper would sponsor a race between horseless carriages. It would be the first race in America to feature gasoline-powered automobiles. Kohlstaat, who was offering $5,000 in prizes, including a first-place prize of $2,000, received telegrams from European racing enthusiasts and from automobile tinkerers across America. After delaying the event for several months at the request of entrants who were still working on their racing prototypes, Kohlstaat finally settled on an official race date--November 2. When the day arrived, 80 automobiles had been entered, but only two showed up: a Benz car brought over from Germany by Oscar Bernhard Mueller, and an automobile built by Charles and Frank Duryea of Springfield, Massachusetts. The disappointed Kohlstaat agreed to delay the official race yet again until Thanksgiving, but approved an exhibition contest to be run on this day between the Duryea brothers and Mueller. Enthusiastic spectators gathered along the 90-mile course from Jackson Park in Chicago to Waukegan, Illinois, and back again, and the Duryea car, driven by Frank, took an early lead over Mueller's motor wagon. However, less than halfway through the race, a team of horses pulling a wagon, frightened by the racket from Frank's noisy car, bolted into the middle of the road and the Duryea automobile was forced off the road and into a ditch. The undriveable car was taken back to Springfield by railroad, and the brothers began hasty repair work for the official race on November 28. Mueller was declared the winner of the exhibition by default, but on Thanksgiving Day he would have to face the Duryeas again, in an event that would be known as the Great Chicago Race of 1895.

November 2, 1978
Chrysler hired Lee Iacocca as President.

November 2, 1989
Carmen Fasanella, a taxicab driver from Princeton, New Jersey, retired after 68 years and 243 days of service. Fasanella, who was continuously licensed as a taxicab owner and driver in the Borough of Princeton, New Jersey, since February 1, 1921, is the most enduring taxi driver on record

November 3, 1900
The first significant car show in the United States began in New York City. The week-long event, held in Madison Square Garden, was organized by the Automobile Club of America. Fifty-one exhibitors displayed 31 automobiles along with various accessories. Among the fathers of the automobile present at the "Horseless Carriage Show" was automaker James Ward Packard, who had completed his first car the year before, and brought three of his Packards to exhibit to the public. In addition to Packard, the show introduced a number of other fledgling automobile companies that became significant industry players in the coming decades, although none of the makes present would still be in business by 1980. The event also featured automotive demonstrations, such as braking and starting contests, and a specially built ramp to measure the hill-climbing ability of the various automobiles. Spectators paid 50¢ each to attend the event.

November 3, 1995
A team of British soldiers from the 21st Engineer Regiment broke all speed records in the construction of a bridge capable of transporting military vehicles. The British soldiers, based in Nienberg, Germany, built the bridge across a 26-foot, three-inch gap located in Hameln, Germany. Their five-bay single-story medium-girder bridge was completed in eight minutes and 44 seconds.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on November 03, 2014, 10:53:09 pm
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On this day, November 4, 1939
The 40th National Automobile Show opened in Chicago, Illinois, with a cutting-edge development in automotive comfort on display: air-conditioning. A Packard prototype featured the expensive device, allowing the vehicle's occupants to travel in the comfort of a controlled environment even on the most hot and humid summer day. After the driver chose a desired temperature, the Packard air-conditioning system would cool or heat the air in the car to the designated level, and then dehumidify, filter, and circulate the cooled air to create a comfortable environment. The main air-conditioning unit was located behind the rear seat of the Packard, where a special air duct accommodated two compartments, one for the refrigerating coils and one for the heating coils. The capacity of the air-conditioning unit was equivalent to 1.5 tons of ice in 24 hours when the car was driven at highway driving speeds. The innovation received widespread acclaim at the auto show, but the expensive accessory would not be within the reach of the average American for several decades. However, when automobile air-conditioning finally became affordable, it rapidly became a luxury that U.S. car owners could not live without.

November 4, 1965
Lee Ann Roberts Breedlove, wife of land speed record-holder Craig Breedlove, became the first female driver to exceed 300 mph when she sped to 308.50 mph in the Spirit of America - Sonic 1 vehicle over the Bonneville Salt Flats in Utah. The Sonic 1 was a four-wheel vehicle powered by a J79 jet engine. A few hours after Lee Ann jet-powered across the one-mile course, Craig Breedlove shattered his own record from the previous year when he reached 555.49 mph in the Spirit of America.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on November 05, 2014, 06:32:37 pm
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On this day, November 5, 1955
Is the date Michael J Fox returned to in the movie "Back to the Future"

November 5, 1895
Inventor George B. Selden received a patent for his gasoline-powered automobile, first conceived of when he was an infantryman in the American Civil War. After 16 years of delay, United States Patent No. 549,160 was finally issued to Selden for a machine he originally termed a "road-locomotive" and later would call a "road engine." His design resembled a horse-drawn carriage, with high wheels and a buckboard, and was described by Selden as "light in weight, easy to control and possessed of sufficient power to overcome any ordinary incline." With the granting of the patent, Selden, whose unpractical automotive designs were generally far behind other innovators in the field, nevertheless won a monopoly on the concept of combining an internal combustion engine with a carriage. Although Selden never became an auto manufacturer himself, every other automaker would have to pay Selden and his licensing company a significant percentage of their profits for the right to construct a motor car, even though their automobiles rarely resembled Selden's designs in anything but abstract concept. In 1903, the newly created Ford Motor Company, which refused to pay royalties to Selden's licensing company, was sued for infringement on the patent. Thus began one of the most celebrated litigation cases in the history of the automotive industry, ending in 1909 when a New York court upheld the validity of Selden's patent. Henry Ford and his increasingly powerful company appealed the decision, and in 1911, the New York Court of Appeals again ruled in favor of Selden's patent, but with a twist: the patent was held to be restricted to the particular outdated construction it described. In 1911, every important automaker used a motor significantly different from that described in Selden's patent, and major manufacturers like the Ford Motor Company never paid Selden another dime.

November 5, 1960
Country and rockabilly artist Johnny Horton was killed instantly in a head-on collision with a drunk driver on Highway 79 at Milano, Texas while he was returning home from a performance at the Skyline Club in Austin.

November 5, 1605
Gunpowder Plot; attempt to blow up King James I while he opened Parliament. Plot uncovered and leader Guy Fawkes tortured and later executed

November 5, 1935
Parker Brothers launches game of Monopoly

Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on November 06, 2014, 09:51:41 pm
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On this day, November 6, 1899
James Ward Packard, an electrical-wire manufacturer from Warren, Ohio, first demonstrated his interest in automobiles when he hired Edward P. Cowles and Henry A. Schryver to work on plans for a possible Packard automobile in 1896. Although a functional engine was completed in 1897, it would take another two years, and James Packard's purchase of a Winton horseless carriage, before his company fully flung itself into the burgeoning automobile industry. In 1898, James Packard purchased an automobile constructed by fellow Ohio manufacturer Alexander Winston, and Packard, a first-time car owner, experienced problems with his purchase from the start. Finally, in June of 1899, after nearly a year of repairing and improving the Winston automobile on his own, Packard decided to launch the Packard Motor Company. On this day, only three months after work on his first automobile began, the first Packard was completed and test-driven through the streets of Warren, Ohio. The Model A featured a one-cylinder engine capable of producing 12hp. Built around the engine was a single-seat buggy with wire wheels, a steering tiller, an automatic spark advance, and a chain drive. Within only two months, the Packard Company sold its fifth Model A prototype to Warren resident George Kirkham for $1,250. By the 1920s, Packard was a major producer of luxury automobiles, and this prosperity would continue well into the late 1950s.

November 6, 1986
The destitute Alfa Romeo company approved its acquisition by fellow Italian automobile manufacturer Fiat, shortly after rejecting a takeover bid by the Ford Motor Company. Alfa Romeo was founded by Nicola Romeo in 1908, and during the 1920s and 1930s produced elegant luxury racing cars like the RL, the 6C 1500, and the 8C 2900 B. Alfa Romeo saw its peak business years during the 1950s and 1960s, when Alfa Romeo chairman Giuseppe Luraghi oversaw a company shift toward more functional and affordable cars. The Giuletta, the Spider, and the Giulia series received enthusiastic responses from consumers, and Alfa Romeo flourished. However, during the 1970s, the company fell out of touch with a changing market, and, like many other automobile companies, failed to meet the demands of recession-era consumers who preferred fuel efficiency and reliability to luxury and design. By the mid-1980s, Alfa Romeo was bankrupt, and Fiat took over the company, assigning it to a new unit called Alfa Lancia Spa, which opened for business in 1997.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on November 07, 2014, 10:19:29 pm
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On this day, November 7, 1957
Before World War II, Audi-founder August Horch cranked out his innovative Audis in the Zwickau Automobile Factory in the eastern German state of Sachsen. It was here that Audi manufactured the first automobiles with four-wheel hydraulic brakes and front wheel drive, decades before these innovations became standard throughout the automobile industry. After World War II, Germany was separated into Eastern and Western occupation zones, and Audi, like most other significant German corporations, fled to the capitalist West. Among the deserted factories the Soviet occupiers faced in postwar East Germany was the former Horch-Audi works in Zwickau. Under the authority of the Soviet administrators, and later under the East German Communist government, the Zwickau factory went back into service in the late 1940s, producing simple, pre-war German automobiles like the Das Klein Wonder F8, and the P70, a compact car with a Duroplast plastic body. In 1957, the East German government approved the updated P50 model to enter the market under a new company name--Trabant. On this day, the first Trabant, which translates to servant in English, was produced at the former Horch auto works in Zwickau. For the Trabant's first marque, the designers settled on "Sputnik," to commemorate the Soviet Union's launching of the first artificial Earth satellite the month before. The Trabant Sputnik was the first in the P50 series, featuring a tiny engine for its time--a two-cylinder 500 cc engine capable of reaching only 18bhp. In design, the Trabant Sputnik was the archetypal eastern European car: small, boxy, and fragile in appearance. Yet, despite the lack of style or power found in the Sputnik and its descendants, these automobiles were affordable, and provided the citizens of East Germany and other Soviet bloc countries with a capable means of getting from here to there.

November 7, 1965
In 1964, Art Arfons, a drag racer from Ohio, built a land-speed racer in his backyard using a military surplus J79 jet aircraft engine with an afterburner. Arfons christened the vehicle Green Monster, and in September took the racer to the Bonneville Salt Flats in Utah to join in the race to set a new land- speed record. On October 5, the Green Monster jet powered to 434.022--a new land-speed record. However, Arfons' record would only stand for six days, for on October 13, Craig Breedlove set his second land-speed record when he reached 468.719 in his jet-powered Spirit of America. In 1965, Arfons returned to the Bonneville Salt Flats in a revamped Green Monster, and on this day shattered Breedlove's record from the previous year, when he raced to 576.553mph across the one-mile course.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on November 09, 2014, 01:10:20 am
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November 8, 1866
Herbert Austin, the founder of the Austin Motor Company, was born the son of a farmer in Little Missenden, Buckinghamshire, England. At the age of 22, Austin moved to Melbourne, Australia, where he served as an apprentice engineer at a foundry, before becoming the manager of the Wolseley Sheep Shearing Company. Long journeys into the wide-open spaces of Australia gave him insight into the benefits of gasoline-driven vehicles, and Austin decided to try his luck in the burgeoning automobile industry. In 1893, Austin returned to England with the Wolseley Company and began work on his first automobile. Like his American counterpart, Henry Ford, Austin hoped to produce an affordable motor car for the masses, and by 1895 the Wolseley Company completed its first vehicle, a three-wheeled automobile, followed by the first four-wheeled Wolseley vehicle in 1900. In 1905, Herbert Austin founded the Austin Motor Company in Birmingham, England, and by 1914, the company was producing over 1,000 automobiles a year. During World War II, Austin and his factories joined in the British war effort, a service for which he was knighted in 1917. In 1922, with the introduction of the Austin 7 Tourer, Sir Herbert Austin finally fulfilled his ambition to produce a mass-produced automobile. The diminutive vehicle, boasting four-wheel brakes and a maximum speed of 50mph, was an instant success in England. In 1930, the Austin 7 was introduced to America, and enjoyed five years of modest U.S. sales before falling prey to the hard times of the Depression in 1935.

November 8, 1895
Diamler returned to his own company as chief engineer. He received shares worth 30,000 marks that he was entitled to through 1882 contract with Daimler. In mid 1893 - Daimler was forced to sell his stake in company, rights to his inventions for 66,666 marks to avoid bankruptcy. In 1895 - group of British industrialists, fronted by Frederick R. Simms, looked to acquire license rights to Maybach-designed Phoenix engine for Britain for 350,000 marks only if Daimler and Maybach returned to company. Daimler returned as expert advisor, general inspector. His stake in company returned (worth 200,000 marks) additional 100,000 mark bonus was also paid.

November 8, 1918
McLaughlin Carriage and Motor Company Limited and Chevrolet Motor Company of Canada Limited merged and formed General Motors of Canada Limited. R.S. "Sam" McLaughlin) became president but GM already owned 49% of company.

November 8, 1956
The Ford Motor Company decided on the name "Edsel" for a new model in development for the 1958 market year. The new addition to the Ford family of automobiles would be a tribute to Edsel Bryant Ford, who served as company president from 1919 until his death in 1943. Edsel Ford was also the oldest son of founder Henry Ford and father to current company President Henry Ford II. The designer of the Edsel, Roy Brown, was instructed to create an automobile that was highly recognizable, and from every angle different than anything else on the road. In the fall of 1957, with great fanfare, the 1958 Edsel was introduced to the public. With its horse collar grill in the front and its regressed side-panels in the rear, the Edsel indeed looked like nothing else on the road. However, despite its appearance, the Ford Edsel was a high-tech affair, featuring state-of-the-art innovations such as the "Tele-Touch" push-button automatic transmission. Nevertheless, buyer appeal was low, and the Ford Edsel earned just a 1.5 percent share of the market in 1958. After two more years, the Edsel marque was abandoned, and its name would forever be synonymous with business failure.

November 8, 1992
Daredevil Jacky Vranken of Belgium set a record for the highest speed ever attained on the rear wheel of a motorcycle. At St. Truiden Military Airfield in Belgium, Vranken reached 157.87 while performing an extended "wheelie" with his Suzuki GSXR 1100 motorcycle. The year before, Yasuyuki Kudo of Japan had set the record for the longest wheelie when he covered 205.7 miles nonstop on the rear wheel of his Honda TLM 220 R motorcycle at the Japan Automobile Research Institute in Tsukuba, Japan.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on November 09, 2014, 11:21:38 pm
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On this day, November 9, 1960
Robert McNamara becomes the president of the Ford Motor Company. He would hold the job for less than a month, heading to Washington in December to join President John F. Kennedy's cabinet. McNamara served as the secretary of defense under Presidents Kennedy and Johnson until he resigned in 1968. That year, he became the president of the World Bank, a job he held until 1981.
At the end of World War II, Ford was in tatters. Henry Ford was still in charge, but he was getting old and increasingly senile; furthermore, since he had made no secret of his pacifist, anti-Semitic and anti-union convictions, many people were reluctant to do business with him or to buy one of his cars. The company had been steadily losing money since the stock market crash of 1929, and by 1945 it was losing about $9 million every month.
At GM and Chrysler, by contrast, business was booming. In order to catch up, in September 1945 Henry Ford's wife and daughter-in-law presented the elderly man with an ultimatum: make 28-year-old Henry Ford II (the elder Ford's grandson) the company's president, or his mother would sell her controlling stake in the company to the highest bidder.
Left without much choice, the elder Ford gave in and put his grandson in charge. Right away, Ford II hired 10 "Whiz Kids," including McNamara, all straight out of the Army Air Corps and all with training in economics and statistics from places like Harvard, Stanford, Berkeley and Princeton. These "Whiz Kids" managed to streamline the company and make it profitable again, in part by creating a sleek new look for Ford cars. The company's '49 coupe, with its "spinner" grille, slab sides and integrated fenders, was an immediate hit.
In all, McNamara spent 14 years at Ford, before heading to Washington, D.C., where he served under both Kennedy and President Lyndon Johnson. McNamara was a key advisor to Kennedy during the Cuban Missile Crisis and is credited with using his management skills to help the Pentagon function more efficiently. He is also known as an engineer of America's Vietnam War policy under both Kennedy and Nixon, an often-criticized role that he later discussed in the 2003 documentary The Fog of War.
McNamara left the Pentagon in early 1968, and then spent 12 years as head of the World Bank.
He died on July 6, 2009 at 93 years old.

November 9, 1989
East German citizens were allowed to buy western cars.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on November 10, 2014, 11:06:59 pm
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November 10, 1965
Formula One racer Eddie Irvine was born in Newtownards, Northern Ireland. In 1996, Irvine won a coveted place on the Ferrari team, racing alongside the likes of World Champion Michael Schumacher, but Irvine is also famous as one of the last of Formula One's most endangered species--the playboy racing driver. The popular bachelor, who maintains an impressive neutrality in regard to his British or Irish nationality, has not won a grand prix as of 1998, yet enjoyed seven career-podium finishes and reached a Formula One ranking of fourth in the world in 1998. Irvine got his start in racing at the young age of 17, competing in his father's Crossle FF 1600 Chassis, and by 1988 had worked his way up to British Formula Three series. 1990 saw him driving for the Jordan F3000 team, and he won his first race at Hockinheim that year, finishing third overall in the series. In the fall of 1993, Irvine made his Formula One debut driving for Sasol Jordan, and at the Suzuki racetrack in Japan he placed sixth, becoming the first driver since Jean Alesi to score points on a Formula One debut. In his first few years of Formula One racing, Irvine, a notoriously fearless and reckless driver, earned the nickname "Irv the Swerve." However, he also demonstrated enough driving potential to be offered the number-two position on the championship Ferrari team in 1996.

November 10, 1885
Paul Daimler, son of German engineer Gottlieb Daimler, became first motorcyclist when he rode his father's new invention for six miles; frame and wheels made of wood; leather belt transferred power from engine to large brass gears mounted to rear wheel; no suspension (front or rear); single cylinder engine had bore of 58mm, stroke of 100mm giving a displacement of 264cc's, gave 0.5hp at 700 rpm, top speed was 12 km/h.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on November 11, 2014, 10:23:37 pm
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On this day, November 11, 1978
A stuntman on the Georgia set of "The Dukes of Hazzard" launches the show's iconic automobile, a 1969 Dodge Charger named the General Lee, off a makeshift dirt ramp and over a police car. That jump, 16 feet high and 82 feet long (its landing totaled the car), made TV history. Although more than 300 different General Lees appeared in the series, which ran on CBS from 1979 until 1985, this first one was the only one to play a part in every episode: That jump over the squad car ran every week at the end of the show's opening credits.
The General Lee was a neon-orange Charger with "01" painted on the doors, a Confederate flag on the roof, and a horn that played the first 12 notes of the song "Dixie." It belonged to the Dukes of Hazzard themselves, the cousins Bo (played by actor John Schneider) and Luke Duke (actor Tom Wopat), who used it to get out of dangerous scrapes and away from the corrupt county commissioner Boss Hogg. Scenes featuring the General Lee are some of the show's most memorable: Luke Duke sliding sideways across the car's hood; the boys hopping feet-first through the windows (the Charger's doors were welded shut, so the windows were the only way to get in and out); the General flying over ditches, half-open drawbridges and police cruisers.
Because practically every one of the General Lee's stunts ended up wrecking the car, the show's prop masters bought every 1969 Dodge Charger they could find (and there were plenty: the Chrysler Corporation sold about 85,000 in all). Then they outfitted each one for action, adding a roll cage to the inside, a protective push bar to the nose and heavy-duty shock absorbers and springs to the suspension. The prop masters also tampered with the brakes to make it easier to do the 180-degree "Bootleggers' Turn" that so often helped the Duke boys evade Boss Hogg. Cars used for jumps also got trunks full of concrete or lead ballast to keep them from flipping over in midair.
While "The Dukes of Hazzard" was on the air, the General Lee got about 35,000 fan letters each month. Fans bought millions of remote-controlled and toy versions of the car, and some even modified their real cars to look like the Dukes' Charger. Indianapolis DJ Travis Bell restored the original General Lee in 2006.

November 11, 1926
Official numerical designation 66 (Will Rogers Highway) assigned to the Chicago-to-Los Angeles Route (2,448 miles). It is one of nation's principal east-west arteries; diagonal course linked hundreds of predominately rural communities in Illinois, Missouri, Kansas to Chicago; enabled farmers to transport grain, produce for redistribution; diagonal configuration of Route 66 particularly significant to trucking industry (rivaled railroad for preeminence in American shipping) traversed essentially flat prairie lands, enjoyed more temperate climate than northern highways.

November 11, 1949
Rex Mays, a 1993 inductee into the International Motorsports Hall of Fame, earned his place among the all-time greats of motor racing as much for his willingness to put the welfare of others before his own as for his actual racing ability. Mays got his start on the West Coast midget racing circuit in the 1930s, winning numerous races before entering national competition where he added sprint and champ-car racing to his repertoire. In 1934, he entered the racing big leagues when he placed ninth in his first Indianapolis 500. Mays never managed to win the esteemed event, but he placed second in 1940 and 1941, the same two years that he won the national titles for champ-car racing. In 1941, Mays gave up the fame and fortune of motor racing to serve his country as an Air Force pilot during World War II. After the war, Mays returned to racing. Although he was not as winning a racer as before the war, two separate incidents demonstrated the distinction of his character, and guaranteed his venerable place in the racing history books. In June of 1948, while competing in a champ-car race at the Milwaukee Mile in Wisconsin, Mays deliberately crashed into a wall, nearly ending his life, in order to avoid hitting racer Duke Dinsmore, who was thrown from his car a moment before. And in the fall of 1949, at the New York State Fairgrounds in Syracuse, New York, May prevented a possible fan riot when he silently took to the racetrack alone after other racers refused to compete because of a dispute over prize money. One by one the other racers joined him and violence was prevented. A few months later, on November 11, 1949, Rex Mays was killed during a race held at Del Mar, California, when he was run over by another car after being thrown from his vehicle in a mishap. In addition to his place in the Motorsports Hall of Fame, Rex is honored with a special plaque at the Milwaukee Mile, at the exact spot on the Turn One wall where he nearly gave up his life to save another.

November 11, 1989
In 1935, British car designer William Lyons introduced the SS Jaguar 100 as a new marque for his Swallow Sidecar Company. Swallow Sidecar had been manufacturing complete luxury cars for four years, but the SS Jaguar 100 was Lyons' first true sports car. During World War II, Lyons dropped the Swallow Sidecar name, and the politically incorrect SS initials, and Jaguar Cars Ltd. was formally established. The first significant postwar Jaguar, the XK 120, was introduced in 1948 at the London Motor Show to great acclaim. Capable of speeds in excess of 120mph, the XK 120 was the fastest production car in the world, and is considered by many to be one of the finest sports cars ever made. Over the next three decades, Jaguar became the epitome of speed coupled with elegance, and the company flourished as its racing division racked up countless trophies. On this day in 1989, Jaguar entered a new era when the company became a subsidiary of the Ford Motor Company. The integrity of the Jaguar marque was recognized and maintained, and throughout the 1990s the company continued to produce distinguished automobiles such as the Jaguar XK8 and the luxurious Vanden Plas.

(http://i1020.photobucket.com/albums/af324/paulofiote/MODELOS%20DIVERSOS/JAGUARSS100.jpg) (http://s1020.photobucket.com/user/paulofiote/media/MODELOS%20DIVERSOS/JAGUARSS100.jpg.html)
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: shaunp on November 11, 2014, 11:03:29 pm
That SS 100 is a very Famous car LNW100, won many races/rallys most notably the Alpine rally which was very prestigious back in the day, was owned and driven by Ian Appleyard, pictured in the car. Car chassis number 3 sold for 198K quid in about 2008. One of the first XK 120 alloy body cars was speed tested on the Jabakee motor way by Jaguar test drive Soapy Sutton it was clocked at over 130 mph in both directions then  to prove how flexible the 3.4 XK engine was he then drove past the press in top gear at 10mph.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on November 12, 2014, 07:22:01 pm
That SS 100 is a very Famous car LNW100, won many races/rallys most notably the Alpine rally which was very prestigious back in the day, was owned and driven by Ian Appleyard, pictured in the car. Car chassis number 3 sold for 198K quid in about 2008. One of the first XK 120 alloy body cars was speed tested on the Jabakee motor way by Jaguar test drive Soapy Sutton it was clocked at over 130 mph in both directions then  to prove how flexible the 3.4 XK engine was he then drove past the press in top gear at 10mph.

Thanks Shaun
I might update that info
Matt
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on November 12, 2014, 07:26:56 pm
(http://i260.photobucket.com/albums/ii22/argo5/Greenfield%20Village%20Sept07/443-HenryFordMuseum-Goldenrod.jpg) (http://s260.photobucket.com/user/argo5/media/Greenfield%20Village%20Sept07/443-HenryFordMuseum-Goldenrod.jpg.html)

On this day, November 12, 1965
Brothers Bill and Bob Summers set a world land-speed record—409.277 miles per hour—on the Bonneville Salt Flats in Utah. They did it in an amazing, hemi-powered hot rod they called the Goldenrod. The car got its name from the '57 Chevy gold paint the brothers used. Today, the Goldenrod is on display at the Henry Ford Museum in Dearborn, Michigan.
The Summers brothers—Bill was the levelheaded engineer and Bob was the daredevil driver—had been hot-rod racing near their home in Southern California and at the Bonneville Salt Flats for years. In 1963, they decided to get serious: if they could find the parts and equipment they needed to build the right car, they agreed, they would try to go faster than any man had ever gone. (The land-speed record at that time, 394.196 miles per hour, had been set by Briton John Cobb in 1947.) But the Summers brothers weren't the only people to have this idea: In July 1964, Englishman Donald Campbell broke Cobb's record (403.10 mph), and in 1964 and 1965, two American drivers used jet engines to go more than 600 miles per hour.
But the Summers brothers thought that using jet engines was cheating: They believed, wrote one reporter, "that real cars were driven by friction between tires and the ground." The brothers wanted their car to be as fast as possible by being as aerodynamic as possible, and it was: The finished Goldenrod was the sleekest, lowest, narrowest racer in history. It was 32 feet long, 48 inches wide and 42 inches tall, with a pointed nose and four 426 cubic-inch V8 hemi engines on loan from Chrysler. Firestone Tire and Rubber donated the specially-built low-profile tires, and Mobil Oil provided the fuel.
The Goldenrod's first six-mile run across the Bonneville Salt Flats broke Campbell's record easily, averaging 417 miles per hour. To set an official record, however, a car must make two record-breaking runs, one out and one back, within an hour. With five minutes to spare, the yellow car headed across the desert for a second time. When she screamed past the timers, her achievement was official: she'd hit an average speed of 409.277 miles per hour.
Because the Summers brothers had to return the Goldenrod's engines to Chrysler, they never tried to break their own record. It stood until Al Teague's supercharged Spirit of '76 broke it until 1991. In 2002, the Henry Ford bought the Goldenrod, paying for the car's restoration with a grant from the federal Save America's Treasure's Fund. The car is on display at the museum today.

November 12, 1927
The Holland Tunnel between New York City and Jersey City, New Jersey, was officially opened when President Calvin Coolidge telegraphed a signal from the presidential yacht, Mayflower, anchored in the Potomac River. Within an hour, over 20,000 people had walked the 9,250-foot distance between New York and New Jersey under the Hudson River, and the next day the tunnel opened for automobile service. The double-tubed underwater tunnel, the first of its kind in the United States, was built to accommodate nearly 2,000 vehicles per hour. Chief engineer Clifford Milburn Holland resolved the problem of ventilation by creating a highly advanced ventilation system that changed the air over 30 times an hour at the rate of over 3,000,000 cubic feet per minute.

November 12, 1946
The Exchange National Bank of Chicago, Illinois, instituted the first drive-in banking service in America, and anticipated a cultural phenomenon that would sweep across America in the coming decade. In 1946, America's Big Three automobile companies were still engaged in the laborious process of retooling from war production to civilian automobile company. With the influx of returning soldiers, and economic signs pointing to a period of great American prosperity, market demand for automobiles was high. At first, U.S. carmakers responded by offering their old pre-war models, but beginning in 1949, the first completely redesigned postwar cars hit the market, and Americans embraced the automotive industry as never before. By the early 1950s, the U.S. was a nation on wheels. With a seemingly endless reserve of cheap gas available, drive-in culture--featuring everything from drive-in movie theaters to drive-in grocery stores--flourished alongside America's highways and main streets. In 1946, the Exchange National Bank of Chicago anticipated the rise of America's drive-in society by several years, featuring such drive-in banking innovations as tellers' windows protected by heavy bullet-proof glass, and sliding drawers that enabled drivers to conduct their business from the comfort of their vehicle.

November 12, 1998
Daimler-Benz completed merger with Chrysler to form Daimler-Chrysler.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: shaunp on November 12, 2014, 08:45:58 pm
Thanks Shaun
I might update that info
Matt

Norm Dewis another Jaguar test driver still alive today, actually got an XK120 up to 172mph with a plastic bubble top over the driver and the rest of the cockpit faired in, some hot cams and webers I think, big speed for the late 40's/early 50's in basically a warmed up production car. Norman is best known for crashing the XJ 13 v12 le mans prototype at Mira on the banking when a magnesium wheel collapsed. Car was restored from the wreck in the 80's when the original body forming bucks were found in a shed at the factory.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on November 13, 2014, 10:13:49 pm
(http://i280.photobucket.com/albums/kk171/crabber1967/Facebook/Duesenberg/543703_10152760696280261_1491701504_n.jpg) (http://s280.photobucket.com/user/crabber1967/media/Facebook/Duesenberg/543703_10152760696280261_1491701504_n.jpg.html)

On this day, November 13, 1916
Errett Lobban Cord, the genius behind the Auburn, Cord, and Duesenberg family of automobiles, first became involved with automobiles as a racing car mechanic and driver. On this day, the 20-year-old Cord won his first motor race in Arizona. Cord, driving a Paige vehicle designed by Harry Jewett, won the 275-mile race from Douglas, Arizona, to Phoenix, Arizona. From his racing beginnings, Cord moved into automobile sales, and in 1924 came to Auburn, Indiana, to save the faltering Auburn Automobile Company. Cord, a brilliant salesman, rapidly pulled the company out of debt by clearing out hundreds of stockpiled Auburn vehicles and excess parts, and was subsequently named the vice president and general manager at Auburn. Under Cord's guidance, the Auburn line was entirely refashioned, and the new Auburns were known as some of the most luxurious and fashionable cars on the road. In 1926, Cord acquired the expert design skills of Fred Duesenberg, and in 1928, the Duesenberg Model J, one of the finest automobiles ever made, was introduced to the public. To make the family complete, the Auburn plant introduced the Cord L-29 in 1929, which was America's first successful front-wheel drive car. The Auburn, Cord, and Duesenberg automobiles that sold so well in the roaring 1920s also proved surprisingly resilient during the early years of the Depression, but by 1937, America's hard times were too much even for E. L. Cord, and manufacturing ceased as his entire corporation was sold.

November 13, 1940
Willys-Overland completes original Jeep prototype. In 1939, the U.S. Army asked America's automobile manufacturers to submit designs for a simple and versatile military vehicle. It would be two full years before the official U.S. declaration of war, but military officials, who knew this declaration to be inevitable, recognized the need for an innovative troop-transport vehicle for the global battlefields of World War II. The American Bantam Car Company, a small car manufacturer, submitted the first design approved by the army, but the production contract was ultimately given to Willys-Overland, a company that had a larger production capability and offered a lower bid. The Willys Jeep, as it would become known during the war, was similar to the Bantam design, and featured four-wheel drive, an open-air cab, and a rifle rack mounted under the windshield. On this day, the first Willys-Overland Jeep prototype was completed, and submitted to the U.S. Army for approval. One year later, with the U.S. declaration of war, mass production of the Willys-Overland Jeep began. By the war's end in 1945, some 600,000 Jeeps had rolled off the assembly lines and onto the battlefields of Asia, Africa, and Europe. The efficient and sturdy four-wheel drive Jeep became a symbol of the American war effort--no obstacle could stop its advance. Somewhere along the line the vehicle acquired the name "Jeep," likely evolving from the initials G.P. for "general purchase" vehicle, and the nickname stuck. In 1945, Willys-Overland introduced the first civilian Jeep vehicle, the CJ-2A--the forefather of today's sport utility vehicles
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on November 14, 2014, 08:03:39 pm
(http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v149/dodge52/Weblog/DeGebroedersDodgeHoraceenJohninOldBetsy.jpg)

On this day, November 14, 1914
John and Horace Dodge completed their first Dodge vehicle, a car informally known as "Old Betsy." The same day, the Dodge brothers gave "Old Betsy" a quick test drive through the streets of Detroit, Michigan, and the vehicle was shipped to a buyer in Tennessee. John and Horace, who began their business career as bicycle manufacturers in 1897, first entered the automotive industry as auto parts manufacturers in 1901. They built engines for Ransom Olds and Henry Ford among others, and in 1910 the Dodge Brothers Company was the largest parts-manufacturing firm in the United States. In 1914, the intrepid brothers founded the new Dodge Brothers Motor Car Company, and began work on their first complete automobile at their Hamtramck factory. Dodge vehicles became known for their quality and sturdiness, and by 1919, the Dodge brothers were among the richest men in America. In early 1920, just as he was completing work on his 110-room mansion on the Grosse Point waterfront in Michigan, John fell ill from respiratory problems and died. Horace, who also suffered from chronic lung problems, died from pneumonia in December of the same year. The company was later sold to a New York bank, and in 1928, the Chrysler Corporation bought the Dodge name, its factories, and the large network of Dodge car dealers. Under Chrysler's direction Dodge became a successful producer of cars and trucks marketed for their ruggedness, and today Dodge sells a lineup of over a dozen cars and trucks.
PICTURED: John and Horace Dodge in "Ol Betsy"

November 14, 1899
August Horch founded A. Horch & Cie in Ehrenfeld, Cologne, Germany.

November 14, 1945
Tony Hulman purchased the Indianapolis Motor Speedway from Edward Rickenbacher for $750,000. The speedway was in deplorable condition after four years of disuse during World War II, and before Hulman made his offer Rickenbacher was considering tearing the facilities down and selling the land. Hulman installed himself as chairman of the board of the raceway and named Wilbur Shaw as president. The two hastily renovated the racetrack for the return of Indy racing in the next year, but also launched a long-range program of improvements that included replacing all of the old wooden grandstands with structures of steel and concrete. In May of 1946, the American Automobile Association ran its first postwar 500-mile race at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway. George Robson, driving a pre-war Adams-Sparks automobile, won the event with an average speed of 114.82mph, and, thanks to the efforts of Tony Hulman and Wilbur Shaw, a great American racing tradition was reborn.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on November 15, 2014, 08:54:16 pm
(http://i269.photobucket.com/albums/jj45/mms58/Misc%20Ford%20Photos/Ford%20Cenn/Ford100100MilFord001.jpg) (http://s269.photobucket.com/user/mms58/media/Misc%20Ford%20Photos/Ford%20Cenn/Ford100100MilFord001.jpg.html)

On this day, November 15, 1977
At the Mahwah plant in New York, workers completed the 100,000,000th Ford to be built in America: a 1978 Ford Fairmont four-door sedan. The Fairmont series was introduced at the beginning of the 1978 model year, to replace the discontinued Ford Maverick. Several Fairmont models were available in the first year of the series, and the available power ran from a 140 cubic-inch, four-cylinder engine to a 302 cubic-inch V-8. The most popular Ford Fairmont was the Sporty Coupe, which was introduced midway through the 1978 model year, and featured styling reminiscent of the Thunderbird. The vehicle was two inches longer than the other Fairmont models, and featured quad headlights and a unique roof design featuring a decorative wrap-over. In the 1979 model year, the Fairmont Sporty Coupe became the Fairmont Futura Sport, and, by 1980, was available as a four-door sedan in addition to the original two-door coupe. By 1981, the Fairmont Futura series was more of a high-trim automobile than its original manifestation as a sporty vehicle, and a Futura station wagon became available. At the end of the 1983 model year, the entire Fairmont line was discontinued.

(http://i269.photobucket.com/albums/jj45/mms58/Misc%20Ford%20Photos/Ford%20Cenn/Ford10050MilFord001.jpg) (http://s269.photobucket.com/user/mms58/media/Misc%20Ford%20Photos/Ford%20Cenn/Ford10050MilFord001.jpg.html)

November 15, 1965
Craig Breedlove, driving his jet-powered Spirit of America--Sonic 1 vehicle, raced to 600.601 mph over the Bonneville Salt Flats in Utah, and set a new land-speed record. Breedlove, a four-time land-speed record holder, was also the first driver to break the 400 mph and 500 mph land-speed barriers, in 1963 and 1964 respectively. Five years later, Gary Gabelich, in his Blue Flame rocket-powered vehicle, would break Breedlove's record by reaching 622.407 mph over the Bonneville Salt Flats.

PICTURED BELOW: Craig Breedlove's Spirit of America

(http://i1268.photobucket.com/albums/jj563/RJS1977/Facebook/USA%202008%20%20Railways%20etc/167379_480890241204_727841204_6471289_675522_n.jpg) (http://s1268.photobucket.com/user/RJS1977/media/Facebook/USA%202008%20%20Railways%20etc/167379_480890241204_727841204_6471289_675522_n.jpg.html)
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on November 17, 2014, 12:37:00 am
(http://i301.photobucket.com/albums/nn72/rdpmtlsuperbird70/EXPOSITIONS/14-2occupants-1901-RikerTorpedoRace.jpg) (http://s301.photobucket.com/user/rdpmtlsuperbird70/media/EXPOSITIONS/14-2occupants-1901-RikerTorpedoRace.jpg.html)

On this day, November 16, 1901
A spare, low-slung car called the "Torpedo Racer"—basically a square platform on bicycle wheels—breaks the world speed record for electric cars in Coney Island, New York. The car's builder and pilot, an engineer named Andrew Riker, managed to coax his machine one mile down the straight dirt track in just 63 seconds, that's about 57 mph; today, by contrast, the world speed record for an electric vehicle is about 245 mph). The battery-powered Torpedo Racer held onto its record for ten years.
Riker's Torpedo Racer was the fastest, but not the first, working electric car in the U.S. The first one was built in 1891 by an Iowan named William Morrison. It had a 4-horsepower motor, a 24-cell battery that weighed almost 800 pounds (the whole car weighed about twice that), and could go about 14 miles per hour at top speed. The Morrison car was an amazing innovation, but not many people were ready to buy one. A few years later, however, the Pope Manufacturing Company of Connecticut sold quite a few of its Columbia Electric Phaetons, which were heavier than Morrison's machines but could still travel at a whopping 15 miles per hour.
Unlike Morrison and the engineers at the Pope Company, Riker concentrated on building electric racecars. In September 1896, one of his machines won the country's first-ever automobile race, five laps around a one-mile dirt horse-racing track in Cranston, Rhode Island. The Riker electric finished the race in a little more than 15 minutes. Riker cars could maintain reasonably fast speeds over long distances, too: In April 1900, a relative of the Torpedo Racer won a 50-mile cross-country race on Long Island. It was the only battery-powered car in the field of racers.
Likewise, Riker's was the only electric car in the 1901 Long-Island-Automobile-Club-sponsored race at Coney Island. Against eight gas-powered cars and six steam-powered ones, all stripped down to frames and wheels to eliminate unnecessary weight (Riker's navigator didn't even have a seat; he just sat on the back of the car, clinging to its side as it whisked down the track), the Torpedo Racer finished the race in third place.

November 16, 1916
Dario Resta, driving a Peugeot, won the last Vanderbilt Cup race, held in Santa Monica, California. In the same year, Resta also won the sixth Indianapolis 500 race. The Vanderbilt Cup, an early example of world-class motor racing in America, was organized in 1904 to introduce Europe's best automotive drivers and manufacturers to the U.S. Named after the event's founder, William K. Vanderbilt Jr., the grand prize of the race was the elegant Vanderbilt cup, crafted by Tiffany & Company, the famous American jewelers. Dozens of automotive pioneers traveled across the Atlantic to participate in the first major international racing competition held in the United States. The race, a 10-mile lap course over a 30-mile circuit, was held in Hicksville, New York, and had 18 entries. George Heath, a Frenchman, won the first Vanderbilt Cup in a Panhard automobile, edging out his competition with a brisk average speed of 52.2mph. French-built cars continued to dominate the Vanderbilt Cup until 1908, when daredevil George Robertson drove a 90hp Locomobile, known as "Old 16," to victory in the fourth Vanderbilt Cup. It was the first major international racing victory for an American car, and served notice that the U.S. could compete in motor racing and automobile production. The original Vanderbilt Cup event was held a total of 11 times between 1904 and 1916, at which point the demands of World War I brought an end to the tradition.

November 16, 1929
Enzo Anselmo Ferrari founded Scuderia Ferrari, an organization that began as a racing club but that by 1933 had absorbed the entire race-engineering division at Alpha Romeo.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on November 17, 2014, 10:48:52 pm
(http://i33.photobucket.com/albums/d58/RD350b/CafeVI%202010/soich.jpg) (http://s33.photobucket.com/user/RD350b/media/CafeVI%202010/soich.jpg.html)

On this day, November 17, 1906
Honda Motor Company founder Soichiro Honda was born the son of a blacksmith in Hamamatsu, Japan, about 150 miles southwest of Tokyo. Honda, who displayed remarkable mechanical intuition even at a young age, began working in an auto repair shop in Tokyo at age 15. In 1928, Honda returned to Hamamatsu to set up another branch of the repair shop, and also began pursuing his youthful passion for motor car racing. In 1936, Honda won his first racing trophy at the All-Japan Speed Rally, but nearly died when his car crashed shortly after setting a speed record. After a prolonged recovery, Honda left racing, and during World War II constructed airplane propellers for his country. When the war was over, Japan's industry was in shambles, and Honda saw an opportunity to beat swords into plowshares by starting an automotive company of his own. He bought a surplus of small generator engines from the military at a bargain price and began attaching them to bicycle frames. Honda's fuel-efficient vehicles were popular in a time when fuel was scarce, and in September of 1948, with only $1,500, Honda formed the Honda Motor Company in Hamamatsu. The company began building a full line of powerful and well-made motorcycles that by 1955 led motorcycle production in Japan. Honda proved as effective a company manager as he was a talented engineer, and by the early 1960s, Honda was the world's largest manufacturer of motorcycles. From this immense success, Honda was inspired to begin automobile production in 1962. Honda's first vehicle, the pint-size S-360, failed to make a dent in the American market, and it was not until 1972, and the introduction of the Civic 1200, that Honda became a serious contender in the industry. The fuel crisis of 1973 was the catalyst that thrust Honda and other Japanese auto manufacturers into the forefront of the international market. Cars like the Honda Civic proved far more durable and fuel efficient than anything being produced in Detroit at the time, and American consumers embraced Japanese-made automobiles. In 1973, Soichiro Honda retired from the top position at Honda, but the company he founded went on to become an industry leader, establishing such successful marques as the Accord, which by 1989 was the best-selling car in America.

November 17, 1970
First wheeled-vehicle on the moon. An unmanned Soviet lunar probe, Luna 17, soft-landed in the Sea of Rains on the surface of the moon on this day. Hours later, Lunokhod 1, a self-propelled vehicle controlled by Soviet mission control on earth, rolled out of the Luna landing probe, and became the first wheeled vehicle to travel on the surface of the moon. Lunokhod, which explored the Mare Imbrium region of the Sea of Rains, sent back television images and took soil samples. Despite this notable space first, the Soviet space program was trailing considerably behind the U.S. program which, in 1969, had succeeded in putting an American on the moon with the Apollo 11 lunar mission. In August of 1971, during the fourth manned lunar landing, the United States achieved another first: astronauts David R. Scott and James B. Irwin drove the Lunar Rover--the first manned lunar automobile--on the surface of the moon.

November 17, 1998
The brand-new Daimler Chrysler began trading its shares on the New York Stock Exchange. The company had formed five days earlier, when the American Chrysler Corporation merged with the German conglomerate Daimler-Benz AG. As a result of the merger, DaimlerChrysler became the world's fifth-largest automaker behind General Motors, Ford, Toyota and Volkswagen.
The Daimler-Chrysler merger, for which Daimler-Benz AG paid $36 billion, was supposed to create a single powerhouse car company that could compete in all markets, all over the world. Daimler-Benz was known for its high-quality luxury cars and sturdy trucks, while Chrysler's minivans and Jeeps had a big chunk of the growing sport- utility vehicle market; meanwhile, the American company seemed to have mastered the art of high-volume, low-cost manufacturing. However, things did not quite work out that way. Chrysler actually lost so much money—$1.5 billion in 2006 alone—that in 2007 Daimler paid a private equity firm to take the company off its hands.
In 2009, Chrysler filed for bankruptcy again. In order to stay afloat, it merged with the Italian company Fiat.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on November 18, 2014, 07:12:51 pm
(http://i1245.photobucket.com/albums/gg592/JonCole56/1-1%20FERRARI-%20ALL/Ferrari250GTORacer196303.jpg) (http://s1245.photobucket.com/user/JonCole56/media/1-1%20FERRARI-%20ALL/Ferrari250GTORacer196303.jpg.html)

On this day, November 18, 1987
A special edition 1963 Ferrari 250 GTO hardtop was sold for $1,600,000 at an automobile auction in Italy, setting a new public auction record. Enzo Ferrari first introduced the GTO in 1954, and public demand for the series was so great that Ferrari was motivated to build its first assembly line. The 250 series, the most popular of which were the Testa Rossa and the GT Spyder, made Ferrari a legend. The 1963 Ferrari 250 GTO was a limited edition variant on the 1962 GTO. The engine featured a 12-cylinder engine with a maximum power output of 290bhp at 7,400rpm. The 1963 GTO variant featured larger tires and the hardtop design, and was significant because of its release during the 250 GTO's last major year of production.

November 18, 1960
Chrysler limits DeSoto production. The Chrysler DeSoto was a hit even before the first model was built in the summer of 1928. When Walter P. Chrysler announced that his Chrysler Corporation intended to build a mid-priced vehicle boasting six-cylinders, dealerships signed on immediately, and in the first 12 months of production the DeSoto set a sales record that stood for 30 years. The automobile, named after Spanish explorer Hernando de Soto, was a large and powerful vehicle marketed to the average American car buyer. The innovative designs of the DeSotos of the 1930s were as daring as their namesake--1934 saw the introduction of America's first affordable automobile with aerodynamic styling, and the 1937 DeSoto was hailed for its safety innovations. In the late 1930s, lackluster U.S. sales prompted Chrysler to introduce a more conservative line of DeSotos. The large and gracious 1940 DeSoto was advertised as "America's Family Car," and the American family agreed, giving DeSoto its best sales in the first few years after World War II. During the 1950s, the DeSoto became adventurous again, and the 1955 DeSoto featured power styling to match its powerful engine. By 1956, DeSoto was 11th in the industry, but the dynamics of its demise were already in motion at Chrysler. Disorganization in the management of the Chrysler Corporation, along with general quality issues in Detroit in the late 1950s, led to several years of popular but flawed DeSotos. In 1958, DeSoto's designers introduced their most flamboyant cars ever, the Firesweeps, Firedomes, and Fireflites, but the public failed to embrace these new models, and all but the Fireflite was dropped in 1959. In 1960, William C. Newberg, the new president at Chrysler, decided to limit the DeSoto program, and the uninspired 1961 DeSoto was doomed for failure. On this day, just two weeks after the 1961 DeSoto was introduced to an uninterested market, Chrysler announced the termination of the DeSoto marque.

November 18, 1853
Street signs authorized at San Francisco intersections

November 18, 1863
Lincoln begins 1st draft of his Gettysburg Address

November 18, 1889
Union Pacific begins daily through service, Chicago-Portland & SF

November 18, 1894
Daily Racing Form founded

November 18, 1945
New world air speed record 606 mph (975 kph) set by HJ Wilson of RAF

November 18, 1967
Surveyor 6 becomes 1st man-made object to lift off Moon

November 18, 1990
David Crosby breaks his left leg, ankle and shoulder in a motorcycle accident in Los Angles, CA

November 18, 1992
Dateline NBC airs a demonstration showing General Motors trucks, blowing up on impact, later revealed NBC rigged test

November 18, 2013
Sebastian Vettel wins a record breaking eighth consecutive Formula One race in the 2013 United States Grand Prix

November 18, 2013
Jimmie Johnson wins the NASCAR Sprint Cup for the sixth time
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on November 19, 2014, 10:52:53 pm
(http://i343.photobucket.com/albums/o468/BaronVonMike_PhotoBucket/BayBridge-GG-30s-50s/ATT00166.jpg) (http://s343.photobucket.com/user/BaronVonMike_PhotoBucket/media/BayBridge-GG-30s-50s/ATT00166.jpg.html)

On this day, November 19, 1954
The first automatic toll collection machine was placed in service at the Union Toll Plaza on New Jersey's Garden State Parkway. In order to pass through the toll area, motorists dropped 25¢ into a wire mesh hopper and then a green light would flash permitting passage through the toll. The automatic toll collection machine was an important innovation for America's modern toll highway, which first appeared in 1940 with the opening of the Pennsylvania Turnpike. For a three-hour reduction of travel time between Pittsburgh and Harrisburg, the turnpike asked travelers to pay tolls, creating revenues that helped cover the roadway's high construction and maintenance costs. The Pennsylvania Turnpike was a tremendous success, leading to the construction of toll highways across the country, including the Garden State Parkway, which opened its first toll section in early 1954, and was completed in 1955. However, a non-automotive toll road first appeared in the United States in 1795, when people traveling through the Blue Ridge Mountains along the Little River Turnpike found their way blocked by toll gates at Snicker's Gap, where they were asked to pay a toll.

November 19, 1993
On this day, Toyota and General Motors signed an historic agreement to sell the Chevy Cavalier in Japan as the Toyota Cavalier. In a sense, the U.S.-built but Japanese-inspired Cavalier was returning home. The popular Cavalier, which was first introduced in 1981, was Detroit's answer to Japan's fuel-efficient and well-made compacts. Japanese automakers had taken the U.S. automobile market by storm during the 1970s, largely due to consumer demand for fuel efficiency and durability during a time of oil crises and recession. It took a decade for the Big Three to bounce back from the blow, finally gaining ground in the early 1980s with Japanese-inspired compacts like the Chevy Cavalier. The Cavalier was the best-selling Chevy model in modern history, and the top-selling U.S. car in 1984. By the late 1980s, Detroit's relationship with Japanese automakers had stabilized--major Japanese plants opened across the United States and the Japanese government relaxed its tariff laws to allow free competition from American automakers. During the 1990s, cooperation became the rule of thumb, and cars can no longer be considered strictly "Japanese" or "American," as most automobiles today are constructed in any number of countries from parts made all around the world

November 19, 1861
The first petroleum shipment (1,329 barrels) from the U.S. to Europe leaves Philadelphia, USA, for London, England on the Elizabeth Watts

November 19, 1952
North American F-86 Sabre sets world aircraft speed record, 1124 KPH

November 19, 1969
Apollo 12's Conrad & Bean become 3rd & 4th humans on Moon

November 19, 1996
The 12.9 km Confederation Bridge, joining Borden-Carleton, Prince Edward Island and Cape Jourimain, New-Brunswick is completed and becomes the longest bridge over ice covered waters in the world
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on November 20, 2014, 07:37:40 pm
(http://i64.photobucket.com/albums/h185/brebaby22/ma%20pics/361px-Morgan_signal.jpg) (http://s64.photobucket.com/user/brebaby22/media/ma%20pics/361px-Morgan_signal.jpg.html)

November 20, 1923
African-American Garrett A. Morgan, of Cleveland, OH, received patent for a "Traffic Signal"; automatic traffic signal to make streets safer for motorists and pedestrians (had seen an automobile crash into a horse-drawn carriage); sold technology to General Electric Corporation for
$40,000.

November 20, 1907
McLaughlin Motor Car Company Limited formed in Ontario with capital of 5,000 shares valued at C$100 each with R.S. "Sam" McLaughlin as President and signed manufacturing agreement with Billy Durant, a partner in Buick Motor Company.

November 20, 1959
British Anglia comes to America. In 1911, the Ford Motor Company, which had been importing Ford Model Ts for several years, opened its first overseas plant at Trafford Park in Manchester, England. In 1920, after a decade of brisk sales in Britain and all over Europe, Ford was faced with a crisis--a new British law established higher tax penalties for larger-engine cars, and Ford's market share was suffering. Ford of England responded by developing several prototypes for a Ford automobile small enough to avoid British tax penalties. Designers also predicted that the citizens of dense European cities would prefer a car smaller than the standard American Ford. The resulting Model Y Ford "8" went into production in 1932, and after a strong first year Ford's British market share began to rapidly expand. In 1938, the Ford E93A Prefect was introduced, the first marque in the United States--the first British Ford to be marketed to Americans on a large scale. Internally, the compact 105E Anglia had a brand new overhead-valve engine and a four-speed gearbox, and externally, it was like nothing else on the road with it distinctive rear-sloping back window, frog-like headlights, and stylish colors: light green and primrose yellow. Despite appreciation for the well-designed car by a few automobile enthusiasts in America, the Anglia, which was a best-seller on the world's markets, failed to make a noticeable impact in the general U.S. market.

November 20, 1817
First Seminole War begins in Florida

November 20, 1953
Scott Crossfield in Douglas Skyrocket, 1st to break Mach 2 (1,300 MPH)

November 20, 1962
USSR agrees to remove bombers from Cuba, & US lifts blockade

November 20, 1980
Steve Ptacek in Solar Challenger makes 1st solar-powered flight

November 20, 1985
Microsoft Windows 1.0 is released.

November 20, 1990
US 68th manned space mission STS 38 (Atlantis 7) returns from space

November 20, 1998
The first module of the International Space Station, Zarya, is launched.

Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on November 21, 2014, 10:50:44 pm
(http://i984.photobucket.com/albums/ae325/teamdearborn/Members%20Vehicles/Boss351Darren.jpg) (http://s984.photobucket.com/user/teamdearborn/media/Members%20Vehicles/Boss351Darren.jpg.html)

On this day, November 21, 1970
One of the rarest of Ford Mustangs--the Boss 351--debuted at the Detroit Auto Show in Detroit, Michigan. Ford first introduced the Mustang marque in 1964 and the car was an instant success, appearing on the covers of both Time and Newsweek. The car, known as a "pony car" for its small size, had the appearance of a sports car. However, the Mustang was far more reasonably prized than the average sports car, and it possessed a rare popular appeal that made it one of the greatest automotive success stories of the 1960s. By 1970, the Ford Mustang had grown considerably in size, and the Boss 351 could better be described as a "muscle car" than a "pony car." The car featured a powerful 8-cyclinder engine built on Ford's new "Cleveland" block, and was factory rated at 300bhp. The Boss 351 was also unquestionably one the rarest Mustangs ever released--it was manufactured for just a single production year, 1971, and only 1,806 units were made--compared with the 500,000 Mustangs manufactured and sold by Ford in 1965 alone.

November 21, 1937
Howard E. Coffin, who founded the Hudson Motor Company along with Joseph L. Hudson in 1909, died from an accidental gunshot wound at Sea Island Beach in Georgia at the age of 64. Coffin served as vice president and chief engineer of Hudson from 1909 to 1930, and was responsible for a number of Hudson's important automotive innovations, including the placement of the steering wheel on the left side, the self-starter, and dual brakes. Under Coffin's influence the Hudson Essex was introduced in 1919, a sturdy automobile built on an all-steel body that sold for pennies more than Ford's Model T. Coffin's last production year with Hudson was also the company's most prosperous--Hudson production peaked in 1929 with over 300,000 units.

November 21, 2005
General Motors Corp. announced it would close 12 facilities, lay off 30,000 workers in North America.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on November 23, 2014, 12:04:21 am
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On this day, November 22, 1985
Lee Iacocca, the chief executive officer of the Chrysler Corporation, presided over the largest swearing-in ceremony for new U.S. citizens in American history. At the end of six days of rallies around the country, Iacocca, the son of Italian immigrants himself, lead 38,648 people in a swearing of allegiance to the United States. Iacocca served as president of the Ford Motor Company during the 1970s, and was largely responsible for the extremely profitable Mustang marque. After a falling out with Henry Ford II in 1978, Iacocca moved to the struggling Chrysler Corporation, and steered the company back to profitability as president and later as CEO. Iacocca was also one of the most charismatic and influential men Detroit had ever known. After making massive but necessary cuts to Chrysler's workforce, Iacocca elected to pay himself only $1 for his first year as CEO, explaining that everyone had to make sacrifices in order for Chrysler to survive. He also appeared in Chrysler's commercials as himself, wrote a best-selling autobiography, and entertained the possibility of running for president of the United States. A self-made son of immigrants, America's immigration and ethnic heritage was always important to Iacocca. Three years before presiding over the record-breaking swearing-in ceremony, Iacocca helped form the Statue of Liberty-Ellis Island Foundation, a non-profit organization founded in 1982 to raise funds for the restoration and preservation of the Statue of Liberty and Ellis Island. Iacocca later became chairman emeritus of this organization.

November 22, 1927
Carl Eliason of Sayner, Wisconsin, was granted the first patent ever given for a snowmobile design. Eliason had actually completed his first working prototype three years before--a small vehicle with a front-mounted liquid-cooled 2.5 HP Johnson outboard engine, slide rail track guides, wooden cleats, rope-controlled steering skis, and running boards made out of two downhill skis. Eliason built his first snowmobile in a small garage behind his general store over a two-year period, and used everything from bicycle parks to a radiator from a used Model T Ford. During the 1930s, Eliason founded Eliason Motor Toboggan, continued improving on his snowmobiles, and the company was soon known around the world. A major purchaser of Eliason snowmobiles in the early years of the company was the U.S. Army, which ordered 150 all-white Eliason Motor Toboggans for use in the defense of Alaska during World War II.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on November 23, 2014, 11:24:54 pm
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November 23, 1900
The first car to be produced under the Mercedes name is taken for its inaugural drive in Cannstatt, Germany. The car was specially built for its buyer, Emil Jellinek, an entrepreneur with a passion for fast, flashy cars. Jellinek had commissioned the Mercedes car from the German company Daimler-Motoren-Gesellschaft: it was lighter and sleeker than any car the company had made before, and Jellinek was confident that it would win races so handily that besotted buyers would snap it up. He was so confident that he bought 36 of them. In exchange for this extraordinary patronage, the company agreed to name its new machine after Jellinek's 11-year-old daughter, Mercedes.
In 1886, the German engineers Gottlieb Daimler and Wilhelm Maybach had built one of the world's first "horseless carriages," a four-wheeled carriage with an engine bolted to it. In 1889, the two men built the world's first four-wheeled automobile to be powered by a four-stroke engine. They formed Daimler-Motoren-Gesellschaft the next year.
In 1896, Emil Jellinek saw an ad for the D-M-G auto in a German magazine. Then, as the story goes, he traveled to D-M-G's Cannstatt factory, charged onto the factory floor wearing a pith helmet, pince-nez and mutton-chop sideburns and demanded that the company sell him the most spectacular car it had.
That car was sturdy, but it could only go 15 miles per hour--not even close to fast enough for Jellinek. In 1898, he ordered two more cars, stipulating that they be able to go at least 10 miles per hour faster than the first one could. Daimler complied; the result was the 8-horsepower Phoenix. Jellinek was impressed enough with the Phoenix that he began to sell them to his friends: 10 in 1899, 29 in 1900.
At the same time, he needed a racing car that could go even faster. Jellinek went back to D-M-G with a business proposition: if it would build him the world's best speedster (and name it the Mercedes), he would buy 36 of them.
The new Mercedes car was fast. It also introduced the aluminum crankcase, magnalium bearings, the pressed-steel frame, a new kind of coil-spring clutch and the honeycomb radiator (essentially the same one that today's Mercedes use). It was longer, wider, and lower than the Phoenix and had better brakes. Also, a mechanic could convert the new Mercedes from a two-seat racer to a four-seat family car in just a few minutes.
In 1902, the company legally registered the Mercedes brand name.
PICTURED: The Mercedes 300SL

November 23, 1897
On this day, Ransom Eli Olds of Lansing, Michigan, is issued a U.S. patent for his "motor carriage," a gasoline-powered vehicle that he constructed the year before. In 1887, when he was only 18, Olds built his first automobile, a steam-propelled three-wheeled vehicle. However, Olds soon recognized the advantages of an engine powered by gasoline, an abundant fuel source that was safer and more reliable than steam. Two months before receiving his patent, Olds had formed the Olds Motor Vehicle Company, a company that grew into the Olds Motors Works, in 1899, with the assistance of private investor Samuel L. Smith. After designing a number of prototypes, Olds and his company finally settled on the Olds Runabout in 1901. The Runabout was a small, motorized buggy with a curved dashboard and lightweight wheels, and was powered by a one-cylinder engine capable of reaching 20mph. Perhaps out of financial necessity, Olds contracted with other companies to construct various parts for the Runabout, a production technique that differed from the current industry practice of individually handcrafting each vehicle. Olds' new production method, a prototype of assembly line production, proved a great success, and Olds Motor Works sold 425 Oldsmobile Runabouts in the first year of business, 2,500 in the next, and peaked in 1904 with sales in excess of 5,000 vehicles.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on November 24, 2014, 09:11:37 pm
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On this day, November 24, 1849
John Froelich, the inventor of the first gasoline-powered farm tractor, was born in Froelich, Iowa. Froelich's tractor, completed in 1892, featured a Van Duzen one-cylinder gasoline engine mounted on wooden beams to operate a threshing machine. Froelich manufactured several more tractors of this type during the year, and in September shipped one of his engine-powered tractors to a farm in Langford, South Dakota, where it was employed in agriculture activity for the first time. Froelich established the Waterloo Gasoline Traction Engine Company in Waterloo, Iowa, in 1893, and began to manufacture tractors on a larger scale. In 1918, the Waterloo Traction Engine Company was purchased by the John Deere Plow Company. John Deere, a long-established plow company, mass-produced gasoline-powered tractors based on Froelich's designs. During the 1920s and 1930s, tractors rapidly changed the face of agriculture in America, and many traditional farmers were pushed off their land by the encroachment of large agricultural interests who utilized the efficient new farming technology.

November 24, 1900
The first gasoline-powered Pierce automobile was taken on a test drive through the streets of Buffalo, New York. George N. Pierce first founded the Pierce Company in 1878 as a manufacturer of household items, but in the late nineteenth century shifted to bicycle production. Pierce bicycles became known for their high quality, and after achieving a substantial capital base, Pierce and his company decided to try their hand in automobile production. The first few Pierce prototypes involved steam power, but in 1900 the designers shifted to gasoline engines. The first production Pierce, test driven on this day, featured a modified one-cylinder deDion engine capable of producing nearly three horsepower. The automobile would be christened the Pierce Motorette, and between 1901 and 1903 roughly 170 Pierce Motorettes were made. In 1903, Pierce began manufacturing its own engines, and later in the year, the Pierce Arrow was introduced, followed by the Pierce Great Arrow in 1904. By 1905, the George N. Pierce Company was producing some of the biggest and most expensive automobiles in America, with prices in excess of $5,000. In 1908, the Pierce-Arrow Motor Car Company was officially launched, and in 1909 U.S. president William Howard Taft ordered two of the prestigious automobiles, a Brougham and a Landaulette, for use by the White House.

Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on November 25, 2014, 11:25:54 pm
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On this day, November 25, 1973
In response to the 1973 oil crisis, President Richard M. Nixon called for a Sunday ban on the sale of gasoline to consumers. The proposal was part of a larger plan announced by Nixon earlier in the month to achieve energy self-sufficiency in the United States by 1980. The 1973 oil crisis began in mid-October, when 11 Arab oil producers increased oil prices and cut back production in response to the support of the United States and other nations for Israel in the Yom Kippur War. Almost overnight, gasoline prices quadrupled, and the U.S. economy, especially its automakers, suffered greatly as a result. The Sunday gasoline ban lasted until the crisis was resolved in March of the next year, but other government legislation, such as the imposing of a national speed limit of 55mph, was extended indefinitely. Experts maintained that the reduction of speed on America's highways would prevent an estimated 9,000 traffic fatalities per year. Although many motorists resented the new legislation, one long-lasting benefit for impatient travelers was the ability to make right turns at a red light, a change that the authorities estimated would conserve a significant amount of gasoline. In 1995, the national 55mph speed limit was repealed, and legislation relating to highway speeds now rests in state hands.

November 25, 1920
Gaston Chevrolet, the younger brother of famous automobile designer and racer Louis Chevrolet, was killed during a race in Beverly Hills, California. Gaston, born in La-Chauz-de-Fonds, Switzerland, came to America in the early nineteenth century to join his brothers Louis and Andre in the establishment of a racing car design company: the Frontenac Motor Corporation. Frontenac replaced Louis' earlier racing car design company, the Chevrolet Motor Company, which he sold to William C. Durant in 1915. After some initial success, the Chevrolet brothers were faced with obsolete vehicles after World War I, and not enough financial resources to make them competitive again. However, in 1920, the new management at the Monroe Motors Company asked Louis to run his racing team. The Chevrolets moved their operations to Indianapolis, and rapidly made the Monroe racers ready for the 1920 Indy 500, the first to be held since 1914. During the 1920s, the Indy 500 was the most important racing event in America, and Gaston Chevrolet, driving a Chevrolet-adapted Monroe, won the first post-war competition with an average race speed of 86.63mph. The Chevrolet brothers did not have long to enjoy their success, however, because just a few months later Gaston was killed along with his riding mechanic Lyall Jolls during the Beverly Hills race.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on November 26, 2014, 08:11:20 pm
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November 26, 1927
The Ford Motor Company announced the introduction of the Model A, the first new Ford to enter the market since the Model T was first introduced in 1908. The hugely successful Model T revolutionized the automobile industry, and over 15,000,000 million copies of the "Tin Lizzie" were sold in its 19 years of production. By 1927, the popularity of the outdated Model T was rapidly waning. Improved, but basically unchanged for its two-decade reign, it was losing ground to the more stylish and powerful motor cars offered by Ford's competitors. In May of 1927, Ford plants across the country closed, as the company began an intensive development of the more refined and modern Model A. The vastly improved Model A had elegant Lincoln-like styling on a smaller scale, and used a capable 200.5-cubic-inch four-cylinder engine that produced 40hp. With prices starting at $460, nearly 5,000,000 Model As, in several body styles and a variety of colors, rolled onto America's highways until production ended in early 1932.

November 26, 1980
Peter DePaolo, who won a dazzling victory at the 1925 Indy 500, died at the age of 82. DePaolo, who was the nephew of racing legend Ralph DePalma, first started racing for Duesenberg in the 1920s. During the first half of the 1920s, Fred and August Duesenberg's expertly crafted racing cars were dominant competitors at the Indianapolis 500. In 1922, a Duesenberg engine won the event, and in 1924 a complete Duesenberg, featuring cutting-edge centrifugal superchargers, blew the competition away. For the 1925 Indy, racing car designer Harry Miller showed up with a dramatic new supercharged front-drive Miller Junior Eight, and Peter DePaolo, who was set to drive for Duesenberg, had his work cut out from him. However, DePaolo had set a promising 135mph record on the Culver City boards that same year, and as the race got underway, he took an early lead over racer Dave Lewis in the Miller Junior Eight. By the halfway point of the race, the blisters on DePaolo's hands had become intolerable, and Fred Duesenberg replaced him with Norman Batten. When DePaolo returned from the track hospital, he learned with horror that Batten had fallen to fifth place, and Dave Lewis was leading in the Miller. DePaolo reentered the race, and slowly but surely, DePaolo fought his way to the front of the pack again. When the dust cleared on the Indianapolis Motor Speedway, Peter DePaolo had prevailed. It was a great victory for the Duesenberg team, made greater by DePaolo's passing of the 100mph Indy speed barrier with an average speed of 101.13mph.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on November 27, 2014, 11:41:44 pm
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On this day, November 27, 1901
Clement Studebaker died in South Bend, Indiana. He was the co-founder of H & C Studebaker Company, which built Pennsylvania-German conestoga wagons and carriages during his lifetime, and automobiles after his death.
PICTURED: Customized Studebaker at SEMA Las Vegas

November 27, 1979
Ricky Carmichael a former professional motocross and supercross racer was born in Clearwater, Florida. He is now transitioning to a stock car career as a development driver with Ken Schrader. While racing pro motocross and supercross, his nickname was GOAT (Greate st of All Time).
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on November 28, 2014, 10:17:40 pm
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November 28, 1942
The first production Ford bomber, the B-24 Liberator, rolled off the assembly line at Ford's massive Willow Run plant in Ypsilanti, Michigan. Two years before, U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt had urged an isolationist America to prepare for its inevitable involvement in the war, declaring that U.S. industry must become "the great arsenal of democracy." Roosevelt established the Office of Production Management (OPM) to organize the war effort, and named a former automotive executive co-director of the OPM. Most Detroit automobile executives opposed the OAW during its first year, and were dubious of the advantages of devoting their entire production to war material. However, on December 7, 1941, the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor, and American citizens mobilized behind the U.S. declaration of war against the Axis powers. Since profit ruled Detroit, the government made Ford and America's other automakers an economic offer they could not refuse. For their participation in the war effort, automakers would be guaranteed profits regardless of production costs, and $11 billion would be allocated to the building of war plants--factories that would be sold to private industry at a substantial discount after the war. In February of 1942, the last Ford automobile rolled off the assembly line for the duration of the war, and soon afterward the Willow Run plant was completed in Michigan. Built specifically for Ford's war production, Willow Run was the largest factory in the world. Using the type of assembly line production that had made Ford an industrial giant, Ford hoped to produce 500 B-24 Liberator bombers a month. After a gradual start, that figure was reached in time for the Allied invasion of Western Europe, and by July of 1944, the Willow Plant was producing one B-24 every hour. By the end of the war, the 43,000 men and women who had worked at Ford's Willow Run plant had produced over 8,500 bombers, which unquestionably had a significant impact on the course of the war.

November 28, 1890
Max Duttenhofer, managing director of Köln-Rottweiler Pulverfabrik, Wilhelm Lorenz and Gottlieb Daimler formed Daimler-Motoren-Gesellschaft, joint-stock company. Wilhelm Maybach joined as chief engineer. He however left on February 11, 1891 over terms of contract.

November 28, 1895
The "Great Chicago Race", first automobile race first race featuring gasoline-powered automobiles, organized by Chicago Times-Herald Publisher Herman H. Kohlstaat, took place between Chicago and Waukegan, IL; six vehicles competed: two electric cars, three German Benz automobiles, one American-made two-cylinder Duryea automobile; $5,000 in prizes, first-place prize of $2,000; Frank Duryea = winner in 10 1/2 hours with no other car in sight, average speed of 7.5mph; 2nd place - German Oscar Mueller, completed the race an hour and a half later.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on December 01, 2014, 10:11:03 pm
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On this day, November 29, 1948
Australian Prime Minister Ben Chifley and 1,200 hundred other people attended the unveiling of the first car to be manufactured entirely in Australia--an ivory-colored motor car officially designated the 48-215, but fondly known as the Holden FX. In 1945, the Australian government had invited Australia's auto-part manufacturers to create an all-Australian car. General Motors-Holden's Automotive, a car body manufacturer, obliged, producing the 48-215, a six-cylinder, four-door sedan. The 48-215 was an instant success in Australia, and 100,000 Holden FXs were sold in the first five years of production. During the next few decades, General Motors-Holden's Automotive went on to introduce a number of other successful marques, including the Torana and the Commodore. Four million Holdens, with their trademark "Lion-and-Stone" emblem, were sold in Australia and exported around the world by the 1980s. In 1994, General Motors-Holden's Automotive finally adopted Holden as its official company name, and today Holden continues its mission of meeting Australia's unique motoring needs.
PICTURED: Launch of the Holden 48-215 by Prime Minister Ben Chifley.

November 29, 1996
Volkswagen executive Jose Ignacio Lopez resigned under charges of industrial espionage from General Motors, his former employer. As part of a major lawsuit against Volkswagen, GM charged that Lopez, its former worldwide chief of purchasing, had stolen trade secrets from the company in 1993 when he defected to Volkswagen along with three other GM managers. Lopez's resignation was likely a result of pressure from the German carmaker, which sought to reach a settlement before the scheduled lawsuit began under U.S. jurisdiction. In January 1997, VW and GM announced a settlement in which Volkswagen would pay General Motors $100 million and agree to buy at least $1 billion in parts from GM. VW also confirmed that the three other former GM managers accused of industrial espionage had all either resigned or were due to take administrative leave. In return, GM agreed to drop all legal action.

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On this day, Paul Walker dead at 40: 'Fast and Furious' star killed in fiery car crash
The star of 'The Fast and the Furious' movie franchise and a friend identified as Roger Rodas died in Southern California after the Porsche they were in crashed violently into a tree, his rep confirmed to the Daily News. Police said speed was a factor.
PICTURED: Vin Diesel (Left) Paul Walker (right)

November 30, 1866
Work on the first underwater highway tunnel in the United States began on this day in Chicago, Illinois. Over a three-year period, workers and engineers tunneled underneath the Chicago River, finally completing the 1,500-foot tunnel at a cost of over $500,000. The tunnel had two roadways, each 11-feet tall and 13-feet wide, and a separate footway 10-feet wide and 10-feet tall. In 1907, the tunnel was lowered to provide better air circulation, and for the first time it began to allow regular automobile traffic.

November 30, 1960
The first Scout all-terrain vehicle rolled off the assembly line at International Harvester's Fort Wayne plant. The history of International Harvester dates back to the early 1800s, when the company sold Cyrus McCormick's mechanical reaper. Around the turn of the century, the company took the name of International Harvester (IH), and, in 1907, produced the Auto Buggy, an early motorized truck marketed to farmers. During the next few decades, IH specialized in industrial vehicles and agricultural machinery. During the 1950s, IH truck production flourished with the rapid emergence of interstate highways. In 1959, IH began work on a new 4x4 utility vehicle, which would be offered to the average American as an alternative to the popular Jeep vehicle. Designed by Ted Ornas, the first Scout was introduced to the public as a versatile, affordable vehicle for both passenger and cargo transport. It was available in both two- and four-wheel drive and featured a four-cylinder engine, with three-speed, floor-mounted transmission. The Scout became the best-selling vehicle in IH history, enjoying a full 10 years of production before being replaced by the improved Scout II in 1971.



Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on December 01, 2014, 10:15:39 pm
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On this day, December 1, 1913
The Ford Motor Company introduced the continuous moving assembly line. Ford's new assembly line could produce a complete car every two-and-a-half minutes. The efficiency and speed of Ford's production lines allowed the company to sell cars for less than any competitor.

December 1, 1915
John D. Hertz founded original Yellow Cab taxicab service in Chicago. The color (and name) yellow selected as result of survey by University of Chicago which indicated it was easiest color to spot.

December 1, 1921
The Detroit Steam Motors Corporation announced the Trask steam car, a favorite project of automobile distributor O.C. Trask. A steam-driven automobile had reached the world-record speed of 127.66mph in 1906, causing a steam-car craze that lasted through the 1920s. The last steam-powered cars in the U.S. were made in 1926.

December 1, 1942
The U.S. government imposed gasoline quotas to conserve fuel during the shortages of World War II. The armed forces overseas had fuel aplenty, but stateside, gasoline became costly and hard to get. People started using bicycles and their own two feet to get around.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on December 02, 2014, 10:49:00 pm
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On this day, December 2, 1899
John R. Cobb, a dominant British racer and three-time land-speed record-holder, was born in Hackbridge, Surrey, south of London, England. During the early 1930s, Cobb dominated British racing, setting a series of lap records at the famous Brooklands racetrack in England, including an unbroken record of 143.44mph in 1935. In 1938, at the Bonneville Salt Flats in Utah, he set a new land speed record of 350.194mph in a Railton racer, breaking the 345.489mph record set by George Eyston two weeks before. Eyston, driving a Thunderbolt, went on to regain the land speed title that year. However, in 1938, Cobb returned to Bonneville to wrest the title from Eyston for good, this time racing to 369.741mph. Cobb's record speed stood until 1947, when Cobb himself returned to Utah in another Railton and set a new record of 394.196mph, although one of his unofficial runs was in excess of 400mph. In 1952, Cobb was killed at the age of 52 while trying to set a new water-speed record on Loch Ness in Scotland. His impressive land-speed record stood until 1963, when Craig Breedlove, driving a jet-propelled vehicle, broke a record that no other drivers of cars with internal combustion engines could touch.

December 2, 1902
The first working V-8 engine was patented in France by French engine designer Leon-Marie-Joseph-Clement Levavasseur. The engine block was the first to arrange eight pistons in the V-formation that allowed a crankshaft with only four throws to be turned by eight pistons. Today, V-8 engines are extremely common in automobiles that need powerful motors.

December 2, 1913
Henry Ford installs the first moving assembly line for the mass production of an entire automobile. His innovation reduced the time it took to build a car from more than 12 hours to two hours and 30 minutes.
Ford's Model T, introduced in 1908, was simple, sturdy and relatively inexpensive--but not inexpensive enough for Ford, who was determined to build "motor cars for the great multitude. In order to lower the price of his cars, Ford figured, he would just have to find a way to build them more efficiently.
Ford had been trying to increase his factories' productivity for years. The workers who built his Model N cars (the Model T's predecessor) arranged the parts in a row on the floor, put the under-construction auto on skids and dragged it down the line as they worked. Later, the streamlining process grew more sophisticated. Ford broke the Model T's assembly into 84 discrete steps, for example, and trained each of his workers to do just one. He also hired motion-study expert Frederick Taylor to make those jobs even more efficient. Meanwhile, he built machines that could stamp out parts automatically and much more quickly than even the fastest human worker could.
The most significant piece of Ford's efficiency crusade was the assembly line. Inspired by the continuous-flow production methods used by flour mills, breweries, canneries and industrial bakeries, along with the disassembly of animal carcasses in Chicago's meat-packing plants, Ford installed moving lines for bits and pieces of the manufacturing process: For instance, workers built motors and transmissions on rope-and-pulley–powered conveyor belts. In December 1913, he unveiled the pièce de résistance: the moving-chassis assembly line.
In February 1914, he added a mechanized belt that chugged along at a speed of six feet per minute. As the pace accelerated, Ford produced more and more cars, and on June 4, 1924, the 10-millionth Model T rolled off the Highland Park assembly line. Though the Model T did not last much longer--by the middle of the 1920s, customers wanted a car that was inexpensive and had all the bells and whistles that the Model T scorned--it had ushered in the era of the automobile for everyone.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on December 03, 2014, 10:53:41 pm
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On this day, December 3, 1979
The last Pacer is produced by the American Motor Company. The bubble-topped Pacer was a reasonably popular economy car, though its Jetson-styled body attracted flack from car critics and stand-up comedians alike.

December 3, 1917
Quebec Bridge opens near Quebec, Canada. At the time, it was the world's longest cantilever truss span in which stiff trusses extend from the bridge piers, without additional support.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on December 04, 2014, 10:39:49 pm
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On this day, December 4, 1991
Pan American World Airways, commonly known as Pan Am, was the principal and largest international air carrier in the United States from 1927 until its collapse on December 4, 1991. Founded in 1927 as a scheduled air mail and passenger service operating between Key West, Florida, and Havana, Cuba, the airline became a major company credited with many innovations that shaped the international airline industry, including the widespread use of jet aircraft, jumbo jets, and computerized reservation systems. It was also a founding member of the International Air Transport Association (IATA), the global airline industry association. Identified by its blue globe logo, the use of the word "Clipper" in aircraft names and call signs, and the white pilot uniform caps, the airline was a cultural icon of the 20th century. In an era dominated by flag carriers that were wholly or majority government-owned, it was also the unofficial flag carrier of the United States. During most of the jet era, Pan Am's flagship terminal was the Worldport located at John F. Kennedy International Airport in New York City.

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December 4, 1915
Automobile tycoon Henry Ford set sail for Europe from Hoboken, New Jersey, aboard the Ford Peace Ship. His mission: to end World War I. His slogan, "Out of the trenches and back to their homes by Christmas," won an enthusiastic response in the States, but didn't get very far overseas. Ford's diplomatic mission was not taken seriously in Europe, and he soon returned.

December 4, 1928
"Dapper Dan" Hogan, a St. Paul, Minnesota saloon keeper and mob boss, is killed when someone plants a car bomb under the floorboards of his new Paige coupe. Doctors worked all day to save him--according to the Morning Tribune, "racketeers, police characters, and business men" queued up at the hospital to donate blood to their ailing friend--but Hogan slipped into a coma and died at around 9 p.m. His murder is still unsolved.
As the newspaper reported the day after Hogan died, car bombs were "the newest form of bomb killing," a murderous technology perfected by New York gangsters and bootleggers. In fact, Hogan was one of the first people to die in a car bomb explosion. The police investigation revealed that two men had entered Dapper Dan's garage early in the morning of December 4, planted a nitroglycerine explosive in the car's undercarriage, and wired it to the starter. When Hogan pressed his foot to that pedal, the bomb went off, nearly severing his right leg. He died from blood loss.
The first real car bomb--or, in this case, horse-drawn-wagon bomb--exploded on September 16, 1920 outside the J.P. Morgan Company's offices in New York City's financial district. Italian anarchist Mario Buda had planted it there, hoping to kill Morgan himself; as it happened, the robber baron was out of town, but 40 other people died and about 200 were wounded in the blast. There were occasional car-bomb attacks after that--most notably in Saigon in 1952, Algiers in 1962, and Palermo in 1963--but vehicle weapons remained relatively uncommon until the 1970s and 80s, when they became the terrifying trademark of groups like the Irish Republican Army and Hezbollah. In 1995, right-wing terrorists Timothy McVeigh and Terry Nichols used a bomb hidden in a Ryder truck to blow up the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City.


December 4, 1971
General Motors recalled 6,700,000 vehicles that were vulnerable to motor mount failure. It was the largest voluntary safety recall in the industry's history.

December 4, 1984
General Motors (GM) announced that it would stop production of diesel engines. According to GM, diesel motors get excellent mileage and produce plenty of power, but tend to be noisy and produce heavy exhaust. Tightening emissions laws drove GM to abandon diesels altogether.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on December 05, 2014, 10:03:05 pm

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On this day, December 5, 1932
The first Ford Model C automobile was introduced. It boasted the first four-cylinder engine made by Ford with a counter-balanced crankshaft. The Model C was largely eclipsed, however, by Ford's other 1932 offering: the Ford V-8. The V-8 was the first eight-cylinder Ford automobile, and boasted the first V-8 engine block ever cast in a single piece. The V-8 sold well, but Ford's fortunes had fallen from their peak. The one-time industry giant was trailing General Motors and Chrysler in sales.

December 5, 1951
Parking Services Inc. opened the first push button-controlled Park-O-Mat garage opened in Washington, DC (open building with 16 floors and 2 basement levels); no ramps, no aisles and no lanes; used a "vehicle parking apparatus" such that single attendant, without entering a car, could automatically park or return an auto in less than a minute; two elevators parked 72 cars on a lot 25 by 40 feet.

December 5, 1977
The Plymouth Horizon was introduced. It was the first American-made small car with front-wheel drive. Technical advances in drive technology had reduced the size and cost of front-wheel drive systems.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on December 06, 2014, 10:42:48 pm
(http://i645.photobucket.com/albums/uu176/MustangMayhem/web/20131201_1224141_zps47a5300d.jpg) (http://s645.photobucket.com/user/MustangMayhem/media/web/20131201_1224141_zps47a5300d.jpg.html)

On this day, December 6, 1955
Volkswagenwerk G.M.B.H. Corporation, Wolfsburg, Germany, registered "Volkswagen" trademark.
PICTURED: Sheri sitting in a 1960 Ratrod VW in Daytona FL 2013

December 6, 1955
The US Federal government standardized the size of license plates throughout the U.S. Previously, individual states had designed their own license plates, resulting in wide variations.

December 6, 1976
The professional stunt woman Kitty O'Neil sets the land-speed record for female drivers at the Alvord Desert in southeastern Oregon. The record hovered around 400 mph; O'Neil's two-way average speed was 512.710 mph. The rules that govern land-speed records require that a driver make two passes across a measured course, one out and one back; officials then average the two speeds. Observers reported that O'Neil's car actually reached a top speed of more than 618 miles per hour on her first pass, but she ran out of fuel and had to coast to the end of the course.
O'Neil's bravery was wide-ranging: She was born deaf; became a champion three-meter and platform diver whose Olympic aspirations were dashed by a bout of spinal meningitis that doctors said would permanently paralyze her; and survived two grueling sets of cancer treatment, all before her 28th birthday. In 1976, she became a Hollywood stuntwoman and was featured in TV shows like "Quincy," "Baretta" and "The Bionic Woman" and movies like "Smokey and the Bandit," "The Blues Brothers" and "Airport '77." When she took her shot at the land-speed record, she already held the record for the highest stunt fall by a woman (105 feet).
Through her husband, a stunt performer himself, O'Neil met Bill Fredrick, a jet-car builder who had just put the finishing touches on a hydrogen-peroxide–fueled machine called the "Motivator" and was looking for a driver who could make it famous. So, in early December 1976, O'Neil found herself squeezed into the tiny three-wheeled rocket car on Oregon's alkali flats. (Alkali flats, or salt flats, are dry lakebeds whose smooth, hard surfaces are perfect for driving low-slung cars very, very fast. For this reason, people pursuing land-speed records often travel to places like Alvord, the Bonneville Salt Flats in Utah and Nevada's Black Rock Desert.) On each of her practice runs, O'Neil pushed the car up to speed with ease, and when she officially broke the record, she was still only using 60 percent of the Motivator's power. "There is no doubt," Sports Illustrated reported, "that by dialing in more power...Kitty would have gone still faster"--past the overall land-speed record (638.388 mph, set by Californian Gary Gabelich in 1970) and maybe even past the sonic barrier.
But dialing in more power was not an option for O'Neil: under her contract, she was only permitted to drive the "Motivator" to a new women's record. The movie director Hal Needham had paid $25,000 for the chance to steer the car to a new overall world record, and he was determined not to lose that chance to a woman. So, after O'Neil set her record, Needham rather unceremoniously demanded that she be pulled from the drivers' seat. (His spokesman even told reporters that it would be "degrading" for a woman to hold the "man's" record.) While the lawyers squabbled, it began to snow, and Alvord was closed for the season. Needham never even got behind the wheel.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on December 08, 2014, 09:46:06 pm
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On this day, December 7, 1965
Chevrolet produced its 3,000,000th car for the year. It was the first time Chevrolet had produced an annual total surpassing 3,000,000 vehicles.

December 7, 1931
The last Ford Model A was produced. The Ford motor works were then shut down for six months for retooling. On April 1, 1932, Ford introduced its new offering, the high-performance Ford V-8, the first Ford with an 8-cylinder engine

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On this day, December 8, 1945
After World War II ended with Japan's surrender on September 3, 1945, Japan remained under Allied occupation ruled by an occupation government. Its war industries were shut down completely. The Toyota Motor Company received permission from the occupation government to start production of buses and trucks--vehicles necessary to keep Japan running. It was the first rumble of the postwar auto industry in Japan.
PICTURED: Toyota's sporty modern day flag ship, the Twin turbo Supra

December 8, 1964
Great Britain's worst auto accident ever killed three people and injured 120 in a pileup of more than 100 vehicles near Wigan, England.

December 8, 1981
Mitsubishi Motors Corporation, the automotive division of the huge Mitsubishi conglomerate of Japan, began selling cars in the U.S. under its own name. Previously, Mitsubishi had done business in the States only in partnerships with American automakers.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on December 09, 2014, 10:49:11 pm
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On this day, December 9, 1921
A young engineer at General Motors named Thomas Midgeley Jr. discovers that when he adds a compound called tetraethyl lead (TEL) to gasoline, he eliminates the unpleasant noises known as "knock" or "pinging" that internal-combustion engines make when they run. Midgeley could scarcely have imagined the consequences of his discovery: For more than five decades, oil companies would saturate the gasoline they sold with lead--a deadly poison.
In 1911, a scientist named Charles Kettering, Midgeley's boss at GM, invented an electric ignition system for internal-combustion cars that made their old-fashioned hand-cranked starters obsolete. Now, driving a gas-fueled auto was no trouble at all. Unfortunately, as more and more people bought GM cars, more and more people noticed a problem: When they heated up, their engines made an alarming racket, banging and clattering as though their metal parts were loose under the hood.
The problem, Kettering and Midgeley eventually figured out, was that ordinary gasoline was much too explosive for spark-ignited car engines: that is, what we now call its octane, a measure of its resistance to detonation, was too low. To raise the fuel's octane level and make it less prone to detonation and knocking, Midgeley wrote later, he mixed it with almost anything he could think of, from "melted butter and camphor to ethyl acetate and aluminum chloride but most of these had no more effect
He found a couple of additives that did work, however, and lead was just one of them. Iodine worked, but producing it was much too complicated. Ethyl alcohol also worked, and it was cheap--however, anyone with an ordinary still could make it, which meant that GM could not patent it or profit from it. Thus, from a corporate point of view, lead was the best anti-knock additive there was.
In February 1923, a Dayton filling station sold the first tankful of leaded gasoline. A few GM engineers witnessed this big moment, but Midgeley did not, because he was in bed with severe lead poisoning. He recovered; however, in April 1924, lead poisoning killed two of his unluckier colleagues, and in October, five workers at a Standard Oil lead plant died too, after what one reporter called "wrenching fits of violent insanity." Almost 40 of the plant's workers suffered severe neurological symptoms like hallucinations and seizures.
Still, for decades auto and oil companies denied that lead posed any health risks. Finally, in the 1970s, the Environmental Protection Agency required that carmakers phase out lead-compatible engines in the cars they sold in the United States. Today, leaded gasoline is still in use in some parts of Eastern Europe, South America and the Middle East.
When the famous American mechanical engineer and chemist Thomas Midgley, Jr. contracted poliomyelitis at the age of 51, he became severely disabled. This situation led him to devise an elaborate system of strings and pulleys to help others lift him from bed.
On November 2, 1944, at the age of 55, Midgley died of strangulation due to the system He created when he was entangled in the ropes of his own device

December 9, 1941
The Automobile Racing Drivers Club of America (ARDCA) closed its doors due to World War II, which created shortages of fuel, tires, and other automotive necessities--including men to drive the cars. After the war, the ARDCA never got started again.

December 9, 1963
The Studebaker Brothers Manufacturing Company, started during the Civil War, was the world's largest manufacturer of horse-drawn carriages. When automobiles came along, Studebaker converted its business, becoming a well-known automaker. But the brand couldn't keep up with its competitors, despite a 1954 merger with the Packard Motor Car Company. On this day in 1963, the last American-made Studebaker was produced, and the factory in South Bend, Indiana, closed forever. Three years later Studebaker's Canadian factories shut down, and the Studebaker passed into history.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on December 10, 2014, 10:05:25 pm
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On this day, December 10, 1970
Lee Iacocca became president of Ford Motor Company. Iacocca joined Ford as an engineer in the 1940s, but quickly moved into marketing, where he gained influence quickly as a supporter of the Ford Mustang. Iacocca was eventually ousted from Ford on October 15, 1978. He went on to become president of the struggling Chrysler Corporation, which was saddled with an inventory of gas-guzzling road yachts, just as the fuel shortage began. Iacocca made history by talking the government into offering Chrysler $1.5 billion in loans. The bailout worked, with the help of Iacocca's streamlining measures. Chrysler recorded record profits in 1984.
PICTURED: Former Chrysler Chairman Lee Iacocca in one of the ads he made for Chrysler in the 1980s

December 10, 1845
English inventor R.W. Thompson received a British patent for his new carriage wheels, which had inflated tubes of heavy rubber stretched around their rims--the world's first pneumatic tires. They became popular on horse-drawn carriages, and later prevented the first motorcar passengers from being shaken to pieces.

December 10, 1868
First traffic control light in London used gas-lighted lantern.

December 10, 1915
The 1,000,000th Model T Ford was produced. It was a triumph of Henry Ford's assembly-line innovations, and the dawn of a new American era. The speed and efficiency of Ford's factories made automobiles cheaper than ever. Average families could afford their own cars. The modern motorized world was being born.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on December 11, 2014, 09:19:19 pm
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On this day, December 11,1844
was the 1st time nitrous oxide was to be used for dental purposes in Hartford, CT. How things have come along since then

December 11, 1894
The world's first auto show, the Exposition Internationale de Velocipidie et de Locomotion Automobile, opened in Paris, France. Four makes of automobiles were on display.

December 11,1901
Guglielmo Marconi, the Italian electrical inventor, sends the first transatlantic radio signal

December 11, 1941
Buick lowered its prices to reflect the absence of spare tires or inner tubes from its new cars. Widespread shortages caused by World War II had led to many quotas and laws designed to conserve America's resources. One of these laws prohibited spare tires on new cars. Rubber, produced overseas, had become almost impossible to get. People didn't mind the spare-tire law too much, though. They were too busy dealing with quotas for gasoline, meat, butter, shoes, and other essentials.

December 11, 1967
Supersonic airliner prototype "Concorde" 1st shown (France)
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on December 12, 2014, 07:55:49 pm
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On this day, December 12, 1916
The Studebaker Corporation, a leading automaker that began as the world's biggest manufacturer of horseless carriages, began construction of a new factory in South Bend, Indiana. Studebaker was a leading automaker throughout the first half of the twentieth century.

December 12, 1922
William L. Kissel and John F. Werner, of Hartford, WI, received a patent for a "Convertible Automobile Body", removable hard top that could turn a closed car into an open touring car (precursor to convertibles); assigned to Kissel Motor Car Company.

December 12, 1955
The Ford Foundation made the biggest donation to charity the world had yet seen: $500,000,000 to hospitals, medical schools, and colleges. The Ford Foundation supported many other charities, and is still active today.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on December 13, 2014, 09:44:03 pm
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On this day, December 13, 1939
The first production Lincoln Continental was finished on this day (prototypes of the touring car had already been driven). The Lincoln Continentals of the 1940s are commonly considered some of the most beautiful production cars ever made. Today, the Lincoln Continental remains one of the world's most popular luxury cars.
PICTURED: A custom Lincoln Convertible

December 13, 1957
The last two-seater T-bird was produced. Through 1957, Ford's Thunderbirds were jaunty, two-seater sports cars that boasted removable hard tops and powerful V-8 engines. The 1958 Thunderbird (nicknamed the "square bird") was a four-passenger car, 18 inches longer and half a ton heavier than the previous year's model. The new luxury Thunderbird packed a 300hp V-8, making it one of the most muscular cars on the road. And one of the most popular. It sold more cars in 1958 than 1957, despite a nationwide slump in auto sales. Ford discontinued the Thunderbird after the 1997 model year, by which time it bore little resemblance to the stylish early "Bird" versions. To the delight of Thunderbird aficionados, it was reintroduced in 2002, with a brand-new and noteworthy design that incorporated elements of 1955-57 and 1961-62 models, including "porthole" windows, rounded lights and a hood scoop.

December 13, 2003
Seattle preservationists load the city's iconic Hat 'n' Boots Tex Gas Station onto a tractor-trailer and drive it away from the spot where it had stood for almost 50 years. The hat, a 44-foot–wide Stetson, went first; the 22-foot–tall cowboy boots followed it one at a time. (The giant hat had always been mostly for show--it had perched atop the filling station's office, luring drivers off the highway. The boots, on the other hand, were eminently functional: The left one housed the men's restroom and the right one housed the women's.) The buildings were famous examples of mid-century roadside Pop Art--eagle-eyed viewers can even see them in the opening credits of the film "National Lampoon's Vacation"--and the move, to a nearby park, saved them from demolition.
Developer Buford Seals intended the Hat 'n' Boots (built in 1955) to be the centerpiece of a gigantic shopping center that he called the Frontier Village. It sat alongside Route 99, the Pacific Northwest's major north-south highway, and Seals was confident that people would flock to his mall if only he could find a way to attract their attention. So, he hired artist Lewis H. Nasmyth to design the enormous structure, and the two men built it themselves out of steel beams, plaster and chicken wire. It cost $150,000, almost all the money Seals had. After the filling station was finished, he managed to scrape together enough cash to build the (ordinary-looking) Frontier Village Supermarket, but the mall's remaining 184 stores never materialized.
For a while, the gas station had better luck than either the shopping center or the supermarket, which quickly went out of business. In fact, for the first five years it was open, the Hat 'n' Boots sold more gasoline than any other station in Washington. Rumor has it that Elvis even pumped gas there! But the completion of the bigger, more modern Interstate 5 just a few miles away drained most of Route 99's traffic, and the Hat 'n' Boots became more of a tourist curiosity than anything else. It closed in 1988.
When they reached their new home in Oxbow Park, the disintegrating boots were restored almost immediately. In 2007, Seattle city officials paid $150,000 to revitalize the hat as well.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on December 14, 2014, 09:55:01 pm
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On this day, December 14, 1909
The famous brick surface of the Indianapolis Motor Speedway (the "Brickyard") was finished on this day. The speedway had its grand opening three days later, when the brickwork was ceremoniously completed by Governor Thomas R. Marshall of Indiana, who cemented the last "golden" brick.

December 14, 1931
Bentley Motors was taken over by Rolls-Royce. Bentley Motors, a maker of luxury automobiles founded in 1920, was, like Rolls-Royce, one of the finest names in the business. As a Rolls-Royce subsidiary, Bentley was guided by the Rolls-Royce aesthetic. Gradually, Bentley automobiles acquired elements of classic Rolls-Royce design until automobiles of the two marques became virtually indistinguishable.

December 14, 1947
The National Association for Stock Car Auto Racing (NASCAR) was founded at the Streamline Hotel in Daytona Beach, Florida. It was the first formal organization for stock-car racing, a sport said to have begun with souped-up bootlegger hot rods during Prohibition. Starting in 1953, the major automakers invested heavily in racing teams, producing faster cars than ever before: good results on the stock-car circuit were believed to mean better sales on the showroom floor. In 1957, however, rising costs and tightened NASCAR rules forced the factories out of the sport, and the modern era of the NASCAR super speedway began.

December 14, 1983
Prime Minister Indira Gandhi handed over the keys of a white Maruti 800 to one Harpal Singh. Many especially political leaders and bureaucrats attended the launch ceremony of Maruti 800, but the person who dreamt of India's first people's car was missing, late Sanjay Gandhi. His smiling portrait lay hanged on the stage.

December 14, 1987
Chrysler pleads no contest to selling driven vehicles as new

December 14, 1793
1st state road authorized, Frankfort, Ky to Cincinnati

December 14, 1798
David Wilkinson of Rhode Island patents a nut & bolt machine
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on December 15, 2014, 09:23:06 pm
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On this day, December 15, 1967
The Silver Bridge across the Ohio River collapsed during rush hour. Dozens of cars fell into the icy water. Forty-six people lost their lives in the accident, and many others were injured. Today, better construction and safety rules make accidents like this one less common.

December 15, 1854
First practical street cleaning machine put into operation in Philadelphia; chain driven by turning of cart's wheels turned series of brooms attached to cylinder mounted on cart.

December 15, 1941
An AFL council adopted a no-strike policy in war industries, which included automotive plants being converted to military production (domestic automobile manufacturing stopped completely from 1941 to 1944). The U.S. was gearing up for the worst years of World War II.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on December 16, 2014, 09:14:27 pm
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On this day, December 16, 1949
A Swedish company by the name of Svenska Aeroplan Aktiebolaget produced its first motorcar. In 1965, the company changed its name to Saab Aktiebolag, and a few years later simply to Saab. The first Saab automobiles were engineered with the precision of fighter planes--the company's other main product. Today Saab is known for producing safe, reliable, high-performing vehicles. In 1990, General Motors bought Saab's car operations, excluding its bus, truck, and military jet businesses. Ten years later, GM acquired the rest of Saab's automotive operations.
PICTURED: SAAB 92001, The first SAAB

December 16, 1979
Libya joined four other OPEC nations in raising the price of crude oil. Since the U.S. bought much of its oil from Libya, the price hike had an almost immediate effect on American gas prices. Gas became costly, and the cost of motoring rose. Heating-oil prices also jumped--a tough blow at the beginning of winter.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on December 17, 2014, 08:17:24 pm
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On this day, December 17, 1979
Driver Stan Barrett became the first person in the world to travel faster than sound on land. He drove the Budweiser Rocket car at a top speed of 739.666 in a one-way run at Rogers Dry Lake, California. The ultrasonic speed set an unofficial record, but an official record requires trips in both directions, whose speeds are averaged.

December 17, 1963
The U.S. Congress passed the Clean Air Act, a sweeping set of laws designed to protect the environment from air pollution. It was the first legislation to place pollution controls on the automobile industry.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on December 18, 2014, 08:29:53 pm
(http://i645.photobucket.com/albums/uu176/MustangMayhem/web/LaubatsJeantaudautomobile_zpsfba66bb6.jpg) (http://s645.photobucket.com/user/MustangMayhem/media/web/LaubatsJeantaudautomobile_zpsfba66bb6.jpg.html)

On this day, December 18, 1898
Count Gaston de Chasseloup-Laubat set the world's first official land-speed record in Acheres Park near Paris: 39.245mph in his Jeantaud automobile, powered by an electric motor and alkaline batteries. The Jeantaud is widely believed to be the first automobile steered by a modern steering wheel rather than a tiller. The tiller was quickly replaced by the steering wheel in the early 1900s.
PICTURED: Laubat's Jeantaud automobile

December 18, 1984
The first Chevy Nova is introduced by New United Motor Manufacturing, Inc., a joint venture between Toyota and General Motors. This car later met with marketing trouble in South America, where its name read as "No Go" to Spanish speakers.

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Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on December 19, 2014, 08:45:04 pm
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On this day, December 19, 1924
The last Rolls-Royce Silver Ghost manufactured in England was sold in London. The Silver Ghost, a custom touring car, was introduced in 1906, and was called by some the "Best Car in the World." The Silver Ghost was followed by the Twenty, the Phantom, the Silver Cloud, the Silver Shadow, and the Silver Wraith.

December 19, 1979
Senate approved Chrysler Loan Guarantee Act of 1979, a $1.5 billion loan for Chrysler Corporation.

December 19, 1994
Great Britain's prestigious Rolls-Royce, a luxury automobile maker, announced that its future cars would feature 12-cylinder motors manufactured by Germany's BMW. It was an ironic change; in earlier years, Rolls-Royce made a name for itself in automobile and aircraft engines.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on December 20, 2014, 11:33:36 pm
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December 20, 1892
Alexander Brown and George Stillman of Syracuse, New York, patented an inflatable automobile tire. Before the pneumatic tire, wheels were often made of solid rubber. This made travel a bumpy experience. After all, the streets of 1892 were made of dirt or cobblestone. Some horse-drawn carriages had been made with inflatable tires, but Brown and Stillman got the first patent for pneumatic automobile tires.

December 20, 1945
Tire rationing in the U.S. ended on this day as World War II wound to a close, and widespread shortages in the States began to ease.

TODAYS TRIVIA:
...There are only 1,426 billionaires in the world....and Im not one of them
...American school buses are yellow because you see yellow faster than any other color, 1.24 times faster than red in fact.
...A man attempted to fly 300 miles into the Mojave desert by strapping a bunch of weather balloons to a lawn chair. At 16,000 feet, he was spotted by two pilots, who alerted air traffic controllers about "what appeared to be an unprotected man floating through the sky in a chair."
...Worlds smallest aquarium is only 3 x 2.4 x 1.4 cm large.
..."Schadenfreude" is a word for that feeling of joy and slight satisfaction you sometimes get from the misfortune of others
...Orcas can weigh 8 tons, and jump 15 feet out of the water
...The all time biggest winner in the history of Jeopardy is a college drop-out.
...People with blue eyes are better able to see in the dark.
...There is a 31 year old Chimpanzee named Kanzi that knows how to start fires and cook!
...Nearly 160 yrs ago, a Frenchman and a Russian fired at one another in the Crimean War and their bullets collided.
...A meth junkie crawled inside a 3,500 year old Florida tree, the fifth oldest tree, and burnt it down.
...People are 30 times more likely to laugh in social settings than when they are alone, according to a University of Maryland study. Laughter has also been shown in studies to reduce stress, improve the immune system, relieve pain, improve memory, and even burn calories.
...Christina Applegate attended the 1989 MTV Movies Awards with Brad Pitt, dumped him at the event and left with someone else.
...Horse-sized ducks (Dromornithidae) roamed Australia 50,000 years ago.
...In 2005, a Brazilian woman sued her partner for failing to give her orgasms!
...People with long legs are generally healthier than people with short legs.
...Luzon Island, Philippines: an island within a lake within an island within a lake within an island
...In 1140, when the Weibertreu Castle was defeated by King Konrad III, the women of the castle were granted free departure and allowed to take what they could carry. Thinking quickly, the women carried the men on their backs. The king kept his word and let the men live.
...Studies show Americans ages 18-29 are far more stressed out that anyone else in the country.
...When you tell someone a goal or a thing you're planning on doing, it chemically satisfies your brain in a manner that's similar to having actually completed the goal.
...Atelophobia is the fear of not being good enough or having imperfections.
...Farting can actually help reduce high blood pressure and is beneficial to your health.
...By balancing temperature, humidity and lighting, a Dutch artist created a cloud in the middle of a room
...Inhaling the air in Beijing is equal to smoking 21 cigarettes a day
...Joseph Stalin said at his first wife's funeral “This creature softened my heart of stone. With her, died my last warm feelings for humanity"
...In February 2006, Charles Tombe, a Sudanese man, was forced to take a goat as his "wife" and pay to the goat owner a dowry of 15,000 Sudanese dinars (US$75) after he was caught having sex with the animal.
...A 33 year old man has spent over $100,000 on plastic surgery to look like Justin Bieber
...A man in China pays part of his fine ($1600) in coins, 18 workers forced to spend all day counting the money.
...About 80% of all cats are infected with Toxoplasma gondii, a parasite that can cause depression, anxiety, and schizophrenia in humans.
...At the 2012 London Olympics, American athlete Manteo Mitchell broke his leg 200 meters into his 400 meter leg of the race. Despite this, he finished fast enough for his team to qualify for the finals.
...In France, by law a bakery has to make all the bread it sells from scratch in order to have the right to be called a bakery.
..."siri" spelled backwards is "iris" who was the messenger between the gods and humans in Greek mythology
...A blue Whale's heart is so big, a small child can swim through the veins.
...Jay-Z and Busta Rhymes went to the same high school and once had a rap battle in the cafeteria -- Jay-Z won.
...1 in 7 crimes committed in New York City now involves an Apple product being stolen.
...When Louis Rèard introduced the bikini in France in 1946, no models were willing to wear such revealing swimwear, so Rèard had to hire a stripper to model it.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on December 22, 2014, 12:24:53 am

(http://i1231.photobucket.com/albums/ee505/peddie19/4.jpg) (http://s1231.photobucket.com/user/peddie19/media/4.jpg.html)

On this day, December 21, 1926
General Motors Corporation registered the "Pontiac" trademark.

December 21, 1937
The Lincoln Tunnel was officially opened to traffic, allowing motorists to drive between New Jersey and Manhattan beneath the Hudson River.

December 21, 1979
The U.S. Congress approved $1.5 billion in loans to the financially threatened Chrysler Corporation in an effort to save the battered automotive giant. President Jimmy Carter signed the bill on January 7, 1980. Under the stewardship of Lee Iacocca, Chysler rebounded quickly. By the late 1980s, the automaker was posting record profits.
Ironically, due to recent crisis not only Chrysler, other two automaker, Ford and GM, most famously known as if Big Three are in a similar situation. On December 19, George W. Bush announced that he had approved the bailout plan, which would give loans of $17.4 billion to U.S. automakers.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on December 22, 2014, 07:24:43 pm

(http://i1228.photobucket.com/albums/ee453/ac427dc/Car%20Dump/53Corvette.jpg) (http://s1228.photobucket.com/user/ac427dc/media/Car%20Dump/53Corvette.jpg.html)

On this day, December 22, 1952
The first Corvette, a production-ready prototype, is completed. The design of the sports car, which has since become an American classic, is said to have cost between $50,000 and $60,000 to build.
General Motors chief William Durant decided to produce a small sports car after a visit to Europe in 1951 during which he saw his European counterparts doing the same. In fact, the first Corvette is believed to have been modeled after a Jaguar. Legendary automobile stylist Harley Earl was tasked with the design project, which was originally codenamed “Opel.” The eventual name “Corvette” came from a type of small, lightly armed warship used by most Allied navies during World War II.
After completing production on December 22, the first Corvette was shipped to New York City, where it made its public debut at the GM Motorama show at the Waldorf Astoria Hotel on January 17. The first regular-production model was rolled out on June 30, 1953. Just over 300 Corvettes were assembled—-by hand—-in Flint, Michigan, that first year. Only about half of them sold; the rest were given away to company executives and VIPs.

December 22, 1900
A new 35hp car built by Daimler from a design by Emil Jellinke was completed. The car was named for Jellinek's daugher, Mercedes. As such the Mercedes was born on this very day.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on December 23, 2014, 10:13:38 pm
(http://i1228.photobucket.com/albums/ee453/ac427dc/National%20Automobile%20Museum/1923Rolls-RoyceSilverGhostSpringfieldPallMallPhaeton.jpg) (http://s1228.photobucket.com/user/ac427dc/media/National%20Automobile%20Museum/1923Rolls-RoyceSilverGhostSpringfieldPallMallPhaeton.jpg.html)

On this day, December 23, 1923
Former President Woodrow Wilson receives a a Rolls-Royce Silver Ghost Pall Mall touring car for his birthday. It's a gift from friends.
PICTURED: A 1923 Rolls-Royce Silver Ghost Springfield Pall Mall Phaeton

December 23, 1969
Gregory Jack Biffle was born Vancouver, Washington. He is a very sucessfull NASCAR Sprint Cup Series driver who drives the #16 3M Ford Fusion for Roush Fenway Racing. He now lives in Mooresville, North Carolina. His 34 combined wins is various... Nextel/WInston/Busch series Cup under his belt
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on December 24, 2014, 10:01:05 pm
(http://i1000.photobucket.com/albums/af124/Schneider357/British%20Car%20show%20Safty%20Harbor/406cc54e.jpg~original) (http://s1000.photobucket.com/user/Schneider357/media/British%20Car%20show%20Safty%20Harbor/406cc54e.jpg.html)

December 24, 1903
England issued its first automobile license plate, number A1. The plate was issued to Earl Russel, the brother of the philosopher Bertrand Russell.
PICTURED: My friend, Lyle Trudell's British Triumph (couldn't find a a pic of the first license plate)

December 24, 1801
Richard Trevithick drove three-wheeled steam-powered vehicle carrying seven passengers up a hill in Camborne, Cornwall, England; one of the first automobiles in history; high-pressure steam engine was lighter, more powerful than low-pressure engine invented by James Watt; used to hoist loads in mines, drive locomotives and ships, run rolling mills. Trevithick sometimes called "Father of the Steam Locomotive."

December 24, 1893
Henry Ford completed his first useful gas motor; at the time Ford was chief steam engineer at the main Detroit Edison Company plant with responsibility for maintaining electric service in the city 24 hours a day.

December 24, 1898
Louis Renault, then just 21, drove his A-type Voiturette, with first direct-drive variable-ratio transmission (3-speed gearbox allowed more power in lower gears, more speed in higher gears vs. chain - drive system), up steep (13% slope) Rue Lepic in Montmartre, Paris. It resulted in its first 12 orders.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on December 25, 2014, 09:47:34 pm
(http://i875.photobucket.com/albums/ab317/jlgmx/LouisChevrolet.jpg) (http://s875.photobucket.com/user/jlgmx/media/LouisChevrolet.jpg.html)

On this day, December 25, 1878
Louis-Joseph Chevrolet was born in La Chaux-de-Fonds, Canton of Neuchâtel, Switzerland.
PICTURED: Louis Chevrolet

December 25, 1909
Zora Arkus-Duntov, a Belgian-born U.S. automotive engineer was born in Brussels. His work on the Chevrolet Corvette earned him the nickname "Father of the Corvette".

December 25, 1985
On Christmas Day, David Turner and Tim Pickhard arrived in John o' Groat's, Scotland, the northernmost point in Great Britain. They had set out four days earlier from Land's End, the southernmost point in Britain, in a battery-powered Freight Rover Leyland Sherpa driven by a Lucas electric motor. They traveled 875 miles on a single battery charge, completing the longest battery-powered drive in history.

Merry Christmas to everyone from Matt & Sheri @ Shermatt International

(http://i645.photobucket.com/albums/uu176/MustangMayhem/web/308781_4400568806887_1170717041_n_zps0db1ff93.jpg) (http://s645.photobucket.com/user/MustangMayhem/media/web/308781_4400568806887_1170717041_n_zps0db1ff93.jpg.html)
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on December 26, 2014, 11:42:20 pm
(http://i1119.photobucket.com/albums/k625/Weigert91/NissanGTR.jpg) (http://s1119.photobucket.com/user/Weigert91/media/NissanGTR.jpg.html)

On this day, December 26, 1933
The Nissan Motor Company was organized in Tokyo under the name Dat Jidosha Seizo Co. (It received its present name the next year). Nissan began manufacturing cars and trucks under the name Datsun. During World War II, Nissan was converted to military production, and after Japan's defeat operated in a limited capacity under the occupation government until 1955. Since then, Nissan has grown into one of the world's premier car companies.

December 26, 1985
The Ford Motor Company had trouble in the early 1980s. Its trucks were selling well, but its line of cars were unpopular and had terrible reputations. The company lost $3.3 billion from 1980 through 1982. As the losses piled up, Ford's engineers were working feverishly to redesign their line of mid-size cars. Ford turned out a redesigned Thunderbird and Tempo and managed a profitable year. And on this day in 1985, Ford introduced the Taurus, the product of years of engineering. The distinctively streamlined car became enormously popular, lifting Ford to record profits in the late 1980s. The rounded "jellybean" shape of the Taurus had a strong influence on the designs of other automakers in the next few years.

December 26, 1926
The first overland journey across Africa from south to north was completed when the expedition of Major C. Court Treatt arrived in Cairo, Egypt. Major Treatt had set out from Capetown, South Africa, some 27 months earlier in two military-style Crossley automobiles. After the difficult trek across unmapped regions, the hero's safe arrival in Cairo was a major treat for everyone.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on December 28, 2014, 11:41:25 pm
(http://i293.photobucket.com/albums/mm63/sadayo/Orphan%20and%20Discontinued%20Car%20Show%202011/1954HudsonHorneta.jpg) (http://s293.photobucket.com/user/sadayo/media/Orphan%20and%20Discontinued%20Car%20Show%202011/1954HudsonHorneta.jpg.html)

December 28, 1954
During the early 1950s, the fastest stock car in the U.S. was the Hudson Hornet, the pride of the Hudson Motor Car Company. Drivers in Hudson Hornets took virtually every major NASCAR event, and the wins paid off in sales. That got the attention of the Big Three: Ford, Chrysler, and General Motors. They began supporting stock-car racers the way Hudson did, and soon began to win. In an effort to stay ahead, Hudson merged with the Nash-Kelvinator Corporation, which let Hudson replace the Hornet's old flat-six engine with the big Nash V-8, providing more power. The first Hudson Hornet with a Nash engine was offered on this day in 1954. But the new Hornet didn't handle as well, and the Big Three kept improving. After 1954 the Hudson Hornet's fortunes declined quickly.
PICTURED: A 1954 Hudson Hornet Convertible

December 28, 1957
The 2,000,000th Volkswagen was finished. Begun 30 years earlier by the Nazi regime, the German automaker and its economical Beetle overcame their unpleasant pasts and began selling in the United States.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on December 29, 2014, 10:24:28 pm
(http://i1090.photobucket.com/albums/i373/lifePR/Pressemeldungen%20-%202011-10-13/Goodyear_Blimp_1.jpg) (http://s1090.photobucket.com/user/lifePR/media/Pressemeldungen%20-%202011-10-13/Goodyear_Blimp_1.jpg.html)

On this day, December 29, 1800
Charles Goodyear was born. Today he is famous for the invention of vulcanized rubber. In its natural form, rubber is sticky, and gets runny when hot, and stiff when cold. Goodyear discovered accidentally that when rubber is mixed with sulfur and heat-treated, it loses its adhesiveness but keeps its elasticity, even at extreme temperatures. He called the process "vulcanization." The industrial use of rubber is possible only because of vulcanization. Goodyear's process made millions of dollars, but not for him. Widespread infringements on his patents, together with poor luck in business, left him deep in debt at his death in 1860.

December 29, 1908
Otto Zachow and William Besserdich of Clintonville, Wisconsin, received a patent for their four-wheel braking system, the prototype of all modern braking systems. Zachow and Besserdich were also the inventor of the very first successful four-wheel drive (4x4) car, the "Battleship", in 1908. The following year they opened their auto company, Badger Four-Wheel Drive Auto Company.

December 29, 1983
Arnold Schwarzenegger was cited for driving without a license after he drove his Jeep into a ditch with Maria Shriver aboard. No one was hurt.

December 29, 1989
Actor Christian Slater, stopped a second time for drunk driving, wrecked his car, fled from the police on foot, and, when caught, kicked a police officer

December 29, 2005
General Motors's stock traded at 20-year low of $18.33.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on December 30, 2014, 11:08:27 pm
(http://i270.photobucket.com/albums/jj103/GreginSD/Real%20Estate/d17cce22.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/GreginSD/media/Real%20Estate/d17cce22.jpg.html)

On this day, December 30, 1905
French driver Victor Hemery, driving a gasoline-powered Darracq automobile, set a new land-speed record in Arles-Salon, France. He reached a speed of 109.589mph. Hemery's record stood until 1906, when American Fred Marriot set a record of 121.573 in a steam-powered Stanley.

December 30, 1936
Strikes closed seven General Motors factories in Flint, Michigan. The giant automaker employed upwards of 200,000 men, and more than one in six of them stopped working during the strike. The United Automobile Workers of America, a labor union, was quarrelling with GM over the right to bargain collectively with manufacturers. The work stoppage was so large that it threatened to force layoffs in the steel, glass, and battery-manufacturing industries, due to reduced demand.

December 30, 1940
California's first freeway, the Arroyo Seco Parkway connecting Los Angeles and Pasadena, was officially opened.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on December 31, 2014, 09:32:48 pm
(http://i967.photobucket.com/albums/ae154/deyeofbeautyl/Scenic/02manhattan.jpg) (http://s967.photobucket.com/user/deyeofbeautyl/media/Scenic/02manhattan.jpg.html)

On this day, December 31, 1909
A graceful 1,470-foot span across the East River opened to traffic on this day. The Manhattan Bridge was the fourth bridge between Manhattan and the boroughs across the river.
PICTURED: The Manhattan Bridge

December 31, 1936
Sit-down strike at GM's Fisher Body Plant became center stage for all unskilled labor struggles as GM moved to legally block strike, evict workers from its facilities; state government, under direction of Governor Frank Murphy, protected rights of workers to bargain collectively; workers invoked Wagner Act, GM forced to settle, recognized union, signed contract; first victory by unskilled laborers in America's largest industry.

December 31, 1941
America's last automobiles with chrome-plated trim were manufactured. Starting in 1942, chrome plating became illegal. It was part of an effort to conserve resources for the American war effort. The chrome wasn't missed too much. Virtually no automobiles were produced in the U.S. from 1942 through the end of World War II.

December 31, 1955
General Motors announced net income of $1,189,477,082 for the year; first Auto Corporation to earn more than a billion dollars in a fiscal year.

Happy new years everyone
From Matt & Sheri
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on January 02, 2015, 02:34:18 am
(http://i1110.photobucket.com/albums/h451/shymartinez1/HAPPY%20NEW%20YEAR/happy-new-year.gif) (http://s1110.photobucket.com/user/shymartinez1/media/HAPPY%20NEW%20YEAR/happy-new-year.gif.html)

On this day, January 1, 1853
The first successful U.S. steam fire engine, named Uncle Joe Ross after city councilman who championed it, began service in Cincinnati, OH; invented by Abel Shawk and Alexander Latta took nine months to build at a cost of $10,000.

January 1, 1919
Edsel Ford succeeded his father, Henry Ford, as president of the Ford Motor Company. That same day, the company announced that it would increase its minimum wage to $6.00 per day. Henry Ford made history in 1914 by increasing the minimum wage in his factories to $5.00 per day, far more than his competitors were paying.

January 1, 1937
Safety glass in windshields became mandatory in Great Britain. Unlike ordinary glass, safety glass shatters into thousands of tiny pieces when it breaks, instead of large jagged sheets. In early automobile accidents, ordinary glass windows often turned into large, deadly blades. Broken safety glass is relatively harmless. The most common type of safety glass is a sandwich in which a layer of clear, flexible plastic is bonded between two layers of glass. It was first produced in 1909 by French chemist Edouard Benedictus, who used a sheet of clear celluloid between glass layers. Various plastics were tried over the years. In 1936, a plastic called polyvinyl butyral (PVB) was introduced. It was so safe and effective that it soon became the only plastic used in safety windows. The British government was so impressed by the safety record of PVB windows that it required their use by law.

January 1, 1942
The U.S. Office of Production Management prohibited sales of new cars and trucks to civilians. All automakers dedicated their plants entirely to the war effort. By the end of the month, domestic car manufacture had stopped. Automobile plants were converted wholesale to the manufacture of bombers, jeeps, military trucks, and other gear.

January 1, 1952
Colin Chapman founded Lotus Engineering Company in Norfolk, England; first production car - Lotus, the Mark VI.

January 1, 1961
McNamara resigned from Ford to become secretary of defense for the new administration of President John F. Kennedy.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on January 02, 2015, 10:24:38 pm
(http://i818.photobucket.com/albums/zz108/Methos2b/Dakar%20Rally%20Cards/Hummer/CPHummerH3Gordon2013_zps7710ed89.jpg) (http://s818.photobucket.com/user/Methos2b/media/Dakar%20Rally%20Cards/Hummer/CPHummerH3Gordon2013_zps7710ed89.jpg.html)

On this day, January 2, 1969
Robert W. Gordon an American racing driver, was born in Bellflower, California. He competed in three Dakar rally, scoring over 8th in 2007 driving Hummer H3.

January 2, 1994
The Chrysler Corporation introduced the Neon compact car. The Neon, a sporty plastic-bodied economy car, quickly became a popular car, particularly among young drivers.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on January 03, 2015, 08:19:05 pm
(http://i72.photobucket.com/albums/i188/dburdyshaw/Vehicles/1981_Chicago_Auto_Show_Pontiac_11jpg.jpg) (http://media.photobucket.com/user/dburdyshaw/media/Vehicles/1981_Chicago_Auto_Show_Pontiac_11jpg.jpg.html)

On this day, January 3, 1926
General Motors introduced the Pontiac brand name. The new Pontiac line was the descendant of the Oakland Motor Car Company, acquired by General Motors in 1909.
PICTURED: The first GM-built Pontiac "Chief of Sixes"

January 3, 1899
An editorial in the The New York Times made a reference to an "automobile" on this day. It was the first known use of the word.

January 3, 1921
The Studebaker Corporation announced that it would no longer build farm wagons. Studebaker began in 1852 as a horse-drawn wagon shop. Over the following years, the company became the world's single biggest manufacturer of horse-drawn carriages and carts. In 1897, Studebaker began experimenting with the newfangled "horseless carriage." By 1902, the company had produced several electric automobiles; and by 1904, gasoline-powered motorcars were rolling out of Studebaker factories. Throughout the early twentieth century, Studebaker remained one of the biggest names in the automobile business. In 1954, Studebaker merged with the Packard Motor Car Company. Production of Studebaker automobiles ended in 1963 in the U.S., and in 1966 in Canada.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on January 05, 2015, 01:24:17 am
(http://i898.photobucket.com/albums/ac186/enigmatrc/Xavier/RE%20Olds%20Museum/100_0612.jpg) (http://s898.photobucket.com/user/enigmatrc/media/Xavier/RE%20Olds%20Museum/100_0612.jpg.html)

On this day, January 4, 1996
General Motors announced that it would release an electric car, the EV-1, in the fall. The EV-1 was sold through GM's Saturn dealerships, and met with modest success. While sales have been quite modest by the standards of internal-combustion cars, the EV-1 is the best-selling electric consumer car of its time.

January 4, 1921
International Motor Company registered MACK trademark first used October 13, 1911 for trucks.

January 4, 1937
Nash Motors merged with Kelvinator Corporation, manufacturer of high-end refrigerators and kitchen appliances. The new company was named Nash-Kelvinator Corporation with George W. Mason as President.

January 4, 1955
The 1955 Packards were introduced to the public on this day. Corvettes and Thunderbirds were upping the horsepower ante, and Packard struck back with the Packard Caribbean, the first V-8 Packard and the debut of highly stylized cathedral taillights. The era of the mighty tailfin was beginning.

January 4, 1990
The Lincoln Town Car was named Car of the Year by Motor Trend magazine. It was the first luxury sedan to win that title in 38 years.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on January 07, 2015, 06:28:22 am
(http://i875.photobucket.com/albums/ab317/jlgmx/Tecnorapia/WalterPercyChrysler.jpg) (http://s875.photobucket.com/user/jlgmx/media/Tecnorapia/WalterPercyChrysler.jpg.html)

On this day, January 5, 1924
Walter Chrylser, a General Motors executive who had pioneered the introduction of all-steel bodies in automobiles (instead of wood), introduced his first motorcar. After his departure from GM in 1920, Chrysler had breathed new life into the failing Maxwell Motor Company. The first Chrysler-built Maxwell was put on display in New York City's Commodore Hotel, where it drew admiring crowds. In 1925, the Maxwell Motor Company was renamed the Chrysler Corporation.

January 5, 1904
Ransom Eli Olds retired from Olds Motor Works. Olds had founded the company in 1899 with financial help from Samuel L. Smith, a lumber tycoon. Olds made the most profitable car in the early 1900s, the tiller-steered Oldsmobile Runabout. In 1904, Olds was approached by his head of engineering, Henry Leland, who had designed a lighter, more powerful engine that could improve the Runabout dramatically. Olds refused to use the new engine, to the dismay of his backer, Samuel Smith. Smith forced Ransom Olds out of the company. Olds went on to found the Reo Motor Car Company, and Oldsmobile went on without him. Henry Leland, the clever engineer, took his motor elsewhere: it powered the world's first Cadillac.

January 5, 1914
Henry Ford established a minimum wage of $5.00 per day in his automobile factories. These wages were twice what Ford had paid the year before, and much more than Ford's competitors were paying. The lofty minimum wage was made possible by Henry Ford's manufacturing breakthrough: the constant-motion assembly line, which carried moving cars past lines of workers. The first modern assembly line, Ford's process allowed him to build cars faster and cheaper than anyone else could. The profits rolled in, and Ford's workers shared in the wealth: an ironic beginning for an auto company that would go on to be a notorious enemy of labor in the 1930s and 1940s.

(http://i735.photobucket.com/albums/ww354/Jasethedick/std_1939_mercedes_benz_770k_cabriolet-hitler-_fvrtopmax.jpg) (http://s735.photobucket.com/user/Jasethedick/media/std_1939_mercedes_benz_770k_cabriolet-hitler-_fvrtopmax.jpg.html)

On this day, January 6, 1973
A Mercedes-Benz 770K sedan, supposedly Adolf Hitler's parade car, was sold at auction for $153,000.00, the most money ever paid for a car at auction at that time.

January 6, 1917
At the New York Automobile Show, Studebaker unveiled a Studebaker touring sedan that had been almost entirely gold-plated. The gold car became legendary.

January 6, 1980
Jimmy Carter signed a bill authorizing $1.2 billion in federal loans to save the failing Chrysler Corporation. It was the largest federal bailout in history until recently. The "Big Three" American car makers (Ford, GM, and Chrysler) had suffered through the 1970s, as Japanese competitors led by Honda and Toyota outperformed them in quality and price. Chrysler, which lacked the vast cash reserves of GM and Ford, was brought to the brink of bankruptcy by 1980. The federal bailout, which required Chrysler to find billions in private financing in order to receive the federal money, brought Chrysler back from the brink. Lee Iacocca, the charismatic executive largely responsible for Ford's successful Mustang, joined Chrysler in late 1979, and engineered the company's return to profitability during the 1980s. A similar scenario occured recently due to recent economic crisis.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on January 08, 2015, 05:33:25 am

(http://i1142.photobucket.com/albums/n613/slimshady_93/Cars/dodge_viper.jpg) (http://s1142.photobucket.com/user/slimshady_93/media/Cars/dodge_viper.jpg.html)

On this day, January 7, 1989
The Dodge Viper was introduced at the North American International Automobile Show. The Viper, a modernized tribute to the classic Shelby Cobra, won such rave reviews that the company delivered a production version in 1992, just three years later.

January 7, 1985
GM launched the Saturn Corporation as a wholly owned but independent subsidiary. The Saturn, a sporty and affordable plastic-bodied two-door, has since met with considerable success. A new mid-sized Saturn sedan and a station wagon was released in 1999.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on January 09, 2015, 06:30:13 am
(http://i740.photobucket.com/albums/xx47/spherebleue/photos-du-jour/Bugatti-royale.jpg) (http://s740.photobucket.com/user/spherebleue/media/photos-du-jour/Bugatti-royale.jpg.html)

On this day, January 8, 1916
Rembrandt Bugatti, brother of race-car maker Ettore Bugatti, committed suicide. The Bugatti brothers were a talented crew: Carlo Bugatti was a noted furniture designer. Ettore, a self-taught engineer, produced some of the world's most striking early race cars. Rembrandt Bugatti was a sculptor noted for his depictions of wild animals.
PICTURED: The grill of the Bugatti Royale boasted a bronze sculpture designed by Rembrandt

January 8, 1927
The Little Marmon, later known as the Marmon Eight, was introduced in New York City.

January 8, 1942
The architect and engineer Albert Kahn--known as "the man who built Detroit"--dies at his home there. He was 73 years old. Kahn and his assistants built more than 2,000 buildings in all, mostly for Ford and General Motors. According to his obituary in The New York Times, Kahn "revolutionized the concept of what a great factory should be: his designs made possible the marvels of modern mass production, and his buildings changed the faces of a thousand cities and towns from Detroit to Novosibirsk."
Albert Kahn was born in Germany in 1869. When he was 11, his family moved to the United States and settled in Detroit, where the teenager took a job as an architect's apprentice. In 1902, after working at a number of well-known architectural firms in Detroit, Kahn started his own practice.
While building factories for Packard, the young architect found that swapping reinforced concrete for wood or masonry sped up the construction of manufacturing plants considerably. It also made them sturdier and less combustible. Moreover, reinforced-concrete buildings needed fewer load-bearing walls; this, in turn, freed up floor space for massive industrial equipment. Kahn's first concrete factory, Packard Shop No. 10, still stands today on East Grand Boulevard in Detroit.
"Architecture," Kahn liked to say, "is 90 percent business and 10 percent art." His buildings reflected this philosophy: they were sleek, flexible, and above all functional. Besides all that utilitarian concrete, they incorporated huge metal-framed windows and garage doors and acres of uninterrupted floor space for conveyor belts and other machines. Kahn's first Ford factory, the 1909 Highland Park plant, used elevators and dumbwaiters to spread the Model T assembly line over several floors, but most of his subsequent factories were huge single-story spaces: Ford's River Rouge plant (1916), the massive Goodyear Airdock in Akron (1929), the Glenn Martin aeronautics factory in Maryland (built in 1937 around an assembly floor the size of a football field) and, perhaps most famous of all, the half-mile–long Willow Run "Arsenal of Democracy," the home of Ford's B-29 bomber in Ypsilanti.
Though Kahn designed a number of non-factory buildings, including the Ford and GM office towers in downtown Detroit, he is best known for building factories that reflected the needs of the industrial age. We still celebrate his innovations today.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on January 10, 2015, 04:11:48 am
(http://i613.photobucket.com/albums/tt211/iscanderro/volga_gaz_21.jpg) (http://s613.photobucket.com/user/iscanderro/media/volga_gaz_21.jpg.html)

On this day, January 9, 1967
Construction of the Volga Automobile Works began in Togliatti in the Soviet Union. By April of 1970, Zhiguli automobiles (later known as "Lada" autos) were rolling off the assembly lines. In association with Fiat, the Volga works became (and remains) the largest producer of small European automobiles.

January 9, 1911
In 1895, George Selden was awarded the first American patent for an internal-combustion automobile, although Selden hadn't yet produced a working model. Other inventors, such as Ransom Olds and the Duryea brothers, were already driving their home-built automobiles through the streets. Beginning in 1903, however, the Selden patent began to make itself felt. The Association of Licensed Automobile Manufacturers (A.L.A.M.) was organized to gather royalties on the Selden patent from all auto makers. Soon, every major automobile manufacturer was paying royalties to the A.L.A.M. and George Selden, except for one major standout, a young inventor named Henry Ford. Ford refused to pay royalties. The A.L.A.M launched a series of lawsuits against Ford. The United States Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that the Ford Motor Company was not infringing on the Selden patent. It was the beginning of the end for the A.L.A.M. and Selden's royalties.

January 9, 1958
The Toyota and Datsun (later Nissan) brand names made their first appearances in the United States at the Imported Motor Car Show in Los Angeles, California. Previously, these auto makers had sold in the U.S. only under American-brand names, as part of joint ventures with Ford and GM.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on January 11, 2015, 06:07:35 am

(http://i339.photobucket.com/albums/n441/smhodgens/oilpumps2.jpg) (http://s339.photobucket.com/user/smhodgens/media/oilpumps2.jpg.html)

On this day, January 10, 1901
In the town of Beaumont, Texas, a 100-foot drilling derrick named Spindletop produced a roaring gusher of black crude oil. The oil strike took place at 10:30 a.m, coating the landscape for hundreds of feet around in sticky oil. The first major oil discovery in the United States, the Spindletop gusher marked the beginning of the American oil industry. Soon the prices of petroleum-based fuels fell, and gasoline became an increasingly practical power source. Without Spindletop, internal combustion might never have replaced steam and battery power as the automobile power plant of choice, and the American automobile industry might not have changed the face of America with such staggering speed.

January 10, 1942
The Ford Motor Company signed on to make Jeeps, the new general-purpose military vehicles desperately needed by American forces in World War II. The original Jeep design was submitted by the American Bantam Car Company. The Willys-Overland company won the Jeep contract, however, using a design similar to Bantam's, but with certain improvements. The Jeep was in high demand during wartime, and Ford soon stepped in to lend its huge production capacity to the effort. By the end of the war, the Jeep had won a place in the hearts of Americans, and soon became a popular civilian vehicle. And that catchy name? Some say it comes from the initials G.P., for "General Purpose." Others say it was named for Jeep the moondog, the spunky and durable creature who accompanied Popeye through the comics pages.

January 10, 1979
The last convertible Volkswagen Beetle was produced. The VW "Bug" was a popular car throughout the 1970s, leading to innovations such as sun roofs and convertible tops, in an otherwise unchanging design.

January 10, 1996
As of this date, Albert Klein of Pasadena, California, held the world's record for automobile mileage: his 1963 VW Beetle had accumulated 1,592,503 miles, and was still running.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on January 12, 2015, 08:02:49 am
(http://i762.photobucket.com/albums/xx268/rodsratrods/54hudsonhornet002.jpg) (http://s762.photobucket.com/user/rodsratrods/media/54hudsonhornet002.jpg.html)

On this day, January 11, 1913
The world's first closed production car was introduced: Hudson Motor Car Company's Model 54 sedan. Earlier automobiles had open cabs, or at most convertible roofs.
PICTURED: The Hudson Hornet

January 11, 1937
Twelve days into a general sit-down strike at the General Motors (GM) factory in Flint, Michigan, General Motors security forces and the Flint Police Department moved in to evict the strikers. A pitched battle broke out at Fisher body plant #2, as strikers held off police and GM security with fire hoses and jury-rigged slingshots, and the police responded with bullets and tear gas. The many picketers outside the plant assisted the strikers however they could, breaking windows to ventilate the factory when police filled it with tear gas, and creating barricades with their own vehicles to prevent police from driving past the plant's open doors. Finally, Governor Frank Murphy ordered the National Guard in to stem the violence. The sit-down strike lasted 44 days, and ended in GM's surrender to the demands of the United Auto Workers Union (UAW). GM was the first of the "Big Three" auto makers to make a deal with the UAW. The era of repressive labor practices in the auto industry was ending.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on January 13, 2015, 06:44:47 am

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On this day, January 12, 1904
Racing driver Barney Oldfield set a new speed record in a stripped-down Ford automobile. Driving across the frozen surface of Lake St. Clair, he reached a top speed of 91.37mph. Not bad, considering that the automobile was only invented a few years earlier. Oldenfield chose the frozen lake because it was wide and flat, and there was nothing to crash into. Luckily, the ice didn't break.
PICTURED: Barney Oldfield & Louis Mooers @ Cleveland.

January 12, 1900
The Detroit Automobile Company finished its first commercial vehicle, a delivery wagon. The wagon was designed by a young engineer named Henry Ford, who had produced his own first motorcar, the quadricycle, before joining the company. Ford soon quit the Detroit Automobile Company, frustrated with his employers, to start his own company.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on January 14, 2015, 08:47:59 am
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On this day, January 13, 1906
The first automobile show of the American Motor Car Manufacturers Association (AMCMA) opened in New York City at the 69th Regiment Armory.

January 13, 1942
Henry Ford patented a plastic-bodied automobile. The car was 30 percent lighter than ordinary cars. Plastic, a relatively new material in 1942, was revolutionizing industry after industry in the United States. Today most car bodies are still made of metal, but plastic parts are becoming more and more common.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on January 15, 2015, 06:36:22 am
(http://i645.photobucket.com/albums/uu178/Rich-photo/Dodge-Viper_SRT8psd.jpg) (http://s645.photobucket.com/user/Rich-photo/media/Dodge-Viper_SRT8psd.jpg.html)

On this day, January 14, 1920
John Dodge, who with his brother Horace co-founded the Dodge Brothers Company, which was once America's third-largest automaker and later became part of Chrysler, dies at the age of 55.
John Francis Dodge was born on October 25, 1864, while his brother Horace Elgin Dodge arrived four years later, on May 17, 1868. The brothers grew up in Michigan and began their careers as machinists. In 1897, they co-founded a bicycle company; however, by 1900, they had sold the business and opened a machine shop in Detroit to make parts for the fledgling auto industry. In 1901, Ransom Olds hired the Dodges to produce engines for his new curved-dash Oldsmobile vehicles. Next, Henry Ford contracted with the brothers to build engines, transmissions and axles. Ford was unable to pay the Dodges fully in cash, so he gave them stock in his company. (In 1919, the brothers sold their Ford Motor Company stock back to Henry Ford for $25 million.)
After supplying parts to Ford for a decade, the Dodge brothers decided to start their own company. Dodge Brothers Motor Company was founded in 1913 and debuted its first automobile, a four-cylinder touring car, in 1914. The company sold almost 250 of these vehicles during its first year and 45,000 the next year, according to Chrysler.com. Three years later, Dodge added trucks to its repertoire. During World War I, the company supplied vehicles and parts to the U.S. military.
In January 1920, while in New York City to attend an auto expo, the brothers both became sick with the flu and pneumonia. John Dodge died that month, while Horace passed away later that same year, on December 10. In 1925, the brothers' widows sold the Dodge Brothers Company to an investment bank for $146 million. In 1928, Walter Chrysler, founder of the Chrysler Corporation, purchased the Dodge company for $170 million. The purchase made Chrysler the world's third-largest automaker overnight.
PICTURED: The SRT Dodge Viper

January 14, 1954
The Hudson Motor Car Company merged with Nash-Kelvinator, an automaker formed in turn by the merger of the Nash automobile firm and the Kelvinator kitchen-appliance company. The new concern was called the American Motors Corporation
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on January 16, 2015, 06:40:25 am
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On this day, January 15, 1927
The Dumbarton Bridge opened carrying the first automotive traffic across the San Francisco Bay.

January 15, 1909
A motorized hearse was used for the first time in a Chicago funeral procession by funeral director H.D. Ludlow. It was a sharp break with tradition: stately horse-drawn hearses had been in use for centuries.

January 15, 1936
Edsel Ford established the Ford Foundation, a philanthropic organization. The foundation was set up partly to allow the Ford family to retain control of the Ford Motor Company after Henry Ford's death, avoiding new inheritance laws. But its charitable works were very real. At its height, the Ford Foundation had assets of $4 billion. The foundation works to promote population control and to prevent famine; to promote the arts and educational media; and to work for peace and the protection of the environment.

January 15, 1942
The first "blackout" Cadillacs were completed. Due to restrictions on materials necessary to the war effort, these cars had painted trim rather than chrome. They also lacked spare tires and other luxuries.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on January 17, 2015, 12:56:37 pm
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On this day, January 16, 1953
The Chevrolet Corvette was introduced as a show car at New York's Waldorf-Astoria Hotel. The car became an American classic almost instantly. Its sporty fiberglass body didn't look like anything else on the road. Although some car buffs criticized the sportscar for being underpowered, that didn't stop Corvettes from speeding off the showroom floors.

January 16, 1913
The first closed car for four passengers was introduced by Frank Duryea at the Stanley Motor Show. All earlier cars had open cabs, or convertible tops. Frank Duryea and his brother, Charles, built the first American-made automobile in 1893. Duryea was one of the best-known names in automobile manufacturing into the early 1900s.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on January 18, 2015, 08:37:44 pm
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On this day, January 17, 1949
The first Volkswagen Beetle in the U.S. arrived from Germany. The little Volkswagen was a sturdy vehicle designed by Ferdinand Porsche at the request of Adolf Hitler. The car was meant to be a durable workhorse car for the common German man. After the defeat of the Nazi government in Germany, the VW Beetle remained a popular car, and its reputation for affordable reliability made it a profitable export.

January 17, 1899
Camille Jenatzy captured the land speed record in an electric car of his own design: 41.425mph at Acheres Park, France. On the same day, however, previous record holder Gaston Chasseloup-Laubat raised the record again, posting a speed of 43.690mph in an electric Jeantaud automobile. The feud wasn't over yet. Jenatzy took the record again 10 days later, on January 27. Chasseloup-Laubat took it back on March 4, and Jenatzy reclaimed the record on April 29, the last time an electric car held the speed record. Until 1963, all other land-speed records were set by steam or internal-combustion power. In 1963, Craig Breedlove took the land-speed record in a jet-powered car, and all record-holding cars since then have been propelled by jet or rocket engines.

January 17, 1964
The first Porsche Carrera GTS, a lasting favorite in the world of luxury sports cars, was delivered to a Los Angeles customer.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on January 19, 2015, 10:04:57 am
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On this day, January 18, 1919
Bentley Motors was established in London, England. A manufacturer of sports cars and luxury automobiles, Bentley was acquired by Rolls-Royce in November, 1931. From that point forward, the Bentley line acquired more and more features of the Rolls-Royce, until the two makes became nearly indistinguishable.

(http://i1012.photobucket.com/albums/af246/B-Rod223/Bentley-Mulsanne_2011_800x600_wallpaper_3d.jpg) (http://s1012.photobucket.com/user/B-Rod223/media/Bentley-Mulsanne_2011_800x600_wallpaper_3d.jpg.html)

January 18, 1952
The Willys-Overland Company, the primary contractor that built the Jeep for the U.S. military during World War II, reentered the commercial automobile market. It offered the Willys Aero, a sporty two-seater.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on January 19, 2015, 10:07:49 am
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On this day, January 19, 1955
The Cadillac Park Avenue show car was displayed at the New York Motorama in Manhattan's Waldorf-Astoria Hotel. The Park Avenue served as the prototype for the lavish Eldorado Brougham, a costly car boasting every conceivable extra.
PICTURED: The Cadillac factory back in 1908

January 19, 1954
General Motors announced a $1 billion plan to expand its automobile operation. GM, like other major auto makers, had deep pockets due to the postwar boom in car sales, though sales were slackening in 1953.

January 19, 2007
Beijing, China, the capital city of the planet's most populous nation, gets its first drive-through McDonald's restaurant. The opening ceremony for the new two-story fast-food eatery, located next to a gas station, included traditional Chinese lion dancers and a Chinese Ronald McDonald. According to a report from The Associated Press at the time of the Beijing drive-through's debut: "China's double-digit economic growth has created a burgeoning market for cars, fast food and other consumer goods. The country overtook Japan last year to become the world's second-biggest vehicle market after the U.S., with 7.2 million cars sold, a 37 percent growth."
Fast-food chains from foreign countries first came to China in 1987, with the opening of a Kentucky Fried Chicken restaurant. The home of the Big Mac and Happy Meal arrived in China three years later. In 2005, McDonald's, the world's largest fast-food chain, launched its first drive-through restaurant in China, in the city of Shenzhen in Guangdong province, near Hong Kong. The Beijing drive-through was McDonald's 16th Chinese drive-through. In September 2008, Chinadaily.com reported that other than America, "China is the No. 1 growth market for McDonald's, with 960 restaurants and over 60,000 employees."
McDonald's opened its first drive-through in the U.S. in 1975. Before there were drive-throughs there were drive-in restaurants, where customers would place their orders at curbside speakers. Servers known as carhops, who often wore rollerskates, then would bring food orders directly to customers' cars. Standard drive-in fare included hamburgers, hotdogs, root beer and milkshakes. Drive-ins reached the height of their popularity in the 1950s. Today, America's largest chain of drive-in restaurants is Sonic, which started as a hamburger and root beer stand known as Top Hat Drive-In in 1953 in Shawnee, Oklahoma. It changed its named to Sonic in 1959 and today has more than 3,500 drive-ins.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on January 20, 2015, 09:20:10 am
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On this day, January 20, 1971
The Jaguar XJ13 prototype was displayed in Lindley, England, by British Leyland, the automotive conglomerate that included Jaguar at that time. The XJ13 was destined to become the next luxury Jaguar, but bad luck changed its destiny: the prototype car was wrecked on its first test run by test-driver Norman Dewis, ending the XJ13 development program. The ruined car was kept and later restored by the company.

January 20, 1946
The first Kaiser-Frazer automobiles were introduced at New York's Waldorf-Astoria Hotel. The Kaiser-Frazer Corporation was formed after World War II by industrialist Henry J. Kaiser and Joseph W. Frazer, president of the Graham-Paige Motor Company. They produced several successful cars, most notably the 1951 Kaiser two-door. In 1953, however, the company was renamed the Kaiser Motors Corporation, and soon abandoned the passenger car business in favor of manufacturing commercial and military vehicles.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on January 21, 2015, 10:21:10 am
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On this day, January 21, 1954
General Motors introduced the Firebird XP-21 show car, the world's first gas-turbine powered car. It was named in imitation of the U.S. military's experimental jet-powered aircraft, which had code numbers like the XP-59A. (PICTURED)

January 21, 1899
In 1898, the five Opel brothers began converting the sewing machine and appliance factory of Adam Opel into an automobile works in Russelheim, Germany. They acquired the rights to the Lutzmann automobile, and began production. The Opel-Lutzmann was soon abandoned, and in 1902, Opel introduced its first original car, a 2-cylinder runabout. In the decades that followed, Opel became one of the premier forces in the European automobile industry, modernizing its factories relentlessly and adopting the continuous-motion assembly line before its European competitors. Today, Opel is a wholly owned subsidiary of General Motors. It produces about a quarter of all German cars, and exports heavily to South America and Africa.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on January 22, 2015, 08:35:21 am
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On this day, January 22, 2009
"Gran Torino," a movie named after the 1972 Ford muscle car, opens in Australia and New Zealand. The critically acclaimed film, which starred Clint Eastwood as a retired Detroit autoworker, had opened across the U.S. earlier that month and later premiered around the rest of the world, eventually grossing more than $263 million, making it among Eastwood's most commercially successful movies.

January 22, 1950
Throughout the twentieth century, independent automobile manufacturers have fallen again and again before the industrial power of the "Big Three"--Ford, General Motors, and Chrysler. Most often, these independent firms are swallowed, bought up, like Nash, Austin, Studebaker, Hudson, Packard, and many others. The story of Preston Tucker is a little darker. Tucker was a Chicago businessman who built 50 extraordinary automobiles in 1947 and 1948. His cars had many modern amenities and remarkable horsepower. But he was indicted on 31 counts of fraud; and as he fought for his freedom in court, his company failed. On this day in 1950, Preston Tucker was cleared of all fraud charges against him. But it was too little, too late. The Tucker automobile was history. Many believe that the legal actions against Tucker were sponsored by the Big Three auto makers, who feared his competition.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on January 23, 2015, 06:16:00 am
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On this day, January 23, 1912
William E. Stephens, of Chicago. IL, received a patent for an "Automobile Horn"; multiple-pipe horn powered by engine exhaust that played chord like a church organ, assigned to Aeromore Manufacturing Company.

January 23, 2006
William Clay Ford, CEO of Ford Motor Company, announced company's turnaround plan, called "Way Forward" (second time in four years Ford has restructured its North American auto division): 1) closing 14 plants (reduces North American production capacity by 1.2 million, or 26 percent, by 2008), 2) eliminating 30,000 jobs in the next six years, a quarter of Ford's North American workforce, 3) cutting at least $6 billion in annual costs by 2010 (Ford reported losses in North America for five of the past six quarters; hurt by: decreased sales of sport utility vehicles, increased health care and materials costs, increased competition and labor contracts that limit plant closures and job cuts, 10 straight years of U.S. market-share losses - 18.6% of the U.S. market in 2005, down from 25.7% a decade earlier, U.S. sales have dropped by more than 1 million units annually since 1999), 2003 - Toyota passed Ford as the world's No. 2 automaker.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on January 24, 2015, 11:10:20 pm
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On this day, January 24, 1907
In Ormond Beach, Florida, Glenn Curtiss, an engineer who got his start building motors for bicycles, set an unofficial land-speed record on a self-built V-8 motorcycle: 136.29mph. No automobile surpassed that speed until 1911. In 1907, four years after the Wilbur and Orville Wright accomplished the first successful airplane at Kitty Hawk, Curtiss established the Curtiss Aeroplane Company, the first airplane manufacturing company in the United States. In the next year, the "June Bug," an aircraft powered by a Curtiss engine, won the Scientific American Trophy for the first flight in the U.S. covering one kilometer. In 1909, Curtiss, piloting his own planes, won major flying events in Europe and America. Over the next five years, Curtiss continued to be an innovator in airplane design, and in January of 1911, built and demonstrated the world's first seaplane for the U.S. Navy.
PICTURED: Glenn Curtiss on his V8 motorcycle

January 24, 1860
French inventor Etienne Lenoir was issued a patent for the first successful internal-combustion engine. Lenoir's engine was a converted steam engine that burned a mixture of coal gas and air. Its two-stroke action was simple but reliable--many of Lenoir's engines were still working after 20 years of use. His first engines powered simple machines like pumps and bellows. However, in 1862, Lenoir built his first automobile powered by an internal-combustion engine--a vehicle capable of making a six-mile trip in two to three hours. It wasn't a practical vehicle, but it was the beginning of the automobile industry.

January 24, 1924
Kingsford, Michigan, the Ford Motor Company's planned community, was incorporated as a village. The company owned large tracts of timber in the area, which were used to produce wooden auto-body panels like those commonly seen on its station wagons in later decades.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on January 25, 2015, 08:04:28 pm
(http://i1011.photobucket.com/albums/af233/carl44s/motorsports%201920-1942/Ralph_DePalma_in_his_Packard_905.jpg) (http://s1011.photobucket.com/user/carl44s/media/motorsports%201920-1942/Ralph_DePalma_in_his_Packard_905.jpg.html)

On this day, January 25, 1905
Arthur MacDonald of Great Britain set a new land speed record of 149.875mph at Daytona Beach, Florida.

January 25, 1991
The United States Postal Service issued a four-cent stamp commemorating the Dudgeon Steam Wagon, a steam-powered vehicle built in 1866 by steam pioneer Richard Dudgeon. Scottish-born Dudgeon completed his first steam wagon in 1857, and with the exception of its steering mechanism, the vehicle was essentially a steam locomotive, complete with a smokestack and exposed cylinders at the forward end of its boiler. The vehicle, capable of holding 10 passengers, was exhibited in New York City's Crystal Palace, where it was destroyed in October of 1857 when the Palace was leveled by fire. In 1866, Dudgeon built a second steam-powered vehicle similar to his 1857 prototype. However, unlike the first, this vehicle survived and is currently on display at the Smithsonian Institute's National Museum of American History in Washington, D.C. Artist Richard Schlecht commemorated Dudgeon's creation in a 1991 U.S. stamp.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on January 27, 2015, 01:34:29 am
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On this day, January 26, 1979
"The Dukes of Hazzard," a television comedy about two good-old-boy cousins in the rural South and their souped-up 1969 Dodge Charger known as the General Lee, debuts on CBS. The show, which originally aired for seven seasons, centered around cousins Bo Duke (John Schneider) and Luke Duke (Tom Wopat) and their ongoing efforts to elude their nemeses, the crooked county commissioner "Boss" Jefferson Davis Hogg (Sorrell Booke) and the bumbling Sheriff Rosco P. Coltrane (James Best).
"The Dukes of Hazzard" was known for its car chases and stunts and the General Lee, which had an orange paint job, a Confederate flag across its roof and the numbers "01" on its welded-shut doors, became a star of the show. The General Lee also had a horn that played the first 12 notes of the song "Dixie." Due to all the fast driving, jumps and crashes, it was common for several different General Lees to be used during the filming of each episode.
The General Lee also had a CB (Citizens Band) radio and Luke and Bo Duke's CB nicknames or "handles" were Lost Sheep #1 and Lost Sheep #2, respectively. "The Dukes of Hazzard" (along with the 1977 trucking movie "Smokey and the Bandit") helped promote the CB craze that swept America from the mid 1970s to the early 1980s.
Among the other cars featured on the show were Boss Hogg's white Cadillac Deville convertible, Uncle Jesse Duke's (Denver Pyle) Ford pickup truck and various tow trucks and vehicles belonging to Cooter Davenport (Ben Jones), the local mechanic. Bo and Luke's short-shorts wearing cousin Daisy Duke (Catherine Bach) drove a yellow Plymouth Roadrunner with black stripes and later a Jeep with a golden eagle emblem on the hood and the word "Dixie" on the doors.
The final episode of "The Dukes of Hazzard" originally aired on August 16, 1985. The show spawned several TV specials and a 2005 movie starring Johnny Knoxville, Seann William Scott and Jessica Simpson.
PICTURED: Cooter’s Place, Nashville, TN

January 26, 1906
American driver Fred Marriott set a new land speed record of 127.659mph in his steam-powered "Wogglebug" at Ormond Beach, Florida. It was the last time that a steam-powered vehicle would claim a new land speed record.

January 26, 1920
The Lincoln Motor Car Company was founded. It was acquired by the Ford Motor Company just two years later. Under Ford's protective wing, the Lincoln brand name flourished, and the Lincoln Continental would become one of the world's most famous luxury cars.

Happy Australia people

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Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on January 28, 2015, 02:21:34 am
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On this day, January 27, 1965
The Shelby GT 350, a version of a Ford Mustang sports car developed by the American auto racer and car designer Carroll Shelby, is launched. The Shelby GT 350, which featured a 306 horsepower V-8 engine, remained in production through the end of the 1960s and today is a valuable collector's item.
Carroll Shelby was born in Texas in 1923 and gained fame in the racing world in the 1950s. Among his accomplishments was a victory at the 24 Hours of Le Mans in 1959, making him just the second American ever to win the iconic endurance race. By the early 1960s, Shelby had retired from racing for health reasons and was designing high-performance cars. He became known for his race cars, including the Cobra and the Ford GT40, as well as such muscle cars as the Shelby GT 350. According to The New York Times: "In the 60's, at the apex of the Southern California car efflorescence, his name was synonymous with muscle cars, relatively small vehicles with big, beefy engines. It was an era that many car buffs consider Detroit's golden age, and Mr. Shelby was arguably its prime mover."
The Shelby GT 350 was an iteration of the first Ford Mustang, which was officially unveiled by Henry Ford II at the World's Fair in Flushing Meadows, New York, on April 17, 1964. That same day, the new car also debuted in Ford showrooms across America and almost 22,000 Mustangs were immediately snapped up by buyers. Named for a World War II fighter plane, the Ford Mustang had a long hood and short rear deck. More than 400,000 Mustangs sold within its first year of production, far exceeding sales expectations. Over the ensuing decades, the Mustang has undergone numerous evolutions and remains in production today, with more than 9 million sold.
In addition to collaborating with Ford, Shelby partnered with other automakers, including Chrysler, for whom he designed the Dodge Viper sports car, which launched in 1992.
The Times in 2003 quoted comedian Jay Leno, an avid car collector who has owned several Shelby cars, as saying: "Carroll is sort of like the car world's Mickey Mantle or Willie Mays... Unlike so many racers, he didn't come from a rich family, so he signifies that everyman, common-sense ideal. When I was kid, American cars were big, clunky things, until Carroll used his ingenuity to make them compete with European cars. He was a populist, the kind of guy that other car buffs could emulate."
Carroll Shelby passed away on May 10, 2012 at the age of 89.

January 27, 1899
Frenchman Camille Jenatzy captured the land-speed record (49.932 miles per hour) in a battery-powered automobile of his own design.

January 27, 1904
American racer William K. Vanderbilt set a new land-speed record of 76.086mph in a gasoline-driven Mors automobile at Ablis, France. It was the first major speed record to be set by an internal-combustion car. All previous records had been set by steam- and battery-powered cars.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on January 29, 2015, 12:00:35 am
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On this day, January 28, 1938
Driver Rudolf Caracciola set a new land-speed record (not recognized by all organizations) of 268.496 mph on the German Autobahn between Frankfurt and Darmstadt. His record remains the highest speed ever achieved on a public road. Later in the same day, a young driver named Bernd Rosemeyer died in a crash on the Autobahn in an attempt to surpass Caracciola's record.
PICTURED: SPEED RUNS February 9, 1939: record-breaking attempts on the Dessau - Bitterfeld Reichsautobahn by Rudolf Caracciola in the Mercedes-Benz W 154 12-cylinder record-breaking car. Rudi said that, at speed, the overpasses seemed like tunnels.

January 28, 1896
The first speeding fine handed to British motorist for exceeding 2mph in a built-up area.

January 28, 1937
The prototype of the Rolls-Royce Wraith made its first test run on this day. The first model of the postwar period was called the Rolls-Royce Silver Wraith, and it became the principal luxury sedan sold by Rolls-Royce in the decades following World War II.

January 28, 2009
Country singer/songwriter John Rich releases a song about the plight of autoworkers titled "Shuttin' Detroit Down." The song, which featured such lyrics as "While they're living it up on Wall Street in that New York City town, here in the real world they're shuttin' Detroit down," quickly became a hit in Michigan, where the U.S. auto industry began, as well as across America. Rich wrote the song after becoming frustrated by news reports of government bailouts for Wall Street companies whose CEOs received stratospheric paychecks while autoworkers struggled to keep their jobs amidst widespread layoffs. Rich, one-half of the country duo Big & Rich, whose hits include "Save a Horse (Ride a Cowboy)" and "Comin' to Your City," recorded "Shuttin' Down Detroit" for his 2009 solo album "Son of a Preacher Man." In January 2009, Michigan-based mlive.com reported that Rich said "Shuttin' Detroit Down" was about: "the working men and women of America, and how Washington and New York City are slinging billions of dollars over the tops of our heads, while hard working people are going down the drain." The song became a working-class anthem and had some fans calling up radio stations in tears after they heard it played.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on January 29, 2015, 11:01:41 pm
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On this day, January 29, 1950
Jody David Scheckter, a South African former auto racing driver was born in East London, South Africa. He was the 1979 Formula One World Drivers Champion.
January 29, 1886
Karl Benz patents the first successful gasoline-driven automobile.

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January 29, 1940
Kunimitsu Takahashi, a former Japanese Grand Prix motorcycle road racer and racing driver was born in Tokyo. He is also considered as the "father of drifting". He was the chairman of the GT-Association, the organizers of the Super GT series, from 1993 to 2007.

January 29, 1987
Matthew Wilson, an English rally driver was born in Cockermouth, Cumbria. He is the son of M-Sport boss and former WRC driver Malcolm Wilson. Wilson currently competes in the World Rally Championship for the Stobart M-Sport Ford team. He achieved his best result at the 2007 Rally Japan, finishing in fourth place.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on January 30, 2015, 11:25:15 pm
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On this day, January 30, 1920
Jujiro Matsuda (1875-1952) forms Toyo Cork Kogyo, a business that makes cork, in Hiroshima, Japan; just over a decade later the company produces its first automobile and eventually changes its name to Mazda. Today, Mazda is known for its affordable, quality-performance vehicles, including the Miata, the world's best-selling two-seat roadster.
In 1931, the company launched the Mazda-Go, a three-wheeled vehicle that resembled a motorcycle with a cargo-carrier at the back. The company's car development plans were halted during World War II and the bombing of Hiroshima. In the 1950s, Mazda began making small, four-wheel trucks. The company launched its first passenger car, the R360 Coupe, in 1960 in Japan. Seven years later, Mazda debuted the first rotary engine car, the Cosmo Sport 110S. Mazda entered the American market in 1970, with the R100 coupe, the first mass-produced, rotary-powered car in the U.S. In 1978, the Mazda RX-7, an affordable, "peak-performing" sports car debuted. The following year, the Ford Motor Company took a 25 percent stake in the company.
In 1989, at the Chicago Auto Show, Mazda unveiled the MX-5 Miata, a two-door sports car carrying a starting price tag of $13,800. According to Mazda, the concept for the car was: "affordable to buy and use, lightweight, Jinba Ittai ('rider and horse as one') handling, and classic roadster looks." The 2000 "Guinness Book of World Records" named the Miata the best-selling two-seat convertible in history.
In 1991, in another milestone for the company, a Mazda 787 B won the 24 Hours of Le Mans race, becoming the first rotary-powered car as well as the first Japanese-made auto to do so. However, Mazda was impacted by the economic slump in Japan in the 1990s and in 1996, Ford took a controlling stake in the automaker and rescued it from potential bankruptcy. The two companies shared manufacturing facilities in several countries along with vehicle platforms and other resources. In 2008, Ford, which had been hurt by the global economic crisis and slumping auto sales, relinquished control of Mazda by selling 20 percent of its controlling stake for around $540 million. (Also that year, General Motors sold its stake in Japan-based Suzuki Motor.)
In 2009, Mazda celebrated the 20th anniversary of the MX-5 Miata, whose sales by then had topped nearly 900,000 and which had won almost 180 major automotive awards.

January 30, 1942
The last pre-war automobiles produced by Chevrolet and DeSoto rolled off the assembly lines today. Wartime restrictions had shut down the commercial automobile industry almost completely, and auto manufacturers were racing to retool their factories for production of military gear.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on February 01, 2015, 12:30:13 am
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On this day, January 31, 1942
The last pre-war automobiles produced by Chrysler, Plymouth, and Studebaker rolled off the assembly lines. Wartime restrictions had shut down the commercial automobile industry almost completely, and auto manufacturers were racing to retool their factories for military gear.
PICTURED: The Vultee BT-13 Valiant

January 31, 1897
The final stage of the Marseille-Nice automobile race posed an unusual challenge: a steep slope that motorists had to climb at speed. It was the first speed hill climb in auto-racing history. The uphill dash was won by M. Pary in a steam-powered DeDion-Bouton automobile.

January 31, 1960
In a special racing series for small-bodied cars at the Daytona International Speedway, the Valiant captured the top seven positions in the 10-lap race. The Valiant was introduced by Chrysler in 1959 (the 1960 models) as a separate make. Its light handling and curvaceous European styling set the Valiant apart from other American compact cars. Over the following years, the Valiant became part of the Plymouth line, and its styling became more typically American. It retained its record for reliability and speed, however, and still has a fan club today.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on February 01, 2015, 11:25:12 pm
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On this day, February 1, 1969
John DeLorean was named the top executive at Chevrolet. DeLorean had risen precipitously through the ranks at Pontiac, where he pioneered the successful GTO and Grand Prix models. As the general manager of Chevrolet, DeLorean sold a record 3,000,000 cars and trucks in 1973. Poised as a top candidate for the presidency of General Motors (GM), DeLorean walked away from Chevrolet in late 1973 to start his own company. He brashly predicted he would "show [GM] how to make cars." DeLorean raised nearly $200 million to finance his new venture, the DeLorean Motor Company. He built a factory in Northern Ireland and began production on the sleek, futuristic DMC-12 car. Interest in the car was high, but the company ran into serious financial trouble. Refusing to abandon his project, DeLorean involved himself in racketeering and drug trafficking in a desperate attempt to make the money that would save his company. In 1982, after being caught on film trying to broker a $24 million cocaine deal, DeLorean was arrested on charges of drug trafficking and money laundering. A federal jury later ruled that DeLorean had been the victim of entrapment, and he was acquitted of all charges. Nevertheless, DeLorean's career and reputation were ruined.
PICTURED: (ABOVE) John Delorean with the DMC "DeLorean. (BELOW) The Pontiac Banshee prototype built by John Delorean.

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February 1, 1898
The Travelers Insurance Company of Hartford, Connecticut, extended coverage to an automobile owner, making them the first company to issue an automobile insurance policy to an individual. Dr. Truman J. Martin of Buffalo, New York, paid a premium of $11.25 for the policy that covered $5,000 to $10,000 of liability. In 1925, Massachusetts became the first state to mandate automobile insurance, "requiring owners of certain motor vehicles and trailers to furnish security for their civil liabilities." Today, auto insurance is a fact of life for American drivers as nearly every state requires some insurance for the operator of a motor vehicle. In a country where the driver's license serves as the primary form of identification, the challenge of selecting a coverage policy and paying the car insurance premium has become a rite of passage for many young Americans.

February 1, 1921
Carmen Fasanella of Princeton, New Jersey, obtained his cab driver's license at the tender age of 17. Mr. Fasanella would go on to drive his taxi for the next 68 years and 243 days, setting an unofficial record for the longest continuous career for a cabbie. Incidentally, the term "cab" comes from "cabriolet," a single-horse carriage used by coach drivers.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on February 04, 2015, 02:55:22 am
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On this day, February 2, 1923
Gasoline mixed with Tetraethyl lead was first sold to the public at a roadside gas station owned by Willard Talbott in Dayton, Ohio. Coined "ethyl gasoline" by Charles Kettering of General Motors, the blend was discovered by General Motors laboratory technician Thomas Midgley to beneficially alter the combustion rate of gasoline. Reportedly, in seven years of research and development General Motors labs tested at least 33,000 compounds for their propensity to reduce knocks. Leaded gasoline would fill the world's gas tanks until emissions concerns lead to the invention of unleaded gasoline.

February 2, 1880
The first electric streetlight was installed in Wabash, Indiana. The city paid the Brush Electric Light Company of Cleveland, Ohio, $100 to install a light on the top of the courthouse. A month later the city commissioned four more lights to be installed. Residents of Wabash became the first Americans to wear their sunglasses at night.

February 2, 1922
Morris Markin established Checker Cab Manufacturing Company. He also moved to Kalamazoo, MI from Illinois and took over factories previously used by the Handley-Knight and Dort automobile companies.

February 2, 1992
A Nissan R91 became the first Japanese car to win an international 24-hour race, winning the "24 Hours of Daytona" event in Daytona Beach, Florida. Japanese engineering quality became the standard for consumer compact vehicles in the 1970s and early 1980s. It was not until the late 1980s and early 1990s, however, that Japanese manufacturers were able to compete with European and American manufacturers at the highest levels of automotive performance technology. Nissan's victory in the 24-hour race proved that Japanese automobiles had achieved the highest level of performance and engineering.


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On this day, February 3, 1948
The first Cadillac with tailfins were produced, signaling the dawn of the tailfin era. Tailfins served no functional purpose, unless you consider attracting attention functional. General Motors increased the size of the Cadillac's "tailfeathers" every year throughout the 1950s. In 1959, the model's sales slumped dramatically, sounding the death knell for the tailfin. The 1960s, consumers announced, would be a practical decade.

February 3, 1881
Joseph A. Galamb, a Ford Motor Company engineer and a member of the team of engineers that developed the Model T, was born in Mako, Hungary. The Model T design would change automotive history with its reliability, affordability, and capacity for mass production. "If you freeze the design and concentrate on production," Ford explained, "as the volume goes up, the cars are certain to become cheaper." Thanks to men like Joseph Galamb, the design for the "Tin Lizzy" met her maker's expectation to bring automobiles to the masses and guaranteed that the New World would become even newer for the next wave of immigrants. On February 3, 1981, the citizens of Mako, Hungary, paid tribute to Galamb, honoring the 100th anniversary of his birth.

February 3, 1919
Clessie Lyle Cummins incorporated Cummins Engine.

February 3, 1959
Became one of the most mythic days in rock 'n' roll history. It's the day the 1947 Beechcraft Bonanza 35 carrying Buddy Holly, Ritchie Valens and J.P. "The Big Bopper" Richardson crashed in an Iowa cornfield. To many, it's simply the day the music died.

February 3, 1929
Major H.O.D. Seagrave set a new land speed record of 231.4mph at Daytona Beach, Florida, driving a car called the Golden Arrow. Seagrave and Sir Malcolm Campbell dueled for land speed supremacy from 1925 to 1935, when Campbell decisively ended the competition by driving his Bluebird III over the 300mph mark at the Bonneville Salt Flats in Utah. These two competitors established Great Britain as the dominant force in land speed technology, a supremacy it maintained until jet engine technology became the norm for land speed race cars.

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Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on February 05, 2015, 07:13:33 am
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On this day, February 4, 1922
The Ford Motor accompany acquired the Lincoln Motor Company for $8 million. Henry Ford's son, Edsel, was subsequently named president of Lincoln. The move signaled Henry Ford's first acknowledgement of diversification as a desirable marketing strategy. Throughout the 1920s, Ford Motors suffered from its unwillingness to match the diverse range of automobiles offered by General Motors. Ford regained some of its market share in 1927 when it released the new Model A, a car whose styling leaned heavily on the traditional sleek look of the Lincoln automobile.
PICTURED: 1922 Lincoln signing February 4, 1922, the Ford Motor Company buys the Lincoln Motor Company. Standing: Henry Ford and Lincoln founder Henry Leland. Seated: Edsel Ford and Wilfred Leland. Pictured on the wall: Abraham Lincoln (Ford Times).

February 4, 1913
Louis Henry Perlman of New York received a patent for the first demountable tire-carrying rim. Until Perlman's invention, changing a tire meant changing the wheel. Today, demountable tire-carrying rims are fashionable accessories that express their driver's individuality.

February 4, 1941
76-year-old Ransom Eli Olds received his last automobile patent for an internal combustion engine design. An innovator throughout his career, Olds built the first American steam-powered vehicle as early as 1894. In 1897, Olds received a patent for his "motor carriage," a gasoline-powered vehicle that he built the year before. He is also credited with having developed the first automobile production line. In an effort to meet the production demands for the Olds Runabout, Olds contracted with the likes of the Dodge brothers for the parts to his cars, which he then assembled in his own factory space. Olds' assembly line was able to produce a higher volume of automobiles in a shorter period of time than was possible using the traditional method of building each vehicle individually. Olds Motor Works sold 425 Runabouts in its first year of business, 2,500 the next year, 5,000 in 1904, and the rest is automobile history.

February 4, 1971
Rolls Royce declared itself bankrupt (state ownership) due to early problems with three-shaft turbofan concept of RB211 aero-engine for Lockheed L-1011 Tri-Star wide body airliners.


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On this day, February 5, 1878
Andre Citroen, later referred to as the Henry Ford of France for developing his country's first mass-produced automobiles, is born in Paris. Citroen revolutionized the European auto industry by making vehicles that were affordable to average citizens.
Before entering the auto business, Citroen studied engineering and later operated a gear manufacturing company. During World War I, he ran a munitions factory where he successfully implemented mass-production technology. Following the war, Citroen, who was inspired by the assembly-line innovations at Henry Ford's American auto plants, converted his munitions factory into a facility to make low-cost vehicles. At the time, only the wealthy in Europe had been able to afford automobiles. Citroen's first car, the Type A, debuted in 1919. The four-door, 10-horsepower vehicle featured an electric starter, lights and a spare tire and was capable of speeds of 40 mph. The Type A was a success, due in part to Citroen's talent as an innovative marketer. He allowed potential customers to take his vehicles for a test drive—then a new concept—and also let people buy on credit. He put the Citroen name in lights on the Eiffel Tower, launched skywriting ads to promote his products and masterminded attention-getting expeditions to Africa and Asia using Citroen vehicles.
In 1934, Citroen launched the Traction Avant, the first mass-produced passenger car to feature front-wheel drive. The car proved enormously popular, and more than 750,000 were built during the 23-year production run. At the time of the Traction Avant's release, however, the Citroen company was on the verge of bankruptcy due to Andre Citroen's heavy investments in new concepts and technology, as well as his alleged gambling debts. In 1935, Citroen was taken over by its largest creditor, the Michelin Tire Company. Andre Citroen, who had been forced out of the business he founded, became ill and died on July 3, 1935.
Citroen remained part of Michelin until the 1970s, when it was sold to the French automaker Peugeot. Today, Peugeot Citroen is one of Europe's leading auto manufacturers.
PICTURED: Citro&euml;n Traction Avant 11BN

February 5, 1918
Thomas A. Edison received a patent for a "Starting and Current-Supplying System for Automobiles".

February 5, 1947
NASCAR racer Darrell Waltrip was born in Owensboro, Kentucky. In 1986, Waltrip became the first stock-car driver to earn $7 million. Having gotten his start in the business racing go-carts at the tender age of 12, the 52-year-old Waltrip did not retire from the NASCAR circuit until 2000. Waltrip was Winston Cup champion three times and won 84 races in his career.

February 5, 1952
The first "Don't Walk" sign was installed in New York City. The city erected the signs in response to the growing awareness of pedestrian fatalities in the increasingly crowded Manhattan streets. Pedestrian fatalities are essentially an urban problem, so city dwellers, next time you see a Don't Walk sign, please don't run. In 1997, 5,307 pedestrians died as a result of automobile accidents. Fatal collisions between pedestrians and motor vehicles occur most often between six p.m. and nine p.m., a period that roughly coincides with rush hour. In 1998, in hopes of minimizing gridlock, New York City began strictly enforcing its jaywalking laws during rush hour. Pedestrians are subject to a $50 fine if they walk, or run, when faced with a Don't Walk sign.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on February 07, 2015, 12:07:16 am
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On this day, February 6, 1954
Mercedes introduced their 300SL coupe to the public. A stylish sports car characterized by its gull-wing doors, the coupe was a consumer version of the 300SL race car. With a six-cylinder engine and a top speed of 155mph, the two-door coupe created a sensation among wealthy car buyers who were actually seen waiting in line to buy it. Because of the impracticality of the gull-wing doors, the company only manufactured 1,400 300SL coupes. Nevertheless, the 300SL is widely considered the most impressive sports car of the decade. Unfortunately, the 300SL race car also played an infamous role in car racing history. Careening out of control in the 1955 race at Le Mans, the SL crashed into the gallery. Eighty spectators died and Mercedes-Benz pulled its cars out of racing competition for nearly three decades

February 6, 1911
Rolls-Royce adopted the "Spirit of Ecstasy" mascot, the silver-winged hood ornament that has become the company's symbol.

February 6, 1985
Walter L. Jacobs, founder of the first car rental company, died. Although he was "not exactly" the founder of the Hertz Corporation, Jacobs' car rental business became the Hertz Corporation after it was purchased by John Hertz in 1923. At the age of 22, Jacobs opened a car-rental business with a dozen Model T Fords that he personally repaired and maintained. Within five years, his business generated an annual revenue of around $1 million. After he sold his business to Mr. Hertz, the president of the Yellow Cab and Yellow Truck and Coach Manufacturing Company, Jacobs remained Hertz's top executive. In addition to its innovations within the car rental industry, Hertz also maintains the unusual distinction of having been a subsidiary of both the General Motors Corporation and Ford Motor Company.


February 6, 2009
The Honda Insight, billed as "the world's first affordable hybrid," goes on sale in Japan. Honda took some 18,000 orders for the car within the first three weeks, pushing Toyota's Prius, known as the world's first mass-produced hybrid vehicle, out of the top-10-selling cars for that month, according to a March 2009 report in The New York Times.
The Insight, a five-door hatchback, went on sale in America on March 24, 2009, and carried a price tag of just under $20,000. In 1999, a three-door hatchback version of the Insight became the first-ever gas-electric hybrid vehicle sold in the U.S. The Toyota Prius, which debuted in Japan in 1997, arrived in America in July 2000 and went on to outsell the first-generation Insight, which was retired in 2006. By the time the second-generation Insight launched in 2009, Toyota controlled 70 percent of the hybrid market in the U.S. (the planet's biggest market for hybrid vehicles). Between 2000 and February 2009, Toyota had sold upward of 700,000 Priuses, or more than half of the 1.2 million purchased worldwide, in America. In March 2009, Toyota announced it had sold more than 1 million gas-electric hybrid vehicles in the U.S. under six Toyota and Lexus brands which in addition to the Prius, include the Highlander SUV and a hybrid Camry sedan, among others.
American automakers trailed behind the Japanese when it came to developing hybrid vehicles. The same week that Toyota announced it had sold its 1 millionth hybrid in America, Ford Motor Company reported that it had built its 100,000th hybrid vehicle in the U.S.
In 2008, Toyota passed General Motors to become the world's largest automaker, a title the American company had held since 1931. GM, which at the time had been hobbled along with the rest of the auto industry by a global economic crisis, received criticism for being the home of the gas-guzzling Hummer and for failing to develop a hybrid vehicle when Toyota first launched the Prius.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on February 09, 2015, 04:09:23 am
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On this day, February 7, 1938
Automotive industry pioneer Harvey Samuel Firestone, founder of the major American tire company that bore his name, dies at the age of 69 in Miami Beach, Florida.
Firestone was born on a farm near Columbiana, Ohio, on December 20, 1868. As a young man, he worked as a salesman for a buggy company and later became convinced that rubber carriage tires would provide a more comfortable ride than steel tires or wooden wheels. Around 1895, Firestone met a young engineer in Detroit named Henry Ford, who was developing his first automobile. Firestone sold Ford a set of rubber carriage tires, an event that marked the start of an important business relationship and friendship between the two men. In 1900, believing that the horse-and-buggy era was ending and the auto age beginning, Firestone incorporated the Firestone Tire & Rubber Company in Akron, Ohio. (Akron, which would come to be known as the world's rubber capital, was also home to Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company, founded in 1898, and B. F. Goodrich, established in 1870.) Firestone began producing its own tires in 1903 and three years later sold 2,000 sets of detachable tires to Henry Ford, in what was then the world's largest tire order. In 1908, Ford launched his first factory-built Model T cars. (By the time production ended in 1927, more than 15 million Model T's had come off the assembly line; it was the all-time best-selling car until 1972, when it was surpassed by the Volkswagen Beetle.)
By 1910, Firestone's profits passed $1 million for the first time. The following year, the winner of the inaugural Indianapolis 500 auto race, Ray Harroun, drove a Marmon Wasp equipped with Firestone tires. By 1926, Firestone was manufacturing more than 10 million tires each year, which represented approximately 25 percent of America's total tire output. Around this time, Firestone established its own rubber plantations in Liberia, Africa, in order to break free of Britain and the Netherlands, who controlled the rubber market through production in their Asian colonies.
Harvey Firestone retired in 1932 and died in 1938. In 1988, the Firestone company was acquired by Japan-based Bridgestone Corporation, a leading global tire manufacturer founded in 1931.

February 7, 1942
The federal government ordered passenger car production stopped and converted to wartime purposes. In spite of President Franklin D. Roosevelt's exhortation that the U.S. auto industry should become the "great arsenal of democracy," Detroit's executives were reluctant to join the war cause. However, following the bombing of Pearl Harbor, the country mobilized behind the U.S. declaration of war. The government offered automakers guaranteed profits regardless of production costs throughout the war years. Furthermore, the Office of Production Management allocated $11 billion to the construction of war manufacturing plants that would be sold to the automobile manufacturers at remarkable discounts after the war. What had at first seemed like a burden on the automotive industry became a boon. The production demands placed on the industry and the resources allocated to the individual automobile manufacturers during the war would revolutionize American car making and bring about the Golden Era of the 1950s.

February 7, 1975
Canada imposed a 55 mph speed limit. In 1973, reacting to the ban of oil sales to the United States and other Western countries by 11 Arab oil producers, President Richard Nixon lowered the U.S. speed limit to 55 mph in hopes of conserving gasoline. An addition to a greater reserve of oil, a by-product of the mandate turned out to be a lower rate of highway automobile fatalities. Two years later, Canada followed suit in hopes of lowering their own rate of highway fatalities.


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On this day, February 8, 1985
Sir William Lyons, the founder of the British luxury automaker Jaguar, dies at the age of 84 in Warwickshire, England.
Lyons was born in Blackpool, England, on September 4, 1901. In 1922, the motorcycle enthusiast co-founded the Swallow Sidecar Company with his neighbor William Walmsley. The company started out making motorcycle sidecars, then turned to producing its own cars. In the early 1930s, the company was renamed SS Cars Ltd.; its first Jaguar automobile, the SS Jaguar 100, debuted in 1935. During World War II, the company's plants were used to make airplane and auto parts for the British military. Following the war, the company changed its name again, to Jaguar Cars Ltd., to avoid any association with the Schutzstaffel, the Nazi paramilitary group also referred to by the initials "SS."
In 1948, Jaguar released the XK120, which was capable of reaching speeds of 120 mph and helped the company stake its claim as a sports car brand. By the 1950s, Jaguar was exporting its high-performance cars to America. In 1961, the automaker introduced the E-type, known as the XK-E in the U.S., a sleek two-seater with a bullet-like silhouette that was the fastest production sports car on the market at the time of its launch. The iconic roadster won accolades for its design and in 1996 an E-Type became part of the permanent collection of New York City's Museum of Modern Art (it was only the third car to do so yet).
In 1956, Lyons was knighted for his contributions to the British auto industry. A decade later, Jaguar merged with the British Motor Corporation to form British Motor Holdings, which later became part of British Leyland Ltd. Lyons retired from the business in 1972 and spent his remaining years raising livestock on his farm. He died in 1985. In 1990, Jaguar was acquired by the Ford Motor Company. Ford sold Jaguar, along with fellow British luxury brand Land Rover, to India-based Tata Motors in 2008, for approximately $2.3 billion. For Tata, the maker of the Nano, the world's cheapest car, the deal was referred to by some as a move from "mass to class."
PICTURED: The Jaguar Pirana

February 8, 1936
General Motors (GM) founder William Durant, filed for personal bankruptcy. Economic historian Dana Thomas described Durant as a man "drunk with the gamble of America. He was obsessed with its highest article of faith--that the man who played for the steepest stakes deserved the biggest winnings." GM reflected Durant's ambitious attitude toward risk-taking in its breathtaking expansionist policies, becoming in its founder's words "an empire of cars for every purse and purpose." However, Durant's gambling attitude had its down sides. Over a span of three years Durant purchased Oldsmobile, Oakland (later Cadillac and Pontiac), and attempted to purchase Ford. By 1910, GM was out of cash, and Durant was forced out of control of the company. Durant got back into the big game by starting Chevrolet, and eventually regained control of GM only to lose it a second time. Later in life, Durant attempted to start a bowling center and a supermarket, but met with little success. Durant's trials and tribulations are proof that, even in America's most successful industry, there were those who gambled and lost.

February 8, 1964
The Iraqi National Oil Company was incorporated in Baghdad. Oil wealth would make Iraq an important player in the politics of the Middle East for the next three decades. The fear of losing access to Arab oil--a fear that marked all U.S. policy to the Middle East following the 1973 Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) embargo--drove the U.S. government to heavily support Iraq's war effort against Iran during the 1980s. However, America's friendly relationship with Iraq ended in 1990 with the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait, another oil wealthy Persian Gulf state friendly to the United States.


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On this day, February 9, 1846
Automotive industry pioneer Wilhelm Maybach, who founded the luxury car brand bearing his name, is born on February 9, 1846, in Heilbronn, Germany.
In 1885, Maybach and his mentor, the German engineer Gottlieb Daimler developed a new high-speed, four-stroke internal combustion engine. Maybach and Daimler fixed their engine to a bicycle to create what is referred to as the first-ever motorcycle. The two men later attached their engine to a carriage, producing a motorized vehicle. In 1890, Daimler and several partners established Daimler Motoren Gelleschaft to build engines and automobiles. Maybach, who served as the company's chief designer, developed the first Mercedes automobile in 1900. The Mercedes was commissioned by auto dealer and racer Emil Jellinek, who wanted a new car to sell to his rich clients in the French Riviera, and named after Jellinek's daughter.
Gottlieb Daimler died in March 1900 and Maybach left the Daimler company in 1907. He later went into business with his engineer son Karl and in 1921 they debuted their first car, the Maybach Type W3, at a Berlin auto show. During the 1920s and 1930s, Maybach became known for developing powerful, technologically sophisticated custom-built vehicles for the wealthy, including the super-luxurious, top-of-the-line Zeppelin model. Wilhelm Maybach died on December 29, 1929, at the age of 83.
During World War II, the company Maybach founded stopped making cars and built engines for German military vehicles. Auto production never resumed after the war, although the company continued to make engines for a variety of vehicles and eventually became part of Daimler-Benz. In the early 2000s, Daimler-Benz resurrected the Maybach nameplate, launching the Maybach 57 and the Maybach 62. Today, the Maybach brand is once again synonymous with opulence and exclusivity. Each car is hand-built to its buyer's specifications and carries a starting price tag in the eight figure range. Maybachs are known for their power and long list of optional luxury extras, including voice-activated controls, entertainment centers, lambswool carpeting and perfume-atomizing systems.
PICTURED: The Daimler history in one photo

February 9, 1909
The Indianapolis Motor Speedway Corporation incorporated with Carl G. Fisher as president. The speedway was Fisher's brainchild, and he would see his project through its inauspicious beginnings to its ultimate glorious end. The first race at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway took place on August 19, 1909, only a few months after the formation of the corporation. Fisher and his partners had scrambled to get their track together before the race, and their lack of preparation showed. Not only were lives lost on account of the track, but the surface itself was left in shambles. Instead of cutting losses on his investment in the speedway, Fisher dug in and upped the stakes. He built a brand new track of brick, which was the cheapest and most durable appropriate surface available to him. The Indianapolis Motor Speedway would later be affectionately called "the Brickyard." Fisher's track filled a void in the international racing world, as there were almost no private closed courses in Europe capable of handling the speeds of the cars that were being developed there. Open course racing had lost momentum in Europe due to the growing number of fatal accidents. Recognizing the supremacy of European car technology, but preserving the American tradition of oval-track racing, Fisher melded the two hemispheres of car racing into one extravagant event, a 500-mile race to be held annually. To guarantee the attendance of the European racers, Fisher arranged to offer the largest single prize in the sport. By 1912, the total prize money available at the grueling Indy 500 was $50,000, making the race the highest paying sporting event in the world. However, the Brickyard almost became a scrap yard after World War II, as it was in deplorable condition after four years of disuse. The track's owner, Eddie Rickenbacher, even considered tearing it down and selling the land. Fortunately, in 1945, Tony Hulman purchased the track for $750,000. Hulman and Wilbur Shaw hastily renovated the track for racing in the next year, and launched a long-term campaign to replace the wooden grandstand with structures of steel and concrete. In May of 1946, the American Automobile Association ran its first postwar Indy 500, preserving an American tradition. Today, the Indy 500 is the largest single-day sporting event in the world.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on February 10, 2015, 10:48:28 pm

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On this day, February 10, 1966
Ralph Nader testified before the Senate, reinforcing his earlier claims that the automobile industry was socially irresponsible and detailing the peculiar methods the industry used in attempting to silence him. Nader's 1965 book, Unsafe At Any Speed: The Designed-In Dangers of the American Automobile, had become a sensation a year earlier. Nader attacked the automotive industry's unwillingness to consider the safety of the consumer, or as Nader himself put it, "insisting on maintaining the freedom to rank safety wherever it pleases on its list of considerations." Nader's heaviest criticism was leveled at the Chevrolet Corvair, a car that had been involved in a high number of one-car accidents. General Motors (GM) responded to Nader's criticism by launching an investigation into his personal life and accusing Nader of being gay and anti-Semitic. Nader filed an invasion of privacy suit against GM, and ultimately extracted $425,000 from the automotive giant. By bringing the public's right to safe automobiles into the spotlight, and by directly challenging General Motors in court, Nader created the methodology for contemporary consumer advocacy. The National Traffic and Motor Vehicle Safety Act, which in 1966 mandated seatbelts, owed its existence to Nader's initiative, as do the other federally regulated safety standards which are common practice today.
PICTURED: A prototype built by John Fitch. It had a Corvair engine and was capable of 130MPH. Corvair was disbanded (thanks to Ralph Nader) before production began

February 10, 1941
The first highway post office service was established along the route between Washington, D.C., and Harrisonburg, Virginia. Mail was transported in buses equipped with facilities for sorting, handling, and dispatch of mail.

February 10, 1989
The Ford Motor Company announced a 1988 net income of $5.3 billion, a world's record for an automotive company. The record served to mark the return to triumph of the U.S. automotive industry after the doldrums of the 1970s and early 1980s.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on February 11, 2015, 10:47:15 pm
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On this day, February 11, 1951
Marshall Teague drove a Hudson Hornet to victory on the beach oval of the 160-mile Daytona Grand National at Daytona Beach, Florida, beginning Hudson's extraordinary run on the NASCAR circuit. In 1948, Hudson introduced the revolutionary "step-down" chassis design that is still used in most cars today. Until Hudson's innovation all car drivers had stepped up into the driver's seats. The "step-down" design gave the Hornet a lower center of gravity and, consequently, better handling. Fitted with a bigger engine in 1951, the Hudson Hornet became a dominant force on the NASCAR circuit. For the first time a car not manufactured by the Big Three was winning big. Excited by the publicity generated by their success on the track, Hudson executives began directly backing their racing teams, providing the team cars with everything they needed to make their cars faster. The Big Three, fearing that losses on the track would translate into losses on the salesroom floor, hurried to back their own cars. Thus was born the system of industry-backed racing that has become such a prominent marketing tool today. The Hudson Hornet would contend for nearly every NASCAR race between 1951 and 1955, when rule changes led to an emphasis on horsepower over handling.

February 11, 1958
Marshall Teague died at age 37 after attempting to raise the closed-course speed record at Daytona.

February 11, 1937
After a difficult 44-day sit-down strike at the Fisher Body plant in Flint, Michigan, General Motors (GM) President Alfred P. Sloan signed the first union contract in the history of the U.S. automobile industry. Organized by the Union of Auto Workers (UAW), the strike was intended to force GM to give ground to its workers. GM workers had protested before, and they'd been fired and replaced for it. The UAW decided they needed to achieve the total shutdown of a working plant in order to bring company executives to the negotiating table. On New Year's Eve, 45 minutes after lunch, union leaders ordered the assembly line halted. Executives kept the belts running, but the workers wouldn't work. GM turned to the courts, winning an injunction against the workers on the grounds that the sit-down strike was unconstitutional. The injunction was overturned when it was discovered that the judge who presided in the case owned over $200,000 of GM stock. Twelve days after the strike had begun, with the workers still dug in, Sloan ordered the heat in the building turned off and barred the workers access to food from the outside. Police, armed with tear gas and guns, surrounded the building. The police fired--first tear gas and later bullets--into the plant. Sympathetic picketers outside, many of them family members of the strikers, helped to break all the windows in the plant by hurling rocks from were they stood. Others, braver still, broke the picket line with their automobiles to form a barricade that prevented the police vehicles from overrunning the building the strikers occupied. Finally, days after the Battle of the Running Bulls, as the violent confrontation came to be known, Michigan Governor Frank Murphy called in the National Guard with the intention of quelling any further violence. The presence of the National Guard bolstered the strikers' confidence. Realizing the futility of their position, GM executives came to the bargaining table. After a week of negotiations over which Governor Murphy personally presided, an agreement between GM and the UAW was reached.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on February 12, 2015, 09:58:28 pm
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On this day, February 12, 1900
J.W. Packard received his first automotive patent a year after forming his company with partner George Weiss. Packard became interested in building cars after purchasing a Winton horseless carriage. The Winton proved unreliable and after nearly a year of fixing up his horseless carriage, Packard decided he would manufacture his own automobile.
PICTURED: The Winton

February 12, 1898
First car crash resulting in fatality happened in Great Britain to Henry Lindfield, Brighton business agent for International Cars; electric car's steering gear failed, ran through a wire fence, hit an iron post, cut main artery in his leg, died of shock from the operation the following day.

February 12, 1953
The Willys-Overland Company, which brought America the Jeep, celebrated its golden anniversary. The original design for an all-terrain troop transport vehicle--featuring four-wheel drive, masked fender-mount headlights, and a rifle rack under the dash--was submitted to the U.S. Armed Forces by the American Bantam Car Company in 1939. The Army loved Bantam's design, but the production contract was ultimately given to Willys-Overland on the basis of its similar design and superior production capabilities. Mass production of the Willys Jeep began after the U.S. declaration of war in 1941. By 1945, 600,000 Jeeps had rolled off the assembly lines and onto battlefields in Asia, Africa, and Europe. The name "Jeep" is supposedly derived from the Army's request to car manufacturers to develop a "General Purpose" vehicle. "Gee Pee" turned to "Jeep" somewhere along the battle lines. The Willys Jeep became a cultural icon in the U.S. during World War II, as images of G.I.s in Gee Pees liberating Europe saturated the newsreels in movie theaters across the country. Unlike the Hummer of recent years, the Jeep was not a symbol of technological superiority but rather of the courage of the American spirit, a symbol cartoonist Bill Mauldin captured when he drew a weeping soldier firing a bullet into his broken down Willys Jeep. In 1945, Willys-Overland introduced the first civilian Jeep vehicle, the CJ-2A.

February 12, 1973
Four metric distance road signs, first in U.S., erected along Interstate 71 in Ohio; showed distance in both miles, kilometers between Columbus and Cincinnati, Columbus and Cleveland

February 12, 2008
In an attempt to cut costs, struggling auto giant General Motors (GM) offers buyouts to all 74,000 of its hourly employees in the U.S. represented by the United Auto Workers (UAW) union. The move came after GM lost $38.7 billion in 2007, which at the time was the largest loss ever experienced by any car maker. Two weeks later, on February 26, the loss was adjusted by $4.6 billion, to $43.3 billion.
GM offered its employees a range of buyout options, including a $140,000 lump payment to those who worked at the company for at least 10 years and agreed to give up their health benefits and pension. GM's goal was to replace the employees who accepted buyouts with new workers brought in at a lower pay scale. At the time, a veteran GM worker (who belonged to the UAW) had an average base salary of $28.12 an hour, but once such benefits as health-care coverage and pension were added in, the cost to GM jumped to $78.21, according to a report by CNNMoney.com.
Some 19,000 GM workers ended up taking buyouts; however, the company's troubles were far from over, as gas prices reached record highs in the summer of 2008 and auto sales continued to slump amidst a growing global economic crisis. GM was criticized for focusing too heavily on its sport utility vehicles and small trucks and being slow to respond to an increasing consumer demand for smaller, more fuel-efficient vehicles. In December 2008, the federal government stepped in with a $13.4 billion loan to help keep GM afloat (Chrysler, the third-largest U.S. automaker, also received federal bailout funds). Also in 2008, Japan-based Toyota surpassed GM as the world's largest automaker, a title the American company, which was founded in 1908, had held since 1931. At its peak in the early 1960s, GM made more than half of all the cars and trucks purchased in the U.S.
In March 2009, President Barack Obama announced that in order to receive additional federal aid and avoid possible bankruptcy, both GM and Chrysler would be required to make deep concessions and develop radical restructuring plans. Additionally, GM's chief executive Rick Wagoner, who had held the top job since 2000, was forced to resign immediately. Nevertheless, on April 30, 2009, Chrysler filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy and announced it would enter a partnership with Italian automaker Fiat. GM filed for bankruptcy a month later, on June 1.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on February 14, 2015, 02:01:25 am
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February 13, 1953
William C. Mack of Mack Trucks Inc. died at age 94. Mack trucks, with their hood-mounted bulldogs, are a symbol of durability and toughness in the commercial vehicle industry.
PICTURED:  A 1913 Mack truck

February 13, 1958
The first Ford Thunderbird with four seats was introduced. The four-passenger "square bird" converted the top-of-the-line Ford from a sports car to a luxury car. The new four-seater packed a 352-cubic-inch 300 horsepower V-8. Thirty-eight thousand cars were initially sold, making the T-Bird one of only two American cars to increase sales between 1957 and 1958. The T-Bird has become a symbol of 1950s American culture, immortalized in movies like Grease and rock songs like the Beach Boys' "I Get Around."
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on February 14, 2015, 10:14:46 pm
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On this day, February 14, 1929 (Valentines Day)
The mob hit known as the St. Valentine's Day Massacre took place in Chicago. In order to perpetrate the hit, members of Al Capone's gang reportedly fitted a Cadillac touring sedan to the speculations of the Chicago Police Department. Under the guidance of Capone's Lieutenant Ray Nitty, the murderers sought out the garage of one "Bugs" Moran with the intention of killing him. Fearing the possibility of misidentifying Mr. Moran, the henchman killed all seven of the men in the garage. Without the help of their modern-day Trojan Horse--the Cadillac Sedan which gang member Bryan Bolton claimed to have personally purchased from the Cadillac Car Company on Michigan Avenue in Chicago--the gang would not have been able to infiltrate "Bugs" Moran's garage with such veritable ease.
PICTURED: Al Capone

February 14, 1867
Sakichi Toyoda, whose textile machinery company spawned the Toyota Motor Corporation, is born in Japan on February 14, 1867. In 2008, Toyota surpassed the American auto giant General Motors (GM) to become the world's largest automaker.
Referred to as Japan's Thomas Edison, Sakichi Toyoda invented a variety of weaving machines, including an automatic power loom, and founded Toyoda Automatic Loom Works. By the late 1920s, Toyoda's son Kiichiro, who worked for the family business, had begun plans, with his father's support, to develop an automobile. Sakichi Toyoda died on October 30, 1930, at the age of 63. In 1933, Kiichiro Toyoda established an auto division within Toyoda Loom Works, which released a prototype vehicle two years later. In 1937, Toyota Motor Corporation was formed as a spinoff of Toyoda Loom Works.
The new car company initially looked to the U.S. auto industry for inspiration. According to The New York Times: "Over the years of its rise to the top, Toyota has made no secret of how much it has learned from Detroit. Its first car, the AA, was a blatant copy of a Chevrolet sedan. Its executives scoured every corner of the Ford Motor Company in the 1950s, taking home ideas to Japan that later inspired the Toyota Production System."
Kiichiro Toyoda died in 1952 at the age of 57, but his company continued to grow. In 1966, Toyota introduced its compact Corolla model, which in 1997 became the world's best-selling car, with more than 35 million sold at the time. The oil crisis of the 1970s made Toyota's small, fuel-efficient vehicles increasingly attractive in America. In the 1980s, the automaker launched the popular Camry and 4Runner sport utility vehicle. Toyota's luxury car line, Lexus, debuted in the U.S. in 1989. The automaker introduced the planet's first mass-produced hybrid vehicle, the Prius, in 1997 in Japan and worldwide in 2001. By the end of the 1990s, Toyota had produced over 100 million vehicles in Japan.
In 2008, Toyota reached another milestone when it sold more cars and trucks than General Motors--8.97 million vehicles versus 8.35 million vehicles--and claimed the sales crown that the American auto giant had held for more than 70 years. However, Toyota, like the rest of the auto industry, was hurt by the global financial crisis and in May 2009 reported the company's first-ever annual loss.

February 14, 1896
Edward Prince of Wales, who would later become King Edward VII, became the first member of the British Royal Family to ride in a motor vehicle.

February 14, 1948
A week before the organization was officially incorporated, NASCAR held its first race for modified stock cars on a 3.2 mile-course at Daytona Beach. In the 150-mile race that featured almost exclusively pre-war Fords, Red Byron edged Marshall Teague to become NASCAR's first champion. Stock car racing would become a tradition at Daytona, but pre-war Fords would not. By 1949 the Olds 88 had become NASCAR's dominant vehicle.

February 14, 1977
Elmer Symons, a motorcycle enduro racer was born in Ladysmith, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa on this day. He began enduro racing in 1996 and moved to the United States in 2003. He had placed well in numerous regional competitions and had participated in the 2005 and 2006 Dakar Rally as a support mechanic. He crashed his privateer KTM and died at the scene at 142 km into the fourth stage in his first attempt to complete the Rally as a rider. The emergency helicopter was with him within 8 minutes of his emergency alert beacon triggering, but was unable to do anything other than record his death. He was in 18th place for motorcycles overall, and leading the Marathon class after the previous stage. Symons is the rally's 49th fatality.

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Feb 14, 2014,
The Hennessey Venom GT hit 270.49mph at the Kennedy Space Center, thus becoming the fastest production car in the world by beating the Bugatti Veyron Super Sport's previous record of 269.86 mph.P
Bugatti and Hennessey has been fighting for the crown for quite some time now, and while this round goes to America, we all know car makers will only stop when people's heads are starting to explode. After all, the game has been on since 1894.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on February 17, 2015, 12:15:29 am
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February 15, 1902
Oldsmobile ran its first national automobile advertisement in the Saturday Evening Post. Ransom Olds was no stranger to innovations in the field of publicity. A year earlier, Olds had sent one of his assistants, Roy Chapin, on a voyage from Detroit to New York in a 1901 Olds Runabout. In spite of the absence of proper roads, gas stations, or repair garages, nine days and 800 miles later, Chapin arrived at New York's Waldorf-Astoria Hotel unscathed. Newspaper accounts of the journey boosted publicity for the Runabout. In one year, Olds' company increased its sales of Runabouts from 425 to 2,500. With the help of newspaper advertisements annual sales would jump another 100 percent to 5,000 cars by 1904.
Olds also commissioned two popular songwriters of the day to write a song for advertising purposes. The result was “In My Merry Oldsmobile,” a song inspired by the Curved Dash Olds and now an all-time standard.
PICTURED: Roy Chapin, New York in the Olds Runabout

February 15, 1967
J. Frank Duryea, founder of the Duryea Motor Wagon Company with his brother Charles, died in Old Saybrook, Conneticut, at age 97. Seventy-four years earlier in the month of February, the Duryea brothers manufactured the first of 13 Duryea Motor Wagons, unofficially giving birth to the auto production line and the American automobile industry.


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On this day, February 16, 1852
Henry and Clement Studebaker founded H & C Studebaker, a blacksmith and wagon building business, in South Bend, Indiana. The brothers made their fortune manufacturing during the Civil War, as The Studebaker Brothers Manufacturing Company became the world's largest manufacturer of horse-drawn carriages.
With the advent of the automobile, Studebaker converted its business to car manufacturing, becoming one of the larger independent automobile manufacturers. During World War II, Studebaker manufactured airplanes for the war effort and emphasized its patriotic role by releasing cars called "The President," "The Champion," and "The Commander." Like many of the independents, Studebaker fared well during the war by producing affordable family cars.
After the war, the Big Three, bolstered by their new government-subsidized production facilities, were too much for many of the independents. Studebaker was no exception. Post World War II competition drove Studebaker to its limits, and the company merged with the Packard Corporation in 1954.
Financial hardship continued however as they continued to lose money over the next several years. Studebaker rebounded in 1959 with the introduction of the compact Lark but it was shortlived. The 1966 Cruiser marked the end of the Studebaker after 114 years.

February 16, 1997
25-year-old Jeff Gordon claims his first Daytona 500 victory, becoming the youngest winner in the history of the 200-lap, 500-mile National Association for Stock Car Auto Racing (NASCAR) event, dubbed the "Super Bowl of stock car racing." Driving his No. 24 Chevrolet Monte Carlo for the Hendrick Motorsports racing team, Gordon recorded an average speed of 148.295 mph and took home prize money of more than $377,000. According to NASCAR.com, Gordon was "a veritable babe in a field that included 27 drivers older than 35, 16 at least 40." Gordon's Hendrick teammates Terry Labonte and Ricky Craven finished the race second and third, respectively.
Gordon was born August 4, 1971, in Vallejo, California, and became involved in racing as a child. In 1993, he competed in his first full season of Winston Cup series (now known as the Sprint Cup), NASCAR's top racing series, and was named Rookie of the Year. He went on to win the Winston series championship in 1995, 1997, 1998 and 2001. Following his first victory at the Daytona 500 in 1997, Gordon won the prestigious race, which serves as the NASCAR season-opener, again in 1999 and 2005.
At the other end of the Daytona age spectrum from Gordon is 50-year-old Bobby Allison, who on February 14, 1988, became the oldest driver to win the Daytona 500. He had an average speed of 137.531 mph and collected over $202,000 in prize money. Allison's son Davey came in second place in that race. Bobby Allison, who was born on December 3, 1937, in Florida, drove in his first Daytona 500 in 1961 and went on to win the race in 1978 and 1982, in addition to his 1988 victory.
The first-ever Daytona 500 was held on February 22, 1959, at the then brand-new Daytona International Speedway in Daytona Beach, Florida. A crowd of more than 40,000 was on hand to witness the 59 cars that started the event. Lee Petty narrowly defeated Johnny Beauchamp to win the race with an average speed of 135.521 mph. He collected prize money of some $19,000. By comparison, Matt Kenseth won the 2009 Daytona 500 with an average speed of 132.816 mph, and took home prize money of more than $1.5 million.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on February 18, 2015, 12:31:46 am
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On this day, February 17, 1911
The first self-starter, based on patented inventions created by General Motors (GM) engineers Clyde Coleman and Charles Kettering, was installed in a Cadillac. In the early years of fierce competition with Ford, the self-starter would play a key role in helping GM to keep pace. The Ford Model T's crank starter caused its share of borken jaws and ribs. Charles Kettering, the founder of Delco (Dayton Engineering Laboratories Company), devised countless improvements for the automobile, including lighting and ignition systems, lacquer finishes, antilock fuels, and leaded gasoline. Prior to his work with cars, Kettering also invented the electric cash register.
PICTURED: Charles F. Kettering, Alfred P. Sloan, Jr., and Nicholas Dreystadt, President of Cadillac Motor Car, looking over the first self starter

February 17, 1934
Pennsylvania State industrial engineer Amos Neyhart fitted his own car with dual brake, clutch linkages and began teaching driving to State College High School students in State College, PA, started American tradition of driver's education, provided both classroom and behind-the-wheel instruction. Students who completed Amos Neyhart's course received State of Pennsylvania driver's licenses.

February 17, 1972
The 15,007,034th Volkswagen Beetle rolled out of the Volkswagen factory in Wolfsburg, Germany, surpassing the Ford Model T's previous production record to become the most heavily produced car in history. The Beetle or the "Strength Through Joy" car, as the Germans initially called it, was the brainchild of Ferdinand Porsche. He developed the Volkswagen on orders from the German government to produce an affordable car for the people. Developed before World War II, the Beetle did not go into full-scale production until after the war. It became a counter-culture icon in the U.S. during the 1960s largely because it offered an alternative to the extravagant American cars of the time. In 1998, Volkswagen released the "New Beetle" to rave reviews.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on February 18, 2015, 10:22:09 pm
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On this day, February 18, 1898
Enzo Anselmo Ferrari was born in Modena, Italy. After fighting in World War I, where he lost both his brother and his father, Ferrari became a professional driver with the Costruzioni Meccaniche Nazional. The following year, Ferrari moved to Alpha Romeo, establishing a relationship that would span two decades and take Ferrari from test driver to the director post of the Alpha Racing Division. In 1929, Enzo founded Scuderia Ferrari, an organization that began as a racing club but that by 1933 had absorbed the entire race-engineering division at Alpha. For financial reasons, Alpha took back control of their racing division from Ferrari in 1939. His pride wounded, Ferrari left Alpha Romeo in 1940, transforming the Scuderia into an independent manufacturing company, the Auto Avio Costruzioni Ferrari. Construction of the first Ferrari vehicle was delayed until the end of World War II. Like Ferdinand Porsche, Enzo Ferrari suffered during the war, as his factory was bombed on numerous occasions. Still, Ferrari persisted with his work. In 1949, Ferrari's 166 won the 24 Hours at Le Mans, Europe's most famous car race. Ferrari would not look back. His passion for racing drove his company to become one of the world's premier race car builders. Ferrari cars would win 25 world titles and over 5,000 individual races during Enzo's 41-year reign. Off the track the company fared just as well. Responding to Ferrari's personal demand that his engineers create the finest sports car in the world, the company produced the F40 in 1987. With a top speed of 201mph and a 0 to 60 time of 3.5 seconds, the F40 may have been Ferrari's crowning achievement. Enzo Anselmo Ferrari died on August 14, 1988.
PICTURED: Enzo Anselmo Ferrari

February 18, 1973
Richard Petty, the "King of Stock Car Racing," won the Daytona 500 before a crowd of over 103,000 spectators, marking the first time a stock car race had drawn over 100,000 spectators. No longer would there be questions about NASCAR's mainstream popularity. On this same day in 1979, Petty became the first man to win six Daytona 500s. Winning the most prestigious event in any sport six times is enough to earn the nickname "The King," but Petty is perhaps most famous for his 1967 season in which he won 27 of 48 races, including a record 10 straight victories. In a sport where mechanical failure is commonplace, Petty's total domination was seen as superhuman. "The King" came from royal stock. His father, Lee Petty, was the first man to win the Daytona 500.

February 18, 2001
Dale Earnhardt Sr., one of the greatest drivers in NASCAR history, died in a last-lap crash at the 43rd Daytona 500 in Daytona Beach, Florida. He was 49. Earnhardt was about half a mile from the finish line when his car, the famous black No. 3 Chevrolet, spun out of control and then crashed into a wall while simultaneously colliding with driver Ken Schrader’s car. He died instantly of head injuries.
Earnhardt, whose tough, aggressive driving style earned him the nickname “The Intimidator,” was involved in another crash at the Daytona 500 in 1997, when his car flipped upside down on the backstretch. He managed to escape serious injury. In 1998, he went on to win the Daytona 500, his first and only victory in that race after 20 years of trying.
Earnhardt, a high-school dropout from humble beginnings in Kannapolis, North Carolina, said all he ever wanted to do in life was race cars. Indeed, he went on to become one of the sport’s most successful and respected drivers, with 76 career victories, including seven Winston Cup Series championships. In addition to his legendary accomplishments as a driver, Earnhardt was also a successful businessman and NASCAR team owner. The 2001 Daytona race which cost Earnhardt his life was won by Michael Waltrip, who drove for Dale Earnhardt, Inc. (DEI). Earnhardt’s son, Dale Jr., also a DEI driver, took second place in the race.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: 69mach1 on February 19, 2015, 08:28:36 pm
On 19 February 1942 mainland Australia came under attack for the first time when Japanese forces mounted two air raids on Darwin.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on February 20, 2015, 01:57:59 am
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On this day, February 19, 1954
The Ford Thunderbird was born in prototype form. It wouldn't be released to the market on a wide scale until the fall of 1954, the beginning of the 1955 model year. The T-Bird was a scaled-down Ford built for two. It came with a removable fiberglass hard top and a convertible canvas roof for sunny days. Armed with a V-8 and sporty looks, the T-Bird was an image car. For $2,944 a driver could drop the top, turn the radio dial, and enter a more promising world. General Motors had created the Corvette two years earlier to meet the needs of the G.I. who had developed a taste for European sports cars. In keeping with Ford's cautious tradition, the T-Bird, its response to the Corvette, still looked like a Ford and was classified as a "personal car" and not a "sports car." But it was popular. Just as it had relied heavily on one car, the Model T, in its early stages, Ford would rely heavily on the T-Bird to bolster its image as a progressive car maker capable of keeping pace with GM. A decade later the Mustang would take the torch from the T-Bird, but to remember Ford in the 1950s one only needs to call to mind the stylish growl of the Thunderbird's V-8.
PICTURED: 1955 Ford Thunderbird (AKA - The Thunder Chicken)

February 19, 1961
Andy Wallace, a professional race car driver was born in Oxford, England. Wallace was the driver for the then record-setting speed of 240.14 mph (386.47 km/h) in a McLaren F1, which for over 11 years this was the world record for the fastest production car.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on February 20, 2015, 09:05:46 pm
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On this day, February 20, 1993
Ferrucio Lamborghini died, leaving behind a remarkable life story of a farm boy with big dreams. Born on his family's farm outside of Bologna, Italy, Lamborghini grew up tinkering with tractors. He enrolled in an industrial college near Bologna, where he studied machinery. Graduating just before World War II, Lamborghini then served as an engineer in the Italian Air Force. After the war he returned to his family's farm and began assembling tractors from leftover war vehicles. Lamborghini built such high-quality tractors that by the mid-1950s, the Lamborghini Tractor Company had become one of Italy's largest farm equipment manufacturers. But Ferrucio dreamt of cars. In 1963, he bought land, built an ultra-modern factory, and hired distinguished Alfa Romeo designer Giotti Bizzarini. Together they set out to create the ultimate automobile. In 1964, Lamborghini produced the 300 GT, a large and graceful sports car. By 1974, Ferrucio Lamborghini had sold out of the business bearing his name, but the company would never deviate from his initial mission to create exquisite vehicles at whatever cost.

February 20, 1937
Legendary driver and designer Roger Penske was born. While he drove and designed a variety of race-car models, Penske is most famous for his achievements in Indy car design, a field that he dominated for many years. Penske cars won three consecutive Indy 500s from 1987 to 1989 and 11 Indy 500s in 23 years. Overseeing the development of his team cars, Penske created an empire that would redefine Indy car racing. Asked why the Penske car was so successful, champion driver Emerson Fitipaldi explained, "The Penske is consistent and easy to adjust. That's why it wins." In addition to his achievements on the track, Roger Penske also changed the Indy game by founding CART (Championship Auto Racing Teams.) Penske created CART as an attempt to increase Indy car team owners' control over Indy 500 rule changes, then dictated by the USAC.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on February 22, 2015, 12:39:53 am
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On this day, February 21, 1954
The 1954 Grand National at Daytona was a microcosm of early NASCAR history. The crowds gathered to see which of the two dominant models of stock car--the fast Olds 88 or the tight handling Hudson Hornet--would take control of the race. However, the first car into the last turn of the first lap wasn't a Hudson or an Olds, but rather Lee Petty's Chrysler New Yorker. Unfortunately, Petty was going faster, and he crashed through the wooden embankment at the back of the turn. Unperturbed, Petty got back in the race. Nineteen laps later his breaks failed. Driving the rest of the race with no breaks, Petty downshifted his way into a competitive position. A late stop for fuel, though, sealed his fate, as he overshot his pit and lost precious seconds. Petty crossed the finish line second to the favored Olds 88 car driven by Tim Flock. The next morning Petty, eating breakfast with his family in a hotel restaurant, learned that Flock's Olds had been disqualified. Petty had won Daytona with no brakes.
PICTURED: Lee Petty's Chrysler New Yorker (1954)

February 21, 1948
Six days after its first race was held, NASCAR was officially incorporated as the National Association for Stock Car Racing, with race promoter Bill France as president. From the beginning, stock car racing had a widespread appeal with its fan base. As the legend goes, the sport evolved from Southern liquor smugglers who souped up their pre-war Fords to outrun the police. NASCAR brought the sport organization and legitimacy. It was Bill France who realized that product identification would increase enthusiasm for the sport. He wanted the fans to see the cars they drove to the track win the races on the track. By 1949, all the postwar car models had been released, so NASCAR held a 150-mile race at the Charlotte Speedway to introduce its Grand National Division. The race was restricted to late-model strictly stock automobiles. NASCAR held nine Grand National events that year. By the end of the year, it was apparent that the strictly stock cars could not withstand the pounding of the Grand Nationals, so NASCAR drafted rules to govern the changes drivers could make to their cars. Modified stock car racing was born. Starting in 1953, the major auto makers invested heavily in stock car racing teams, believing that good results on the track would translate into better sales in the showroom. In 1957, rising production costs and tightened NASCAR rules forced the factories out of the sport. Today NASCAR racing is the fastest growing spectator sport in America.

Also on February 21,
1431 - England begins trial against Joan of Arc

1764 - John Wilkes thrown out of Engl House of Commons for "Essay on Women"

1804 - 1st locomotive, Richard Trevithick's, runs for 1st time, in Wales

1882 - NYC's 24 hour race begins, winner with most mileage in 24 hours

1937 - Initial flight of the first successful flying car, Waldo Waterman's Arrowbile.

1964 - UK flies 24,000 rolls of Beatles wallpaper to US
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on February 24, 2015, 12:45:04 am
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On this day, February 22, 1923
The 1,000,000th Chevy was produced. Chevrolet began when William Durant hired Louis Chevrolet, a Swiss race-car driver and star of the Buick Racing Team, to design a new car. Durant hoped to challenge the success of the Ford Model T with an affordable, reliable car. Chevrolet wanted to design a finer sort of automobile, however. Their product, the Classic Six, was an elegant car with a large price tag. But Durant built two more models, sturdier and cheaper, and Chevy was on its way. Durant eventually made over a million dollars in profits on his Chevrolet marque, money that allowed him to reacquire a majority interest in General Motors stock. Durant eventually merged the two companies and created GM's current configuration. Louis Chevrolet left the company before the merger, leaving only his name to benefit from the company's success.
PICTURED: Sheepshead Bay 'Harkness Handicap' 1/6/18. A 2 mile lap consisting of 50 laps. Louis Chevrolet & Frontenac rolled 7th with a time of 50 laps @ 1:03:48

February 22, 1949
Stylish Austrian race-car driver Niki Lauda was born in Vienna, Austria. Lauda is also the founder of Air Lauda, a continental European airline that features flight attendants in denim jeans and Team Lauda baseball caps.

February 22, 1959
It's difficult to talk about NASCAR without talking about the Daytona 500, and it's difficult to talk about the Daytona 500 without mentioning the Petty family. On this day in 1959, Lee Petty won the first Daytona 500 at the brand-new Daytona International Speedway, driving a new hardtop Olds 88 to a photo finish with Johnny Beauchamp. The Petty family would switch to Plymouths midway through the season that year. Richard and Lee Petty drove Plymouths, Chryslers, and Dodges for most of their remaining careers. Together the father and son team combined for 254 wins, including eight Daytona 500s. The Daytona 500 would become the premier event in NASCAR racing.


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On this day, February 23, 1958
In a bizarre twist, Argentine racing champion Juan Manuel Fangio was kidnapped by Communist guerrillas in Havana, Cuba, one day before the second Havana Grand Prix. Members of the July 26 Movement (M-26-7) and followers of Fidel Castro and Che Guevara, the kidnappers hoped to make a political statement by kidnapping the world-famous Fangio before he could defend his title at the Havana Grand Prix. "We wanted to show that Cuba was living in a situation of war against the Batista tyranny," explained Arnol Rodriguez, a member of the kidnapping team. Revolutionary Manuel Uziel, holding a revolver, approached Fangio in the lobby of his hotel and ordered the race-car driver to identify himself. Fangio reportedly thought it was a joke until Uziel was joined by a group of men carrying submachine guns. Fangio reacted calmly as the kidnappers explained to him their intention to keep him only until the race was over. After his release to the Argentine Embassy, Fangio revealed a fondness for his kidnappers, refusing to help identify them and relaying their explanation that the kidnapping was a political statement. In the meantime, the Havana Grand Prix had been marred by a terrible accident, leading Fangio to believe that he had been spared for a reason. Years later, Fangio would return to Havana on a work mission. He was received as a guest of the state, and he expressed his gratitude with quiet eloquence, "Two big dreams have come true for me: returning to Cuba and meeting Fidel Castro." Fangio was famous for winning races; he became legendary by missing one.

Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on February 26, 2015, 02:11:19 am
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February 24, 1909
The Hudson Motor Car Company, founded by Joseph Hudson, in Detroit, Michigan, was incorporated. Hudson is perhaps most famous for its impact on NASCAR racing, which it accomplished thanks to a revolutionary design innovation. In 1948, Hudson introduced the Monobuilt design. The Monobuilt consisted of a chassis and frame that were combined in a unified passenger compartment, producing a strong, lightweight design with a beneficial lower center of gravity that did not affect road clearance. Hudson called the innovation the "step-down design" because, for the first time, drivers had to step down to get into their cars. In 1951, Hudson introduced the Hornet. Fitted with a bigger engine than previous Hudson models, the Hudson Hornet became a dominant force on the NASCAR circuit. Because of its lower center of gravity, the Hornet glided around corners with relative ease, leaving its unstable competitors in the dust. For the first time a car not manufactured by the Big Three was winning big. In 1952, Hudson won 29 of 34 events. Excited by their success on the track, Hudson executives began directly backing their racing teams, providing the team cars with everything they needed to increase success. The Big Three responded, and in doing so brought about the system of industry-backed racing that has become such a prominent marketing tool today. The Hudson Hornet would dominate NASCAR racing until 1955 when rule changes led to an emphasis on horsepower over handling.

February 24, 1955
Formula 1 all-time victory leader Alain Prost was born in Saint-Chamond, France. Affectionately called "The Professor" by his fans for his cool, calculated driving style, Prost won 51 Grand Prix races during his F1 career. The French adore Prost for, among other things, his ability to uphold the country's national sporting tradition of winning on home soil. Prost won six French Grand Prix's, a record of national success second to none. Prost is perhaps best remembered for his late 1980s battles with British bulldog Nigel Mansel, and the late Brasilian superhero Ayrton Senna.


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On this day, 25 February 2008
Ashley Alan Cooper, an Australian race car driver died from severe head and internal injuries after a high speed racing accident. Preliminary investigation suggests that his car may have clipped a guard rail at over 200 km/h at the Clipsal 500 meeting in Adelaide.
Cooper began his racing career in 1998 driving Holden HQ sedans. Leading the 2005 Commodore Cup championship for most of the year, Cooper finished fourth at the final round at Eastern Creek Raceway. In 2006, Cooper was crowned V8 Utes Rookie of the Year. He competed in three rounds of the 2007 Fujitsu V8 Supercar Series, with a top 15 finish at Queensland Raceway.

February 25, 1837
Thomas Davenport, of Brandon, VT, received a patent for an "Electric Motor" ("Improvement in Propelling Machinery by Magnetism and Electro-Magnetism"); probably the first commercially successful electric motor; first to secure a US patent for his direct current motor.

February 25, 1919
Oregon, USA became first state to impose 1% tax on gasoline. Collected funds used for road construction, maintenance.

25 February 1932
Charles Anthony Standish Brooks aka Tony Brooks, a British former racing driver was born in Dukinfield, Cheshire. He was also known as the "racing dentist". He participated in 39 Formula One World Championship Grands Prix, debuting on 14 July 1956, and scored the first win by a British driver in a British car in a Grand Prix since 1923, in 1955 driving a Connaught at Syracuse in a non World Championship race. He won 6 races for Vanwall and Ferrari, secured 4 pole positions, achieved 10 podiums, and scored a total of 74 championship points. He drove for BRM but retired from the team at the end of 1961, just before their most successful season.

February 25, 1961
David Carl "Davey" Allison, a NASCAR race car driver was born in Hollywood, Florida. He was best known as the driver of the Robert Yates Racing #28 Texaco-Havoline Ford. He was the eldest of four children born to NASCAR driver Bobby Allison and wife Judy. The family moved to Hueytown, Alabama and along with Bobby's brother Donnie Allison, family friend Red Farmer, and Neil Bonnett, became known in racing circles as the Alabama Gang. He died in his newly acquired Hughes 369HS helicopter crash while flying to Talladega Superspeedway.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on February 26, 2015, 02:15:38 am
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On this day, February 26, 1945
Australian race car legend Peter Brock was born

February 26, 1903
Alexander Winton, driving his Winton Bullet, set the first speed record ever achieved at Daytona Beach, Florida. Built in 1902 the "Bullet Number 1" drove a measured mile at over 65mph. The first automobile race at Daytona was held a year earlier when Winton and his Bullet took on Ransom Olds. The race was declared a tie as both cars reached a top speed of 57mph. For hardware lovers, the "Bullet 1" carried a massive water-cooled four-cylinder engine with a displacement of 792 cubic inches. It had automatic intake valves, operated by compressed air, and an overhead cam. Winton's "Bullet 2" carried two four-cylinder engines bolted together, creating a straight eight. Winton's cars were driven by legendary speed demon Barney Oldfield, whose celebrated competitions with Ralph DePalma carried car racing through its first decade. Oldfield was America's first racing icon. Fans loved to watch him speed to victory with an unsmoked cigar clamped in his teeth.

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February 26, 1935
The Pontiac "Indian Maiden" mascot was patented by its designers Chris Klein and C. Karnstadt. Pontiac, the namesake of the General Motors manufacturing division, was a male war chief of the Ottawa tribe, who distinguished himself through his bravery in fighting the English during the French and Indian Wars. The "Indian Maiden" mascot, therefore, is either a cross-dressed representation of Pontiac or a thoughtful attempt by its designers to find him a compatible hood ornament.

February 26, 1936
Hitler introduced Ferdinand Porsche's "Volkswagen" a.k.a. Kdf-Wagen.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on February 28, 2015, 12:29:32 am
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February 27, 2008
Boyd Leon Coddington of American Hot Rod, TV series fame died due to diabetic complications. Coddington had been hospitalized in January 2008, shortly after New Year's Eve. He was discharged, but was readmitted just a few days later to Presbyterian Intercommunity Hospital in suburban California. After being readmitted, doctors performed surgery and Boyd was expected to make a complete recovery but died on February 27, 2008 due to complications that were brought on from a recent surgery along with liver and kidney complications.
Many of the next generation of customizers started their career with Coddington. Larry Erickson, later the Chief Designer of the Mustang and Thunderbird for Ford Motor Co. worked with Coddington early on, and specifically credits the CadZZilla collaboration for jump-starting his career. Legendary designer Chip Foose, and fabricator Jesse James both started their careers in his shop. Foose rose to become the president of Coddington's company Hot Rods by Boyd, but later departed to start his own firm. The two became fierce competitors, to the point that their personal relationship split. Coddington hosted the Discovery Channel show “American Hot Rod", where he competed fiercely as well with his former protegé.
Coddington's creations have won the Grand National Roadster Show's "America's Most Beautiful Roadster (AMBR)" award seven times, the Daimler-Chrysler Design Excellence award twice, and entry into both the Grand National Roadster Show Hall of Fame and the National Rod & Custom Museum Hall of Fame . In 1997, Coddington (along with Foose), was inducted into the Hot Rod Hall of Fame.
PICTURED: Brad Fanshaw and Boyd Coddington with the just finished "Smoothster" in 1995. Boyd and Brad were business partners in Boyds Wheels and Hot Rods by Boyd. Chip Foose standing on far left

February 27, 1914
In the first decade of automobile racing, one rivalry stood out above the others: the brash Barney Oldfield vs. the gentlemanly Ralph DePalma. It was DePalma who got the better of Oldfield in the 9th Vanderbilt Cup in Santa Monica, California. The Vanderbilt Cup was American racing's first tradition. The event was founded in 1904 to introduce Europe's best racers and manufacturers to the U.S. Named after the event's sponsor, William K. Vanderbilt Jr., the Vanderbilt Cup ran every year from 1904 to 1915, when race fatalities finally led Vanderbilt to shut down the event. With the amazing safety technology available in car racing today, it is hard for us to imagine just how dangerous racing was for men like Barney Oldfield and Ralph DePalma. Racers of their generation had more in common with Chuck Yeager and John Glenn than with the racers of today. Equipped with enormous engines and almost no suspension or steering technology, the pre-World War I race car was a hunk of metal on wheels capable of propelling itself over 60mph on dirt tracks. Guiding the cars through turns was as much a test of brute strength and raw courage as it was a test of skill. With death as a silent participant in every race, it is clear why a race between Barney Oldfield and Ralph DePalma was as fascinating to spectators. Oldfield, hard-nosed and streetwise would race anyone, anywhere, anytime. DePalma was a product of the system; deferential and quiet, but he was no less courageous. The rivalry would come to a head during the 1917 match races between the two men. Large-scale racing had been halted due to World War I, but head-to-head match races commanded considerable crowds. Oldfield, driving the Harry Miller designed "Golden Submarine," an aluminum-framed technological wonder, defeated DePalma and his more traditional Packard, powered by a 12-cylinder aircraft engine.

February 27, 1934
Ralph Nader was in Winsted, Connecticut. Nader would revolutionize consumer advocacy with his 1965 book, Unsafe at Any Speed: The Designed-In Dangers of the American Automobile, in which he lambasted the safety standards of the Big Three automotive manufacturers.

February 27, 1948
The Federal Trade Commission issued a restraining order, preventing the Willys-Overland Company from representing that it had developed the Jeep. Willys-Overland did, in fact, end up producing the Army vehicle that would come to be known as the Jeep; but it was the Bantam Motor Company that first presented the innovative design to the Army.

February 27, 1813 - Congress authorizes use of steamboats to transport mail

February 27, 1981 - Greatest passenger load on a commercial airliner-610 on Boeing 747

February 27, 1988 - Gulfstream G-IV goes around the world 36:08:34
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on March 02, 2015, 09:55:22 pm
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On this day, February 28, 1960
Richard Petty, the king of stock car racing, recorded his first Grand National victory at the old Charlotte, North Carolina, fairgrounds. Eight months earlier Richard had edged out his father, Lee, at the Grand National race in Lakewood, Georgia, only to watch his victory reviewed on the grounds of his own father's protest. The protest was upheld, and Lee Petty was awarded the win. It's not hard to tell how Richard developed the competitive instinct that would make him the winningest NASCAR race of all time.
PICTURE: Daytona 500 in 1960

February 28, 1903
Henry Ford hired John F. and Horace E. Dodge to supply the chassis and running gear for his 650 Ford automobiles. John and Horace, who began their business careers as bicycle manufacturers in 1897, first entered the automobile industry as manufacturers of auto parts in 1901. Manufacturing car bodies for Henry Ford and Ransom Olds, the Dodge Brothers had become the largest parts-manufacturing firm in the U.S. by 1910. In 1914, the brothers founded the Dodge Brothers Motor Car Company, and began work on their first automobiles. Dodge vehicles were known for their quality and sturdiness, and by 1919 the Dodge Brothers were among the richest men in America. Their good fortune didn't hold, however. Both brothers died of influenza in 1920. Their company was sold to a New York bank, before eventually being purchased by Chrysler in 1928. Under Chrysler's direction, Dodge became a successful producer of cars and trucks marketed for their ruggedness.

February 28, 1932
The last Ford Model A was produced, ending an era for the Ford Motor Company. The successor to the Model T, the Model A was an attempt to escape the image of bare bones transportation that had driven both the Model T's success and its ultimate failure in the market. The vastly improved Model A boasted elegant Lincoln-like styling, a peppy 40 horsepower four-cylinder engine, and, of course, a self-starting mechanism. The Model A was as affordable as its predecessor, however, and with a base price at $460, five million Model A's would roll onto American highways between 1927 and 1932.


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On this day, March 1, 1897
The Winton Motor Carriage Company was organized in Cleveland, Ohio, with Alexander Winton as president. After 12 years in the bicycle manufacturing business, Winton began producing cars with his name on them in 1896. A fiery Scotsman, Winton took the challenge to build the world's fastest automobile personally. Like Ransom Olds, he raced his own cars. Racing at Daytona Beach is said to have begun with a match race between Winton and Olds in 1902, which the two men declared a draw. A year later, Winton won a multi-car race at Daytona, driving his Winton Bullet to an average speed of 68mph and becoming the first person to break the mile-per-minute barrier. Alexander Winton's personal rivalries did not stop with Ransom Olds. In 1901, Henry Ford, after being passed over for a mechanic's job with Winton's company, defeated Winton in his first and last car race. Ford's future notoriety would depend heavily on the publicity won in his encounter with his one-time potential employer. James Ward Packard also maintained a personal rivalry with Winton. After having purchased a Winton, Packard complained about the car's reliability. Winton reportedly politely urged Packard to build his own car. Packard responded by starting his own company. In the first decade of American car racing Wintons and Packards, driven by Barney Oldfield and Ralph DePalma, respectively, would fuel the sport's greatest rivalry. In 1903, Winton drove his car from San Francisco to New York to prove the reliability of his vehicles. It was the automotive industry's most dramatic achievement up to that point as such a long trip by an automobile was unheard of in 1897 but Mr. Winton believed he could do it.

A popular anecdote sums up Winton's involvment in the early automotive industry. Faced with mechanical problems in an early Winton, a Cleveland area resident reportedly towed his Winton through the streets of Cleveland with a team of mules exhibiting a sign reading, "This is the only way you can drive a Winton." In response, Winton hired a farm wagon carrying a jackass to follow his detractor, exhibiting a sign that read, "This is the only animal unable to drive a Winton."
A must read book on Winton and his acheivement is rightfully named 'Famous but forgotten' authored by Thomas Saal and Bernard Golias This 192-page book includes numerous photographs of vintage Winton automobiles and their accomplishments in performance races. Winton's career, from bicycle manufacturer to automotive innovator to diesel-engine developer for trains, illustrates the versatility which his prodigious creativity required.


March 1, 1973
The Honda Civic was introduced to the United States market. Luckily for Honda, the introduction of the small, fuel-efficient car coincided with the oil crisis of the early 1970s. This made car owners aware of the advantages of fuel economy and the Civic became a popular alternative to the inefficient cars offered by American car companies.
Civic is the second-longest continuously-running nameplate from a Japanese manufacturer, with Toyota Corolla, introduced in 1968, taking the first spot.

March 1, 1941
The first Ford general-purpose vehicles (jeeps) rolled off the assembly line in Dearborn, Michigan to support the Allied effort in World War II. Ford employees built more than 277,000 of these off-road military vehicles.


Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on March 02, 2015, 10:00:28 pm
(http://i493.photobucket.com/albums/rr299/Sport-GT-Monoplace/Ferrari%20Sport/1947-Maranellomars-125S-LuigiBazzi.jpg) (http://s493.photobucket.com/user/Sport-GT-Monoplace/media/Ferrari%20Sport/1947-Maranellomars-125S-LuigiBazzi.jpg.html)

On this day, March 2, 1947
Enzo Ferrari drove his first 125S vehicle out of the factory gates.

March 2, 1918
Hans Ledwinka, the engineer who created the Tatra marquee, died in Munich, Germany, at the age of 89. Early in his career, Ledwinka took over engineering for Nesseldorf Wagenbau of Austria-Hungary when the founder of the company, Hugo von Roslerstamm, decided the company should enter racing. Under Ledwinka's leadership, the Rennzweier and the Type A racers were produced. The cars demonstrated modest racing success, and wide-scale production of the Type S began in 1909. Nesseldorf Wagenbau continued to grow until 1914, when, coinciding with the outbreak of WWI, it shifted to railroad production. On October 28, 1918, two weeks before the end of the war on the Western Front, the Moravian town of Nesseldorf of Austria-Hungary became the city of Koprivnicka in the newly created country of Czechoslovakia. Just after the war, Hans Ledwinka began construction of a new automobile to be marketed under the marquee Tatra, a division of the newly named Koprivnicka Wagenbau. The Tatra High Mountains are among the highest mountains in the Carpathian Mountain Range, the legendary home of Bram Stoker's Dracula. Ledwinka settled on the name Tatra in 1919 when an experimental model of his car with four-wheel brakes passed a sleigh on an icy mountain road, prompting the sleigh riders to exclaim, "This is a car for the Tatras." In 1923, the first official Tatra automobile, the Tatra T11, was completed, and Ledwinka's hope for an affordable "people's car" was realized. The reliable, rugged T11, like Ford's Model T, gave many Czechoslovakians their first opportunity to own an automobile. In 1934, Tatra achieved automotive notoriety with the introduction of the Tatra 77, the world's first aerodynamically styled automobile powered by a rear-mounted air-cooled engine.

March 2, 1925
The first nationwide highway numbering system was instituted by the joint board of state and federal highway officials appointed by the secretary of agriculture. In order to minimize confusion caused by the array of multiform state-appointed highway signs, the board created the shield-shaped highway number markers that have become a comforting sight to lost travelers in times since. Later, interstate highway numbering would be improved by colored signs and the odd-even demarcation that distinguishes between north-south and east-west travel respectively. As America got its kicks on Route 66, it did so under the aegis of the trusty shield.

March 2, 1949
The first automatic streetlight system in which the streetlights turned themselves on at dark was installed in New Milford, Connecticut, by the Connecticut Light and Power Company. Each streetlight contained an electronic device that contained a photoelectric cell capable of measuring outside light. By November of 1949, seven miles of New Milford's roads were automatically lit at dusk by a total of 190 photoelectric streetlights. No longer would the proud men of New Milford be forced to put on stilts in order to light their street lamps.

March 2, 2015
Australian racing legend, Leo Geoghegan passes away after a lengthy battle with prostate cancer. The motor racing champion, whose career began in 1956 in an early model Holden and captured an extensive range of titles including the Australian Drivers’ Championship 1970, the Australian GT Championship in 1960, the Australian Formula Junior Championship in 1963 and the Australian F2 Championship from 1973-74, also shared second place in the 1967 Gallaher 500 with his famous brother, ‘Pete’.
He capped an outstanding career with victory in the international Japan Grand Prix of 1969, driving the Lotus 39-Repco V8. Geoghegan and Lotus enjoyed a close association for many years and were renowned for the superb presentation of the team.

Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on March 04, 2015, 01:21:42 am
(http://i865.photobucket.com/albums/ab215/woodburner802/Dealers/Tucker/1-PrestonTuckerautomagnateandwifefreedoffraudcharges1023AM12350.jpg)

On this day, March 3, 1949
The postwar car market was so strong in the United States that a number of bold entrepreneurs formed independent car companies to challenge the established Big Three. Arguably the most remarkable such independent was the Tucker Corporation, founded by Preston "P.T." Tucker. Tucker, a gifted marketeer and innovator, created a phenomenon felt through the automotive industry when he released his car, the Tucker. Along with the cars, Preston Tucker sent a magazine called "Tucker Topics" along to dealers, hoping to increase the salesmen's enthusiasm for his automobile. The Tucker was equipped with a number of novel features. It had six exhaust pipes, a third headlight that rotated with the axle, and a "bomb shelter" in the backseat. Beyond the frills though, the Tucker packed a powerful punch, making 0-60mph in 10 seconds and reaching a top speed of 120mph. Great anticipation surrounded the awaited release of the Tucker, but in 1949, before his cars could reach their market, the Securities and Exchange Commission indicted Preston Tucker on 31 counts of investment fraud. Tucker had only produced 51 cars. On this day in 1949, the Tucker Corporation went into receivership, and the Tucker automobile became merely a historical footnote.
PICTURED: After the verdict : Preston Tucker, auto magnate, and wife, freed of fraud charges, 10.23 AM, 23rd Jan 1950

March 3, 1931 
"Star Spangled Banner" officially becomes US national anthem

March 3, 1932
Alfieri Maserati died at the age of 44 from complications resulting form injuries incurred in a 1927 racing accident.

March 3, 1937
Australia snatch series against England 3-2 after being 2-0 down

March 3, 1972
Sir William Lyons, founder of Jaguar Motors, retired as Chairman of Jaguar Cars Ltd. Lyons got his start making motorcycle sidecars in Blackpool, England. In 1926, he co-founded the Swallow Sidecar and Coachbuilding Company with William Walmsley. Recognizing the demand for automobiles, Lyons eventually built wooden frames for the Austin Seven Car, calling his creation the Austin Swallow. Spurred on by the warm reception of his Austin Swallows, Lyons began building his own cars, which he called Standard Swallows. In 1934, his company, now SS Cars Ltd., released a line of cars called Jaguars. After WWII, Lyons dropped the "SS" initials that reminded people of the Nazi SS soldiers. Jaguar Cars Ltd. went on to produce a number of exquisite sports cars and roadsters, among them the XK 120, the D Type, and the XK-E or E Type. Perhaps Lyons' most monumental achievement, the E Type was the fastest sports car in the world when it was released in 1961. With a top speed of 150mph and a 0-60mph of 6.5 seconds, the Jaguar made a remarkable 17 miles to the gallon and suffered nothing in its looks. In spite of Jaguar's distinguished record on the race track, the company is associated most with the beautiful lines of its car bodies appropriate considering Lyons's first offering to the automobile industry was a wooden frame bolted to another man's car. After a series of bouyouts by various auto companies, now its owned by Indian Conglomerate 'TATA'.

1943 - Battle of the Bismarck Sea during WWII: Australian and American airforces devastate Japanese navy convoy

1955 - Elvis Presley made his 1st TV appearance

1969 - Apollo 9 launched for 151 Earth orbits (10 days)

1991 - Boon completes 10th Test Cricket century, 109* v WI at Kingston

1991 - LA Police severly beat motorist Rodney King, captured on amateur video

1997 - The tallest free-standing structure in the Southern Hemisphere, Sky Tower in downtown Auckland, New Zealand, opens after two-and-a-half years of construction.

2005 - Steve Fossett becomes the first person to fly an airplane around the world solo without any stops without refueling - a journey of 40,234 km/25,000 mi completed in 67 hours and 2 minutes.

2013 - A 2 year old US girl becomes the first child born with HIV to be cured
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on March 04, 2015, 06:19:50 pm
(http://i1107.photobucket.com/albums/h389/Archer46176/Studebaker%20Museum/783696087_photobucket_68341_.jpg) (http://s1107.photobucket.com/user/Archer46176/media/Studebaker%20Museum/783696087_photobucket_68341_.jpg.html)

On this day, March 4, 1888
Knute Kenneth Rockne, football coach at the University of Notre Dame and namesake of the Studebaker's Rockne brand, was born in Voss, Norway. Studebaker, based along with Notre Dame in South Bend, Indiana, named the Rockne brand after the winningest coach in college football history and arguably the most important man in town and was once a salesman for Studebaker. The low-priced Rockne was produced between 1932 to 1933. However, unlike Coach Rockne, the Rockne never enjoyed success as the Great Depression put the squeeze on all U.S. markets.
March 4, 1887
PICTURED: The 1932 Studebaker Rockne

The Daimler "benzin motor carriage" made its first test run in Esslingen and Cannstatt, Germany. It was Gottlieb Daimler's first four-wheel motor vehicle. The "benzin" has nothing to do with Carl Benz; at that time Gottlieb Daimler was Carl Benz's major competitor. Daimler, an engineer whose passion was the engine itself, had created and patented the first gasoline-powered, water-cooled, internal combustion engine in 1885. In Daimler's engine, water circulated around the engine block, preventing the engine from overheating. The same system is used in most of today's automobiles. Daimler's first four-wheel motor vehicle had a one-cylinder engine and a top speed of 10 miles per hour. By 1899, Daimler's German competitor, Benz and Company, had become the world's largest car manufacturer. In the same year, a wealthy Austrian businessman named Emile Jellinek saw a Daimler Phoenix win a race in Nice, France. So impressed was he with Daimler's car that he offered to buy 36 vehicles from Daimler should he create a more powerful model, but requested that the car be named after his daughter, Mercedes. Gottlieb Daimler would never see the result of his business deal with Jellinek, but his corporation would climb to great heights without him. The Mercedes began a revolution in the car manufacturing industry. The new car was lower to the ground than other vehicles of its time, and it possessed a wider wheelbase for improved cornering. It had four speeds, including reverse, and it reached a top speed of 47mph. The first Mercedes had a four-cylinder engine and is generally considered the first modern car. In the year of its birth, the Mercedes set a world speed record of 49.4mph in Nice, France--the very course that was responsible for its marque's conception. By 1905, Mercedes cars had reached speeds of 109mph. Forever reluctant to enter car racing, Carl Benz realized he must compete with Daimler's Mercedes to preserve his company's standing in the automotive industry. For 20 years, Mercedes and Benz competed on racetracks around the world. In 1926, the Daimler and Benz corporations merged. The two founders never met.

March 4, 1902
The American Automobile Association (AAA) was organized. The American Motor League (AML) had been the first organization to address the problems that commonly plague motorists, but it fell apart due to a diverse membership that featured powerful car makers who wanted to limit the AML only to issues that affected car manufacturing and engineering. However, soon trade groups such as the Association of Automotive Engineers took its place, paving the way for more specialized automobile organizations. AAA was formed to deal with the concerns of the motorists themselves, and has been America's largest organization of motorists since.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on March 05, 2015, 09:07:33 pm
(http://i787.photobucket.com/albums/yy156/BarryReeder/henryfordfirstcar.jpg) (http://s787.photobucket.com/user/BarryReeder/media/henryfordfirstcar.jpg.html)

On this day, March 5, 1875
The Wisconsin state legislature offered a $10,000 reward to any man who could supply "a cheap and practical substitute for the use of horse and other animals on highway and farm," documenting that the search for a motorized wagon was officially under way by 1875. By 1879, George Selden had already sought a patent for his self-propelled gas-burning vehicle. Ransom Eli Olds, founder of Oldsmobile, created his first steam-propelled automobile in 1887. Frank and Charles Duryea drove their first motorized wagon in 1893. The Duryea brothers would eventually be credited with operating the first auto production line when they produced and sold 13 cars in 1896. Elwood Haynes of Kokomo, Indiana, claimed to have produced the first "real" car in 1894. Haynes contended that the Duryeas had only managed to attach an engine to a wagon. In short, the historical bounty for the creation of the automobile was a cup to be shared by all. Legally, however, and later financially, George Selden won the first prize. In 1895, Selden received U.S. Patent No. 549,160 for his "road engine." With the granting of the patent, Selden, whose designs were generally inferior to those of his contemporary automotive pioneers, won a monopoly on the concept of combining an internal combustion engine with a carriage. Although Selden never became an auto manufacturer, every automaker would have to pay him a percentage of their profits for the right to construct a motor car. In 1903, Henry Ford refused to pay Selden the percentage, arguing that his design had nothing to do with Selden's. After a long drawn-out legal case that ended in 1911, the New York Court of Appeals upheld Selden's patent for all cars of the particular out-dated construction he originally described, and in doing so ended Selden's profitable reign as the father of the automobile. Ironically, it wasn't until Ford's Model T that the car became a significant substitute for "the horse and other animals" as stipulated in the aforementioned challenge issued by the Wisconsin legislature. By that time, Henry Ford didn't need the $10,000.
PICTURED: Henry Ford's first car

March 5, 1658
Antoine de la Mothe, Le Sieur de Cadillac, namesake of Cadillac cars, was born in Gascogny, France. Cadillac was the explorer responsible for mapping the Great Lakes region of North America for the French crown. He is credited as the founder of Detroit, Michigan, which today is affectionately known as the Motor City.

March 5, 1929
Fire destroyed the Los Angeles Automobile Show. Over 320 new cars, including the Auburn Motor Company's only Auburn Cabin Speedster, were lost in the flames.

March 5, 1929
Erik Carlsson, aka "Carlsson på taket" ("Carlsson on the roof"), was born in Trollhättan, Sweden and was a rally driver for Saab. Because of his public relations work for Saab, he is also known as Mr. Saab.

March 5, 1929
David Dunbar Buick, a Scottish-born American inventor best known for founding the Buick Motor Company died. He was 74. He was born in Arbroath, Angus, Scotland moving to Detroit, Michigan at the age of two when his parents emigrated to the United States.

5 March 1977
Tom Price, British Grand Prix racer died during the racing accident of 1977 South African Grand Prix at Kyalami.

March 5, 1995
Gregg Hansford, Australian motorcycle and touring car racer died while competing in a Supertouring race in 1995 at Phillip Island. Hansford's Ford Mondeo slid off the track and hit a tyre wall at high speed. The car bounced back onto the track where he was hit by Mark Adderton's Peugeot 405 at over 200 km/h. Hansford died moments after the impact.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on March 06, 2015, 09:26:12 pm
(http://i865.photobucket.com/albums/ab215/woodburner802/34-dario-resta-peugeot-1916.jpg)

On this day, March 6, 1915
Dario Resta, driving a Peugeot, won the 10th Vanderbilt Cup Race at the Pan-Pacific International Speedway in San Francisco, California. The Vanderbilt Cup, the first international car race in America, was organized in 1904 to introduce Europe's best drivers and manufacturers to the U.S. Named after its founder, millionaire racing enthusiast William K. Vanderbilt Jr., the Vanderbilt Cup became the world's premier racing event after laws in Europe, designed to protect spectators, restricted the level of competition at venues there. The first Vanderbilt Cup was won by George Heath, a Frenchman, in a Panhard automobile. Heath averaged 52.2mph over the course of three 10-mile laps in Hicksville, New York. French cars dominated the event until 1908 when George Robertson drove the 90-horsepower Locomobile, a.k.a Old 16, to victory in the fourth Vanderbilt Cup. It was the first victory in an international racing event by an American car. The Vanderbilt Cup moved to Savannah, Georgia, in 1910, and later out to California. The race was christened with a French victory, and it would be laid to rest with a French victory. Dario Resta won the final Vanderbilt Cup in 1916 driving his Peugeot. That year Resta also won the Indianapolis 500 and the 100-mile Chicago Cup Challenge--during which he became the first man to average over 100mph over a race of that distance.
PICTURED: Dario Resta in his Peugeot Indy car

March 6, 1896
Charles B. King tested his automobile on the streets of Detroit, Michigan, becoming the first man to drive a car in the Motor City. While driving up and down Woodward Avenue his Horseless Carriage broke down, speculators responded by telling him to "get a horse".

March 6, 1936
American industrailist and race car driver Bob Akin was born in North Tarrytown, New York.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on March 08, 2015, 01:02:11 am
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On this day, March 7, 1916
The manufacturing firms of Karl Rapp and Gustav Otto merged to form the Bayerische Flugzeugwerke AG (Bavarian Aircraft Works). The company would later become the Bayerische Motor-Werke (Bavarian Motor Works or BMW). As the original name suggests, BMW began as a manufacturer of aircaft engines. In 1923, BMW built its first motorcycle. The BMW R12, a classic-looking BMW motorcycle, was the first motorcycle to have a telescopic hydraulic front fork, providing a smoother ride and better contact with the road. BMW is still the leader in motorcycle design and production in Europe. In 1929, BMW built its first car, the Dixi, in a factory in Eisenach, Germany. Prior to opening the factory in Eisenach, all BMW products had been manufactured in Munich. By 1938, BMW was racing in the biggest car races in Europe. The 328 won its class at the Mille Miglia Italian road race. The outbreak of World War II saw BMW, like its U.S. counterparts, switch production to war manufacturing. BMW facilities were destroyed by Allied bombing during World War II. After the peace, a three-year ban was imposed on BMW by the Allies for its part in the war. The BMW R24 motorcycle became, with its release in 1948, the company's first post-war product. BMW completed its first postwar car, the 501, in 1951. BMW is still one of the world's leading automobile manufacturers. The company is noted for its innovations in the field of ABS, Anti-Lock Breaking Systems.
PICRURED: Today's BMW on the track

March 7, 1903
C.S. Rolls, driving a Mors automobile on a private estate in Nottinghamshire, England, ran a record flying kilometer at 84.84mph. He himself disallowed the record, noting as an objection the favorable tailwind and gradual slope of the course.

March 7, 1932
The Communist Party of America organized the "March on Hunger"; the procession traveled from downtown Detroit to the Ford Motor Company's River Rouge Plant in order to protest the company's labor record. When police and firemen were unable to disperse the thousands gathered at River Rouge, Ford strongman Harry Bennet, notorious for his mob tactics of labor management, ordered his "servicemen" to quell the crowd with fire hoses. Defying the freezing temperatures and icy water, the crowd refused to give up its protest. Bennet, who ruled Ford's enterprise with nothing short of terrorist tactics, confronted the crowd, ordering them to disperse once and for all. The determined crowd, unaware that they were faced with their nemesis, began to shout, "We want Bennet. And he's in that building." Bennett corrected their mistake, and for his trouble he was showered with bricks and slag pieces. He was struck in the head during the barrage. Before he fell to the ground, the combat-ready Bennett pulled Joseph York, a Young Communist League organizer, to the ground on top of him. Seeing Bennett bleeding profusely from his head, the police opened fire on the unarmed protesters. York and three other protesters were killed. Ford's trouble with labor unions came to a head five years later when Roosevelt's New Deal guaranteed the workers the right to join a union. Again Bennett would be at the center of a violent confrontation at the River Rouge complex.

March 7, 1938
Janet Guthrie, the first woman race driver to qualify and compete in both the Indianapolis 500 and the Daytona 500. was born in Iowa.

7 March 1947
Walter Röhrl, German rally legend was born in Regensburg, Bavaria.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on March 10, 2015, 12:39:19 am
(http://i280.photobucket.com/albums/kk171/crabber1967/Daytona%20Historic/1958-FireballFranceNewDaytona.jpg) (http://s280.photobucket.com/user/crabber1967/media/Daytona%20Historic/1958-FireballFranceNewDaytona.jpg.html)

On this day, March 8, 1936
Daytona Beach, Florida, staged its first race strictly for stock cars on a combination beach and public roadway course. The race is remembered as the impetus for today's NASCAR. However, race or no race, NASCAR never would have come into being without the efforts of Bill France. Having moved to Daytona in 1934, Bill France opened a garage there. He fixed and raced cars, finishing fifth in Daytona's original race. The city claimed it lost money on the event and enthusiasm for city-sponsored racing waned. The next year the Daytona Elks persuaded the city to stage a Labor Day road race for stock cars. The city lost money again. At that point, Bill France and local club owner Charlie Reese took over the promotion for the Daytona race. With Reese's money and France's work, the race established itself as a successful enterprise. Racing halted during the war, but afterward France returned to Daytona Beach and persisted at race promotion. Reese died in 1945. France went on to promote races all over the South. In 1946, he staged a National Championship race at the Old Charlotte Speedway. A news editor objected to France's calling a race a National Championship without any organized sanctioning body. France responded by forming the National Championship Stock Car Circuit (NCSCC) in 1946. On December 14, 1947, France called a meeting to reorganize the growing NCSCC. Racing officials gathered at the Streamline Hotel in Daytona Beach to hear France call for major changes in the operation of the circuit. He demanded more professionalism and suggested that the organization provide insurance for drivers and strict rules for the race cars and tracks. A new organization to be incorporated later that year as the National Association for Stock Car Auto Racing (NASCAR) emerged from the meeting, with Bill France, former mechanic, as president.
PICTURED: 1959 Unfinished Daytona track - test - 2
Left [sitting] is Big Bill France and far right is Fireball Roberts with their two passengers [the gentleman in the suit appears to be Jim Stephens] who took a run in a 1959 Pontiac around the banks of the yet-to-be-paved Daytona Speedway.

March 8, 1969
The Pontiac Firebird Trans Am was introduced. The Firebird Trans Am was just one in a series of muscle cars released by Pontiac in the 1960s, including the Grand Prix and the GTO. It all began in 1959 when Pontiac hired a young car designer named John DeLorean. DeLorean's designs increased sales for Pontiac by 27 percent between 1962 and 1968. The Grand Prix and the Firebird accounted for half of the gain. On the basis of its muscle cars, Pontiac ruled the youth market of the late 1960s and early 1970s. The Trans Am, originally a limited model Firebird, would become a symbol in the muscle car niche of automobile manufacturing.


(http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v614/CaptainComet/MCCI%202011%20Roundup%20Dearborn%20Michigan/PICT0064-1.jpg) (http://smg.photobucket.com/user/CaptainComet/media/MCCI%202011%20Roundup%20Dearborn%20Michigan/PICT0064-1.jpg.html)

On this day, March 9, 1964
The first regular production Mustangs rolled off the Dearborn Assembly Plant line in Michigan.
PICTURED: The Mustang concept that never made production along with a 1965 Mustang convertible at the rear

March 9, 1901
A fire destroyed the Olds Motor Works factory in Detroit, Michigan. Legend holds that Olds employee James Brady pushed a Regular Runabout, affectionately called the Curved Dash, out of the building to safety. Over the course of the previous year, Olds had developed over 11 models for cars, all of which varied greatly in price and design. He had reportedly not decided which Olds models on which to focus the company's production capability, but, as the fire destroyed all but one prototype, fate decided that the Runabout would be the first major production Olds. The Runabout, a small buggy with lightweight wheels and a curved dashboard powered by a one-cylinder engine, not dissimilar from today's lawnmower engines, became the Olds Motor Company's primary automobile. The Runabout maxed out at 20mph. Olds later viewed the fire as a miracle, a sign that the Runabout would make his fortune. He expressed his enthusiasm for the little car, "My horseless carriage is no passing fad. It never kicks, never bites, never tires on long runs, never sweats in hot weather, and doesn't require care when not in use. It eats only when it's on the road. And no road is too tough for the Olds Runabout." In preparation for his success, Olds contracted other companies for parts to comprise his Runabout and, in doing so, he revolutionized the automobile industry. Previously, all cars had been built from start to finish on one site. Olds' methods allowed for an assembly line in which parts were produced outside his factory and systematically assembled in his own factories. Among Olds subcontracted partners were the Dodge Brothers; Henry Leland, who founded Lincoln and Cadillac; and Fred Fisher, whose family produced bodies for General Motors. The Olds Runabout sold for $650.

March 9, 1950
Racer Danny Sullivan was born in Louisville, Kentucky. Sullivan dominated Indy Car racing in the 1980s driving Penske cars. Danny Sullivan won the 1985 Indy 500 after a full-circle spin on the track.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on March 10, 2015, 09:05:12 pm
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On this day, March 10, 1927
Robert Kearns, inventor who won suits against auto giants is born in Gary, Indiana. He patented a design for a type of windshield wiper and later won multi-million dollar judgments against Chrysler and Ford for using his concept without permission. Kearns’ invention, the intermittent windshield wiper, enabled wipers to move at timed intervals, rather than constantly swiping back and forth. Intermittent wipers aided drivers in light rain or mist and today are a standard feature of most cars. Kearns’ real-life David versus Goliath story about taking on the auto giants was made into a movie titled “Flash of Genius” that opened in 2008 and starred Greg Kinnear.

March 10, 1972
Matthew Roy Kenseth, an American stock car driver was born in Cambridge, Wisconsin. Matt currently drives the #17 DeWalt Ford in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series for Roush Fenway Racing. He is currently the defending Daytona 500 champion, having won a rain-shortened race in 2009, the first Daytona 500 win for the Roush Fenway Racing team. Kenseth followed that up with a win at California Speedway moving his win list up to 19 in Sprint Cup.

March 10, 1975
Lyne Bessette, a Canadian professional bicycle racer was born in Lac Brome, Quebec. A two-time member of the Canadian Olympic team (2000 and 2004), she has twice won the prestigious Tour de l'Aude Feminin (1999 and 2001) as well as the 2001 Women's Challenge.

March 10, 2003
Barry Sheene, a British former World Champion Grand Prix motorcycle road racer died of cancer of the stomach and esophagus.
Sheene is credited with the invention the motorcycle back protector, with a prototype model he made himself out of old helmet visors, arranged so they could curve in one direction, but not the other. Sheene gave the prototype along with all rights to the Italian company Dainese - they and other companies have manufactured back protectors since then.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on March 12, 2015, 10:26:09 am
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On this day, March 11, 1885
Sir Malcolm Campbell, land-speed record holder, is born in Chiselhurst, Kent, England, on this day. Campbell's thirst for speed was evident early in his life. He won three gold medals in the London-Edinburgh motorcycle trials as a young man. However, Campbell gained his greatest fame by way of his quest to attain the landspeed record. Over the course of two decades, he battled with Major H. O. C. Segrave for sole possession of the land-speed title. He received worldwide attention when he flew his Bluebird to South Africa in search of a flat racing surface superior in safety to the beach at Daytona. He ended up at Verneuk Pan, a massive salt flat in South Africa's interior. Verneuk Pan, flat as it was, proved to be too rough a surface for Campbell's tires; but having already made the extraordinary trip, Campbell's people built a road on the flat and raced the car. Over the course of his career, Campbell set six land-speed records in various types of vehicles, all christened "Blue Bird." After eclipsing the 300mph barrier on land at the age of 50, Campbell turned his attention to boat racing and broke a number of water-speed records. For his lifetime of achievement in international speed events, Campbell was knighted by Queen Elizabeth II. Campbell passed his thirst for speed on to his son, Donald, who was the first person to set both land and water speed records in the same year.
PICTURED: The Blue Bird driven by the young Donald Campbell accompanied his father (Sir Malcolm Campbell) at the Bonneville Salt Flats of Utah on 3 September 1935 where the 300mph barrier fell by a bare mile-per-hour, crowning Sir Malcolm Campbell's record-breaking career

March 11, 1927
The Flatheads Gang staged the first armored truck holdup in U.S. history on the Bethel Road, seven miles out of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, on the way to Coverdale. The armored truck, carrying $104,250 of payroll money for the Pittsburgh Terminal Coal Company, drove over a mine planted under the roadbed by the road bandits. The car blew up and five guards were badly injured. It was staged by their ring leader, Paul Jaworski.

March 11, 1968
Jerod O. Shelby, the founder of the American supercar automobile manufacturer Shelby SuperCars, was born in Richland, Washington. He is not related to car designer Carroll Shelby.

March 11, 2009
The Toyota Motor Company announces that it has sold over 1 million gas-electric hybrid vehicles in the U.S. under its six Toyota and Lexus brands. The sales were led by the Prius, the world’s first mass-market hybrid car, which was launched in Japan in October 1997 and introduced in America in July 2000.

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On this day, March 12, 1952
Mercedes introduced the 300SL to the press. With a sleek rounded body, gull-wing doors and a detachable steering wheel, the 300SL created quite a buzz. As a race car, the 300SL enjoyed paramount success, capturing victories at Le Mans, the German Grand Prix, and the Carrera PanAmericana in Mexico. However, despite its racing success, the 300SL race car will forever be remembered for its role in car racing's greatest tragedy. Careering out of control in the 1955 race at Le Mans, the 300SL crashed into the gallery. Eighty spectators died and, in respect to the victims of the accident, Mercedes-Benz pulled its cars out of racing competition for nearly three decades. Two years after the introduction of the 300SL, Mercedes introduced the 300SL coupe to the public. A stylish sports car also characterized by its gull-wing doors, the coupe was a consumer version of the 300SL race car. With a six-cylinder engine and a top speed of 155mph, the two-door coupe created a sensation among wealthy car buyers who actually waited in line to buy it. However, because of the impracticality of the gull-wing doors, the company only manufactured 1,400 300SL coupes. Nevertheless, the 300SL coupe is widely considered one of the most impressive sports cars of the decade.

March 12, 1831
Clement Studebaker was born in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania. Clement and his brother, Henry Studebaker, founded H. & C. Studebaker, a blacksmith and wagon building business in South Bend, Indiana. The Studebaker brothers made their fortune manufacturing carriages for the Union army during the Civil War. By the end of the war, the Studebaker Brothers Manufacturing Company had become the world's largest manufacturer of horse-drawn carriages. With the advent of the automobile, Studebaker converted its business to car manufacturing, becoming one of the larger independent automobile manufacturers. Another major war would affect the company's fortune almost a century after its founders had benefited from the demand caused by the Civil War. During World War II, Studebaker manufactured aircraft engines, trucks, and amphibious vehicles for the war effort and emphasized their patriotic role by releasing cars called "The President," "The Champion," and "The Commander." Like many of the independents, Studebaker fared well during the war by producing affordable family cars. As their advertisement claimed, "Studebaker is building an unlimited quantity of airplane engines, military trucks and other material for national defense... and a limited number of passenger cars which are the finest Studebaker has ever produced." However, after the war, the Big Three, bolstered by their new government-subsidized production facilities, were too much for many of the independents, and Studebaker was no exception. Post WWII competition drove Studebaker to its limits, and the company merged with the Packard Corporation in 1954. The merger did not help matters and production of Packards ended in 1958. After a brief respite with the introduction of the popular, compact Studebaker Lark in 1959, the company again suffered financial troubles. Finally, in late 1963, Studebaker was forced to close its South Bend, Indiana, plant. An Ontario plant remained open until 1966, when Studebaker produced its last car, a blue and white Cruiser.

March 12, 1921
Gianni Agnelli, Italian industrialist and grandson of FIAT founder Giovanni Agnelli was born in Villar Perosa, near Turin He was the principal shareholder of Fiat. As the head of Fiat, he controlled 4.4% of Italy's GNP, 3.1% of its industrial workforce, and 16.5% of its industrial investment in research.

March 12, 1755
1st steam engine in America installed, to pump water from a mine

March 12, 1904
1st main line electric train in UK (Liverpool to Southport)

March 12, 1913
Foundation stone of the Australian capital in Canberra was laid

March 12, 1935
England establishes 30 MPH speed limit for towns & villages
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on March 14, 2015, 12:16:24 am
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On this day, March 13, 1944
Charles Sorensen resigned as the vice president of the Ford Motor Company. Sorensen had been Henry Ford's longtime right-hand man. Tall and handsome, Sorensen became a darling of the national press corps during World War II. He was in charge of Ford's wartime production; and the Willow Run plant that produced B-24 Liberator bombers was Sorensen's project. Originally, Ford had been contracted to produce subassemblies for United Aircraft, but Sorensen demanded that Ford be able to produce entire planes. He promised the government 500 planes per month, a figure nearly three times as great as United Aircraft's production potential. In return, he was rewarded with a huge contract which included $200 million for the construction of the Willow Run facility. Willow Run, after a rocky beginning, became a heroic success story, a symbol of America's role as the "great arsenal of democracy." The plant eventually reached a production level of one bomber per hour. With Willow Run's success came attention for Sorensen. In 1940, he appeared in Time and Newsweek, and in 1942, Fortune Magazine ran a long adulatory article entitled "Sorensen of the Rouge." Sorensen himself admitted that his popularity may have caused his departure from Ford, "My ability to keep out of the public eye was one reason I stayed as long as I did at Ford while others left." In 1943, Henry Ford promoted Harry Bennet, his longtime labor enforcer, to a position above Sorensen. Realizing that he had fallen from favor, the graceful Sorensen resigned from Ford.

March 13, 1946
UAW and General Motors agreed to a settle a strike which had lasted from November 1945 until March of 1946; 175,00 strikers agreed to head back to work; walkout engineered by UAW chief Walter Reuther; agitated for higher pay for GM's 320,000 employees, looked to consolidate his power in auto union; in coming months leaders in various industries proved successful in drive for price increases, led to inflation, wiped out workers' wage gains.

March 13, 1969
The Walt Disney studio released The Love Bug. Directed by Robert Stevenson, the film starred "Herbie," a lovable Volkswagen bug with a personality. Abused by the evil race-car driver "Thorndyke" (David Thomlinson), Herbie is rescued by the young good-guy race-car driver "Jim" (Dean Jones). Grateful for his rescue, Herbie rewards the hapless Jim by winning one race after another on his driver's behalf. The excitement begins when the ruthless Thorndyke plots to get Herbie back by any means necessary. Based on a story by Gordon Buford, The Love Bug inspired several sequels, including Herbie Rides Again, Herbie Goes To Monte Carlo, Herbie Goes Bananas, and Herbie: Fully Loaded. By becoming one of the biggest grossing films of 1969, The Love Bug allayed any fears that the Disney Studio would collapse without the presence of the recently deceased Walt Disney. The movie became a children's film classic and enhanced the Volkswagen Beetle's image as a quirky car endowed with more than solid engineering.

March 13, 1980
Henry Ford II resigned as Chairman of the Ford Motor Company after naming Philip Caldwell his successor. With Ford's resignation, the era of the Ford family as an automotive dynasty temporarily ended. Henry II was, like his grandfather, a tough and formidable leader. He reorganized the company and instituted a modern bookkeeping system. His father, Edsel, had been considered a dreamer by Henry I. Edsel had spent much of his energy designing cars and improving Ford's labor relationships. He hadn't been a hard-edged businessman and often drew his father's criticism on those grounds. Like the archetypal ruling families of England, the Ford family followed its own generational legacy: Henry the Great, Edsel the Confessor, and Henry II. It sounds like Shakespeare.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on March 14, 2015, 09:53:10 pm

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On this day, March 14, 1924
John “Jack” Mack, who co-founded Mack trucks along with his brothers, what would become one of North America’s largest makers of heavy-duty trucks is killed when his car collides with a trolley in Pennsylvania.
In the early afternoon of March 14, Jack Mack was enroute to a business meeting in Weatherly, Pennsylvania in his Chandler coupe. His car became involved in an accident with a trolley car of the Lehigh Valley Transit Company, which was crossing the road diagonally. Jack was killed almost instantly when his light car, being pushed off the road ahead of the trolley, was caught against a heavy pole and crushed like an egg shell. His body was interred in Fairview Cemetery in Allentown, just above the former Mack plant on 10th Street.

March 14, 1914
Stock-car racer Lee Arnold Petty was born near Randleman, North Carolina, on this day. Now famous as the father of Richard Petty--the all-time "winningest" racer in NASCAR history--Lee Petty was no slouch in his own day. In 1959, Lee Petty won the first Daytona 500 at the brand new Daytona International Speedway driving a new hardtop Olds 88 to a photo finish with Johnny Beauchamp. The Pettys would switch to Plymouths midway through the season that year. Lee and Richard Petty drove Plymouths, Chryslers, and Dodges for most of their remaining careers. Together the father-and-son team combined for 254 wins, including eight Daytona 500s. However, Lee and Richard also took father and son competition to its extremes. The embodiment of stock car racing's hard-nosed past, Lee Petty never lost a race on account of being too kind to his competitors, even if his competitors were family. Richard Petty remembers his quest to win his first NASCAR race at the Grand National Exposition in Toronto, "Cotton Owens was leading and daddy was second. They came up on me and I moved over to let them pass. Cotton went on, but daddy bumped me in the rear and my car went right into the wall." Richard finished in 17th place. In 1959, Richard thought he had won his first race after finishing first in the Grand National at Lakewood, Georgia. However, Lee, who finished second in the event, protested his son's victory. The protest was upheld, and Lee won the race. Before you call Richard Petty "The King," remember "The King" isn't an absolute monarch when his daddy is around. Richard's son Kyle is also a successful NASCAR racer, and no doubt benefits from the family's competitive edge.

March 14, 1962
GM produced 75-millionth US-made car.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on March 16, 2015, 12:39:42 am
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On this day, March 15, 1906
Rolls-Royce Ltd. was officially registered with Charles S. Rolls and F. Henry Royce as directors. In 1904, Henry Royce, the founder of his self-titled electrical and mechanical engineering firm, built his first car. In May of that year, he met Charles Rolls, whose company sold cars in London. The two men agreed that Royce Limited would manufacture a line of cars to be sold exclusively by C.S. Rolls & Co. The cars bore the name Rolls-Royce. Success with their partnership led to the formation of the Rolls-Royce Company. In 1906, just after the company was
organized, it released the six-cylinder 40/50 horsepower Silver Ghost. The car was enthusiastically heralded by the British press as "the best car in the world." From its formation to the start of World War I in 1914, Rolls-Royce focused on one product--the Silver Ghost. The war forced new demands on the British economy, and Rolls-Royce shifted its manufacturing emphasis to airplane engines. Henry Royce's designs are credited with having provided half of the total horsepower used in the Allies' air war against Germany, and World War II transformed Rolls-Royce into a major force in aerospace engineering. In 1931, Rolls-Royce absorbed Bentley, and, since then, it has produced all cars bearing that name. Together Rolls-Royce and Bentley are synonymous with luxurious handmade cars.
PICTURED: Charles Rolls sitting on a 1898 PANHARD 8hp

March 15, 1911
Gustave Otto, the son of internal combustion engine pioneer Nikolaus Otto, organized Gustav Otto Flugmaschinenfabrik Muchen. Otto's Munich-based this aero-engineering firm would later merge with Karl Rapp's firm to form the Bayerische Motoren-Werke, or BMW.

March 15, 1968
Construction starts on the north tunnel of the Eisenhower/Johnson Memorial Tunnel on Interstate 70 in Colorado. Located at an altitude of more than 11,000 feet, the project was an engineering marvel and became the world’s highest vehicular tunnel when it was completed in 1979. Four months after opening, one million vehicles had passed through the tunnel; today, some 10 million vehicles drive through it each year.

March 15, 1990
The Ford Explorer was introduced to the public. One of the first generation sports utility vehicles released by the Big Three in the early 1990s, the Ford Explorer became one of the company's best-selling models almost immediately. Like sports cars before them, "Sport Utility Vehicles" (SUVs) became the chosen automobiles for the glamorous world of entertainment, and their virtues were even extolled in pop music. Ice Cube rapped, "I put the petal to the floor of my two-tone Ford Explorer," in his song "Down For Whatever." However, SUVs have come under fire recently for the relatively high proportion of deaths resulting from accidents involving them and their fuel guzzling habits.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on March 17, 2015, 12:02:13 am
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On this day, March 16, 1961
Jaguar Cars Ltd. introduced the XK-E, or E-Type, at the Geneva Auto Show. The E-Type was the successor to the C- and D-Type Jaguar that had earned the company's reputation for racing excellence. The D-Type, with a top speed of 170mph, captured first place at the 24-hour race at Le Mans in 1955, 1956, and 1957. In 1956, Queen Elizabeth II knighted Sir William Lyons, Jaguar's founder, to recognize his achievement in bringing Jaguar to the heights of the international sports-car world. In 1957 a massive fire at the Jaguar factory halted the further development of Jaguar race cars. The disaster left many wondering whether Jaguar Motors had not already seen its best days in the successful 1950s. The release of the E-Type in 1961 signaled an impressive return by the British racing giant. The E-Type did everything the D-Type had done and more. With a top speed of 150mph and a 0 to 60 time of 6.5 seconds, the E-Type engine growled loudly. What's more, the E-Type averaged an unheard of 17 miles per gallon. By the mid 1960s, the E-Type had become the most famous sports car in the world; today the E-Type is cherished as a car of beautiful lines and precision engineering.

March 16, 2001
Robert "Bob" Wollek, nicknamed "Brilliant Bob", a race car driver from Strasbourg, France was killed in a road accident in Florida while riding a bicycle to prepare for the 12 Hours of Sebring. He was struck from behind by a van driven by an elderly driver from Okeechobee, Florida at approximately 4:30 p.m. He was 57, prior to his death, he announced he would retire from racing to serve as an ambassador for Porsche, and was due to sign this agreement upon returning home after Sebring. On race day, the organizers held a one minute silence in memory of Wollek. Wollek was due to start in the Porsche 996 GT3-RS with Johnny Mowlem and Michael Petersen, however out of respect the car was withdrawn from the race.

March 16, 2003
Race car driver Ricky Craven wins the Darlington 500, crossing the finish line .002 seconds ahead of Kurt Busch for the closest recorded finish in NASCAR history. In May 2009, more than 5,000 racing fans voted Craven’s victory the most memorable moment in the history of South Carolina’s challenging Darlington Raceway, nicknamed “The Track Too Tough to Tame.”
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on March 17, 2015, 08:30:08 pm
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On this day, March 17, 1949
The first car to carry the Porsche family name was introduced at the 19th International Automobile Show in Geneva, Switzerland. After serving a two-year prison sentence for his participation as an engineer in Hitler's regime, Ferdinand Porsche and his son Ferry went to work on a car that would carry the Porsche name. The Porsche prototype, named the 356, was a sports-car version of the Volkswagen that Porsche had designed at Hitler's request. Its rounded lines, rear engine, and open two-seater design set the standard for all Porsches to come. The classic design and the incomparable engineering of Porsche cars attracted loyal customers at a record pace. In 1950, Ferdinand Porsche celebrated his 75th birthday. He had risen to fame as an engineer for Mercedes; he had developed the Volkswagen; and he had finally put his name to his own automobile. One year later, Porsche suffered a stroke from which he would never recover. He died in January of 1952. Ferry Porsche, Ferdinand's son, built the Porsche Company into the empire it is today.
PICTURED: First rear engine car
Germany 1937 - This is said to be the first rear engine car, the legendary Tazio Nuvolari at the Karrussel curve (Carousel) at the old original North Nurburgring. Not only was this monster a true rear-engine car but it was a V-16 of 4.36 liters (about 262 cubic inches) designed by Dr. Ferdinand Porsche. Supercharged, it cranked out about 295 HP at 4,500 RPM. Nuvo and Hans Stuck were the few drivers who learned how to control this beast. They were run from about 1934 through 1939.

March 17, 1834
Gottlieb Daimler, who in 1890 founded an engine and car company bearing his name, is born in Schorndorf, Germany, on this day.

March 17, 1929
General Motors acquired 80% of German auto manufacturer Adam Opel AG for just under $26 million.

March 17, 1930
John North Willys of the Willys-Overland Corporation became the first U. S. ambassador to Poland. Willys had rescued the ailing Overland firm from its woeful production of 465 cars in 1908. By 1916, Willys-Overland produced over 140,000 cars per year. Willys subsequently left the day-to-day operations of the company, moving his personal offices to New York in order to pursue work related to World War I. During his absence, mismanagement nearly buried the company he had worked so hard to build up. Massive strikes, bloated inventories, and other troubles had cost Willys-Overland dearly. By 1920, the company was $46 million in debt. The briefly retired Walter Chrysler was called on to rework the company's daily operations, and in no time at all, he had cut the debt by nearly two-thirds to $18 million. Chrysler claimed, however, that without the release of a new model of automobile, the debt would decrease no further. Willys, who remained president of Willys-Overland, disagreed. He maintained that through the improvement of the existing models, the company could regain its original profit margins. Chrysler left. Continuing to pursue his political interests, Willys became the U.S. ambassador to Poland on this day in 1930. Eight years later Poland would be absorbed into the Third Reich. Three years after that, in 1941, Willys-Overland began mass production of the Willys Jeep, the "General Purpose" vehicle of the U.S. Army. In 1944, Willys' political and manufacturing legacies merged symbolically as Willys Jeeps carried U.S. troops across liberated Poland.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on March 18, 2015, 08:23:32 pm
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On this day, March 18, 1933
American automaker Studebaker, then heavily in debt, goes into receivership. The company’s president, Albert Erskine, resigned and later that year committed suicide. Studebaker eventually rebounded from its financial troubles, only to close its doors for the final time in 1966.
Studebaker downfall lay in Albert Erskine failure to cut production and costs quickly in response to the slump of 1929 and 1930, which led to an insurmountable cash flow crisis. In 1930, Erskine had declared a dividend of $7,800,000 which was five times the actual net profits of that year. In 1931, he paid a dividend of $3,500,000—also out of capital—a ruinous procedure which he unsuccessfully sought to correct through a merger with White Motor Company. Working capital had fallen from $26 million in 1926 to $3.5 million in 1932 and the banks were owed $6 million, for which they demanded payment. Studebaker defaulted and went into receivership.

March 18, 1937
Mark Neary Donohue, Jr., nicknamed "Captain Nice", was born in Haddon Township, New Jersey.
He is the race car driver known for his ability to set up his own race car and drive it consistently on the absolute limit. Donohue is probably best-known as the driver of the 1500+ bhp “Can-Am Killer” Porsche 917-30, and as winner of the 1972 Indianapolis 500. Donohue's racing car pedigree is a veritable laundry list of great racing cars from the 1960s and 1970s. Cars that Donohue raced include: Elva Courier, Ferrari 250LM, Shelby Mustang GT350R, Lotus 20, Shelby Cobra, Ford GT-40 MK IV, Ferrari 512, Lola T70, Porsche 911, Chevrolet Camaro, AMC Javelin, AMC Matador, Porsche 917/10, Porsche 917/30, Eagle-Offy, McLaren M16, and Lola T330.

March 18, 1938
Legendary Timo Mäkinen was born in Helsinki, Finland. He was one of the original "Flying Finns" of motor rallying. He is most famous for his hat-trick of wins in the RAC Rally, at the wheel of a Ford Escort, preceded only by Erik Carlsson (Saab 96) in that feat.

March 18, 1947
William C. Durant, the founder of General Motors, died in New York City at the age of 85. Economic historian Dana Thomas described Durant as a man "drunk with the gamble of America". He was obsessed with its highest article of faith--that the man who played for the steepest stakes deserved the biggest winnings." General Motors reflected Durant's ambitious attitude toward risk-taking in its breathtaking expansionist policies, becoming in its founder's words "an empire of cars for every purse and purpose." But Durant's gambling attitude had its downside. Over a span of three years, Durant purchased Oldsmobile, Oakland (later Cadillac and Pontiac), and attempted to purchase Ford. By 1910, GM was out of cash, and Durant lost his controlling interest in the company. Durant would get back into the game by starting Chevrolet, and he would eventually regain control of GM--only to lose it a second time. Later in life, Durant attempted to start a bowling center and a supermarket; however, these ventures met with little success.

March 18, 1958
Plastone Company Inc. registered "Turtle Wax 'Hard Shell Finish' Auto Polish" trademark first used January 11, 1955 (automobile polish).

18 March 1964
Alessandro "Alex" Caffi, an Italian F1 driver was born in Rovato (province of Brescia), in Northern Italy.

March 18, 1977
José Carlos Pace, Brazilian F1 driver was killed in a light aircraft accident in 1977, this occurred days after the 1977 South African Grand Prix, in which Tom Pryce was killed after running over Jansen Van Vuuren. The track which currently hosts the Brazilian Grand Prix annually now, as a tribute to him, bears his name, Autódromo José Carlos Pace.

18 March 2003
Karl Kling, a German F1 driver died in Gaienhofen on Lake Constance, Germany due to natural causes He was 93.
Interesting thing about Kling is that, It is said, that he was born too late and too early. Too late to be in the successful Mercedes team of the '30s and too early to have a real chance in 1954 and 1955. Unusually, Kling found his way into motorsport via his first job as a reception clerk at Daimler-Benz in the mid-1930s, competing in hillclimb and trials events in production machinery in his spare time. During the Second World War he gained mechanical experience servicing Luftwaffe aircraft, and after the cessation of hostilities he resumed his motorsport involvement in a BMW 328.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on March 19, 2015, 11:25:50 pm
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On this day, March 19, 2005
John Zachary DeLorean, an American engineer and and founder of the DeLorean Motor Company died at Overlook Hospital in Summit, New Jersey from a stroke, aged 80.
At the time of his death, DeLorean was working on a business venture project known as DeLorean Time, a company that would sell high-end wristwatches. DeLorean's death caused the dissolution of the company, and no DeLorean Time products were ever offered to the public. His ashes are buried at the White Chapel Cemetery, in Troy, Michigan. At the request of his family, and in keeping with military tradition, he was interred with military honors for his service in WWII.
PICTURED: The DeLorean DMC-12 coupe that was made infamous with the movie Back to the Future starring Michael J Fox

March 19, 1952
The 1,000,000th Jeep was produced. In 1939, the American Bantam Car Company submitted its original design for an all-terrain troop transport vehicle--featuring four-wheel drive, masked fender-mount headlights, and a rifle rack under the dash to the U.S. Armed Forces. The Army loved Bantam's design, but the development contract for the vehicle was ultimately awarded to the Willys-Overland Company for its superior production capabilities. Bantam wound up fulfilling a government contract for 3,000 vehicles during the war; but the Jeep, as designed by Willys-Overland, would become the primary troop transport of the U.S. Army. Mass production of the Willys Jeep began after the U.S. declaration of war in 1941. The name "Jeep" is reportedly derived from the Army's request that car manufacturers develop a "General Purpose" vehicle. "Gee Pee" turned to "Jeep" somewhere along the battle lines. Another story maintains that the name came from a character in the Popeye cartoon who, like the vehicle, was capable of incredible feats. The Willys Jeep became a cultural icon in the U.S. during World War II, as images of G.I.'s in "Gee Pees," liberating Europe, saturated newsreels in movie theaters across the country. Unlike the Hummer of recent years, the Jeep was not a symbol of technological superiority but rather of the courage of the American spirit--a symbol cartoonist Bill Mauldin captured when he drew a weeping soldier firing a bullet into his broken down Willys Jeep. By 1945, 660,000 Jeeps had rolled off the assembly lines and onto battlefields in Asia, Africa, and Europe. Many remained abroad after the war, where their parts were integrated into other vehicles or their broken bodies were mended with colorful impromptu repairs. Wherever the Jeep roamed, it lived up to its design as a vehicle for general use. During the war, Jeep hoods were used as altars for field burials. Jeeps were also used as ambulances, tractors, and scout cars. After the war, surplus Jeeps found their way into civilian life as snowplows, field plows, and mail carriers. Willys-Overland released its first civilian Jeep model, called the CJ (Civilian Jeep) in 1945.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on March 20, 2015, 11:23:09 pm
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On this day, March 20, 1920
Bugatti delivered its first 16-valve car to a customer in Basel, Switzerland. Bugatti, a French luxury car company, was famous for its exquisite, powerful vehicles. In the 1920s and 1930s, the Bugatti car was a symbol of wealth and status, and its cars were equipped with massive racing engines. A bizarre footnote in Bugatti history, the renowned American dancer Isadora Duncan was driving in a 16-valve Bugatti when her trademark long scarf caught in the rear wheel of the vehicle, and she was instantly strangled to death.
PICTURED: The Bugatti 57

March 20, 1928
James Ward Packard, founder of the Ohio Automobile Company and the Packard Motor Car Company, died in Cleveland, Ohio, at the age of 64. A native of Warren, Ohio, James Packard and his brother, William, started their industrial careers manufacturing electric lamps. They entered the automobile business after James Packard purchased a Winton Motor Carriage. He was so dissatisfied with Winton's machine that he decided to build his own. Using the shops of a Packard Electric Company subsidiary, J.W. Packard completed his first automobile in 1899, driving through the streets of his hometown of Warren. Wishing to keep their automotive and electrical interests separate, the Packard brothers, along with fellow engineer George Weiss, started the Ohio Automobile Company in September 1900. That year the Packards boosted their company's profile by selling two cars to William D. Rockefeller. In 1901, an Ohio Automobile Company employee was arrested for speeding through the streets of Warren at 40mph. The nationally publicized speeding arrest also raised the company's profile. A shrewd promoter, Packard developed one of the car industry's first widely recognized slogans. Responding to a customer's inquiry about the performance of his car, Packard said, "Ask the man who owns one." Packard's deft promotion left the company with more customers than cars. A Detroit financier named Henry Joy volunteered his services to raise capital in order to raise the company's production capabilities. In 1902, the reorganized Ohio Automobile Company was incorporated as the Packard Motor Car Company. Packard cars would be the first to carry a steering wheel in the place of a tiller and the first to utilize the H-gear-shift configuration.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on March 21, 2015, 11:37:06 pm
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On this day, March 21, 1950
Preston Tucker filed suit against his former prosecutors. Tucker, made famous by the 1988 film Tucker starring Jeff Bridges in the title role, was one of the car industry's most spectacular postwar failures. Having built a reputation as an engineer during WWII, when he served as general manager of his company Ypsilanti Machine & Tool Company, Tucker looked to capitalize on the high demand that the postwar conditions offered. No new car model had been released since 1942, so the end of the war would bring four years worth of car buyers back to the market. Tucker intended to meet the new demand with a revolutionary automobile design. His 1945 plans called for an automobile that would be equipped with a rear-mounted engine as powerful as an aircraft engine, an hydraulic torque converter that would eliminate the necessity of a transmission, two revolving headlights at either side of the car's fender along with one stationary "cyclops" headlight in the middle, and a steering wheel placed in the center of the car and flanked by two passenger seats. In the end, only 51 Tuckers were produced, and none of them were equipped with the features Tucker had initially advertised. Still, loyal fans of Tucker claim that Tucker was the victim of industrial sabotage carried out by the Big Three. Tucker was indicted by the Securities and Exchange Commission before he could begin to mass-produce his automobiles. He was eventually acquitted of all charges. Emboldened by his acquittal, Tucker filed suit against his prosecutors. Historians who argue against the conspiracy theory maintain that post-war manufacturing conditions left small manufacturers little room for success. They suggest that, if anything, Tucker's acquittal was merciful. Tucker failed to meet the requirements for capital and production capability that his project demanded. After raising almost $15 million from stockholders, Tucker defaulted on federal deadlines for the production of car prototypes. When he finally did produce the cars, none of them were equipped with the technological breakthroughs he promised. Still, the Tucker was a remarkable car for its price tag. Whether as an innovator silenced by the complacent authorities or a charlatan better fit to build visions than cars, Preston Tucker made a personal impact in a post-war industry dominated by faceless goliaths.

21 March 1913
George Edgar Abecassis, an English racing driver, and co-founder of the HWM Formula One team was born in Chertsey, Surrey.
George Abecassis began racing in 1935 in a modified Austin Seven. However, he made a name for himself in English club racing during the 1938 and 1939 seasons with Alta and ERA machinery. In 1939 he won the Imperial Trophy Formula Libre race at Crystal Palace, his only major victory, driving his Alta, defeating Prince Bira, in the E.R.A. known as Romulus, in a wet race, "that being the only time it was beaten by a 1,500 c.c. car in the British Isles."
At one point Abecassis held the Campbell circuit lap record at Brooklands at 72.61 m.p.h. On July 3, 1938 Abecassis broke the Prescott Hill Climb record with a climb of 47.85 seconds in his supercharged 1½ litre Alta.
When World War II broke out he joined the Royal Air Force and became an experienced pilot, ultimately becoming a member of the secret "Moon Squadrons",ferrying secret agents in and out of France with Lysander aircraft. During the course of his wartime service Abecassis was awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross.

March 21, 1960
Ayrton Senna da Silva was born in Sao Paolo, Brazil. Senna was first given a 1 cc car by his father when he was only four years old. He raced throughout his childhood and began to compete at the age of 13 in local Brazilian KART races. Senna rose from the anonymity of KART racing to become one of the greatest Formula-1 drivers in history. He was worshipped in Brazil to an extent nearly unimaginable in the U.S. Senna, known for his belligerent competitive spirit, won 41 Grand Prix events, and remains second all-time to Alain Prost in Formula-1 victories. He was a key player in the golden years of F-1 racing when he, Nigel Mansel, Alain Prost, and Nelson Piquet battled for the top position in car racing's most glamorous circuit. Senna died in a crash in 1994 during the Grand Prix of San Monaco. A manslaughter investigation still shrouds Senna's death in mystery. It is presumed that Senna's fatal crash may have been caused by a faulty steering column on his Williams-Renault automobile. However, the cause of Senna's death has become a point of contention among Brazilian racing fans who hold the Williams team responsible for the death of their national hero.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on March 23, 2015, 08:45:44 pm
(http://i930.photobucket.com/albums/ad142/hmrh2/Car/hummer-0003.jpg) (http://s930.photobucket.com/user/hmrh2/media/Car/hummer-0003.jpg.html)

On this day, March 22, 1983
The Pentagon awards a production contract worth more than $1 billion to AM General Corporation to develop 55,000 High Mobility Multipurpose Wheeled Vehicles (HMMWV). Nicknamed the Humvee and designed to transport troops and cargo, the wide, rugged vehicles entered the spotlight when they were used by the American military during the 1989 invasion of Panama and the Persian Gulf War in the early 1990s. Which in turn sparked the interest in Arnold Schwarzenegger, who went directly to AM General's Office and asked one for himself and do a similar version for Civilian use.

March 22, 1926
The Ford Motor Company renamed its massive River Rouge facility the Fordson Plant. The name River Rouge, synonymous with Ford history, would continue to be used. River Rouge was established in response to the massive demand for the Model T. In the spring of 1915, Henry Ford began buying huge tracts of land along the Rouge River, southwest of Detroit. He later announced his plans to construct a massive industrial complex which would include its own steel mills. Ford proclaimed he would no longer be "at the mercy of his suppliers." Ford Lieutenant William Knudsen disagreed with his boss's notion that bigger was better. The pugnacious Ford responded to his advice with typical urbanity, saying, "No, William, no. I want the Ford business all behind one fence so I can see it." The outbreak of war in Europe brought with it a scarcity of steel that threatened to halt production of the Model T. Ford ordered Knudsen to buy up all the steel he could. Henry Ford, a proclaimed pacifist, objected to the idea of preparing for war. He likened a war-ready nation to a man carrying a gun: bound for trouble. Nevertheless, once war was declared, Ford stood behind President Wilson and River Rouge became an "arsenal of democracy." The largest industrial complex of its day, River Rouge looked like a small city. After the war, the factory remained a primary character in the Ford drama. By 1937, General Motors (GM) and Chrysler recognized the United Auto Workers (UAW) as a labor union. But, despite the fact that the federal government, with the New Deal, guaranteed a worker's right to belong to a union, Ford refused to negotiate with the UAW. Instead, he ordered his strongman, Harry Bennett, to keep the workers in check. On May 26, 1937, union leader Walter Reuther led a group of men through the River Rouge Plant to distribute literature to the workers. Upon leaving the plant, Reuther and his companions were attacked by Bennett and his men. The event, named the "Battle of the Overpass," received national attention. Ford's reputation as a labor negotiator, already bad, grew worse. Amazingly, though, Bennett's fear tactics postponed the inevitable triumph of labor leaders for almost four years, when a massive sit-down strike finally succeeded in shutting the River Rouge plant down. The Ford River Rouge plant is also well-known for a Ford family controversy over a series of murals by artist Diego Rivera, which were commissioned by Edsel Ford on behalf of the Detroit Art Institute. Henry Ford objected strongly to the communist aesthetic of the murals and ordered their production ceased. Edsel, in a rare moment of defiance, refused his father's demands and the murals remained on display at the River Rouge Plant. Today, just as Henry Ford desired, the Fordson Plant at River Rouge really is "the Ford business all behind one fence," where we can see it.

March 22, 1958
South Carolina police pulled over Alabama boat and car racer J. Wilson Morris for exceeding the speed limit, as Morris attempted to race across the state in record time. The police held the 19-year-old Morris in jail for two days, scaring him so badly that he finished his trip on the bus.

March 22, 1974
Peter Jeffrey Revson, a racecar driver from United States who had successes in Formula One and the Indianapolis 500 lost his life during a practice run for the 1974 South African Grand Prix in Kyalami. He was just 35 years old. He was killed as a result of suspension failure on his Shadow Ford DN3. He was the second Revson to lose his life racing; his brother Douglas was killed in a crash in Denmark in 1967.

March 22, 2006
General Motors announced one of largest employee buyout plans in U.S. corporate history, agreed to finance buyouts, early-retirement packages offered to as many as 1,31,000 employees of GM, Delphi Corp., removed whole generation of workers hired in 1960's, 1970's from assembly line.


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On this day, March 23, 1909
Wilhelm and Karl Maybach formed Luftfahrzeug-Motoren GmbH in Bissingen, Germany, to produce engines for the Zeppelin airships. The Maybach Motoren-Werke, a subsidiary of the aviation company, would produce the luxurious Maybach automobile between 1921 and 1941. Wilhelm Maybach designed the internal expanding brake in 1901. The internal brake operated by pressing shoes against the interior of the wheel or drive shaft. Maybach's design remained the model for most braking systems until the disc brake emerged as an alternative in the 1970s.
PICTURED: Maybach, then and now

March 23, 1921
Donald Malcolm Campbell, a British car and motorboat racer was born in Horley, Surrey. He broke eight world speed records in the 1950s and 60s. He remains the only person to set both land and water speed records in the same year (1964). His father Sir Malcolm Campbell is also the holder of 13 world speed records in the 1920s and 30s in the famous Bluebird cars and boats.

March 23, 1937
Craig Breedlove, the first person to reach land speeds of 400mph, 500 mph and 600 mph in a jet-powered vehicle, is born.
Breedlove was raised in Southern California, where as a teenager he built cars and was a drag racer. As a young man, he designed a three-wheeled, rocket-shaped vehicle powered by a surplus military J-47 plane engine and dubbed it the Spirit of America. On October 5, 1963, Breedlove became the fastest man on wheels when he recorded an average speed of more than 407 mph in the Spirit of America at Utah’s Bonneville Salt Flats. Located approximately 100 miles west of Salt Lake City, the Bonneville Salt Flats are a hard, flat 30,000-acre expanse formed from an ancient evaporated lake. In 1914, Teddy Tezlaff set an auto speed record at Bonneville, driving 141.73 mph in a Blitzen Benz. By the late 1940s, Bonneville had become the standard place for setting and breaking world land-speed records and has since attracted drivers from around the globe who compete in a number of automotive and motorcycle divisions.

March 23, 1956
The Studebaker-Packard Corporation halted merger talks with the Ford Motor Company to pursue talks with the Curtiss-Wright Corporation. Studebaker-Packard itself was the result of a merger in which the large Studebaker firm merged with the small and successful Packard line. After World War II the independent car manufacturers had a difficult time keeping pace with the production capabilities of the Big Three, who were able to produce more cars at lower prices to meet the demands of a population starved for cars. Independents began to merge with one another to remain competitive. Nash-Kelvinator and Hudson Motors merged successfully to become American Motors (AMC). Paul Hoffman, the manager of Studebaker, realized his company would have to merge or perish. He negotiated an arduous merger between his company and Detroit-based Packard Motors. The merger took over five months to come through, as unionized labor on both sides balked at the proposal. Finally, in October of 1954, Studebaker and Packard merged to become the country's fourth largest car company. Hoffman chose Packard President James Nance to lead the new operation. Nance, spiteful of the inefficiency that Studebaker brought to his company, generally ignored the input of his colleagues, instituting his own policies in an attempt to turn around the fortune of his new company. His policies failed, and renewed labor problems brought Studebaker-Packard to its knees. In 1956, Curtiss-Wright purchased Studebaker-Packard. The failed merger between Studebaker, which had been in operation since the 1890s, and Packard was emblematic of the post-war independent manufacturers' scramble to consolidate. While Studebaker-Packard failed, AMC was able to stay alive into the 1970s, when it was bought by French giant Renault.

March 23, 1986
Andrea Dovizioso, an Italian professional motorcycle road racer was born in born in Forlì. He won the 125cc World Championship in 2004.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on March 24, 2015, 10:27:38 pm
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On this day, March 24, 1898
Winton Motor Carriage Company made first commercial sale of an American-built automobile in the U.S.

March 24, 1954
Stockholders of the Nash-Kelvinator Corporation and the Hudson Motor Car Company approved the proposed merger of the two firms. The companies would form the American Motors Corporation (AMC). AMC is recognized as the most successful postwar independent manufacturer of cars. The deal was the largest corporate merger up to that point - worth $197,793,366 - but was just one phase of a planned mega merger of Hudson, Nash, Studebaker, and Packard. The combined company would cover all segments of the market, and their size and ability to share engineering would amortize costs nicely; at least, that was the plan of Kelvinator’s George Mason, whose company owned Nash. The name “American Motors” originated with Mason, who started working on the plan just after World War II.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on March 25, 2015, 09:29:21 pm
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March 25, 1899
Herbert (Burt) James Munro, a New Zealand motorcycle racer, was born in Invercargill. He is famous for setting an under-1000cc world record, 183.586 mph (295.453 km/h), at Bonneville in 26 August 1967. This record still stands today. Burt Munro was 68 and was riding a 47-year old machine when he set his last record.
Working from his home in Invercargill, he worked for 20 years to highly modify the 1920 Indian motorcycle which he had bought in 1920. Munro set his first New Zealand speed record in 1938 and later set seven more. He traveled to compete at the Bonneville Salt Flats, attempting to set world speed records. During his ten visits to the salt flats, he set three speed records, one of which still stands today. His efforts, and success, are the basis of the motion picture The World's Fastest Indian (2005), starring Anthony Hopkins, and an earlier 1971 short documentary film Burt Munro: Offerings to the God of Speed– both directed by Roger Donaldson.
PICTURED: Herbert (Burt) James Munro, the main character on whose life the move "The World Fastest Indian" is based.

March 25, 1901
The Mercedes was introduced by Gottlieb Daimler at the five-day "Week of Nice" in Nice, France. The car, driven by Willhelm Werner, dominated the events at the competition. Mercedes cars were conceived at the same venue in Nice two years earlier. After seeing a Daimler car win a race there, businessman Emile Jellinek approached Gottlieb Daimler with an offer. Jellinek suggested that if Daimler could produce a new car model with an even bigger engine then he would buy 30 of them. Jellinek also requested that the cars be named after his daughter, Mercedes. Daimler died before the Mercedes was released, but the car carried his name to the heights of the automotive industry. In 1904, a Mercedes clocked 97mph over a one-kilometer stretch, an astonishing feat in its day. Mercedes cars dominated the racing world for half a decade before Karl Benz's car company could catch up.

March 25, 1920
Walter P. Chrysler resigned as executive vice president in charge of automotive operations for General Motors. Born in the western Kansas railroad town of Wamego, Chrysler grew up around Union Pacific engineers. Early in life, he formed the idea of becoming a locomotive engineer himself. Working his way up from the position of janitor, he achieved his lifelong engineering dream by the time he was 20. Chrysler's attention gradually shifted to the automotive industry. In 1912, while employed by the American Locomotive Company, Chrysler was offered a position in Flint, Michigan by Buick President Charles Nash. The job promised only half of his current salary, but he took it anyway. As a manager at Buick, Chrysler revolutionized the company's mass production capabilities, and distinguished himself as an irreplaceable part of the GM team. However, in 1916, William C. Durant regained control of the company he had founded and Chrysler's mentor, Charles Nash, was forced out. Recognizing Chrysler's value, Durant offered him the presidency of Buick, a title worth $500,000 a year. Chrysler had previously made $25,000 a year. Heeding warnings from Nash that Durant was a micro-managing tyrant, Chrysler did not immediately accept the offer. Eventually, though, the money was too good to turn down. Among his many accomplishments as head of Buick, Chrysler's greatest achievement may have been initiating GM's purchase of the Fisher Body Plant, on which the company relied for its products. GM purchased 60 percent of Fisher's stock, and gained control over one of its most important components. Eventually, William Durant lived up to Nash's warnings. He began to meddle in Buick's affairs, infuriating Chrysler to the point of despair on numerous occasions. One day, Chrysler reached the boiling point during a board meeting and walked out. Longtime GM President Alfred Sloan later recalled, "I remember the day. He (Chrysler) banged the door on the way out, and out of that bang came eventually the Chrysler Corporation."

March 25, 1982
Danica Sue Patrick, American auto racing driver was born in Beloit, Wisconsin. She is currently competing in the IndyCar Series. Patrick was named the Rookie of the Year for both the 2005 Indianapolis 500 and the 2005 IndyCar Series season. Patrick became the first woman to win an Indy car race.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on March 27, 2015, 12:30:44 am
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On this day, March 26, 1984
The Ford Escort was named the best-selling car in the world for the third year in a row. The Escort was the result of Ford's attempt to design a "world car," a car that could be sold with minor variations all over the world. It was Ford's first successful sub-compact car and its features have become standard for cars in that class all over the world. The Escort was one of the first successes of Ford's dramatic resurgence in the 1980s.
PICTURED: The original Ford Escort 1300 GT

March 26, 1932
Henry Martyn Leland, the founder of Cadillac and Lincoln, died in Detroit, Michigan at the age of 89. Leland was born in Vermont, the 8th child of New England farmer Leander Barton Leland and his wife Zilpha Tifft Leland. He began his industrial career as an apprentice engineer at Knowles Loom Works in Worcester, Massachusetts. With the outbreak of the Civil War, Leland began work at the U.S. Armory in Springfield, Massachusetts. After the war, Leland served as an engineer and mechanic in a series of manufacturing firms in New England. He distinguished himself as a tireless worker and an exacting supervisor only satisfied with his own high standard of quality. Leland was a real New Englander, a Presbyterian stickler with good manners and a titan's work ethic. He moved to Detroit to run a company with his old partner Charles Norton that was to be financed by Detroit lumber mogul Robert Faulconer. After successfully runnning, for a few years, as a supplier of various machine-shop products, Leland and Falconer gained entrance into the automobile industry at the request of Ransom Olds. Olds needed a supplier of transmissions for his Olds Runabouts. Leland wasn't the only major player in the automotive industry to get his start with Olds. Olds also hired the Dodge brothers to manufacture the bodies for his cars. After a successful run supplying Olds transmissions, Leland was asked by the Detroit Automobile Company to appraise their holdings, which they were preparing to liquidate. Leland surprised them by recommending that they hang on to their facilities; he offered to run their car company for them and revealed to them an engine design he had come up with which produced three times the horsepower of Olds' engines. The Cadillac Car Company was born, named after Antoine de la Mothe Cadillac, the founder of Detroit. The first Cadillacs came on the market as low-priced cars, but soon, due to Leland's high standards, the car was marketed as a luxury item. The car company that became a symbol of excess and ostentation in the 1950s began as the product of a puritanical perfectionist. Cadillac distinguished itself further by becoming the first car company to introduce a self-starting mechanism. Charles Kettering invented the system at the urging of Leland, who was said to be distraught over the death of a friend caused when an errant crank-shaft broke the man's arm and jaw. In 1908, William Durant and GM bought the Cadillac Motor Car Company for $4.4 million in cash. Leland continued to run Cadillac, and it became GM's most successful marque. Eventually, Leland and Durant fell out over GM's participation in World War I. Leland had been to Europe just before the war, become convinced that the war was inevitable, and that it would decide the future of Western Civilization. Durant's disinterest in the war cause infuriated Leland so much that he quit. He went on to found Lincoln, which he named after the man he admired most and for whom he had cast his first vote as a 21-year-old, Abraham Lincoln. Leland was never able to escape financial trouble with Lincoln, and he ended up selling the company to Henry Ford. Ford eventually ran Leland out of the business, most likely as a result of some personal jealousy on Ford's part. Nevertheless, Leland was responsible for creating the luxury marques for America's two largest automotive manufacturers.

March 26, 1934
Driving tests was introduced in Britain.

March 26, 1989
Boris Yeltsin was elected to the Soviet Parliament, defeating Communist Party candidate Yevgeny Brakov, manager of the Zavod Imieni Likhacheva, manufacuterers of the ZIL car. In spite of Brakov's close brush with history, he was destined to remain a car maker.

March 26, 2008
The Ford Motor Company announces the sale of its Jaguar and Land Rover divisions to the Tata Group, one of India’s oldest and largest business conglomerates, for some $2.3 billion--less than half of what Ford originally paid for the brands. The sale came at a time when Ford, along with much of the rest of the auto industry, was experiencing a sales slump as a result of the global economic crisis. For Tata, which earlier that year had unveiled the Nano, the world’s cheapest car, the purchase of the venerable British-based luxury brands was referred to by some observers as a “mass to class” acquisition.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on March 27, 2015, 08:08:11 pm
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March 27, 1939
Racer Cale Yarborough was born in Timmonsville, South Carolina. Yarborough became famous on the NASCAR circuit racing Mercury "fastback" Cyclones. In 1968 he won four races including the Daytona 500, tallying record annual winnings of $136,786. Yarborough remained a giant in NASCAR racing through the 1970s, becoming the first racer ever to win three consecutive Winston Cup Championships by winning the title in 1976, 1977, and 1978 driving for Chevy. Yarborough also holds the distinction of being the first man to qualify for the Daytona 500 at a speed of over 200 miles per hour, a feat he accomplished in 1984. He is a member of the Motor Sports Hall of Fame.
PICTURED: 1969.10.12 Charlotte National 500
After the Drivers vs. Bill France walkout at Talladega, the first real test for the new Charger Daytona came at the Charlotte Motor Speedway, in October 1969. Fords took the first two rows in qualifying. Cale Yarborough put the Wood Brothers Spoiler II on the pole at 162.162 mph. Cale was followed by the Torino Talladegas of Richard Petty, Donnie Allison and Lee Roy Yarbrough (no relation to Cale) The fastest of the still under development Daytonas were Buddy Baker, Bobby Allison and Charlie Glotzbach. In the race, just as at Talladega, the tires proved to be the deciding factor. Still coming to grips with rubber that wasn't quite up to the task of handling the Daytona's rear downforce, the Dodge teams ran very strong but still struggled with blistering tires. Pole sitter Cale Yarborough led early, but dropped out with a blown Shotgun 429 engine. Donnie Allison dominated the race, leading 161 of the 334 laps. Donnie took turns leading with Bobby Allison and Buddy Baker up front the rest of the time, but tire troubles slowed the winged Dodges. When it was all over, the brothers Allison finished 1-2 with Donnie out front. Baker and Glotzbach were third and fourth, still on the lead lap. David Pearson was fifth, two laps down. Notables in the did not finish catagory were Richard Petty, Lee Roy Yarbrough and Bobby Isaac, all retiring with engine failures.
photo: Ford Archives

March 27 1863
Sir Frederick Henry Royce, was born in Alwalton, Huntingdonshire, near Peterborough.

March 27, 1925
Cecil Kimber registered his first modified Morris, the prototype of the MG. Kimber's car is now known as "Old Number One", though design differences lead some to maintain that "Old Number One" was a different species from the MG. However you look at it, Kimber's modified Morris was the first in a line of successful automobiles known for their style and performance. Known for their zippy overhead cam engine's, MG's were hugely popular in the U.S. as sports cars.

March 27, 1947
Nanjing Automobile Group Corp. (NAC), a state-owned company was founded as military garage in Jiangsu. Its the oldest and currently fourth largest Chinese automobile manufacturer with 16,000 employees and annual production capacity of about 200,000 vehicles. Coincidently also on March 27, 2007 NAC revived MG brand and began production of MG sports cars.

March 27, 1952
Kiichiro Toyoda, founder of the Toyota Motor Corporation, which in 2008 surpassed America’s General Motors as the world’s largest automaker, dies at the age of 57
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on March 28, 2015, 09:03:54 pm
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On this day, March 28, 1941
Construction of Ford's Willow Run Plant began. Due both to his admiration of the German people and his philosophical alignment as a pacifist, Henry Ford was reluctant to convert all of his production facilities to war manufacturing. Compounding his anxiety was the fact that one of his former employees, William Knudsen, who had defected to General Motors headed the bureau in Washington in charge of administrating Detroit's war effort. But with the U.S. declaration of war in 1941, Ford had no choice but to participate. He contributed with his usual sense of competitive ambition. Before the war, Ford had boasted nonchalantly that Ford could produce 1,000 airplanes per day provided there was no interference from stockholders or labor unions. So when Ford was asked by Knudsen to build subassemblies for Consolidated Aircraft, it was no surprise that Ford Lieutenant Charles Sorensen pushed for a deal that would allow Ford to construct the entire B-24 Liberator bomber. The contract included $200 million toward the construction of a new production facility. In exchange, Sorensen promised Ford would manufacture 500 planes per month, a quote nearly 10 times what Consolidated Aircraft was then capable of producing. Ground was broken on a vast piece of land in Ypsilanti, Michigan, to begin a plant called Willow Run. Over the course of the next few years, Willow Run would be a source of problems for the Ford Motor Company. Squabbling within Ford over control of the company, government interference, the loss of much of the company's labor force to the draft, and other problems deterred Ford's war effort. By the end of 1942, Willow Run had only produced 56 B-24 bombers, and the plant had been saddled with the nickname "Willit Run?" The government considered taking over the operations at Willow Run. Just when it seemed that Sorensen's project would fail, Willow Run began rolling out B-24's at a remarkable rate. The plant produced 190 bombers in June of 1943, 365 in December. By the middle of 1944, Willow Run churned out a plane every 63 minutes. "Willow Run looked like a city with a roof on it," remembered Esther Earthlene, one of the many women who worked there during the war. Willow Run was the largest factory of its day. Its workers built planes around the clock, rotating three eight-hour shifts. They were provided with housing and entertainment. Willow Run had a 24-hour movie theater. By the end of the war, Willow Run had produced more than 8,500 bombers, and it had become a symbol of the American economy's successful response to war.
PICTURED: B-24J-1-FO, S/N 42-95559. Built At Ford's Willow Run Plant. Assigned to 221st Base Unit, Casper Army Air Force Base, Wyoming

March 28, 1892
Charles Duryea and Erwin Markham signed a contract to design and finance the construction of a gasoline-powered automobile.

March 28, 1900
The British Royal family receives its fist motor car, a Daimler Mail Phaeton.

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Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on March 29, 2015, 11:25:13 pm
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On this day, March 29, 1927
Major Henry O'Neil de Hane Segrave became the first man to break the 200mph barrier. Driving a 1,000 horsepower Mystery Sunbeam, Segrave averaged 203.79mph on the course at Daytona Beach, Florida. Segrave and his contemporary, British racer Malcolm Campbell, battled for land-speed supremacy throughout the 1920s. Segrave won the most historic victory in the long-standing competition when he broke the 200mph barrier and went on to set many more land-speed records. Between his efforts and Campbell's, Great Britain dominated the land-speed record books until jet engines usurped supremacy from internal combustion engines. Segrave died in 1930, attempting to set a new water speed record.
PICTURED: Henry Segrave @ The 1921 Le Mans GP de l'A.C.F.  in a SUNBEAM

March 29, 1806
US Congress appropriated $30,000 for Army's Corps of Engineers to begin surveying for construction of Great National Pike, also known as Cumberland Road, first highway funded by national treasury. The road stretched from Cumberland, MD through Appalachian Mountains to Wheeling, VA, on Ohio River.

March 29, 1919
The First Tatra vehicle, a TL4 truck, was completed. The truck was Tatra's first offering to the automotive world but it was the Tatra car that had inspired engineer Hans Ledwinka to found Tatra. Just after the war, Hans Ledwinka began construction of a new automobile to be marketed under the marque Tatra, a division of the newly named Koprivnicka Wagenbau of Czechoslovakia. The Tatra High Mountains are among the highest in the Carpathian Mountain Range, the legendary home of Bram Stoker's Dracula. Ledwinka settled on the name Tatra in 1919, when an experimental model of his car with four-wheel brakes passed a sleigh on an icy mountain road, prompting the sleigh riders to exclaim, "This is a car for the Tatras." In 1923, the first official Tatra automobile, the Tatra T11, was completed, and Ledwinka's hope for an affordable "people's car" was realized. The reliable, rugged T11, like Ford's Model T, gave many Czechoslovakians their first opportunity to own an automobile. In 1934, Tatra achieved automotive press with the introduction of the Tatra 77, the world's first aerodynamically styled automobile powered by a rear-mounted air-cooled engine.

March 29, 2009
Rick Wagoner, the chairman and chief executive of troubled auto giant General Motors (GM), resigns at the request of the Obama administration. During Wagoner’s more than 8 years in the top job at GM, the company lost billions of dollars and in 2008 was surpassed by Japan-based Toyota as the world’s top-selling maker of cars and trucks, a title the American automaker had held since the early 1930s.
On March 30, 2009, the day after the White House announced Wagoner had been asked to step aside, President Barack Obama stated that GM would have to undergo a fundamental restructuring in the next 60 days in order for the government to consider loaning it any more money. On June 1, 2009, GM filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on March 30, 2015, 11:04:05 pm
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On this day, March 30, 1947
Preston Tucker announced his concept for a new automobile to be named "the Tucker". Having built a reputation as an engineer during WWII when he served as general manager of his company, Ypsilanti Machine & Tool Company, Tucker looked to capitalize on the high demand for cars that post-war conditions offered. No new car model had been released since 1942, and so the end of the war would bring four years worth of car-buyers back to the market. Tucker intended to meet the demand with a revolutionary automobile design. His 1945 plans called for an automobile that would be equipped with a rear-mounted engine as powerful as an aircraft engine, an hydraulic torque converter that would eliminate the necessity of a transmission, two revolving headlights at either side of the carÝs fender, one stationary "cyclops" headlight in the middle, and a steering wheel placed in the center of the car and flanked by two passenger seats. However, a series of financial difficulties forced Tucker to tone down his own expectations for the cars. Production costs rose above his projections and investors became more cautious as the Big Three continued their astounding post-war success. To raise money for his project, Tucker sold franchises to individual car dealers who put up $50 in cash for every car they expected to sell during their first two years as a Tucker agent. The deposit was to be applied to the purchase price of the car upon delivery. The SEC objected to TuckerÝs strategy on the grounds that he was selling unapproved securities. It was just one intervention in a continuous battle between Tucker and federal regulatory bodies. Tucker loyalists espouse the theory that Tucker was the victim of a conspiracy planned by the Big Three to sabotage independent manufacturers. More likely, though, Tucker was the victim of an unfriendly market and his own recklessness. Unfortunately for his investors, the SEC indicted Tucker before he could begin mass production of his cars. He was acquitted on all counts, but his business was ruined. In the end, only fifty-one Tuckers were produced and none of them were equipped with the technological breakthroughs he promised. Still, the Tucker was a remarkable car for its price tag. Whether as an innovator silenced by the complacent authorities or a charlatan better fit to build visions than cars, Preston Tucker made a personal impact in a post-war industry dominated by faceless goliaths.
PICTURED: After the verdict 23rd Jan 1950: Preston Tucker, auto magnate, and wife, freed of fraud charges

March 30, 1998
German automaker BMW bought Rolls-Royce for $570 million. But the deal was not smooth and has a very interesting story behind it.
In 1998, owners Vickers decided to sell Rolls-Royce Motors. The most likely buyer was BMW, who already supplied engines and other components for Rolls-Royce and Bentley cars, but BMW's final offer of £340m was beaten by Volkswagen's £430m.
A stipulation in the ownership documents of Rolls-Royce dictated that Rolls-Royce plc, the aero-engine maker would retain certain essential trademarks (the Rolls-Royce name and logo) if the automotive division was sold. Rolls-Royce plc chose to license not to VW but to BMW, with whom it had recently had joint business ventures. VW had bought rights to the "Spirit of Ecstasy" bonnet (hood) ornament and the shape of the radiator grille, but it lacked rights to the Rolls-Royce name necessary to build the cars. Likewise, BMW lacked rights to the grille and mascot. BMW bought an option on the trademarks, licensing the name and "RR" logo for £40 million, a deal that many commentators thought was a bargain for possibly the most valuable property in the deal. VW claimed that it had only really wanted Bentley anyway.
BMW and VW arrived at a solution. From 1998 to 2002 BMW would continue to supply engines for the cars and would allow use of the names, but this would cease on 1 January 2003. From that date, only BMW would be able to name cars "Rolls-Royce", and VW's former Rolls-Royce/Bentley division would build only cars called "Bentley". The Rolls-Royce's Corniche ceased production in 2002.

March 30, 2009
U.S. President Barack Obama issues an ultimatum to struggling American automakers General Motors (GM) and Chrysler: In order to receive additional bailout loans from the government, he says, the companies need to make dramatic changes in the way they run their businesses. The president also announced a set of initiatives intended to assist the struggling U.S. auto industry and boost consumer confidence, including government backing of GM and Chrysler warranties, even if both automakers went out of business. In December 2008, GM (the world’s largest automaker from the early 1930s to 2008) and Chrysler (then America’s third-biggest car company) accepted $17.4 billion in federal aid in order to stay afloat. At that time, the two companies had been hit hard by the global economic crisis and slumping auto sales; however, critics charged that their problems had begun several decades earlier and included failures to innovate in the face of foreign competition and issues with labor unions, among other factors.
President Obama’s auto task force determined that Chrysler was too focused on its sport utility vehicle (SUV) lines and was too small a company to survive on its own. In his March 30 announcement, Obama gave Chrysler a month to complete a merger with Italian car maker Fiat or another partner. Shortly before its April 30 deadline, Chrysler said it had reached agreements with the United Auto Workers union as well as its major creditors; however, on April 30, Obama announced that Chrysler, after failing to come to an agreement with some of its smaller creditors, would file for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection, then form a partnership with Fiat. The move made Chrysler the first big automaker to file for bankruptcy and attempt to reorganize since Studebaker did so in 1933.
As for General Motors, according to the conditions Obama announced on March 30, the auto giant had 60 days to undergo a major restructuring, including cutting costs sharply and getting rid of unprofitable product lines and dealerships. Over the next two months, GM said it would shutter thousands of dealerships and a number of plants, as well as phase out such brands as Pontiac. Nevertheless, on June 1, 2009, GM, which was founded in 1908, declared bankruptcy. At the time, the company reported liabilities of $172.8 billion and assets of $82.3 billion, making it the fourth-biggest U.S. bankruptcy in history.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on March 31, 2015, 09:52:00 pm
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On this day, March 31, 1956
Ralph DePalma died in South Pasadena, California at age 72. DePalma, one of the premier racers of the century's second decade and winner of the 1915 Indy 500, is most famous for his rivalry with fellow racing legend Barney Oldfield. During World War I, car racing on a grand scale was not allowed because of the war effort. However, match races pitting two rivals against each other were deemed appropriate as they provided maximum entertainment with a relatively minimal allocation of resources. Race promoters naturally realized the appeal of starting DePalma and Oldfield on the same line with the same end in mind. Beyond their ordinary competitive relationship, Oldfield and DePalma embodied two contrasting archetypes of the champion. Brash and crude, Oldfield talked as much as he raced, cheated as much as he played fair. He ran his car with an unlit cigar clamped in the back of his teeth. DePalma, on the other hand, was a true gentleman, gracious both in victory and defeat, but no less competitive than his abrasive rival. The match race was originally set for June 23, 1917, but heavy rains postponed the event by a day. This gave the race promoters an extra day to magnify the publicity accompanying the personal rivalry between DePalma and Oldfield that had flared up after DePalma won an appeal for calcium chloride to be laid on the track to keep the dust down. An outraged Oldfield claimed dust was "part and parcel of dirt-track racing." Later he said, "I've been waiting a long time to get DePalma on a dirt track. I'll show him what racing is all about." Not to be outdone, DePalma in his characteristic style explained, "Modesty is a word Greek to Oldfield and he's probably been telling everybody how he is going to make me eat his dust." Following the heavy rains on the 23rd, the racetrack was pronounced to be in excellent condition. An estimated 15,000 fans turned out to watch the two men race. Unfortunately, the race didn't live up to its hype. Oldfield won all three heats. His car, the Golden Submarine, was so much lighter than DePalma's Packard that its speed through the turns more than made up for DePalma's bigger engine. Perhaps a credit to Oldfield's unconventional quest for victory, he had chosen to drive a car designed by Harry Miller. Miller's all-aluminum car had been mocked in the public, but he and Oldfield got the last laugh at the match races. Miller would go on to revolutionize race-car design, as his cars dominated the Indy 500 for over a decade.
PICTURED: Playa Del Rey -Los Angeles Motordrome
The world's first elevated wooden board track built for race cars took 16 days to build and cost $12,000. The Los Angeles Motordrome opened on April 8, 1910 near the present-day intersection of Culver and Jefferson boulevards in Playa del Rey. Promoters Fred Moskovics and Walter Hemple had taken notice of the success of automobile races involving now-legendary driver Barney Oldfield at Los Angeles tracks in the early 1900s, and hired velodrome designer Jack Prince to design a raised wooden track designed specifically for motorized racing. Construction on the one-mile round banked track began in Feb. 1910. According to Prince, more than 2 million square feet of lumber and 30 tons of nails were used in its construction. The Los Angeles Pacific Railway built a special spur to bring fans to the track, which held 12,000 spectators. Sportswriters immediately began referring to the structure as a "pie pan" due to its circular shape and banked track. Oldfield was the biggest name at its opening seven-day racing meet, which also featured racers Ralph DePalma, George Robertson, Lewis Strang, Roy Harroun and Caleb Bragg. The event was a success, and both automobile and motorcycle races were held regularly at the motordrome for the next three years. The motordrome at Playa del Rey was the first of several that eventually would be built in the Los Angeles area, including wooden tracks in Beverly Hills, Culver City, and the Los Angeles Coliseum motordrome at Hooper Avenue and 35th Street. On the afternoon of Aug. 11, 1913, a fire broke out under the wooden track in Playa del Rey. Though it did not fully destroy it, the damage was severe enough that rebuilding it wasn't feasible. A Los Angeles Times news story detailing the fire blamed it on vagrants sleeping beneath the track who were careless with matches. Wooden tracks eventually died out as other surfaces such as asphalt began to be used for auto racing tracks in the late 1920s, replacing the more dangerous wooden structures.

March 31, 1900
The first car advertisement to run in a national magazine appeared in the Saturday Evening Post. The W.E. Roach Company of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania ran an ad featuring its jingle, "Automobiles That Give Satisfaction."

March 31, 1931
Knute Rockne, famed Notre Dame football coach and the namesake of the Studebaker Rockne, was killed in a plane crash near Bazaar, Kansas at the age of 43.

March 31, 1932
Ford Motor Company publicly unveiled its "V-8" (eight-cylinder) engine.

March 31, 1998
Julius Timothy "Tim" Flock died of lung and liver cancer on 73. He is one of NASCAR's early pioneers, and a two time series champion. He was a brother to NASCAR's second female driver Ethel Mobley and NASCAR pioneers Bob Flock and Fonty Flock.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on April 01, 2015, 10:45:40 pm
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On this day, April 1, 1970
AMC, the company that first introduced the compact car in the 1950s, introduced the Gremlin, America's first sub-compact car. AMC was the only major independent car company to survive into the 1970s. AMC's success relied heavily on the vision of the company's first President George Romney, who strongly believed that to compete with the Big Three his company must offer smaller, more fuel-efficient alternatives to their cars. The AMC Rambler, a compact car, accounted for nearly all of AMC's profits through the 1950s, the era during which the company enjoyed its most substantial success. AMC's fortune faded rapidly after Romney left the company in 1962, and by the end of the ' 60s, the company's output had dropped to a dismal 250,000 sales per year. The release of the Gremlin in 1970 marked the company's return to Romney's vision. Designed to compete with the imported Volkswagens and Japanese sub-compacts, the Gremlin was essentially the AMC Hornet with its back end cut off. AMC President Roy Chapin attempted to re-create the vigorous personal campaign that Romney had used successfully to market the Rambler in the 50s. He appeared before the American public in advertisements to extol the virtues of the "first sub-compact" car. Unfortunately for AMC, the Gremlin was out on the market for only a short time before the Big Three released their own sub-compact models.

April 1, 1826
Samuel Morey of New Hampshire received a patent for the internal combustion engine. He was a pioneer in steamships who accumulated a total of 20 patents.

April 1, 1993
Alan Kulwicki, 1992 Winston Cup Champion, died in a plane crash near Bristol, Tennessee. Alan, son of USAC mechanic and engine builder Jerry Kulwicki, grew up in Milwaukee. His father didn't approve of his son racing cars, but Alan raced all the same. He became the youngest racer to start a late-model stock- car race in Wisconsin when, at the age of 18, he started a race at the Hales Corners Speedway. He took home $27. Little by little, Alan worked his way up the ranks of American stock-car racing. Continuing to pursue his dream to race on the NASCAR circuit, Alan owned, maintained, and raced his own cars throughout his career. He became the Winston Cup Circuit's "Rookie of the Year" in 1986, a remarkable feat considering he raced without heavy corporate sponsorship. Alan went on to win the Winston Cup Circuit in 1992, becoming the greatest stock-car racer in the world. His untimely death prevented him from defending his title. In an era of stock-car racing dominated by family dynasties, Alan Kulwicki was a self-made champion.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on April 02, 2015, 10:28:11 pm
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On thsi day, April 2, 1926
Grand Prix racer Jack Brabham was born in Hurstville, New South Wales, Australia. Brabham is credited with having rung in the "green decade" of Formula One racing. Between 1962 and 1973 British Formula One teams won 12 World Championships in cars painted British "racing green." Brabham won back-to-back championships in 1959 and 1960 driving the Cooper Team car equipped with a 2500 CC Coventry Climax engine and a revolutionary rear-engine design. Winning the World Championship for the third time in 1966, Brabham raced alongside British greats like Scotsmen Jim Clark and Jackie Stewart, Englishman Graham Hill, and Kiwi Denny Hulme. Jack's son Geoff Brabham is also an F1 racer.

April 2, 1875
Walter Percy Chrysler, the founder of the Chrysler Corporation, which for years was one of America’s Big Three automakers along with General Motors (GM) and Ford, is born on April 2, 1875, in Wamego, Kansas.

April 2, 1956
Alfred P. Sloan stepped down after 19 years as chairman of General Motors, with Albert Bradley elected as his successor. Sloan is recognized as the creator of the GM Corporation as it exists today. Brought on by William Durant by way of the purchase of the Hyatt Roller Bearing Corporation, Sloan worked his way into the position of vice president of GM. At that time, the company was a poorly planned and loosely configured extension of William Durant's vision. Sloan, with Durant's approval if not his undivided attention, set about centralizing GM. His first major step was to build a new corporate headquarters on the outskirts of Detroit. Methodical and calculating, Sloan was the model for the late twentieth century corporate leader in that he did not allow his ego, or his genius, to interfere with his shareholders' interests. When Durant was bought out of GM in 1920 by the DuPont family, Pierre DuPont, at the urging of Sloan, took his place as the company's head. The recession of the early 20s had damaged GM stock, and Sloan believed that DuPont's name at the head of the company would help to restore its investors' confidence. DuPont was not interested in running the company, and so the Sloan Era of General Motors began. Alfred Sloan reorganized the company and trimmed its financial sails, and before long GM was making headway. Gone were the days of Durant's mercurial and reckless expansionist policies. Sloan focused on consolidation and profit margin. He would effectively rule GM with an invisible hand for over three decades.

April 2, 1959
Juha Matti Pellervo Kankkunen, a Finnish rally driver was born in Laukaa, Finland. He made his name principally as a rally car driver. Aided partly by his record of 23 career victories on individual world rallies, he went on to drive Peugeot (1986), Lancia (1987 and 1991) and Toyota (1993) cars to four World Rally Championship driver's titles. He is currently 6th in the rankings of all time individual rally victories. However, only 2004-2008 World Champion Sébastien Loeb has thus far been successful in besting his tally of driver's world titles over the course of an entire career in the sport.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on April 03, 2015, 10:32:28 pm
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On this day, April 3, 2009
“Fast & Furious,” the fourth film in an action-movie franchise centered around the world of illegal street racing, debuts in U.S. theaters on April 3, 2009, kicking off a record-breaking $72.5 million opening weekend at the box office. “Fast & Furious,” starring Vin Diesel, Paul Walker, Jordana Brewster and Michelle Rodriguez, recorded the all-time highest-grossing opening of any car-themed film, besting the 2006 animated feature “Cars,” which raked in more than $60 million in its opening weekend and went on to earn more than $244 million at the box office.

April 3, 1885
Gottlieb Daimler was granted a German patent for his 1-cylinder water-cooled engine design. Daimler's invention was the breakthrough that other engine builders had been waiting for. Previously no one had been able to efficiently solve the problem posed by the tremendous heat produced by internal combustion engines. In Daimler's engine, cool water circulated around the engine block, preventing the engine from overheating. Today's engines still employ Daimler's basic idea. Before the water-cooled engine, cars were practical impossibilities, as the parts on which the engine was mounted could not sustain the heat generated by the engine itself. Daimler built himself his first whole automobile in the fall of 1896, and in doing so, took the first step in his self-named company's storied car-building history.

April 3, 1996
The Museum of Modern Art in New York City placed a Jaguar E-Type in its permanent exhibit. The E-Type was just the third car to be honored by the curators of the museum's permanent exhibit. Released in 1961, the E-Type was the first model released by Jaguar Motors after a disastrous fire destroyed the company's production facilities in 1957. The car's sleek lines made it an immediate success. Jaguar founder Sir William Lyons first made an impact in the automobile industry when he bolted a car body he designed onto the frame of an Austin Seven Car. His car, the Austin Swallow, was so successful that Lyons determined to manufacture his own automobiles. The E-Type is the epitome of Jaguar's exquisite feel for body design. The car is literally a work of art.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on April 04, 2015, 09:59:28 pm
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On this day, April 4, 2001
Ed "Big Daddy" Roth, an artist and cartoonist who created the hot-rod icon Rat Fink and other extreme characters died on this day at the age of 69. As a custom car builder, Roth was a key figure in Southern California's "Kustom Kulture" and Hot-rod movement of the 1960s. He grew up in Bell, California, attending Bell High School, where his classes included auto shop and art.

April 4, 1929
Karl Benz died at his home in Ladenburg, Germany at the age of 84 from a bronchial inflammation. Until her death on May 5, 1944 his wife, Bertha Benz continued to reside in their last home. Members of the family resided in the home for thirty more years. The Benz home now has been designated as historic and is used as a scientific meeting facility for a nonprofit foundation, the Gottlieb Daimler and Karl Benz Foundation, that honors both Bertha and Karl Benz for their roles in the history of automobiles.

April 4, 1944
Actor and car racer Craig T. Nelson was born in Spokane, Washington. Nelson is most famous for his title role in the long-running television show Coach, in which he portrayed Coach Hayden Fox of the struggling Minnesota State football team. Nelson, whose TV show was cancelled in 1997 after nine years, has been racing in Sports Cars premier division since 1994. "Coach" has been essentially footing the bill for his Nelson's Screaming Eagles Race Team. He refuses to accept the sponsorships of tobacco or alcohol companies. Having enjoyed limited success thus far on the circuit, Nelson consoles himself with the fact that he loves both the racing of the cars and the perspective the sport provides him. Nelson has not yet given up his career as an actor. He's appeared in Hollywood films such as The Devil's Advocate, stage productions like Eugene O'Neill's Ah, Wilderness!, and he continues to do work on television miniseries.

April 4, 1973
Loris Capirossi, an Italian Grand Prix motorcycle racer, was born in Castel San Pietro Terme, Bologna. He currently rides for the factory Suzuki MotoGP team. He is a former 250cc World Champion for Aprilia.

April 4, 1980
Björn Karl Michael Wirdheim is a racing driver born on in Växjö, Sweden. Wirdheim is son of Örnulf Wirdheim, a Swedish racing driver. He began racing karts competing in his first race at the age of 10. His main achievement to date is becoming the International Formula 3000 Champion in 2003.

April 4, 1996
Jaguar introduced its new SK8 convertible at the New York International Auto Show. The SK was the sports car version of the XK car released a few months before. The two models were Jaguar's first entirely new designs since the company became a Ford subsidiary in 1989. Powered by the Advanced Jaguar V-8 coupled with a five-speed automatic gearbox, the SK lives up to Jaguar's historic line of powerful sports cars. However, Jaguar purists argue that the lines of the car body itself are not Jaguar lines. Ford executives claim that they have not meddled with the integrity of the Jaguar marque, and so any lines that don't look like they came from Jaguar designs still came from Jaguar designers.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on April 05, 2015, 11:33:01 pm
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On this day, April 5, 1923
Firestone Tire and Rubber Company of Akron, Ohio, began balloon-tire production. The company had previously experimented with large-section, thin-walled tires with small bead diameters for special purposes, but none had been put on the commercial market. Firestone had become the largest producer of tires when it received the contract to supply Henry Ford's Model T's with tires. The company remained on top of the tire industry, challenged for supremacy only by Goodyear. Balloon tires provided better handling and a smoother ride for car drivers. In balloon tires an inner tube is fitted inside the tire and inflated. With Firestone's innovation came the era of the flat tire.

April 5, 1988
Tracy Chapman released the single "Fast Car" from her self-titled first album Tracy Chapman. The album went multi-platinum largely on the strength of the enormous popularity of "Fast Car." Chapman grew up in Cleveland, Ohio, and attended private school in Connecticut. She eventually attended Tufts University, where she graduated in 1986. She started her musical career, as did Rick Von Schmidt, playing the bars and coffeehouses of Harvard Square in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Chapman is often thought of in relation to human and civil rights issues. Many of her songs contain messages dealing with equality and/or the estrangement of minorities and women. Chapman was the only female performer listed on Amnesty International's Human Rights Tour, and she was also on the bill at Freedomfest, London, a concert that honored Nelson Mandela. In "Fast Car" Chapman follows in the tradition of American balladeers, singing the praises of the freedom afforded by the open road.

April 5, 2000
Lee Arnold Petty, one of the early pioneers and superstar of NASCAR died at the age of 86 due to complication of stomach aneurysm. He is buried at the Level Cross United Methodist Church Cemetery in Randleman, North Carolina.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on April 06, 2015, 10:01:24 pm
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On this day, April 6, 1853
Emil Jellinek, an entrepreneur who commissioned engineer Wilhelm Maybach to design the first Mercedes automobile, named after Jellinek’s daughter, is born in Leipzig, Germany, on this day in 1853.
PICTURED: 1938.07.03 - French GP start
French Grand Prix, July 3, 1938 - Caracciola from the standing start in the W154 - The Mercedes would win six out of the eight major races in 1938 with Auto Union taking the remaining two. Rudolf Caracciola was crowned European Champion for the third and last time.

April 6, 1898
Thirteen days after selling its first car, the Winton Motor Carriage Company became an international marque, selling a car to John Moodie of Hamilton, Ontario. The international sale was a testament to Alexander Winton's pioneering enthusiasm for car advertising. The Scotch-born Winton had undertaken the industry's first "publicity stunt" a year earlier when he and one of his mechanics had driven a 2-cylinder Winton Motor Carriage 800 miles from Cleveland, Ohio to New York City. Winton managed to gain enough attention for a small article in Horseless Age, the leading motor-car journal of the day. Over the next few years, Winton launched an advertising campaign that included regular print ads in Scientific American and the Saturday Evening Post. In 1899, Winton undertook his second publicity-oriented motorized trek to New York City, this time achieving his goal of reaching a broad audience of potential car buyers. In addition to the estimated 1,000,000 people who saw Winton drive into the city, the Cleveland Plain Dealer ran a series of articles covering the journey.

April 6, 1909
Hermann Lang, a German champion race car driver was born in the Bad Cannstatt district of Stuttgart, Germany.

April 6, 1934
The Ford Motor Company announced white sidewall tires as an option on its new vehicles at a cost of $11.25 per set. Whitewalls soon became associated with style and money. By the 1950s, whitewalls were standard on many cars, and it would be hard to imagine a '55 Corvette without a corresponding set of whitewall treads. The popularity of whitewalls continued well into the 1960s. Car companies offered different width white bands in a race to make their whitewalls whiter.

April 6, 1941
Don 'The Snake' Prudhomme, an American drag racer was born in San Fernando, California. He won the NHRA funny car championship four times in a thirty-five-year career. He was the first funny car driver to exceed 250 mph. He retired in 1994 to manage his own racing team with driver Larry Dixon, Prudhomme's team won the top fuel championship in 2002 and 2003. He gained wider public attention from Mattel's "Hot Wheels" toy versions of the cars that were released in 1970. Hot Wheels celebrated their 35th anniversary in 2005 with a two day event. Prudhomme retired from drag racing in 2010
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on April 07, 2015, 09:38:47 pm
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On this day, April 7, 1922
Racer Sig Haugdahl drove the Wisconsin Special over 180mph on a one-way run at the Daytona Beach racing oval. Haugdahl's speed was a remarkable 24mph faster than the previous world-land speed record. A Norwegian immigrant who settled in Minnesota, Sig Haugdahl began his racing career in 1918. He became the IMCA champion but was considered an outsider by the more influential USAC governing body. Eager to prove he could outrace anybody, Haugdahl built his own car with the specific aim of unseating then USAC champion Tommy Milton. The fruit of Haugdahl's endeavor was the Wisconsin Special, so named because of its massive 836 cubic-inch Wisconsin Airplane engine. Antique car restorer Paul Freehill explained the mechanics of the Wisconsin Special's engine, "It's World War I technology that's leftover. There wasn't a clutch or anything; the engine was hooked directly to the rear axle." But however primitive the propulsion system may have been, Haugdahl had to be an innovator to make the car stay on the ground. He tapered the exposed parts of his car to cut drag. Where structural tapering was impossible, he wrapped parts in tape to cut drag. Haugdahl was also the first man to balance the wheels and tires on his race car. It was essential that Haugdahl pay attention to the smallest details, as the size of his engine left little room for error. The Wisconsin Special was only 20 inches wide. Even the 5'3" Haugdahl had to squeeze to fit in. Imagine the thrill of racing at 180mph on a sand course with the Wisconsin Special roaring a few feet from your back. Haugdahl was the first man to travel three miles in a minute, but his record was never observed by the USAC governing body as none of its members were present to witness the event. Those who were present witnessed a veritable miracle. Haugdahl's unofficial record would go untouched for over a decade.

April 7, 1947
Henry Ford, founder of the Ford Motor Company and father of modern assembly lines died due to cerebral hemorrhage at age 83 in Fair Lane, his Dearborn estate. He is buried in the Ford Cemetery in Detroit.

April 7, 1968
Jim Clark, one of the greatest grand prix racers of all time, died in a tragic accident during a Formula 2 race in Hockenheim, Germany. Clark, widely regarded as the most naturally gifted F1 racer of all time, competed his entire career on behalf of Colin Chapman's Team Lotus. He won two World Championships, in 1963 and in 1965. Clark's 1965 season is undoubtedly the sport's greatest individual achievement. Clark led every lap of every race he finished, and he won the Indy 500. Known for his soft-spoken manor, Clark was known for his ability to win on all types of courses, including those that he personally detested. He won four straight Belgian GPs at his least favorite course, the arduous Spa-Francorchamps circuit. Clark died in a meaningless race at Hockenheim, when his car mysteriously left the track and collided with a tree. His death shocked the racing world.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on April 08, 2015, 05:39:36 pm
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April 8, 1916
Racer Bob Burman crashed through a barrier into the crowd at the last Boulevard Race in Corona, California. Burman, his riding mechanic Eric Scroeder, and a track policeman were killed, and five spectators were badly injured. The boulevard race started in 1913 as part of the AAA national championship schedule. The race was run on Grand Boulevard, a street that formed a perfect three-mile circle. Bob Burman was coming off an attempt at the world land-speed record at Brighton Beach, New York, where he had run 129mph. Burman led most of the race at Corona before his blue Peugot broke a wheel, sending the car over the curb and into a pole. The tragedy ended racing in inland Southern California for almost 40 years.
PICTURED: 1911 Bob Burman - Daytona
When the famous Barney Oldfield was suspended from racing, Bob Berman took over as Benz' driver. The Benz and Burman went to Daytona Beach in April 1911. Burman's speed was 141.732 MPH; a full ten miles an hour faster than Oldfield's runs. This is not to suggest that Burman was the better driver; Barney had typically held back during his Benz run so he could promote another "go-for-the-record" exhibition. Needless to say, Oldfield was furious and came out of retirement to seek vengeance. But the "fastest speed at which man has ever traveled over the earth's surface" belonged to Burman for eight years. So phenomenal was 141-plus mph that automobile makers throughout the world were loathing to consider building a car to attempt to top it.

April 8, 1910
The Los Angeles Motordome, the first speedway with a board track, opened near Playa Del Rey, California, under the direction of Fred Moskovics and Jack Prince. The track was made of wood and ran a circumference of 5,281 feet. Board tracks used the same engineering technology as the smaller wood velodromes used in France for bicycle racing. The tracks were paved with 2x4's and were steeply banked at angles as high as 45 degrees. On such a track, a car-racing daredevil could reach speeds up to 100mph with his hands off the steering wheel. The L.A. Motordome, affectionately known as "The Boards," was a huge success. By 1915, nearly a half-dozen board tracks had popped up around the country. By 1931, there were 24 board tracks in operation including tracks in Beverly Hills, Sheepshead Bay, Brooklyn, and Atlantic City. Incidentally, the Beverly Hills track stood approximately where the prime-time shopping blocks of Rodeo Drive are located now. No tracks have ever approximated the speeds allowed on the heavily banked boards. Board tracks began to fade from existence during the Depression. The lifetime for 2x4's exposed to racing tires is approximately five years after which deadly splinters and potholes begin to dot the track's smooth surface. During the Depression, the expensive upkeep of the board tracks made them impractical. The last decade of board racing was a sight to behold. Cars tore down straightaways at 120mph while carpenter's patched the tracks from beneath. It wasn't unheard of for mischievous children to peek their heads up through holes in the board tracks to watch their favorite racers with a squirrel's eye view.

April 8, 1979
In the Rebel 500 event at Darlington Raceway in South Carolina, drivers Darrell Waltrip and Richard Petty swap the lead four times in a last-lap battle before Waltrip finally wins the race.
The race also featured a pit stop mishap in which driver David Pearson, following a miscommunication with his crew, drove away with only two of his four tires properly changed. Pearson’s car flipped over and had to be removed from the race. The embarrassing incident led to Pearson, who was a top driver, being released from his team, Wood Brothers.
At the time of his defeat by Waltrip at the Rebel 500, Richard Petty was a NASCAR legend. That same year, he won his seventh NASCAR championship, a record later duplicated by just one other driver, Dale Earnhardt (1951-2001). Petty, who was born on July 2, 1937, in Level Cross, North Carolina, is the son of driver Lee Petty (1914-2000), a three-time NASCAR champ who won the first Daytona 500 in 1959. Richard Petty began his own NASCAR career in 1958 and was a dominant competitor before retiring in the early 1990s. Nicknamed “The King,” Petty won a record 200 races in his career, including a record seven victories at the Daytona 500. Petty’s son Kyle (1960- ) also became a well-known NASCAR driver; his grandson Adam (1980-2000), NASCAR’s first fourth-generation driver, was killed in an accident during a practice session at New Hampshire International Speedway.

April 8, 2005
MG Rover Group collapsed under debts of $1.7 billion with a loss of more than 5,000 jobs.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on April 09, 2015, 07:59:24 pm
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On this day, April 9, 2002
George Francis 'Pat' Flaherty, Jr., an American racecar driver who won the Indianapolis 500 in 1956 died. He was 77 years old.
Interesting thing about Pat Flaherty's win is that, In the Spring of 1956, Flaherty did not have a ride for the 1956 Indianspolis 500. While tending bar at the tavern he owned on Chicago's north side, Flaherty overheard from two racing insiders, that car owner Zink did not have a driver yet for his racecar. Flaherty quickly called him and the two agreed over the phone to a one race deal. He won.
PICTURED: Pat Flaherty

April 9, 1971
Jacques Joseph Charles Villeneuve, Canadian automobile F1 racing driver was born in Saint-Jean-sur-Richelieu, Quebec. He is the son of Formula One driver Gilles Villeneuve, and is the namesake of his uncle (also a racer).

April 9, 1986
The French government ruled against the privatization of leading French carmaker Renault. The privatization of Renault, France's second largest carmaker to PSA Peugot-Citroen, has remained a highly debated issue since the 1986 decision. In 1994, the government sold shares of Renault to the public for the first time at 165 francs per share. The sale dramatically increased the company's revenue, but the French government remained the majority shareholder. Between 1996 and 1997, the market for cars in Europe grew precipitously, with the most marked increases in France. Renault, often scorned for its "public sector" policies, failed to capitalize on the growing markets. Instead foreign competitors like Volkswagen and Fiat took advantage. In 1995, Renault lost over $800 million. Renault and Peugot were the two weakest of Europe's Big Seven carmakers. Economists blame the French carmakers lack of success on its protectionist policies, and more specifically on the unwillingness of PSA Peugot and Renault to merge, a maneuver that would radically lower production costs for both auto-making giants.
It was eventually decided in 1996 that the company's state-owned status was detrimental to its growth, and Renault was privatized. This new freedom allowed the company to venture once again into Eastern Europe and South America, including a new factory in Brazil and upgrades for the infrastructure in Argentina and Turkey. It also meant the end of the aforementioned successful Formula 1 campaign. In 1999 Renault merged with Nissan Motor Campany.

April 9, 2009
The Honda FCX Clarity, a four-door sedan billed as the planet’s first hydrogen-powered fuel-cell vehicle intended for mass production, wins the World Green Car award at the New York Auto Show.
The first FCX Clarity cars came off the assembly line at a Honda plant in Takanezawa, Japan, in June 2008.
According to Honda, which reportedly spent more than 15 years and millions of dollars developing its fuel-cell technology, the FCX Clarity is more fuel-efficient than a gas-powered car or hybrid and gets 74 miles per gallon of fuel. FCX Clarity are more eco-friendly than an electric car “whose batteries take hours to recharge and use electricity, which, in the case of the United States, China and many other countries, is often produced by coal-burning power plants.
One downside of fuel-cell technology, however, is its cost, which in the case of the FCX Clarity, added up to several hundred thousand dollars per vehicle. To combat this issue, Honda chose to initially lease rather than sell the cars, at a subsidized price of some $600 per month. In July 2008, the first FCX Clarity cars became available in California. In November of that same year, another fleet was leased to government employees in Japan.
At the time of the FCX Clarity’s debut in 2008, the Japanese auto industry, led by Honda and Toyota, was out in front of American car makers in developing green technologies. In 1997, Toyota launched the Prius, the world’s first mass-produced hybrid car. The Prius debuted in the U.S. in 2000 and went on to dominate the hybrid-vehicle market. American auto giants such as General Motors were criticized for maintaining a focus on producing gas-guzzling sport utility vehicles and small trucks for too long, even as consumer demand shifted toward more fuel-efficient, eco-friendly cars. Hence which eventually led to their decline.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on April 10, 2015, 09:15:50 pm
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On this day, April 10, 1969
Harley Earl, an automotive stylist and engineer and industrial designer died due to a stroke in West Palm Beach, Florida. He was 75 years old. He is most famous for his time at General Motors from 1927 until 1959, where he was the first Vice President of Design. He is credited with heading the design team of Buick Y-job and Corvette.
PICTURED: 1938 Buick Y-Job with GM designer Harley Earl

April 10, 1863
Adam Opel founded Adam Opel AG to make household goods namely sewing machines. He advertised his first product to general public time for the first time on this day.

April 10, 1944
Henry Ford II was named executive vice president of the Ford Motor Company. His promotion confirmed his bid to become the heir to his grandfather's throne at Ford. Henry II despised his grandfather for tormenting his father, Edsel Ford. Nevertheless Henry II went on to display many of the leadership skills of his grandfather en route to becoming the head of the Ford Empire. After an unsatisfactory academic career at Yale University—where Henry spent four years without receiving a diploma—he returned to work at the River Rouge plant. There he familiarized himself with the operation of the company, and he witnessed the bitter struggle for the succession of Henry Ford's title as president of the company. After his father Edsel Ford's death-- the result of "stomach cancer, undulant fever, and a broken heart"-- Ford Lieutenants Harry Bennett and Charles Sorensen fought a silent battle for the Ford throne. Henry Ford Sr. had reassumed the title of president, although it was clear he was too old to stay in that position for long. The irritable Henry I wasn't dead yet though, and he intervened on behalf of his violent pet Harry Bennet, who had gained power at Ford for his suppression of organized labor. After being passed up for the vice presidency of the company, Sorensen left the company after over 40 years of service. Many attributed Ford's poor treatment of Sorensen to personal jealousy. Henry the Elder was reportedly even jealous of his grandson's presence at the Rouge Plant. At the outbreak of World War II, Henry II left Ford for military service, which he carried out in Salt Lake City, Utah, until his father died on May 26, 1943. At that time he returned to Ford to take the reigns of the company at the urging of the U.S Government. His grandfather was finally too old to run the company; and if he didn't name a successor, the company would fall out of the family's control for the first time in its existence. Realizing that Henry's presence would make his own accession to the company's presidency impossible, strongman Harry Bennett attempted to bring Henry II under his influence. His efforts were of no avail, though, as Henry Ford II refused to be influenced by his tyrannical grandfather's toady. His accession to the executive vice-presidency made him the inevitable successor to the presidency of the Ford Motor Company. Henry Ford II went on to lead his family's company back to greatness from its dubious position behind both GM and Chrysler after the war.

April 10, 1972
Italian Fiat executive Oberdan Sallustro was executed by Argentine Communist guerrillas 20 days after he was kidnapped in Buenos Aires. During the '60s and '70s, Argentina was a violent ideological battleground. Communist organizers resisted the oppression of the Fascist dictator Juan Peron. The era was famous for its "desaparecidos," the inexplicable disappearances of Peron's political opponents at the hands of his security forces. Unfortunately, it was not only Peron who was guilty of atrocities. Sallustro was very likely targeted as a member of Fiat because of Peron's strong love for Italy. A symbol of the established power, Sallustro fell victim to a battle over which he had no control. His murder was regarded as a tragedy. Communist revolutionaries tried to claim that his execution was "approved" by the people of Argentina, but the argument was hollow.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on April 11, 2015, 09:42:35 pm
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On this day, April 11, 1913
Ettore Bugatti first proposed designing the super car that would eventually emerge as the Bugatti Type 41 Royale. Eventually called the "car of kings," Bugattis were huge hand-crafted luxury cars that were affordable only for Europe's elite.
PICTURED: Bugatti Type 41 Royale at the Sinsheim Auto & Technik Museum.

April 11, 1888
Henry Ford married Clara Bryant in Greenfield, Michigan, on her 22nd birthday. When Clara Bryant married Henry Ford, he was living on a 40-acre plot of land that belonged to his father. Instead of farming the land Ford had it cleared and sold the lumber. Once the lumber was gone, he took a job as an engineer at the Edison Illuminating Company. The move was the beginning of Ford's precipitous rise through the ranks of the engineering world, a career that saw he and his wife move 11 times between 1892 and 1915, always to finer circumstances. Not many wives in that day would have approved of such a migrant lifestyle, but Clara Bryant Ford did. She is credited with backing her husband in all of his endeavors. There was a time when Henry Ford's success as a maker of cars was dubious at best. Indeed, Ford spent the years between 1895 and 1901 as a virtual unknown and unpaid tinkerer. In 1896, Ford met Thomas Edison for the first time. Edison encouraged him in his car-building mission, exhorting Ford to continue his work.
The union of Clara and Henry would reach its most celebrated stages after Henry had become a success. Clara Bryant stood by her man, it's true, but there were times when she objected to his practices, and on those occasions she intervened. She is often credited with forcing her reluctant husband to finally give in to labor negotiations. In 1941, most of the workers at Ford's colossal River Rouge Plant walked out on their jobs. Even after a successful strike, Henry Ford refused to negotiate with the UAW. He believed that Ford workers were essentially loyal and that the union had bullied them into striking. The stubborn Ford said, "let the union take over," meaning he wouldn't run the company if they were a part of it. The government informed Ford that they would take over if he to choose to close the plants. Ford was immovable. He insisted the government, by backing the unions, would hurt the American auto industry and not Henry Ford. Finally, though, Henry capitulated. Apparently, Clara warned him that should he close the plants, he would have to seek a new wife.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on April 12, 2015, 11:10:49 pm
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On this day, April 12, 1888
Cecil Kimber, the founder of MG, was born in Dulwich, England. MG stands for Morris Garages, which was the name for the Oxford distributor of Morris cars, a company owned by William Morris. When Kimber became general manager of Morris Garages in 1922, he immediately began work modifying Morris Cowleys, lowering the chassis and fitting sportier bodywork. In 1924, Morris Garages advertised the "MG Special four-seater Sports," the first car to bear the famous octagonal badge of MG. Old Number One, as the car was called, was actually the 48th body built for Morris by the manufacturing firm Carbodies, but it is still considered the grandfather of all true MG sports cars. Morris Garages outgrew its home in Oxford, and moved to Abingdon in 1929 under the name MG Car Company. The early 1930s were the glory years of MG sports cars during which time the company's road cars were promoted by its successful racing endeavors. For fiscal reasons, William Morris sold his private companies, which included MG, to the public holding company of Morris Motors. Purists contend that MG was never the same. Morris Motors diminished MG's racing activity, limited the variety of the company's products, and even placed the MG badge on company saloon cars. Cecil Kimber died in 1945 in a train crash. After his death, beautiful MG's were still produced, despite what the purists say. The Midget, the MGA, the TC, and the MGB were all good cars. Indeed, it wasn't until after Kimber's death that the MG caught on as a small sports car in the U.S. MG did, however, suffer after it was purchased by British Leyland, and the 1970s saw the company fall to pieces. Production at Abingdon stopped in 1980. In 1992, an MG revival was begun with the release of the MG RV8, a throwback to Kimber's earlier vision for MG sports cars.

April 12, 1968
Heinz Heinrich Nordhoff, a German automobile engineer died of heard failure at the age of 69. He is famous for his leadership of the Volkswagen company as it was rebuilt after World War II. Following the war, he was appointed Managing Director of Volkswagen, assuming the position on 2 January 1948. Nordhoff became legendary from turning the Volkswagen Beetle into a worldwide automotive phenomenon.

April 12, 1977
General Motors (GM) announced it had dropped plans to produce a Wankel rotary engine on the grounds that its poor fuel economy would hurt sales.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on April 13, 2015, 10:42:33 pm
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On this day, April 13, 1925
Elwood Haynes died in Kokomo, Indiana, at the age of 67. Haynes, the founder of the Haynes Automobile Company, led a remarkable life that began in Portland, Indiana. The son of pioneer farmers Judge Jacob and Hillinda Haynes, Elwood thirsted for education at an early age. He eventually received degrees in engineering from Worcester Polytechnic Institute and from Johns Hopkins. He returned to Portland to become a high school teacher in his subjects. His career and life turned around as the result of the discovery of vast natural gas deposits near Portland. Forever curious, Haynes familiarized himself with natural gas containment and piping methods. He became the architect for the Indiana Natural Gas Company's pipe network that provided most of Chicago with natural gas. Haynes was the first man to suggest that natural gas should be dehydrated before it was piped, a principle still in use today. From his laboratory at the Indiana Natural Gas Company, Haynes began tinkering with internal combustion engines. He completed his first car in 1894, one year after Charles Duryea is credited with having built the first American car. Such was the dissemination of information at the time that Haynes, even until his death, was credited with building the first American car. After creating his prototype, Haynes started his own car company, which he ran for nearly three decades. He is credited with a number of automotive innovations, including the rotary engine. But Haynes' greatest achievements came as a metallurgist. He was the first American to pioneer the oxidization of steel and the use of chromium to retard nature's oxidization process. He eventually received a U.S. patent for "stainless steel," although the invention first surfaced in England under the name "rustless iron."
PICTURED: Haynes-Apperson 1896, Elwood Haynes

April 13, 1931
Daniel ***ton Gurney, an American racing driver was born in Port Jefferson, New York. Gurney is the first driver to win races in Formula One (1962), NASCAR (1963), and Indy Car (1967). The other two are Mario Andretti and Juan Pablo Montoya.

April 13, 1956
Peter Raymond George "Possum" Bourne, a three time APRC rally champion was born in in Pukekohe, Auckland. He died tragically under non-competitive circumstances while driving on a public road, that was to be the track for an upcoming race.
Bourne was best known for his exploits behind the wheel of Subaru, initially the RX, the turbocharged version of the Leone, then the Legacy. But it would be the Impreza WRX that he would become most associated with, driving for the Prodrive Subaru World Rally Team in Rally New Zealand, Australia and also in Indonesia, partnered by Kenneth Eriksson in the mid 1990s, before going on to win multiple Australian titles with his own team.
Subaru Japan even awarded him a black limited edition STi version of the Impreza for personal use.

April 13, 1974
Darren Turner, an English racing driver was born in Reading, Berkshire. He was McLaren Autosport BRDC Young Driver of the Year in 1996. He was also a former test driver for the McLaren Formula One team, but has raced primarily in touring cars and sportscars since 2000.

April 13, 2009
former Major League Baseball all-star pitcher Mark “The Bird” Fidrych is found dead at the age of 54 following an accident at his Massachusetts farm involving a Mack truck he was working on. Fidrych, the 1976 American League Rookie of the Year, suffocated when his clothes got tangled in the truck’s power takeoff shaft.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on April 14, 2015, 09:17:33 pm
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On this day, April 14, 1927
The first regular production Volvo, nicknamed "Jakob," left the assembly line in Goteborg, Sweden. Volvo was the result of a collaboration between Assar Gabrielsson and Gustaf Larson. Gabrielsson was an economist and a businessman who began his career at SKF Manufacturing in Goteborg. As head of SKF's subsidiary in France, he discovered that, due to the comparative labor costs, it was possible to sell Swedish ball bearings in France more cheaply than American ones. The realization planted the seed that it was also possible to supply cars to continental Europe at a lower cost than American car companies could. Enter Gustaf Larson, engineer and designer. He had been a trainee at White & Poppe in Coventry, England, where he had helped design engines for Morris. The two men met in 1923, and by the next year they already had plans to build cars. Larson gathered a team of engineers, and began work on a car design in his spare time. By July of 1926, the chassis drawings were complete. Meanwhile Gabrielsson had aroused the interest of SKF in his project, and he obtained guarantees and credit form the parent company to build 1,000 vehicles, 500 open and 500 covered. SKF provided the name, AB Volvo. Volvo is Latin for "I Roll." It wasn't until the 1930s that Volvo made a mark on the international automotive world. Volvo purchased its engine supplier, Pentaverken, and began production on a variety of car models, including the PV651 that enjoyed great success in the taxicab market. After weathering the lean years of the early '30s, Volvo released its first "streamlined car" the PV36, or Carioca, a car heavily influenced by American designs, in 1936. Also in line with American marketing strategies was Volvo's decision to release new car models in the autumn, a tradition it began in 1938. Volvo's fortunes would mirror those of the American car companies after the war. Because of Sweden's neutrality during the war its production facilities were left undamaged, allowing Volvo to meet the demand for cars in Sweden and Europe after the war.
PICTURED: Volvo ÖV 4 a.k.a. 'Jakob', the first Volvo.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on April 15, 2015, 06:29:02 pm
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On this day, April 15, 1965
The Chesapeake Bay Bridge-Tunnel opened. Connecting Kiptopeke and Chesapeake Beach, Virginia, the bridge-tunnel hybrid spans the entire mouth of the great Chesapeake Bay. It is the longest such structure in the world at 17.65 miles in length. The bridge-tunnel is essentially an artificial causeway raised on platforms. At the north end of the bay, a high extension bridge crosses a shipping lane. At the south end of the structure, two mile-long tunnels cross commercial shipping lanes.

April 15, 1912
Washington Augustus Roebling II, car racer and designer, perished in the RMS Titanic when the ship sank in the North Atlantic Ocean. Roebling was the son of John A. Roebling, president of Roebling and Sons Company of Trenton, New Jersey. Washington's namesake, Colonel Washington A. Roebling, had been one of the builders of the Brooklyn Bridge. Young Washington began work as an engineer at the Walter Automobile Plant, which was later taken over by the Mercer Automobile Company. While working for Mercer, Washington designed and built the Roebling-Planche race car that he raced to a second-place finish in the 1910 edition of the Vanderbilt Cup Race. In early 1912, Washington embarked on a tour of Europe with his friend Stephen Blackwell. Roebling's chauffeur Frank Stanley brought with him the Roebling's Fiat in which the group began their continental adventure. A week before the completion of their tour, Stanley fell ill, and returned to America with the family Fiat. Roebling and Blackwell booked passage on the RMS Titanic in the first-class cabin. On the night of April 14, according to Titanic survivor Edith Graham, Roebling alerted her and her daughter to the danger. He helped them to a lifeboat making no attempt to save his own life and reportedly remarked to them cheerfully, "You will be back with us on the ship again soon." Both Roebling and Blackwell perished.

April 15, 1924
Rand McNally released its first comprehensive road atlas. Today Rand McNally is the world's largest maker of atlases in print and electronic media.

April 15, 1943
An Allied bomber attack misses the Minerva automobile factory and hits the Belgian town of Mortsel instead, killing 936 civilians.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on April 16, 2015, 08:52:54 pm
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On this day, April 16, 1908
The first Oakland car was sold to a private owner. Oakland Car Company was the creation of Edward Murphy, the founder of the Pontiac Buggy Company. Murphy was one of the most respected designers in the carriage industry. He decided to enter the car industry, and he invited Alanson Brush, the designer of the Brush Runabout to join him. Brush had been a chief engineer at Cadillac. His contract with Cadillac included a no-competition clause that had just ended when he met Murphy. Anxious to get back into the design race, Brush built a car for Murphy that was ready in 1908. Oakland ran independently for less than a year before it was purchased by William C. Durant and absorbed into Durant's holding company, General Motors. Durant's purchase of Oakland is often regarded as mysterious, considering the company had enjoyed little success and had produced less than a 1,000 cars at the time Durant purchased it. Often accused of "intuitive" business practices, Durant claimed that his purchase of Oakland, while exhausting his cash flow, provided GM with a more impressive portfolio on which to base their stock interest. Nevertheless, his decision to purchase Oakland, later called Pontiac, forced Durant out of control of GM.
PICTURED: The Oakland

April 16, 1946
Arthur Chevrolet, brother of Chevrolet namesake Louis Chevrolet, committed suicide at age 60 in Slidell, Louisiana. Louis and Arthur made their names as car racers in the first decade of the century. Known for their fearless driving styles, both brothers raced against American racing legend Barney Oldfield. The brothers came into contact with General Motors founder William Durant when Durant, impressed by their racing talents invited the brothers to audition for the job of chauffeur. He reportedly took the brothers to a track and raced them. Louis won the race, but Durant gave Arthur the chauffeur job. He offered Louis a position on GM's elite Buick Racing Team. Chevrolet raced and designed for Buick during the years of Durant's GM presidency. When Durant stepped down, new GM President Charles Nash took the money away from the Buick Racing Team. Durant asked Louis and Arthur to start a new venture. Born racers, Louis and Arthur designed a performance car that became the first Chevrolet. Durant wanted something to compete with GM's lower-priced models. Disappointed with Durant's demands for an economy car, Louis and Arthur eventually left Chevrolet to pursue their own racing and design endeavors. The brothers worked closely together for their entire careers. They designed aircraft engines, car engines, and continued to race. In spite of designing many successful engines, the Chevrolet brothers had little gift for finance, and they often were pushed out of their endeavors before they could reap the rewards due to them. By 1933, both men were broke, and their racing careers were over. Louis returned to Detroit to work as mechanic in GM's Chevrolet division. In the late '30s, he suffered a series of strokes which incapacitated him and finally killed him. With his brother dead and no fortune to speak of, Arthur was a broken man.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: GT Sally on April 17, 2015, 08:31:26 am
https://www.daysoftheyear.com/days/ford-mustang-day (https://www.daysoftheyear.com/days/ford-mustang-day)
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on April 21, 2015, 10:13:34 pm
(http://i645.photobucket.com/albums/uu176/MustangMayhem/this%20day%20in%20HISTORY/485058359_zps998036c0.jpg) (http://s645.photobucket.com/user/MustangMayhem/media/this%20day%20in%20HISTORY/485058359_zps998036c0.jpg.html)

April 17 1964
The Ford Mustang is officially unveiled by Henry Ford II at the World’s Fair in Flushing Meadows, New York, on April 17, 1964. That same day, the new car also debuted in Ford showrooms across America and almost 22,000 Mustangs were immediately snapped up by buyers. Named for a World War II fighter plane, the Mustang was the first of a type of vehicle that came to be known as a “pony car.” Ford sold more than 400,000 Mustangs within its first year of production, far exceeding sales expectations.
The Mustang was conceived as a “working man’s Thunderbird,” according to Ford. The first models featured a long hood and short rear deck and carried a starting price tag of around $2,300. Ford general manager Lee Iacocca, who became president of the company in October 1964 (and later headed up Chrysler, which he was credited with reviving in the 1980s) was involved in the Mustang’s development and marketing. The car’s launch generated great interest. It was featured on the covers of Newsweek and Time magazines and the night before it went on sale, the Mustang was featured in commercials that ran simultaneously on all three major television networks. One buyer in Texas reportedly slept at a Ford showroom until his check cleared and he could drive his new Mustang home. The same year it debuted, the Mustang appeared on the silver screen in the James Bond movie “Goldfinger.” A green 1968 Mustang 390 GT was famously featured in the 1968 Steve McQueen movie “Bullitt,” in a car chase through the streets of San Francisco. Since then, Mustangs have appeared in hundreds of movies.
Within three years of its debut, some 500 Mustang fan clubs had cropped up. In March 1966, the 1 millionth Mustang rolled off the assembly line. In honor of the Mustang’s 35th anniversary in 1999, the U.S. Postal Service issued a stamp commemorating the original model. In 2004, Ford built its 300 millionth car, a 2004 Mustang GT convertible 40th anniversary model. The 2004 Mustangs were the final vehicles made at the company’s Dearborn production facility, which had been building Mustangs since their debut. (Assembly then moved to a plant in Flat Rock, Michigan.)
Over the decades, the Mustang underwent numerous evolutions, and it remains in production today, with more than 9 million sold.
PICTURED: Ford Celebrates Mustang's 50th Anniversary From Top Of Empire State Building. Picture taken 22 hours ago

April 17 1937
Ferdinand Piëch, grandson of Ferdinand Porsche was born in Vienna, Austria. Piëch was the winner of the award of Car Executive of the Century in 1999.
His grandfather had developed a famous supercharged 16-cylinder engine for the Auto Union racing cars in the 1930s. Coincidentally, decades later when VW came up with a very ambitious project yet, Buggati Veyron, Piëch insisted putting a turbocharged W16-cylinder in it churning out nearly a 1000 horsepower and a top whack of 407 km/h.

April 17 1954
Riccardo Gabriele Patrese, an Italian F1 racing driver was born. He raced in Formula One from 1977 to 1993. He became the first Formula One driver to achieve 200 Grand Prix starts when he appeared at the 1990 British Grand Prix, and the first to achieve 250 starts at the 1993 German Grand Prix. Patrese entered 257 Formula One World Championship Grands Prix and started 256 races making him the second most experienced F1 driver in history, after Rubens Barrichello.


(http://i51.photobucket.com/albums/f378/Weirdeaux/vehicles/TommyIvo1960.jpg) (http://s51.photobucket.com/user/Weirdeaux/media/vehicles/TommyIvo1960.jpg.html)

18th April, 1936
Tommy Ivo, also known as "TV Tommy" was born in Denver, Colorado He is an actor and drag racer, who was active in the 1950-60s racing community. In the late 1950s, Ivo raced a twin (side by side) Nailhead Buick engined dragster which was the first Gasoline Powered dragster to break the nine second barrier. The Twin Buick also was the first gas dragster to record speeds of 170, 175 and 180 mph.

April 18th, 1882
Gottlieb Daimler and Wilhelm Maybach reached an agreement to work towards the creation of a high-speed internal combustion engine. Daimler had purchased a house with 75k goldmark from his Deutz compensation. In its garden they added a brick extension to the roomy glass-fronted summerhouse which became their workshop.Working in Daimler's greenhouse, the two men finished their first gas-powered engine in 1883. Four years later the two men achieved a major breakthrough when they constructed the first water-cooled, gas-powered internal combustion engine. Their activities alarmed the neighbours who suspected they were engaged in counterfeiting and, in their absence, the police raided the property using the gardener's key, but found only engines.

18th April 1906
Sunset Automobile Company, a startup company in San Francisco was totally destroyed by fire. Production of the Sunset never resumed, and the firm was legally dissolved in 1909. Throughout the history of American automobile production no company ever succeeded on the West Coast. they developed one of the most silent engine of that time.

18th April, 1942
Karl Jochen Rindt was born in Mainz, Germany. He was a German racing driver who represented Austria over his entire career. He is the only driver to posthumously win the Formula One World Drivers' Championship (in 1970), after being killed in practice for the Italian Grand Prix. Away from Formula One, Rindt was highly successful in other single-seater formulae, as well as sports car racing. In 1965 he won the 24 Hours of Le Mans race, driving a Ferrari 250LM in partnership with Masten Gregory from the United States of America.

18th April, 1949
18 times Nascar winner Geoff Bodine was born.

18th April, 2009
Driver Mark Martin wins the Subway Fresh Fit 500 at the Phoenix International Speedway in Avondale, Arizona, and becomes the first 50-year-old to claim victory at a National Association for Stock Car Auto Racing (NASCAR) Sprint Cup race since Morgan Shepherd did so at a race in Atlanta in 1993. Besides Martin and Shepherd, only two other drivers age 50 or older have won Sprint Cup events.


(http://i961.photobucket.com/albums/ae91/danny_galaga/karmann.jpg) (http://s961.photobucket.com/user/danny_galaga/media/karmann.jpg.html)

19th April, 1955
Volkswagen of America, Inc. was established in Engelwood, New Jersey. Also 1955 was a banner year for Volkswagen as the company produced its 1 millionth car and exceeded, for the first time, the production benchmark of 1,000 cars per day on average. Less than five years after that the VW Bug had almost single-handedly ended the years of "virtual monopoly" that Detroit Big Three had previously enjoyed.
PICTURED: If you know your VW Karmann Ghia's...You know this is cool

April 19, 1962
Two time Indianapoli 500 winner Alfred Unser, Jr. was born in Albuquerque, New Mexico, He was famously known as "Little Al" and the Unser family has a history of Indianapolis wins. He also has video games on nintendo & PC named after him.

April 19, 1964
Mario Andretti competes in his inaugural Indy car race, in Trenton, New Jersey, finishing in 11th place. The following year, Andretti won the first of his four Indy car championships (also referred to as the U.S. National Championship) and was named Rookie of the Year at the prestigious Indianapolis 500, where he came in third. Andretti went on to become an icon in the world of motor sports. He is the only man to win the Formula One World Championship, the U.S. National Championship (1965, 1966, 1969, 1984), the Indianapolis 500, the Daytona 500, the 24 Hours of Daytona, the 12 Hours of Sebring (1967, 1970, 1972) and the Pikes Peak International Hill Club.
He also has video games on nintendo & PC named after him.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on April 21, 2015, 10:16:47 pm
(http://i579.photobucket.com/albums/ss237/katiexgetsxcrunk/danica_patrick.jpg) (http://s579.photobucket.com/user/katiexgetsxcrunk/media/danica_patrick.jpg.html)

On this day, April 20, 2008
26-year-old Danica Patrick wins the Indy Japan 300 at Twin Ring Montegi in Montegi, Japan, making her the first female winner in IndyCar racing history.
Danica Patrick was born on March 25, 1982, in Beloit, Wisconsin. She became involved in racing as a young girl and as a teenager moved to England in pursuit of better training opportunities. In 2002, after returning to the United States, she began driving for the Rahal Letterman Racing team, owned by 1986 Indianapolis 500 champ Bobby Rahal and late-night talk-show host David Letterman. In 2005, Patrick started competing in IndyCar events, which include the famed Indianapolis 500 race at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway in Indiana.

April 20, 1925
Pete Depaolo, wins his first Indy 500 in cluver city, California for Dusenberg family averaging an impressive 135mph.

April 20, 1927
Phil Hill, american F1 racer was born in Miami Florida, He won the 1961 F1 championship racing for Scuderia ferari, driving the famous 'sharknose' Ferari 156

April 20, 1931
Matilda Dodge Wilson, the widow of John Dodge, was named to the board of the Graham-Paige Motors Corporation, becoming the first woman to sit on the board of a major auto-manufacturer. Graham-Paige was founded by the Graham brothers, whose initial car-making endeavor, Graham Brothers Truck Company, had been purchased by Dodge in 1926.

April 20, 1946
Gordon Smiley, another Indy 500 racer was born. Though he raced twiced in 1980,81 in Indy500 but never won. He tragically died during qualifying run in 1982 Indy500, and to date is the last driver ever to die during qualifying run.

April 20, 2003
Dajiro Kato, Japanese MotoGP racer died at Suzuka, crashing hard at 125mph to a wall at final chicane of the circuit.


(http://i645.photobucket.com/albums/uu176/MustangMayhem/this%20day%20in%20HISTORY/download_zps2c2aa9c1.jpg) (http://s645.photobucket.com/user/MustangMayhem/media/this%20day%20in%20HISTORY/download_zps2c2aa9c1.jpg.html)

On this day, April 21, 1967
General Motors (GM) celebrates the manufacture of its 100 millionth American-made car. At the time, GM was the world’s largest automaker.
General Motors was established in 1908 in Flint, Michigan, by horse-drawn carriage mogul William Durant. In 1904, Durant invested in the Buick Motor Company, which was started in 1903 by Scottish-born inventor David Dunbar Buick. Within a few years of forming his company, Buick lost control of it and sold his stock, which would later be worth hundreds of millions of dollars. (In 1929, Buick died at age 74 in relative obscurity and modest circumstances). Durant made Buick Motors the cornerstone of his new holding company, General Motors, then acquired Oldsmobile, Cadillac and Reliance Motor Company, among other auto and truck makers.
In 1911, Durant founded Chevrolet Motor Company, which by 1918 was part of GM. By the early 1930s, GM had passed the Ford Motor Company to become the world’s biggest automaker. Although Ford sold more than 15 million Model Ts between 1908 and 1927, the company was criticized for not responding quickly enough to consumer demand for new models, as GM did. GM also offered financing options to consumers, while Henry Ford objected to credit.
GM went on to experience decades of growth. The company pursued a strategy of selling a vehicle “for every purse and purpose,” in the words of Alfred Sloan, who became GM’s president in 1923 and resigned as chairman in 1956. In 1940, the company commemorated its 25 millionth American-made car, and by its peak in 1962, GM produced 51 percent of all the cars in the U.S. Its 75 millionth U.S.-made car rolled off the assembly line that year, while the 100 millionth car followed in 1967.
However, according to The New York Times, during the 1960s the automaker “began a long and slow process of undermining itself,” as it failed to innovate fast enough in the face of competition from foreign car manufacturers. In 2008, GM, hard hit by the global economic crisis, lost its title as the world’s top-selling automaker; that year, GM sold 8.356 million cars and trucks compared with Toyota’s 8.972 million vehicles. On June 1, 2009, GM filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection. It was a move once considered unthinkable for the company that became a giant of the U.S. economy in the 20th century.
http://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=1955&dat=19670416&id=ewQrAAAAIBAJ&sjid=xZcFAAAAIBAJ&pg=5383,758730 (http://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=1955&dat=19670416&id=ewQrAAAAIBAJ&sjid=xZcFAAAAIBAJ&pg=5383,758730)

April 21, 1985
The legendary Ayrton Senna won his first of 41 F1 Championship victories driving a Lotus-Renault at the Portuguese Grand Prix in Estoril.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on April 22, 2015, 09:17:24 pm
(http://i645.photobucket.com/albums/uu176/MustangMayhem/this%20day%20in%20HISTORY/merlin_1766705b_zpsbc097b7b.jpg) (http://s645.photobucket.com/user/MustangMayhem/media/this%20day%20in%20HISTORY/merlin_1766705b_zpsbc097b7b.jpg.html)

On this day, April 22, 1967
Frederick Henry Royce, who with Charles Stewart Rolls founded the luxury British automaker Rolls-Royce, dies on this day in 1933 at the age of 70 in England.
Royce was born on March 27, 1863, near Peterborough, Cambridgeshire, England. He grew up in a family of modest means and worked a variety of jobs, eventually becoming an electrician. In the mid-1880s, he founded a business that made electric cranes and electrical generators. In the early 1900s, after purchasing his first car, Royce began designing cars of his own, deciding he could build something better. Royce met British automotive dealer Charles Rolls, who agreed to sell Royce’s cars; the two men later formed a company, Rolls-Royce Limited. Royce, who was known for his attention to detail and perfectionism, served as head engineer. The six-cylinder Rolls-Royce Silver Ghost, which debuted in 1906, was dubbed by the British press the world’s “best car.”
In 1910, Charles Rolls died at the age of 32 while piloting his own plane. Royce continued on with their company and during World War I, designed aircraft engines for the Allied forces. Following the war, Rolls-Royce returned to making cars, launching the Phantom I , a vehicle that was “powered by an all-new, pushrod-operated overhead valve engine with detachable cylinder heads--cutting-edge technology for its time,” according to the automotive information Web site Edmunds.com. In 1931, Rolls-Royce acquired rival luxury automaker Bentley. Frederick Henry Royce died on April 22, 1933, at West Wittering, West Sus***, England.
In 1950, Rolls-Royce introduced the powerful and highly exclusive Phantom IV. Only 18 of these cars were produced, according to Edmunds.com, and they all went to royalty and other VIPs. The automaker continued to thrive during the 1950s and 1960s; however, in 1971, Rolls-Royce Ltd. declared bankruptcy after financial troubles related to the development of a jet engine. The company was restructured into two separate businesses: automotive and aircraft. In 1980, the auto company was acquired by a British defense business, Vickers. The following year, the Rolls-Royce Silver Spirit, a car designed to attract a new generation of buyers, launched.
In the late 1990s, when Vickers decided to sell Rolls-Royce, German automakers Volkswagen and BMW each made a play for the business. VW ended up acquiring the Rolls-Royce production facilities in Crewe, England, while BMW got the rights to the Rolls-Royce car brand. BMW licensed the Rolls-Royce name to VW until the end of 2002, then BMW began producing Rolls-Royce cars in 2003. VW continued to make Bentleys at the Crewe plant.
PICTURED: Rolls-Royce handout photo of their Merlin engines being made
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on April 23, 2015, 11:19:55 pm
(http://i1245.photobucket.com/albums/gg592/JonCole56/1-1%20LAMBORGHINI/Lamborghini350GTV.jpg) (http://s1245.photobucket.com/user/JonCole56/media/1-1%20LAMBORGHINI/Lamborghini350GTV.jpg.html)

On this day, 23rd April 1987
The Chrysler Corporation purchases Nuova Automobili F. Lamborghini, the Bologna, Italy-based maker of high-priced, high-performance cars. Although the terms of the deal were not disclosed, the media reported that Chrysler paid $25 million for Lamborghini, which at the time was experiencing financial difficulties.
Lamborghini was established in 1963 by Ferruccio Lamborghini (1916-1993), a wealthy Italian industrialist who made his fortune building tractors and air-conditioning systems, among other ventures. Lamborghini owned a variety of sports cars, including Ferraris. According to legend, after experiencing mechanical problems with his Ferraris, he tried to meet with Enzo Ferrari, the carmaker’s founder. When Enzo Ferrari turned him down, Ferruccio Lamborghini decided to build cars that would be even better than Ferrari’s. Lamborghini’s first car, the 350 GTV, a two-seat coupe with a V12 engine, launched in 1963.
The company’s logo featured a bull, a reference to Ferruccio Lamborghini’s zodiac sign, Taurus the bull. Various Lamborghini models had names related to bulls or bullfighting, including the Miura, a mid-engine sports car that was released in mid-1960s and gained Lamborghini an international following among car enthusiasts and a reputation for prestige and cutting-edge design. The Miura was named for a breeder of fighting bulls, Don Eduardo Miura.
In the early 1970s, Lamborghini’s tractor business experienced problems and he eventually sold his interest in his sports car business and retired to his vineyard in the mid-1970s. Automobili Lamborghini changed hands several times and in 1987 was sold to Chrysler.
In 1994, Chrysler sold Lamborghini to a group of Indonesian investors. Four years later, German automaker Audi AG owned by Volkswagen took control of Lamborghini. The company has continued to build high-performance cars, including the Murcielago, the Gallardo LP560-4 and theSpyder.
PICTURED: The Lamborghini 350 GTV

April 23 1992
Smithsonian Museum bought one of Miller's 91 Packard Cable Special's. Harry Miller was one of the most famous race car builder's of his time. Cars and engines built by him won Indy500 12 times which was then dominated by Dusenberg family. This car bought was one of 12 racing cars built by Harry A. Miller. Its 1500cc supercharged V8 rated at 230 horsepower drives front wheel. Strangely it weighted only 108kgs. This particular car was driven by Ralph Hepburn in the 1929 Indianapolis 500 and set speed records of 143mph. In 1991 the car also won two of the most rigorous antique auto competitions in the world: the Pebble Beach Concours in California and the Bagatelle Concours Paris.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on April 24, 2015, 11:19:38 pm
(http://i46.photobucket.com/albums/f105/felixdk/Motorsports/Sports%20Cars%20and%20Prototypes/Watkins%20Glen%206%20Hour%201971/716hr_6.jpg)

On this day, April 24, 1983
Rolf Stommelen, a German race car driver fatally crashed in his porsche 935 while racing in Camel GT trophy on Riverside Raceway, California.
He was one of the best race car drivers of the '60s and '70s, He won the Daytona 4 times and the pole position for the 1969 Le Mans in a Porsche 917, during which he became the first person to reach speeds exceeding 350 km/h. In 1970, he made his Formula One debut with Brabham and raced both sportscars and F1 throughout the 1970s.
Unfortunately, he is also remembered for killing 5 spectators when he crashed his car, Embassy-Hill- Lola during the 1975 season Spanish Grand Prix in Barcelona.
PICTURED: Rolf Stommelen's, Alfa Romeo T33/3

April 24, 1995
After producing about 6939 cars Lotus tuned Chevy Corvette ZR1's production was ceased. The heart of this car was lotus built LT5 V8 engine, which had a very unique intake manifold. It had 4 valves per cylinder and 4 camshaft to control them. It could shut off half of the intake valves and fuel injectors when the engine was at part-throttle, It was rated at 375bhp-405bhp in later models. In 2009 Chevy again revived ZR1.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on April 25, 2015, 11:35:55 pm
(http://i609.photobucket.com/albums/tt179/caddy-shack/Maserati/ViadPepoliBologna.jpg) (http://s609.photobucket.com/user/caddy-shack/media/Maserati/ViadPepoliBologna.jpg.html)

April 25, 1926
Alfieri Maserati's first car, the Tipo 26, made its racing debut by winning its class at the Targa Florio. Alfieri Maserati drove the car himself.
PICTURED: The Original Maserati factory/showroom on the Via dé Pepoli, in the 'old town' of Bologna, (Not many people know that - most fans tend to associate Maserati with the now legendary 'Viale Ciro Menotti' but Maserati didn't start out there, they moved there in 1940) The picture is Circa 1928 as a Tipo 26 leaves the factory.

April 25, 1901
Registration of the first vehicle which is today mandatory for all cars, first started in the state of New York. The fee to register the vehicle was $1. Total registration fees collected amounted $954 for very first year.
However France is considered the first to introduce a license plate, in 1893, followed by Germany in 1896. The Netherlands was the first country to introduce a national license plate, called a "driving permit", in 1898. But uniform registration and charging the owner for it was first introduced in the city of New York.

April 25, 2001
44-year-old Italian race car driver Michele Alboreto is killed on a track in Germany during a test drive. Alboreto collected five Grand Prix wins on the Formula One (F1) circuit, where he competed during the 1980s and early 1990s, and also claimed victory at the 24 Hours of Le Mans endurance race in 1997.
Michele Alboreto was born in Milan, Italy, on December 23, 1956, and began his racing career in the mid-1970s. He made his F1 debut in 1981 and took home his first victory at the Caesars Palace Grand Prix Las Vegas in 1982. From 1984 to 1988, Alboreto drove for the Ferrari team, the first Italian to do so in more than a decade. In 1985, his most successful year, he won the Canadian Grand Prix and the German Grand Prix and came in second place for the F1 drivers’ championship behind the iconic French driver Alain Prost, who collected the crown again in 1986, 1989 and 1993.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on April 26, 2015, 11:08:40 pm
(http://i574.photobucket.com/albums/ss184/schrader_42/PIERCE1.jpg) (http://s574.photobucket.com/user/schrader_42/media/PIERCE1.jpg.html)

April 26, 1906
Pierce Arrow purchased 16 acre's of land to create its new manufacturing unit. The factory that was constructed on it was of reinforced concrete and was absolutely fireproof. Albert Kahn, the architect of the factory, achieved a breakthrough with his single story, top-lit modular design. With its uniform lighting and physical flexibility, it rapidly became the prototype for American factory design, particularly in the emerging motor industry.
Pierce was the only luxury brand that did not create a lower price car. Its cars are collectors items world over.
PICTURED: The Pierce Arrow with a protective cover over the very intricate hood emblem

(http://i2.photobucket.com/albums/y17/wannabemustangjockey/SFIAS%20Nov%2009/100_0669.jpg) (http://s2.photobucket.com/user/wannabemustangjockey/media/SFIAS%20Nov%2009/100_0669.jpg.html)

April 26, 2009
Chrysler and the United Auto Workers (UAW) union reach a tentative deal that meets government requirements for the struggling auto manufacturer to receive more federal funding.
As part of the deal, the UAW agreed to let Chrysler reduce the amount of money it would pay toward health care costs of its retired workers. The month before the deal was announced, President Barack Obama issued an ultimatum to Chrysler that it must undergo a fundamental restructuring and shrink its costs in order to receive future government aid. Obama also gave Chrysler a month to complete a merger with Italian car maker Fiat or another partner. Although Chrysler reached a deal with the UAW as well as its major creditors shortly before the one-month deadline, Obama announced on April 30 that Chrysler, after failing to come to an agreement with some of its smaller creditors, would file for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection, then form a partnership with Fiat. The move made Chrysler the first big automaker to file for bankruptcy and attempt to reorganize since Studebaker did so in 1933.
The current stake holders (as of 2009) are in New Chrysler are: Fiat, 20 %; U.S. government, 9.85 %; Canadian government, 2.46 %; and the UAW retiree medical fund 67.69 %.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on April 27, 2015, 10:56:22 pm
(http://i126.photobucket.com/albums/p83/okiedirt2/38Pontiac2.jpg) (http://s126.photobucket.com/user/okiedirt2/media/38Pontiac2.jpg.html)

On this day, April 27, 2009
The struggling American auto giant General Motors (GM) says it plans to discontinue production of its more than 80-year-old Pontiac brand.
Pontiac’s origins date back to the Oakland Motor Car, which was founded in 1907 in Pontiac, Michigan, by Edward Murphy, a horse-drawn carriage manufacturer. In 1909, Oakland became part of General Motors, a conglomerate formed the previous year by another former buggy company executive, William Durant. The first Pontiac model made its debut as part of the Oakland line in the 1920s. The car, which featured a six-cylinder engine, proved so popular that the Oakland name was eventually dropped and Pontiac became its own GM division by the early 1930s.
Pontiac was initially known for making sedans; however, by the 1960s it had gained acclaim for its fast, sporty “muscle cars,” including the GTO, the Firebird and the Trans Am. The GTO, which was developed by auto industry maverick John DeLorean, was named after a Ferarri coupe, the Gran Turismo Omologato. Pontiacs were featured in such movies as 1977’s “Smokey and the Bandit,” in which actor Burt Reynolds drove a black Pontiac Trans Am, and the 1980s hit TV show “Knight Rider,” which starred a Pontiac Trans Am as KITT, a talking car with artificial intelligence, alongside David Hasselhoff as crime fighter Michael Knight.
By the mid-1980s, Pontiac’s sales reached their peak. Experts believe GM hurt the Pontiac brand in the 1970s and 1980s by opting for a money-saving strategy requiring Pontiacs to share platforms with cars from other divisions. In 2008, General Motors, which had been the world’s top-selling automaker since the early 1930s, lost the No. 1 position to Japan-based Toyota. That same year, GM, with sales slumping in the midst of a global recession, was forced to ask the federal government for a multi-billion-dollar loan to remain afloat. On April 27, 2009, as part of its reorganization plan, GM announced it would phase out the Pontiac brand by 2010. A little over a month later, on June 1, GM filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection, becoming the fourth-largest bankruptcy in U.S. history.
Pontiac became the second brand General Motors has eliminated in six years. Oldsmobile met the same fate in 2004 after being more slowly phased out over four years. Pontiac also became the ninth North American automobile brand since 1987 to be phased out, after Merkur, Passport, Asüna, Geo, Plymouth, American Motors (AMC) (renamed Eagle in 1988, only to be phased out a decade later), and Oldsmobile.
The last American Pontiac, a 2010 G6, was built on November 25, 2009 at the Orion Assembly plant. No public farewell took place, although a group of plant employees documented the event. In December 2009, the last Pontiac-branded vehicle to roll off an assembly line was in the Canadian-market Pontiac G3 Wave, manufactured in South Korea by GM Daewoo.

April 27, 1936
The United Auto Workers (UAW) gains autonomy from the American Federation of Labor.

April 27, 1952
Ari Vatanen, a Finnish rally driver turned politician was born in Tuupovaara. Vatanen won the World Rally Championship drivers' title in 1981 and the Paris Dakar Rally four times.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on April 29, 2015, 09:42:17 pm
(http://i891.photobucket.com/albums/ac114/MotorsportRevolution/Lost%20Racing%20Legends%201/DaleEarnhardtSr-2.jpg) (http://s891.photobucket.com/user/MotorsportRevolution/media/Lost%20Racing%20Legends%201/DaleEarnhardtSr-2.jpg.html)

April 29, 1951
Dale Earnhardt Sr., popularly known as "The Intimidator" was born in Kannapolis, North Carolina. He is considered as one of the greatest drivers in NASCAR history. He died on February 18, 2001, when he was fatally injured in a last-lap at the Daytona 500. Earnhardt, age 49, died instantly of head injuries.

April 29, 2004
The last Oldsmobile comes off the assembly line at the Lansing Car Assembly plant in Michigan, signaling the end of the 106-year-old automotive brand, America’s oldest. Factory workers signed the last Oldsmobile, an Alero sedan, before the vehicle was moved to Lansing’s R.E. Olds Transportation Museum, where it went on display. The last 500 Aleros ever manufactured featured “Final 500” emblems and were painted dark metallic cherry red.
In 1897, Ransom E. Olds (1864-1950), an Ohio-born engine maker, founded the Olds Motor Vehicle Company in Lansing. In 1901, the company, then known as Olds Motor Works, debuted the Curved Dash Oldsmobile, a gas-powered, open-carriage vehicle named for its curved front footboard. More than 400 of these vehicles were sold during the first year, at a price of $650 each (around $17,000 in today’s dollars). In subsequent years, sales reached into the thousands. However, by 1904, clashes between Olds and his investors caused him to sell the bulk of his stock and leave the company. He soon went on to found the REO (based on his initials) Motor Car Company, which built cars until 1936 and produced trucks until 1975.
In 1908, Oldsmobile was the second brand, after Buick, to become part of the newly established General Motors (GM). Oldsmobile became a top brand for GM and pioneered such features as chrome-plating in 1926 and, in 1940, the first fully automatic transmission for a mass-market vehicle. Oldsmobile concentrated on cars for middle-income consumers and from the mid-1970s to the early 1980s, the Oldsmobile Cutlass was America’s best-selling auto. However, in the decades that followed, sales began to decline, prompting GM to announce in 2000 that it would discontinue the Oldsmobile line with the 2004 models. When the last Oldsmobile rolled off the assembly line in April 2004, more than 35 million Oldsmobiles had been built during the brand’s lifetime. Along with Daimler and Peugeot, Oldsmobile was among the world’s oldest auto brands.

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30th April 1925
The Dodge widows sold Dodge Brothers Inc to the New York City banking firm of Dillon, Read & Company for $146 million plus $50 million for charity. It was the largest cash deal in history at that time. The sale of Dodge was not the result of a downturn in the company's fortune as Dodge was still selling well. The sale of the company was rather the result of the unwillingness of the Dodge Brothers' offspring to manage the company's affairs. Both Horace and John Dodge died in 1920. During their lifetimes, they had run the company personally, explicitly excluding their family members from participation in the company's management. After the brothers' deaths a brief depression in the stock market in 1921 scared the family members into "cashing out" of the company's affairs.
After running it unsuccessfully for three years Dillion Read & Company approached Chrysler for takeover.

April 30th 1948
Land Rover was unveiled for the first time in Amsterdam Motor Show. Land Rover was developed as a result of necesscity when Maurice Wilks, a Rover engineer was unable to procure parts for his constanly breaking WW2 american Jeep while working on his farm in Wales.
He thought there could be a huge demand of such vehcile, as there were a very limited option in that segment namely, Jeep and Kubelwagen only.
He had very limited resource, as Steel was rationed and available to company that exported and at that time Rover didn't. So he thought of using Alumunium, as they were plenty as WWII surplus used to built aircraft. Ironically this had added advantage, one it was cheap, other it was rust proof, just right for Britain's weather.
Its said that 75% of Landy that left the Solihull is still alive.

April 30th 1963
Micheal Waltrip, two time Daytona 500 champion was born in Kentucky. He is retired and currently lives in North Carolina. He owns a racing team, Michael Waltrip Racing and do ocassional commentary for race events.

April 30th 1975
Elliot Sadler, a Nascar race driver was born in Virginia. He currently drives No19 Dodge Charger for Gillett Evernham Motorsports.

April 30th 1991
The last Trabant rolled out of assembly line after 34 years of production and and nearly three million example produced. The model hardly had any significant change during its 34 years of lifecycle. It is commonly used as a handy symbol by the advocate of free market for everything wrong with government planned economies and communism.

April 30th 1993
Roland Ratzenberger, an Austrian racecar driver crashed fatally during the qualifying run for the San Marino Grand Prix at Imola, In the same event the very next day three-time Formula One world champion Ayrton Senna died.

April 30th 2003
Possum Bourne, A kiwi rally driver succumbed due to head injuries sustained on 18th April in non-competitive circumstances while driving on a public road, that was to be the track for an upcoming race. He was driving his Subaru Outback and collided with a Jeep Cherokee driven by another rally driver Mike Baltrop. At the time of his death, Possum had just re-entered the world stage, driving a production-class Subaru Impreza.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on May 01, 2015, 10:12:41 pm
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On this day, May 1st 1994
Three time F1 World Champion, Aryton Senna died at Imola. Austrian driver Roland Ratzenberger was killed in a practice accident the previous day. Senna and the other drivers still opted to start the Grand Prix, but the race was interrupted by a huge accident at the start line. A safety car was deployed and the drivers followed it for several laps. On the restart Senna immediately set a quick pace with the third quickest lap of the race, followed by Schumacher. As Senna entered the high-speed Tamburello corner on the next lap, the car left the track at high speed, hitting the concrete retaining wall at around 135 mph. Senna was removed from the car by Sid Watkins and his medical team and treated by the side of the car before being airlifted to Bologna hospital where Senna was later declared dead.
PICTURED: Medics tend to a fatally injured Ayrton Senna at Imola

May 1st 1902
First gasoline powered Locomobile was produced.

May 1st 1925
Ettore Bugatti registered both the 'Pur Sangre Des Automobiles', and the thoroughbred racing horse profile, as French trademarks.

May 1st 1925
Ford Motor Company becomes one of the first companies in America to adopt a five-day, 40-hour week for workers in its automotive factories. The policy would be extended to Ford's office workers the following August.
Henry Ford's Detroit-based automobile company had broken ground in its labor policies before. In early 1914, against a backdrop of widespread unemployment and increasing labor unrest, Ford announced that it would pay its male factory workers a minimum wage of $5 per eight-hour day, upped from a previous rate of $2.34 for nine hours (the policy was adopted for female workers in 1916). The news shocked many in the industry--at the time, $5 per day was nearly double what the average auto worker made--but turned out to be a stroke of brilliance, immediately boosting productivity along the assembly line and building a sense of company loyalty and pride among Ford's workers.
The decision to reduce the workweek from six to five days had originally been made in 1922. According to an article published in The New York Times that March, Edsel Ford, Henry's son and the company's president, explained that "Every man needs more than one day a week for rest and recreation….The Ford Company always has sought to promote an ideal home life for its employees. We believe that in order to live properly every man should have more time to spend with his family."
Manufacturers all over the country, and the world, soon followed Ford's lead, and the Monday-to-Friday workweek became standard practice.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on May 02, 2015, 09:04:56 pm
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On this day, May 2nd 1918
The General Motors acquired the Chevrolet Motor Company for $32 million in GM stock. This is quite an interesting story. The deal was actually a merger engineered by William Durant rather than a buyout. The original founder of GM, Durant had been forced out of the company by stockholders who had disapproved of Durant's increasingly reckless policies to run the company. Durant after being kicked out of GM started Chevrolet with Swiss racer Louis Chevrolet and managed to make the company a successful competitor in a relatively short period of time. Still the owner of a considerable portion of GM stock, Durant began to purchase more stock in GM as his profits from Chevrolet allowed. In a final move to regain control of the company he founded, Durant offered GM stockholders five shares of Chevrolet stock for every one share of GM stock. Though GM stock prices were exorbitantly high, the market interest in Chevrolet made the five-for-one trade irresistible to GM shareholders. With the sale, Durant regained control of GM.

His revenge did not last long though. Only two years later, Durant’s control of the company was taken by Pierre S. DuPont (of the powerful chemical company by the same name) who had been buying GM stock for years. DuPont soon paid off all of Durant’s debt, and the controversial company founder left the company for good.

Durant refused to give up on the automotive industry, though. He founded Durant Motors in 1921 and produced a line of cars for the next decade. The Great Depression in the early 1930s put an end to his company, and Durant then operated bowling alleys near the Buick complex in Flint, Michigan. These flopped eventually, and he spent much of the remainder of his life in anonymity. Durant passed away on March 18, 1947, at the age of 85. Hats off to William C. “Billy” Durant from all of us at
PICTURED: Louis Chevrolet is shown driving Durant around a track in this photo.

May 2nd 1972
Buddy Baker became the first stock car driver to finish a 500-mile race in less than three hours en route to winning the Winston Select 500 at the Alabama International Motor Speedway in Talladega, Alabama. He also broke the 200mph barrier a few years ago on the same track.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on May 03, 2015, 11:19:12 pm
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On this day, May 3rd 1987
The late Davey Allison recorded his first NASCAR Winston Cup victory at Talladega, Alabama, driving his Ford Thunderbird. The very day and in the same race his father, legendary Bobby Allison suffered a near fatal crash.
After the crash, NASCAR made the use of restrictor plates mandatory in all
cars.

May 3rd 1980
13-year-old Cari Lightner of Fair Oaks, California, is walking along a quiet road on her way to a church carnival when a car swerves out of control, striking and killing her. Cari's tragic death compelled her mother, Candy Lightner, to found the organization Mothers Against Drunk Driving (MADD), which would grow into one of the country's most influential non-profit organizations.
When police arrested Clarence Busch, the driver who hit Cari, they found that he had a record of arrests for intoxication, and had in fact been arrested on another hit-and-run drunk-driving charge less than a week earlier. Candy Lightner learned from a policeman that drunk driving was rarely prosecuted harshly, and that Busch was unlikely to spend significant time behind bars. Furious, Lightner decided to take action against what she later called "the only socially accepted form of homicide." MADD was the result.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on May 04, 2015, 09:33:23 pm
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On this day, May 4th 1948
Three time le Mans winner Hurley Haywood was born in Chicago. He was drafted into Army and sent to Vietnam in 1970 before driving his Porsches' to victory.
PICTURED: Henn Porsche 935L, Paul Revere 250, Daytona 1983
Here's the Henn 935L in the 1983 Paul Revere 250 at Daytona. It was driven by A.J. Foyt and Hurley Haywood to 1st place overall after qualifying in 1st

May 4th 1904
Charles Stewart Rolls met Frederick Henry Royce in Midland Hotels, Manchester for the very first time and rest is history.

May 4th 1920
Harry Miller was issued a U.S. patent for a race car design that introduced many features later incorporated into race cars in the following decades.

May 4th 1946
British F1 racer John Watson was born in Northern Ireland.

May 4th 1949
14 time NHRA funny car drag race winner John Force was born in Bell Gardens, California.

May 4th 1984
New Jersey rocker Bruce Springsteen releases "Pink Cadillac" as a B-side to "Dancing in the Dark," which will become the first and biggest hit single off "Born in the U.S.A.," the best-selling album of his career.

May 4th 1987
Jorge Lorenzo, a two time 250cc class World champion was born in Mallorca, Spain. He is currently Rossi's partner in Fiat Yamaha Moto GP team. He previously rode Aprilla to both his victories.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on May 05, 2015, 07:52:22 pm
(http://i645.photobucket.com/albums/uu176/MustangMayhem/this%20day%20in%20HISTORY/cannonball2_zpse731f7e1.jpg) (http://s645.photobucket.com/user/MustangMayhem/media/this%20day%20in%20HISTORY/cannonball2_zpse731f7e1.jpg.html)

On this day, 5th May 1914
Erwin "Cannonball" Baker began his record setting cross-continental motorcycle trip. After this trip he received his nickname 'Canonball' by A New York newspaper reporter who compared him with Canonball Train.
Baker set 143 driving records from the 1910s through the 1930s. His first was set in 1914, riding coast to coast on an Indian motorcycle in 11 days. In 1915, Baker drove from Los Angeles to New York City in 11 days, 7 hours and fifteen minutes in a Stutz Bearcat, and the following year drove a Cadillac 8 roadster from Los Angeles to Times Square in seven days, eleven hours and fifty-two minutes while accompanied by an Indianapolis newspaper reporter. In 1926 he drove a loaded two-ton truck from New York to San Francisco in a record five days, seventeen hours and thirty minutes, and in 1928, he beat the 20th Century Limited train from New York to Chicago. Also in 1928, he competed in the Mount Washington Hillclimb Auto Race, and set a record time of 14:49.6 seconds, driving a Franklin.
His best-remembered drive was a 1933 New York City to Los Angeles trek in a Graham-Paige model 57 Blue Streak 8, setting a 53.5 hour record that stood for nearly 40 years. This drive inspired the later Cannonball Baker Sea-To-Shining-Sea Memorial Trophy Dash, better known as the "Cannonball Run", which itself inspired at least five movies and a television series. In 1941, he drove a new Crosley Covered Wagon across the nation in a 6,517-mile run to prove the economy and reliability characteristics of Crosley automobiles. Other record and near-record transcontinental trips were made in Model T Fords, Chrysler Imperials, Marmons, Falcon-Knights and Columbia Tigers, among others.
PICTURED: Erwin "Cannonball" Baker and crew

5th May 1944
Bertha Benz, the wife of inventor Karl Benz and the first person to drive an automobile over a long distance, dies in Ladenburg, Germany.
Born Bertha Ringer, she married Karl Benz around 1870. Karl Benz received a patent for his horseless carriage, called the Motorwagen, in January 1886. The wooden vehicle had two wheels in the back, one in the front, and a handle-like contraption as a steering wheel. Powered by a single-cylinder, 2.5-horsepower engine, it could reach speeds of up to 25 miles per hour. Benz was having trouble selling the Motorwagen, however: Early press reports were not altogether positive, and customers were reluctant to take a chance on a vehicle that had so far only been tested over short distances.
In early August 1888, Bertha and her two teenage sons, Richard and Eugen, hatched a plan to take the car on a surprise visit to her mother in Pforzheim, Germany. Knowing that Karl would never allow it, they left early in the morning, while he was still sleeping. The trio drove from their home in Mannheim to Pforzheim and back, a total distance of 106 kilometers. Though big streets in the cities were often paved, there were no real roads outside urban areas yet, and Bertha had to drive along railway lines in order to find her way. To refuel the car, she bought Ligroin, a detergent then used as fuel, at local pharmacies. When the car's fuel line clogged, she unclogged it using one of her hairpins. She also used the garter on her stocking to fix a broken ignition.
Bertha's history-making drive proved that the horseless carriage was suitable for regular use. The press covered it extensively, and Karl Benz began to field requests from potential buyers all over the world. By the end of the 19th century, Benz & Cie. was the world's largest automobile company, with 572 vehicles produced in 1899 alone. Karl Benz left the company several years later. He died in 1929, three years after Benz & Cie. merged with Daimler Motors to form Daimler-Benz, makers of the famous Mercedes-Benz. Bertha Benz continued to live at their home in Ladenburg until her death on May 5, 1944, at the age of 95.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on May 06, 2015, 08:47:40 pm
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On this day, May 6th 1991
Harry Gant, aged 51, broke his own record to become the oldest man to win a NASCAR race when he won the Winston 500 in Talladega.

May 6th 1994
French President Mitterrand and Queen Elizabeth II jointly open the Channel Tunnel linking Britain and France underneath the English Channel. Eurotunnel Shuttle service, a roll-on roll-off shuttle service is used to transport road vehicles including freight lorries from France to UK and vice-versa.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on May 07, 2015, 08:34:37 pm
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On this day, May 7th 1967
Don Prudhomme, then 26, popularly known as 'The Snake' drove a modified Ford to became the first dragster to run the quarter mile in less than seven seconds when he reached 226 mph at the NHRA World Series.
PICTURED: Don Prudhomme - Southland - 1970

May 7th 1952
James J. Nance resigned form his position at Hotpoint, an appliance maker to become the president and general manager of the Packard Motor Company. There he was responsible for development of Packard's first V8 engine and automatic transmission popularly known as Ultramatic.

May 7th 1998
Dana Holding Corporation announces its participation in the largest-ever merger of automotive suppliers by its acquisition of Echlin Inc.

May 7th 1998
The German automobile company Daimler-Benz--maker of the world-famous luxury car brand Mercedes-Benz--announces a $36 billion merger with the United States-based Chrysler Corporation.
The purchase of Chrysler, America's third-largest car company, by the Stuttgart-based Daimler-Benz marked the biggest acquisition by a foreign buyer of any U.S. company in history. Though marketed to investors as an equal pairing, it soon emerged that Daimler would be the dominant partner, with its stockholders owning the majority of the new company's shares. For Chrysler, headquartered in Auburn Hills, Michigan, the end of independence was a surprising twist in a striking comeback story. After a near-collapse and a government bailout in 1979 that saved it from bankruptcy, the company surged back in the 1980s under the leadership of the former Ford executive Lee Iacocca, in a revival spurred in part by the tremendous success of its trendsetting minivan.
The new company, DaimlerChrysler AG, began trading on the Frankfurt and New York stock exchanges the following November. A few months later, according to a 2001 article in The New York Times, its stock price rose to an impressive high of $108.62 per share. The euphoria proved to be short-lived, however. While Daimler had been attracted by the profitability of Chrysler's minivans and Jeeps, over the next few years profits were up and down, and by the fall of 2003 the Chrysler Group had cut some 26,000 jobs and was still losing money.
In 2006, according to the Times, Chrysler posted a loss of $1.5 billion and fell behind Toyota to fourth place in the American car market. This loss came despite the company's splashy launch of 10 new Chrysler models that year, with plans to unveil eight more. The following May, however, after reportedly negotiating with General Motors about a potential sale, DaimlerChrysler announced it was selling 80.1 percent of Chrysler to the private-equity firm Cerberus Capital Management for $7.4 billion. DaimlerChrysler, soon renamed Daimler AG, kept a 19.9 percent stake in the new company, known as Chrysler LLC.
By late 2008, increasingly dismal sales led Chrysler to seek federal funds to the tune of $4 billion to stay afloat. Under pressure from the Obama administration, the company filed for bankruptcy protection in April 2009 and entered into a planned partnership with the Italian automaker Fiat.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on May 08, 2015, 07:48:58 pm
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On this day, May 8th 1899
Olds Motor Works was incorporated by the merger of Olds Motor Vehicle and Olds Gasoline Engine Works.

May 8th 1933
The very first police radio system was installed in Eastchester Township, New York, by Radio Engineering Laboratories of Long Island.

May 8th 1956
Henry Ford II resigned as the chairperson of Ford Foundation. The Ford Foundation is a philanthropic institution incorporated in Michigan and based in New York City created to fund programs that was chartered in 1936 by Edsel Ford and Henry Ford. He resigned as a trustee in 1976 rendering it independent of Ford Motor Company and Ford family.

May 8th 1964
Bobby Labonte, an american Nascar driver for born in Texas. As of 2008, Labonte is the only driver to have won both the NASCAR Sprint Cup championship and the NASCAR Nationwide Series championship.

May 8th 1982
Gilles Villeneuve, Canadian race car driver died when he crashed his Ferrari during the Belgian Grand Prix.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on May 09, 2015, 09:11:45 pm
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On this day, May 9th 2008
"Speed Racer," the big-budget live-action film version of the 1960s Japanese comic book and television series "MachGoGoGo," makes its debut in U.S. movie theaters.
Christina Ricci, John Goodman, Susan Sarandon and Matthew Fox co-starred in "Speed Racer" alongside Hirsch. Another key cast member was not an actor but an automobile: the mighty Mach 5, a race car designed and built by Speed's father, Pops Racer. As in the American version of the comic, the sleek Mach 5 used in the film is white with red accents, bears similarities to an early Ferrari Testarossa and is outfitted with an array of special features, including jacks that automatically boost the car, allowing for easy repair; rotary saws that protrude from the front tires; and a deflector that seals the driver into a crash-proof container. As part of the publicity for the Wachowskis' "Speed Racer," the Mach 5 went on display in January 2008 at the North American International Auto Show in Detroit, Michigan. As reported in USA Today, however, the car saw little real action on the track. During filming, it was attached to a crane, and most of the effects for the racing scenes were computer generated.

May 9th 1911
Thomas H. Flaherty, of Pittsburgh, PA, received a patent for a "Signal for Crossing", first U. S. patent application for a traffic signal design.

May 9th 1992
Roberto Guerrero, a Colombian race car driver set an Indianapolis 500 qualifying record, driving his Lola-Buick to an average speed of 232.483mph and setting the single lap record at 232.618mph.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on May 10, 2015, 07:28:18 pm
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On this day, May 10th 1975
Hélio Castroneves, a two time Indy500 race car driver was born in Sao Paulo, Brazil.

May 10th 1841
James Gordon Bennett Jr., publisher of the New York Herald and one of the very first sponsor and patron of auto racing (Gordon Bennett Cup Races) was born in New York City.

May 10th 1923
Alfred P. Sloan, Jr. elected GM president, Chairman of Executive Committee.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on May 11, 2015, 08:20:03 pm
(http://i645.photobucket.com/albums/uu176/MustangMayhem/this%20day%20in%20HISTORY/flat550x550075f_zps5e2f89d8.jpg) (http://s645.photobucket.com/user/MustangMayhem/media/this%20day%20in%20HISTORY/flat550x550075f_zps5e2f89d8.jpg.html)

May 11th 1947
Ferrari made its independent racing debut at a race in Piacenza, Italy. Enzo Ferrari had been designing race cars for Alpha Romeo since the late 1920s, After the WWII he decided to start his own brand. His debut car Tipo 125 featured a revolutionary V12 engine and way ahead of time but failed to finish due to fuel pump error. Still during the season he made and sold 3 Tipos. He adopted the now famous prancing horse logo in honour of Italian World War I ace Enrico Baracca, who used the logo on his fighter plane. Interesting thing about Enzo is that he manufactured and sold his cars to
fullfill his racing hobby.

May 11th 1916
Charles Kettering and Edward Deeds agreed to sell their Dayton Engineering Laboratories Company, famously known as DELCO to the United Motors Corporation, a holding company of William C. Durant at a record $9 million. Delco was responsible for several innovations in automobile electric systems, including the first battery ignition system and the first practical automobile self starter.

May 11th 1947
The B.F. Goodrich Company of Akron, Ohio, announces it has developed a tubeless tire, a technological innovation that would make automobiles safer and more efficient.
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Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on May 12, 2015, 08:58:52 pm
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On this day, May 12th 1847
William Clayton invented the odometer. During his trip across the plains from Missouri to Utah he was assigned to record the number of miles the company traveled each day. Clayton with the help of mathematecian Orson Pratt tired counting the revolutions of a wagon wheel and computing the day's distance by multiplying the count by the wheel's circumference. After consulting with Pratt, he developed a design consisting of a set of wooden cog wheels attached to the hub of a wagon wheel, with the mechanism "counting" or recording by position the revolutions of the wheel. The apparatus was built by the company's carpenter Appleton Milo Harmon.

(http://i493.photobucket.com/albums/rr299/Sport-GT-Monoplace/Ferrari%20Granturismo%20competizione/1956-tourdeFrance-250GT-DePortago-0577-3.jpg) (http://s493.photobucket.com/user/Sport-GT-Monoplace/media/Ferrari%20Granturismo%20competizione/1956-tourdeFrance-250GT-DePortago-0577-3.jpg.html)

May 12th 1957
Alfonso de Portago fataly crashed his Ferrari during the Mili Miglia. He, his co-driver Edmund Nelson along with nine spectators were killed when his tire blew. Among the dead were five children. This accident also resulted in a long trial for Ferrari team owner Enzo Ferrari.
PICTURED: 1956-tour de France-250 GT-De Portago-0577

May 12th 1973
Art Portland, an american race car driver died during the practice session for the 1973 Indianapolis 500.

May 12th 2000
19-year-old Adam Petty, son of Winston Cup driver Kyle Petty and grandson of National Association for Stock Car Auto Racing (NASCAR) icon Richard Petty, is killed after crashing into a wall during practice for a Grand National race at Loudon, New Hampshire.

May 12th 2014
Russ Collins, one of the leading motorcycle drag racers and drag bike builders of the 1960s and ‘70s, passed away in Hawaii. He was 74.
http://www.cyclenews.com/664/24404/Racing-Article/Drag-Racing-Legend-Russ-Collins-Passes.aspx (http://www.cyclenews.com/664/24404/Racing-Article/Drag-Racing-Legend-Russ-Collins-Passes.aspx)
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on May 13, 2015, 08:19:27 pm
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On this day, May 13th 1958
During a goodwill trip through Latin America, Vice President Richard Nixon's car is attacked by an angry crowd and nearly overturned while traveling through Caracas, Venezuela. The incident was the dramatic highlight of trip characterized by Latin American anger over some of America's Cold War policies.

May 13th 1980
At the annual meeting of the Chrysler Corporation, stockholders vote to appoint Douglas Fraser, president of the United Automobile Workers (UAW), to one of 20 seats on Chrysler's board of directors. The vote made Fraser the first union representative ever to sit on the board of a major U.S. corporation.
Born in 1916 in Glasgow, Scotland, to a strongly unionist father, Fraser was brought to the United States at the age of six. After dropping out of high school, he was fired from his first two factory jobs for trying to organize his fellow workers. Fraser then got a job at a Chrysler-owned DeSoto plant in Detroit that was organized by the UAW. Quickly promoted through union ranks, Fraser caught the eye of UAW president Walter Reuther. He worked as Reuther's administrative assistant during the 1950s, a groundbreaking period during which the UAW solidified policies on retirement pensions and medical and dental care for its members. Well liked by Reuther, with whom he shared a similar philosophy of unionism as social action, Fraser became a member of the union's executive board in 1962 and a vice president in 1970. Reuther died in an airplane crash that year, and Leonard Woodcock won a narrow vote over Fraser to become UAW president. Fraser succeeded Woodcock in 1977.
The late 1970s were turbulent times for the American auto industry: Rising fuel prices and the popularity of fuel-efficient Japanese-made cars had crippled sales, and Chrysler--known for its big, gas-guzzling cars--faced possible bankruptcy. In 1979-80, Fraser played a key role in getting Chrysler a $1.5 billion bailout from the U.S. government, negotiating a deal that called for hourly workers at Chrysler to accept wage cuts of $3 per hour (to $17) and giving the company permission to shed nearly 50,000 of its U.S. jobs. In a controversial move that was viewed with trepidation from both sides of the labor-management divide, Chrysler's chief executive, Lee Iacocca, nominated Fraser to the company's executive board. The stockholders voted in Fraser on May 13, 1980--three days after U.S. Treasury Secretary G. William Miller announced the approval of the Chrysler bailout.
Chrysler's subsequent turnaround--the company paid off its government loans ahead of schedule and posted record profits of some $2.4 billion in 1984--seemed to justify Fraser's willingness to make compromises on the labor side. Some critics, however, saw the union leader's actions as opening the door to a wave of similar concessionary bargaining on the part of automakers that later spread to management in other industries. Fraser retired as UAW president in 1983 and left the Chrysler board the following year. He died in February 2008, at the age of 91.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on May 14, 2015, 09:32:38 pm
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On this day, May 14, 2007
Cerebrus Capital Management, a private equity firm acquired 80.1% interest in Chrysler from Daimler A.G. for $7.4 billion. Daimler had bought it for $36 billion in 1998. The management renamed it Chrysler Holdings. Daimler paid $677 million in cash in return for release from $18 billion health/pension liabilities but retained 19.9% interest in Chrysler. This was the first private auto company in Detroit since 1956 (Ford went public).
On March 30, 2009, it was announced that Cerberus Capital Management will lose its equity stake and ownership in Chrysler as a condition of the Treasury Department’s bailout deal, but Cerberus will maintain a controlling stake in Chrysler’s financing arm, Chrysler Financial. Cerberus will utilize the first $2 billion in proceeds from its Chrysler Financial holding to backstop a $4 billion December 2008 Treasury Department loan given to Chrysler. In exchange for obtaining that loan, it promised many concessions including surrendering equity, foregoing profits, and giving up board seats.
Now Fiat is poised to assume a 35% stake in the company. So the question is, who holds controlling interest? Well in short, nobody does. Daimler holds nearly 20%, Fiat's taking over 35%, leaving Cerberus with 45% – the lion's share, but short of controlling interest.
But while the majority of Chrysler's shares may be back in Europe, Daimler isn't interested in holding onto its stake. Daimler and Cerberus had been talking about transferring ownership of the remaining 20% for a while already, but with America's financial institutions in shambles, who knows if the capital management company can even manage to find the capital to buy the rest of the company. In the meantime, it looks like Chrysler's at the whim of European automakers... yet again.
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Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on May 15, 2015, 07:51:59 pm
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On this day, May 15th 1981
The 20,000,000th Volkswagen Beetle was produced at the Volkswagen plant in Puebla, Mexico.

May 15th 1942
United States began gasoline rationing.

May 15th 1982
Gordon Smiley, an american race car driver was killed in Indianapolis Speedway

May15th 1986
Elio de Angelis an Italian F1 racer was killed during testing at the Paul Ricard circuit at Le Castellet

May 15th 1992
Edward Jovy Marcelo, a Filipino race car driver from Quezon City, Philippines was killed in practice for the 1992 Indianapolis 500.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on May 16, 2015, 08:24:56 pm
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On this day, May 16th 1903
George Wyman became the first motorcyclist to make a transcontinental trip across America. In fact, he was the first ever to make the trip by means of a motorized vehicle. Wyman’s trip was made on a 1.25-horsepower, 90cc California motorcycle designed by Roy Marks. Wyman’s arduous journey, which started in San Francisco on May 16, took 50 days and ended in New York City on July 6.
PS: not to be confused with a 19th century architect of the same name.

May 16th 1956
General Motors opens its brand-new $125 million GM Technical Center in Warren, Michigan. Today, the GM Technical Center is one of the landmarks of twentieth-century architecture. A $1 billion dollar renovation of the GM Technical Center was completed in 2003
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on May 17, 2015, 08:23:47 pm
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On this day, May 17th 2005
On this day in 2005, Toyota Motor Company announces its plans to produce a gasoline-electric hybrid version of its bestselling Camry sedan. Built at the company's Georgetown, Kentucky, plant, the Camry became Toyota's first hybrid model to be manufactured in the United States.
Toyota introduced the Camry--the name is a phonetic transcription of the Japanese word for "crown"--in the Japanese market in 1980; it began selling in the United States the following year. By the late 1980s and early 1990s, the success of the Camry and its Japanese competitor, the Honda Accord, had allowed Toyota and Honda to seize control of the midsize sedan market in the United States. By then, Toyota had adapted the Camry more to American tastes, increasing its size and replacing its original boxy design with a smoother, more rounded style. By 2003, as Micheline Maynard recorded in her book "The End of Detroit," apart from the early-'90s success of the Ford Taurus, the Camry and Accord had long maintained their position atop the list of the nation's best-selling cars overall, each selling around 400,000 units per year.
In 1997, Toyota's Prius--the world's first mass-produced gasoline-electric hybrid vehicle--went on sale in Japan. It was released worldwide in 2001. By using an electric motor to supplement power from the gasoline, hybrid technology resulted in greatly improved fuel efficiency and higher gas mileage. Honda launched its own hybrid lineup with the Insight in 1999 and continued with the hybrid Civic in 2002. By then, skyrocketing gas prices had combined with a backlash against gas-guzzling sport utility vehicles (SUVs) to make hybrids suddenly chic. Eco-conscious Hollywood celebrities such as Leonardo DiCaprio and Cameron Diaz proudly drove their Priuses around Los Angeles, and by 2003 Honda and Toyota were selling 50,000 hybrids a year in the United States. The plans to develop a hybrid Camry, announced in May 2005, brought the total number of Toyota-made hybrid models to four, including the Prius; the Lexus RX 400h, a midsize sport utility vehicle (SUV) released in April 2005; and a second SUV, the Toyota Highlander, released that June.

May 17th 1868
Horace Elgin Dodge, automobile manufacturing pioneer was born in Niles, Michigan.

May 17th 1890
Emile Levassor married Louise Sarazin, the widow of Edouard Sarazin and the French distributor of Daimler engines. The marriage set the stage for Levassor's business venture, Panhard et Levassor, which would use Daimler engines in its cars. Emile, France's premier car racer before the turn of the century, set an early record by driving from Paris to Bordeaux and back at an average of 14.9mph in 1895. His cutting-edge Panhard had a 2.4 liter engine and produced only 4hp. After two years of development Levassor's Daimler engine was capable of pushing the lightweight, wood-framed Panhard to over 70mph.

May 17th 1994
Al Unser Sr. announced his retirement from auto racing, ending one of the greatest Indy Car careers of all time.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on May 18, 2015, 09:29:25 pm
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On this day, May 18th 1958
In Monaco, France, Team Lotus makes its Formula One debut in the Monaco Grand Prix, the opening event of the year's European racing season. Over the next four decades, Team Lotus will go on to become one of the most successful teams in Formula One history.
Team Lotus was the motor sport wing of the Lotus Engineering Company, founded six years earlier by the British engineer and race car driver Anthony Colin Bruce Chapman.
Chapman built his first car, a modified 1930 Austin Seven, while still a university student. His success building trial cars led to the completion of the first Lotus production model, the Mark 6, in 1952; 100 were produced by 1955, establishing Chapman's reputation as a innovator in the design of top-performing race cars. By 1957, Lotus had become a well-known name among car aficionados, while Team Lotus dominated the Le Mans racing circuit, winning the 750-cc class and the Index of Performance at Le Mans in 1957 with the Lotus Type 11.
On May 18, 1958, Team Lotus made its first entry in the Formula One circuit, entering two single-seat Type 12s, driven by Cliff Allison and Graham Hill, into the Monaco Grand Prix. Though Ferrari was the favorite going into the race, British-made cars dominated the qualifying rounds, with Vanwall, British Racing Motors (BRM) and Cooper all finishing in front of Ferrari. In the main event, Maurice Trintignant (driving a Cooper) took first place after Ferrari's Mike Hawthorn, that year's eventual Formula One champion, was forced to stop with a broken fuel pump. Allison finished sixth in his Lotus, 13 laps behind the leader; Hill finished in 26th place.
Chapman learned from the success of the midsize engine Cooper race cars, incorporating the layout into a refined version of the Lotus Type 12. In 1960, Stirling Moss drove the result--the Type 18--to victory in the Monaco Grand Prix, scoring the first of what would be many Grand Prix wins for Lotus. Jim Clark won the team's first World Driver's Championship in 1963, beginning a golden age of Lotus racing. Both Clark and Graham Hill won multiple Formula One titles, and Clark also drove a Lotus to victory in the Indianapolis 500 in 1965. In later years, virtuoso drivers like Emmerson Fittipaldi, Mario Andretti and Alessandro Zanardi all represented Lotus. In 1977, the low-slung Lotus Esprit had a starring turn in the James Bond movie "The Spy Who Loved Me"; another Esprit, the Turbo, was featured in the 1981 Bond film "For Your Eyes Only."
Chapman died in 1982, and Team Lotus left racing in the 1990s. It remains one of the most successful Formula One teams of all time, with more than 50 Grand Prix titles.
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Pictured: Colin Chapman

Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on May 19, 2015, 09:09:29 pm
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On this day, May 19th 1903
Clarence Spicer received a patent for a "Casing for Universal Joints"; first practical universal joint to power automobile (vs. chain-and-sprocket drives
Pictured: First car utilizing Spicer's universal joint, built at Cornell in 1903. Spicer had attended Alfred Academy where he studied physiology, then applied human joint structure to the auto.

May 19th 1903
David Dunbar Buick, former plumbing inventor and manufacturer, incorporated Buick Motor Co. (formed in 1902) in Detroit, Michigan.

May19th 1928
Colin Chapman, the founder of Lotus Cars was born in the suburb of London.

May19th 1991
Willy T. Ribbs became the first African-American driver to qualify for the Indy 500.

May19th 2007
Los Angeles, California, is the first stop on a cross-country road show launched on this day in 2007 by Smart USA to promote the attractions of its "ForTwo" microcar, which it had scheduled for release in the United States in 2008.
In the early 1990s, Nicholas Hayek of Swatch, the company famous for its wide range of colorful and trendy plastic watches, went to German automaker Mercedes-Benz with his idea for an "ultra-urban" car. The result of their joint venture was the diminutive Smart (an acronym for Swatch Mercedes ART) ForTwo, which debuted at the Frankfurt Motor Show in 1997 and went on sale in nine European countries over the next year. Measuring just over eight feet from bumper to bumper, the original ForTwo was marketed as a safe, fuel-efficient car that could be maneuvered easily through narrow, crowded city streets. Despite its popularity among urban Europeans, Smart posted significant losses, and Swatch soon pulled out of the joint venture.
Undaunted, Mercedes maker DaimlerChrysler (now Daimler AG) launched the Smart ForTwo in Canada in 2004 as an initial foray into the North American market. In June 2006, DaimlerChrysler chairman Dieter Zetsche announced that the Smart would make its U.S. debut in early 2008. Between 2003 and 2006, as reported by the German newspaper Handelsblatt, DaimlerChrysler took a loss of some 3.9 billion euros (around $5.2 billion) on the Smart brand, and the company looked to the U.S. market as a way to bring the brand into profitability.
The cross-country road show that began in May 2007 allowed consumers in 50 cities nationwide to test-drive the ForTwo. On each stop on the tour, a large truck served as a mobile exhibit dedicated to the microcar, complete with interactive displays and virtual demonstrations. As Dave Schembri, president of Smart USA, put it: "The Smart ForTwo is all about urban independence and freeing people from the constraints of city driving." Under normal driving conditions, the ForTwo was designed to achieve 40 plus miles per gallon. The show was presumably a success: By September 2007, according to an article in MarketWatch, Smart USA said it had already received more than 30,000 registrations from potential buyers. The FortTwo went on sale in the United States in January 2008, at prices ranging from around $12,000 to around $21,000.

May19th, 2014
Three-time formula one world champion Sir Jack Brabham has passed away, aged 88.
A former Royal Australian Air Force mechanic, Brabham’s motorsport career started on Australian speedway dirt tracks in the late 1940s before he headed to the United Kingdom and joined the Cooper Racing Team, with which he won the 1959 and 1960 Formula One championships.
But it was his own Brabham racing cars – designed and engineered with friend and fellow Australian Ron Tauranac – that led to him winning the 1966 championship.
Brabham is the only person to have won the F1 world championship in his own car.
He was born John Arthur Brabham on April 2, 1926 but was known as Jack and later picked up the nickname Black Jack.
Brabham is survived by his second wife, Lady Margaret, and sons to his first wife Betty - Geoff, Gary and David, each of whom has enjoyed success in motorsport.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on May 20, 2015, 09:49:06 pm
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On this day, May 20th 1961
The Ford Motor Company completed a highly modified stretch Lincoln Continental convertible sedan for the U.S. Secret Service to be used as a presidential limousine. It was modified by Hess & Eisenhardt Company. The limo, later known as the SS-100-X, carried President John F. Kennedy down Elm Street in Dallas, Texas, when he was assassinated in 1963.

May 20th 1899
Jacob German, operator of a taxicab for the Electric Vehicle Company, became the first driver to be arrested for speeding when he was stopped by Bicycle Roundsman Schueller for driving at the speed of 12mph on Lexington Avenue in Manhattan. German was booked and held in jail at the East Twenty-second Street station house. He was, of course, not made to hand over his license and registration, as neither item was required until two years later in the State of New York.

May 20th 1971
Anthony Wayne "Tony" Stewart, a NASCAR driver was born in Columbus, Indiana.

May 20th 1973
Jarno Karl Keimo Saarinen, a Finnish Grand Prix motorcycle racer died during the fourth Moto GP season in Monza, Italy. A crash during the 350cc race left an oil slick on the track which the Race officials had failed to clean it properly between races. On the opening lap of the 250cc race, track marshals didn't wave the yellow and red stripe oil flag warning riders of the oil slicked surface. The race leader, Renzo Pasolini fell in front of Saarinen, who was in second place. He couldn't avoid the fallen rider and the resulting crash caused a multiple rider pile up. In all, 14 riders were embroiled in the mayhem that resulted. When the dust cleared, Jarno and Pasolini laid dead with many other riders seriously injured.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on May 21, 2015, 09:16:00 pm
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On this day, May 21st 2003
Alejandro de Tomaso an Argentinean racing driver and car maker died in Modena Italy. He participated in two F1 races winning no points but was a very successful car maker. He founded the Italian sports car company De Tomaso Automobili in 1959, and later built up a substantial business empire. Even Elvis Presly was fan of his car and owned himself a yellow one

May 21st 1901
Connecticut became the first state to enact a speeding-driver law. The State General Assembly passed a bill submitted by Representative Robert Woodruff that stipulated the speed of all motor vehicles should not exceed 12mph on country highways and eight mph within city limits.

May 21st 1950
Juan Manuel Fangio, Argentinean auto racer won the Monaco Grand Prix in an Alfa Romeo 158, the victory was the first of the 24-Grand Prix victories in his illustrious Formula One career.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on May 22, 2015, 09:48:16 pm
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On this day, May 22nd 1921
Racer Marshall Teague was born in Daytona Beach, Florida. Teague was one of NASCAR's earliest heroes. Racing Hudson Hornets equipped with revolutionary step-down chassis, Teague won five races in 1951 alone.

May 22nd 1977
Janet Guthrie became the first female to qualify for the Indianapolis 500. However she failed to finish the 1977 race due to mechanical troubles.

May 22nd 2001
Ford Motor Co. announced plans to spend more than $2 billion to replace up to 13 million Firestone tires on its vehicles because of safety concerns and numerous law suits.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on May 23, 2015, 10:54:02 pm
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On this day, May 23rd 1934
Wanted outlaws Clyde Barrow and Bonnie Parker are shot to death by Texas and Louisiana state police officers as they attempt to escape apprehension in a stolen 1934 Ford Deluxe near Bienville Parish, Louisiana.
Beginning in early 1932, Parker and Barrow set off on a two-year crime spree, evading local police in rural Texas, Louisiana and New Mexico before drawing the attention of federal authorities at the Bureau of Investigation (as the FBI was then known). Though the couple was believed to have been responsible for 13 murders by the time they were killed, along with several bank robberies and burglaries, the only charge the Bureau could chase them on was a violation of the National Motor Vehicle Act, which gave federal agents the authority to pursue suspects accused of interstate transportation of a stolen automobile. The car in question was a Ford, stolen in Illinois and found abandoned in Pawhuska, Oklahoma. Inside, agents discovered a prescription bottle later traced to the Texas home of Clyde Barrow's aunt.
As authorities stepped up the pressure to catch the outlaw couple, the heavily armed Barrow and Parker were joined at various times by the convicted murderer Raymond Hamilton (whom they helped break out of jail in 1934), William Daniel Jones and Clyde's brother Ivan "Buck" Barrow and his wife, Blanche. In the spring of 1934, federal agents traced the Barrow-Parker gang to a remote county in southwest Louisiana, where the Methvin family was said to have been aiding and abetting the outlaws for over a year. Bonnie and Clyde, along with some of the Methvins, had staged a party at Black Lake, Louisiana, on the night of May 21. Two days later, just before dawn, a posse of police officers from Texas and Louisiana laid an ambush along the highway near Sailes, Louisiana. When Parker and Barrow appeared, going some 85 mph in another stolen Ford--a four-door 1934 Deluxe with a V-8 engine, the officers let loose with a hail of bullets, leaving the couple no chance of survival despite the small arsenal of weapons they had with them.
The bullet-ridden Deluxe, originally owned by Ruth Warren of Topeka, Kansas, was later exhibited at carnivals and fairs then sold as a collector's item; in 1988, the Primm Valley Resort and Casino in Las Vegas purchased it for some $250,000. Barrow's enthusiasm for cars was evident in a letter he wrote earlier in the spring of 1934, addressed to Henry Ford himself: "While I still have got breath in my lungs I will tell you what a dandy car you make. I have drove Fords exclusively when I could get away with one. For sustained speed and freedom from trouble the Ford has got every other car skinned and even if my business hasn't been strictly legal it don't hurt anything to tell you what a fine car you got in the V-8."
PICTURED: Iconic Image of Bonnie and Clyde, Check the Ford V8 at back

May 23 1945,
Heinrich Himmler, chief of the SS, assistant chief of the Gestapo, and architect of Hitler's program to exterminate European Jews, commits suicide one day after being arrested by the British.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on May 24, 2015, 08:18:52 pm
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On this day, May 24th 2013
Aussie drag racer, John English passes away aged 89. John, along with Eddie Thomas, was one of the first real stars of Australian drag racing, a pioneer of the speed equipment industry and an all-round top bloke
PICTURED: John English in a Ford Side-Valve Dragster..... one of his earlier creations

May 24th 1991
On this day in 1991, the critically acclaimed road movie "Thelma and Louise" debuts in theaters, stunning audiences with a climactic scene in which its two heroines drive off a cliff into the Grand Canyon, in a vintage 1966 green Ford Thunderbird convertible.

May 24th 1899
W. T. McCullough, of Boston opened first public garage, Back Bay Cycle and Motor Company, as a "stable for renting, sale, storage, and repair of motor vehicles."

May 24th 1903
Marcel Renault, age 31, and his riding mechanic Vauthier, were killed in a crash during the Paris-to-Madrid Race. After another deadly crash, the race was canceled at the end of the first leg from Paris to Bordeaux, and the era of city-to-city races came to an end.

May 24th 1938
The very first patent was received for a "Coin Controlled Parking Meter" by Carl C. Magee of Dual Parking Meter Company of Oklahoma City

May 24th 1987
Al Unser Sr. won his fourth Indianapolis 500 driving the year-old March-Cosworth car. At 47 years and 360 days old, Al became the oldest winner in the event's history.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on May 27, 2015, 08:44:59 pm
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On this day, May 25th 1985
On this day in 1994, the ashes of 71-year-old George Swanson are buried (according to Swanson's request) in the driver's seat of his 1984 white Corvette in Hempfield County, Pennsylvania.
Swanson, a beer distributor and former U.S. Army sergeant during World War II, died the previous March 31 at the age of 71. He had reportedly been planning his automobile burial for some time, buying 12 burial plots at Brush Creek Cemetery, located 25 miles east of Pittsburgh, in order to ensure that his beloved Corvette would fit in his grave with him. After his death, however, the cemetery balked, amid concerns of vandalism and worries that other clients would be offended by the outlandish nature of the burial. They finally relented after weeks of negotiations, but insisted that the burial be private, and that the car be drained of fluids to protect the environment.
According to the AP, Swanson's widow, Caroline, transported her husband's ashes to the cemetery on the seat of her own white 1993 Corvette. The ashes were then placed on the driver's seat of his 10-year-old car, which had only 27,000 miles on the odometer. Inside the car, mourners also placed a lap quilt made by a group of women from Swanson's church, a love note from his wife and an Engelbert Humperdinck tape in the cassette deck, with the song "Release Me" cued up and ready to play. The license plate read "HI-PAL," which was Swanson's go-to greeting when he didn't remember a name. As 50 mourners looked on, a crane lowered the Corvette into a 7-by-7-by-16-foot hole.

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May 25th 1898
Elwood Haynes and Elmer Apperson organized the Haynes-Apperson Company in Kokomo, Indiana. Credited with having built America's first gas-powered car for much of his lifetime, Elwood Haynes was one of the most brilliant inventors in the early car industry. The Haynes-Apperson Company was his first foray into the mass production of cars. Together, the pair expected to manufacture 50 cars per year. Most famous as a metallurgist, Haynes was the first man to outfit his cars with all-aluminum engines, and to build his car bodies of nickel-plated steel. Haynes and Apperson shocked the world when they fulfilled the terms of a buyer's agreement by delivering their car from Kokomo to New York City. It was the first 1,000-mile car trip undertaken in the United States.
PICTURED: Elwood Haynes first car

May 25th 1927
Ford Motor Company announced end of Model T and its replacement by Model A.

May 25th 1985
The Charlotte Motor Speedway, a k a the Mecca of Motorsports, held its first race. The Speedway, and the city of Charlotte itself, are symbols of the new era of NASCAR racing.

May 25th 1977
Memorial Day weekend opens with an intergalactic bang as the first of George Lucas' blockbuster Star Wars movies hits American theaters.

May 25, 1935, at Forbes Field in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, Babe Ruth hits his 714th home run, a record for career home runs that would stand for almost 40 years. This was one of Ruth’s last games, and the last home run of his career. Ruth went four for four on the day, hitting three home runs and driving in six runs.

May 25th 1895
Playwright Oscar Wilde is taken to Reading Gaol in London after being convicted of sodomy. The famed writer of Dorian Gray and The Importance of Being Earnest brought attention to his private life in a feud with Sir John Sholto Douglas, whose son was intimately involved with Wilde.


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On this day, May 26th 1937
Union leaders, Ford Service Department men clashed in violent confrontation on Miller Road Overpass outside Gate 4 of Ford River Rouge Plant in Dearborn, MI (three months after UAW achieved its first landmark victory at Ford, had forced company to negotiate policy toward organized labor by staging lengthy sit-down strike at Rouge complex); UAW organizers Walter Reuther, Bob Kanter, J.J. Kennedy, Richard Frankensteen were distributing leaflets among workers at Rouge complex when approached by gang of Bennett's men; Ford Servicemen brutally beat four unionists while many other union sympathizers, including 11 women, were injured in resulting melee - Battle of the Overpass.

May 26th 1923
First Le Mans Grand Prix d'Endurance is run.

May 26th 1927
Ford Motor Company manufactured its 15 millionth Model T automobile

May 26th 1897
The first copies of the classic vampire novel Dracula, by Irish writer Bram Stoker, appear in London bookshops

May 26th 1907
John Wayne, an actor who came to epitomize the American West, is born in Winterset, Iowa.


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On this day, May 27th 1923
First Le Mans Grand Prix d'Endurance is concluded. Winners Andre Lagache and Renee Leonard covered 1,372.928 miles in a Chenard-Walker car. Le Mans is the world's longest-running 24-hour event, a type of racing that's considered the ultimate test of sports car performance.

May 27th 1927
Production of the Ford Model T officially ended after 15,007,033 units had been built. The Model T sold more units than any other car model in history, until the Volkswagen Beetle eclipsed its record in the 1970s.

May 27th 1930
Chrysler Building in NYC. opened as world's tallest building.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on May 29, 2015, 07:22:29 pm
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On this day, May 28th 1937
The government of Germany--then under the control of Adolf Hitler of the National Socialist (Nazi) Party--forms a new state-owned automobile company, then known as Gesellschaft zur Vorbereitung des Deutschen Volkswagens mbH. Later that year, it was renamed simply Volkswagenwerk, or "The People's Car Company."
Originally operated by the German Labor Front, a Nazi organization, Volkswagen was headquartered in Wolfsburg, Germany. In addition to his ambitious campaign to build a network of autobahns and limited access highways across Germany, Hitler's pet project was the development and mass production of an affordable yet still speedy vehicle that could sell for less than 1,000 Reich marks (about $140 at the time). To provide the design for this "people's car," Hitler called in the Austrian automotive engineer Ferdinand Porsche. In 1938, at a Nazi rally, the Fuhrer declared: "It is for the broad masses that this car has been built. Its purpose is to answer their transportation needs, and it is intended to give them joy." However, soon after the KdF (Kraft-durch-Freude)-Wagen ("Strength-Through-Joy" car) was displayed for the first time at the Berlin Motor Show in 1939, World War II began, and Volkswagen halted production. After the war ended, with the factory in ruins, the Allies would make Volkswagen the focus of their attempts to resuscitate the German auto industry.
Volkswagen sales in the United States were initially slower than in other parts of the world, due to the car's historic Nazi connections as well as its small size and unusual rounded shape. In 1959, the advertising agency Doyle Dane Bernbach launched a landmark campaign, dubbing the car the "Beetle" and spinning its diminutive size as a distinct advantage to consumers. Over the next several years, VW became the top-selling auto import in the United States. In 1960, the German government sold 60 percent of Volkswagen's stock to the public, effectively denationalizing it. Twelve years later, the Beetle surpassed the longstanding worldwide production record of 15 million vehicles, set by Ford Motor Company's legendary Model T between 1908 and 1927.
With the Beetle's design relatively unchanged since 1935, sales grew sluggish in the early 1970s. VW bounced back with the introduction of sportier models such as the Rabbit and later, the Golf. In 1998, the company began selling the highly touted "New Beetle" while still continuing production of its predecessor. After nearly 70 years and more than 21 million units produced, the last original Beetle rolled off the line in Puebla, Mexico, on July 30, 2003.

May 28th 1916
Barney Oldfield ran a qualifying lap in his front-wheel-drive Christie at 102.6mph. It was the first time any driver had rounded the Indianapolis Motor Speedway in excess of 100mph. But Oldfield ended up finishing fifth on race day, as Dario Resta beat the field in his Peugeot.

May 28th 1937
The Golden Gate Bridge opened to vehicular traffic on this day in 1937. One of the world's largest single-span suspension bridges, the Golden Gate Bridge was designed by Clifford Paine.


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On this day, May 29th 1950
Preston Tucker's lawsuit against his former prosecutors was thrown out of court. Tucker had been indicted for stock fraud after managing to produce only 53 of his long-awaited Tucker cars. The court case ruined Tucker's chances of ever releasing the car on a grand scale. Tucker charged the Big Three with trumping up a conspiracy to ground his competitive operation. Eventually all the charges against Tucker were dropped. Hungry to clear his name, Preston Tucker sued his former prosecutors on various grounds related to the destruction of his reputation. It was generally believed that Tucker's initial acquittal was an act of charity granted to an overly-ambitious, failed entrepreneur. Tucker's case was dismissed after little consideration. It was Preston Tucker's last-gasp effort to save his name, and it failed. His reputation has fared far better in recent years with the help of the Hollywood movie Tucker: The Man and His Dream, starring Jeff Bridges, that portrays Tucker as a visionary in a practical age.

29th May 1971
Al Unser became the first racer to win a single-day purse of over $200,000 at the Indy 500. The only racer besides A.J. Foyt to win four Indy 500s, Al Unser, too, has a legitimate claim to the title of Indy's greatest.

29th May 2005
On this day in 2005, 23-year-old Danica Patrick becomes the first female driver to take the lead in the storied Indianapolis 500.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on May 30, 2015, 10:13:25 pm
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On this day, May 30th 1911
Ray Harroun won the inaugural Indianapolis 500, averaging 74.6mph in the Marmon Wasp. The Indy 500 was the creation of Carl Fisher. In the fall of 1909, Fisher replaced the ruined, crushed-stone surface of his 2.5-mile oval with a brand-new brick one. It was the largest paved, banked oval in the United States. Fisher then made two decisions vital to the success of the Indy 500. First, he determined to hold only one race per year on his Indianapolis Motor Speedway; second, he elected to offer the richest purse in racing as a reward for competing in his annual 500-mile event.

May 30th 1896
First recorded auto accident occurred: Duryea Motor Wagon, driven by Henry Wells from Springfield, MA, collided with bicycle ridden by Evylyn Thomas of New York City.

May 30th 2002
Trabant filed for insolvency protection.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on June 01, 2015, 11:01:06 pm
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On this day, May 31st 1929
After two years of exploratory visits and friendly negotiations, Ford Motor Company signs a landmark agreement to produce cars in the Soviet Union on this day in 1929.
The Soviet Union, which in 1928 had only 20,000 cars and a single truck factory, was eager to join the ranks of automotive production, and Ford, with its focus on engineering and manufacturing methods, was a natural choice to help. The always independent-minded Henry Ford was strongly in favor of his free-market company doing business with Communist countries.
Signed in Dearborn, Michigan, on May 31, 1929, the contract stipulated that Ford would oversee construction of a production plant at Nizhni Novgorod, located on the banks of the Volga River, to manufacture Model A cars. An assembly plant would also start operating immediately within Moscow city limits. In return, the USSR agreed to buy 72,000 unassembled Ford cars and trucks and all spare parts to be required over the following nine years, a total of some $30 million worth of Ford products. Valery U. Meshlauk, vice chairman of the Supreme Council of National Economy, signed the Dearborn agreement on behalf of the Soviets. To comply with its side of the deal, Ford sent engineers and executives to the Soviet Union.
At the time the U.S. government did not formally recognize the USSR in diplomatic negotiations, so the Ford agreement was groundbreaking. (A week after the deal was announced the Soviet Union would announce deals with 15 other foreign companies, including E.I. Du Pont de Nemours and RCA.) As Douglas Brinkley writes in "Wheels for the World," his book on Henry Ford and Ford Motor, the automaker was firm in his belief that introducing capitalism was the best way to undermine communism. In any case, Ford's assistance in establishing motor vehicle production facilities in the USSR would greatly impact the course of world events, as the ability to produce these vehicles helped the Soviets defeat Germany on the Eastern Front during World War II. In 1944, according to Brinkley, Stalin wrote to the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, calling Henry Ford "one of the world's greatest industrialists" and expressing the hope that "may God preserve him."
PICTURED: The Ford plant at Nizhni Novgorod

May 31st 1870
Professor Edward Joseph De Smedt of the American Asphalt Pavement Company, New York City, received two patents for his invention known as "French asphalt pavement." De Smedt had invented the first practical version of sheet asphalt. On July 29 of the same year, the first road pavement of sheet asphalt was laid on William Street in Newark, New Jersey.

May 31st 1898
Thomas A. Edison received a patent for a "Governor for Motors", a "means for adjusting the governor for any desired speed, and with the means, such as centrifugal governor-*****, for regulating the friction members to maintain a constant speed."

May 31st 1904
Byron J. Carter, of Jackson, MI, received a U.S. patent for "Transmission-Gearing"; "friction-drive" mechanism replaced conventional transmission to provide more precise control of a car's speed; never really caught on, proved susceptible to poor road conditions; technology involved in the friction-drive is, however, related to today's disc brakes.

May 31st, 1884 
Kellogg patents the cornflake


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On this day, June 1st 1917
Henry Leland, the founder of the Cadillac Motor Car Company, resigned as company president on this date in 1917. Ever since William Durant had arranged for General Motors (GM) to purchase Cadillac, Leland and Durant had endured a strained relationship. But Leland's electric starter had made Cadillac so successful early on that Durant had avoided meddling with the autonomy of his company. Leland's next great achievement at Cadillac was his supervision of his son's proposal that Cadillac should introduce a V-8 engine.
PICTURED: Left to Right, Edsel Ford, Henry Ford, Henry Leland, and Wilfred Leland

June 1st 1934
The Tokyo-based Jidosha-Seizo Kabushiki-Kaisha (Automobile Manufacturing Co., Ltd. in English) takes on a new name: Nissan Motor Company.
Jidosha-Seizo Kabushiki-Kaisha had been established in December 1933. The company's new name, adopted in June 1934, was an abbreviation for Nippon Sangyo, a "zaibatsu" (or holding company) belonging to Tobata's founder, Yoshisuke Aikawa. Nissan produced its first Datsun (a descendant of the Dat Car, a small, boxy passenger vehicle designed by Japanese automotive pioneer Masujiro Hashimoto that was first produced in 1914) at its Yokohama plant in April 1935. The company began exporting cars to Australia that same year. Beginning in 1938 and lasting throughout World War II, Nissan converted entirely from producing small passenger cars to producing trucks and military vehicles. Allied occupation forces seized much of Nissan's production operations in 1945 and didn't return full control to Nissan until a decade later.
In 1960, Nissan became the first Japanese automaker to win the Deming Prize for engineering excellence. New Datsun models like the Bluebird (1959), the Cedric (1960) and the Sunny (1966) helped spur Nissan sales in Japan and abroad, and the company experienced phenomenal growth over the course of the 1960s.
The energy crises of the next decade fueled the rise in exports of affordable, fuel-efficient Japanese-made cars: The third-generation Sunny got the highest score on the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's tests of fuel economy in 1973. Success in the United States and other markets allowed Nissan to expand its foreign operations, which now include manufacturing and assembly plants in as many as 17 countries around the world. Today, Nissan--which dropped the Datsun name in the mid-1980s--is the third-largest car manufacturer in Japan, behind first-place Toyota and just behind Honda. After struggling in the late 1990s, the company turned itself around by building an alliance with French carmaker Renault; overhauling its luxury car line, Infiniti; and releasing the Titan pickup truck as well as revamped versions of the famous Z sports car and mid-size Altima sedan.

Monday, June 1, 1829
Today is Foundation Day for Western Australia.
The first recorded sighting of Australia's western coastline came in 1611, when Dutch mariner Hendrik Brouwer experimented with a different route to the Dutch East Indies. As the route became more popular, the Dutch began to refer to the land as "New Holland".
Dutch captain Willem de Vlamingh named the Swan River in 1697 because of the black swans he saw in abundance there. In 1826, Edmund Lockyer was sent to claim the western half of the Australian continent for Britain. He arrived at King George Sound on Christmas Day in 1826, and established a military base which he named Frederick's Town (now Albany). However, this is not regarded as Western Australia's Foundation Day.
In 1829, Captain Charles Fremantle was sent to take formal possession of the remainder of New Holland which had not already been claimed for Britain under the territory of New South Wales. On 2 May 1829, Captain Fremantle raised the Union Jack on the south head of the Swan River, thus claiming the territory for Britain.
Western Australia's Foundation Day is considered to be 1 June as, on 1 June 1829, Western Australia's first non-military settlers arrived in the Swan River Colony aboard the Parmelia. The colony of Western Australia was then proclaimed on 8 June 1829, and two months later, Perth was also founded.

June 1, 1962.
Adolf Eichmann, 'Chief Executioner of the Third Reich', is hanged for his war crimes.
Adolf Eichmann was a member of the Austrian Nazi party in World War II. After his promotion to the Gestapo's Jewish section, he was essentially responsible for the extermination of millions of Jews during the war. He is often referred to as the 'Chief Executioner' of the Third Reich. After the war Eichmann escaped to Argentina in South America, but was located and captured by the Israeli secret service in 1960.
Eichmann's trial in front of an Israeli court in Jerusalem started on 11 April 1961. He faced fifteen criminal charges, including crimes against humanity, crimes against the Jewish people and war crimes. As part of Israeli criminal procedure, his trial was presided over by three judges instead of a jury, all of which were refugees from the Nazi regime in Germany. Eichmann was protected by a bulletproof glass booth and guarded by two men whose families had not suffered directly at the hands of the Nazis. Eichmann was convicted on all counts and sentenced to death on 15 December 1961. He was hanged a few minutes after midnight on 1 June 1962 at Ramla prison, the only civil execution ever carried out in Israel.

June 1, 1850.
The first convicts arrive in Fremantle, Western Australia, to help populate the waning Swan River colony.
The Swan River colony, established on Australia's western coast in 1829, was begun as a free settlement. Captain Charles Fremantle declared the Swan River Colony for Britain on 2 May 1829. The first ships with free settlers to arrive were the Parmelia on June 1 and HMS Sulphur on June 8. Three merchant ships arrived 4-6 weeks later: the Calista on August 5, the St Leonard on August 6 and the Marquis of Anglesey on August 23. Although the population spread out in search of good land, mainly settling around the southwestern coastline at Bunbury, Augusta and Albany, the two original separate townsites of the colony developed slowly into the port city of Fremantle and the Western Australian capital city of Perth.
For the first fifteen years, the people of the colony were generally opposed to accepting convicts, although the idea was occasionally debated, especially by those who sought to employ convict labour for building projects. Serious lobbying for Western Australia to become a penal colony began in 1845 when the York Agricultural Society petitioned the Legislative Council to bring convicts out from England on the grounds that the colony's economy was on the brink of collapse due to an extreme shortage of labour. Whilst later examination of the circumstances proves that there was no such shortage of labour in the colony, the petition found its way to the British Colonial Office, which in turn agreed to send out a small number of convicts to Swan River.
The first group of convicts to populate Fremantle arrived on 1 June 1850. Between 1850 and 1868, ultimately 9721 convicts were transported to Western Australia. The last convict ship to Western Australia, the Hougoumont, left Britain in 1867 and arrived in Western Australia on 10 January 1868.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on June 02, 2015, 09:12:04 pm
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On this day, June 2nd 1970
Car racer, designer, and manufacturer Bruce McLaren was killed when his McLaren M8D lost its back end at high speed and collided with an earthen embankment at the Goodwood racetrack in England.
PICTURED: Bruce McLaren and Juan Manual Fangio

June 2nd 1988
Consumer Reports called for ban on Suzuki Samurai automobile.

June 2, 1953
Queen Elizabeth II is crowned, watched by millions in the first televised coronation of a monarch.
Princess Elizabeth, who became Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom, was born Elizabeth Alexandra Mary Windsor on 21 April 1926. She was proclaimed queen on 6 February 1952, following the death of her father, George VI. She ascended the throne the following year, on 2 June 1953. The Queen was crowned in a lavish coronation ceremony attended by over 8,000 guests in Westminster Abbey, London. The ceremony included the Queen being handed the four symbols of authority - the orb, the sceptre, the rod of mercy and the royal ring of sapphire and rubies. The ceremony was completed as the Archbishop of Canterbury, Dr Geoffrey Fisher, placed St Edward's Crown on her head.
Whilst approximately three million people lined the streets of London to glimpse the new monarch travelling to and from Buckingham Palace in the golden state coach, millions more around the world watched the first ever televised coronation of a monarch in a broadcast made in 44 languages.
Queen Elizabeth II celebrated her Diamond Jubilee in 2012.

June 2, 1841.
Eyre's expedition across the Nullarbor is saved when he meets Captain Rossiter, of the whaler 'Mississippi'.
Edward John Eyre, born 5 August 1815, was the first white man to cross southern Australia from Adelaide to the west, travelling across the Nullarbor Plain to King George's Sound, now called Albany. Eyre originally intended to cross the continent from south to north, taking with him his overseer, John Baxter, and three Aborigines. He was forced to revise his plans when his way became blocked by the numerous saltpans of South Australia, leading him to believe that a gigantic inland sea in the shape of a horseshoe prevented access to the north.
Following this fruitless attempt, Eyre regrouped at Streaky Bay on the west coast of the Eyre Peninsula. He then continued west, which had never before been attempted, in a gruelling journey across the Nullarbor, during which his party faced starvation and thirst. Eyre's overseer, Baxter, was killed on the night of 29 April 1841, as he tried to stop two of the expedition's Aborigines from raiding the meagre supplies. After Baxter died, Eyre was left with just one loyal companion, the Aborigine, Wylie. The two continued on, trying to outrun the Aborigines whilst susbsisting on very few rations.
The pair faced starvation a number of times during their journey, in between rest stops in places when they found food was abundant. On 2 June 1841, Eyre and Wylie were travelling along the shore near Thistle Cove when they encountered the French whaler 'Mississippi'. Attracting the attention of the ship's crew by way of a fire, they were met at the beach and taken aboard the Mississippi as guests of Captain Rossiter. Here, they were given ample food and water, and their horses even shod by the ship's blacksmith. Loaded with supplies from the ship, Eyre continued his westward journey on 14 June. Eyre named the inlet Rossiter Bay after the ship's captain, though it was later renamed Mississippi Point.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on June 03, 2015, 09:56:21 pm
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On this day, June 3rd 1957
The U.S. Supreme Court rules that the chemical company E. I. Du Pont de Nemours & Co. must give up its large stock interest in the Detroit-based automobile company General Motors on the grounds that it constituted a monopoly, or a concentration of power that reduced competition or otherwise interfered with trade.
Between 1917 and 1919, Du Pont invested $50 million in GM, becoming the automaker's largest stockholder, with a 23 percent share. The chemical company's founder, Pierre S. Du Pont, served as GM's president from 1920 to 1923 and as chairman of the company's board from 1923 to 1929. By that time, GM had passed Ford Motor Company as the largest manufacturer of passenger cars in the United States, and had become one of the largest companies in the world, in any industry.
In 1949, the U.S. Justice Department brought suit against Du Pont, charging that the chemical giant's close relationship with GM gave it an illegal advantage over competitors in the sale of its automotive finishes and textiles. This advantage, according to the suit, violated the 1890 Sherman Antitrust Act, Congress' first attempt to regulate monopolies. The case dragged on for five years before Chicago's U.S. District Court Judge Walter J. LaBuy dismissed the government's suit, ruling that it had "failed to prove conspiracy, monopolization, a restraint of trade, or any reasonable probability of a restraint."
The Justice Department appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court, and on June 3, 1957, the Court handed down its decision. It based its reversal of LaBuy's verdict not on the Sherman Act but on Section 7 of the Clayton Act, which had been passed in 1914 to clarify and support the Sherman Act. This section, to which government lawyers had dedicated only a tiny portion of their case, prohibited any corporation from purchasing stock in another "where the effect of such acquisition may be to restrain commerce or tend to create a monopoly of any line of commerce."
The four justices in the majority were Chief Justice Earl Warren, William Brennan, Hugo Black and William Douglas; Brennan wrote the majority opinion, which stated that the "inference is overwhelming that Du Pont's commanding position [in the sale of automobile finishes and fabrics to GM] was promoted by its stock interest and was not gained solely on competitive merit." Justices Harold Burton and Felix Frankfurter dissented from the majority, while two justices--Tom Black and John Marshall Harlan--disqualified themselves from the case: Black had been attorney general in 1949, when the Justice Department brought the case, and Harlan had previously represented Du Pont as a lawyer.

June 3rd 1965
One hundred and 20 miles above the earth, Major Edward H. White II opens the hatch of the Gemini 4 and steps out of the capsule, becoming the first American astronaut to walk in space. Attached to the craft by a 25-foot tether and controlling his movements with a hand-held oxygen jet-propulsion gun, White remained outside the capsule for just over 20 minutes. As a space walker, White had been preceded by Soviet cosmonaut Aleksei A. Leonov, who on March 18, 1965, was the first man ever to walk in space.

June 3rd 1956
Rock and roll is banned in Santa Cruz, California
Santa Cruz, California, a favorite early haunt of author Ken Kesey and his Merry Pranksters, was an established capital of the West Coast counterculture scene by the mid-1960s. Yet just 10 years earlier, the balance of power in this crunchy beach town 70 miles south of San Francisco tilted heavily toward the older side of the generation gap. In the early months of the rock-and-roll revolution, in fact, at a time when adult authorities around the country were struggling to come to terms with a booming population of teenagers with vastly different musical tastes and attitudes, Santa Cruz captured national attention for its response to the crisis. On June 3, 1956, city authorities announced a total ban on rock and roll at public gatherings, calling the music "Detrimental to both the health and morals of our youth and community."

June 3rd 1864
Ransom Eli Olds, founder of Old Motor Vehicle Company was born to Pliny and Sarah Olds in the northeastern Ohio town of Geneva.

June 3rd 1921
Mack adopted Bulldog as symbol for Mack trucks.

June 3rd 1769 
Lieutenant James Cook observes the transit of Venus across the sun, on the trip during which he would chart Australia's eastern coast

June 3rd 1790
The Lady Juliana is the first ship of the Second Fleet to arrive in Sydney Cove

June 3rd 1787 
The First Fleet arrives in Tenerife, in the Canary Islands, to take on extra supplies

June 3rd 1862 
John McKinlay, during his relief expedition to locate the missing Burke and Wills, loses a horse to snake bite
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on June 04, 2015, 10:35:44 pm
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On this day, June 4th 1896
At approximately 4:00 a.m. on June 4, 1896, in the shed behind his home on Bagley Avenue in Detroit, Henry Ford unveils the "Quadricycle," the first automobile he ever designed or drove.
Ford was working as the chief engineer for the main plant of the Edison Illuminating Company when he began working on the Quadricycle. On call at all hours to ensure that Detroit had electrical service 24 hours a day, Ford was able to use his flexible working schedule to experiment with his pet project--building a horseless carriage with a gasoline-powered engine. His obsession with the gasoline engine had begun when he saw an article on the subject in a November 1895 issue of American Machinist magazine. The following March, another Detroit engineer named Charles King took his own hand-built vehicle--made of wood, it had a four-cylinder engine and could travel up to five miles per hour--out for a ride, fueling Ford's desire to build a lighter and faster gasoline-powered model.
As he would do throughout his career, Ford used his considerable powers of motivation and organization to get the job done, enlisting friends--including King--and assistants to help him bring his vision to life. After months of work and many setbacks, Ford was finally ready to test-drive his creation--basically a light metal frame fitted with four bicycle wheels and powered by a two-cylinder, four-horsepower gasoline engine--on the morning of June 4, 1896. When Ford and James Bishop, his chief assistant, attempted to wheel the Quadricycle out of the shed, however, they discovered that it was too wide to fit through the door. To solve the problem, Ford took an axe to the brick wall of the shed, smashing it to make space for the vehicle to be rolled out.
With Bishop bicycling ahead to alert passing carriages and pedestrians, Ford drove the 500-pound Quadricycle down Detroit's Grand River Avenue, circling around three major thoroughfares. The Quadricycle had two driving speeds, no reverse, no brakes, rudimentary steering ability and a doorbell button as a horn, and it could reach about 20 miles per hour, easily overpowering King's invention. Aside from one breakdown on Washington Boulevard due to a faulty spring, the drive was a success, and Ford was on his way to becoming one of the most formidable success stories in American business history.

June 4th 1959
Kihachiro Kawashima selected as Executive Vice President, General Manager of American Honda Motor Company (seven employees, operating capital of $250,000.); opened shop in small storefront office on Pico Boulevard in Los Angeles to serve consumers wanting small, light, easy to handle and maintain two-wheeled vehicles.

June 4th 1629 
Dutch trading ship 'The Batavia' is shipwrecked off Australia's western coast
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on June 05, 2015, 07:51:19 pm
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On this day, June 5th 1951
Gordon M. Buehrig, of South Bend, IN, received a patent for "Vehicle Top Construction", vehicle top with removable panels; appeared as "T-top" on 1968 Chevrolet Corvette Stingray.
Buehrig was one of 25 candidates for Car Designer of the Century, an international award given in 1999 to honor the most influential automobile designer of the 20th century.
PICTURED: The 1935 Auburn Speedster designed by Gordon Buehrig

June 5th 1937
Henry Ford initiated 32 hour work week.

June 5th 1998
3,400 members of the United Auto Workers (UAW) union walk out on their jobs at a General Motors (GM) metal-stamping factory in Flint, Michigan, beginning a strike that will last seven weeks and stall production at GM facilities nationwide.

Jun 5th, 1968:
Bobby Kennedy is assassinated
Senator Robert Kennedy is shot at the Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles after winning the California presidential primary. Immediately after he announced to his cheering supporters that the country was ready to end its fractious divisions, Kennedy was shot several times by the 22-year-old Palestinian Sirhan Sirhan. He died a day later.

Jun 5th 2004,
Ronald Wilson Reagan, the 40th president of the United States, dies, after a long struggle with Alzheimer's disease. Reagan, who was also a well-known actor and served as governor of California, was a popular president known for restoring American confidence after the problems of the 1970s and helping to defeat communism.

Jun 5th 1944,
more than 1,000 British bombers drop 5,000 tons of bombs on German gun batteries placed at the Normandy assault area, while 3,000 Allied ships cross the English Channel in preparation for the invasion of Normandy—D-Day.

Jun 5th 1866
Explorer John McDouall Stuart, first to successfully cross Australia from north to south, dies

Jun 5th 1988 
Kay Cottee returns to Sydney, the first woman to sail solo around the world.

Jun 5th 1823 
Explorer Allan Cunningham breaks through the Warrumbungle Range on his quest to find an overland route to the Liverpool Plains

jun 5th 1788 
First Fleet cattle from the government herds go bush, disappearing for seven years
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on June 06, 2015, 10:16:44 pm
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On this day, June 6th 1933
eager motorists park their automobiles on the grounds of Park-In Theaters, the first-ever drive-in movie theater, located on Crescent Boulevard in Camden, New Jersey.
Park-In Theaters--the term "drive-in" came to be widely used only later--was the brainchild of Richard Hollingshead, a movie fan and a sales manager at his father's company, Whiz Auto Products, in Camden. Reportedly inspired by his mother's struggle to sit comfortably in traditional movie theater seats, Hollingshead came up with the idea of an open-air theater where patrons watched movies in the comfort of their own automobiles. He then experimented in the driveway of his own house with different projection and sound techniques, mounting a 1928 Kodak projector on the hood of his car, pinning a screen to some trees, and placing a radio behind the screen for sound. He also tested ways to guard against rain and other inclement weather, and devised the ideal spacing arrangement for a number of cars so that all would have a view of the screen.
The young entrepreneur received a patent for the concept in May of 1933 and opened Park-In Theaters, Inc. less than a month later, with an initial investment of $30,000. Advertising it as entertainment for the whole family, Hollingshead charged 25 cents per car and 25 cents per person, with no group paying more than one dollar. The idea caught on, and after Hollingshead's patent was overturned in 1949, drive-in theaters began popping up all over the country. One of the largest was the All-Weather Drive-In of Copiague, New York, which featured parking space for 2,500 cars, a kid's playground and a full service restaurant, all on a 28-acre lot.
Drive-in theaters showed mostly B-movies--that is, not Hollywood's finest fare--but some theaters featured the same movies that played in regular theaters. The initially poor sound quality--Hollingshead had mounted three speakers manufactured by RCA Victor near the screen--improved, and later technology made it possible for each car's to play the movie's soundtrack through its FM radio. The popularity of the drive-in spiked after World War II and reached its heyday in the late 1950s to mid-60s, with some 5,000 theaters across the country. Drive-ins became an icon of American culture, and a typical weekend destination not just for parents and children but also for teenage couples seeking some privacy. Since then, however, the rising price of real estate, especially in suburban areas, combined with the growing numbers of walk-in theaters and the rise of video rentals to curb the growth of the drive-in industry. Today, fewer than 500 drive-in theaters survive in the United States.
The first movie Showing "Wife Beware"
Pictured: The reverse side of the world's first drive-in movie screen, in Camden, New Jersey. (front side also shown)

June 6th 1925
Walter Percy Chrysler renamed Maxwell Motor Company as the Chrysler Corporation.

June 6th 1932
The first gasoline tax levied by US Congress was enacted as a part of the Revenue Act of 1932. The Act mandated a series of excise taxes on a wide variety of consumer goods. Congress placed a tax of 1¢ per gallon on gasoline and other motor fuel sold.

June 6, 1980 
For the second time in a week, a computer error falsely warns US forces of an impending Soviet nuclear attack.

June 6, 1944
Although the term D-Day is used routinely as military lingo for the day an operation or event will take place, for many it is also synonymous with June 6, 1944, the day the Allied powers crossed the English Channel and landed on the beaches of Normandy, France, beginning the liberation of Western Europe from Nazi control during World War II. Within three months, the northern part of France would be freed and the invasion force would be preparing to enter Germany, where they would meet up with Soviet forces moving in from the east.

June 6, 1827
Explorer Allan Cunningham discovers the Darling Downs

June 6, 1835
John Batman, the native-born founder of Melbourne, signs a treaty with Aborigines entitling him to 250,000 hectares of land in Port Phillip Bay.

June 6, 1859 
Today is Queensland Day, marking the day that Queensland separated from the colony of New South Wales.

June 6, 1888 
The British Crown annexes Christmas Island

June 6, 1980 
For the second time in a week, a computer error falsely warns US forces of an impending Soviet nuclear attack.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on June 07, 2015, 09:58:07 pm
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On this day, June 7 1954
Ford Motor Company formed styling team to design entirely new car, later named Edsel. The car brand is best known as one of the most spectacular failures in the history of the United States automobile industry.
More than sixty years after its spectacular failure, Edsel has become a highly collectible item amongst vintage car hobbyists. A mint 1958 car can sell up to $100,000, while rare models, like 1960 convertible, may price up to $200,000. While the design was considered "ugly" fifty years ago, many other car manufacturers, such as Pontiac and Alfa Romeo, have employed similar vertical grille successfully on their car designs.

June 7 1962
The banking institution Credit Suisse, then known as Schweizerische Kreditanstalt (SKA), opens the first drive-through bank in Switzerland at St. Peter-Strasse 17, near Paradeplatz (Parade Square) in downtown Zurich.
Like many developments in automotive culture--including drive-through restaurants and drive-in movies--drive-through banking has its origins in the United States. Some sources say that Hillcrest State Bank opened the first drive-through bank in Dallas, Texas, in 1938; others claim the honor belongs to the Exchange National Bank of Chicago in 1946. Regardless of when exactly it began, the trend didn't reach its height until the car-crazy era of the late 1950s and early 1960s. Around that time, California-based Wells Fargo Bank introduced the "TV Auto Banker Service," where an image of the teller was broadcast to the customer in their car on a special closed-circuit television. Deposits, withdrawals and other transactions were completed using an underground pneumatic tube that whisked money and paperwork between the car and the teller station.
The SKA branch that opened in Zurich in June 1962 featured eight glass pavilions, seven outfitted for left-hand drive cars and one for vehicles with right-hand drive (such as those used in the United Kingdom and Ireland). Upon the opening of the large and modern facility, Zurich daily newspaper Neue Zurcher Zeitung advised motorists on how to enter the drive-through portion: "At the entrance to the bank, approaching cars trigger a sensor on the ground, activating a light trail that directs the driver to the next available counter."
The Paradeplatz drive-through was well received by the press, and in its first year of operation, the bank handled around 20,000 customers. By the 1970s, however, the automobile's popularity had led to a major traffic problem in downtown Zurich, and fewer and fewer drivers opted to stop to do their banking from their cars. After years without a profit, SKA closed the drive-through in 1983.
In the United States, by contrast, drive-through banking never lost its popularity. Nearly all major banks nationwide offer some type of drive-through option, from regular teller service to 24-hour automated teller machines (ATMs). In recent years, drive-through banking reached the previously untapped Asian market: Citibank opened China's first drive-through ATM at the Upper East Side Central Plaza in Beijing in August 2007.

June 7th 1976
Disco as a musical style predated the movie Saturday Night Fever by perhaps as many as five years, but disco as an all-consuming cultural phenomenon might never have happened without the 1977 film and its multi-platinum soundtrack featuring such era-defining hits as the Bee Gees' "Stayin' Alive" and Yvonne Elliman's "If I Can't Have You." What is absolutely certain is that Saturday Night Fever would never have been made were it not for a magazine article detailing the struggles and dreams of a talented, young, Italian-American disco dancer and his scruffy entourage in Bay Ridge, Brooklyn. That article—"The Tribal Rites of the New Saturday Night," by journalist Nik Cohn—was published on this day in 1976 in the June 7 issue of New York magazine.

June 7th, 1770
Lieutenant James Cook names Palm Island, off Australia's eastern coast.

June 7th 1825 
Van Diemen's Land (Tasmania) officially separates from New South Wales.

June 7th 1654 
Louis XIV is crowned King of France

June 7th 1942 
The Battle of Midway, between American and Japanese forces, ends with a US victory.

June 7th also marks "International Donut day" ...(9 things you didn’t know about donuts)
In honor of National Donut Day, we share some fun facts about the sweet treats you probably didn't know.
* In the U.S. alone, more than 10 billion donuts are made every year. Between 27 locations, Lamar’s Donuts produces 17 million donuts per year.
* The US donut industry is worth 3.6 billion dollars.
* The largest donut ever made was an American-style jelly donut weighing 1.7 tons, which was 16 feet in diameter and 16 inches high in the center.
* Per capita, Canada has more donuts shops than any other country.
* The hole in the donut’s center appeared in the first half of the 19th Century and allows the donut to cook more evenly.
* The Dutch are often credited with bringing donuts to the U.S. with their olykoeks, or oily cakes in the 1800s.
* Adolph Levitt invented the first donut machine in 1920.
* Ray’s Original Glazed Donut only has 220 calories, while a bagel and cream cheese averages 450 calories.
* The Guinness World record for donut eating is held by John Haight, who consumed 29 donuts in just over 6 minutes.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on June 08, 2015, 07:18:35 pm
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On this day,June 8th 1948,
A hand-built aluminum prototype labeled "No. 1" becomes the first vehicle to bear the name of one of the world's leading luxury car manufacturers: Porsche. Dr. Ferdinand Porsche test drove first Porsche two-seat roadster sports car, Project 356-1, built in a sawmill in Gmund, Austria (Tyrolean Alps).
Dr. Ferdinand Porsche debuted his first design at the World's Fair in Paris in 1900. The electric vehicle set several Austrian land-speed records, reaching more than 35 mph and earning international acclaim for the young engineer. He became general director of the Austro-Daimler Company (an outpost of the German automaker) in 1916 and later moved to Daimler headquarters in Stuttgart. Daimler merged with the Benz firm in the 1920s, and Porsche was chiefly responsible for designing some of the great Mercedes racing cars of that decade.
Porsche left Daimler in 1931 and formed his own company. A few years later, Adolf Hitler called on the engineer to aid in the production of a small "people's car" for the German masses. With his son, also named Ferdinand (known as Ferry), Porsche designed the prototype for the original Volkswagen (known as the KdF: "Kraft durch Freude," or "strength through joy") in 1936. During World War II, the Porsches also designed military vehicles, most notably the powerful Tiger tank.
At war's end, the French accused the elder Porsche of war crimes and imprisoned him for more than a year. Ferry struggled to keep the family firm afloat. He built a Grand Prix race car, the Type 360 Cisitalia, for a wealthy Italian industrialist, and used the money to pay his father's bail. When Porsche was released from prison, he approved of another project Ferry had undertaken: a new sports car that would be the first to actually bear the name Porsche. Dubbed the Type 356, the new car was in the tradition of earlier Porsche-designed race cars such as the Cisitalia. The engine was placed mid-chassis, ahead of the transaxle, with modified Volkswagen drive train components.
The 356 went into production during the winter of 1947-48, and the aluminum prototype, built entirely by hand, was completed on June 8, 1948. The Germans subsequently hired Porsche to consult on further development of the Volkswagen. With the proceeds, Porsche opened new offices in Stuttgart, with plans to build up to 500 of his company's own cars per year. Over the next two decades, the company would build more than 78,000 vehicles.

June 8th 1986
Tim Richmond won the first of his seven Winston Cup Series races in 1986, a total that would vault him to third place in the Series point race and solidify his reputation as one of NASCAR's greatest drivers. He had his career cut short when he contracted HIV and died of complications from AIDS on 19th Aug 1989.

June 8th 1770 
Lieutenant James Cook names Palm Island, off Australia's eastern coast

June 8th 1825 
Van Diemen's Land (Tasmania) officially separates from New South Wales

June 8th 1654 
Louis XIV is crowned King of France

June 8th 1942 
The Battle of Midway, between American and Japanese forces, ends with a US victory
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on June 09, 2015, 09:21:58 pm
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On this day, June 9th 2006
The animated feature film "Cars," produced by Pixar Animation Studios, roars into theaters across the United States.
For "Cars," which won the first-ever Academy Award for Best Animated Feature, Pixar's animators created an alternate America inhabited by vehicles instead of humans. The film's hero is Lightning McQueen (voiced by Owen Wilson), a Corvette-like race car enjoying a sensational debut on the National Association for Stock Car Auto Racing (NASCAR) circuit. Arrogant and foolish, with talent to burn, McQueen thinks of himself as a one-man show. After he refuses a tire change during the prestigious Piston Cup race, McQueen blows a huge lead, setting up a three-way tie-breaking race with The King, a longtime champion, and Chick Hicks, an intimidating competitor with a chip on his shoulder. On the way to the race site in California, however, McQueen goes off course (and off the interstate) and ends up in Radiator Springs, a forgotten town on the now-defunct Route 66.
At first desperate to escape, McQueen learns to appreciate Radiator Springs, especially after finding a best friend (the rusting tow-truck Mater, as in Tow-Mater), a love interest (Sally Carrera, a fetching Porsche) and a mentor (it turns out the town's gruff doctor-mechanic, Doc Hudson, is actually the Hudson Hornet, a real-life NASCAR legend). Among the other memorable inhabitants of Radiator Springs are an aging hippie VW van; a military Jeep named Sarge; Flo, a glamorous show car and proprietress of the V-8 Café (a gas station); Ramon, a Chevy Impala low rider; and Guido, a Fiat who owns a tire shop and is obsessed with Ferraris.
As director John Lasseter told The New York Times, he was inspired to make "Cars" by a cross-country road trip he took with his wife and five sons, as well as by a general love of automobiles. While researching the movie, the team of animators traveled along the historic Route 66, once the iconic route to the American West and now bypassed by interstate highways. (The "Mother Road" was decertified in 1985 and has been reborn as a tourist attraction.) In addition to the painstaking depictions of both classic and modern cars and their distinctive personalities, "Cars" features the voices of some of the leading figures in auto racing, beginning with the late Paul Newman, the legendary actor-turned-race car driver, as Doc Hudson. Racing legends Mario Andretti (as himself), Richard Petty (as The King) and Michael Schumacher (as a Ferrari) can also be heard, along with sports announcers Darrell Waltrip and Bob Costas.

June 9th 1903
Stanley Steamer received a patent for a "Steam Motor-Vehicle"; arrangement of engine on axle and housing.

June 9th 1909
Alice Huyler Ramsey, a 22-year-old housewife and mother from Hackensack, New Jersey, became the first woman to drive across the United States. With three female companions, none of whom could drive a car, for fifty-nine days she drove a Maxwell automobile the 3,800 miles from Manhattan, New York to San Francisco, California.
In later years, she lived in Covina, California, where in 1961 she wrote and published the story of her journey 'Veil, Duster, and Tire Iron'. Between 1909 and 1975, Ramsey drove across the country more than 30 times. On October 17, 2000, she became the first woman inducted into the Automotive Hall of Fame.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on June 10, 2015, 07:46:40 pm
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On this day, June 10th 1979
Paul Newman, the blue-eyed movie star-turned-race car driver, accomplishes the greatest feat of his racing career, roaring into second place in the 47th 24 Hours of Le Mans, the famous endurance race held annually in Le Mans, France.
Newman emerged as one of Hollywood's top leading men in the 1960s, with acclaimed performances in such films as "The Hustler" (1961), "Cool Hand Luke" (1967) and "Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid" (1969). Also in 1969, he starred in "Winning" as a struggling race car driver who must redeem his career and win the heart of the woman he loves--played by Newman's real-life wife, Joanne Woodward--at the Indianapolis 500. To prepare for the movie, Newman attended racing school, and he performed many of the high-speed racing scenes in the movie himself, without a stunt double. In 1972, Newman began his own racing career, winning his first Sports Club Car of America (SCCA) race driving a Lotus Elan. He soon moved up to a series of Datsun racing sedans and won four SCCA national championships from 1979 to 1986.
Newman's high point at the track came in June 1979 at Le Mans, where he raced a Porsche 935 twin-turbo coupe on a three-man team with Dick Barbour and Rolf Stommelen. His team finished second; first place went to two brothers from Florida, Don and Bill Whittington, and their teammate, Klaus Ludwig. Drama ensued during the last two hours of the race, when the Whittingtons' car--also a Porsche 935--was sidelined with fuel-injection problems and it looked like Newman's team could overtake them to grab the win. In the end, however, they had trouble even clinching second due to a dying engine. The Whittington team covered 2,592.1 miles at an average speed of 107.99 mph, finishing 59 miles ahead of Newman, Barbour and Stommelen.
After the race, The New York Times quoted the 54-year-old Newman as saying he might not race at Le Mans again: "I'm getting a bit long in the tooth for this. And my racing here places an unfortunate emphasis on the team. It takes it away from the people who really do the work." In fact, he continued racing into his eighties, making his last start at the Rolex 24 at Daytona International Speedway in 2006. He also found success as a race car owner, forming a team with Carl Haas that became one of the most enduring in Indy car racing. Newman died in September 2008 at the age of 83.

June 10th 1947
Saab introduced its first car, the model 92001, the Ursaab prototype. Saab had been primarily a supplier of military aircraft before and during World War II. With the end of the war, company executives realized the need to diversify the company's production capabilities. After an exhaustive planning campaign that at one point led to the suggestion that Saab manufacture toasters, But company executives decided to start building motor cars. Saab director Sven Otterbeck placed aircraft engineer Gunnar Ljungstrom in charge of creating the company's first car.

June 10th 1954
General Motors announced its research staff had built the GM Turbocruiser, a modifed GMC coach powered by a gas turbine; engine consisted of a single burner with two turbine wheels (one used to drive the centrifugal compressor, second delivered power for the transmission to the rear wheels of the vehicle).
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on June 11, 2015, 08:16:40 pm
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On this day, June 11th 1939
Racer Jackie Stewart, popularly know as the Flying Scotsman was born in Dumbarton, Scotland

June 11th 1994
TOYOTA Commemorative Museum of Industry and Technology was Established on the 100th anniversary of the birth of Kiichiro Toyoda, founder of Toyota Motor Corporation.

June 11th 1895
Charles E. Duryea received a patent for a "Road Vehicle", first US patent granted to an American inventor for a gasoline-driven automobile.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on June 12, 2015, 08:42:40 pm
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On this day, June 12th 1940,
Edsel Ford telephones William Knudsen of the U.S. Office of Production Management (OPM) to confirm Ford Motor Company's acceptance of Knudsen's proposal to manufacture 9,000 Rolls-Royce-designed engines to be used in British and U.S. airplanes.
By the spring of 1940, Nazi Germany had conquered Poland, Norway and Denmark and pushed France to the brink of defeat. An increasingly nervous General George C. Marshall, chief of staff of the U.S. Army, warned President Franklin D. Roosevelt that the United States needed to rearm in order to prepare for the possibility of a German attack on American shores. That May, Roosevelt called on Knudsen, a former Ford executive who became president of General Motors in 1937, to serve as director general of the OPM, the agency responsible for coordinating government purchases and wartime production. Knudsen had barely settled in Washington when he received an urgent appeal from the British government: The Royal Air Force (RAF) was in desperate need of new airplanes to defend Britain against an expected German offensive.
Unlike other automakers, Ford had already built a successful airplane, the Tri-Motor, in the 1920s. In two meetings in late May and early June 1940, Knudsen and Edsel Ford agreed that Ford would manufacture a new fleet of aircraft for the RAF on an expedited basis. One significant obstacle remained, however: Edsel's father Henry, who still retained complete control over the company he founded, was known for his opposition to the possible U.S. entry into World War II. Edsel and Charles Sorensen, Ford's production chief, had apparently gotten the go-ahead from Henry Ford by June 12, when Edsel telephoned Knudsen to confirm that Ford would produce 9,000 Rolls-Royce Merlin airplane engines (6,000 for the RAF and 3,000 for the U.S. Army). However, as soon as the British press announced the deal, Henry Ford personally and publicly canceled it, telling a reporter: "We are not doing business with the British government or any other government."
In fact, according to Douglas Brinkley's biography of Ford, "Wheels for the World," Ford had in effect already accepted a contract from the German government. The Ford subsidiary Ford-Werke in Cologne was doing business with the Third Reich at the time, which Ford's critics took as proof that he was concealing a pro-German bias behind his claims to be a man of peace. As U.S. entry into the war looked ever more certain, Ford reversed his earlier position, and in May of 1941 the company opened a large new government-sponsored facility at Willow Run, Michigan, for the purposes of manufacturing B-24E Liberator bombers (pictured above) for the Allied war effort. In addition to aircraft, Ford Motor plants produced a great deal of other war materiel during World War II, including a variety of engines, trucks, jeeps, tanks and tank destroyers.

June 12th 1952
Maurice Olley, Chevrolet's chief engineer, completed chassis, code-named Opel, for eventual use in 1953 Corvette.
Maurice Olley was the ultimate engineer. He had a passion for understanding engineering fundamentals and was committed to creating solutions to solve mechanical engineering problems related to automobiles. His entire career, from his time at Rolls-Royce to his 25 years at General Motors and Chevrolet, prepared him for the important role he was asked to play with the Corvette. But his contribution would have been just as passionate whether it had been applied to a Buick Roadmaster or to the Corvette. To Maurice Olley, it wasn’t the specific product that motivated him; it was how he could improve the function of the product while furthering the understanding of the engineering principle behind it.
Working along side Harley Earl and Bob McLean, Olley developed the chassis and suspension of the first-generation Corvette. Acting as head of Chevrolet Research and Development, he headed the engineering team that worked to perfect the early Corvettes and hired Zora Arkus-Duntov to continue the improvements.
Olley had a passion for making an automobile as good as it can be, along with an unmistakable influence on the development of the first Corvette.

June 12th 1931 
The territories of North Australia and Central Australia are reunited as the Northern Territory

June 12th 1948 
Donald Bradman scores 138 in the First Test at Trent Bridge.

June 12th 2003 
Optus launches the C1 satellite, the largest Australian hybrid communications and military satellite ever launched.

June 12th 1929 
WWII Holocaust diarist, Anne Frank, is born.

June 12th 1964 
Anti-apartheid leader, Nelson Mandela, is given a life sentence in jail
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on June 13, 2015, 09:14:53 pm
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On this day,Published Jul 13, 2004
Lee A. Iacocca, who gave the world the Ford Mustang and revived Chrysler by popularizing the modern minivan, left the automobile industry over a decade ago. But he is still pushing new ideas. His latest product was a spray-on version of Olivio, a butter substitute made from olive and canola oils. Mr. Iacocca, the founder and principal owner of Olivio Premium Products, joined some of his grandchildren that fall in testing the company's new spray pump on soda crackers.

June 13th 1895
Emile Levassor drives a Panhard et Levassor car with a two-cylinder, 750-rpm, four-horsepower Daimler Phoenix engine over the finish line in the world's first real automobile race. Levassor completed the 732-mile course, from Paris to Bordeaux and back, in just under 49 hours, at a then-impressive speed of about 15 miles per hour.
Levassor and his partner Rene Panhard operated one of the largest machine shops in Paris in 1887, when a Belgian engineer named Edouard Sarazin convinced Levassor to manufacture a new high-speed engine for the German automaker Daimler, for which Sarazin had obtained the French patent rights. When Sarazin died later that year, the rights passed to his widow, Louise. In 1889, visitors to the Paris exposition celebrating the 100th anniversary of the French Revolution were able to admire not only Gustave Eiffel's now-famous tower, but also a Daimler-produced automobile with one of the new Panhard et Levassor-constructed engines. The following year, Levassor married Louise Sarazin.

By 1891, Levassor had built a drastically different automobile, placing the engine vertically in front of the chassis rather than underneath or behind the driver--a radical departure from the carriage-influenced design of earlier vehicles--and put in a mechanical transmission that the driver engaged with a clutch, allowing him to travel at different speeds. In the years to come, this arrangement, known as the Systeme Panhard, would become the model for all automobiles. In 1895, a committee of journalists and automotive pioneers, including Levassor and Armand Peugeot, France's leading manufacturer of bicycles, spearheaded the Paris-Bordeaux-Paris race in order to capitalize on public enthusiasm for the automobile. Out of 46 entries, Levassor finished first but was later disqualified on a technicality; first place went to a Peugeot that finished 11 hours behind him.
The Paris-Bordeaux-Paris race highlighted France's superiority in automotive technology at the time, and established Panhard et Levassor as a major force in the fledgling industry. Its success spurred the creation of the Automobile Club de France in order to foster the development of the motor vehicle and regulate future motor sports events. Over the next century, these events would grow into the Grand Prix motor racing circuit, and eventually into its current incarnation: Formula One.

June 13th 1978
Ford Motor Company Chairman, Henry Ford II, fired Lee Iaccoca, the mustang designer, from the position of president, ending a bitter personal struggle between the two men.

June 13th 1980
Markus Winkelhock (born June 13, 1980 in Stuttgart Germany was a German Formula One driver. Winkelhock is the only driver in Formula One history to start last on the grid and lead the race in his first Grand Prix, and due to the red flag and restart, is also the only driver in Formula One history to start both last and first on the grid in the same Grand Prix.

Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on June 14, 2015, 10:34:29 pm
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On this day, June 14th 2002
In one of the most memorable scenes in the film "The Bourne Identity" the amnesiac assassin Jason Bourne (Matt Damon) drives a vintage Austin Mini Cooper through the traffic-heavy streets of Paris to evade his police and Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) pursuers.

June 14th 1928
Leon Duray drove his Miller 91 Packard Cable Special to a world close-coursed speed record, recording an astonishing top speed of 148.173mph, at the Packard Proving Ground in Utica, Michigan. Two weeks earlier, Duray had posted a record lap of 124mph at the Indy 500, a record that stood for 10 years until the track was banked.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on June 15, 2015, 10:01:54 pm
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On this day, June 15th 1924
Ford Motor Company manufactured its 10 millionth Model T automobile.

June 15th, 1844.
Vulcanised rubber is patented by Charles Goodyear.
Vulcanisation, or curing, of rubber is a chemical process in which rubber molecules become locked together to a greater or lesser extent, making the bulk material harder, more durable and more resistant to chemical attack. The process also alters the surface of the material from a stickiness that adheres to other materials, to a smooth soft surface.
Prior to the mid-19th century, natural or India rubber had limited usefulness because it melted in hot weather, froze and cracked in cold weather, and tended to stick to virtually everything. Charles Goodyear, a businessman who experimented with the properties of gum elastic, accidentally discovered the process of vulcanisation of rubber when he dropped some rubber mixed with sulfur on a hot stove. He received US Patent No. 3,633 on 15 June 1844 for his invention.
Goodyear did not benefit from his invention as Englishman Thomas Hancock copied his idea and attained a British patent for the process before Goodyear applied for a British patent. However, vulcanised rubber was later was made into tyres emblazoned with Goodyear's name. The Goodyear Tyre and Rubber Company adopted the Goodyear name because of its activities in the rubber industry, but it has no other links to Charles Goodyear and his family.

June 15th 1937
Harold T. Ames, of Chicago, IL, chief executive of Duesenberg, received a patent for a "Headlight Structure"; retractable headlamps (defining detail on Cord 810).

June 15th 1986
Driving legend Richard Petty makes the 1,000th start of his National Association for Stock Car Racing (NASCAR) career, in the Miller American 400 in Brooklyn, Michigan. He became the first driver in NASCAR history to log 1,000 career starts.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on June 16, 2015, 09:58:30 pm
(http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v170/drfong/Cars/1917MillerGoldenSubmarine02a.jpg) (http://smg.photobucket.com/user/drfong/media/Cars/1917MillerGoldenSubmarine02a.jpg.html)

On this day, June 16th 1917
Harry Miller completed the Golden Submarine, the first of his expensive custom-made race cars that would change the shape of things to come in American auto racing. The Golden Submarine carried an unimaginable ticket price of $15,000 at its completion. Its gold color was the result of a combination of lacquer and bronze dust. Built for Barney Oldfield, America's most brash race-car driver, the Golden Submarine had an enclosed cockpit. Oldfield, who helped design the car, thought the closed cockpit would make the car safer if it rolled; he'd lost his close friend, Bob Burman, in a crash the year before. The Golden Submarine was the first American race car to possess an all electrically welded steel chassis. Also unique to the sub was the liberal use of aluminum in engine and body components. The engine--the component that would later define Miller's career--contained four cylinders and a single overhead cam. It put out 130hp at 290 cubic inches of piston displacement, and, most remarkable for its time, it only weighed 410 pounds. Consider that the car's competition carried engines that produced around 300hp at over 400 cubic inches of piston displacement.
Pictured: Harry Millers Golden Submarine

June 16th 1903
At 9:30 in the morning, Henry Ford and other prospective stockholders in the Ford Motor Company meet in Detroit to sign the official paperwork required to create a new corporation. Twelve stockholders were listed on the forms, which were signed, notarized and sent to the office of Michigan's secretary of state. The company was officially incorporated the following day, when the secretary of state's office received the articles of association.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: goff on June 16, 2015, 10:41:55 pm
At 9:30 in the morning on this day in 1903, Henry Ford and other prospective stockholders in the Ford Motor Company meet in Detroit to sign the official paperwork required to create a new corporation. Twelve stockholders were listed on the forms, which were signed, notarized and sent to the office of Michigan’s secretary of state.  The company was officially incorporated the following day, when the secretary of state’s office received the articles of association.

Ford had built his first gasoline-powered vehicle–which he called the Quadricycle–in a workshop behind his home in 1896, while he was working as the chief engineer for the main plant of the Edison Illuminating Company in Detroit. He made two unsuccessful attempts to start a company to manufacture automobiles before 1903. A month after the Ford Motor Company was established, the first Ford car was assembled at a plant on Mack Avenue in Detroit .

In the early days of Ford, only a few cars were assembled per day, and they were built by hand by small groups of workers from parts made to order by other companies. With the introduction of the Model T in 1908, Ford succeeded in his mission to produce an affordable, efficient and reliable automobile for everyone: within a decade, nearly half the cars in America were Model Ts. The sensational demand for the “Tin Lizzie” led Ford to develop mass-production methods, including large production plants, the use of standardized, interchangeable parts and, in 1913, the world’s first moving assembly line for cars. In 1914, to further improve productivity, Ford introduced the $5 daily wage for an eight-hour day for his workers (up from $2.34 for nine hours), setting a standard for the industry.

During the late 1910s and early 1920s, Ford began construction of a massive industrial complex along the banks of the River Rouge in Dearborn, Michigan. The plant combined all the components necessary for auto production, including a glass factory, steel mill and assembly line. When Ford Motor’s other stockholders resisted the idea of building the River Rouge plant due to its enormous costs, Henry Ford (who as early as 1906 owned 58.5 percent of the company) bought them out, installing his son Edsel as president of the company in 1919. The elder Ford retained full control of the company’s operations, however, and returned to the presidency briefly after Edsel died in 1943, before handing it over to his grandson, Henry Ford II, in 1945. Two years later, the legendary automaker died at his Dearborn home at the age of 83.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on June 17, 2015, 09:23:40 pm
(http://i270.photobucket.com/albums/jj93/Blacquenhard/OJSimpsonInterstate405June171994.jpg) (http://s270.photobucket.com/user/Blacquenhard/media/OJSimpsonInterstate405June171994.jpg.html)

On this day, June 17th 1994
Viewers around the world are glued to their television screens, watching as a fleet of black-and-white police cars pursues a white Ford Bronco along Interstate-405 in Los Angeles, California. Inside the Bronco is Orenthal James "O.J." Simpson, a former professional football player, actor and sports commentator whom police suspected of involvement in the recent murders of his former wife, Nicole Brown Simpson, and her friend Ronald Goldman.
The bodies of Brown Simpson and Goldman were found outside her home in the exclusive Los Angeles neighborhood of Brentwood shortly after midnight on June 13, 1994. Bloodstains matching Simpson's blood type were found at the crime scene, and the star had become the focus of the Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD) investigation by the morning of June 17. When police arrived to arrest Simpson at the home of his friend and lawyer, Robert Kardashian, they found that Simpson had slipped out the back door with his former college and Buffalo Bills teammate Al Cowlings. The two men had then driven off in Cowlings' white Ford Bronco.
After a news conference--in which his lawyer, Howard Shapiro, announced that Simpson was distraught and might attempt suicide--the LAPD officially declared the former football star a fugitive. Around 7 p.m. PST, police located the white Bronco by tracing calls made from Simpson's cellular phone. Simpson was reported to be in the back seat of the vehicle, holding a gun to his head. With news helicopters following the chase from above and cameras broadcasting the dramatic events live to millions of astonished viewers, vehicles from the LAPD and California Highway Patrol pursued the Bronco for about an hour as it traveled at some 35 miles per hour along I-405. Finally, after about an hour, the Bronco pulled into the driveway of Simpson's Brentwood home. He emerged from the car close to 9 pm and was immediately arrested and booked on double murder charges.
The trial that followed gripped the nation, inspiring unprecedented media scrutiny along with heated debates about racial discrimination on the part of the police. Though a jury acquitted Simpson of the murder charges in October 1995, a separate civil trial in 1997 found him liable for the deaths and ordered him to pay $33.5 million in damages to the Brown and Goldman families.
PICTURED: Innocent O.J. Simpson being chased by LA Police.

June 17th 1903
Ford Motor Company was officially incorporated with capital of $28,000 and Ford's patents, knowledge and engine, John S. Gray was elected as President and Henry Ford as Vice President. Primary stockholders were Henry Ford, Alexander Malcomson, John W. Anderson, C.H. Bennett, James Couzens, Horace E. Dodge, John F. Dodge, Vernon C. Fry, John S. Gray, Horace H. Rackham, Albert Strelow and Charles J. Woodall.

June 17th 1923
On this day, Enzo Ferrari, who would go on to an historic career as a driver for Alpha Romeo before being put in charge of their racing division, won his first race, a 166-mile event at the Circuito del Savio in Ravenna, Italy.

June 17th 1962
Scotch racer Jim Clark won his first Formula One Grand Prix at Spa-Francorchamps in Belgium. Clark would go on to one of the most storied careers in F1 history. His 1965 season is his crowning achievement as the sport's most dominant racer. Clark led every lap of every race he competed in, and he became the first Briton to win the Indy 500. Clark died in a tragic accident in a Formula Two race in Germany.

June 17th 1990
"Handsome" Harry Gant became the oldest driver to win a Winston Cup race when he won the Miller Genuine Draft 500 in Long Pond, Pennsylvania, at the age of 50 years, 158 days.

June 17th 1867
Henry Lawson, one of Australia's best known writers, is born

June 17th 1703 
John Wesley, founder of Methodism, is born

June 17th 1893 
Gold is discovered at Kalgoorlie in Western Australia

June 17th 1928 
Amelia Earhart becomes the first woman to fly across the Atlantic

June 17th 1961 
Russian ballet legend Rudolf Nureyev breaks free from Russian guards and requests asylum in France

June 17th 1972 
The Watergate scandal begins.

June 17th 1999 
Removal of the entire Cape Hatteras lighthouse tower in the USA commences.

June 17th 1779
In support of the US, Spain declares war on England and the siege of Gibraltar begins

June 17th 1784 - Holland forbids orange clothes (also in the same year, Ben Franklin expresses unhappiness over eagle as America's symbol...Go figure!!)

USELESS FACTS

....The longest one-syllable word in the English language is "screeched."
... FACT, chevy badges dont belong on holdens
...Everytime the media uses the word "HOON" to describe a car enthusiast, a puppy dies
...The name for Oz in the "Wizard of Oz" was thought up when the creator, Frank Baum, looked at his filing cabinet and saw A-N, and O-Z, hence "Oz."
...The sentence, "The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog," uses every letter in the alphabet.
...The term "the whole 9 yards" came from WWII fighter pilots in the Pacific. When arming their airplanes on the ground, the .50 caliber machine gun ammo belts measured exactly 27 feet, before being loaded into the fuselage. If the pilots fired all their ammo at a target, it got "the whole 9 yards."
...The name Jeep came from the abbreviation used in the army for the "General Purpose" vehicle, G.P.
...Pound for pound, hamburgers cost more than new cars.
...Only FOUR automobiles were registered in the United States in 1895.
...a production car contains more than 20kgs (44lbs) of glue
...The first speeding ticket was issued in 1902
...The World’s Oldest Car was built in France in 1884 for French Count De Dion
...The engine in the Mclaren F1 is a distant cousin of the one found in the BMW 850CSi
...The porsche 911 Sc was supposed to be the last 911 so it was given the SC designation(Super Carrera)
...The RS Cosworth came about due to a fluke. Stuart Turner, head of motorsport at Ford Europe spotted a prototype 16v head on a pinto block during a visit to Cosworth. He suggested they turbocharge it and bung it in a Sierra to knock Rover off the top spot in touring car racing. The rest is history
...The Jaguar XK120 was designed on the roof of the Coventry factory during an air-raid in WW2
...Mazda is named after the Zoroastrian religion
...Subaru is named after the pleides constellation, which has six stars visible, plus Subaru was made up of 5 companies becoming one so the logo conveniently displays six stars to represent that
...The Hyundai (which means modernity in Korean) badge spells out an H but is also supposed to represent two people, the customer and company, shaking hands
...Ford was the second car company that Henry Ford started. The first was the Henry Ford Motor Company, which he sold, and which eventually evolved into Cadillac
...Ford was offered the Beetle after WWII. Their assessors sent a report back saying the car 'wasn't worth a damn'
...Ferrari originally wanted to be paid for the use of the Ferrari 308 in Magnum PI. They relented when the producers told them they would use a Porsche 911 instead
...Volvo have the patent on 3-point seatbelts, but have never enforced it
...The 3-letter abbreviation for Harley-Davidson on the NY Stock Exchange is HOG
...California has issued at least 6 drivers licenses to people named Jesus Christ.
...In 1910, magician Harry Houdini was the first solo pilot to fly a plane in Australia. He taught himself to drive a car just so he could drive out to the airfield then never drove again
...Nicolas Cugnot made a steam powered car in 1769, this car was driven into a wall in 1771 and is recorded as the first motor accident
...Volvo is Latin for - "I roll"
...The doorhandles on the Mazda 3/5 are the same as on a 2005-on Mustang.
...Pontiac is named after an Indian tribe
...the Renault Feugo was the first car to come with remote central locking
...Oldsmobile's 4-4-2 stands for four-barrel carb, four-speed manual transmission, and two exhausts
...The Ford Probe was destined to be the new Ford Mustang but after a public outcry and petition, Ford backed down and called it the Probe. The Probe is now long dead and the Mustang is one of Ford's best sellers
...The double "RR" on the front of a Rolls Royce used to be red in colour. When Mr Rolls or Mr Royce died (can't remember which), one of the "R"s was changed to black. So some Rolls have a black and red "RR". When the other one died both "R"s became black
...The Porsche 993 Turbo was the first production road Porsche to use forged finned cylinder barrels
...Porsche wanted to call the 911 the 901 but couldnt because Peugeot own the copyright of all 3 digit numbers with an zero in the middle. Hence the 911
...Henry Ford asked all companies supplying parts and components to send them in boxes and crates of his design and specification so he could use the packaging as part of the vehicle structure as a way to cut costs
...Henry Ford was illiterate and he named the two-door Model A, tudor because he couldn't spell two-door
...If you look at an older VW ignition key (say for a Golf Mk II) it has the intials AH stamped on it. As do all air-cooled VWS. The intials stand for Adolf Hitler
...The Cadillac car brand was named after Antoine Laumet, dit de La Mothe, sieur de Cadillac, a French pioneer who founded a trading post on what was to become Detroit
...Only Phase I Nissan GTI-R's were actually built by Nissan (at Tochigi), The remaining three production phases were assembled by Fuji Heavy Industries (ie: Subaru Automotive)
...The AstonMartin Vantage which at the time had the largest brakes fitted to a production car produced enough heat energy stopping from 200mph to heat a small 1 bed flat for a fortnight
...The doors on the sides of the AMC Pacer are different sizes
...The production car with the longest cambelt - Porsche 928.
...The tail lights fitted to the Mclaren F1 came from a coach.
...The worlds first v6 was produced by Lancia
...Adolf Hitler had a false floor fitted into his Mercedes 770K, making him look 5 inches taller, when he stood up in the car
...A 1973 Oldsmobile Delta 88 is featured in every single Sam Rami film
...The Aston Martin in Goldfinger was the last DB4 S5 Vantage off the line. Being pretty similar-looking to the DB5 meant that they changed its identity to keep the film 'current' when it was announced during filming. The only point where it's referred to as a 'DB5' is during Q's briefing
...The Rolls-Royce Silver Cloud in A View To A Kill actually belonged to producer Albert 'Cubby' Broccoli
...E.L Cord once ran the Auburn-Cord-Duesenberg empire which made some of the greatest American cars. When it went bankrupt in the thirties he founded a refrigerator firm and made a large fortune.He had no interest in the cars he had built and never talked about them or attneded any meeting afterwards
...The turbocharger on a Mitsubishi Lancer EVO spins in the oposite direction to the turbocharger fitted to a Subaru Impreza
...The O in GTO, as in Ferrari 250GTO, stands for Gran Turismo 'omologato' or homologated to conform to the rules of a specific motor race, so should only apply to race specification cars built to satisfy the numbers required for homologation
...Ferris Buellars Ferrari was NOT an MG with a Ferrari bodykit on it
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on June 18, 2015, 08:46:57 pm
(http://i359.photobucket.com/albums/oo33/69belair/other%20makes/nyc1946_zps3a058dee.jpg) (http://s359.photobucket.com/user/69belair/media/other%20makes/nyc1946_zps3a058dee.jpg.html)

On this day, June 18th 1923
The first Checker Cab rolls off the line at the Checker Cab Manufacturing Company in Kalamazoo, Michigan.
Morris Markin, founder of Checker Cab, was born in Smolensk, Russia, and began working when he was only 12 years old. At 19, he immigrated to the United States and moved to Chicago, where two uncles lived. After opening his own tailor's shop, Markin also began running a fleet of cabs and an auto body shop, the Markin Auto Body Corporation, in Joliet, Illinois. In 1921, after loaning $15,000 to help a friend's struggling car manufacturing business, the Commonwealth Motor Company, Markin absorbed Commonwealth into his own enterprise and completely halted the production of regular passenger cars in favor of taxis. The result was the Checker Cab Manufacturing Company, which took its name from a Chicago cab company that had hired Commonwealth to produce its vehicles.
By the end of 1922, Checker was producing more than 100 units per month in Joliet, and some 600 of the company's cabs were on the streets of New York City. Markin went looking for a bigger factory and settled on Kalamazoo, where the company took over buildings previously used by the Handley-Knight Company and Dort Body Plant car manufacturers. The first shipment of a Checker from Kalamazoo on June 18, 1923 stood out as a major landmark in the history of the company, which by then employed some 700 people.
During the Great Depression, Markin briefly sold Checker, but he bought it back in 1936 and began diversifying his business by making auto parts for other car companies. After converting its factories to produce war materiel during World War II, Checker entered the passenger car market in the late 1950s, with models dubbed the Superba and the Marathon. In its peak production year of 1962, Checker rolled out some 8,173 cars; the great majority of those were taxis. Over the course of the 1970s, however, as economic conditions led taxi companies to convert smaller, more fuel-efficient standard passenger cars into cabs, the 4,000-pound gas-guzzling Checker came to seem more and more outdated. Markin had died in 1970, and in April 1982 his son David announced that Checker would halt production of its famous cab that summer. Though the company still owns the Yellow and Checker cab fleets in Chicago and continued to make parts for other auto manufacturers, including General Motors, the last Checker Cab rolled off the line in Kalamazoo on July 12, 1982.
Pictured: 1946 checkered cab

18 June 1936
Denis Clive "Denny" Hulme, New Zealand car racer and the 1967 Formula One World Champion for the Brabham team was born in Moteuka, New Zealand.

18 June 1983 
America launches its first woman into space

18 June 1936
1st bicycle traffic court in America established, Racine, WI

18 June 1977
Sex Pistols Johnny Rotten & Paul Cook, beaten & robbed by London pub

18 June 1815 
Napoleon Bonaparte is defeated in the Battle of Waterloo

18 June 1928 
Arctic explorer Roald Amundsen disappears while on a rescue mission.

18 June 1972 
118 people are killed in the UK's worst air disaster

18 June 2000 
58 Chinese immigrants die from suffocation whilst trying to illegally enter Britain

18 June 1178
5 Canterbury monks report explosion on moon (only known observation)

18 June 1879
W H Richardson, a black inventor, patents the children's carriage
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on June 19, 2015, 08:18:33 pm
(http://i293.photobucket.com/albums/mm46/CarClassic/Blog-03/Lamborghini_Gallardo_05.jpg) (http://s293.photobucket.com/user/CarClassic/media/Blog-03/Lamborghini_Gallardo_05.jpg.html)

On this day, June 19th 1965
Luc Donckerwolke, famous Belgian car designer was born in Lima, Peru. He started his design career in 1990 with Peugeot. He also worked for Skoda (1994-98 where he helped design Octavia and Fabia. After that he shifted to Audi where he helped design Audi A4 and R8. He was head of design at Lamborghini from 1998, where he was responsible for the 2001 Lamborghini Diablo VT 6.0, 2002 Lamborghini Murciélago and 2003 Lamborghini Gallardo, winning the 'Red Dot Award' in 2003 in recognition for his work on them. He also worked with Walter de'Silva to produce the 2006 Lamborghini Miura concept. In September 2005, Donckerwolke was appointed SEAT Design Director overseeing the design of future SEAT models.
PICTURED: The Lamborghini Gallardo

June 19th 1949
NASCAR staged its first Grand National event at the Charlotte Fairgrounds, the event marked the birth of NASCAR racing as we know it today.

June 19, 1940
Shirley Muldowney, the "First Lady of Drag Racing" was born in Schenectady, New York. She was the first woman to receive a licence to drive a top fuel dragster by the NHRA. She won the NHRA Top Fuel championship in 1977, 1980 and 1982.

(http://i645.photobucket.com/albums/uu176/MustangMayhem/this%20day%20in%20HISTORY/11051871_10203848166275151_1706218519976333452_n_zpsg0ljvuax.jpg) (http://s645.photobucket.com/user/MustangMayhem/media/this%20day%20in%20HISTORY/11051871_10203848166275151_1706218519976333452_n_zpsg0ljvuax.jpg.html)

June 19, 35 years ago today the best movie ever made was released. The Blues Brothers

June 19th 2005
After 14 Formula One race car drivers withdraw due to safety concerns over the Michelin-made tires on their vehicles, German driver Michael Schumacher wins a less-than-satisfying victory at the United States Grand Prix. The race, held at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway in Indianapolis, Indiana, will go down one of the most controversial Formula One racing events in history.
Two days before the race, driver Ralf Schumacher (Michael's brother) crashed in practice while negotiating the speedway's banked right-hand 13th turn. Michelin, makers of Schumacher's tires, determined that the tires they had supplied for the Grand Prix could not withstand the high speed on the turn, and asked the Federation Internationale de l'Automobile (FIA), the sanctioning body for Formula One races, for permission to send another batch of tires. The FIA refused, citing its mandate that only one set of tires be used in a weekend. The organization also refused Michelin's petition to build a chicane, or series of turns, designed to slow down cars before the 13th turn--despite the fact that the speedway's chief executive and 9 out of the 10 teams in the race agreed that the track could be altered. The only team that didn't was Ferrari, the team of Michael Schumacher and Rubens Barrichello (who ended up finishing second) and one of three teams in the race that used Bridgestone tires instead of Michelin.
In the end, 14 cars stayed in the garage for the Grand Prix; the six remaining cars were from the Bridgestone-outfitted Ferrari, Minardi and Jordan teams. The race itself featured one moment of excitement, when Michael Schumacher almost collided with Barrichello after a pit stop, forcing Barrichello off the track briefly and onto the grass before he regained his bearings. Many disgruntled fans left early, while others threw beer bottles and other debris from the stands and booed the victory ceremony, during which a subdued Schumacher declined to spray the customary bottle of champagne into the crowd.
The teams that used Michelin tires issued a joint apology to fans and sponsors, while Michelin later reimbursed some ticket holders for the event. Though many faulted Michelin for not providing adequate tires and agreed that the FIA and Ferrari team had the right to insist that the race course not be changed, many felt a compromise would have benefited Formula One racing as a whole, especially in the United States, where it was still seeking to build a solid fan base. The 2005 Grand Prix had drawn a crowd of some 100,000 fans--far less than that attracted by the Indianapolis 500 or a regular NASCAR Nextel Cup event.


(http://i1010.photobucket.com/albums/af230/Seeking_uno/James-Gandolfini_zps6a65684d.jpg) (http://s1010.photobucket.com/user/Seeking_uno/media/James-Gandolfini_zps6a65684d.jpg.html)

June 19 2013
Sopranos star James Gandolfini best known as TV mob boss Tony Soprano dies of suspected heart attack in Italy, age 51. Already a well-travelled actor, Gandolfini shot to fame in 1999 as the head of a mob family on HBO TV series The Sopranos, the show that changed TV's reputation into a destination for quality drama and in turn, film actors.
Sept 18 1961 - June 19 2013

2012 - A man in Saudi Arabia is beheaded for witchcraft and sorcery

1835 - New Orleans gives US government Jackson Square to be used as a mint

1862 - Slavery outlawed in US territories

1889 - Start of the first Sherlock Holmes adventure "Man with the Twisted Lip"

1910 - 1st airship in service "Germany"

1910 - Father's Day celebrated for 1st time (Spokane, Wash)

1917 - After WW I King George V ordered members of British royal family to dispense with German titles & surnames, they take the name Windsor

1954 - Tasmanian Devil, debuts in "Devil May Hare" by Warner Bros

1956 - Jerry Lewis & Dean Martin end partnership after 16 films

1967 - Paul McCartney admits on TV that he took LSD

1973 - "Rocky Horror Picture Show," stage production opens in London

1978 - "Best Little Whorehouse..." opens at 46th St NYC for 1577 perfs

1978 - Garfield, created by Jim Davis, 1st appears as a comic strip

1981 - Heaviest known orange (2.5 kg) exhibited, Nelspruit, South Africa

1988 - World's Largest Sausage completed at 13 1/8 miles long

1992 - "Batman Returns," opens
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on June 20, 2015, 08:11:23 pm
(http://i163.photobucket.com/albums/t289/Eryk_PL/fs_7706921-1-1.jpg) (http://s163.photobucket.com/user/Eryk_PL/media/fs_7706921-1-1.jpg.html)

On this day, June 20th 1945
Shekhar Mehta, the only five-time winner of the Safari Rally, was born in Uganda. The most grueling rally race in the world, the Safari originated in 1953 at the behest of the Royal East African Automobile Association. He was born in 1945 to an Indian family of plantation owners in Uganda, and began rallying behind the wheel of a BMW aged 21. In 1972 he and his family fled Idi Amin's regime to Kenya.
Through the most successful period of his career he drove Nissan/Datsun 240Z car.
PICTURED: Shekhar Mehta in a Datsun 240Z - '73 Safari Rally

June 20th 1987
First Junior Go-Kart race was run at the three-quarter-mile cross-country course outside of Easton, Maryland. Racer William Smith won this event in his 50cc Yamaha Green Dragon.

June 20th 1941
After a long and bitter struggle on the part of Henry Ford against cooperation with organized labor unions, Ford Motor Company signs its first contract with the United Automobile Workers of America and Congress of Industrial Organizations (UAW-CIO)
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on June 22, 2015, 12:47:13 am
(http://i200.photobucket.com/albums/aa56/AAinsworthNo2/Mille_Miglia_1955_Stirlingcopy.jpg) (http://s200.photobucket.com/user/AAinsworthNo2/media/Mille_Miglia_1955_Stirlingcopy.jpg.html)

On this day, June 21 1947
After an interim of seven years, during which World War II wreaked havoc across the European continent, the first post-war Mille Miglia auto race is held on this day in 1947 in Brescia, Italy.
The Mille Miglia ("Thousand Miles") was the brainchild of the Brescia Automobile Club, formed in 1926 under the leadership of Franco Mazzotti and Count Aymo Maggi. An important center for Italian motor sports since the turn of the century, Brescia was smarting over the fact that Monza (near Milan) had been chosen as the site of the prestigious Italian Grand Prix. Using its considerable political connections, the fledgling automobile club gained the approval of Italy's Fascist government to run a race from Brescia to Rome--a distance of some 1,600 kilometers (around 1,000 miles) on Italian public roads. The first race, held on March 26 and 27, 1927, featured all of the leading Italian drivers; foreign participation was limited to three tiny French-made Peugeots in the lower-power Class H field. Cars made by local manufacturer Officine Meccaniche (OM) captured the three top spots. The winner completed the course in a little more than 20 hours, at an average speed of more than 77 kilometers per hour.
After an entrant spun out of control during the 1938 Mille Miglia, killing 10 spectators--, including seven children--the Fascist government of Benito Mussolini banned the race. It resumed briefly during wartime but was suspended again after the 13th running in 1940. After World War II ended in 1945, much of Italy's infrastructure, including roads and bridges, had to be rebuilt, gasoline and rubber were still being rationed and the country's new government was struggling to demonstrate its effectiveness in the wake of the Fascist movement's demise. Mille Miglia organizers were forced to postpone the starting date from late April to June 1947; they also switched to a new 1,800-kilometer route. Finally, on June 21, 1947, 155 starters left the line for the 14th edition of the Mille Miglia. Aided by a violent rainstorm that hampered runner-up Tazio Nuvolari's small Cisitalia convertible, the driver Clemente Biondetti won the race in an Alfa Romeo.
Even in its new incarnation, Italian drivers and cars dominated the race, which popularized such powerhouse brands as Alfa Romeo, Ferrari and Maserati. Tragically, driver Alfonso de Portago blew a tire and spun off the road during the 1957 edition, killing himself, his co-driver and 10 spectators. Three days later, the Italian government banned the Mille Miglia and all other motor racing on Italian public road
PICTURED: Stirling Moss at 1955 Mille Miglia

June 21 1947
William Clay Ford married Martha Firestone, uniting two of the greatest fortunes in the American automotive industry. Henry Ford and Harvey Firestone had been close friends and allies during their lives after Firestone received the exclusive contract to supply tires for Ford's Model T. Neither man lived to see the union of their families.

June 21 1894
Workers in Pittsburgh strike Pullman sleeping car company

June 21 1938
Bradman scores 101* in 77 minutes, Australia v Lancashire

June 21 1954
John Landy runs world record mile (3:58.0)

June 21 1960
Armin Hary runs world record 100m (10.0)

June 21 1962
USAF Maj Robert M White takes the X-15 to 75,190 m

(http://i166.photobucket.com/albums/u108/rnich172/X15a03R.jpg) (http://s166.photobucket.com/user/rnich172/media/X15a03R.jpg.html)

June 21 1982
John Hinckley found not guilty of 1981 attempted assassination of President Reagan by reason of insanity

June 21 2004
SpaceShipOne becomes the first privately funded spaceplane to achieve spaceflight.

June 21 2006
Pluto's newly discovered moons are officially named Nix & Hydra.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on June 22, 2015, 07:38:56 pm
(http://i728.photobucket.com/albums/ww284/jonesp2009/the_fast__furious.jpg) (http://s728.photobucket.com/user/jonesp2009/media/the_fast__furious.jpg.html)

June 22nd 2001
"The Fast and the Furious," a crime drama based in the underground world of street racing in Southern California, debuts in theaters across the United States.
In the film, directed by Rob Cohen, Paul Walker starred as Brian O'Connor, an undercover cop who infiltrates the illegal late-night racing scene in Los Angeles to catch a gang suspected of hijacking big-rig trucks to get the parts to outfit their souped-up cars. As the movie opens, O'Connor is practicing his high-speed driving in order to blend in with his targets; his vehicle is a bright green 1995 Mitsubishi Eclipse, which he powers through an empty parking lot near Dodger Stadium. Later on, O'Connor loses the title to the Mitsubishi to Dominic Toretto (Vin Diesel), the leader of the gang of suspected thieves, after a street race. Toretto, the reigning "king of the streets," dominates the competition in his powerful fire-engine red 1993 Mazda RX-7 Twin Turbo. In another scene, Toretto drives a hulking vintage 1969/1970 Dodge Charger.
These were just three of the cars featured prominently in the high-speed, high-impact racing scenes that punctuate "The Fast and the Furious." The screenplay for the film was based on an article about the street-racing scene titled "Racer X," written by Kenneth Li and published in Vibe magazine in 1998. Street racing (an illegal practice that should not be confused with drag racing, which is a popular sport most commonly done on a track, along a straight "drag" strip) began in the early 1990s on the roads and highways of Southern California, mostly among young Asian Americans, but quickly spread; Li's article chronicled the adventures of a racer living in New York City. Like many street racers, the characters in "The Fast and the Furious" favor low-slung Acura Integras, Honda Civics, and other common Japanese-made compact cars that are modified so that they can reach speeds of around 160 mph.
Despite mixed reviews from critics, "The Fast and the Furious" was an unexpected hit at the box office. It spawned three sequels: "2 Fast 2 Furious" (2003), "The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift" (2006) and "Fast & Furious" (2009), in which the four main co-stars of the first film--Walker, Diesel, Michelle Rodriguez and Jordana Brewster--all reprised their roles.

June 22nd 1915
Joseph Lewinka, of Philadelphia, PA, received a patent for an "Automobile-Body"; design.

June 22nd 1934
Ferdinand Porsche contracted with Automobile Manufacturers Association of Germany (RDA) to build three prototype "people's cars". The contract was a direct result of Hitler's personal request to Porsche that he design such a car.
Also on this day, 1941 - Germany, Italy & Romania declares war on Soviet Union during WW II

June 22nd 1633 - Galileo Galilei forced to recant Earth orbits Sun by Pope (on Oct 31, 1992, Vatican admits it was wrong)

June 22nd 1870 - 1st Boardwalk in America invented

June 22nd 1910
1st airship with passengers sets afloat-Zeppelin Deutscheland

June 22nd1962
1st test flight of a Hoovercraft

June 22nd 1981
Mark David Chapman pleads guilty to killing John Lennon

June 22nd 1983
"Monty Python's The Meaning of Life," released in France

And for those who want to know
June 22nd 1990
Florida passes a law that prohibits wearing a throng bathing suit (which has since been abolished)
which brings me to this
So......On this day 22nd June, is International "No Panty Day"
"Who'd of thought it actually has some history"

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Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on June 23, 2015, 09:10:21 pm
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On this day, June 23rd 1902
German automaker Daimler-Motoren-Gesellschaft (DMG) first registers "Mercedes" as a brand name; the name will gain full legal protection the next September.
Mechanical engineer Gottlieb Daimler sold his first luxury gasoline-powered automobile to the sultan of Morocco in 1899; a year later, he formed DMG in his hometown [or whatever] of Cannstatt, Germany. Emil Jellinek, a prominent Austrian diplomat and businessman who was extremely enthusiastic about the development of the automobile, ordered a car from Daimler in 1897. The carmaker delivered a six-horsepower vehicle with a two-cylinder engine, but it was too slow for Jellinek; to replace it, he ordered two of a faster model--the four-cylinder Daimler Phoenix. Soon, Jellinek began to sell Daimler cars to high society customers and to drive them in racing events, including Nice Week on the French Riviera, in 1899. He entered these races using the pseudonym "Mercedes," the name of his elder daughter.
In April 1900, Jellinek signed an agreement with DMG to distribute and sell a new line of four-cylinder vehicles. He suggested they call the car Mercedes, feeling that the non-German name might sell better in France. On December 22, 1900, DMG delivered the first Mercedes to Jellinek. Designed by Wilhelm Maybach, chief engineer for DMG, the 35-horsepower vehicle featured a pressed-steel chassis (or frame), honeycomb radiator, mechanical intake valves and an improved gearbox; it could achieve a speed of 53 mph. For this combination of attributes, the 1901 Mercedes is considered to have been the first truly modern automobile.
At Nice Week in March 1901, Mercedes race cars nearly swept the field, and orders began pouring into DMG's Cannstatt factory. "Mercedes" was registered as a brand name on June 22, 1902, and legally protected the following September 26. In June 1903, Emil Jellinek obtained permission to take the name Jellinek-Mercedes, observing that it was "probably the first time that a father has borne the name of his daughter."
The famous Mercedes symbol, a three-point star, was registered as a trademark in 1909 and used on all Mercedes vehicles from 1910 onward. It had its origins in a story that Paul and Adolf Daimler, sons of Gottlieb Daimler and senior executives at DMG, remembered about their father, who died in 1900. On a postcard with a picture of Cologne and Deutz, where he was working at the time in the Deutz engine factory, the elder Daimler had drawn a star over the house where he was living. In the card's message, he told his wife the star represented the prosperity that would shine on them in the future, when he would have his own factory.

June 23rd 1951
Michèle Mouton was born in Grasse, France. She is the most successful and well-known female rally driver of all time, as well as arguably the most successful female in motor racing as a whole. She was the first and so far the only woman to win a round of the World Rally Championship, the Rallye Sanremo in 1981.

June 23rd 1991
Bertrand Gachot, Johnny Herbert, and Volker Wiedler won the 24-Hours of Le Mans driving a Mazda. It was the first time an automaker outside of Western Europe had won the prestigious title. The 1991 Mazda was also the first car to win Le Mans with a Wankel rotary engine. The engine consisted of four rotors with three sequential spark plugs per rotor. The Mazda drove 4,923 kilometers at an average speed of 295kmh.

June 23rd 1784
1st US balloon flight (13 year old Edward Warren)

June 23rd 1942
World War II: Germany's latest fighter, a Focke-Wulf FW190 is captured intact when it mistakenly lands at RAF Pembrey in Wales.

June 23rd 1961
USAF Maj Robert M White takes X-15 to 32,830 m

June 23rd 1972
Nixon & Haldeman agree to use CIA to cover up Watergate

June 23rd 1974
1st extraterrestrial message sent from Earth into space

June 23rd 1993
Lorena Gallo Bobbitt amputates husband's John Wayne Bobbitt's penis

June 23rd 1996
Nintendo 64 goes on sale in Japan
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on June 24, 2015, 08:26:56 pm
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On this day, JUNE 24rd, 1969 (reported)
A 1966 Mustang GT with vinyl top was crushed and burned when a DC4 airplane with a engine fire skipped across rooftops, spreading debris for four blocks and exploded in a used car lot in downtown Miami. One of the engines from the plane ended up on the Mustang. (11-people died)

June 24th 1900
Oliver Lippincott became the first motorist in Yosemite National Park, when he drove his Toledo Automobile Company-built car to the South Rim from Flagstaff. Lippincott would start a trend with his visit, as motorists increasingly chose to drive to National Parks, avoiding the more time-consuming train and coach rides. By 1901, a number of other motorists had made the trip to Yosemite, mostly in Locomobiles.

June 24th 1928
The rocket-powered Opel RAK 3 debuted on a section of railroad track near Hanover, Germany. With approximately 20,000 spectators looking on, the rocket car recorded a rail-speed record of 157mph on its first run. The result of a rather odd experiment, the RAK 3 carried a caged cat as its driver. Tragically, on the car's second run, too many of its rockets fired at once and the car crashed, killing its feline pilot.

June 24th 1939
Pan Am's 1st US to England flight

June 24th 1947
Flying saucers sighted over Mount Rainier by pilot Ken Arnold

June 24th 1968
Australia all out for 78 v England at Lord's

June 24th 1970
"Catch 22" opens in movie theaters

June 24th 1976
1975 movie "Rocky Horror Picture Show" released in Germany

June 24th 1997
USAF reports Roswell 'space aliens' were dummies
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on June 25, 2015, 09:27:02 pm
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On this day, June 25th 1956
The last Packard--the classic American luxury car with the famously enigmatic slogan "Ask the Man Who Owns One"--rolls off the production line at Packard's plant in Detroit, Michigan on this day in 1956.
Mechanical engineer James Ward Packard and his brother, William Dowd Packard, built their first automobile, a buggy-type vehicle with a single cylinder engine, in Warren, Ohio in 1899. The Packard Motor Car Company earned fame early on for a four-cylinder aluminum speedster called the "Gray Wolf," released in 1904. It became one of the first American racing cars to be available for sale to the general public. With the 1916 release of the Twin Six, with its revolutionary V-12 engine, Packard established itself as the country's leading luxury-car manufacturer. World War I saw Packard convert to war production earlier than most companies, and the Twin Six was adapted into the Liberty Aircraft engine, by far the most important single output of America's wartime industry.
Packards had large, square bodies that suggested an elegant solidity, and the company was renowned for its hand-finished attention to detail. In the 1930s, however, the superior resources of General Motors and the success of its V-16 engine pushed Cadillac past Packard as the premier luxury car in America. Packard diversified by producing a smaller, more affordable model, the One Twenty, which increased the company's sales. The coming of World War II halted consumer car production in the United States. In the postwar years, Packard struggled as Cadillac maintained a firm hold on the luxury car market and the media saddled the lumbering Packard with names like "bathtub" or "pregnant elephant."
With sales dwindling by the 1950s, Packard merged with the much larger Studebaker Corporation in the hope of cutting its production costs. The new Packard-Studebaker became the fourth largest manufacturer of cars. Studebaker was struggling as well, however, and eventually dropped all its own big cars as well as the Packard. In 1956, Packard-Studebaker's then-president, James Nance, made the decision to suspend Packard's manufacturing operations in Detroit. Though the company would continue to manufacture cars in South Bend, Indiana, until 1958, the final model produced on June 25, 1956, is considered the last true Packard.

June 25th 1964
John Paul Herbert was on born June 25, 1964 in Romford, London, England. He is a former racing driver from England. He competed in Formula One, winning three races, and also in sports cars winning the Le Mans 24 Hours in 1991 driving a Mazda 787B. They only non-european car to win Le-Mans that too with a rotary engine.

June 25th 1919
1st advanced monoplane airliner flight (Junkers F13)

June 25th 1953
1st passenger to fly commercially around the world < 100 hours

June 25th 1997
Christies auctions off Princess Di's clothing for $5.5 million
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on June 26, 2015, 10:12:31 pm
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On this day, June 26 1906
The first French Grand Prix, the first race of that kind to be held anywhere was staged in Le Mans by the Automobile Club of France and won by Hungarian driver Ferenc Szisz in a 90hp Renault. The race covered 1,200 kilometers over two days, and was run under a new set of rules that would become a standard element of Grand Prix racing.
PICTURED: 1st GP ever - 1906 LeMans, Ferenc Szisz and his riding mechanic winning the 1906 race

June 26th 1925
After two years of stock acquisitions by Walter Chrysler and Harry Bronner, Chrysler Corporation was incorporated in Delaware, Later it took over Maxwell Motor Corporation with Walter P. Chrysler as president and chairman of the board.

June 26th 1971
Massimiliano "Max" Biaggi, Italian motercycle racer was born in Rome, Italy. Biaggi is also known as the Roman Emperor and Mad Max and is notorious for his difficult relationship with the press, team personnel and other riders.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on June 27, 2015, 09:27:18 pm
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On this day, June 27th 1985
After 59 years, the iconic Route 66 enters the realm of history, when the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials de-certifies the road and votes to remove all its highway signs.
Measuring some 2,200 miles in its heyday, Route 66 stretched from Chicago, Illinois to Santa Monica, California, passing through eight states. According to a New York Times article about its decertification, most of Route 66 followed a path through the wilderness forged in 1857 by U.S. Navy Lieutenant Edward Beale at the head of a caravan of camels. Over the years, wagon trains and cattlemen eventually made way for trucks and passenger automobiles.
The idea of building a highway along this route surfaced in Oklahoma in the mid-1920s as a way to link the state to cities like Chicago and Los Angeles. Highway Commissioner Cyrus S. Avery touted it as a way of diverting traffic from Kansas City, Missouri and Denver. In 1926, the highway earned its official designation as Route 66. The diagonal course of Route 66 linked hundreds of mostly rural communities to the cities along its route, allowing farmers to more easily transport grain and other types of produce for distribution. The highway was also a lifeline for the long-distance trucking industry, which by 1930 was competing with the railroad for dominance in the shipping market.
Route 66 was the scene of a mass westward migration during the 1930s, when more than 200,000 people traveled from the poverty-stricken Dust Bowl to California. John Steinbeck immortalized the highway, which he called the "Mother Road," in his classic 1939 novel "The Grapes of Wrath."
Beginning in the 1950s, the building of a massive system of interstate highways made older roads increasingly obsolete, and by 1970, modern four-lane highways had bypassed nearly all sections of Route 66. In October 1984, Interstate-40 bypassed the last original stretch of Route 66 at Williams, Arizona, and the following year the road was decertified. According to the National Historic Route 66 Federation, drivers can still use 85 percent of the road, and Route 66 has become a destination for tourists from all over the world.
Often called the "Main Street of America," Route 66 became a pop culture mainstay over the years, inspiring its own song (written in 1947 by Bobby Troup, "Route 66" was later recorded by artists as varied as Nat "King" Cole, Chuck Berry and the Rolling Stones) as well as a 1960s television series. More recently, the historic highway was featured prominently in the hit animated film "Cars" (2006).

June 27th 1909
Mercedes Benz introduced three-pointed star symbol.

June 27th 1955
Illinois, the 21st state of United State enacted first automobile seat belt legislation.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on June 28, 2015, 09:36:12 pm
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On this day, June 28th 1914
Archduke Franz Ferdinand was assassinated by Gavrilo Princip in Sarajevo, Bosnia, while riding in an The 1911 Gräf & Stift Double Phaeton (Austro Daimler)that was chauffeured by Otto Merz, a Mercedes team driver. The assassination resulted in the outbreak of World War I.
PICTURED: The 1911 Gräf & Stift Double Phaeton in which the Archduke Franz Ferdinand was riding at the time of his assassination.

June 28th 1926
Benz & Cie. and Daimler Motoren Gesellschaft (DMG) merged to form Daimler-Benz AG.

June 28th 1931
Robert Glen Johnson Junior famously known as Junior Johnson was born in Wilkes County, North Carolina. He was a legendary moonshiner (bootlegger) in the rural South who became one of the early superstars of NASCAR in the 1950s and 1960s. He won 50 NASCAR races in his career before retiring in 1966. In the 1970s and 1980s he became a highly successful NASCAR racing team owner. He sponsored such NASCAR champions as Cale Yarborough and Darrell Waltrip. He is credited with discovering drafting/slipstreaming
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on June 29, 2015, 10:29:05 pm
(http://i694.photobucket.com/albums/vv310/cuto01/Race%20Cars/03-1.jpg) (http://s694.photobucket.com/user/cuto01/media/Race%20Cars/03-1.jpg.html)

On this day, June 29th 1902
Marcel Renault won the four-day Paris-to-Vienna race, driving a car of his own design. The early city-to-city races were the largest sporting events of that era. Some three million people turned out to cheer Renault on to victory during the 15-hour, 615-mile race. These races were discontinued in large part due to Renault's fatal accident the following year at the Paris-Madrid race.
PICTURED: Marcel Renault and his mechanic, Vauthier

June 29th 1932
Audiwerke, Horchwerke, Zschopauer Motorenwerke - DKW, Automobile Division of Wanderer merged to formed Auto Union AG (second-largest motor vehicle manufacturer in Germany.). The new company's logo, four interlinked rings, one for each of founder companies was adopted. Horch was on supervisory board of Auto Union.

June 29th 1956
President Dwight Eisenhower signed into law the Highway Revenue Act of 1956 which outlined a policy of taxation with the aim of creating a fund for the construction of over 42,500 miles of interstate highways. The plan called for $50 billion over 13 years to pay for the project. A system of taxes, relying heavily on the taxation of gasoline, was implemented. Eisenhower thought of the Federal Interstate System as his greatest achievement.

June 29th 1957
Giuseppe Bacciagaluppi, managing director of the Autodromo Nazionale di Monza, staged the first race at his newly remodeled track, a match race between the top 10 Indy Car drivers and the top 10 Formula One drivers in the world. Monza enjoyed the reputation of being Europe's fastest racetrack. Jimmy Bryan of the United States won the Two Worlds Trophy in a Salih roadster at 160mph. The race did little to settle the dispute as to where the world's best drivers reside, on the high-speed ovals of the United States or on the curvy Grand Prix tracks of Europe. In those days, many racers bridged the gap between the two worlds-- like Jim Clark, who won at Indy in the same year he captured the F1 crown. Today it is widely held that the world's best drivers compete on the F1 circuit, though the specialized cars of today make the two types of racing more difficult to compare.

June 29th 1985
Jim Pattison purchased a custom-painted Rolls-Royce Phantom V limousine that had belonged to John Lennon for $2,229,000. Lennon had purchased the car in 1966 and asked a friend to paint the car with a period-typical psychedelic design pattern. The auction sale price was 10 times Sotheby's initial estimate.

1790  -    The inventer of the idea of dental floss, Levi Spear Parmly, is born
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on June 30, 2015, 09:08:02 pm
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On this day, June 30th 1953
The first production Corvette is built at the General Motors facility in Flint, Michigan. Tony Kleiber, a worker on the assembly line, is given the privilege of driving the now-historic car off the line.
Harley J. Earl, the man behind the Corvette, got his start in his father's business, Earl Automobile Works, designing custom auto bodies for Hollywood movie stars such as Fatty Arbuckle. In 1927, General Motors hired Earl to redesign the LaSalle, the mid-range option the company had introduced between the Buick and the Cadillac. Earl's revamped LaSalle sold some 50,000 units by the end of 1929, before the Great Depression permanently slowed sales and it was discontinued in 1940. By that time, Earl had earned more attention for designing the Buick "Y Job," recognized as the industry's first "concept" car. Its relatively long, low body came equipped with innovations such as disappearing headlamps, electric windows and air-cooled brake drums over the wheels like those on an airplane.
After scoring another hit with the 1950 Buick LeSabre, Earl headed into the 1950s--a boom decade for car manufacturers--at the top of his game. In January 1953, he introduced his latest "dream car," the Corvette, as part of GM's traveling Motorama display at the Waldorf Astoria Hotel in New York City. The sleek Corvette, the first all-fiberglass-bodied American sports car, was an instant hit. It went into production the following June in Flint; 300 models were built that year. All 1953 Corvettes were white convertibles with red interiors and black canvas tops. Underneath its sleek exterior, however, the Corvette was outfitted with parts standard to other GM automobiles, including a "Blue Flame" six-cylinder engine, two-speed Powerglide automatic transmission and the drum brakes from Chevrolet's regular car line.
The Corvette's performance as a sports car was disappointing relative to its European competitors, and early sales were unimpressive. GM kept refining the design, however, and the addition of its first V-8 engine in 1955 greatly improved the car's performance. By 1961, the Corvette had cemented its reputation as America's favorite sports car. Today, it continues to rank among the world's elite sports cars in acceleration time, top speed and overall muscle.

June 30th 1969
The last U.S. produced Rambler (an American Rambler) rolls off the production line in Kenosha. A total of 4,204,925 had been made.
The Nash Rambler had originally been developed by George Walter Mason after World War II. Mason realized before anyone else that the postwar "seller's market" would evaporate once the market was again saturated with cars. He foresaw the difficulty that independent car companies would experience once they were faced with head-to-head competition with the Big Three's massive production capabilities. It was Mason's theory that to compete with the Big Three, the independents needed to market a different product. He developed a number of smaller cars, including the Rambler, the Nash-Healey (a collaboration with British Healey), and the Metropolitan. None of the cars managed to capture the American market. But years later, after Nash-Kelvinator and Hudson merged to become AMC, the Rambler finally caught on as a sub-compact car. George Romney, Mason's protÉgÉ, coined the term "gas-guzzling dinosaur" to describe the Big Three's products. Romney led a personal ad campaign promoting the AMC Rambler as an efficient, reliable car. His campaign was immensely successful, and the Rambler single-handedly kept AMC alive during impossible times for independents.
The Rambler marque was continued in numerous international markets. Examples include AMC Hornets and AMC Matadors assembled by the Australian Motor Industries (AMI) from CKD kits that continued to be badged as Ramblers until 1978. The Rambler nameplate was last used on automobiles in 1983 by Vehiculos Automotores Mexicanos (VAM) in Mexico.
In Argentina, the Rambler American became the IKA Torino in 1967. It then became the Renault Torino and was offered until 1980.

June 30 1926
GM traded 667,720 shares of its own stock, at market value of $136 million to acquire remaining 40 percent of Fisher Body to make Fisher Body Division of GM.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on July 01, 2015, 09:20:21 pm
(http://i183.photobucket.com/albums/x207/Starcowboy/race%20trib/France/GrandPrix/grid-f34.jpg) (http://s183.photobucket.com/user/Starcowboy/media/race%20trib/France/GrandPrix/grid-f34.jpg.html)

On this day, July 1st 1948
Achille Varzi, an Italian Grand Prix driver who died during practice runs for the 1948 Swiss Grand Prix during light rain. His car skidded on the wet surface, flipping over and crushing him to death. Varzi's death resulted in the FIA mandating the wearing of crash helmets for racing, which had been optional previously. He used to race for Buggati and Alfa Romeo.
PICTURED: XL Louis Chiron (12), Achille Varzi (6), Rudolf Caracciola (8), Ren� Dreyfus (18), Hans Stuck (4) Scuderia Ferrari Alfa Romeo Tipo B, Scuderia Ferrari Alfa Romeo Tipo B, Mercedes-Benz W25, Bugatti T59, Auto Union A 1934

July 1st 1913
Carl Fisher, President of Prest-o-lite, formed Lincoln Highway Association with headquarters in Detroit, MI. Henry Joy, President of Packard Motor Cars, came up with the idea of naming the highway after Abraham Lincoln to build coast-to-coast paved road; envisioned improved, hard-surfaced road that would stretch almost 3400 miles from coast to coast, New York to San Francisco, over shortest practical route; promoted road using private, corporate donations; Henry Joy elected as president. Carl Fisher elected vice-president.

July 1st 2005
The last Thunderbird, Ford Motor Company's iconic sports car, emerges from a Ford factory in Wixom, Michigan.
Ford began its development of the Thunderbird in the years following World War II, during which American servicemen had the opportunity to observe sleek European sports cars. General Motors built the first American sports car: the Chevrolet Corvette, released in 1953. The undeniably sleek Corvette's initial engine performance was relatively underwhelming, but it was gaining lots of attention from the press and public, and Ford was motivated to respond, rushing the Thunderbird to the market in 1955. The 1955 Thunderbird was an immediate hit, selling more than 14,000 that year (compared to just 700 Corvettes). The success of the Thunderbird led Chevrolet to continue production of (and improve upon) the Corvette, which soon became a tough competitor in the sports car market.
In addition to the powerful V-8 engine that Ford was known for, the Thunderbird boasted all the conveniences consumers had become accustomed to, including a removable hard convertible top, soundproofing and the accessories standard to most Ford cars. In 1958, to satisfy critics who thought the T-Bird was too small, Ford released a four-seater version with a roomier trunk and bucket seats. The Beach Boys elevated the Thunderbird to pop- culture-icon status in 1964 by including it in the lyrics of their hit single "Fun Fun Fun" ("she'll have fun, fun, fun 'til her daddy takes the T-Bird away"). By that time, President John F. Kennedy had already included 50 Thunderbirds in his inaugural procession in 1961, and a T-Bird would also feature prominently in the 1973 film "American Graffiti."
Thunderbird sales slowed during the 1990s, and Ford discontinued the Thunderbird in 1997. In 2002, however, in an attempt to capitalize on car buyers' nostalgia, the company launched production of a retro T-Bird, a two-seater convertible that took some of its styling from the original classic. The luxury retailer Neiman Marcus offered an early special edition version in their 2000 Christmas catalog, priced at just under $42,000; their stock of 200 sold out in two hours and 15 minutes. Despite brisk early sales and good reviews, sales of the new Thunderbird couldn't justify continued production, and Ford discontinued it again in mid-2005.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on July 02, 2015, 09:46:11 pm
(http://i1011.photobucket.com/albums/af236/ricktrae/Atlanta%20High%20Art%20Museum%20Auto%20exhibit/ZorasVette.jpg) (http://s1011.photobucket.com/user/ricktrae/media/Atlanta%20High%20Art%20Museum%20Auto%20exhibit/ZorasVette.jpg.html)

On this day, June 2nd 1992
Original Corvette engineer Zora Arkus Duntov drove the one-millionth Chevrolet Corvette off of the assembly line in Bowling Green, Kentucky. The event was monumental to both America's first sports car and the man that made the car possible.
The color choice for the one millionth Corvette - white with red interior and black roof - was appropriate. This was a nod to the 1953 Corvette, whose entire production run of 300 units featured the same livery
PICTURED: Zora Arkus Duntov's Concept Vette

July 2nd 1910
Frank D. and Spencer Stranahan incorporated Champion Spark Plug Company in Toledo, Ohio in accordance with manufacturing contract with Willys-Overland Company.

July 2nd 1843
An alligator falls from sky during a Charleston SC thunderstorm

July 2nd 1940
Hitler orders invasion of England (Operation Sealion)

July 2nd 1956
Elvis Presley records "Hound Dog" & "Don't Be Cruel"

July 2nd 1970
1st Boeing 747 to land in Amsterdam & Brussels

July 2nd 1982
Larry Walters using lawn chair & 42 helium balloons, rose to 16,000'

July 2nd 2002
Steve Fossett becomes the first person to fly solo around the world nonstop in a balloon.

July 2nd 1993
F-28 crashes at Sorong Irian Barat, 41 die
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on July 03, 2015, 10:02:32 pm
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On this day July 3rd 1985
The blockbuster action-comedy "Back to the Future"--in which John DeLorean's iconic concept car is memorably transformed into a time-travel device--is released in theaters across the United States.
"Back to the Future," directed by Robert Zemeckis, starred Michael J. Fox as Marty McFly, a teenager who travels back 30 years using a time machine built by the zany scientist Doc Brown (Christopher Lloyd). Doc's mind-blowing creation consists of a DeLorean DMC-12 sports car outfitted with a nuclear reactor. Once the car reaches a speed of 88 miles per hour, the plutonium-powered reactor achieves the "1.21 gigawatts" of power necessary to travel through time. Marty arrives in 1955 only to stumble in the way of his own parents (Crispin Glover and Lea Thompson) and keep them from meeting for the first time, thus putting his own life in jeopardy.
A veteran of the Packard Motor Company and General Motors, John DeLorean founded the DeLorean Motor Company in Detroit in 1975 to pursue his vision of a futuristic sports car. DeLorean eventually set up a factory in Dunmurry, near Belfast in Northern Ireland. There, he built his iconic concept car: the DMC-12, known simply as the DeLorean. An angular vehicle with gull-wing doors, the DeLorean had an unpainted stainless-steel body and a rear-mounted engine. To accommodate taller drivers (like its designer, who was over six feet tall), the car had a roomy interior compared to most sports cars.
Although it was built in Northern Ireland, the DeLorean was intended predominantly for an American audience, so it was built with the driver's seat on the left-hand side. The company built about 9,000 of the cars before it ran out of money and halted production in 1982; only 6,500 of those are still in existence. Despite its short lifespan, the DeLorean remains an object of great interest to car collectors and enthusiasts, no doubt largely due to the smashing success of "Back to the Future" and its two sequels, released in 1989 and 1990. John DeLorean died in March of 2005, at the age of 80.

July 3rd 1909
Hudson Motor Car Company in Detroit, Michigan began production with the Model 20. The company had several 'firsts' for the auto industry: self starter, dual brakes, first balanced crankshaft which allowed the Hudson straight-6 engine to work at a higher rotational speed while remaining smooth, developed more power than lower-revving engines.

July 3rd 1978
Ernest R. Breech, chairman of the Ford Motor Company from 1955-1960, died in Royal Oak, Michigan at the age of 81. Breech had been at the top of the accounting world when Henry Ford II had personally pleaded with him to join the ailing Ford Motor Company and take a chance at reviving one of America's historic corporations.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on July 06, 2015, 09:20:12 pm
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On this day, July 4th 1894
Elwood Haynes successfully tested one-horsepower, one-cylinder vehicle at 6 or 7 mph at Kokomo, IN. It was one of the first automobiles built and oldest American-made automobile in existence. Currently it is on exhibition at the Smithsonian Institution, Washington DC.
PICTURED: Elwood Haynes & America's First Car

July 4th 1957
Fiat launched "Nuova 500", cinquecento in Turin. It was designed by Dante Giacosa. it was marketed as a cheap and practical town car. Measuring only 2.97 m (9 ft 9 in) long, and originally powered by a tiny 479 cc two-cylinder, air-cooled engine, the 500 redefined the term "small car" and is considered one of the first city cars.
During the filming of Italian Job (original), the boss of Fiat Motors offered to donate huge number of Fiat 500s in place of the Minis. The director however decided that as it was a very British film, it should be British Minis.

July 4th 2007
Fiat 500 Nuova was launched officially at Murazzi del Po, Turin lexactly 50 year after the launch of the original Fiat 500. With 250,000 in attendance it was the largest launch party held in the last ten years, a testament to the 500's huge popularity. The show was coordinated by Marco Balich, who was also responsible for Turin's 2006 Winter Olympic Games. Several artists performed during the show, including Lauryn Hill, Israeli dancing group Mayumana and others followed by huge firework spectacle. The car was also displayed in the squares of 30 cities in Italy for the launch.


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On this day, July 5th 1933
Fritz Todt was appointed general inspector for German highways. His primary assignment was to build a comprehensive autobahn system. Todt, a civil engineer who was a proponent of a national highway system as a means of economic development, was handpicked for the position in 1932 by Adolf Hitler. The two men were close friends, and Todt remained a Nazi party member throughout World War II. By 1936, 100,000 kilometers of divided highways had been completed, leaving Germany with the most advanced transportation system in the world.
The autobahn inspired U.S. President Dwight D. Eisenhower to foster a similar American interstate highway system. Having been in Germany during the war, he returned to the United States deeply convinced that good highways were directly linked to economic prosperity.

July 5th 1937
Henry Ford initiated 32 hour work week for his factory workers.

July 5th 1951
Gordon M. Buehrig, of South Bend, Indiana, received a patent for "Vehicle Top Construction" ("to provide a vehicle top construction which is essentially the type providing an enclosed passenger compartment with the attendant advantages but which may be opened to a substantial degree to simulate an open passenger compartment"); vehicle top with removable panels; appeared as "T-top" on 1968 Chevrolet Corvette Stingray.

July 5th 1998
Strike at General Motors parts factory near Detroit closed five assembly plants which idled workers nationwide. This standoff lasted seven weeks

1902 - Australia won the one & only Test Cricket played at Sheffield

1937 - Spam, the luncheon meat, was introduced into the market by the Hormel Foods Corporation.

1954 - B-52A bomber made its maiden flight

1963 - 1st Beatle tune to hit US charts, Del Shannon "From Me to You" at #87

1968 - John Lennon sells his psychedelic painted Rolls-Royce

1973 - Isle of Man begins issuing their own postage stamps

1982 - Challenger flies to Kennedy Space Center via Ellington AFB, Texas

1985 - Nicholas Mark Sanders (England) begins circumnavigation of globe, covering 13,035 road miles in 78 days, 3 hr, 30 min

1993 - Richard Chelimo run world record 10 km (27:07.91)


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On this day, July 6th 1958
The great Argentine race car driver Juan Manuel Fangio, winner of five Formula One driver's world championships, competes in his last Grand Prix race--the French Grand Prix held outside Reims, France.
Fangio left school at the age of 11 and worked as an automobile mechanic in his hometown of San Jose de Balcarce, Argentina before beginning his driving career. He won his first major victory in the Gran Premio Internacional del Norte of 1940, racing a Chevrolet along the often-unpaved roads from Buenos Aires to Lima, Peru. In 1948, Fangio was invited to race a Simca-Gordini in the French Grand Prix, also at Reims, which marked his European racing debut. After a crash during a road race in Peru that fall killed his co-driver and friend Daniel Urrutia, Fangio considered retiring from racing, but in the end returned to Europe for his first full Formula One season the following year.
In Formula One, the top level of racing as sanctioned by the Fédération International de l'Automobile (FIA), drivers compete in single-seat, open-wheel vehicles typically built by large automakers (or "constructors," in racing world parlance) and capable of achieving speeds of more than 230 mph. Individual Formula One events are known as Grands Prix. Fangio signed on in 1948 with Alfa Romeo, and won his first Formula One championship title with that team in 1951. Over the course of his racing career, he would drive some of the best cars Alfa-Romeo, Mercedes-Benz, Ferrari and Maserati ever produced. Capturing four more Formula One titles by 1957, Fangio won an impressive 24 of 51 total Grand Prix races.
Reims, famous for its 13th-century cathedral, hosted the oldest Grand Prix race, the French Grand Prix, at its Reims-Gueux course a total of 14 times (the last time in 1966). In the race on July 6, 1958, the British driver Mike Hawthorn--who would win the driver's world championship that season, but die tragically in a (non-racing) car accident the following January, at the age of 29--took the lead from the start in his 2.4-liter Ferrari Dino 246 and held on for the win. Fangio, driving a Maserati, finished fourth, in what would be the last race before announcing his retirement at the age of 47. The 1958 French Grand Prix also marked the Formula One debut of Phil Hill, who in 1960 would become the first American driver to win the world championship.
PICTURED: Juan Manuel Fangio

July 6th 1955
Federal Air Pollution Control Act was implemented and federal funds were allocated for research into causal analysis and control of car-emission pollution.

1919 - British R-34 lands in NY, 1st airship to cross Atlantic (108 hr)

1924 - 1st photo sent experimentally across Atlantic by radio, US-England

1947 - The AK-47 goes into production in the Soviet Union.

1964 - Beatles' film "Hard Day's Night" premieres in London

1965 - Rock group "Jefferson Airplane" forms

1969 - Filming begins on "Ned Kelly" starring Mick Jagger

2003 - The 70-meter Eupatoria Planetary Radar sends a METI message Cosmic Call 2 to 5 stars: Hip 4872, HD 245409, 55 Cancri, HD 10307 and 47 Ursae Majoris that will arrive to these stars in 2036, 2040, 2044, 2044 and 2049 respectively.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on July 07, 2015, 09:01:42 pm
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On this day, July 7th 1928
The Chrysler Corporation introduced the Plymouth as its newest car. The Plymouth project had taken three years to complete, as Chrysler engineers worked to build a reliable and affordable car to compete with the cheaper offerings of Ford and General Motors. The Plymouth debuted with great fanfare in July of 1928, with renowned aviator Amelia Earhart behind the wheel. The publicity blitz brought 30,000 people to the Chicago Coliseum for a glimpse of the new car. With a delivery price of $670, the Plymouth was an attractive buy, selling over 80,000 units in its first year and forcing Chrysler to expand its production facilities drastically.
PICTURED: 1928 Plymouth

July 7th 2000
Eight weeks to the day after the fourth-generation NASCAR driver Adam Petty was killed during practice at the New Hampshire International Speedway in Loudon, New Hampshire--the driver Kenny Irwin Jr. dies at the same speedway, near the exact same spot, after his car slams into the wall at 150 mph during a practice run.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on July 08, 2015, 11:10:01 pm
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July 8, 1907
George Wilcken Romney was born in Colonia Dublán, Galeana, in the Mexican state of Chihuahua. He was chairman of American Motors Corporation from 1954 to 1962. He then served as the 43rd governor of Michigan from 1963 to 1969 and then the 3rd United States Secretary of Housing and Urban Development from 1969 to 1973. Romney was a candidate for President in 1968, ultimately losing the Republican nomination to Richard Nixon.
He entered the car industry as a salesman and eventually became one of the most powerful men in the business, leading AMC in becoming the largest independent car company in the country.
PICTURED: American Motors AMX/3

July 8, 2004
Suzuki Motor Corporation and Consumers Union, publisher of Consumer Reports magazine, agree to a settlement in an eight-year-long lawsuit in which the automaker accused Consumer Reports of damaging its reputation with claims that its Samurai sport utility vehicle (SUV) was prone to rolling over.
In July 1988, a Consumer Reports product review judged the Samurai as unacceptable because of its propensity to tip during sharp turns. (The magazine based this conclusion on the car's performance in avoidance-maneuver tests.) Suzuki stopped making the Samurai in 1995. The following year, the company filed the lawsuit, accusing Consumer Union of rigging the test and perpetrating consumer fraud. The automaker sought $60 million in compensation and unspecified punitive damages. Suzuki's case included testimony from a former Consumers Union employee who served for 10 years as a technician in the company's auto testing group, as well as videotapes and records of automobile testing that date back to 1988. The videos showed, among other things, that the testing personnel had driven the Samurai through the course no fewer than 46 times before getting it to tip up on two wheels on the 47th, a result that was met by laughing and cheering from the group.
A federal judge dismissed Suzuki's lawsuit without a trial, but in September 2002 an appeals court ruled that a jury should hear the case. In April 2000, Consumers Union had won a jury trial over a lawsuit filed by Isuzu Motor, which claimed that Consumer Reports magazine had rigged a test involving its Trooper SUV in order to make the vehicle tip over. In November 2003, U.S. Supreme Court rejected a Consumers Union appeal in the Suzuki case, and the case was headed for a jury trial in California before the settlement was reached the next July.
No money changed hands in the agreement. Though Consumers Union did not issue an apology--"We stand fully behind our testing and rating of the Samurai," David Pittle, vice president for technical policy at Consumers Union, said--it made a "clarification," stating that the magazine's statement that the Samurai "easily" rolls over during turns may have been "misconstrued or misunderstood." The agreement also stated that Consumers Reports "never intended to imply that the Samurai easily rolls over in routine driving conditions" and had spoken positively of other Suzuki models such as the Sidekick and the Vitara/XL-7. For its part, Suzuki claimed the settlement as a win for its side: Company officials said it would allow them to concentrate on growing Suzuki's business in the United States, including building national sales to 200,000 vehicles by 2007, compared with 58,438 in 2003.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on July 09, 2015, 10:01:03 pm
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On this day, July 9th 1919
The Ford Motor Company was reorganized as a Delaware corporation with Edsel Ford as company president. The reorganization was the last step in Henry Ford's drive to gain 100% of the company's stock for his family. He borrowed heavily in order to buy out the minority shareholders. The extent to which the Ford family has maintained control over the company makes Ford unique in the annals of business history. Edsel Ford held the title of president until his death in 1943, but Henry effectively ran the company until 1945, when Henry Ford II took control of the company.
PICTURED: The Edsel Ford Speedster

July 9th 1979
A car bomb destroys a Renault owned by famed "Nazi hunters" Serge and Beate Klarsfeld at their home in France. Individuals purporting to represent the pro-Nazi ODESSA secret international organization took credit for the attack and demanded that the Klarsfelds stop pursuing (former) Nazis.
The Klarsfelds were involved in finding Klaus Barbie, René Bousquet, Jean Leguay, Maurice Papon and Paul Touvier and seeking prosecution for their war crimes committed during WWII.


July 9th 2006
The Fiat 500 Club Italia, an organization formed in appreciation of the iconic 500--"Cinquecento" in Italian--car produced by the automaker Fiat (Fabbrica Italiana Automobili Torino), holds what the Guinness Book of World Records will call the world's largest parade of Fiat cars on July 9, 2006, between Villanova d'Albenga and Garlenda, Italy.
Fiat, founded in 1899 by Giovanni Agnelli, released a 500-cc car known as "Il Topolino" (the Italian name for Mickey Mouse) before World War II; at the time, it was the smallest mass-produced car on the market. In the postwar years, the company sought to capitalize on the need for affordable family-size cars by revamping their 500 model. To that end, the Nuova Cinquecento, a two-cylinder rear-engined four-seater, made its debut on July 4, 1957. Some 3.5 million new 500s were sold between 1957 and 1975, when Fiat halted production. Like the Volkswagen Beetle in Germany, the diminutive but efficient 500 became an iconic symbol of postwar Italy and its people.
In 1984, a group of enthusiasts calling themselves the "Amici della 500" (Friends of the 500) unofficially organized as the Fiat 500 Club Italia in Garlenda, in the province of Savona. Some 30 participants attended the club's first rally on that July 15: the crowd included Dante Giacosa, the designer of the 500. The club was officially established in 1990 and today boasts more than 200,000 members and holds as many as 100 rallies per year. In July 2006, during the club's international meeting in Garlenda, a record-high number of participants (754 teams) gathered to make up a parade of 500 Fiats, later recorded by Guinness as a world record.
After struggling financially in the face of stiff competition from Volkswagen and other automakers, Fiat turned its fortunes around beginning in 2004, with the arrival of Sergio Marchionne as the company's head. A key part of Fiat's resurgence was was the launch of a redesigned Cinquecento in 2007. Italian Prime Minister Romano Prodi was among the more than 100,000 spectators who gathered in Turin on July 4, 2007--50 years to the day after the original Nuova 500 made its debut--to celebrate the new version's arrival. In 2009, Fiat completed an alliance with Chrysler after the struggling American automaker was forced to file for federal bankruptcy protection. Under the terms of the partnership, Fiat owns a 20 percent share of Chrysler (which could eventually grow to at least 35 percent).
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on July 10, 2015, 08:15:40 pm
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On this day, July 10th 1958
The final production line of Trabant started at VEB Sachsenring factory in Zwickau, Saxony. It was considered to be East Germany's answer to Volkswagen. The Trabant was a steel monocoque design with roof, bootlid, bonnet, fenders and doors in Duroplast, a form of plastic containing resin strengthened by wool or cotton. This helped the GDR to avoid expensive steel imports, but in theory did not provide much crash protection, although in crash tests it has actually proven to be superior to some modern small hatchbacks. The duroplast was made of recycled material, cotton waste from Russia and phenol resins from the East German dye industry making the Trabant the first car with a body made of recycled material.
The engine for the Trabant was a small two-stroke engine with two cylinders, giving the vehicle modest performance of 25 horsepower from a 600 cc displacement. The car took 21 seconds from 0 to 100 km/h and the top speed was 112 km/h. There were two main problems with the engine: the smoky exhaust and the pollution it produced. The fuel consumption was a modest 7 liters/100 km. However later models of trabant did had bigger 1.1L VW engine until 1991 when its production ended.
The name Trabant means "fellow traveler" in German and was inspired by Soviet Sputnik. Since it could take years for a Trabant to be delivered from the time it was ordered, people who finally got one were very careful with it and usually became skillful in maintaining and repairing it. The lifespan of an average Trabant was 28 years.Used Trabants would often fetch a higher price than new ones, as the former were available immediately, while the latter had the aforementioned waiting period of several years.
PICTURED: The P50 Trabant mounted to a 80 foot tower....now used as a nest for wildlife.

July 10th 1962
The United States Patent Office issues the Swedish engineer Nils Bohlin a patent for his three-point automobile safety belt "for use in vehicles, especially road vehicles"
Four years earlier, Sweden's Volvo Car Corporation had hired Bohlin, who had previously worked in the Swedish aviation industry, as the company's first chief safety engineer. At the time, safety-belt use in automobiles was limited mostly to race car drivers; the traditional two-point belt, which fastened in a buckle over the abdomen, had been known to cause severe internal injuries in the event of a high-speed crash. Bohlin designed his three-point system in less than a year, and Volvo introduced it on its cars in 1959. Consisting of two straps that joined at the hip level and fastened into a single anchor point, the three-point belt significantly reduced injuries by effectively holding both the upper and lower body and reducing the impact of the swift deceleration that occurred in a crash.
On August 17, 1959, Bohlin filed for a patent in the United States for his safety belt design. The U.S. Patent Office issued Patent No. 3,043,625 to "Nils Ivar Bohlin, Goteborg, Sweden, assignor to Aktiebolaget Volvo" on July 10, 1962. In the patent, Bohlin explained his invention: "The object … is to provide a safety belt which independently of the strength of the seat and its connection with the vehicle in an effective and physiologically favorable manner retains the upper as well as the lower part of the body of the strapped person against the action of substantially forwardly directed forces and which is easy to fasten and unfasten and even in other respects satisfies rigid requirements."
Volvo released the new seat belt design to other car manufacturers, and it quickly became standard worldwide. The National Traffic and Motor Vehicle Safety Act of 1966 made seat belts a required feature on all new American vehicles from the 1968 model year onward. Though engineers have improved on seat belt design over the years, the basic structure is still Bohlin's.
The use of seat belts has been estimated to reduce the risk of fatalities and serious injuries from collisions by about 50 percent.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: goff on July 12, 2015, 09:29:54 am
Some interesting photos  :event: :event:
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on July 13, 2015, 08:13:00 pm
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On this day, July 11th 1899
Company charter of Societa Anonima "Fabbrica Italiana Automobili Torino” (FIAT) signed at Palazzo Bricherasio by Giovanni Agnelli with several of his investors.
Giovanni Agnelli founded and led the company until his death in 1945, while Vittorio Valletta administered the day-to-day activities of the company. Its first car the 3 ½ CV (of which only eight copies were built, all bodied by Alessio of Turin) strongly resembled contemporary Benz and had a 697 cc boxer twin engine.

July 11th, 1979
US Space laboratory, Skylab I, plunges back to earth, scattering debris across parts of Western Australia.
Skylab was the first space station the United States launched into orbit. Launched on 14 May 1973, it was designed to test various aspects of human endurance in space by having teams of astronauts living in Skylab for up to 84 days at a time. Each Skylab mission set a record for the duration of time astronauts spent in space.
In all, the space station orbited Earth 2,476 times during the 171 days and 13 hours of its occupation during the three manned Skylab missions. Astronauts performed ten spacewalks totalling 42 hours 16 minutes. Skylab logged about 2,000 hours of scientific and medical experiments, including eight solar experiments. Skylab had been in orbit for six years when it made its descent on 11 July 1979, with many chunks of hot debris falling across southern Western Australia. Most of the pieces were found on a 160km wide strip of land between the Perth-Adelaide highway and the Indian Pacific railway line.


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On this day, July 12th 1933
The first three-wheeled, multi-directional Dymaxion car (PICTURED)--designed by the architect, engineer and philosopher Buckminster Fuller--is manufactured in Bridgeport, Connecticut.
Born in Massachusetts in 1895, Fuller set out to live his life as (in his own words) "an experiment to find what a single individual can contribute to changing the world and benefiting all humanity." After making up the world "Dymaxion" as a combination of the words "dynamic," "maximum" and "ion," he took the word as his own personal brand. Among his groundbreaking creations were the geodesic dome and the Dymaxion house, which was made of lightweight aluminum and could be shipped by air and assembled on site.
In 1927, Fuller first sketched the Dymaxion car under the name "4D transport." Part aircraft, part automobile, it had wings that inflated. Five years later, Fuller asked his friend, the sculptor Isamu Noguchi, to make more sketches of the car. The result was an elongated teardrop design, with a rear third wheel that lifted off the ground and a tail fin. Fuller set up production of the Dymaxion car in a former Locomobile factory in Bridgeport in March 1933. The first model rolled out of the Bridgeport factory on July 12, 1933--Fuller's 38th birthday. It had a steel chassis and a body made of ash wood, covered with an aluminum skin and topped with a painted canvas roof. It was designed to be able to reach a speed of 120 miles per hour and average 28 miles per gallon of gasoline.
Sold to Gulf Oil, the Dymaxion car went on display at the Century of Progress exposition in Chicago. That October, however, the professional driver Francis Turner was killed after the Dymaxion car turned over during a demonstration. An investigation cleared Dymaxion of responsibility, but investors became scarce, despite the enthusiasm of the press and of celebrities such as the novelist H.G. Wells and the painter Diego Rivera.
Along with the Nazi-built KdF-wagen (the forerunner of the Volkswagen Beetle), the Dymaxion was one of several futuristic, rear-engined cars developed during the 1930s. Though it was never mass-produced, the Dymaxion helped lead to public acceptance of new streamlined passenger cars, such as the 1936 Lincoln Zephyr. In 2008, the only surviving Dymaxion was featured in an exhibit dedicated to Fuller's work at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York City.

July 12th 1904
Driver Harry Harkness won the first Mount Washington, New Hampshire, hill-climb race driving a 60hp Mercedes Benz on this day in 1904 and placed the record figures for the year at twenty-four minutes, thirty seconds in his $18000 imported Mercedes.

July 12th 1946
Spicer Manufacturing Company was renamed Dana Holding Corporation recently emerged from Chapter 11 Bankruptcy.
The company has 35,000 workers and is listed on the Fortune 500. Originally incorporated in New Jersey in 1904 as the 'Spicer Universal Joint Manufacturing Company', named after Clarence W. Spicer, engineer, inventor, and founder of the company. It was renamed the 'Spicer Manufacturing Company' in 1909. It relocated to Toledo, Ohio in 1928 and was renamed the Dana Corporation after Charles Dana, who joined the company in 1914 and became president and treasurer in 1916.
Its key products include axles, driveshafts, frames, and sealing and thermal-management products.


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On this day, July 13th 1978
Ford Motor Company chairman Henry Ford II fires Lee Iacocca as Ford's president, ending years of tension between the two men.
Born to an immigrant family in Pennsylvania in 1924, Iacocca was hired by Ford as an engineer in 1946 but soon switched to sales, at which he clearly excelled. By 1960, Iaccoca had become a vice president and general manager of the Ford division, the company's largest marketing arm. He successfully championed the design and development of the sporty, affordable Ford Mustang, an achievement that landed him on the covers of Time and Newsweek magazines in the same week in 1964.
In December 1970, Henry Ford II named Iacocca president of Ford, but his brash, unorthodox style soon brought him into conflict with his boss. According to Douglas Brinkley's history of Ford "Wheels for the World," Henry authorized $1.5 million in company funds for an investigation of Iacocca's business and private life in 1975. Suffering from a heart condition and aware that the time for his retirement was approaching, Ford made it clear that he eventually wanted to turn the company over to his son Edsel, then just 28. In early 1978, Iacocca was told he would report to another Ford executive, Philip Caldwell, who was named deputy chief executive officer. In his increasingly public struggle with Ford, Iacocca made an attempt to find support among the company's board of directors, giving Ford the excuse he needed to fire him. As Iacocca later wrote in his bestselling autobiography, Ford called Iacocca into his office shortly before 3 pm on July 13, 1978 and let him go, telling him "Sometimes you just don't like somebody."
News of the firing shocked the industry, but it turned into a boon for Iacocca. The following year, he was hired as president of the Chrysler Corporation, which at the time was facing bankruptcy. Iacocca went to the federal government for aid, banking on his belief that the government would not let Chrysler fail for fear of weakening an already slumping economy. The gamble paid off, with Congress agreeing to bail out Chrysler to the tune of $1.5 billion. Iacocca streamlined the company's operations, focused on producing more fuel-efficient cars and pursued an aggressive marketing strategy based on his own powerful personality. After showing a small profit in 1981, Chrysler posted record profits of more than $2.4 billion in 1984. By then a national celebrity, Iacocca retired as chief executive of Chrysler in 1992.

July 13th 1995
The Chrysler Corporation opened a car dealership in downtown Hanoi, Vietnam. One week later, Chrysler opened another dealership in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam, with the intention of marketing 200 import vehicles per year through the two dealerships. The openings were a part of Chrysler's long-term goal of implementing auto production in Vietnam--something that rivals Ford and Toyota were also pursuing at the time. On September 6, Chrysler received permission from the Vietnamese government to assemble vehicles in Vietnam, allowing Chrysler to construct a production facility in Dong Nai Province, Southern Vietnam, with the aim of manufacturing 500 to 1,000 Dodge Dakota pick-up trucks for the Vietnamese market annually.

July 13th 1998
General Motors announced recall of 800,000 vehicles due to malfunctioning airbags. A large number of Chevrolet and Pontiac cars displayed "an increased risk of airbag deployment in a low speed crash or when an object strikes the floor pan.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on July 14, 2015, 08:48:38 pm
(http://i69.photobucket.com/albums/i70/superbeetle100/VWKarmannGhia.jpg) (http://s69.photobucket.com/user/superbeetle100/media/VWKarmannGhia.jpg.html)

On this day, July 14th 1955
Volkswagen introduced the Karmann-Ghia coupe at the Kasino Hotel in Westfalia, Germany. As the European car market finally recovered from the war, Volkswagen felt that it needed to release an "image car" to accompany its plain but reliable "Bugs and Buses." Volkswagen was not the only automotive company looking for a flagship car at the time. Chevrolet had released the Corvette, and Ford the Thunderbird. The Chrysler Corporation had contracted with the Italian design firm Ghia to create designs for a Chrysler dream car; however, none of the designs came to fruition. Meanwhile, Volkswagen had contracted with German coach-builder Karmann for their own image car, and Karmann, in turn, had sub-contracted to Ghia for design offerings. Eventually Ghia supplied Karmann with a version of their Chrysler design, modified for the floor plan of the Volkswagen Beetle. The Karmann-Ghia was released as a 1956 model by Volkswagen. The car's sleek lines and hand craftsmanship attracted the attention Volkswagen had hoped for. Nevertheless, as sporty as the Karmann-Ghia looked, it suffered from its 36hp flat four engine in the area of power. Still, the Karmann-Ghia sold 10,000 units in its first full production year ,and with the release of the convertible in 1958, production reached 18,000 units for one year. Sales climbed steadily through the 1960s, peaking at 33,000 cars per year. While General Motors and Ford focused on their Corvette and Thunderbird, respectively, Volkswagen found that the Bug had increased in popularity, especially in the U.S. market. Executives decided to focus their marketing attention on the Bug, abandoning the Karmann-Ghia, which was last produced in 1

1853 - 1st US World's fair opens (Crystal Palace NY)

1912 - Kenneth McArthur runs Olympic record marathon (2:36:54.8)

1914 - 1st patent for liquid-fueled rocket design granted (Robert Goddard)

1927 - 1st commercial airplane flight in Hawaii

1945 - Battleship USS South Dakota is 1st US ship to bombard Japan

1949 - USSR explodes their 1st atom bomb

1955 - 2 killed, many dazed when lightning strikes Ascott racetrack, England

1959 - 1st atomic powered cruiser, Long Beach, Quincy Mass

1962 - US performs nuclear Test at Nevada Test Site

1964 - Jacques Anquetil wins his 5th Tour de France

1965 - Australian Ronald Clarke runs world record 10k (27:39.4)

1965 - US Mariner IV, 1st Mars probe, passes at 6,100 miles (9,800 km)

1967 - Surveyor 4 launched to Moon; explodes just before landing

1969 - "Soccer War" between El Salvador & Honduras begins, 1000 dead

1969 - The United States $500, $1,000, $5,000 and $10,000 bills are officially withdrawn from circulation.

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1972 - USSR performs underground nuclear Test

1975 - EPCOT Center (Florida) plans announced (This is right next door to our office)

1979 - USSR performs nuclear Test

1984 - USSR performs nuclear Test at Eastern Kazakh/Semipalitinsk USSR

1985 - Columbia returns to Kennedy Space Center via Offutt AFB, Neb

1986 - Motley Crue's Vince Neil begins 30 day sentence for vehicular homicide

1988 - WYHY radio offers $1M to anyone who can prove Elvis is still alive
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on July 15, 2015, 10:05:22 pm
(http://i269.photobucket.com/albums/jj45/mms58/Misc%20Ford%20Photos/Ford%20Canada%20Cenn/1903FordModelAFCC001.jpg) (http://s269.photobucket.com/user/mms58/media/Misc%20Ford%20Photos/Ford%20Canada%20Cenn/1903FordModelAFCC001.jpg.html)

On this day, July 15th 1903
The newly formed Ford Motor Company takes its first order from Chicago dentist Ernst Pfenning: an $850 two-cylinder Model A (Not to be confused with Model A of 1927) automobile with a tonneau (or backseat). The car, produced at Ford's plant on Mack Street (now Mack Avenue) in Detroit, was delivered to Dr. Pfenning just over a week later.
Henry Ford had built his first gasoline-powered vehicle--which he called the Quadricycle--in a workshop behind his home in 1896, while working as the chief engineer for the main plant of the Edison Illuminating Company in Detroit. After making two unsuccessful attempts to start a company to manufacture automobiles before 1903, Ford gathered a group of 12 stockholders, including himself, to sign the papers necessary to form the Ford Motor Company in mid-June 1903. As Douglas Brinkley writes in "Wheels for the World," his history of Ford, one of the new company's investors, Albert Strelow, owned a wooden factory building on Mack Avenue that he rented to Ford Motor. In an assembly room measuring 250 by 50 feet, the first Ford Model A went into production that summer.
Designed primarily by Ford's assistant C. Harold Wills, the Model A could accommodate two people side-by-side on a bench; it had no top, and was painted red. The car's biggest selling point was its engine, which at two cylinders and eight-horsepower was the most powerful to be found in a passenger car. It had relatively simple controls, including two forward gears that the driver operated with a foot pedal, and could reach speeds of up to 30 miles per hour (comparable to the car's biggest competition at the time, the curved-dash Oldsmobile).
Dr. Pfenning's order turned out to be the first of many, from around the country, launching Ford on its way to profitability. Within two months, the company had sold 215 Fords, and by the end of its first year the Mack Avenue plant had turned out some 1,000 cars. Though the company grew quickly in the next several years, it was the launch of the Model T in 1908 that catapulted Ford to the top of the automobile industry. The Lizzie's tremendous popularity kept Ford far ahead of the pack until dwindling sales led to the end of its production in 1927. That same year, Ford released the second Model A amid great fanfare; it enjoyed similar success, though the onset of the Great Depression kept its sales from equaling those of the Model T.
PICTURED: 1903 Ford Model A FCC 1

July 15th 1939
Carl Fisher, the founder of both the Indy 500 and Miami Beach, died in Miami at age 65. Born in Greensburg, Indiana, Fisher grew up racing cars and bicycles and aspired to be a successful inventor. He turned out to be a better businessman than an inventor, and left his first imprint on the business world when he partnered with Fred Avery, who held the patent for pressing carbide gas into tanks. Together, they manufactured car headlamps as the Presto-O-Lite Corporation. By 1910, six years after starting the business, Fisher was a multimillionaire. He bought land and built a track in Indianapolis, paving the track with local brick. By offering the largest single day purse in sport, Fisher guaranteed interest in his epic 500-mile race, and in less than five years "Indy" had become one of the premier car races in the world. In 1915, Fisher led the development effort for the Lincoln Highway, the nation's first continuous cross-continental highway from New York to California. Later, in the 1920s, Fisher developed the Dixie Highway, a road that ran from Michigan to Miami. Fisher fell in love with Miami, and in 1910 he bought a house there. It became his project to develop Miami Beach into a city. Fisher gave $50,000 of his own money to complete the longest wooden bridge in the state, stretching between Miami and Miami Beach. At that time Miami Beach was wild, and Fisher set about cleaning up the beach. He built lavish facilities near the water and invited the rich and famous to check out his creation. The Florida land bust of 1926 and the subsequent stock market crash of 1929 left Fisher penniless, and he lived in a small home on Miami Beach until his death.

TRIVIA
1869  -    Margarine is patented in Paris
1922  -    A platypus is displayed for the first time in the United States.
1964  -    Rupert Murdoch unveils 'The Australian' newspaper in Sydney.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on July 16, 2015, 09:22:55 pm
(http://i231.photobucket.com/albums/ee189/Pr0Mitheas/stirling20moss.gif) (http://s231.photobucket.com/user/Pr0Mitheas/media/stirling20moss.gif.html)

On this day, July 16th 1955
Stirling Moss won his first Grand Prix race, the British Grand Prix in Aintree, driving a Mercedes Benz W196. Moss is considered the greatest racer that never won a World Driving Championship, having finished second to Juan Manuel Fangio for four consecutive years. Most impressive is Moss' record of having won 16 of 66 Grand Prix starts and 194 of his 466 starts in major events.

1985 - F-86 Sabre sets world aircraft speed record of 1152 kph (716 mph)

1935 - 1st automatic parking meter in US installed (Oklahoma City, Ok)

1945 - 1st test detonation of an atomic bomb, Trinity Site, Alamogordo, New Mexico

1969 - Apollo 11, carrying 1st men to land on Moon, launched

1999 - John F. Kennedy Jr., his wife Carolyn Bessette Kennedy, and sister-in-law Lauren Bessette are killed in a plane crash off the coast of Martha's Vineyard. The Piper Saratoga aircraft was piloted by Kennedy.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on July 17, 2015, 10:11:29 pm
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On this day, July 17th 1964
Donald Campbell, the son of Britain's most prolific land-speed record holder, Sir Malcolm Campbell, drove the Proteus Bluebird CN7 to a four-wheel, gasoline-powered land-speed record with two identical runs of 403mph (648.783 kph) at Lake Eyre, South Australia.

July 17th 1920
Nils Bohlin, the Swedish engineer and inventor responsible for the three-point lap and shoulder seat belt was born in Härnösand, Sweden. Seat belt is considered one of the most important innovations in automobile safety.

1879 - 1st railroad opens in Hawaii

1959 - Dr Leakey discovers oldest human skull (600,000 years old)

1962 - Robert White in X-15 sets altitude record of 108 km (354,300 ft)

1964 - Don Campbell sets record for turbine vehicle, 690.91 kph (429.31 mph)

1968 - Beatle's animated film "Yellow Submarine" premieres in London

1989 - 1st Test flight of US stealth-bomber

1993 - Graeme Obree bicycles world record time, 51,596 km

1994 - Hulk Hogan beats Ric Flair to win WCW wrestling championship
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on July 18, 2015, 08:53:14 pm
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On this day, July 18th 1948
Juan Manuel Fangio, a.k.a. "the Maestro," made his Formula One debut finishing 12th at the Grand Prix de l'ACF in France. Fangio was 37 years old at the start of his first Formula One race, but his late appearance onto the racing scene did not diminish his impact. Born to an Italian immigrant family outside of Buenos Aires, Argentina, Fangio learned to race on the death-trap tracks of Argentina for little reward. Finally, his excellence was recognized by Argentine dictator Juan Peron, who agreed to sponsor Fangio's racing career. Formula One Grand Prix racing began in 1950, and Fangio took second place in the World Driver's Championship driving for Alpha Romeo. The next year he won. A crash kept him out of the circuit for the next two years, but in 1954, he switched to the Mercedes team and won his first of four consecutive World Driver's Championships. He is the only man to ever have won five titles.

July 18th 1911
James D. Robertson, of Toledo, OH, received a patent for a "terminal Clamp"; assigned to Champion Spark Plug Company. It was the company's first patent.

1940 - 1st successful helicopter flight, Stratford, Ct

1942 - World War II: the Germans test fly the Messerschmitt Me-262 using only its jet engines for the first time.

1955 - 1st electric power generated from atomic energy sold commercially

1971 - Eddy Merckx wins his 3rd Tour de France

1976 - Lucien van Impe wins Tour de France
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on July 19, 2015, 11:45:34 pm
(http://i935.photobucket.com/albums/ad194/IDriveA6K3/Danville%20dElegance%202010/100_4724.jpg) (http://s935.photobucket.com/user/IDriveA6K3/media/Danville%20dElegance%202010/100_4724.jpg.html)

On this day, July 19th 1934
Harold T. Ames filed a patent application for his retractable headlamps. The design would later become one of the defining details on Ames' most triumphant project, the Cord 810. Ames, then the chief executive at Duesenberg, asked Cord designer Gordon Buehrig to make a "baby version" of the Duesenberg car. Buehrig's response, the Cord 810, is widely held to be one of the most influential cars in American automotive history. It was the last great offering of the Auburn, Cord, and Duesenberg triumvirate, as the company became insolvent at the end of the Depression. In 1952, the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) chose the 1937 Cord as one of eight automotive works of art for a year-long exhibition.
PICTURED: The 1936 Cord 810 Phaeton

July 19th 1935
The first automatic parking meter in the U.S., the Park-O-Meter invented by Carlton Magee, was installed in Oklahoma City by the Dual Parking Meter Company. Twenty-foot spaces were painted on the pavement, and a parking meter that accepted nickels was planted in the concrete at the head of each space. The city paid for the meters with funds collected from them. Today parking meters are big business. Companies offer digital parking meters, smart parking meters, and, even more remarkably, user-friendly parking meters. The user-friendly parking meters are an attempt to stem the tide of "violent confrontations" between users and their meters.

1860 - 1st railroad reaches Kansas

1879 - Doc Holliday kills for the first time after a man shoots up his New Mexico saloon.

1944 - 500 15th Air Force Liberators/Flying Fortresses bomb Munich vicinity

1957 - Don Bowden becomes 1st American to break 4 minute mile (3m58s7)

1958 - Charly Gaul wins Tour de France

1963 - NASA civilian Test pilot Joe Walker in X-15 reaches 105 km high

1965 - Shooting begins on Star Trek 2nd pilot "Where No Man Has Gone Before"

1969 - Apollo 11 goes into Moon orbit

1976 - Rock group Deep Purple disbands

1984 - 1st female to captain a 747 across Atlantic (Lynn Rippelmeyer)

1991 - Mike Tyson rapes a Miss Black America contestant (Desiree Washington)

1993 - Last day of 1st-class cricket for Ian Botham
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on July 21, 2015, 09:11:36 pm
(http://i645.photobucket.com/albums/uu176/MustangMayhem/this%20day%20in%20HISTORY/622x350_zpsae3fcd4c.jpg) (http://s645.photobucket.com/user/MustangMayhem/media/this%20day%20in%20HISTORY/622x350_zpsae3fcd4c.jpg.html)

On this day, July 20th
James Garner, the US star of hit TV series The Rockford Files and Maverick and films including The Great Escape, has died aged 86.

(http://i276.photobucket.com/albums/kk9/gperigo/American%20Cars%201930%201940/ErrettLobbanCord.jpg) (http://s276.photobucket.com/user/gperigo/media/American%20Cars%201930%201940/ErrettLobbanCord.jpg.html)

July 20th 1894
Errett Lobban Cord was born in Warrensburg, Missouri, on this day in 1894. Cord moved to Los Angeles while he was in high school and remained there after his graduation, starting a number of car dealerships. His prowess as a salesman led him to pursue bigger goals and to look for a way to invest the $100,000 he had managed to save in a few years of work. "Then I started looking around," he said, "I wanted to do something with that $100,000."
Cord was a leader in United States transport during the early and middle 20th century. Cord founded the Cord Corporation in 1929 as a holding company for over 150 companies he controlled, mostly in the field of transportation.
PICTURED: Errett Lobban Cord

1969 - 1st men on the Moon, Neil Armstrong and Edwin Aldrin Jr. from Apollo 11

1969 - Eddy Merckx wins Tour de France

1973 - Jack Brisco beats Harley Race in Houston, to become NWA champ

1976 - US Viking 1 lands on Mars at Chryse Planitia, 1st Martian landing

1977 - The Central Intelligence Agency releases documents under the Freedom of Information Act revealing it had engaged in mind control experiments.

1984 - Uwe Hohn of East Germany throws javelin a record 104.8 m

1991 - Mike Tyson is accused of raping a Miss Black America contestant

1992 - Round World Air Race begins in Paris

1994 - OJ Simpson offers $500,000 reward for evidence of ex-wife's klller

2000 - Terrorist Carlos the Jackal sues France in the European Court of Human Rights for allegedly torturing him.

2012 - 12 people are killed and 59 injured after a gunman opens fire at a Dark Knight movie premier in Aurora, Colorado


(http://i148.photobucket.com/albums/s26/DHotard/2007%20Concours%20de%20Elegance/1909GobronBrillieModel7090.jpg) (http://s148.photobucket.com/user/DHotard/media/2007%20Concours%20de%20Elegance/1909GobronBrillieModel7090.jpg.html)

On this day, July 21st 1904
Louis Rigolly, driving a 15-liter Gobron-Brillie on the Ostend-Newport road in Belgium, became the first man to break the 100mph barrier in a car by raising the land-speed record to 103.55mph. On the same day in 1925, Sir Malcolm Campbell was first to best the 150mph mark when he drove his Sunbeam to a two-way average of 150.33mph at the Pendine Sands in Wales.
PICTURED: A 1909 Gobron-Brillie

July 21st 1917
Rapp-Motorenwerke renamed Bayerische Motoren Werke GmbH (Bavarian Motor Works or BMW) Rapp Motorenwerke GmbH was one of the first aircraft engine manufacturers in Germany founded by Karl Rapp and Julius Auspitzer with a capital stock of Reich Mark 200,000 on 28 October 1913 on the site of Flugwerke Deutschland.


July 21st 1960
The German government passes the "Law Concerning the Transfer of the Share Rights in Volkswagenwerk Limited Liability Company into Private Hands," known informally as the "Volkswagen Law."
Founded in 1937 and originally under the control of Adolf Hitler's Nazi Party, Volkswagen would eventually grow into Europe's largest car manufacturer and a symbol of Germany's economic recovery after the devastation of World War II. The Volkswagen Law, passed in July 1960, changed the company to a joint stock corporation, with 20 percent held each by Germany and Lower Saxony, the region in which Volkswagen is still headquartered. By limiting the share of any other stockholder to 20 percent, regardless of how many shares owned, the law effectively protected the company from any attempt at a hostile takeover.
By 2007, the controversial legislation had come under full-blown attack from the European Commission as part of a campaign against protectionist measures in several European capitals. The commission objected not only to the 20 percent voting rights cap but to the law's stipulation that measures taken at the annual stockholders' meeting must be passed by more than four-fifths of VW shareholders--a requirement that gave Lower Saxony the ability to block any such measures as it saw fit.
In March of that year, fellow German automaker Porsche announced that it had raised its stake in Volkswagen to 30.9 percent, triggering a takeover bid under a German law requiring a company to bid for the entirety of any other company after acquiring more than 30 percent of its stock. Porsche announced it did not intend to take over VW, but was buying the stock as a way of protecting it from being dismantled by hedge funds. Porsche's history was already entwined with Volkswagen, as the Austrian-born engineer Ferdinand Porsche designed the original "people's car" for Volkswagen in 1938.
On October 23, 2007, the European Court of Justice formally struck down the Volkswagen Law, ruling that its protectionism illegally restricted the free movement of capital in European markets. The decision cleared the way for Porsche to move forward with its takeover, which it did, maintaining that it will still preserve the Volkswagen corporate structure. By early 2009, Porsche owned more than 50 percent of Volkswagen shares.

July 21st 1987
Enzo Ferrari (89), in ceremony commemorating his company's 40th year, unveiled Ferrari F40 at factory in Maranello, It had 2.9litre twin turbo v8 under the hood and Italy's first production sports car to top 200mph barrier and capable of 0-60mph in 3.5 seconds, could hold top speed of 201mph.

1884 - 1st Test Cricket match played at Lord's

1969 - Neil Armstrong steps on Moon at 2:56:15 AM (GMT)

1984 - 1st documented case of a robot killing a human in US

1985 - Bernard Hinault wins his 5th & last Tour de France

1989 - Greg LeMond (US) wins Tour de France in fastest time

1990 - Pink Floyds' "Wall" is performed where Berlin Wall once stood

2011 - NASA's Space Shuttle program ends with the landing of Space Shuttle Atlantis on mission STS-135.

1997 - Madelaine Clarke (my 1st daughter was born) Happy 18th birthday sweetheart
Who'd of thought that on this same day in 1969, Neil Armstrong would be the first human to put a footprint on the moon and 28 years later, you would be born to be the first to leave footprints on your Dads heart.
 I love you to the moon and back baby
 Happy 18th Birthday
 Dad xx
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on July 22, 2015, 09:11:29 pm
(http://i1137.photobucket.com/albums/n519/gerard1973/fisher-body_logo_30s.jpg) (http://s1137.photobucket.com/user/gerard1973/media/fisher-body_logo_30s.jpg.html)

July 22 1908
Albert Fisher and his nephews, Frederic and Charles Fisher, established the Fisher Body Company to manufacture carriage and automobile bodies. Albert Fisher personally supplied $30,000 of the company's total of $50,000 in initial capital. Charles and Frederic had been trained in their father's carriage building shop and supplied the technical know-how required at the company's inception. Fisher Body quickly abandoned carriage building to concentrate on car frames. By 1910, Fisher supplied some car bodies for General Motors (GM), and in 1919 GM purchased controlling interest in the company to shore up a supplier for its car bodies. At that time, Fisher was the largest supplier of car bodies in the world. The Fisher brothers were early advocates of closed-body, steel and wood frames, and they pre-empted their competition by creating more closed-bodied cars than open-bodied. They were also early in their adoption of aluminum and steel frames.

July 22nd 1911
General Motors organized General Motors Truck Company (later GMC) to handle sales of GM's Rapid and Reliance products.
In 1901, Max Grabowski established a company called the "Rapid Motor Vehicle Company", which developed some of the earliest commercial trucks ever designed. The trucks utilized one-cylinder engines. In 1909, the company was purchased by General Motors to form the basis for the General Motors Truck Company, from which GMC Truck was derived.
Another independent manufacturer purchased by GM that same year was Reliance Motor Car Company. Rapid & Reliance were merged in 1911 by GM, and in 1912 the marque "GMC Truck" was first shown at the New York International Auto Show.

July 22nd 1912
Edward G. Budd formed Edward G. Budd Mfg. Co., at 121 S. Broad Street, Philadelphia, with $75,000 of his own savings. He borrowed $15,000 from family friend named A. Robinson McIlvaine, $10,000 from another friend, J.S. Williams. Budd became president and appointed McIlvaine as secretary. Their first product was an all-metal truck body for Philadelphia coal distributor.

July 22nd 2005
MG Rover Group acquired by Nanjing Automobile for $97 million.

1933 - 1st solo flight round the world 7d 19hrs (Wiley Post)

1942 - Gasoline rationing using coupons begins in the United states

1980 - Scott Dixon, New Zealand racing driver was born

1983 - Dick Smith makes 1st solo helicopter flight around the world

1994 - William Sigei runs world record 10k (26:52.53)

2003 - Members of 101st Airborne of the United States, aided by Special Forces, attack a compound in Iraq, killing Saddam Hussein's sons Uday and Qusay, along with Mustapha Hussein, Qusay's 14-year old son, and a bodyguard.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on July 24, 2015, 10:56:02 pm
(http://i269.photobucket.com/albums/jj45/mms58/Misc%20Ford%20Photos/Ford%20Canada%20Cenn/1903FordModelAFCC001.jpg) (http://s269.photobucket.com/user/mms58/media/Misc%20Ford%20Photos/Ford%20Canada%20Cenn/1903FordModelAFCC001.jpg.html)

On this day, July 23rd 1903
The first two-cylinder Ford Model A was delivered to its owner, Dr. Ernst Pfenning of Chicago, on this day in 1903 (a week after the Dr. Ernst booked the car). The Model A was the result of a partnership between Henry Ford and Detroit coal merchant Alexander Malcomson. Ford had met Malcomson while working at Edison Illuminating Company: Malcomson sold him coal. The Model A, designed primarily by Ford's assistant C. Harold Wills, was the affordable runabout that Ford needed to begin marketing his company's stock. In the next year Ford raised enough stock to release a line of cars and to incorporate as the Ford Motor Company. Ford's company grew quickly, but it wasn't until the release of the Model T that Ford took the position of our nation's largest carmaker. The Model T kept Ford number one in the industry until production was stopped in 1927, and Ford relinquished its place to Chevrolet. The second Model A, released in November of 1927, was a great success. Between 1927 and 1931, 4.3 million Model A Fords were made. The stylish, dependable, and affordable Model A reaffirmed Ford's position as a premier automaker at the time. Sales for the Model A would never approach those of its forerunner the Model T, due to the onset of the Depression. As sales slumped, Henry Ford decided to release a new car model in 1932. He introduced the speedy Ford V-8, known as the fastest car in the land at the time.


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On this day, 24th July 1938
Richard "Dick" Seaman, driving a Mercedes-Benz 154 to victory at the German Grand Prix at Nurburgring, Germany, became the first Briton to win a major Grand Prix since Malcolm Campbell did it 15 years earlier. The race turned out to be a showdown between Mercedes--with their driving team of Seaman, Caracciola, von Brauchitsch and Lang; Auto Union--with newly acquired Italian great Tazio Nuvolari; and Alpha--with their team of Tartuffi and Farina. Mercedes qualified all three first row positions with Seaman in his British green helmet on the outside. After the typical lengthy Nazi parading, the race got underway in front of over 400,000 spectators. Midway through the race, in spite of Nuvolari's noble efforts, it was clear the race would be decided among the Mercedes drivers and that von Brauchtitsch and Seaman were the men to beat. Von Brauchtitsch led the race until he came into pit for tires and fuel. The crowd buzzed to see how fast the crew could change him, but in their rush the fuel tank was overfilled. The portable starter ignited the engine, the tank sucked in air and then shot a massive flame into the sky, igniting the back half of the car. Seaman pulled away unscathed, taking the lead for the first time. Von Brauchtitsch eventually returned to the race only to let his foul mood get the best of him as he took a corner too fast and crashed into a ditch. He is said to have walked back to the pits, black in the face, holding his detachable steering wheel that he claimed came off in the turn. His mechanic denied the possibility. Meanwhile, Seaman steamed to a comfortable victory ahead of Lang, Stuck, and Nuvolari.
PICTURED: Richard "Dick" Seaman (1939)

24th July 1998
South Korea's government opens the bidding for the Kia Motors Corporation, the country's third-largest car company, which went bankrupt during an economic crisis that gripped much of Asia.
Founded on the outskirts of Seoul in 1944, Kia began as a small manufacturer of steel tubing and bicycle parts. The name of the company was derived from the Chinese characters "ki" (meaning "to arise" or "to come out of") and "a" (which stood for Asia). By the late 1950s, Kia had branched out from bicycles to motor scooters, and in the early 1970s the company launched into automobile production. Kia's Sohari plant, completed by 1973, was Korea's first fully integrated automobile production facility; it rolled out the Brisa, the country's first passenger car, in 1974.
Kia's lineup by the late 1980s included the Concord, Capital, Potentia and Pride. Ford Motor Company brought the Pride to the United States, calling it the Ford Festiva; the company later sold the Kia Avella as the Ford Aspire. In the 1990s, Kia began selling cars in the United States under its own name, beginning with the Sephia. At first available in only a few states, Kia gradually rolled out across the country, jumping on the success of the sport-utility-vehicle (SUV) category in the mid-1990s with its Sportage, released in 1995.
By 1997, Kia was struggling financially, and that July it collapsed under $10 billion worth of debt. The automaker's failure marked the beginning of a full-blown economic crisis that eventually led South Korea to seek a record international bailout of some $57 billion. Auto sales plummeted nationwide, and by the time bidding for Kia opened in late July 1998, both Hyundai Motor and Daewoo Motor, South Korea's largest and second-largest automakers respectively, had suffered heavy losses as well. The two companies placed bids for Kia and its commercial-vehicle subsidiary, Asia Motors; the other bidders included another local company, Samsung, and Ford Motor, which along with its subsidiary Mazda already owned nearly 17 percent of Kia.
Hyundai managed to win the auction that October, having offered the highest bid; Daewoo was the runner-up. As a subsidiary of Hyundai, Kia made improvements in its cars' quality as well as their reliability, including the introduction of a new warranty program in 2001. It also began concentrating intently on the European market, building a sleek new $109 million design center in Frankfurt, Germany, in early 2008. At the Paris Motor Show that fall, Kia unveiled its new Soul, a subcompact mini multi-purpose-vehicle (MPV). Designed jointly by studios in California and South Korea, the Soul debuted on the global marketplace in early 2009.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on July 25, 2015, 10:07:04 pm
(http://i1232.photobucket.com/albums/ff365/IDriveA6K4/SFIAS%202011/100_6669.jpg) (http://s1232.photobucket.com/user/IDriveA6K4/media/SFIAS%202011/100_6669.jpg.html)

On this day, July 25th 1945
Henry Kaiser and Joseph Frazer announced plans to form a corporation to manufacture automobiles. The two men formed an unlikely pair. Frazer had great contacts in the auto industry and Kaiser had initial capital and experience with huge government contracts.
PICTURED: 1954 Kaiser Darrin Convertible

July 25th 1941
The American automaker Henry Ford sits down at his desk in Dearborn, Michigan and writes a letter to the Indian nationalist leader Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi. The letter effusively praises Gandhi and his campaign of civil disobedience aimed at forcing the British colonial government out of India.
By July of 1941, Ford's pacifist views led him to despair at the current global situation: Nazi Germany had invaded Poland, causing Britain and France to declare war against it. The United States, led by President Franklin D. Roosevelt, was firmly on the side of the Allies, but Ford was convinced that the country should remain neutral, despite mounting pressure from the government for his company to start mass-producing airplanes to help defeat the Nazis. The previous May, Ford had reluctantly bowed to this pressure, opening a massive production facility for airplane production at Willow Run, near Dearborn, to manufacture B-24E Liberator bombers for the Allied war effort. (Building 1 plane every 55 minutes)
As Douglas Brinkley writes in "Wheels for the World," his history of Ford Motor Company, the automaker disliked imperialism and was hopeful that Gandhi's campaign would succeed in pushing the British out of India and establishing Indian home rule. In addition, Ford Motor Company had long enjoyed healthy sales in the cities of Bombay (now Mumbai) and Calcutta. Ford's letter to Gandhi, now included in the Henry Ford Museum and Library, read: "I want to take this opportunity of sending you a message…to tell you how deeply I admire your life and message. You are one of the greatest men the world has ever known."
The letter was sent to the Mahatma (as Gandhi was known) via T.A. Raman, the London editor of the United Press of India. According to Raman, Brinkley recounts, Gandhi didn't receive the letter until December 8, 1941--the day after the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor. Greatly pleased, he sent in response a portable spinning wheel, one of the old-fashioned devices that Gandhi famously used to produce his own cloth. The wheel, autographed in Hindi and English, was shipped some 12,000 miles and personally delivered to Ford by Raman in Greenfield Village, Michigan. Ford kept it as a good luck charm, as well as a symbol of the principles of simplicity and economic independence that both he and Gandhi championed.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iKlt6rNciTo (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iKlt6rNciTo)
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on July 27, 2015, 11:38:54 pm
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On this day, July 26th 1932
Frederick S. Duesenberg died in Johnstown, Pennsylvania, of complications from injuries suffered in an automobile accident on July 2, 1932. Frederick and his brother Augie created the Duesenberg Automobile and Motors Company. Born in Lippe, Germany, Frederick moved to the U.S. in 1885. In 1897 he started a bicycle business, and in 1899 he built a highly efficient gasoline engine to be used for motorcycles. This was the beginning of his automotive career. He took a job with the Rambler Motor Company and worked there, learning the business, until 1905, when he convinced his brother Augie to go into business selling engines. The two brothers designed the Mason engine, with its famous "walking beam" overhead valve design, and started the Mason Motor Car Company. When they sold the business in 1913, they were mature players in the automotive industry.
PICTURED: Augie and Fred Duesenberg 1916 (Fred on the left)

July 26th 1998
The U.S. 500, the most prestigious race in the Championship Auto Racing Teams (CART) series, dissolves into tragedy on this day in 1998, when three fans are killed and six others wounded by flying debris from a car at Michigan Speedway in Brooklyn, Michigan.
CART (later known as Champ Car) was an open-wheel racing circuit created in the late 1970s by racing team owners frustrated with the direction of the existing United States Automobile Club (USAC). Open-wheel cars, built specifically for racing, are sophisticated vehicles built for speed, with small, open cockpits and wheels located outside the car's main body. In CART races, as well as those of its rival open-wheel circuit, the Indy Racing League, drivers often achieved speeds of up to 230 mph in the straightaways. (In comparison, drivers in National Association for Stock Car Racing--better known as NASCAR--events reach some 200 mph.)
While rounding the fourth turn at Michigan Speedway (a two-mile oval) in the 1998 U.S. 500, driver Adrian Fernandez lost control of his car and crashed into one of the raceway's retaining walls. The car broke apart, and the right front tire and part of the suspension flew over the 15-foot-high wall and into the stands. Traveling nearly 200 mph, the debris hit fans in the eighth and 10th rows. Two people were killed instantly; another died moments later, and six others received minor injuries. To the outrage of Sports Illustrated reporter Rick Reilly, who wrote a scathing editorial about the incident in the magazine, race officials didn't stop the event, which was won by the young Canadian driver Greg Moore. (In a tragic twist of fate, Moore died in October 1999, after a fatal crash in the CART season finale, the Marlboro 500, in California.) In August 1998, Michigan Speedway announced that it would extend the protective fencing around all of its grandstand sections to a total of around 17 feet in an effort to prevent further accidents.
The CART circuit changed its name to Champ Car in 2004. Four years later, plagued by financial troubles, the Champ Car World Series declared bankruptcy and merged with the Indy Racing League.

1902 - Australia beat England by 3 runs at Old Trafford

1942 - RAF bombs Hamburg

1944 - The first German V-2 rocket hits Great Britain.

1983 - Light flashes seen on Jupiter moon Io

1991 - Paul Reubens (Pee Wee Herman) is arrested in Florida, for exposing himself at an adult movie theater

1993 - Mars Observer takes 1st photo of Mars, from 5 billion km

BIRTHDAYS

1939 - J W Howard, Prime Minister of Australia (Good Ol Lil Johny)

1949 - Roger Taylor, British rock drummer (Queen-Bohemian Rhapsody)

1957 - Wayne Grady, Brisbane, Australia, PGA golfer (1990 PGA Champion)

1964 - Sandra Bullock, Wash DC, actress

1970 - Phil Alley, cricketer (NSW left-arm pace bowler)

1981 - Abe Forsythe, Australian actor/director


(http://i222.photobucket.com/albums/dd229/marcimark/My%20Cars/MyCars-12.jpg) (http://s222.photobucket.com/user/marcimark/media/My%20Cars/MyCars-12.jpg.html)

On this day, July 27th 1990
The last Citroen 2CV, known as the "Tin Snail" for its distinctive shape, rolls off the production line at the company's plant in Mangualde, Portugal at four o'clock on the afternoon of July 27, 1990. Since its debut in 1948, a total of 5,114,959 2CVs had been produced worldwide.
The French engineer and industrialist Andre Citroen converted his munitions plant into an automobile company after World War I; beginning in 1919, it was the first automaker to mass-produce cars outside of the United States. As in Germany (the Volkswagen Beetle), Italy (the Fiat 500) and Britain (Austin Mini), the rise of mass car ownership in France in the 1930s led to a demand for a light, economical "people's car," which Citroen answered in the post-World War II years with the 2CV. The company actually began testing the 2CV before the war but kept the project under wraps when war broke out; the original production model was only discovered by chance in the late 1960s. When Citroen finally unveiled the car at the 1948 Paris Motor Show, it was an immediate success: At one point, the waiting time to buy one was five years.
The 2CV ("Deux Chevaux Vapeur" in French, or "two steam horses," a reference to France's policy of taxing cars based on their engine output) was a trailblazer among other small cars of its era. Its innovations included a sophisticated suspension system, front-wheel drive, inboard front brakes, a lightweight, air-cooled engine and a four-speed manual transmission. Its front and rear wings, doors, bonnet, fabric sunroof and trunk lid were all detachable. The 2CV's endearingly unfashionable form joined the Eiffel Tower as a quintessential symbol of France in popular culture. Citroen released a 2CV van in 1951 and a luxury version, the 2CV AZL, in 1956. New models came out over the years, including the 2CV4 and 2CV 6, capable of reaching speeds above 100 kilometers per hour, in 1970; and the popular "Charleston" model in 1981. That same year, Roger Moore--playing the superspy James Bond in "For Your Eyes Only"--drove a bright yellow, high-performance version of the 2CV, evading his pursuers (in Peugeots) in the requisite Bond movie high-speed car chase.
By the late 1980s, however, consumers were no longer wild about the 2CV's quirky, antiquated design. This fact, combined with poor performance according to crash-testing and anti-pollution standards, led to the Tin Snail's demise. In 1988, production moved from France to Portugal, and the last 2CV was produced two years later.

July 27th 1904
Dr. Herbert Hills of Flint, Michigan, purchased the first Buick automobile ever to be sold. Founder David Buick initially made his mark as an inventor and mechanic in the plumbing industry, but had sold out of his business in order to pursue building motor cars. Buick was a man with an innate gift for inventing and tinkering, but who cared little for financial matters. He reputedly was unable to sit still unless he was concentrating on some kind of mechanical problem. None of his contemporaries would have been surprised that his company eventually became more successful than he did. In 1902, after years of fiddling with an automobile design, Buick agreed to a partnership with the Briscoe Manufacturing Company, wherein Briscoe would write off Buick's debts while in turn establishing a $100,000 capitalization for Buick's car company. Buick ceded $99,700 of the company's stock to Briscoe until he repaid his standing debt of $3,500, at which point he could buy controlling interest in the stock. Still, Buick had yet to complete an automobile. When it became clear to Briscoe that Buick would neither be able to pay his debts nor complete his vehicle soon, they sold their interest in the company to the Flint Wagon Works for $10,000. Buick and his son were given stock, but their managerial roles shrunk. Finally, in July of 1904, the first Buick made its initial test run. During the test run, the Buick averaged 30mph on a trip around Flint, going so fast at one point that the driver "couldn't see the village six-mile-an-hour sign." Sixteen Buicks were sold in the next few months, but Flint Wagon Works remained troubled by the Buick venture. They had purchased the company in order to help the city of Flint adjust to a new economy of automobile production, but Buick was already heavily in debt to a number of Flint banks. At this point, David Buick owned only a small share of stock and held none of the business responsibilities, and the Wagon Works decided to bring in Flint whiz kid William Durant to turn the business around. Durant kept Buick on as a manager, a position he held with little impact until 1908. Durant turned Buick into a major player in the automotive industry before incorporating it into his General Motors project.

July 27th 1888
Philip W. Pratt demonstrated first electric automobile in Boston, a tricycle powered by six Electrical Accumulator Company cells. It weighed 90 pounds (about 41 kilograms).

1898 - Start of Sherlock Holmes "Adventure of Dancing Men"

1909 - Orville Wright tests 1st US Army airplane, flying 1h12m40s

1920 - Radio compass used for 1st time for aircraft navigation

1940 - Bugs Bunny debuts in "Wild Hare"

1944 - 1st British jet fighter used in combat (Gloster Meteor)

1948 - Australia set 404 to win v England at Headingley

1948 - Bradman's 29th & last Test Cricket century, part of winning 3-404

1949 - 1st jet-propelled airline (De Havilland Comet) flies

1956 - Jim Laker takes 9-37 in Australia's 1st innings at Manchester

1965 - Pres Johnson signs a bill requiring cigarette makers to print health warnings on all cigarette packages about the effects of smoking

1972 - The F-15 Eagle flies for the first time.

1977 - John Lennon is granted a green card for permanent residence in US

1987 - First expedited salvaging of Titanic wreckage begins by RMS Titanic, Inc.

1988 - Radio Shack announces Tandy 1000 SL computer

2002 - Ukraine airshow disaster: A Sukhoi Su-27 fighter crashes during an air show at Lviv, Ukraine killing 85 and injuring more than 100 others, the largest air show disaster in history.

2005 - STS-114: NASA grounds the Space shuttle, pending an investigation of the external tank's continued foam-shedding problem. During ascent, the external tank of the Space Shuttle Discovery sheds a piece of foam slightly smaller than the piece that caused the Space Shuttle Columbia disaster; this foam does not strike the spacecraft.

2007 - Phoenix News Helicopter Collision: News helicopters from Phoenix, Arizona television stations KNXV and KTVK collide over Steele Indian School Park in central Phoenix while covering a police chase; there were no survivors. This was the first known incidence of two news helicopters colliding in mid-air, and the worst civil aviation incident in Phoenix history.

BIRTHDAYS

1955 - Allan Border, cricket captain (Australia)

1973 - Gorden Tallis, Australian rugby league footballer

1976 - Scott Mason, Australian cricketer (d. 2005)

1980 - Allan Davis, Australian cyclist

1986 - Ryan Griffen, Australian rules footballer

1988 - Adam Biddle, Australian footballer

1990 - Indiana Evans, Australian actress
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on July 28, 2015, 08:02:56 pm
(http://i183.photobucket.com/albums/x207/Starcowboy/gran%20prix/Tazio/nuvolari.jpg) (http://s183.photobucket.com/user/Starcowboy/media/gran%20prix/Tazio/nuvolari.jpg.html)

On this day, July 28th 1935
The Italian race car driver Tazio Nuvolari wins the greatest victory of his career in the Grosser Preis von Deutschland (German Grand Prix) held on the Nurburgring racetrack in Nurburg, Germany 
Known to his fans as "Il Montavano Volante," or the Flying Mantuan, for his home city of Mantua, Nuvolari served as a driver in the Italian army before beginning his career racing motorcycles at the age of 28; he won the Italian championship in that sport in 1924 and 1928. His first major victory in a four-wheeled vehicle came in the 1930 Mille Miglia (Thousand Miles), Italy's most famous automobile road race. Over the course of his career, in addition to racing as part of the Alfa Romeo team (and later the German Auto Union teams), Nuvolari raced as an independent driver in cars constructed by Bugatti, Maserati and MG.
The German Grand Prix of 1935 is remembered as Nuvolari's greatest victory, and arguably one of the most impressive auto racing victories of all time. At the time, German automakers reigned supreme in the world of race car construction, and the "home team" at the Nurburgring that July day consisted of five Mercedes and four German Auto Union vehicles, all of which overpowered Nuvolari's older 330 bhp (brake horsepower is a unit used to measure the power of an engine by the energy needed to brake it) Alfa Romeo. An estimated 250,000 to 300,000 spectators turned up to watch the race on that rainy, foggy July day, and drama broke out from the beginning, when Nuvolari's longtime rival, Achille Varzi, driving for the German Auto Union, hit an auto mechanic working the race.
With one lap left to go, the German driver Manfred von Brauchitsch in his 445 bhp W25 Mercedes Benz--the most powerful car of the day--took a 35-second lead over Nuvolari; the rest of the field, competitive throughout, had fallen behind. Von Brauchitsch's left rear tire was fraying, however, and with Nuvolari in hot pursuit behind him he declined a pit stop: The tire blew, and von Brauchitsch was forced to slow to 40 mph and guide it to the rim of the track. Nuvolari blew past him for the win, to the great chagrin of the Nazi Party officials at the finish line who had already started to raise the flag of the Reich and prepare the celebration.
Though Nuvolari would later race for the German Auto Union himself, that day he broke German hearts in his little red Alfa Romeo, beating the most powerful cars on the planet on one of the world's most demanding tracks.

July 28th 1973
Bonnie and Clyde's bullet-riddled 1934 Ford V-8 sedan was sold at auction for $175,000 to Peter Simon of Jean, Nevada. The Ford V-8 model succeeded the new Model A, and it was well received due to its speed and power, perhaps this is why it seemed most popular among the criminal element. Henry Ford first received a personal letter congratulating him on the car's performance from famed outlaw gunman John Dillinger.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on July 29, 2015, 09:50:33 pm
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On this day, July 29th 1909.
The newly formed General Motors Corporation (GM) acquires the country's leading luxury automaker, the Cadillac Automobile Company, for $4.5 million.
Cadillac was founded out of the ruins of automotive pioneer Henry Ford's second failed company (his third effort, the Ford Motor Company, finally succeeded). When the shareholders of the defunct Henry Ford Company called in Detroit machinist Henry Leland to assess the company's assets for their planned sale, Leland convinced them to stay in business. His idea was to combine Ford's latest chassis (frame) with a single-cylinder engine developed by Oldsmobile, another early automaker. To that end, the Cadillac Car Company (named for the French explorer Antoine Laumet de La Mothe Cadillac, who founded the city of Detroit in 1701) was founded in August 1902. Leland introduced the first Cadillac--priced at $850--at the New York Auto Show the following year.
In its first year of production, Cadillac put out nearly 2500 cars, a huge number at the time. Leland, who was reportedly motivated by an intense competition with Henry Ford, assumed full leadership of Cadillac in 1904, and with his son Wilfred by his side he firmly established the brand's reputation for quality. Among the excellent luxury cars being produced in America at the time--including Packard, Lozier, McFarland and Pierce-Arrow--Cadillac led the field, making the top 10 in overall U.S. auto sales every year from 1904 to 1915.
By 1909, William C. Durant had assembled Buick and Oldsmobile as cornerstones of his new General Motors Corporation, founded the year before. By the end of July, he had persuaded Wilfred Leland to sell Cadillac for $4.5 million in GM stock. Durant kept the Lelands on in their management position, however, giving them full responsibility for automotive production. Three years later, Cadillac introduced the world's first successful electric self-starter, developed by Charles F. Kettering; its pioneering V-8 engine was installed in all Cadillac models in 1915.
Over the years, Cadillac maintained its reputation for luxury and innovation: In 1954, for example, it was the first automaker to provide power steering and automatic windshield washers as standard equipment on all its vehicles. Though the brand was knocked out of its top-of-the-market position in the 1980s by the German luxury automaker Mercedes-Benz.
PICTURED: 1957 CADILLAC

July 29th 1904
Jehangir Ratanji Dadabhoy (J.R.D.) Tata was born in Paris, France to Ratanji Dadabhoy Tata and his French wife Suzanne Briere. Ratanji Tata was a first cousin of Jamsetji Tata.
He was a pioneer aviator and important businessman of India. He was one of the few people who were awarded Bharat Ratna during their life time.
J.R.D.Tata was inspired early by French aviation pioneer Louis Bleriot, and took to flying. In 1929 Tata got the first pilot licence issued in India. He later came to be known as the father of Indian civil aviation. He founded India's first commercial airline, 'Tata Airlines', in 1932, which in 1946 became Air India, now India's national airline.

1899 - 1st motorcycle race, Manhattan Beach, NY

1910 - JWEL Hilgers is 1st Dutchman to fly above Dutch territory

1930 - Airship R100, 1st passenger-carrying flight from England to Canada

1938 - Comic strip "Dennis the Menace," 1st appears

1945 - After delivering the Atomic Bomb across the Pacific, the cruiser USS Indianapolis is torpedoed & sunk by a Japanese submarine

1952 - 1st nonstop transpacific flight by a jet

1961 - Bob Dylan injured in car accident

1966 - Bob Dylan hurt in motorcycle accident near Woodstock NY
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on July 30, 2015, 11:05:07 pm
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On this day, July 30th 1898
Scientific American magazine carried the very first automobile advertisement for Winton Motor Car Company of Cleveland, OH; invited readers to "dispense with a horse".

July 30th, 1863
Henry Ford was born. Ford was born on a prosperous farmstead a few miles outside of Detroit. He would love the American farm all his days, save for one thing: He detested farming. From his childhood on, he sought ways to shift labor from humans to machines. Unlike most farm boys, he had a strong dislike of horses, and by the time he was in his teens, he was in thrall to the idea of a self-propelled vehicle.
When he was 17, he went into Detroit, then a vigorous young industrial city with a thousand machine shops. Those shops were his college, and he proved a brilliant student. He returned to the farm only briefly, in 1888, to marry a woman named Clara Bryant, a most fortunate choice as she proved steadfast, brave and so convinced of her husband’s genius that he came to call her “the believer.”

July 30th 2003
The last of 21,529,464 Volkswagen Beetles built since World War II rolls off the production line at Volkswagen's plant in Puebla, Mexico. One of a 3,000-unit final edition, the baby-blue vehicle was sent to a museum in Wolfsburg, Germany, where Volkswagen is headquartered.
The car produced in Puebla that day was the last so-called "classic" VW Beetle, which is not to be confused with the redesigned new Beetle that Volkswagen introduced in 1998. (The new Beetle resembles the classic version but is based on the VW Golf.) The roots of the classic Beetle stretch back to the mid-1930s, when the famed Austrian automotive engineer Dr. Ferdinand Porsche met German leader Adolf Hitler's request for a small, affordable passenger car to satisfy the transportation needs of the German people Hitler called the result the KdF (Kraft-durch-Freude)-Wagen (or "Strength-Through-Joy" car) after a Nazi-led movement ostensibly aimed at helping the working people of Germany; it would later be known by the name Porsche preferred: Volkswagen, or "people's car."
The first production-ready Kdf-Wagen debuted at the Berlin Motor Show in 1939; the international press soon dubbed it the "Beetle" for its distinctive rounded shape. During World War II, the factory in Kdf-stat (later renamed Wolfsburg) continued to make Beetles, though it was largely dedicated to production of war vehicles. Production was halted under threat of Allied bombing in August 1944 and did not resume until after the war, under British control. Though VW sales were initially slower in the United States compared with the rest of the world, by 1960 the Beetle was the top-selling import in America, thanks to an iconic ad campaign by the firm Doyle Dane Bernbach. In 1972, the Beetle surpassed the longstanding worldwide production record of 15 million vehicles, set by Ford Motor Company's legendary Model T between 1908 and 1927. It also became a worldwide cultural icon, featuring prominently in the hit 1969 movie "The Love Bug" (which starred a Beetle named Herbie) and on the cover of the Beatles album "Abbey Road."
In 1977, however, the Beetle, with its rear-mounted, air-cooled-engine, was banned in America for failing to meet safety and emission standards. Worldwide sales of the car shrank by the late 1970s and by 1988, the classic Beetle was sold only in Mexico. Due to increased competition from other manufacturers of inexpensive compact cars, and a Mexican decision to phase out two-door taxis, Volkswagen decided to discontinue production of the classic bug in 2003. The final count of 21,529,464, incidentally, did not include the original 600 cars built by the Nazis prior to World War II.

1889 - Start of Sherlock Holmes adventure "Naval Treaty" (BG)

1898 - Will Kellogg invents Corn Flakes

1908 - Around the World Automobile Race ends in Paris

1909 - Wright Brothers deliver 1st military plane to the army

1956 - US motto "In God We Trust" authorized

1971 - Japanese Boeing 727 collides with an F-86 fighter killing 162

1971 - US Apollo 15 (Scott & Irwin) lands on Mare Imbrium on the Moon

1983 - Official speed record for a piston-driven aircraft, 832 kph, Calif

1990 - The first Saturn automobile rolls off the assembly line.

BIRTHDAYS

1945 - David Sanborn, jazz saxophonist (David Letterman Show)

1947 - Arnold Schwarzenegger, Austria, body builder/actor/politician (Terminator, 38th Governor of California)

1958 - Kate Bush, Plumstead England, singer/songwriter

1963 - Lisa Kudrow, Encino California, actress (Phoebe-Friends, Romy & Michele)

1982 - Yvonne Strahovski, Australian actress
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on July 31, 2015, 10:07:52 pm
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On this day. July 31st 1916
The future racing legend Louise Smith, who will become the first woman inducted into the International Motorsports Hall of Fame, is born in Barnesville, Georgia.
In the mid-1940s, the racing promoter Bill France was looking for a female driver as a way to attract spectators to some of the earliest events in what would become the National Association for Stock Car Auto Racing (NASCAR) circuit. Before a race near Greenville, South Carolina, in 1946, he heard of Louise Smith, a local resident who was famous for outrunning law enforcement on the roads. With France's encouragement, Smith entered the race at Greenville-Pickens Speedway in a 1939 Ford and finished third. Unaware that a checkered flag meant the finish line, she kept going beyond the end of the race until someone threw out a red flag.
Though her husband Noah, the owner of a junkyard, didn't approve of her new speed-demon career, Smith was hooked. In 1947, she famously "borrowed" Noah's new car, a Ford coupe, and drove it to watch races in Daytona Beach, Florida. She ended up entering the race herself and wrecking the car, a fact she tried to conceal from him, not knowing that the news had made the front page of the Greenville paper before she returned home. Smith subsequently became a regular on France's new circuit, appearing in NASCAR events throughout the United States and Canada for the next decade. She won 38 races and had some spectacular crashes, including one in which her car overturned, earning her 48 stitches and four pins in her left knee. Dubbed the "Good Ol' Gal" by her fellow drivers, Smith nonetheless struggled in the masculine world of NASCAR.
Smith retired in 1956 but remained active in the racing world: She sponsored various drivers, and was involved in the Miss Southern 500 Scholarship Pageant at Darlington Raceway in South Carolina. In 1999, she was inducted into the International Motorsports Hall of Fame in Talladega, Alabama. Smith died in April 2006, at the age of 89.

July 31st 1928
The Chrysler Corporation acquired Dodge Brothers, Inc. from Dillon Read for $170 million.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on August 02, 2015, 11:03:49 pm

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August 1st 1941
Jeep is born. Parade magazine called it "...the Army's most intriguing new gadget...a tiny truck which can do practically everything." During World War I, the U.S. Army began looking for a fast, lightweight all-terrain vehicle, but the search did not grow urgent until early 1940. At this time, the Axis powers had begun to score victories in Europe and Northern Africa, intensifying the Allies' need for an all-terrain vehicle. The U.S. Army issued a challenge to automotive companies, requesting a working prototype, fit to army specifications, in just 49 days. Willy's Truck Company was the first to successfully answer the Army's call, and the new little truck was christened "the Jeep." General Dwight D. Eisenhower said that America could not have won World War II without it. Parade was so enthusiastic about the Jeep, that, on this day, it devoted three full pages to a feature on the vehicle.

August 1st 1903
The first cross-country auto trip, from New York City to San Francisco, was completed on this day in 1903. The trail was blazed by a Packard, which finished in a mere 52 days. Since then, countless Americans have embarked on the cross-country trek, driving from coast to coast.

August 1st 1910
The state of New York issued its first license plates on this day in 1910. Massachusetts, the first state in the nation to issue plates, had been doing so since 1893, when it introduced iron plates with the registration number etched on top. The current New York plate, which features the Statue of Liberty, has been in use since 1986.

August 1st 2006
Market share of Detroit auto companies fell to 52% in July 2006, lowest point in history (52.2% in October 2005). Auto sales figures showed that Toyota passed Ford Motor Company to rank as the second-biggest-selling auto company in the U.S. Honda outsold DaimlerChrysler's Chrysler group for the first time. General Motors held a 27% share of the auto market and Chrysler - 10%.

August 1st 2007
Citibank opens China's first drive-through automated teller machine (ATM) at the Upper East Side Central Plaza in Beijing.
Like those of drive-through restaurants and drive-in movies, the origins of drive-through banking can be traced to the United States. Some sources say that Hillcrest State Bank opened the first drive-through bank in Dallas, Texas, in 1938; others claim the honor belongs to the Exchange National Bank of Chicago in 1946. The trend reached its height in the post-World War II boom era of the late 1950s. Today, nearly all major banks in the United States offer some type of drive-through option, from regular teller service to 24-hour ATMs.
Drive-through banking, like other developments in automobile-centered culture, caught on a bit later in the rest of the world. Switzerland, for example, didn't get its first drive-through bank until 1962, when Credit Suisse--then known as Schweizerische Kreditanstalt (SKA)--opened a branch in downtown Zurich featuring eight glass pavilions with drive-through banking services. Though popular at first, the branch faltered in the 1970s, when traffic problems in the city center made fewer people willing to do their banking from their cars. SKA closed the drive-through in 1983.
In December 2006, five years after joining the World Trade Organization, China opened its retail banking sector to foreign competition. Under the new regulations Citibank became one of four foreign banks--along with HSBC, Standard Chartered and Bank of East Asia--approved to provide banking services using the Chinese currency, renminbi. (Often abbreviated as RMB, renminbi literally means "people's money.") The agreement had been signed in the fall of 2006, and by early December Citi had already opened 70 regular ATMs across the Chinese mainland.
Initially, the Citibank drive-through ATM that opened in Beijing in August 2007 was available only to holders of bank cards issued abroad, as foreign banks were not yet allowed to issue their own cards in China. Other banks soon hopped on the drive-through banking bandwagon in China, including China Construction Bank, which opened the first drive-through ATM in the southern Chinese city of Guangzhou in May 2008.


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On this day, August 2nd 1990
Sven-Erik Soderman, driving an Opel Kadett at Mora, Sweden, set a world's record in stunt driving. Soderman reached a speed of 102.14mph while driving his car on two side wheels.

Pretty cool video below
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JrNqAl_G-6g (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JrNqAl_G-6g)

August 2nd 1950
The Ford Motor Company created the Defense Products Division in order to handle the large number of government contracts related to the Korean War. The conversion from automobile manufacture to weapons production had already been made several times in history, including during World War II, when civilian automobile production in the U.S. virtually ceased as manufacturers began turning out tanks instead.

August 2nd 1987
This fateful day in 1987 witnessed the fastest race in Indy car history to that date, when Michael Andretti won the Marlboro 500 at the Michigan International Speedway with an average speed of 171.490mph. Andretti broke the record previously set by Bobby Rahal at 170.722mph. Incidentally, one of the drivers that Andretti sped past on that day was his father and fellow driver, Mario Andretti.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on August 03, 2015, 10:02:45 pm
(http://i391.photobucket.com/albums/oo360/rooster364/firestonecheckeredcopy.jpg) (http://s391.photobucket.com/user/rooster364/media/firestonecheckeredcopy.jpg.html)

On this day, August 3rd 1900
The Firestone Tire & Rubber Company was established in Akron, Ohio. Thirty-one-year-old inventor and entrepreneur Harvey S. Firestone seized on a new way of making carriage tires and began production with only 12 employees. Eight years later, Firestone tires were chosen by Henry Ford for the Model T, and Firestone eventually became a household name. Firestone is now owned by Bridgestone.
In May 2000, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration contacted Ford and Firestone about the high incidence of tire failure on Ford Explorers, Mercury Mountaineers, and Mazda Navajos fitted with Firestone tires. Ford investigated and found that several models of 15" Firestone tires had very high failure rates, especially those made at Firestone's Decatur, Illinois plant. This was one of the leading factors to the closing of the Decatur plant.
In a 2001 letter to Ford Motor Company Chief Executive at the time Jacques Nassar, then Chairman / CEO of Bridgestone/Firestone announced that Bridgestone/Firestone would no longer enter into new contracts with Ford Motor Company, effectively ending a 100-year supply relationship.

August 3, 1926
The first traffic lights in Britain were installed at Piccadilly Circus.

August 3rd 1938
The famous English circuit Brooklands hosted its final race on this day in 1938, ending the track's 32-year history. It opened in 1907, and was the world's first oval-style motorsport venue and was also one of Britain's first airfields. Nowadays it plays host to an aviation and motoring museum, as well as various vintage car rallies.

August 3rd 1941
Although the U.S. had not yet entered World War II at this time, gasoline rationing began in parts of the eastern United States on this day in 1941. The rationing would spread to the rest of the country as soon as the U.S. joined the Allied forces, and the production of cars for private use halted completely in 1942. Measures of a similar sort had already taken place in most European countries.

August 3rd 1977
"The Spy Who Loved Me," starring Roger Moore as the suave superspy James Bond, known for his love of fast cars and dangerous women, is released in theaters across America. The film features one of the most memorable Bond cars of all time--a sleek, powerful Lotus Esprit sports car that does double duty as a submarine.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on August 05, 2015, 12:20:08 am
(http://i1085.photobucket.com/albums/j439/82lebaronconv/Connecticut%20Packard%20Graveyard/070.jpg) (http://s1085.photobucket.com/user/82lebaronconv/media/Connecticut%20Packard%20Graveyard/070.jpg.html)

On this day, August 4th 1898
On a visit to the Winton plant with his brother James, William D. Packard was taken for a test-drive in one of the company's vehicles, accompanied by George L. Weiss, a Winton executive. Packard ended up purchasing the Winton, to his later regret. The Packards' disappointing experience with the Winton prompted them to build their own car and establish the Ohio Automobile Company in 1900, which would later become the Packard Motor Company.
PICTURED: Rear detail - 1953 Cavalier
Note Packard script on upper rear quarter panel. This was adopted from James Ward Packard's personal signature, who founded the Packard Motor Car Company in 1899. The last Packards were built in 1958

August 4th 1957
Juan Fangio won his last auto race and captured the world auto driving championship for the fifth consecutive year on this day in 1957. Fangio, born in Argentina and of Italian descent, won the World Championship a record five times, as well as capturing 24 Grand Prix titles. He began his career as a mechanic, but eventually started racing in South America with a car he built himself. After his retirement from racing, Fangio went to work for Mercedes-Benz in Argentina.

August 4th 1957
The Italian automaker Fiat (short for Fabbrica Italiana Automobili Torino) debuts the "Nuova Cinquecento," a redesigned version of a model that it first released in 1936.
Founded in 1899 by Giovanni Agnelli, Fiat had dominated the Italian auto industry since the early 20th century. When Fiat's first 500-cc car--known as "Il Topolino" (the Italian name for Mickey Mouse)--came on the scene, it was the smallest mass-produced car on the market, with space for two people, a tiny luggage capacity and a top speed of 53 mph. In the years following World War II (during which Fiat made many of the vehicles used by Italian forces under Benito Mussolini), the company sought to capitalize on the need for affordable family cars by revamping the 500. The Nuova Cinquecento was a two-cylinder rear-engined four-seater; like the German Volkswagen Beetle, it was intended as an Italian "people's car." Like the Beetle, the 500 was became a symbol of a country and a people, an emblem of "la dolce vita" in post-war Italy. Some 3.5 million new 500s were sold between 1957 and 1975, when Fiat halted production.
By 2004, Fiat--once the largest carmaker in Europe--was struggling financially due to stiff competition from Volkswagen and other companies. That year, Sergio Marchionne took over as the company's chief executive; he soon ended Fiat's largely unsuccessful five-year partnership with General Motors and would be praised by investors for the subsequent revival of the company's fortunes. A critical step in this turnaround was the launch of the new Cinquecento in 2007. Designed by Frank Stephenson (already famous for the redesign of another classic, the Mini Cooper), the new 500 was based on the mechanical elements of the popular Fiat Panda, but modified significantly. Though its retro styling evoked its iconic predecessor, the strong performance and extensive safety features (including seven airbags) were all its own.
On July 4, 2007--50 years to the day after Giacosa's famous car debuted--several thousand VIP guests, including Italian Prime Minister Romano Prodi, were among the 100,000 spectators who gathered in Turin to celebrate the launch of the Nuova Cinquecento. The lavish ceremony featured a fireworks display and a waterborne carnival procession along the Po River. Two years later, Fiat completed an alliance with Chrysler after the struggling American automaker was forced to file for federal bankruptcy protection. Under the terms of the partnership, Fiat owns a 20 percent share of Chrysler (which could eventually grow to at least 35 percent).

August 4th 1971
Jeff Gordon, a stock-car driver known as "The Kid," was born. Gordon raced onto the NASCAR scene in 1997 by winning the Winston Cup season points championship for a prestigious second time at the age of 26. "The Kid" was also the first driver to win the Southern 500, NASCAR's oldest race, three years in a row. His clean-cut California image was initially disliked by many racing fans, who tended to prefer the gritty personas of traditional stock-car drivers. However, Gordon had talent, an aggressive driving style, and a knack for publicity, which drew many new fans to the sport.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on August 05, 2015, 10:07:49 pm
(http://i25.photobucket.com/albums/c100/ericastar_/standardoilrefinery-richmondca-1911.jpg) (http://s25.photobucket.com/user/ericastar_/media/standardoilrefinery-richmondca-1911.jpg.html)

On this day, August 5th 1882
The Standard Oil Company of New Jersey was established as part of the giant Standard Oil Trust. The trust had been organized earlier in the year, bringing together John D. Rockefeller's oil empire under one central management, run by Rockefeller and an "inner circle." The Standard Oil Trust became the first great monopoly in American history, eventually acquiring 90 percent of the world's oil refining capacity before it was ordered to dissolve in 1892. Rockefeller was infamous for his ruthless business tactics, and it was rumored that he often threatened to put local merchants out of business unless they bought Standard Oil.

August 5th 1914
The first traffic light was installed at the intersection of Euclid Avenue and East 105th Street in Cleveland, Ohio. Earlier roads, shared by horses, cars, and streetcars, were chaotic. As accidents and traffic increased it became apparent that some rules of the road were required. The traffic light was only one of several improvements to arrive in this period--the traffic island was introduced in 1907, dividing lines appeared in 1911, and the "No Left Turn" sign debuted in 1916

August 5, 1947
Ferdinand Porsche was released from a French prison. Porsche had been arrested as a suspected Nazi collaborator by United States and French occupation authorities in the aftermath of World War II and held in custody for two years. He would live to see his 75th birthday

August 5, 1990
Amos Neyhart, an engineering professor who established the first driver education courses in the United States in the 1930s, dies in a Pennsylvania nursing home at the age of 91.
Neyhart joined the faculty of Pennsylvania State University in 1929 as an assistant professor of industrial engineering. (He earned his bachelor's and master's degrees at the same institution.) Around 1931, when a drunk driver hit Neyhart's parked car, he became convinced of the need for teenagers to be educated in how to drive properly. Parents lacked the necessary objectivity and patience to teach their children to drive, he believed, and they also often unknowingly passed along their own bad driving habits. Neyhart began by teaching volunteer students from State College High School; he used his own 1929 Graham-Paige automobile, which he had specially fitted with dual brake and clutch linkages. In 1933, he established a formal course at the high school, and he soon developed a teacher-preparation program. In 1934, Neyhart published "The Safe Operation of an Automobile," the first textbook on driver education.
Neyhart's pioneering work in Pennsylvania soon caught on across the country. By 1968, according to an article that year in The New York Times, accredited driver education courses were offered in more than 71 percent of the nation's high schools. A study completed at the time by the New York State Department of Motor Vehicles found that graduates of such courses were involved in 22 percent fewer accidents and had 50 percent fewer driving violations than non-graduates, and most insurance companies had begun granting discounts to accredited young drivers.
Beginning in the late 1930s, Neyhart served as a consultant on driver education for the American Automobile Association (AAA); he was also director of Penn State's Institute of Public Safety in Continuing Education. Presidents Harry S. Truman, John F. Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson all named him to national traffic safety committees during their administrations. In 1988, Neyhart was inducted into the Safety and Health Hall of Fame International.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on August 06, 2015, 10:55:28 pm
(http://i237.photobucket.com/albums/ff157/IDriveA6K2/Cars/103867.jpg) (http://s237.photobucket.com/user/IDriveA6K2/media/Cars/103867.jpg.html)

August 6th 1957
The Chevrolet Corporation registered the Corvair name for its new rear-engine compact car. Corvairs became quite controversial--people either loved them or hated them. The car was accused of being "unsafe at any speed," with much criticism directed toward its handling, even though a 1972 government study later exonerated the Corvair. Today, the Corvair is considered rare and collectible and has been called one of the most significant cars in automotive history.

August 6th 1928
Chung Se Yung, a cofounder of the Hyundai Motor Company, was born on this day in Kangwon Province, Korea. Hyundai, which was founded in 1967, is one of the largest auto manufacturers in the world, actively exporting to 160 countries. Its international network consists of 145 independent importers and distributors, as well as several subsidiaries, such as Hyundai Motor America.

August 6th 1932
Richard Hollingshead Jr. first registered his patent for the drive-in movie theater. Tired of ordinary movie houses, Hollingshead wanted to create a theater where parents could bring the children in their pajamas, avoid baby-sitters, and relax in the comfort of their own car while watching a Friday night film. Hollingshead was awarded the patent in May of the following year, though it was declared invalid in 1950. After the patent was revoked, thousands of drive-ins appeared on the American landscape, reaching a high of 4,063 in 1958.

August 6th 1958
The great Argentine race car driver Juan Manuel Fangio, winner of five Formula One driver's world championships, competes in his last Grand Prix race--the French Grand Prix held outside Reims, France.
Fangio left school at the age of 11 and worked as an automobile mechanic in his hometown of San Jose de Balcarce, Argentina before beginning his driving career. He won his first major victory in the Gran Premio Internacional del Norte of 1940, racing a Chevrolet along the often-unpaved roads from Buenos Aires to Lima, Peru. In 1948, Fangio was invited to race a Simca-Gordini in the French Grand Prix, also at Reims, which marked his European racing debut. After a crash during a road race in Peru that fall killed his co-driver and friend Daniel Urrutia, Fangio considered retiring from racing, but in the end returned to Europe for his first full Formula One season the following year.
In Formula One, the top level of racing as sanctioned by the Fédération International de l'Automobile (FIA), drivers compete in single-seat, open-wheel vehicles typically built by large automakers (or "constructors," in racing world parlance) and capable of achieving speeds of more than 230 mph. Individual Formula One events are known as Grands Prix. Fangio signed on in 1948 with Alfa Romeo, and won his first Formula One championship title with that team in 1951. Over the course of his racing career, he would drive some of the best cars Alfa-Romeo, Mercedes-Benz, Ferrari and Maserati ever produced. Capturing four more Formula One titles by 1957, Fangio won an impressive 24 of 51 total Grand Prix races.
Reims, famous for its 13th-century cathedral, hosted the oldest Grand Prix race, the French Grand Prix, at its Reims-Gueux course a total of 14 times (the last time in 1966). In the race on July 6, 1958, the British driver Mike Hawthorn--who would win the driver's world championship that season, but die tragically in a (non-racing) car accident the following January, at the age of 29--took the lead from the start in his 2.4-liter Ferrari Dino 246 and held on for the win. Fangio, driving a Maserati, finished fourth, in what would be the last race before announcing his retirement at the age of 47. The 1958 French Grand Prix also marked the Formula One debut of Phil Hill, who in 1960 would become the first American driver to win the world championship.

August 6th 1991
Peugeot SA announced its withdrawal from the United States market, due to lagging sales. The major French automotive manufacturer and holding company has been in existence since 1896 and is presently headquartered in Paris.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on August 07, 2015, 06:00:17 pm
(http://i1011.photobucket.com/albums/af233/carl44s/motorsports%201920-1942/dario-resta-peugeot-1916.jpg) (http://s1011.photobucket.com/user/carl44s/media/motorsports%201920-1942/dario-resta-peugeot-1916.jpg.html)

On this day, August 7th 1915
Driving a Peugeot, race-car driver Dario Resta broke the 100mph speed barrier. He broke the record while winning the 100-mile Chicago Cup Challenge Race at the Maywood Board Speedway in Chicago. With an average speed of 101.86mph, this was the first event in which such speeds had been attained for a race of this length in the U.S.

August 7th 1927
The last Dodge Convertible Cabriolet, produced as a sporty car, was discontinued on this day in 1927. The Cabriolet was in production for only four months after its debut.

August 7th 1974
French daredevil Philip Petit walked across a tightrope strung between the twin towers of the World Trade Center in New York City. The stunt caused a massive traffic jam on the streets below.

(http://i727.photobucket.com/albums/ww273/brendan022/petit.jpg) (http://s727.photobucket.com/user/brendan022/media/petit.jpg.html)

August 7th 2000
Eight weeks to the day after the fourth-generation NASCAR driver Adam Petty was killed during practice at the New Hampshire International Speedway, New Hampshire--the driver Kenny Irwin Jr. dies at the same speedway, near the exact same spot, after his car slams into the wall at 150 mph during a practice run.
At 19, Adam Petty was in his second season in the Busch Series and was planning to move to the Winston Cup circuit full time the following year. He finished 40th in his first Winston Cup race in April 2000, three days before the death of his great-grandfather, Lee Petty, a pioneer of NASCAR (the acronym stands for National Association for Stock Car Auto Racing). On May 12, during a practice session to qualify for the following day's Busch 200 in Loudon, the youngest Petty's car crashed head-on into a wall while traveling at 130 miles per hour. He was airlifted to Concord Hospital, where he was pronounced dead of head trauma.
A native of Indianapolois, Indiana, Kenny Irwin Jr. won Rookie of the Year honors for the NASCAR Winston Cup series in 1998, earning one fifth-place finish and four top-10s while driving the famous No. 28 Texaco Havoline Ford for the Robert Yates Racing team. (Among the celebrated previous drivers of the No. 28 were Ernie Irvan and Davey Allison.) After Irwin racked up three more top-five finishes in 1999, including third place in the Daytona 500, he Irwin left the Yates organization and joined a team owned by Felix Sabates. In a car sponsored by BellSouth, he ran a total of 17 races, still seeking a win.
On July 7, 2000, the 30-year-old Irwin was killed instantly when his car hit the wall on Turn 3 of the New Hampshire International Speedway; it flipped over and landed on its roof before coming to a halt. As in the case of Petty's crash, speculation as to the cause focused on a stuck accelerator, which would have prevented both drivers from slowing enough to make the turn. As The Chicago Tribune reported, some drivers pointed out that the track was one of the slickest on the NASCAR circuit, with no margin for error on the tight turns. On the other hand, Petty's grandfather, the NASCAR icon Richard Petty, dismissed those charges, attributing the two similar crashes to "circumstances beyond human control…circumstances with the way you stop that thing so quick. Your body just can't stand it."

(http://i891.photobucket.com/albums/ac114/MotorsportRevolution/Kenny%20Irwin%20Jr/nh0005.jpg) (http://s891.photobucket.com/user/MotorsportRevolution/media/Kenny%20Irwin%20Jr/nh0005.jpg.html)
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on August 08, 2015, 08:44:08 pm
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On this day, August 8th 1986
The last episode of the TV show Knight Rider aired on this day. The program featured David Hasselhoff as private eye Michael Knight, but the real star of the show was "KITT," his talking car. KITT was a modified Pontiac Firebird, complete with artificial intelligence and glowing red lights. KITT assisted Michael on his crime-fighting missions, communicating with him through a remote device Michael wore on his wrist.

August 8th 1907
The Rolls-Royce Silver Ghost passed its 15,000-mile official trial with flying colors, showing off its seven-liter engine and four-speed overdrive gearbox. It was this trial that made "the Ghost's" reputation and gave the Rolls-Royce the name "The Best Car in the World." A total of 6,173 Silver Ghosts were produced.

August 8th 1954
Nigel Mansell, the Formula-1 racer, was born on this day in Birmingham, West Midlands, England. Mansell won 29 Grand Prix titles between 1980 and 1992. He retired from Formula-1 racing in 1992 to join the Haas-Newman Indy car racing team in the U.S., becoming an Indy car champion within his first year. He later returned to Formula-1 racing.

August 8th 1991
James B. Irwin, pilot of the Lunar Roving Vehicle, died on this day. Irwin visited the surface of the moon during the Apollo 15 mission in 1971, during which he spent almost three days on the moon's surface investigating the Hadley-Apennine site, 462 miles north of the lunar equator. The Lunar Rover was a specially designed vehicle used to transport Irwin and David Scott around the moon's surface while collecting rocks and core samples. Irwin died at the age of 61.

August 8th 2004
On July 8, 2004, Suzuki Motor Corporation and Consumers Union, publisher of Consumer Reports magazine, agree to a settlement in an eight-year-long lawsuit in which the automaker accused Consumer Reports of damaging its reputation with claims that its Samurai sport utility vehicle (SUV) was prone to rolling over.
In July 1988, a Consumer Reports product review judged the Samurai as unacceptable because of its propensity to tip during sharp turns. (The magazine based this conclusion on the car's performance in avoidance-maneuver tests.) Suzuki stopped making the Samurai in 1995. The following year, the company filed the lawsuit, accusing Consumer Union of rigging the test and perpetrating consumer fraud. The automaker sought $60 million in compensation and unspecified punitive damages. Suzuki's case included testimony from a former Consumers Union employee who served for 10 years as a technician in the company's auto testing group, as well as videotapes and records of automobile testing that date back to 1988. The videos showed, among other things, that the testing personnel had driven the Samurai through the course no fewer than 46 times before getting it to tip up on two wheels on the 47th, a result that was met by laughing and cheering from the group.
A federal judge dismissed Suzuki's lawsuit without a trial, but in September 2002 an appeals court ruled that a jury should hear the case. In April 2000, Consumers Union had won a jury trial over a lawsuit filed by Isuzu Motor, which claimed that Consumer Reports magazine had rigged a test involving its Trooper SUV in order to make the vehicle tip over. In November 2003, U.S. Supreme Court rejected a Consumers Union appeal in the Suzuki case, and the case was headed for a jury trial in California before the settlement was reached the next July.
No money changed hands in the agreement. Though Consumers Union did not issue an apology--"We stand fully behind our testing and rating of the Samurai," David Pittle, vice president for technical policy at Consumers Union, said--it made a "clarification," stating that the magazine's statement that the Samurai "easily" rolls over during turns may have been "misconstrued or misunderstood." The agreement also stated that Consumers Reports "never intended to imply that the Samurai easily rolls over in routine driving conditions" and had spoken positively of other Suzuki models such as the Sidekick and the Vitara/XL-7. For its part, Suzuki claimed the settlement as a win for its side: Company officials said it would allow them to concentrate on growing Suzuki's business in the United States, including building national sales to 200,000 vehicles by 2007, compared with 58,438 in 2003.

August 8th 2013,
'Five Easy Pieces,' 'Easy Rider' actress Karen Black dies at 74
Karen Black, a versatile actress whose name became virtually synonymous with films that reflected and helped define America in the late 1960s and early 1970s, including “Five Easy Pieces,” died Thursday in Los Angeles. She was 74.
Family spokesman Elliot Mintz confirmed her death.
Diagnosed with ampullary cancer in 2010, Black had sought help from the public earlier this year to cover the cost of her
medical treatment. An appeal by her husband, Stephen Eckelberry, on a crowd-sourcing website raised more than $60,000.
Although she had a small part in Dennis Hopper’s groundbreaking 1969 counterculture movie, “Easy Rider,” Black was best known for her performance in “Five Easy Pieces,” the 1970 film in which she plays the clingy, ultimately abandoned girlfriend of Jack Nicholson’s character, a brooding dropout from an upper-class life who becomes an oilfield roughneck.

She also had roles in the 1974 version of “The Great Gatsby,” “The Day of the Locust” in 1975 and two Robert Altman films, “Nashville” and “Come Back to the Five and Dime, Jimmy Dean, Jimmy Dean.”
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on August 09, 2015, 10:45:03 pm
(http://i875.photobucket.com/albums/ab317/jlgmx/RudolfChristianKarlDiesel.jpg) (http://s875.photobucket.com/user/jlgmx/media/RudolfChristianKarlDiesel.jpg.html)

On this day, August 9th 1898
Rudolf Diesel, of Berlin, Germany, received a U.S. patent for an "Internal Combustion Engine" ("improvements in apparatus for regulating the fuel supply in slow-combustion motors and, in particular to internal combustion engines").
PICTURED: Rudolf Diesel

August 9th 1901
The first rally race in Ireland, sponsored by the Irish Automobile Club, was held on this day as 12 automobiles attempted an organized journey from Dublin to Waterford. A rally takes place over a specified public route with a driver and navigator straining to maintain a breakneck pace from checkpoint to checkpoint. The course is generally kept secret until the race begins. Rally racing became extremely popular after World War II, and weekend rallies became common worldwide. The longest rally took place in 1977, spreading over 19,239 miles from London to Sydney.

August 9th 1918
Following the lead of countries all over the world, the U. S. government ordered automobile production to halt by January 1, 1919, and convert to military production. Factories instead manufactured shells, and the engineering lessons of motor racing produced light, powerful engines for planes. Manufacturers turned out staff cars and ambulances by the hundreds. In fact, World War I has often been described as the war of the machines.

August 9th 1962
The Chrysler Corporation was the forst Auto Company to set an industry milestone by announcing for 1963 a five-year, 50,000-mile warranty covering all of its cars and trucks.

August 9th 2006
The Fiat 500 Club Italia, an organization formed in appreciation of the iconic 500--"Cinquecento" in Italian--car produced by the automaker Fiat (Fabbrica Italiana Automobili Torino), holds what the Guinness Book of World Records will call the world's largest parade of Fiat cars on July 9, 2006, between Villanova d'Albenga and Garlenda, Italy.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on August 10, 2015, 10:41:54 pm
(http://i645.photobucket.com/albums/uu176/MustangMayhem/web/PrinceBorghese_zpsa299e52f.jpg) (http://s645.photobucket.com/user/MustangMayhem/media/web/PrinceBorghese_zpsa299e52f.jpg.html)

On this day, August 10th 1907
Stretching nearly 10,000 miles, this Peking-to-Paris race lasted for 62 days, and was won by the team of Prince Scipione Borghese and Ettore Guizzardi of Italy. Driving like a madman across Asia and Europe, Prince encountered brush fire, got stuck in a swamp, numerous crash and was pulled over by a policeman in Belgium. The policeman refused to believe that the prince was racing, rather than merely speeding.
There were no rules in the race, except that the first car to reach Paris would win the prize of a magnum of Mumm Champagne. The race went without any assistance through country where there were no roads or road-maps. For the race, camels carrying fuel left Peking and set up at stations along the route to give fuel to the racers. The race followed a telegraph route so that the race was well covered in newspapers at the time. Each car had one journalist as a passenger, with the journalists sending stories from the telegraph stations regularly through the race.
PICTURED: Peking to Paris & Prince Borghese

August 10th 1897
C. Harrington Moore and Frederick R. Simms founded Automobile Club of Great Britain and Ireland, later known as the Royal Automobile Club. Its the oldest auto club.

August 10th 1986
The Hungarian Grand Prix, the first such race held behind the Iron Curtain, was won by Nelson Piquet on this day driving the Williams-Honda. Held at the twisty Hungaroring near Budapest, the race has been a mainstay of the racing calendar. Run in the heat of a central European summer, it also holds the distinction of being the only current Grand Prix venue that had never seen a wet race up until the 2006 Hungarian Grand Prix. The first Grand Prix saw 200,000 people spectating even though the tickets were expensive at the time.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on August 11, 2015, 10:19:30 pm
(http://i27.photobucket.com/albums/c197/dabassisst/Chevy1967Camaro.jpg) (http://s27.photobucket.com/user/dabassisst/media/Chevy1967Camaro.jpg.html)

August 11th 1966
The first Chevy Camaro drove out of the manufacturing plant in Norwood, Ohio. The 1967 Camaro coupe was named just weeks before production. General Manager Elliot Estes, when publicly announcing the name saying, "I went into a closet, shut the door and came out with the name." Camaro is actually French for "comrade, pal, or chum." The Camaro was a hit with the public, sporting a base price of only $2,466 for a six-cylinder engine and three-speed manual transmission.
PICTURED: The Chevrolet Camaro

August 11th 1965
The Ford Bronco, intended to compete against Jeep's CJ-5 and International Harvester's Scout, was introduced on this day, feeding the burgeoning four-wheel-drive market. The first Broncos were very simple, without options such as power steering or automatic transmission. The classic Bronco was manufactured for 12 years, with 18,000 produced in 1966 alone. The Bronco's small size (92 in wheelbase) made it popular for off-roading and some other uses, but impractical for such things as towing. The Bronco was Ford's first compact SUV.

1897  -    British children's author, Enid Blyton, is born.
1824  -    New South Wales is constituted a Crown Colony.
1877  -    American astronomer Asaph Hall discovers Phobos and Deimos, the two moons of Mars.
1999  -    Up to 350 million people watch the last total solar eclipse of the twentieth century.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on August 12, 2015, 06:26:26 pm
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On this day, August 12, 1988
Director Francis Ford Coppola's critically acclaimed biopic "Tucker: The Man & His Dream" premieres in U.S. theaters, starring Jeff Bridges as the brash Chicago businessman-turned-car-designer Preston Tucker who shook up 1940s-era Detroit with his streamlined, affordable "Car of Tomorrow."
Remembered by some as a visionary and others as a flamboyant but failed opportunist, Preston Tucker was inspired to build cars by his friendship and pre-World War II business partnership with the race car driver and auto designer Harry Miller. In the renewed prosperity following the war, Tucker believed that Americans were ready to take a chance on a new kind of car, and that he, as an independent entrepreneur, was in the position to take risks that the big, established car companies were unwilling to take. He hired a skilled team including designer Alexander S. Tremulis and chief mechanic John Eddie Offuttas and leased an old Dodge aircraft engine plant in Chicago with plans to design and produce his dream cars.
Based on clay mock-ups built to scale, the Tucker team produced a metal prototype, dubbed the "Tin Goose," in June 1947. The following spring, the teardrop-shaped, 150-horsepower rear-engined Tucker "Torpedo" began rolling off the line, accompanied by the memorable advertising slogan "Don't Let a Tucker Pass You By." Among the Torpedo's innovations were a padded dashboard, a pop-out windshield and an innovative center-mounted headlight.
Despite rave reviews in the automotive press, Tucker's company fell under harsh scrutiny from the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), who investigated the automaker for mail fraud and other charges. The investigation caused a flood of negative publicity for the company, while Tucker struggled to keep producing cars with a fraction of his staff. His efforts were in vain; in March 1949 the company fell into receivership and its assets were seized.
Tucker was ultimately acquitted of all charges, but his dream car would never rise again; only 51 were produced after that initial prototype. Forty-seven of those still exist, and a number of them were used in the making of Coppola's movie, which revived interest in the Tucker '48 and the story of the man behind it. At the time of his death in 1956, Preston Tucker was working on plans for a sports car, the Carioca, to be produced in Brazil.
PICTURED: Henry Ford at a baseball game with Preston Tucker

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August 12th 1901
Charles A. Yont and W.B. Felker completed the first automobile trip to the summit of Pikes Peak, Colorado, on this day, driving an 1899 locomobile steamer. Climbing 14,110 feet to the top was quite a feat for the little steamer. Pikes Peak is well known because of its commanding location and easy accessibility. Today, an ascent to the top is made easy by a graded toll road.

August 12, 1908
Henry Ford's first Model T, affectionately known as the "Tin Lizzie," rolled off the assembly line in Detroit, Michigan. The Model T revolutionized the automotive industry by providing an affordable, reliable car for the average American. Prior to the invention of the Model T, most automobiles were viewed as playthings of the rich. Ford was able to keep the price down by retaining control of all raw materials, as well as his use of new mass production methods. When it was first introduced, the "Tin Lizzie" cost only $850 and seated two people. Though the price fluctuated in the years to come, dipping as low as $290 in 1924, few other changes were ever made to the Model T. Electric lights were introduced in 1915, and an electric starter was introduced as an option in 1919. Eventually, the Model T's design stagnancy cost it its competitive edge, and Ford stopped manufacturing the "Tin Lizzie" in 1927.
The Ford Model T car was designed by Childe Harold Wills and two Hungarian immigrants named Joseph A. Galamb and Eugene Farkas. Also, Harry Love, C. J. Smith, Gus Degner and Peter E. Martin were part of the team.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on August 13, 2015, 11:44:07 pm
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August 13, 1902
The German engineer Felix Wankel, inventor of a rotary engine that will be used in race cars, is born on this day in Lahr, Germany.
Wankel reportedly came up with the basic idea for a new type of internal combustion gasoline engine when he was only 17 years old. In 1924, Wankel set up a small laboratory where he began the research and development of his dream engine, which would be able to attain intake, compression, combustion and exhaust, all while rotating. He brought his knowledge of rotary valves to his work with the German Aeronautical Research Establishment during World War II, and to a leading German motorcycle company, NSU Motorenwerk AG, beginning in 1951. Wankel completed his first design of a rotary-piston engine in 1954, and the first unit was tested in 1957.
In other internal-combustion engines, moving pistons did the work of getting the combustion process started; in the Wankel rotary engine, an orbiting rotor in the shape of a curved equilateral triangle served this purpose. Fewer moving parts created a smoothly performing engine that was lightweight, compact, low-cost and required fewer repairs. After NSU officially announced the completion of the Wankel rotary engine in late 1959, some 100 companies around the world rushed to propose partnerships that would get the engine inside their products. Mazda, the Japanese automaker, signed a formal contract with NSU in July 1961, after receiving approval from the Japanese government.
In an attempt to experiment with the rotary engine and perfect it for use in its vehicles, Mazda formed an RE (Rotary Engine) Research Department in 1963. The Cosmo Sport, which Mazda released in May 1967, was the planet's first dual-rotor rotary engine car. With futuristic styling and superior performance, the Cosmo wowed car enthusiasts worldwide. Mazda began installing rotary engines in its sedans and coupes in 1968, and the vehicles hit the U.S. market in 1971. In the wake of a global oil crisis in 1973-74, Mazda continually worked on improving its rotary engines to improve fuel efficiency, and by the end of that decade its sports cars had become popular in both Europe and the United States In addition to Mazda, a number of other companies licensed the Wankel engine during the 1960s and 1970s, including Daimler-Benz, Alfa Romeo, Rolls Royce, Porsche, General Motors, Suzuki and Toyota.
Meanwhile, Wankel continued his own work with the rotary piston engine, forming his own research establishment in Lindau, Germany, in the mid-1970s. In 1986, he sold the institute for 100 million Deutschmarks (around $41 million) to Daimler Benz, maker of the Mercedes. Wankel filed a new patent as late as 1987; the following year, he died after a long illness.

August 13th 1898
After a visit to the Winton plant with his brother William, James W. Packard purchased a Winton automobile #12. However, the car turned out to be a poor purchase. Dissatisfaction with it would prompt Packard to build his own car and establish the Packard Motor Car Company. Packard Motor Car Company would later be acquired by Studebaker, and lagging sales eventually led to the discontinuation of the Packard in 1958.

August 13, 1907
The first taxicab took to the streets of New York City, marking the beginning of the love-hate relationship between New Yorkers and their cabbies. Motorized taxicabs had actually begun appearing on the streets of Europe in the late 1890s, and their development closely mirrors that of the automobile. The taxi is named after the taximeter, a device that automatically records the distance traveled or time consumed and used to calculate the fare. The term cab originated from the cabriolet, a one-horse carriage let out for hire.

August 13, 1955
Racer Hideo Fukuyama was born on this day in Owase, Japan. A NASCAR racer, he has contributed to the growing popularity of racing in Japan.

1888  -    John Logie Baird, inventor of television, is born
1817  -    Explorer John Oxley discovers the Bogan River in central western New South Wales
1806  -    Captain William Bligh becomes Governor of New South Wales.
1940  -    Three Parliamentary Ministers are killed when their aircraft crashes in Canberra.
1941  -    The Australian Women’s Army Service is formed, to enable more men to serve in fighting units.
1989  -    Thirteen people die in the world's worst hot-air balloon crash, near Alice Springs in central Australia.
World History
1961  -    East Berlin is cut off from the west by the Berlin Wall.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on August 14, 2015, 10:45:34 pm
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On this day, August 14th 1912
As part of a yearlong celebration of its 100th anniversary, a redesigned version of the Michelin Man, Bibendium, the corporate symbol of one of the world's largest tire manufacturers, makes an appearance at the Monterey Historic Automobile Races in Monterey, California, beginning on this day in 1998.
The history of Michelin dates back to 1889, when two brothers named Edouard and Andre Michelin took over a struggling rubber factory in the French industrial city of Clermont-Ferrand. The Michelins later became France's leading producer of pneumatic (inflatable) bicycle tires, and in June 1895 they entered the first car to be equipped with pneumatic tires in the historic Paris-Bordeaux-Paris auto race.
As the story goes, their now-iconic corporate symbol originated with Edouard Michelin's observation that a stack of tires resembled a human figure. A cartoonist named Maurice Rossillon, who signed his work O'Galop, created a series of sketches based on this idea. One depicted a man made of tires raising a glass of champagne and declaring "Nunc est bibendum" ("Now is the time to drink"). The figure's white color mirrored the pale hue of rubber tires at the time, before manufacturers began using carbon black as a preservative around 1912. The symbol subsequently became known as Bibendum (sometimes Bibidendum or Mr. Bib), or the Michelin Man.
The original poster, produced from 1898 to 1914, was followed by a variety of other posters and signs featuring Bibendum smoking a cigar, wearing gladiator garb, riding a bicycle and carrying a load of tires, among other activities. Ubiquitous in France, the logo's fame spread along with the popularity and success of Michelin tires around the world. In 1923, the Michelin Man was redesigned, losing some of his rings to reflect the introduction of wider, low-pressure tires. During the 1980s, he grew slimmer to conform to the healthy-living trend, a process that continued with the 1998 redesign. By that time, Bibendum was one of the oldest and most recognized advertising symbols in the world.
On January 1, 1998, the Michelin Man kicked off his centennial celebration by appearing on his own birthday float at the Tournament of Roses Parade in Pasadena, California. The Monterey Historic Automobile Races, held at the Laguna Seca Raceway in Monterey that August 14-16, welcomed the Michelin Man as part of its own 25th anniversary celebration. Two years later, an international jury of 22 designers, advertising executives and branding experts voted Bibendum the winner of a competition co-sponsored by The Financial Times, proclaiming him the "greatest logo in history."
PICTURED: The original 1898 poster featuring Bibendum

August 14th 1893
The world's first automobile license plates were issued in Paris, France. However, plates were not issued in the United States for a few more years, when they were finally instituted as a safety measure. The city of Boston was the first to require its motorists to hold a license and register their vehicle--the owner would make his own plate with the corresponding registration numbers. The rest of Massachusetts soon followed the trend and began issuing registration plates made of iron and covered with a porcelain enamel.

August 14th 1912
The first double-decker bus appeared on the streets of New York, travelling up and down Broadway. The double-decker originated in London as a two-story horse-drawn omnibus. The vehicles eventually added roof seating. Two-story buses can still be seen in the Big Apple, usually carrying a busload of tourists.

August 14th 1935
Mrs. M.S. Morrow of Whitestone, New York, had the last U.S.-built Rolls-Royce Phantom 1 delivered to her home. Manufactured at the Rolls-Royce plant in Springfield, Massachusetts, the U.S.-built Phantom I made its debut one year after its British counterpart. It featured elegant proportions and well-engineered coachwork, suitable for the successor of the Silver Ghost--the model that earned Rolls-Royce a reputation as "the best car in the world." A total of 1,241 Phantoms were produced.

MISC:
1861  -    William Landsborough organises a relief expedition to find the missing Australian explorers Burke and Wills.
Australian History
1875  -    ‘The Queenslander’ newspaper reports on the first ever game of Association Football, later Soccer, played in Australia.
1963  -    The Yirrkala Bark Petitions are presented to the Australian Parliament, becoming a catalyst to the recognition of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people in Commonwealth law.
World History
1945  -    Japan surrenders in WWII.
2000  -    An operation gets underway to rescue the men stranded in the sunk Russian submarine, the 'Kursk', in the Arctic Circle.
2003  -    North America suffers a power outage affecting over 50 million people.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on August 15, 2015, 09:49:04 pm
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August 15th 1899
Henry Ford resigned as chief engineer at the main Detroit Edison Company plant in order to concentrate on automobile production. On call at all times, Ford had no regular hours and could experiment in his free time. His tinkering was fruitful, for he completed his first horseless carriage by 1896. After turning to automobiles full time, he would revolutionize the automotive industry with the Model T, also known as the "Tin Lizzie."
PICTURED: The Ford Model T

August 15th 1945
World War II gasoline rationing in America ended on this day. Rationing was just one of the special measures taken in the U.S. during wartime. Civilian auto production virtually ceased after the attack on Pearl Harbor, as the U.S. automotive industry turned to war production. Automotive firms made almost $29 billion worth of military materials between 1940 and 1945, including jeeps, trucks, machine guns, carbines, tanks, helmets, and aerial bombs. After the war, rationing ended and the auto industry boomed.

August 15th 1947
On 3 June 1947, Viscount Louis Mountbatten, the last British Governor-General of India, announced the partitioning of the British Indian Empire into a secular India and a Muslim Pakistan. At midnight, on 15 August 1947, India became an independent nation. This is largest mass mobilization of people in India.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on August 16, 2015, 09:47:11 pm
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August 16th 1985
The last episode of the television show Dukes of Hazzard aired on this day, concluding a successful five-year run. Aside from Bo (John Schneider), Luke (Tom Wopat), and Daisy (Catherine Bach), the star of the show was General Lee, a 1969 Dodge Charger. The specially customized car became a favorite of fans as a large portion of each show was devoted to car chases and jumps. Several changes were made to the car, including custom orange paint, new manifolds, a special exhaust system, and a grill guard. Also, the stock horn was replaced by a special horn that played the first 12 notes of "Dixie."
On August 5, 2005, the General Lee made its big-screen debut in the release of the action comedy The Dukes of Hazard. The "Duke Boys," Bo (Seann William Scott) and Luke (Johnny Knoxville) Duke, elude authorities in the famed car while trying to help Daisy (Jessica Simpson) and moonshine running Uncle Jesse (Willie Nelson) save the family farm from being destroyed by Hazzard County's corrupt commissioner Boss Hogg (Burt Reynolds).

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August 16th 1984
After close to 30 hours of deliberation, a jury of six men and six women unanimously acquits the former automaker John Z. DeLorean of eight counts of drug trafficking in Los Angeles, California.
A Detroit native and the son of an autoworker, DeLorean began working for the Packard Motor Company as an engineer in 1952. He rose quickly at Packard and later at General Motors (GM), where he moved in 1956. At GM, he managed both the Pontiac and Chevrolet divisions before becoming a vice president in 1972. DeLorean's flashy style and self-promotional ability distinguished him in the staid culture of the auto industry, while his ambition and appetite for innovation seemed never to be satisfied: He claimed to hold more than 200 patents and was credited with such developments as the lane-change turn signal, overhead cam-engine and racing stripes.
In 1975, DeLorean left GM to found the DeLorean Motor Company and follow his dream of building a high-performance and futuristic but still economical sports car. With funds from the British government, DeLorean opened his car plant near Belfast in Northern Ireland in 1978 to manufacture his eponymous dream car: Officially the DMC-12 but often called simply the DeLorean, it had an angular stainless-steel body, a rear-mounted engine and distinctive "gull-wing" doors that opened upward. After skyrocketing production costs caused the DMC-12's price tag to top $25,000 (at a time when the average car cost just $10,000) sales were insufficient to keep the company afloat. Following an investigation into suspected financial irregularities, the British government announced the closing of the DeLorean Motor Company on October 19, 1982. That same day, John DeLorean was arrested and charged with conspiring to obtain and distribute $24 million worth of cocaine.
The prosecution's seemingly airtight case centered on a videotaped conversation about the drug deal between DeLorean and undercover FBI agents. If convicted, DeLorean faced up to 60 years in prison. DeLorean's defense team argued that he had been entrapped, or lured into a situation that made it look like he had committed a crime. On August 6, 1984, the jury issued its surprising acquittal verdict. Over the next 15 years, DeLorean saw his dream car shoot to Hollywood stardom (in the "Back to the Future" film trilogy) even as he battled nearly 40 legal cases relating to his failed auto company. He declared bankruptcy in 1999 and died in 2005, at the age of 80.

August 16th 1937
Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts, became the first school to institute graduate study courses in traffic engineering and administration.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on August 18, 2015, 12:36:42 am
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On this day, August 17th 1915
Charles F. Kettering, co-founder of Dayton Engineering Laboratories Company (DELCO) in Dayton, Ohio, is issued U.S. Patent No. 1,150,523 for his "engine-starting device"--the first electric ignition device for automobiles
In the early years of the automobile, drivers used iron hand cranks to start the internal combustion process that powered the engines on their cars. In addition to requiring great hand and arm strength, this system was not without certain risks: If the driver forgot to turn his ignition off before turning the crank, the car could backfire or roll forward, as at the time most vehicles had no brakes. Clearly a better system was needed, and in 1911 Cadillac head Henry M. Leland gave Charles Kettering the task of developing one.
Before founding DELCO with his partner Edward Deeds in 1909, Kettering had worked at the National Cash Register Company, where he helped develop the first electric cash register. He drew on this experience when approaching his work with automobiles. Just as the touch of a button had started a motor that opened the drawer of the cash register, Kettering would eventually use a key to turn on his self-starting motor. The self-starter was introduced in the 1912 Cadillac, patented by Kettering in 1915, and by the 1920s would come standard on nearly every new automobile. By making cars easier and safer to operate, especially for women, the self-starting engine caused a huge jump in sales, and helped foster a fast-growing automobile culture in America.
United Motors Corporation (later General Motors) bought DELCO in 1916, and Kettering worked as vice president and director of research at GM from 1920 to 1947. Other important auto-related innovations developed during Kettering's tenure were quick-drying automotive paint, spark plugs, leaded gasoline, shock absorbers, the automatic transmission, four-wheel brakes, the diesel engine and safety glass. He helped develop the refrigerant Freon, used in refrigerators and air conditioners, and the Kettering home in Dayton was the first in the country to be air-conditioned. In the realm of medicine, Kettering created a treatment for venereal disease and an incubator for premature infants, and in 1945 he and longtime General Motors head Alfred P. Sloan established the Sloan-Kettering Institute for Cancer Research in New York City. Kettering died in 1958.

August 17th 1890
Ralph R. Teetor, inventor of the cruise control, was born in Hagerstown, Indiana. A mechanical engineer with a degree from the University of Pennsylvania, Teetor began working at the Light Inspection Car Company. This family business eventually evolved into the Perfect Circle Company, of which Teetor became president. Teetor had a knack for invention and continued to work on new ideas after his retirement. His accomplishments are even more remarkable because he was blinded at the age of six, but never let his handicap keep him from his dream of becoming an inventor.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on August 18, 2015, 09:48:35 pm
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August 18th 1940
Walter Percy Chrysler, the founder of the American automotive corporation that bears his name, dies on this day in 1940 at his estate in Great Neck, New York, after suffering a cerebral hemorrhage. He was 65 years old.
Born in 1875 in Kansas, Chrysler was the son of a locomotive engineer; he began working himself when he was 17, earning seven cents an hour as an apprentice in a railroad machine shop. He worked his way up quickly, becoming a plant manager for the American Locomotive Company by the time he was 33 years old. In the early years of the automobile, Chrysler became fascinated: At a 1905 automobile show in Chicago, he borrowed $5,000 to purchase his own car, taking it apart and putting it back together again before taking a single ride. In 1911, Chrysler accepted a job as a manager at the Buick Motor Company at half his former salary. Within five years, he rose to become the company's president, and to make Buick into the strongest unit of William C. Durant's General Motors (GM).
Durant and Chrysler clashed over policy, however, and Chrysler left GM in 1920 to work with the Willys-Overland Company and with Maxwell Motors Company. A car designed by Chrysler and featuring a high-compression engine sold $50 million worth in its first year replaced the existing Maxwell car. In 1925, he emerged as president of the Chrysler Corporation, consisting of the former Maxwell and Chalmers car companies. After acquiring Dodge in 1928 and introducing the Plymouth that same year, the Chrysler Corporation would go on to become one of the Big Three of American automakers, alongside Ford and GM.
Aside from automobiles, Chrysler was chiefly known for financing the 77-story Art Deco skyscraper in midtown Manhattan (at the corner of Lexington Avenue and 42nd Street) that bears his name. To complete the distinctive ornamentation around the spire of the building, its architects used elements from Chrysler's automobiles, including radiator caps, hubcaps and stainless steel that evoked the chrome shine on a car. When it was completed in 1930, the Chrysler building was the tallest building in the world and the first manmade structure to top 1,000 feet. Surpassed by the Empire State Building a year later, the building remains one of New York City's most distinctive skyscrapers.
PICTURED: One of the chrome features on the Chrysler building in Manhattan

August 18th 1905
Newell S. Wright, an attorney, filed to register the Cadillac crest as a trademark. The insignia has adorned Cadillac's luxury car for almost a century.

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August 18th 1937
The Toyota Motor Company, Ltd., began as a division of the Toyota Automatic Loom Works, was established on this day. The company underwent huge expansion in the 1960s and 1970s, exporting its smaller, more fuel-efficient cars to countless foreign markets. During this period, Toyota also acquired Hino Motors, Ltd., Nippondenso Company, Ltd., and Daihitsu Motor Company Ltd. Toyota has been Japan's largest automobile manufacturer for several decades.
PICTURED: A replica 1936 Model AA. Japan

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Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on August 19, 2015, 09:57:00 pm
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On this day, August 19th 1909
In front of some 12,000 spectators, automotive engineer Louis Schwitzer wins the two-lap, five-mile inaugural race at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway in Indianapolis, Indiana.
Conceived by local businessmen as a testing facility for Indiana's growing automobile industry, the Indianapolis Motor Speedway would later become famous as the home to the now world-famous Indianapolis 500 race, which was first held in 1911. In that inaugural race, Schwitzer (then the chief engineer at Stoddard-Dayton) drove a stripped-down Stoddard Dayton touring car with a four-cylinder engine. He achieved an average speed of 57.4 mph on the new track, which was then covered in macadam, or crushed pieces of rock layered and bound by tar. Later, the speedway would be covered with 3.2 million paving bricks, which earned it its enduring nickname, "The Brickyard."
Born in Silesia in northwestern Austria in 1881, Schwitzer earned advanced degrees in electrical and mechanical engineering before immigrating to America around the turn of the century. His first job in the auto industry was with Pierce Arrow, as an engineer, working on one of the very first six-cylinder engines; he then began working for Canada Cycle and Motor Company, designing the Russell motor car. There, he met the prosperous automaker Howard Marmon (of the Marmon Motor Car Company), and would later earn lasting fame as the designer of the famous "Marmon Yellow Jacket" engine, which powered the vehicle of Ray Harroun, winner of the first Indianapolis 500 in 1911.
After leaving racing, Schwitzer remained active in the sport's development, joining the Indianapolis Motor Speedway Technical Committee in 1912 (he was its chairman from 1919 through 1945). He served in the United States Army Motor Transport Corps during World War I, then returned to Indianapolis to start his own business, which later became Schwitzer-Cummins. After developing improved automotive cooling systems and water pumps, Schwitzer began producing superchargers for gasoline and diesel engines, which helped both truck and boat engines produce increased horsepower. He then moved on to so-called "turbochargers," the first of which was introduced on a Cummins diesel-powered racing car which won the pole position for the 1952 Indianapolis 500.
In 1965, Schwitzer suffered a stroke while riding a horse on his farm. He was paralyzed, and for a time lost his ability to speak English, reverting to Hungarian. He died in 1967.
To honor Schwitzer's legacy, the Society of Professional Engineers now presents an individual or group involved with the Indianapolis 500 with the annual Louis Schwitzer Award for Engineering Excellence.
PICTURED: Louis Schwitzer (center) led both laps, and won by a 150-foot margin

August 19th 1927
Henry and Edsel Ford drove the fifteen millionth Model T off the assembly line at the Highland Park plant in Michigan, officially ending Model T production. Production in England ended on August 19; in Ireland on December 31. After revolutionizing the automobile market, sales of the Model T had started to falter due to its failure to keep up with the competition. Total world Model T production: 15,458,781.

August 19th 1958
The production of the elegant Packard line came to a halt. Studebaker-Packard attributed the decision to lagging luxury car sales, but many Packard fans were disgruntled by the decision, which came shortly after Packard's merge with Studebaker. Many wondered why Packard, with its reputation for high-quality cars and knowledgeable management would join with the debt-ridden Studebaker Company. Studebaker management assumed the company reins after the merger, not Packard.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on August 20, 2015, 09:52:38 pm
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On this day, August 20th 2004
83 tow trucks roll through the streets of Wenatchee, Washington, in an event arranged by the Washington Tow Truck Association (WTTA). "The Guinness Book of World Records" dubbed it the world's largest parade of tow trucks.
According to the International Towing and Recovery Hall of Fame and Museum in Chattanooga, Tennessee, the first tow truck was the invention of a Chattanooga native named Ernest Holmes, who helped his friend retrieve his Model T Ford after the car slid into a creek. Holmes had previously assembled a system consisting of three poles, a pulley and a chain, all connected to the frame of a 1913 Cadillac. Holmes soon patented his invention, and began manufacturing the equipment to sell to garages and other interested customers out of a small shop on Chattanooga's Market Street. The Holmes brand went on to earn an international reputation for quality in the towing industry.
The WTTA organized the August 2004 tow-truck parade as part of its annual Tow Show & Road-E-O event. Wenatchee's tow-truck world record came under assault from at least two quarters in 2008. In Hampton Beach, New Hampshire, that May 18, more than 250 tow trucks took part in a single-file parade organized by the New Hampshire Towing Association (NHTA). According to an article in The Hampton Union newspaper, all kinds of trucks--"Flatbeds, wheel-hook tow trucks, massive, 72-ton big-rig wreckers"--participated in the parade, which was followed by a driving skills competition and a tow-truck "beauty" contest. Rene Fortin, president of the NHTA, said that his organization had unofficially broken Wenatchee's record in 2005 with a parade of 235 trucks, but as the parade didn't fit Guinness' long list of requirements, it hadn't been accepted. World records aside, Fortin told The Hampton Union, the central goal of the parade was to revamp the image of the towing industry: "People don't often like towers, so this is our chance to show our good side."
On September 20, 2008, the Metropolitan New York Towing Association threw its own hat into the ring. Two hundred and ninety-two tow trucks, including flatbeds, wreckers and 50-ton rotators, left Shea Stadium in Queens (previously the home of the New York Mets, the baseball park has since been demolished to make way for the Mets' new Citi Field) and traveled along the Van Wyck Expressway and the Belt Parkway before ending up at an abandoned airport tarmac at Floyd Bennett Field in Brooklyn. There, the trucks parked in a formation that spelled out the words "New York."

August 20th 1946
World War II civilian truck restrictions were lifted in the U.S. Truck restrictions were only the beginning of special regulations during the war. Civilian auto production virtually ceased after the attack on Pearl Harbor as the U.S. automotive industry turned to war production, and gas rationing began in 1942.

August 20th 1991
The Mazda Motor Corporation of Japan announced that it planned to enter the luxury car market in 1994 with the Amati. Several other high-end brands from Japan had already been introduced: Lexus, Infiniti, and Acura. But the plan never took off.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on August 21, 2015, 09:44:25 pm
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August 21st 1909
Barney Oldfield broke five world records on this day, pushing his Benz to new speeds on the Indianapolis Motor Speedway. However, the record-breaking feat was marred by tragedy. Three other drivers died on the same track as 20,000 spectators watched in disbelief, and the three-day meet was ended early.
PICTURED: Barney Oldfield in his 1907 CHRISTIE. 20 Liter V4

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August 21st 1897
Ransom Eli Olds of Lansing, Michigan, founds Olds Motors Works--which will later become Oldsmobile--on August 21, 1897.
Born in Geneva, Ohio, in 1864, Olds went to work for his family's machine-repair and engine-building business in 1883. In 1896, Olds completed his first gasoline-powered vehicle, and the following year he founded Olds Motor Works with financial backing from Samuel L. Smith, who had made his fortune in lumber. After the company moved from Lansing to Detroit in 1900, a fire destroyed all of its cars except its small, one-cylinder curved-dash model. Light, reliable and relatively powerful, the curved-dash Oldsmobile (as Olds had renamed his company) became a commercial sensation after appearing at the New York Auto Show in 1901. Olds returned to Lansing in 1902 and began large-scale production of the car.
The curved-dash Oldsmobile was the first American car to be produced using the progressive assembly-line system, and the first to become a commercial success. Olds soon split with Smith and his board of directors over the future direction of the company, however: Olds wanted to continue the focus on smaller cars, while the others favored the production of larger, more expensive automobiles. In 1904, Olds left to found the Reo Motor Car Company (for his initials, R.E.O.). After his departure, Oldsmobile struggled, and in 1908 it was swallowed up by the new General Motors (GM) conglomerate.
By the 1920s, Oldsmobile's six- and eight-cylinder models sat solidly in the middle of GM's lineup--less expensive than Buick or Cadillac, but still comfortably ahead of Chevrolet. Oldsmobile survived the Great Depression years and earned a reputation as GM's "experimental" division, introducing the so-called "safety automatic transmission" in 1938, a precursor to 1940's "Hydra-Matic," which was the first successful fully automatic transmission. The 135-horsepower "Rocket" engine, introduced in the new 88 model in 1949, made Oldsmobile one of the world's top-performing cars. In 1961, with the release of the upscale compact F-85 (powered by a V-8 engine), Oldsmobile launched its Cutlass, which would become one of the industry's longest-running and most successful names. The Cutlass Supreme would reign as the best-selling American car for much of the 1970s and early 1980s.
In the 1980s, however, Oldsmobile sales declined, and in 1992 a story in The Washington Post--denied by both Oldsmobile and GM--claimed that GM had seriously considered killing the brand. In August 1997, Oldsmobile celebrated the 100th anniversary of its founding. Despite efforts to compete with foreign imports with smaller, more fuel-efficient models like the Aurora, Intrigue, Alero and Bravada, Oldsmobile continued to struggle, and in 2004 GM finally discontinued the brand. At the time of its demise, Oldsmobile was America's oldest continuously operating automaker.
PICTURED: the Liberty engine with distinctive 45 degree angles between the banks used in WW1 designed by Ransom Olds

August 21st 1903
America's first transcontinental auto race, stretching from New York City to San Francisco, was completed on this day. The race was finished by Tom Fetch and M.C. Karrup in two Model F Packards, travelling an average of 80 miles per day for 51 days. They arrived covered in mud and exhausted. Along the way, the two travelers and their motorcars generated quite a bit of interest as they drove through many rural areas where automobiles were a rare sight. In one instance, a couple of Nebraska farmers, suspicious of the vehicles, threatened Fetch and Karrup with shotguns.

August 21st 1947
Ettore Bugatti, the French car manufacturer, died on this day. Born on September 15, 1881, in Brescia, Italy, Bugatti specialized in racing and luxury automobiles, and his factory in Alsace turned out some of the most expensive cars ever produced. The best-known Bugatti car was Type 41, known as the "Golden Bugatti" or "La Royale." It was produced in the 1920s, meticulously constructed and inordinately expensive--only a few were ever built. After Bugatti's death, the firm failed to survive, at least in part because Ettore's eldest son and chosen successor died before Bugatti himself.

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Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on August 22, 2015, 07:35:12 pm
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On this day, August 22nd 1902
President Theodore Roosevelt became the first U.S. chief executive to ride in an automobile. His first drive took place in Hartford, Connecticut, adding yet another first to Roosevelt's presidential accomplishments. He was also the first president to entertain an African-American in the White House. With a reputation for aggressiveness, righteousness, and pride, Roosevelt was not the kind of man to fear uncharted waters; he also wrote almost 40 books, cleared the building of the Panama Canal, and won a Nobel Peace Prize for his contributions toward the resolution of the Russo-Japanese War.

August 22nd 1647
Denis Papin, inventor of the piston steam engine (Steam digester), was born in Blois, France. This British physicist, who also invented the pressure cooker, got the first seedlings of an idea when he noticed the enclosed steam in the cooker raising the lid. Why couldn't one use steam to drive a piston? Though he never actually constructed an engine, nor had a practical design, his sketches were improved on by others and led to the development of the steam engine.

August 22nd 1901
The Cadillac Company, named after eighteenth century French explorer Antoine de la Mothe Cadillac, founder of the city of Detroit, was established. Henry Leland, a former mechanic and precision machinist, founded the company that would come to be known as the maker of America's luxury car. The Cadillac reached its height of popularity during the 1950s. The Cadillac Debutante, which debuted at the Waldorf-Astoria, was based on the play The Solid Gold Cadillac. Cadillac sales decreased during the 1970s as the American car market experienced an influx of smaller imports, but luxury car sales, Cadillac included, have rebounded in recent years.

August 22nd 1962
President Charles De Gaulle of France survives one of several assassination attempts against him thanks to the superior performance of the presidential automobile: The sleek, aerodynamic Citroen DS 19, known as "La Deesse" (The Goddess).
When the Citroen DS made its sensational debut at the 1955 Paris Motor Show, its streamlined, understated form stood out among the tail-finned and chrome-covered cars popular in that era. A far cry from Citroen's famous 2CV (dubbed the "ugly duckling"), the DS had a 1.9-liter engine and power-assisted gearshift, clutch, steering and brake systems. Its crowning aspect, however, was a hydropneumatic suspension system that Citroen would become known for, which automatically adjusted the height of the car to keep it level and enable the driver to maintain control more easily. Citroen took 12,000 orders for the DS by the end of that first day, and it soon became known as the preferred mode of transportation among France's wealthy and most powerful citizens.
In August 1962, a group called the OAS (Secret Army Organization in English) plotted an assassination attempt on President De Gaulle, who they believed had betrayed France by giving up Algeria (in northern Africa) to Algerian nationalists. Near dusk on August 22, 1962, De Gaulle and his wife were riding from the Elysee Palace to Orly Airport. As his black Citroen DS sped along the Avenue de la Liberation in Paris at 70 miles per hour, 12 OAS gunmen opened fire on the car. A hail of 140 bullets, most of them coming from behind, killed two of the president's motorcycle bodyguards, shattered the car's rear window and punctured all four of its tires. Though the Citroen went into a front-wheel skid, De Gaulle's chauffeur was able to accelerate out of the skid and drive to safety, all thanks to the car's superior suspension system. De Gaulle and his wife kept their heads down and came out unharmed.
Frederick Forsyth dramatized the events of that August in his best-selling novel "The Day of the Jackal," later made into a film. In 1969, De Gaulle--knowing that he owed his life to that Citroen--attempted to prevent the outright sale of France's premier auto manufacturer (owned by the Michelin family of tire fame) to the Italian automaker Fiat by limiting the stake Fiat could buy to 15 percent. In 1975, to avert potential bankruptcy, the French government funded Citroen's sale to a group that included its French rival, Peugeot; the result was PSA Peugeot Citroen SA, formed in 1976.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on August 23, 2015, 10:50:40 pm
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On this day, August 23rd 1922
A 23-litre car named "Chitty Chitty Bang Bang" won the first Southsea Speed Carnival in 1922, driven by Count Louis Zborowski at 73.1mph. It is to be noted that the name "Chitty Chitty Bang Bang" reappeared much later in Ian Fleming's book about a magical car, and again in the 1968 movie of the same name starring Dick Van Dyke.

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August 23rd 1904
Harold D. Weed of Canastota, New York, is issued U.S. Patent No. 768,495 for his "Grip-Tread for Pneumatic Tires," a non-skid tire chain to be used on automobiles in order to increase traction on roads slick with mud, snow or ice.
At the time, Weed worked for the Marvin and Casler Company, a Canastota machine shop that made a range of products including automobile engines, name plate machines, automatic palm readers and motion picture equipment. He reportedly drew inspiration for his tire chain from the habit of some local motorists who wrapped rope around their tires to increase traction on muddy country roads. In his patent, Weed said that his invention aimed to "provide a flexible and collapsible grip or tread composed entirely of chains linked together and applied to the sides and periphery of the tire and held in place solely by the inflation of the tire, and which is reversible." The tire chain was assembled around a tire when it was partially deflated; after hooks on either end of the chain were fastened, the tire was then reinflated. Weed's tire chains were soon found to work just as well on snow and ice as on mud.
In 1908, in a promotional effort, representatives of the Weed Chain Tire Grip Company challenged the master magician Harry Houdini to escape from a prison created by their product. According to "The Secret Life of Houdini," by William Kalush and Larry Sloman, Houdini was enmeshed in a series of looped, locked tire chains, then chained into two steel-rimmed automobile tires. At one point during the escape, the chains had to be moved lower, as Houdini was turning blue from one of them binding his throat; he was then able to release himself. Houdini performed this famous stunt during a weeklong engagement at Hammerstein's Theatre in New York.
Harry Weed eventually sold his tire chain patents to the American Chain and Cable Company, the successor to the Weed Chain Tire Grip Co. After serving as a lieutenant colonel in the U.S. Army during World War I, he held patents for devices related to the tire chain and was honored by the Army Ordnance Committee for his work in designing bomb-release mechanisms and machine gun synchronizing devices for use in aircraft. He died in Palm Beach, Florida, in 1961, at the age of 89.

August 23rd 1913
Automobiles were legally allowed to enter Yosemite National Park, California, for the first time; marked huge change in national park system.

August 23rd 1967
Georges Berger, a Belgian racing driver was killed racing a Porsche 911 in the 1967 Marathon de la Route at Nürburgring.
He raced a Gordini Type 15/16 in his two World Championship Formula One Grands Prix.

August 23rd 1987
Didier Pironi, a racing driver from France who decided to take powerboat racing crashed his powerboat near the Isle of Wight. The accident also took the life of his two crew members, journalist Bernard Giroux and his old friend Jean-Claude Guenard.
During his career he competed in 72 Formula One World Championship Grands Prix, mostly driving for Tyrrell and Ferrari, and won the 24 Hours of Le Mans in 1978 driving a Renault Alpine A442B.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on August 25, 2015, 06:53:35 pm
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On this day, August 24th 1958
Maria Teresa de Filippis--the first woman ever to compete in Formula One racing--drives a Maserati in the Portuguese Grand Prix at Oporto on August 24, 1958.
In Formula One (also known as F1), the highest class of automobile racing sanctioned by the Federation Internationale de l'Automobile, drivers compete in single-seat, open-wheel vehicles capable of speeds above 230 mph and typically built by large automakers, or "constructors" in racing parlance. The F1 season consists of a series of events known as Grand Prix races; since 1950, the circuit has awarded a driver's world championship title, and since 1958, it has given one for the top constructor. From 1958 to 2009, only five women have ever competed in F1 racing; in 1980, the South African driver Desire Wilson became the only female driver to win a F1 race, at Britain's Brands Hatch circuit.
Born in Naples, Italy, in 1926, De Filippis got her start racing small Fiat 500s when she was around 22. As she told the British newspaper The Observer during a 2006 interview, she began her racing career after two of her brothers made a bet with each other that she couldn't drive fast. De Fillipis won her first race at Salerno-Cava dei Tirreni in a 500. After she finished second in the 1954 Italian sports car championship, the Italian automaker Maserati hired her as a works driver, testing their high-performance cars, and in 1958 she became the first woman to compete in a Formula One world championship race.
De Filippis raced in three Grand Prix events for Maserati that year, posting her best finish--10th place, two laps behind the winner--in her first race, the Belgian Grand Prix. At Oporto that August 24, she was forced to quit the race due to engine troubles. The British driver Stirling Moss, driving a Vanwall, won the event after his countryman Mike Hawthorn (the year's eventual world champion) spun out and stalled his Ferrari and was forced to push-start it in order to get back in the race.
De Filippis used the same Maserati that the great Argentine driver Juan Manuel Fangio drove when he won his then-record fifth world championship title in 1957. As De Filippis told The Observer, Fangio had warned her of her tendency to drive too fast, to take risks: "I wasn't frightened of speed, you see, and that's not always a good thing. He worried I might have an accident." As it turned out, De Filippis quit the sport the following year and started a family. In 1979, she joined the International Club of Former F1 Grand Prix Drivers; she became its vice president in 1997, and was also president of the Maserati Club.
August 24th 1832
Nicolas Carnot, a pioneer in the development of the internal combustion engine, died in Paris at age 36. The import of advanced British engines dismayed Carnot, for he saw how far behind French design had fallen. However, his own work would change that. He would go on to develop the Carnot cycle and Carnot efficiency, improving the efficiency of all types of engines.

August 24th 1945
The last Cadillac-built M-24 tank was produced on this day, ending the company's World War II effort. Civilian auto production virtually ceased after the attack on Pearl Harbor, as the U.S. automotive industry turned to war production. Between 1940 and 1945, automotive firms made almost $29 billion worth of military materials, including jeeps, trucks, machine guns, carbines, tanks, helmets, and aerial bombs.
August 24th 1967
The famous industrialist Henry J. Kaiser passed away in Honolulu, Hawaii, at the age of 85 on this day. Along with a construction company, a shipyard, an aircraft company, and an aluminum manufacturing plant, Kaiser owned an automobile company. Co-founded with Joseph W. Frazer in 1945, the company produced only a few models before production was ceased in 1954.

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On this day, August 25, 1991
The German race car driver Michael Schumacher makes his Formula One (Europe's top racing circuit) debut in the Belgian Grand Prix at Spa Francorchamps.
Schumacher was born in Hurth-Hermulhein, West Germany, in 1969. His father managed a go-kart track in the town of Kerpen, and young Michael won the German junior karting championship in 1984 and 1985 and the German and European titles in 1987. He left school to work as a car mechanic and in 1988 began racing on the Formula Three circuit, which features less-powerful vehicles than those of Formula One. After winning the German Formula Three championship in 1990, Schumacher made the move to the big time: The next August, he made his Formula One debut at Spa, racing for Irish businessman Eddie Jordan's team.
Though Schumacher retired during the first lap of that first Grand Prix (as individual Formula One events are called) with clutch problems, he drew the attention of Benetton, another Formula One constructor owned by the same family as the international clothing store chain. Benetton soon snapped up the rising young star (he and Jordan had not signed a contract), beginning a successful five-year collaboration. Schumacher won the drivers' world championship, Formula One's top honor, for the team in 1994--a season marred by the death of the Brazilian driver Ayrton Senna in the San Marino Grand Prix and accusations of technical irregularities against the Benetton team--and 1995.
Schumacher signed with the venerable Ferrari team before the 1996 season. Things began well, despite an incident in 1997 when Schumacher tried in vain to ram the car of his top rival, Jacques Villeneuve, off the road during the final race, at Jerez in Spain; he was stripped of his second-place finish as punishment. After crashing his Ferrari during the 1999 British Grand Prix--he emerged with a broken leg, the only injury of his career to date--Schumacher won the 2000 drivers' world championship (Ferrari's first since 1979). He went on to win the title another four years in a row, racking up nine Grand Prix wins in 2001 and 11 in 2002. His sixth drivers' title in 2003 broke the previous record, held by the Argentine driver Juan Manual Fangio. In 2004, Schumacher won 13 of 18 total Grand Prix races held that year, easily securing his seventh championship.
At the age of 41, still at the top of his game, Schumacher retired from racing. During his final season in 2006, he won seven Grand Prix races, bringing his career total to 91, and making him by far the winningest driver in Formula One history (his closest rival, the French driver Alain Prost, had 51).
August 25th 1910
Walden W. Shaw and John D. Hertz formed the Walden W. Shaw Livery Company, which later became the Yellow Cab Company. In 1907, the Shaw Livery Company purchased a number of small taxicabs equipped with meters. The first yellow cab (the Model J) hit the streets in 1915, and its distinctive color became the company's trademark. The company was also the first to use automatic windshield wipers, ultrahigh frequency two-way radios, and passenger seat belts.

August 25th 1910
Horch Automobil-Werke GmbH forced to change company name due to legal dispute over Horch trademark. It was renamed Audi Automobilwerke GmbH. Audi in Latin translation to Horch.

August 25th 1921
Six-Cylinder Love, the first full-length play based on the motor car, opened at the Sam H. Harris Theatre in New York City. The play traces a family's purchase of an expensive car and their resulting woes. A silent film version of the play was produced in 1923, and a talkie starring Spencer Tracy followed in 1931.

August 25, 1954
The United States Postal Service began issuing a Classic Cars booklet of stamps. The special edition stamps, designed by Ken Dallison, featured five different designs: a 1928 Locomobile, a 1929 Pierce-Arrow, a 1931 Cord, a 1932 Packard, and a 1935 Dusenberg.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on August 26, 2015, 10:57:42 pm
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On this day, August 26th 1940
The LaSalle, manufactured by Cadillac, was discontinued after 14 years of production. Intended to boost profits during a lag in luxury car sales, the LaSalle was a moderately priced alternative to the opulence of the Cadillac. The company chose to market the car under a new name so as not to lessen the value of the Cadillac name.
PICTURED: 1934 LaSalle Convertible Coupe

August 26th 1957
The Ford Motor Company rolled out the first Edsel automobile. The car was named after Henry Ford's son, Edsel Bryant Ford. 110,847 Edsels were built before the company pulled the plug after three years due to lack of sales and negative press. Ironically, market research conducted just a few years earlier had pointed to the Edsel's success; consumers had said they wanted more horsepower, tailfins, three-tone paint jobs, and wraparound windshields. However, by 1957, fickle consumers had changed their minds, and despite a relatively low price, Edsel sales lagged. Today, due to the limited number produced, the Edsel has become a collector's item.

August 26th 1959
The British Motor Corporation (BMC) launches its newest car, the small, affordable–at a price tag of less than $800–Mark I Mini. The diminutive Mini went on to become one of the best-selling British cars in history.
The story behind the Mini began in August 1956, when President Gamal Abdel Nasser of Egypt nationalized the Suez Canal in response to the American and British decision to withdraw funding for a new dam's construction due to Egypt's Communist ties. The international crisis that followed led to fuel shortages and gasoline rationing across Europe. Sir Leonard Lord, head of BMC--formed by the merger of automakers Austin and Morris in 1952--wanted to produce a British alternative to the tiny, fuel-efficient German cars that were cornering the market after the Suez Crisis. He turned to Alec Issigonis, a Turkish immigrant who as chief engineer at Morris Motors had produced the Morris Minor, a teapot-shaped cult favorite that had nonetheless never seriously competed with the Volkswagen "Beetle" or Fiat's 500 or Cinquecento.
Mini development began in 1957 and took place under a veil of secrecy; the project was known only as ADO (for Austin Drawing Office) 15. After about two and a half years–a relatively short design period–the new car was ready for the approval of Lord, who immediately signed off on its production.
Launched on August 26, 1959, the new front-wheel-drive car was priced at around $800 and marketed under two names: Austin Seven and Morris Mini-Minor. The two vehicles were the same except for each had a different radiator grille, and by 1962 both were known simply as the Mini. Issigonis' design, including an engine mounted sideways to take up less space, had created a surprising amount of space for a small-bodied car: At only 10 feet long, the Mini could sit four adults, and had a trunk big enough for a reasonable amount of luggage. With a starting price of around $800, the Mini was truly a "people's car," but its popularity transcended class, and it was also used by affluent Londoners as a second car to easily maneuver in city traffic.
By the time production was halted in 2000, 5.3 million Minis had been produced. Around that same time, a panel of 130 international journalists voted the Mini "European Car of the Century." A high-performance version of the Mini engineered by the race car builder John Cooper had first been released in 1961; known as the Mini Cooper, it became one of the favorites of Mini enthusiasts worldwide. In 2003, the Mini Cooper was updated for a new generation of buyers by the German automaker BMW.

August 26th 1985
The Yugo, manufactured in Yugoslavia, was first introduced to the U.S. market. Originally marketed as a lower-cost alternative, the Yugo quickly became infamous for its poor quality of construction.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on August 27, 2015, 07:06:07 pm
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On this day, August 27th 1938
Captain George E. T. Eyston breaks his own automobile land speed record at the Bonneville Salt Flats in Utah, raising the mark to 345.49 mph.
Located approximately 80 miles west of Salt Lake City, Utah, the Bonneville Salt Flats were formed by the evaporation of a huge Ice Age-era lake. Near the end of the 19th century, the flats hosted a bicycle competition arranged as a publicity stunt by the publishing magnate William Randolph Hearst. Then, in 1914, the daredevil racer Teddy Tezlaff drove his Blitzen Benz vehicle at 141.73 mph to set an unofficial land speed record at the flats. Bonneville truly took off as a racing destination thanks to the efforts of Utah native Ab Jenkins, who set several endurance speed records there beginning in 1925, driving a Studebaker dubbed the Mormon Meteor. In 1935, the British racing legend Sir Malcolm Campbell set a world land speed record of 301.126 mph in his famous Bluebird, and since then the flats became the standard course for land speed record attempts.
Drivers who attempted to set the world land speed record, or the fastest speed traveled on land in a wheeled vehicle, had to complete two mile-long runs in opposite directions, within a space of sixty minutes. George Eyston, an engineer and retired British Army captain, had set the previous record of 311.42 mph at Bonneville in November 1936. On his August 27 run, he hit 347.49 mph on the outbound trip and 343.51 on the return; his new record, 345.49, was the average of the two. As Eyston told the press at the time, he did not even bring his vehicle, the Thunderbolt, to full throttle to achieve the record-setting speed: "I had a very comfortable ride and not once did I feel there was any danger….I wanted to be certain I set a new record, but I also wanted to be sure that the car and I got through in good shape."
By September 1938, Eyston had raised the land speed record to 357.5 mph. In a lecture he delivered that month, Eyston described his built-for-speed Thunderbolt as having two 2,000-horsepower Rolls Royce motors geared together; the vehicle measured 35 feet long and weighed nearly 7 tons. One of Eyston's rivals, John Cobb, set a new world land speed record of 394.194 mph in 1947 at Bonneville in a car with a piston engine; thereafter, most record holders have driven jet- or rocket-powered vehicles. In October 1997, a twin turbofan jet-powered car dubbed ThrustSSC achieved 763.035 mph (the first supersonic world land speed record) over one mile at Nevada's Black Rock Desert.

August 27th 1904
Newport, Rhode Island, imposed the first jail sentence for a speeding violation on this day. This was a harsh sentence in 1904 because traffic laws were still relatively new--the first traffic code wasn't implemented until 1903, when New York introduced a two-page book of regulations. Early traffic regulations varied drastically from state to state, some having no speed limits at all.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on August 28, 2015, 10:07:39 pm
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On this day, August 28th 1877
Charles Stewart Rolls, the pioneering British motorist, aviator and co-founder (with Henry Royce) of the Rolls-Royce Ltd. luxury automobile company, is born in London's upscale Mayfair district.
The third son of Lord and Lady Llangattock, who had their ancestral seat in Monmouth, Wales, Rolls was a card-carrying member of the British aristocracy. He was educated at Eton and at Cambridge University's Trinity College, where he first developed his love for the new sport of motoring. His first vehicle, a Peugeot with 3.75 horsepower, was the first car to be seen at Cambridge, and enabled him to drive home to Monmouth in an astonishingly quick time of two days. In 1900, Rolls drove a 12-horsepower Panhard car in the famous British auto race the Thousand Mile Trial; he also took part in a number of other early long-distance European races. Considered the best driver in Wales, he was reportedly responsible for changing the national speed limit at the time from 4 to 12 miles per hour.
In 1902, Rolls went into the business of selling cars. Two years later, at the Midland Hotel in Manchester, England, he met with Frederick Henry Royce, an electrical engineer of modest background who had his own engineering business, Royce Ltd., and had built several experimental cars of his own design. After that historic meeting, Rolls and Royce merged their firms in 1906 to form Rolls-Royce Ltd. The Rolls-Royce Silver Ghost, produced that year, became one of the world's most admired cars. While Royce was responsible for every aspect of car design, Rolls provided the bulk of the financing, as well as the social connections that helped make sales.
In addition to automobiles, Rolls became passionate about aviation, including hot air balloons and early airplanes. In February 1910, Rolls wrote to the inventor Wilbur Wright to complain about the Wright plane he had bought in Europe. In the letter, Rolls told Wright he had resigned his former position at Rolls Royce and taken another, which "does not require any regular attendance at the office," in order "to devote myself to flight." That June, Rolls became the first aviator to fly nonstop across the English Channel and back. Tragically, on July 12, 1910, Rolls was killed when the tail of his plane snapped off in mid-air during a flying exhibition in Bournemouth, England. He was 32 years old.
PICTURED: Charles with the 1898 PANHARD 8hp

August 28th 1921
Construction of the Paragon Motor Company factory began in Cumberland, Maryland. The company's production was limited to only four prototypes, and the factory was never completed.

August 28th 1922
The famous Autodromo, an automobile-racing track, was opened in Monza, Italy. Set in a busy industrial center along the Lambro River, this track, with its elliptical shape and concrete banked curves, is said to be the fastest in the world.

August 28th 1937
The Toyota Motor Company, Ltd., originally a division of the Toyota Automatic Loom Works, became a corporation. The company underwent huge expansion in the 1960s and 1970s, exporting its smaller, more fuel-efficient cars to countless foreign markets. During this period, Toyota also acquired Hino Motors, Ltd., Nippondenso Company Ltd., and Daihitsu Motor Company, Ltd. Toyota has been Japan's largest automobile manufacturer for several decades and is headquartered in Toyota City, Japan.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on August 29, 2015, 10:51:32 pm
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On this day, August 29th 1885
The world's first motorcycle, made by Gottlieb Daimler, was patented. The two-wheeled vehicle gained immense popularity after 1910, when it was used heavily by all branches of the armed forces during World War I. The motorcycle's popularity lagged during the Great Depression, but came back with a vengeance after World War II and remains popular today. Often associated with a rebellious image, the vehicle is often used for high-speed touring and sport competitions.
PICTURED: The first motorcycle, made by Gottlieb Daimler, at the Deutsches Zweirad-und NSU-Museum in Neckarsulm, Germany.

August 29th 1876
Charles F. Kettering, inventor of the electric starter, was born on this day in Detroit. Kettering, along with Edward A. Deeds, founded Delco (Dayton Engineering Laboratories Company). He and his company invented countless improvements for the automobile, including lighting and ignition systems, lacquer finishes, antilock fuels, and leaded gasoline. The Cadillac was the first car to use the electric starter, and Delco would later become a subsidiary of General Motors. Incidentally, Kettering also invented the first electric cash register before he started working on cars.

August 29th 1898
The Goodyear Tire and Rubber Co. was incorporated in Ohio. Originally founded as a rubber company by the Seiberling brothers, the company began manufacturing tires shortly after its establishment. Today, Goodyear makes passenger and industrial tires, in addition to producing rubber, chemical, and plastic products. The company also is well-known for its marketing skill--its Goodyear blimp is one of the most recognizable corporate symbols in America.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on August 30, 2015, 09:29:57 pm
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August 30th 1945
A pale green Super Six coupe rolled off the Hudson Company's assembly line, the first post-World War II car to be produced by the auto manufacturer. Like all other U.S. auto manufacturers, Hudson had halted production of civilian cars in order to produce armaments during the war. The Super Six boasted the first modern, high-compression L-head motor, though it garnered its name from the original Hudson-manufactured engine produced in 1916. The name stayed, though the engines became more sophisticated

August 30th 1898
Henry Ford, of Detroit, Michigan, received a patent for a "Carbureter" (fuel injector) especially designed for use in connection with gas or vapor engines.

August 30th 1916
Studebaker announced the release of the Heaslet Special, a semi-custom touring car. The car was named in honor of Studebaker's vice president of engineering, James G. Heaslet.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on September 01, 2015, 09:21:14 pm
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On this day, August 31st 1899
A Stanley Steamer, driven by F.O. Stanley, became the first car to reach the summit of Mount Washington, New Hampshire. Stanley was one of the Stanley twins, founders of the Stanley Motor Company, which specialized in steam-driven automobiles. The steamers not only climbed mountains, but often beat larger, gasoline-powered cars in races. In 1906, a Stanley Steamer would break the world record for the fastest mile when it reached 127mph.
PICTURED: A Stanley Steamer racer 1907

August 31st 1903
Packard automobile completed a 52-day journey from San Francisco to New York, became first car to cross U.S. under its own power.

August 31st 1951
James E. Lynch, the stunt driver, died in Texarkana, Arkansas, at age 50. He was founder of the "Jimmie Lynch Daredevils" stunt drivers show.

August 31st 1955
William G. Cobb of the General Motors Corp. (GM) demonstrates his 15-inch-long "Sunmobile," the world's first solar-powered automobile, at the General Motors Powerama auto show held in Chicago, Illinois.
Cobb's Sunmobile introduced, however briefly, the field of photovoltaics--the process by which the sun's rays are converted into electricity when exposed to certain surfaces--into the gasoline-drenched automotive industry. When sunlight hit 12 photoelectric cells made of selenium (a nonmetal substance with conducting properties) built into the Sunmobile, an electric current was produced that in turn powered a tiny motor. The motor turned the vehicle's driveshaft, which was connected to its rear axle by a pulley. Visitors to the month-long, $7 million Powerama marveled at some 250 free exhibits spread over 1 million square feet of space on the shores of Lake Michigan. In addition to Cobb's futuristic mini-automobile, Powerama visitors were treated to an impressive display of GM's diesel-fueled empire, from oil wells and cotton gins to submarines and other military equipment.
Today, more than a half-century after Cobb debuted the Sunmobile, a mass-produced solar car has yet to hit the market anywhere in the world. Solar-car competitions are held worldwide, however, in which design teams pit their sun-powered creations (also known as photovoltaic or PV cars) against each other in road races such as the 2008 North American Solar Challenge, a 2,400-mile drive from Dallas, Texas, to Calgary, Alberta, Canada.
In early 2009, The Nikkei, a Japanese business daily, reported that Toyota Motor Corp. was secretly developing a vehicle that would be powered totally by solar energy. Hurt by a growing global financial crisis and a surge in the Japanese yen relative to other currencies, Toyota had announced in late 2008 that it was expecting its first operating loss in 70 years. Despite hard economic times, Toyota (which in 1997 launched the Prius, the world's first mass-produced hybrid vehicle) has no plans to relinquish its reputation as an automotive industry leader in green technology. The company uses solar panels to produce some of its own electricity at its Tsutsumi plant in central Japan, and in mid-2008 announced that it would install solar panels on the roof of the next generation of its groundbreaking electric-gasoline hybrid Prius cars. The panels would supply part of the 2 to 5 kilowatts needed to power the car's air conditioning system.
According to The Nikkei, Toyota's planned solar car is not expected to hit the market for years. The electric vehicle will get some of its power from solar cells on the vehicle, and will be recharged with electricity generated from solar panels on the roofs of car owners' homes.

August 31st 2003
Harley-Davidson 100th Anniversary Party held in Milwaukee's Veterans Park.
PICTURED: The original Harley Davidson workshop
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On this day, September 1st 1950
A new chapter in Porsche history began with the company's return to Zuffenhausen, Germany, and the completion of the first Porsche. The first car to bear the Porsche name had actually been built two years earlier by Ferry Porsche and his design team, but this Porsche was the first car to boast a Porsche-made engine. Porsche became an independent automobile manufacturer during this year and soon sealed its success with a stunning victory at Le Mans in 1951.
PICTURED: Glaser coachworks 1950 Porsche Cabriolet

September 1st 1989
The federal government passed new car safety legislation, requiring all newly manufactured cars to install an air bag on the driver's side. While air bags have proven to be life-saving devices in most cases, concern over the safety of the air bags themselves arose during the 1990s. Several instances in which small children were seriously injured or killed by an air bag caused a public clamor for further investigation of the devices, which can explode out of the dashboard at up to 200mph. Air bags are still installed in all newly manufactured models.

September 1st 1989
The first Lexus was sold, launching Toyota's new luxury division. However, Lexus' story had begun six years earlier in a top secret meeting of Toyota's elite. Surrounded by the company's top-level management, Chairman Eiji Toyota proposed the company's next challenge - a luxury car that could compete with the world's best. The project was given the code name "F1," with F for "flagship," and the numeral 1 recalling the high performance of Formula 1 race cars. Designed by chief engineers Shoiji Jimbo and Ichiro Suzuki, the F1 prototype was completed just two years later. The top secret project was finally unveiled after extensive testing in 1987, and officially launched in 1989.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on September 02, 2015, 10:04:49 pm
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On this day, September 2nd 1959
At a news conference broadcast to viewers in 21 cities on closed-circuit television, Henry Ford II introduces his company’s newest car--the 90-horsepower, 30 miles-per-gallon Falcon. The Falcon, dubbed “the small car with the big car feel,” was an overnight success. It went on sale that October 8 and by October 9, dealers had snapped up every one of the 97,000 cars in the first production run.
In 1959, each one of Detroit’s Big Three automakers began to sell a smaller, zippier, lower-priced car: Ford had the Falcon, while General Motors had the Corvair and Chevrolet had the Valiant. After years of building huge, gas-guzzling, lavishly be-finned cars, American companies entered the small-car market because European carmakers like Volkswagen, Fiat, and Renault were selling their little cars to American buyers by the thousands. (Foreign-car sales in the United States had jumped 1,060 percent since 1954 and accounted for about 10 percent of the nation’s new-car sales.) Executives in Detroit hoped that cars like the Falcon would “drive the imports back to their shores.”
Mostly, people liked these smaller cars because they were inexpensive. The Falcon cost about $1,900 (about $14,029 in today’s dollars)--still much more expensive than even the priciest of the European imports (the Triumph and the Simca sold for about $1,600, while a Fiat, the cheapest car you could buy, cost about $1,000), but more affordable than any other American car. In addition, more fuel-efficient cars like the Falcon also saved their drivers money on gas.
Many people believed that the introduction of American compact cars would permanently transform the automobile industry. The “desire of American car buyers for sensible automobiles,” one industry executive told a reporter, would soon make big, inefficient cars obsolete. Unfortunately, though the Falcon was an immediate sensation--Ford sold more than a million of them in the car’s first two years on the market, and its design went on to inspire the iconic Ford Mustang which at the time was also going to be offered in a 4 door--this did not prove to be the case for the falcon. Today, small cars account for less than 20 percent of new-car sales.
PICTURED: The 1965 Ford Mustang 4 door concept (1962)

September 2nd 1969
Willy Mairesse, race-car driver for the Ferrari team, died in Ostend, Belgium, from an overdose of sleeping pills. His career had been a continuing disappointment, with zero wins from 12 grand prix starts and only seven points. He left the Ferrari team in 1963 and was only 40 years old at the time of his death.

September 2nd 1992
The Southern California Gas Company purchased the first motor vehicles powered by natural gas. Spurred on by a new California law promoting the commercialization of alternative fuel vehicles, the company put 50 of the new vehicles into service and began promoting the natural gas vehicles (NGVs) as a viable option for the future. Compressed natural gas costs 25-30 percent less than gasoline and has an octane rating of 130 - meaning it burns much cleaner than even premium unleaded gasoline. The NGVs can also go 10,000 miles between oil changes, 40,000 miles between tune-ups, and 75,000 miles between spark plugs. However, the most compelling argument for natural gas is its environmental advantages. NGVs reduce NOX emissions and reactive hydrocarbons by as much as 95 percent. The new vehicles also reduce carbon monoxide by 85 percent and carcinogenic particulate emissions by 99 percent.

TODAYS TRIVIA:
The first man to survive going over Niagara Falls later died from slipping on an orange peel.

Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on September 03, 2015, 08:28:49 pm
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On this day, 3 rd Sept 1967
Chaos reigned on the day that Sweden switched from driving on the left side of the road to driving on the right side of the road, also known as Dagen H, caused confusion in the streets all over the country.
PICTURED: photo appears to have been taken on Kungsgatan in Stockholm

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3rd Sept 1951.
Southern 500 starting field
Looking toward turn four. The photo shows from the third row to the end of the starting field. Notice the huge starting field! A starting field of 82! The pole sitter, Frank Mundy in a 1951 Studebaker dropped out after 12 laps due to oil pressure and finished last. The second place starter Herb Thomas in a Hudson Hornet won, quite a difference! The white car shown near the right in the photo is Frank Gise, driving the #38 B. R. Waller owned 1951 Studebaker V8 Commander Starlight coupe [Redmond Motors (Studebaker) Knoxville, TN] started 9th and finished 65th, reason out: "wheel". The cars were lined up in rows of three.

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September 3rd 1875
Ferdinand Porsche, engineer and patriarch of Porsche cars, was born on this day in Maffersdorf, Austria. He began his career at the Daimler Company, rising to general director, but he eventually left in 1931 to design his own sports and racing cars. Perhaps his most famous project was Hitler's "car for the people," the Volkswagen. Together with his son, Porsche was responsible for the initial Volkswagen plans, but his involvement with Hitler was to cost him dearly. He was arrested by the French after World War II and held for several years before finally being released.

September 3rd 1900
The first car ever made in Flint, Michigan makes its debut in the town’s Labor Day parade. Designed and built by a county judge and weekend tinkerer named Charles H. Wisner, the car was one of the only cars built in Flint that did not end up being produced by General Motors. In the end, only three of the Wisner machines were ever built.
Wisner’s car, nicknamed the “Buzz-Wagon,” was a somewhat ridiculous contraption: it was “very noisy,” according to The Flint Journal; its only door was in the rear; and it had no brakes. In order to stop, Wisner had to collide with something sturdy, usually the side wall of his machine shop. At the Labor Day parade, however, he didn’t have a problem with the brakes; instead, in front of 10,000 spectators, the car stalled and had to be pushed off the parade route.
Wisner’s lemon notwithstanding, Flint soon became the cradle of the American auto industry. GM was formed there in 1908, and the city quickly became known for all the Chevrolets and Buicks--not to mention the engine parts and electronics--produced and assembled there. The sit-down strikes at Flint’s GM plants in 1936 and 1937 won union recognition for autoworkers along with a 30-hour workweek and a 6-hour day, overtime pay, seniority rights, and “a minimum rate of pay commensurate with an American standard of living.” These victories guaranteed a middle-class existence for generations of autoworkers. In fact, for a long time, Flint had the highest average per-household income of any city in the United States.
But GM has been declining painfully since the 1970s, and Flint has suffered along with it. The 1988 film Roger & Me, which told the story of 30,000 layoffs at one of Flint’s GM plants, made the city’s woes famous. In July 1999, GM closed its Buick City complex, the last assembly plant in the city. And in the beginning of 2009, as a financial crisis enveloped the auto industry and the nation as a whole, Michigan’s Genesee County (which includes Flint) had an unemployment rate of nearly 15 percent--higher than it had been in 18 years and almost twice the national average.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on September 05, 2015, 09:39:49 pm
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On this day, September 4th 1957
--“E-Day,” according to its advertising campaign--the Ford Motor Company unveils the Edsel, the first new automobile brand produced by one of the Big Three car companies since 1938. (Although many people call it the “Ford Edsel,” in fact Edsel was a division all its own, like Lincoln or Mercury.) Thirteen hundred independent Edsel dealers offered four models for sale: the smaller Pacer and Ranger and the larger Citation and Corsair.
To many people, the Edsel serves as a symbol of corporate hubris at its worst: it was an over-hyped, over-sized, over-designed monstrosity. Other people believe the car was simply a victim of bad timing. When Ford executives began planning for the company’s new brand, the economy was booming and people were snapping up enormous gas-guzzlers as fast as automakers could build them. By the time the Edsel hit showrooms, however, the economic outlook was bad and getting worse. People didn’t want big, glitzy fin cars anymore; they wanted small, efficient ones instead. The Edsel was just ostentatious and expensive enough to give buyers pause.
At the same time, there is probably no car in the world that could have lived up to the Edsel’s hype. For months, the company had been running ads that simply pictured the car's hood ornament and the line “The Edsel Is Coming.” Everything else about the car was top-secret: If dealers failed to keep their Edsels hidden, they’d lose their franchise. For the great E-Day unveiling, promotions and prizes--like a giveaway of 1,000 ponies--lured shoppers to showrooms.
When they got there, they found a car that had a distinctive look indeed--but not necessarily in a good way. Thanks to the big impact ring or “horse collar” in the middle of its front grille, it looked (one reporter said) like “a Pontiac pushing a toilet seat.” (Another called it “an Oldsmobile sucking a lemon.”) And its problems were more than cosmetic. Drivers changed gears by pushing buttons on the steering wheel, a system that was not easy to figure out. In addition, at highway speeds that famous hood ornament had a tendency to fly off and into the windshield.
In its first year, Edsel sold just 64,000 cars and lost $250 million ($2.5 billion today). After the 1960 model year, the company folded.

September 4th 1997
The very last Ford Thunderbird rolled off the assembly line in Lorain, Ohio, leaving many of the car's fans disappointed. One Ford dealer even held a wake for the beloved Thunderbird, complete with flowers and a RIP plaque. Originally conceived as Ford's answer to the Corvette, the Thunderbird has enjoyed an illustrious place among American cars. It was promoted as a "personal" car, rather than a sports car, so it never had to compete against the imports that dominated the sports car market. The name of the enormously successful car was eventually shortened to "T-Bird".

September 4th 1891
Fritz Todt, the head designer of the German autobahn, was born in Pforzheim, Germany. Todt's creation was the first true system of national superhighways, and was held up by Germany as a proud symbol of the modernity of their engineering. However, the autobahn system emerged from World War II as a battered version of its earlier self. The newly formed nations of East and West Germany set about repairing the old system, though at different rates. Booming increases in motor traffic propelled extensions and enhancements in West Germany, while improvements were more gradual in East Germany. Over the years, the autobahn regained its status as a model expressway and became famous for its nonexistent speed limit.

September 4th 1922
William Lyons (21) and William Walmsley (9) launched Swallow Sidecar Company in Blackpool, UK, to produce sidecars for motorcycles; financed with bank overdraft of £1000 guaranteed by their respective fathers.



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On this day, September 5th 1930
Cross-country trips were no longer considered big news in 1930, but Charles Creighton and Jam Hargises ' unique journey managed to make headlines. The two men from Maplewood, New Jersey, arrived back in New York City, having completed a 42-day round trip to Los Angeles - driving their 1929 Ford Model A the entire 7,180 miles in reverse gear.
PICTURED: Final Assembly of a Ford Model A V8, Ford Rouge Plant, Dearborn, Michigan

TODAYS TRIVIA
...75% of cars that Rolls Royce has ever produced are still on the road today.
...Arnold Schwarzenegger did not accept his governor's salary of $175,000 per year because of his already substantial wealth from acting.
...Boris Yeltsin, when he was president of Russia, was found by White House secret service drunk and in his underwear on Pennsylvania Ave, trying to hail a cab to get some pizza.
...In 1962, Bruce Lee landed 15 punches and a kick that knocked out his opponent in a fight which lasted 11 seconds.
...There's an area of the universe a billion light years away that has virtually nothing in it, not even dark matter.
...The colors blue, yellow, red, green and black were chosen for the Olympic rings because at least one of them appears on every nation's flag.
TODAYS TRIVIA:
All blue eyed people can be traced back to one person who lived near the Black Sea about 10,000 years ago.
Mark Wahlberg had a cocaine addiction by age 13, and was convicted of attempted murder at the age of 16.
About 159,635 people will die on the same day as you.
In North Korea, it's not 2014. The year is 103, because North Korea marks years from the birth of Kim Il-sung, not Jesus.
Since the earth's rotation is slowing down, today is about 0.00000002 seconds longer than yesterday.
The sentence "Are you as bored as I am?" can be said backwards and still make sense.
There is an evil counterpart to Santa named Krampus. Krampus physically beats bad children before sacking them away to Hell.
Darrell, from the reality show "Storage Wars" once found a plastic-wrapped human corpse in a storage locker.
25,000,000 of your cells died while you were reading this status.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on September 08, 2015, 12:42:51 am
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On this day, September 6th 1900
Andrew L. Riker set a new speed record, driving an electric car. His time of 10 minutes, 20 seconds established a new low for the five-mile track in Newport, Rhode Island, proving that the electric car could compete with its noisier petroleum-fueled cousins. In fact, the electric car remained competitive until 1920, often preferred for its low maintenance cost and quiet engine. However, developments in gasoline engine technology, along with the advent of cheaper, mass-produced non-electrics like the Model T, proved to be the death knell of the electric car. However, rising fuel costs in the late 1960s and 1970s renewed interest in the electric car, and several working models have recently been sold in small numbers.
PICTURED: The first US oval track events took place in early September 1896 at Narragansett Park Rhode Island They consisted of three 5 mile sprint events The first two were won by Andrew Lawrence Riker (1862-1930) in an electric car of his own design and the third race was won by an electric also dubbed the Electrobat

September 6th 1915
The first tank prototype was completed and given its first test drive, developed by William Foster & Company for the British army. Several European nations had been working on the development of a shielded, tracked vehicle that could cross the uneven terrain of World War I trenches, but Great Britain was the first to succeed. Lightly armed with machine guns, the tanks made their first authoritative appearance at the Battle of Cambrai in 1917, when 474 British tanks managed to break through the German lines. The Allies began using the vehicles in increasing numbers throughout the rest of the war. After World War I, European nations on all sides continued to build tanks at a frantic pace, arming them with even heavier artillery and plating. This competitive stockpiling came to a lethal head on the battlefields of World War II.

September 6th 1949
By the end of World War II, Germany's Volkswagen factory was in shambles, along with much of Europe. The machines stood silent, the assembly lines lay still, and rubble littered the hallways. It was in this state that the British occupation forces took control of the Volkswagen factory and the town of Wolfsburg. The next four years were spent in an attempt to return to normal life, and the wheels of industry eventually began to turn in the old Volkswagen factory. With Heinrich Nordhoff as managing director and the German economy rejuvenated by currency reform, Volkswagen had become the largest car producer in Europe by 1949. On this day, the Allied military authorities relinquished control of the former Nazi regime's assets, including the Volkswagen factory - marking the final transition back to everyday life.

September 6th 1995
Chrysler Corporation received permission from Vietnamese government to assemble vehicles in Vietnam, allowed Chrysler to construct production facility in Dong Nai Province, Southern Vietnam, with aim of manufacturing 500 to 1,000 Dodge Dakota pick-up trucks for Vietnamese market annually.


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September 7th 1899
Over a dozen motorcars, decorated with hydrangeas, streamers, lights, and Japanese lanterns, lined up to take part in America's first automobile parade. A throng of spectators showed up in Newport, Rhode Island, to witness the event, arriving in cabs, private carriages, bicycles, and even by foot to witness the spectacle, attracted by the novelty and rumors surrounding the event. The nature of the motorcar decorations had been shrouded in mystery prior to the parade, for each participant had wished to surprise and outdo the others. Since then, car parades and car shows have been a part of every countries culture

September 7th 1993
The Chrysler Corporation introduced its new Neon at the Frankfurt Auto Show on this day. The sporty compact indicated a new direction for Chrysler and quickly gained fame through its multi-million dollar "Hi" campaign. The slick ads emphasized friendliness - friendly handling, comfortable seats, reliable safety features - punctuated with a simple "Hi. I'm Neon."


TODAYS TRIVIA:
...If you are 6 feet 2 inches tall, then you are taller than 94% of the world.
...Today is National Be Late for Something Day!
...There were no cats on the Titanic. Cats were often brought on ships as a form of good luck.
...Women in ancient Rome wore the sweat of Gladiators to improve their beauty and complexion.
...PG-13 movies are allowed one non-sexual use of the word "f@#k" per script.
...George W. Bush was the head cheerleader at Phillips Academy Boarding school during his senior year of high school.
...The word "mortgage" comes from a French word that means "pledge to the death."
...Brad Pitt tore his Achilles tendon while filming a fight scene for Troy -- He played Achilles in the movie.
...If a Google employee passes away, their spouse gets half of their pay for 10 years.
...Mary Gibbs (voice of Boo in Monsters Inc.) was too young to sit to record her lines, so they followed her around with a mic.
...Jackie Chan is actually a pop star in Asia, having released 20 studio albums - He often sings the theme songs of his own movies.
...Nintendo owned a chain of sex hotels in the 1950’s and 1960’s.
...Internet weighs about as much as a strawberry. The weight of all the electrons in motion that make up the internet at any given moment is equivalent to 50 grams.
...In 1939, The New York Times predicted that television would fail because people wouldn't have time to stop and stare at a screen.

Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on September 08, 2015, 09:35:59 pm
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On this day, September 8, 1953
Continental Trailways offered the first transcontinental express bus service in the U.S. The 3,154-mile ride from New York City to San Francisco lasted 88 hours and 50 minutes, of which only 77 hours was riding time. The cost was $56.70. Today Greyhound charges $183 for the same trip.

September 8, 1960
Aguri Suzuki, Japanese racing phenomenon, was born on this day. He is one of the most successful Japanese race car drivers in history, a favorite of fans around the world. He began his winning career in the Japanese Kart Championship, but eventually moved on to Formula 1 racing--achieving 1 podium, and scoring a total of 8 championship points. He is married with one son and enjoys ultra-light flying, golf, and water sports.

September 8, 1986
British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher and Yutaka Kume, the president of the Nissan Motor Company, officially open Nissan’s first European manufacturing plant in Sunderland, Britain. Sunderland is situated in the northeastern part of England, a region that was hit especially hard by the deindustrialization and economic strain of the 1970s and 80s. Many of its coal pits, shipyards, steel mills, and chemical factories had closed or were closing, and the Japanese company’s arrival gave many of the town’s residents hope for the future. Twenty-five thousand people applied for the first 450 jobs advertised at the plant.
Nissan brought a new kind of shop-floor culture to a place where labor-management relationships typically ranged from frosty to belligerent. The Sunderland factory was a different, more cooperative kind of workplace: Instead of enmity and strikes, it had kaizen, a Japanese philosophy of continual improvement that applied to workers and their bosses alike. Meanwhile, everyone wore the same blue coveralls and ate in the same lunchroom, and plant foreman received the same pay as design and manufacturing engineers. Likely as a result of this egalitarianism, at least in part, the factory soon became the most efficient and productive auto plant in Europe, and it exported 75 percent of the cars it made. (Some were even sent back to Japan.) It was also the largest car factory in England, building one of every five British-made cars.
With all this good will and productivity, it seemed like the plant would be successful forever. In June 2008, Sunderland’s 5 millionth Nissan rolled off the assembly line, and at the beginning of 2008 the factory was hiring hundreds more workers to keep up with increased demand for Nissan’s new hatchback, the Qashqai. Just one year later, however, the economic downturn had resulted in almost 1,500 layoffs at the Sunderland plant--25 percent of its workforce. This was a disaster for those workers, of course, but also for Sunderland itself: Five thousand people had worked at the plant, but 10,000 more--parts suppliers, service and support workers, supermarket operators--depended directly on Nissan for their livelihood.
At the same time it announced the Sunderland job cuts, Nissan unveiled a new product: a deluxe sports car that will, when it goes on sale, cost 107,000 pounds. It seems likely enough that no one in Sunderland will be buying.

TODAYS TRIVIA:
...During the filming of Casino Royale, three Aston Martin DBS cars valued at $300,000 each were destroyed for the car roll sequence.
...Google successfully tested an automated car that drove 300,000 miles with only one accident, a parking lot fender bender. That occurred when a human was driving.
...Spider-Man grew up at 20 Ingram Street in Queens. The address exists in real life, and the family that lives there is the Parkers.
...In the movie Jurassic Park, the roar of the T-Rex was actually a combination of the sounds by a baby elephant, an alligator and a tiger
...In 1985 a New Orleans man drowned at a party attended by 100 lifeguards who were celebrating a summer without any drownings at a city pool.
...Sloths can swim 3 times faster than they can move on land -- They can also hold their breath for up to 40 minutes.
...Japan's Okinawa Island has more than 450 people living above the age of 100 and is known as the healthiest place on Earth.
...Michael Jackson had cast actual gang members in his music video for “Beat It” and reformed them in the process of filming.
...Bank robber John Dillinger once escaped from jail by smuggling a potato from the prison cafeteria, carving in to the shape of a gun, and dyeing it black using iodine he took from the prison infirmary, then threatening a guard with it to obtain the keys and a real gun.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on September 09, 2015, 06:30:12 pm
(http://i269.photobucket.com/albums/jj45/mms58/Internet/Ford%20People/RobertMcNamara1958.jpg) (http://s269.photobucket.com/user/mms58/media/Internet/Ford%20People/RobertMcNamara1958.jpg.html)

On this day,September 9, 1982
Henry Ford II retired once and for all, swearing off all involvement with the Ford Motor Company.
When Henry Ford II, grandson and namesake of Henry Ford, succeeded his father as president of the Ford Motor Company in 1945, the firm, still recovering from the unexpected death of its president Edsel Ford, was losing money at the rate of several million dollars a month. The automotive giant was crumbling. Fortunately for the company, Henry Ford II turned out to be a genius of industrial management. He quickly set about reorganizing and modernizing the company, firing the powerful Personnel Chief Harry Bennett, whose strong-arm tactics and anti-union stance had made Ford notorious for its bad labor relations. He also brought in new talent, including a group of former U.S. Air Force intelligence officers, among them Robert McNamara, who quickly became known as the "Whiz Kids." During his tenure as president, Henry Ford II nursed the Ford Motor Company back to health, greatly expanding its international operations and introducing two classic models, the Mustang and the Thunderbird. Still, even an industrial management genius could grow tired of a president's demanding schedule.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on September 10, 2015, 09:06:47 pm
(http://i1152.photobucket.com/albums/p497/Arek56/Drunk-O-Meter.jpg) (http://s1152.photobucket.com/user/Arek56/media/Drunk-O-Meter.jpg.html)

On this day, September 10, 1897
A London cabdriver named George Smith slams his taxi into a building and is the first person to be arrested for drunk driving. He pled guilty and was fined 25 shillings.
Police officers knew that Smith was drunk because he acted drunk (he had driven that cab into a wall, after all) and because he said he was, but what they lacked was a scientific way to prove someone was too intoxicated to drive, even if he or she wouldn’t admit it. Blood tests were soon introduced, but those were messy and needed to be performed by a doctor; there were urine tests, but those were even messier, not to mention unreliable and expensive. In 1931, a toxicologist at Indiana University named Rolla Harger came up with a solution--a device he called the Drunkometer. It was simple: all the suspected drinker had to do was blow into a balloon. The tester then attached the balloon to a tube filled with a purple fluid (potassium permanganate and sulfuric acid) and released its air into the tube. Alcohol on a person's breath changed the color of the fluid from purple to yellow; the quicker the change, the drunker the person.
The Drunkometer was effective but cumbersome, and it required a certain amount of scientific calculation to determine just how much alcohol a person had consumed. In 1954, another Indianan named Robert Borkenstein invented a device that was more portable and easier to use. Borkenstein’s machine, the Breathalyzer, worked much like Harger’s did--it measured the amount of alcohol in a person's breath--but it did the necessary calculations automatically and thus could not be foiled or tampered with. (One tipsy Canadian famously ate his underwear while waiting to take a Breathalyzer test because he believed that the cotton would somehow absorb the alcohol in his system. It did not.) The Breathalyzer soon became standard equipment in every police car in the nation.
Even in the age of the Breathalyzer, drunk driving remained a problem. In 2007, more than 1.4 million drivers were arrested for driving while intoxicated, and a Centers for Disease Control survey found that Americans drove drunk 159 million times. That same year, about 13,000 people--more than 30 percent of all traffic fatalities--died in accidents involving a drunk driver.

September 10, 1921
The Ayus Autobahn, the world's first controlled-access highway and part of Germany's Bundesautobahn system, opened near Berlin. Once regarded as a symbol of modernity and a model of German engineering, the autobahn system was nearly destroyed during World War II. At the start of the postwar era, the newly formed nations of East and West Germany set about repairing the superhighway network. The system was greatly extended and improved in West Germany, which had a higher growth rate of motor traffic than its Eastern neighbor, although repairs and extensions were also made to the system in East Germany. Over the years, the autobahn has regained its status as a model expressway, famed for its nonexistent speed limit.

September 10, 1942
Following the example of several European nations, President Franklin D. Roosevelt mandated gasoline rationing in the U.S. as part of the country's wartime efforts. Gasoline rationing was just one of the many measures taken during these years, as the entire nation was transformed into a unified war machine: women took to the factories, households tried to conserve energy, and American automobile manufacturers began producing tanks and planes. The gasoline ration was lifted in 1945, at the end of World War II.

TODAYS TRIVIA:
...A hacker group named UGNazi once completely disabled the US pizza franchise, Papa Johns website because their pizza was 2 hours late.
...Bill Gates intends to leave less than $10M for each of his three children "so they can make their own way"
...The average citizen of Liechtenstein doesn’t even lock their door because crime in the country is so low -- Their last murder was in 1997.
...While studying at Yale in the early 60's, Fred Smith proposed in a paper, the concept of a self-contained logistics company. The paper got a C. In 1971, he founded Federal Express.
...There are about 3 reported cases of dolphins raping humans every year.
...Martin Luther King Jr. received a C in public speaking at seminary school.
...In 2011, a 29-year-old man became Britain's youngest grandfather, when his 14-year-old daughter gave birth.
...Teenagers who spend much of their time listening to music are 8.3 times more likely to be depressed.
...In 1982 A Man Broke Into Buckingham Palace And Ate The Queens Cheese And Crackers.
...After watching Star Wars, James Cameron decided to quit his job as a truck driver, and entered the film industry.
...During the peak of his drug addiction EMINEM was taking "up to 60 Valium and 30 Vicodin pills a day."
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on September 11, 2015, 10:31:28 pm
(http://i887.photobucket.com/albums/ac79/hiamalex93/Decorated%20images/twintowersattack.jpg) (http://s887.photobucket.com/user/hiamalex93/media/Decorated%20images/twintowersattack.jpg.html)

On this day, September 11, 2001
Coordinated attacks result in the collapse of the World Trade Center in New York City, destruction of the western portion of The Pentagon in Arlington, Virginia, and an unplanned passenger airliner crash in Shanksville, Pennsylvania, which happened after airplane passengers fought back on the plane. In total, 2,974 people are killed in the September 11, 2001 attacks.

September 11, 1903
The oldest major speedway in the world, the Milwaukee Mile, opened today as a permanent fixture in the Wisconsin State Fair Park. The circuit had actually been around since the 1870s as a horseracing track, but the proliferation of the automobile brought a new era to the Milwaukee Mile. However, the horses stuck around until 1954, sharing the track with the automobiles until the mile oval was finally paved. At one point, the horses and autos also had to make room for professional football. The Green Bay Packers played in the track's infield for almost 10 years during the 1930s, winning the National Football League Championship there in 1939.

September 11, 1918
Often called the "war of the machines," World War I marked the beginning of a new kind of warfare, fought with steel and shrapnel. Automotive manufacturers led the way in this new technology of war, producing engines for planes, building tanks, and manufacturing military vehicles. Packard was at the forefront of these efforts, being among the first American companies to completely cease civilian car production. Packard had already been the largest producer of trucks for the Allies, but the company began devoting all of its facilities to war production on this day, just a few months before the end of the war. Even after Packard resumed production of civilian vehicles, its wartime engines appeared in a number of vehicles, from racing cars and boats to British tanks in the next world war.

September 11, 1970
The Ford Pinto was introduced at a cost of less than $2,000, designed to compete with an influx of compact imports. But it was not the Pinto's low cost that grabbed headlines. Ford's new best-selling compact contained a fatal design flaw: because of the placement of the gas tank, the tank was likely to rupture and explode when the car was involved in a rear end collision of over 20mph. In addition, it was eventually revealed that Ford knew about the design flaw before the Pinto was released. An internal cost-benefit analysis prepared by Ford calculated that it would take $11 per car to correct the flaw at a total cost of $137 million for the company. When compared to the lowly estimate of $49.5 million in potential lawsuits from the mistake, the report deemed it "inefficient" to go ahead with the correction. The infamous report assigned a value of $200,000 for each death predicted to result from the flaw. Ford's irresponsibility caused a public uproar, and it 1978, a California jury awarded a record-breaking $128 million to a claimant in the Ford Pinto case.

Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on September 12, 2015, 08:16:14 pm
(http://i645.photobucket.com/albums/uu176/MustangMayhem/This%20Day%20History/cannonball_indian1_zps4f71ecff.jpg) (http://s645.photobucket.com/user/MustangMayhem/media/This%20Day%20History/cannonball_indian1_zps4f71ecff.jpg.html)

September 12, 1918
Cannonball Baker, born Erwin G. Baker, discovered his special talent soon after buying his first motorcycle--he was capable of exceptional stamina and endurance on the road. His lean frame sat naturally atop his Indian V-twin, and his toughened stance and leather riding trousers seemed to announce to the world that he was ready to outride all challengers. Made a celebrity by his 3,379-mile cross-country motorcycle trek, "Cannonball" became a symbol of the American motorcycle rider, synonymous with wild cross-country journeys. His fame led to other tours and promotional trips, and he completed his most extensive tour on this day--a 17,000 mile, 77-day trip to all 48 state capitals--yet another testament to his legendary endurance.
PICTURED: Erwin Cannonball Baker on his Indian

September 12, 1988
Ford and Nissan announced plans to design and build a new minivan together in the hope of cashing in on an expanding market. The announcement came during the heyday of the minivan craze, when Dodge Caravans dotted the highways and station wagons became a thing of the past. Instantly popular, the spacious minivan replaced the wagon as the family car of choice, putting the old wood-paneled Country Squires to shame. But with the rise of the sport utility vehicle in the '90s, the minivan also began to fade.

TODAYS TRIVIA:
...More than 2,500 left-handed people are killed every year from using products made for right-handed people.
...Workers at Ground Zero found an 18th century ship underneath the World Trade Center rubble.
...Women speak nearly 7,000 words a day - Men average around 2,000.
...A tortoise lived 255 years. To put it into perspective, he was born before the US existed and his death was announced on CNN. (1750-2006)
...During sex, estrogen levels double -- effectively making women prettier.
...Bill Gates received an honorary knighthood from the Queen but as an American Citizen he cannot use the title "Sir".
...Due to the gender imbalance, by the year 2020, 24 million Chinese men will be unable to find a spouse.
...Someone who weighs 150 pounds on Earth would weigh 354 pounds on Jupiter.
...In the Shawshank Redemption, Andy actually crawls through chocolate syrup in the sewer scene, and the tunnel where it was filmed still smells like chocolate today.
...The four ghosts in Pacman are programmed to act differently: red chases you, pink just tries to position itself in a set way, blue tries to ambush you, orange is random.
...North Koreans are forced to choose 1 of 28 approved hair cuts.
...McDonald's feeds 68 million people every day - That's about 1% of the world's population.
...There's an unknown object in the nearby galaxy m82 that started sending out radio waves. The emission doesn't look like anything seen before
...There's a device that allows girls to pee standing up...called a shewee.
...In 1993, Tupac flew out to Maryland to meet a dying boy named Joshua. Tupac then renamed his publishing company to Joshua's Dream after the boy died.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: mert on September 13, 2015, 01:14:45 pm
Sept 13, 1969 - Plastic Ono Band's (John, Yoko & Eric Clapton) 1st live performance   :smile01:
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on September 14, 2015, 08:33:08 pm
(http://i694.photobucket.com/albums/vv310/cuto01/Race%20Cars/20-1.jpg) (http://s694.photobucket.com/user/cuto01/media/Race%20Cars/20-1.jpg.html)

On this day, September 13, 1916
The Hudson Motor Car Company's first engine, the "Super Six," was an astounding success. It was the auto industry's first balanced, high-compression L-head motor, and it became so popular that the name "Super Six" became the unofficial brand name of Hudson. Initially, Hudson launched a series of publicity stunts to promote its new engine, including a "Twice Across America" run from San Francisco to New York and back, which began on this day.
PICTURED: Hudson 1920 Hudson Super Six. Race car

September 13, 1899
The first recorded fatality from an automobile accident occurred, after an oncoming vehicle fatally struck Henry Bliss on the streets of New York. Bliss, a 68-year-old real estate broker, was debarking from a southbound streetcar at the corner of Central Park West and 74th Street when driver Arthur Smith ran him over. Smith was arrested and held on $1,000 bail while Henry Bliss was taken to Roosevelt hospital, where he died.

September 13, 1977
General Motors (GM) introduced the first diesel automobiles in America, the Oldsmobile 88 and 98 models. A major selling point of the two models was their fuel efficiency, which GM claimed to be 40 percent better than gasoline-powered cars. By compressing air, rather than an air-fuel mixture, the diesel engine achieves higher compression ratios, and consequently higher theoretical cycle efficiencies. In addition, the idling and reduced power efficiency of the diesel engine is much greater than that of its spark engine cousin. However, the diesel engine's greater efficiency is balanced by its higher emission of soot, odor, and air pollutants.

September 13, 2004
TV talk-show host Oprah Winfrey gives a brand-new Pontiac G-6 sedan, worth $28,500, to everyone in her studio audience: a total of 276 cars in all.) Oprah had told her producers to fill the crowd with people who “desperately needed” the cars, and when she announced the prize (by jumping up and down, waving a giant keyring and yelling “Everybody gets a car! Everybody gets a car!”), mayhem--crying, screaming, delirium, fainting--broke out all around her. It was, as one media expert told a reporter, “one of the great promotional stunts in the history of television.”
Alas, scandal wasn't far behind. For one thing, the gift wasn't really from Oprah at all. Pontiac had donated the cars, paying the hefty price tag out of its advertising budget, because the company hoped that that the giveaway would drum up some enthusiasm for its new G-6 line. (To this end, during the segment, Winfrey herself took a tour of a Pontiac plant, gushing over the cars' satellite radios and fancy navigation systems.) The car company also paid the state sales tax on each of the automobiles it donated. However, that still left the new-car recipients with a large bill for their supposedly free vehicles: Federal and state income taxes added up to about $6,000 for most winners. Some people paid the taxes by taking out car loans; others traded their new Pontiacs for cheaper, less souped-up cars. “It's not really a free car,” one winner said. “It's more of a 75 percent-off car. Of course, that's still not such a bad deal.”
Two months later, Oprah hosted another giveaway episode, this one for teachers from around the country. Their gifts were worth about $13,000 and included a $2,249 TV set, a $2,000 laptop, a $2,189 washer/dryer, sets of $38 champagne glasses and a $495 leather duffel bag. This time, the show’s producers had learned their lesson: they also gave each audience member a check for $2,500, which they hoped would cover the tax bill for all the loot. Unfortunately, it didn't quite--most people in the audience owed the Internal Revenue Service between $4,500 and $6,000--but the PR gimmick worked: Oprah’s giveaways have earned some of the highest ratings in the program’s history.

September 13, 1945,
The first post-war Pontiac was built. Pictured is the advertisement for the 1946 Pontiac:

(http://i645.photobucket.com/albums/uu176/MustangMayhem/This%20Day%20History/1946-Pontiac_zpsdc88c103.jpg) (http://s645.photobucket.com/user/MustangMayhem/media/This%20Day%20History/1946-Pontiac_zpsdc88c103.jpg.html)


(http://i235.photobucket.com/albums/ee113/carslinger/amilcar.jpg) (http://s235.photobucket.com/user/carslinger/media/amilcar.jpg.html)

On this day, September 14, 1927
Isadora Duncan, the controversial but highly influential American dancer, was instantly strangled to death in Nice, France, when her trademark long scarf got caught in the rear wheel of a Amilcar driven by factory mechanic Benoit Falchetto, whom she called 'Buggati' and this lead to misconception that the unfateful car was a Buggati, but in actual it was an Amilcar.
Duncan was 49. The scarf was hand painted silk from the Russian-born artist Roman Chatov. The accident gave rise to Gertrude Stein's mordant remark that "affectations can be dangerous." PICTURED: The Amilcar

September 14, 1960
The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries was founded at the Baghdad Conference of 1960, established by five core members: Iran, Iraq, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, and Venezuela. Originally made up of just these five, OPEC began as an attempt to organize and unify petroleum policies, securing stable prices for the petroleum producers. The organization grew considerably after its creation, adding eight other members and developing into one of the most influential groups in the world. The first real indication of OPEC's power came with the 1973 oil embargo, during which long lines and soaring gasoline prices quickly convinced Americans of the reach of OPEC's influence. OPEC's member countries currently supply more than 40 percent of the world's oil.

September 14, 1965
My Mother the Car, one of the shortest running television shows in history and first about a Car, premiered on this day. The show featured Ann Southern as the reincarnation of the main character's mother - in the form of a classic 1928 Porter Automobile. Apparently, the idea of automobile reincarnation didn't appeal to the public then, and the series was canceled a few weeks after its debut.

September 14, 1982
Princess Grace of Monaco, also known as Grace Kelly, died on this day of injuries sustained in a car crash. The accident was one of the most tragic in modern memory, the car plunged down a 45-foot embankment after the Princess suffered a stroke and lost control of the car. Known as America's princess, Kelly's life had been a true fairy tale. She was born into a rich Irish Catholic family in Philadelphia where she attended private schools before enrolling in the Academy of Dramatic Art in New York. She soon rose to stardom both on Broadway and in Hollywood, winning the public's affection in such films as Rear Window and The Country Girl. However, she abandoned her acting career in order to marry Prince Rainier of Monaco, making her a real-life princess

(http://i127.photobucket.com/albums/p138/gaga51/Grace%20Kelly/grace.jpg) (http://s127.photobucket.com/user/gaga51/media/Grace%20Kelly/grace.jpg.html)

TODAYS TRIVIA:
...There is a rare neurological disorder known as Alien Hand Syndrome in which one hand functions involuntarily, with the victim completely unaware of its action.
...A 103 year old Taiwanese man who passed away in 2008 hired a stripper to dance at his funeral.
...A Croatian footballer(soccer) was placed on the transfer list by his club, after fulfilling his life long dream of having sex in the middle of the pitch.
...There is a statue of George Washington in Britain that sits on top of soil imported from Virginia, due to Washington exclaiming "I will never set foot in Britain again!"
...The reason for Sylvester Stallone's snarl/slurred speech was an accident at birth, during which his Obstetrician accidentally severed a nerve and caused semi-paralysis in parts of Stallone's face.
...There is a mass reservoir of water floating in space that is 100,000 times bigger than our sun and holds 140 trillion times more water than all of our oceans.
...There are about 50 serial killers free in the US killing about 300-400 people every year.
...Nicolas Cage convinced Johnny Depp to pursue acting while playing a game of Monopoly.
...In 1989 a computer game was released which could not be copied, and which deleted itself upon being completed. The last known copy was sold at auction for more than $700,000.
...In 1907 Kellogg's promoted their cornflakes with something called the Wink Day campaign. Women we're encouraged to "wink at your grocer and see what you get" , what they got was a free box of cereal.
...One of the best selling erotic novels of the 15 century was written by a Pope.
...Teen pregnancy rates are actually at their lowest since the 1970s.
...An orangutan named Fu Manchu repeatedly escaped from his cage at the zoo using a key he had fashioned from a piece of wire. Every time his zookeepers inspected him, he hid the key in his mouth.
...During the filming of a Breaking Bad episode, the introduction of Wendy the prostitute was briefly interrupted when a non-actor attempted to pick up actress Julia Minesci, mistaking her for a prostitute.
...In 1939, Hitler’s nephew wrote an article called “Why I Hate My Uncle.” He came to the U.S., served in the Navy, and settled on Long Island.
...400 million years ago, a day was 21 hours long instead of 24 hours long.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on September 15, 2015, 09:02:57 pm
(http://i784.photobucket.com/albums/yy124/Ayhankirca/My%20Movie%20Collection/italian_job_ver2.jpg) (http://s784.photobucket.com/user/Ayhankirca/media/My%20Movie%20Collection/italian_job_ver2.jpg.html)

On this day, September 15, 1969
The classic British heist movie The Italian Job is released in Swedish theaters. (It had opened in the U.K. in June and in the United States on September 3.) The film starred Michael Caine as Charlie Croker, the leader of a gang of goodhearted thieves determined to steal a 4-million-pound shipment of gold on its way from China to a bank in Turin, Italy. The film also featured three Mini Coopers--a red one, a blue one, and a white one--as getaway cars for the pilfered gold. The popular British-made “microcars” get Croker’s gang out of Turin in a spectacular chase through the city, across crowded shopping arcades and plazas, over rooftops, around a Fiat factory and even down the steps of a church during a wedding. In the end, the thieves escape Turin by zipping through its sewer pipes and head for the Alps.
But once the mobsters swap their Minis for a getaway bus en route to Switzerland, all does not end well. After taking a turn too fast on the twisting Alpine road, the bus winds up see-sawing on the edge of a great cliff, with the mobsters in the front end and their loot in the precariously swaying rear. The thieves are stuck: As Croker inches toward the gold, the gold slides closer to the door and the bus wobbles closer to the precipice. Just before the credits roll, in what director Peter Collinson thought would be the perfect setup for a sequel, Croker tells his accomplices to hold on: “I’ve got a great idea.” (Collinson’s sequel was never made; however, an updated remake of the film was released in 2003.)
In 2008, in honor of the film’s approaching 40th anniversary, the Royal Society of Chemistry proposed a contest to finish Croker’s thought. To the person who could come up with the most original and plausible way to save the gold and the crew before the bus tipped off the edge, the RSC promised an Italian holiday.
Early in 2009, the Society announced its winner: an information-technology manager named John Godwin, whose 6-page scientific proof proposed an elaborate scheme involving window-breaking, fuel-tank draining, tire-deflating, and rock-gathering, all to make the bus stable enough for one of the thieves to shimmy back and grab the gold.

September 15, 1909
Charles F. Kettering of Detroit, Michigan, applied for a patent on his ignition system. But the ignition system was only the first of Kettering's many automobile improvements, a distinguished list that includes lighting systems, lacquer finishes, antilock fuels, leaded gasoline, and the electric starter. His company Delco (Dayton Engineering Laboratories Company) was a leader in automotive technology and later became a subsidiary of General Motors. Kettering himself served as vice president and director of research for GM from 1920 to 1947.

September 15, 1909
Ford sues George B. Selden. George Selden is rarely mentioned in accounts of automobile history, often lost among names like Ford, Daimler, and Cugnot. However, Selden reigned as the "Father of the Automobile" for almost 20 years, his name engraved on every car from 1895 until 1911. He held the patent on the "Road Engine," which was effectively a patent on the automobile - a claim that went unchallenged for years, despite the many other inventors who had contributed to the development of the automobile and the internal combustion engine. Almost all of the early car manufacturers, unwilling to face the threat of a lawsuit, were forced to buy licenses from Selden, so almost every car on the road sported a small brass plaque reading "Manufactured under Selden Patent." Henry Ford was the only manufacturer willing to challenge Selden in court, and on this day a New York judge ruled that Ford had indeed infringed on Selden's patent. This decision was later overturned when it became plain that Selden had never intended to actually manufacture his "road engine." Selden's own "road engine" prototype, built in the hope of strengthening his case, only managed to stagger along for a few hours before breaking down.
PICTURED: Brayton / Selden engine diagram and George B Selden driving his automobile in 1905

(http://i38.photobucket.com/albums/e136/fattywagonman/seldednauto_zps36292280.jpg) (http://s38.photobucket.com/user/fattywagonman/media/seldednauto_zps36292280.jpg.html) (http://i38.photobucket.com/albums/e136/fattywagonman/braytonseldenengine_zps28040f32.jpg) (http://s38.photobucket.com/user/fattywagonman/media/braytonseldenengine_zps28040f32.jpg.html)

TODAYS TRIVIA:
...In the early years of the 20th century, horses were causing so much pollution with their poop that automobiles were seen as the "green" alternative.
...A woman jumped off of the Eiffel Tower and landed on a car and survived, then later married the car’s owner.
...The longest killshot from a sniper was from more that 1.5 miles away . . . and he did it twice.
...A woman fell in love with, has a sexual relationship with, and plans to marry, an amusement park ride.
...The Chocolate River in Willy Wonka and The Chocolate Factory was made from real chocolate, water and cream.
...While shooting Resident Evil there was an accident that injured 16 people. First responders to the scene thought there was a catastrophe and had trouble assessing the injuries due to the victims zombie costumes.
...A women fabricated a story about being on the 78th floor of the south WTC after it was hit. She became the president of the WTC Survivors Network. She was in Spain during 9/11.
...A man won a bet that he could have sex with 2 women for 12 hours but died shortly afterward due to ingesting an entire bottle of viagra.
...Gmail logo was designed the night before the service launched
...Men and women who listen to more music tend to be better communicators and even have longer lasting relationships.
...The price of admission for a zoo in 18th century England was a dog or a cat -- they were fed to the lions.
...New Yorkers bite 10 times more people than sharks do worldwide.
...Taking a short nap after learning something new can actually help your memory.
...Marijuana was used to treat absent-mindedness in Ancient China.
...An African tribe donated 14 cows to the US after the events of 9/11.
...At least 5 people have been murdered for unfriending someone on Facebook.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on September 17, 2015, 03:21:01 am
(http://i90.photobucket.com/albums/k268/rbotti/Factory-Star.jpg)

September 16, 1908
William C. Durant founded the General Motors Corporation (GM), consolidating several motor car companies, including Buick, Oldsmobile, and Cadillac, to form this Goliath of the automotive industry. GM's success was assured in 1912 when Cadillac introduced the electric self-starter, quickly making the hand crank obsolete and propelling sales. Throughout the next few years, the company continued to grow, buying out Chevrolet, Delco, the Fisher Body Company, and Frigidaire. In 1929, GM surpassed Ford to become the leading American passenger-car manufacturer, and by 1941, the company was the largest automotive manufacturer in the world. But the 1970s and 1980s brought darker times, and the company suffered under severe competition from imports. GM responded with attempts at modernization, but its efforts have yielded mixed results thus far; the company was forced to close a large number of plants in the U.S. during the early 1990s after several years of heavy losses.
PICTURED: Durant Factory Muncie, Indiana

September 16, 1903
Frederick Henry Royce, of Rolls-Royce Ltd., successfully tested his first gasoline engine. The two-cylinder, 10hp engine was one of three experimental cars designed by Royce during the automobile's early years, when gasoline-powered engines competed on equal footing with electric and steam engines. In fact, Royce's first company, Royce Ltd., built electric motors.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on September 17, 2015, 08:40:52 pm
(http://i72.photobucket.com/albums/i188/dburdyshaw/Z%20Misc%205%20FEP/AmphiCar.jpg) (http://s72.photobucket.com/user/dburdyshaw/media/Z%20Misc%205%20FEP/AmphiCar.jpg.html)

On this day, September 17, 1965
Four adventurous Englishmen arrive at the Frankfurt Motor Show in Germany after crossing the English Channel by Amphicar, the world’s only mass-produced amphibious passenger car. Despite choppy waters, stiff winds, and one flooded engine, the two vehicles made it across the water in about seven hours.
The Amphicar’s design, by the German engineer Hans Trippel, derived from the Schwimmwagen, the amphibious all-wheel-drive vehicle that Volkswagen had produced for the German armed forces during World War II. A company called the Quandt Group produced the Amphicars for seven years, from 1961 to1968; in all, they built about 3,900 of the little swimming convertibles.
Amphicars came in four colors--Beach White, Regatta Red, Lagoon Blue, and Fjord Green--and were powered from the rear by a 43-horsepower, four-cylinder Triumph Herald engine. On land, the cars used a four-speed-plus-reverse manual transmission. In the water, they used a transfer case that had two speeds: forward and backward. With the top and windows up, the Amphicar was remarkably seaworthy: Its front wheels acted as rudders and two nylon propellers chugged along in back. The car’s builders called it the “770,” because--in theory, at least--it could go 7 mph in the water and 70 mph on land. To see an Amphicar hit either one of these speeds was rare, however: According to one owner, it was “the fastest car on the water and the fastest boat on the road.”
The four Englishmen left London on the morning of September 16, rolled down the ramp at Dover, and headed for France. About halfway across the Channel, a blocked bilge pump flooded one of the Amphicars; the other towed it the rest of the way to shore. When they arrived at Calais, the four travelers (with the help of the crowd that had gathered to see them) managed to drag the cars over the beach and to the gas station. The next day, they headed off to Frankfurt.
About 3,000 Amphicars were imported into the United States. In fact, Quandt sold such a large proportion of the cars to Americans that in 1968, when the Motor Vehicle Air Pollution Act raised emissions standards to a level that the Amphicar couldn’t meet, the company just stopped building the cars altogether. Amphicar enthusiasts estimate that between 300 and 600 seaworthy vehicles remain on the road today.

September 17, 1903
First coast-to-coast tour was completed. At a time when driving across country was akin to climbing Mt. Everest, Lester L. Whitman and Eugene I. Hammond completed their coast-to-coast expedition on this day to national acclaim. Whitman and Hammond's journey, the third trans-U.S. automobile trip in history, contained a small detour, however. The two drivers decided to include a side trip from Windsor to Niagara Falls in Ontario, Canada, in order to dub their trek "international."

September 17, 1986
In 1985, a car that had evolved from a first-class chassis was introduced in the form of the Bentley Turbo R. Superior suspension for road handling, firmer shock absorbers, and crisper steering were meant to entice sporting motorists--just in case the Turbo R's top speeds were not enough. Still, Bentley's turbo-charged model needed nothing but speed on, breaking 16 records for speed and endurance at the Millbrook, Bedfordshire, high-speed circuit in England.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on September 18, 2015, 09:21:32 pm
(http://i294.photobucket.com/albums/mm82/slidingpillar/Napier_Bentley4.jpg) (http://s294.photobucket.com/user/slidingpillar/media/Napier_Bentley4.jpg.html)

On this day, September 18, 1904
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Glidden completed the first crossing of the Canadian Rockies by automobile, arriving exhausted from their 3,536-mile trip. The couple had driven from Boston, Massachusetts, to Vancouver, Canada, in their 24hp Napier.
PICTURED: The evolved Bently - Napier

September 18, 1955
The Ford Motor Company produced its 2,000,000th V-8 engine, 23 years after the first Ford V-8 was manufactured. The popularity of the V-8 engine began in the late 1940s, when the engines of the time failed to satisfy the industry trend toward increased horsepower, experiencing vibration and size problems at the high pressures that accompany high horsepower. Engineers began developing a stiff, V-shaped configuration to combat the new problems, and the V-8 became the preferred choice for auto manufacturers. Trends began to reverse somewhat during the late 1960s with the advent of smaller cars, and four and six cylinder engines began to gain on the popularity of the V-8.

September 18, 2006
Ford bought rights to Rover name from BMW for approximately £6 million. Ironically no Rover branded cars were produced whilst Ford owned the brand. As part of Ford's agreement to sell their Jaguar & Land Rover operations early this year to Tata Motors, the Rover brand name was included in the deal.

TODAYS TRIVIA:
...Volkswagen owns Bentley, Bugatti, Lamborghini, Audi, Ducati and Porsche.
...There is such a thing as one-way bulletproof glass. This allows you to return fire through the glass while still keeping you protected from the attacker (your shot leaves a bullet-sized hole, but doesn't compromise the rest of the shield)
...There is an Australian band called "The Beards". Every single one of their 38 songs is about beards.
...Rubik's Cube is the best-selling product of all time. It has outsold all iPhones by 100 million units.
...A teaspoon of honey is actually the lifework of 12 bees.
...There's a school in Russia for mastering “The Art of oral sex”
...World's oldest backpacker has been travelling around the world for the last 30 years.
...The phrase "Money is the root of all evil." is a misquotation of "The love of money is a root of all kinds of evil." which has quite a different meaning.
...In the 50's, the CIA tried to assassinate Fidel Castro by slipping an exploding cigar into his private supply
...In Japan, you can find Glowing Firefly Squids. They glow as they are pushed to the shore's edge.
...Animal Planet made a fake documentary about the existence of mermaids... twice. People fell for the trick both times.
...One of the first documented Internet purchases was a pepperoni pizza with mushrooms and extra cheese from Pizza Hut.
...People who are sad or depressed are likely to spend more money than those who are happy.
...Adolf Hitler was the first one to name a weapon an "assault rifle" (for the Nazi Army's StG 44 weapon)
...A husband and wife each won a lottery by playing numbers recommended by a fortune cookie.
...Google makes more money from iPhone users than Android users.
...If you squeezed out all the space inside an atom you could fit the entire human race into a sugar cube.
...2 years after Titanic sank, the Empress Of Ireland sank in the Gulf of St. Lawrence and lost 68.5% of all passengers (.5% more than Titanic!). The event was buried in the papers because of WWI.
...The worlds first smartphone was released in 1994 by IBM, and cost $899, and had only one 3rd party app.
...'Okay' is the most recognized word/phrase in the world. 'Coca Cola/Coke' is the second.
...60% (50 of 83) of the restaurants that appeared on Kitchen Nightmares have been sold or shutdown.
...Rivalry between Pizza Hut and Papa John's is so fierce, Pizza Hut reserves any phone numbers that spell out the letters P-A-P-A ...just so Papa John's can't get them.
...The word 'f@# k' was first used in 1568, but was most commonly used between 1700-1720. It disappeared from the English language for 150 years in the 18-1900s.
...Japan has a law that states any day that falls between two holidays shall become a holiday.
...Nicholas Cage once woke up in the middle of the night to find a naked man eating a Fudgesicle in front of his bed.
...Once Rowan Atkinson, known as Mr. Bean, saved a plane crash when the pilot of his private jet fainted mid-flight.
...Just like fingerprints, every person also has a unique tongue print!
...Hitler had only 1 testicle, the other was shot off in WW1, and medic Johan Jambor saved his life and regretted it until he died in 1985.
...We lose 6 seconds of visual information each minute from blinking. In a 150 minute long movie, our eyes are shut for 15 minutes.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on September 20, 2015, 12:52:04 am
(http://i280.photobucket.com/albums/kk171/crabber1967/Facebook/Duesenberg/934860_10152791783120261_1760316030_n.jpg) (http://s280.photobucket.com/user/crabber1967/media/Facebook/Duesenberg/934860_10152791783120261_1760316030_n.jpg.html)

On this day, September 19, 1932
The Bonneville Salt Flats in Utah have been the site of dozens of world speed records, but Ab Jenkins set a new kind of record in Bonneville. Jenkins completed the first 24-hour solo run, driving 2,710 miles nonstop in a single day. His stock Pierce Arrow V-12 averaged 112.94mph.

September 19, 1887
Dr. Graham Edgar, developer of the octane rating system, was born in Fayetteville, Arkansas. Although he may not be a household name, evidence of Edgar's work lines every highway in America. His rating system measures a fuel's ability to resist any form of abnormal combustion, in other words, its ability to burn cleanly. Eighty-eight and 90 are the normal ratings for everyday unleaded gasoline, while racing gasoline will often have a rating as high as 115. Almost every gas pump in America sports an octane rating sticker.

September 19, 1919
Wary of the unpopularity of "German-sounding" names after World War I, August Beuck began using the name Buick rather than Beuck for the first time when he christened the new post office in his Colorado hometown. The new name of the General Motors marque seemed assuredly all-American in a time when anti-German feelings dominated the nation. The wave of intolerance had begun with the United States entrance into World War I, resulting in many a Schmidt becoming a Smith. Throughout the country, hundreds of German newspapers and publications were forced to shut down, and German language instruction came to an end in most states.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on September 20, 2015, 06:12:49 pm
(http://i36.photobucket.com/albums/e46/ChevyGirlRox/2009%20Events/LA%20Roadster%20show%20trip/Day%20Ten-%20LA%20Roadster%20show%20Sunday/32Homecomingtrip868.jpg) (http://s36.photobucket.com/user/ChevyGirlRox/media/2009%20Events/LA%20Roadster%20show%20trip/Day%20Ten-%20LA%20Roadster%20show%20Sunday/32Homecomingtrip868.jpg.html)

On this day, September 20, 1960
California hot rodder Mickey Thompson takes another shot at the world land-speed record. A few weeks earlier, Thompson had become the first American to travel faster than 400 mph on land when he’d piloted his Challenger I (a car that he designed and built himself) across Utah’s Bonneville Salt Flats at 406.6 mph. This drive had made Thompson the fastest man on wheels, but not officially: In order to win a place in the land-speed record books, racers must make a return pass within the hour, and Thompson’s car broke down in the middle of his second run, necessitating a follow-up attempt.
At the time, the world land-speed record was 394 mph, set at Bonneville in 1947 by the British driver John Cobb. On his first run across the flats (403.135 mph), Cobb became the first man to go faster than 400 mph. (His second run only reached 388.019 mph; the record speed was an average of the two.) To set a world speed record, drivers must make two passes over the same measured mile, one out and one back (to account for wind assistance), and beat the previous average by at least 1 percent.
After Thompson’s first pass across the Utah flats on September 9, he refueled the 7,000-pound, 2,000 horsepower Challenger and pushed off for the return trip. As the car gathered speed, however, something went wrong. For years, Thompson told people that something was the driveline: It had snapped, he said, forcing him to stop accelerating and coast back across the desert. In fact, one of the car’s four supercharged engines blew when Thompson shifted into high gear.
On September 20, Thompson tried again. This time, he only managed to coax the Challenger up to about 378 mph on his first run and 368 mph on his second. But it hardly mattered: The Challenger’s speedy trips across the desert won worldwide fame for the car and its driver, and by the time Thompson retired in 1962, he had set more than 100 speed records.
In 1988, two hooded gunmen murdered Thompson and his wife in their driveway and fled the scene on bicycles. Almost 20 years later, one of Thompson’s business acquaintances was convicted of the killings; he is serving two life sentences without parole.

September 20, 1945
War production halts. Automotive manufacturers had been at the heart of a seamless war machine during World War II, producing trucks, tanks, and planes at astounding rates. But only after the last shots were fired did auto factories begin to produce cars again, focusing their sights on the booming postwar market. A month after the surrender of Japan, Packard followed the lead of every other company and ceased military production, turning out its last wartime Rolls-Royce Merlin engine on this day.

September 20, 1979
Legendary Lee Iacocca makes a comeback. After being fired from the Ford presidency, he was elected chairman of the failing Chrysler Corporation. Despite dire predictions from his critics, Iacocca succeeded in rebuilding Chrysler through layoffs, cutbacks, hard-selling advertising, and a government loan guarantee. He became the epitome of the "can-do" executive, famous for his strong work ethic and no-nonsense style. During Chrysler's crisis years, Iacocca reduced his salary to $1 per year to set an example for the rest of the company, explaining that everyone must be willing to sacrifice a little in order for Chrysler to survive. By 1983, Chrysler had moved from the verge of bankruptcy to a competitive force in the automobile market, paying back all of its government loans in less than four years. His autobiography Iacocca became a best-seller in 1984, breaking all records for a business book, which accounts all of his such ventures.

September 20, 1984
Twelve people were killed when a suicide car bomber attacked the U.S. embassy complex in Beirut, Lebanon. Car bombs have started to become the weapon of choice for terrorists from early 80s.. But car bombs has been used as early as 1920s. The car bomb method has sadly proven an effective way of achieving mass destruction, as it is much easier for a terrorist to find a parking space than bypass a building's internal security. From Beirut to Oklahoma City, entire buildings have been destroyed from car bomb blasts, and countless lives have been lost. Among the most noted in recent times were the dual U.S. embassy bombings in Kenya and Tanzania, where two car bombs killed 257 people, and reduced several buildings to rubble. Similar setup has been used extensively by insurgents in Iraq.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on September 21, 2015, 09:37:38 pm
(http://i351.photobucket.com/albums/q465/64Val/mopar%20sunday/PB160008.jpg) (http://s351.photobucket.com/user/64Val/media/mopar%20sunday/PB160008.jpg.html)

On this day, September 21, 1959
No-name Plymouth produced in Michigan. The first Plymouth Valiant was produced on this day at a plant in Hamtramck, Michigan, although it was not known by that name until 1961. Originally code named "Falcon" after the 1955 Chrysler Falcon, plans for the new model went awry when the Chrysler marketing team found out at the last minute that Ford had already registered the name "Falcon" for its compact car. The news resulted in a wild scramble, for the logo castings had already been made and marketing plans finalized. A company-wide contest was held for a new name, and "Valiant" emerged the winner. However, there was no time to make new logo castings, so the car was simply introduced as the Valiant, featuring only a mylar sticker on the engine for identification. It wasn't until 1961 that the Valiant became the Plymouth Valiant, new logo castings and all.

September 21, 1921
The first Bentley was sold to Noel van Raalte, wealthy and influential playboy racecar driver.

September 21, 1945
Henry Ford II, grandson and namesake of Henry Ford, succeeded his father as president of the Ford Motor Company, inheriting a company that was losing money at the rate of several million dollars a month. After recovering from the shock of his father's unexpected death, Henry Ford II was effectively given a crash course in management, but fortunately for the company, he turned out to have the magic touch. He quickly set about reorganizing and modernizing the Ford Motor Company, firing the powerful Personnel Chief Harry Bennett, whose strong-arm tactics and anti-union stance had made Ford notorious for its bad labor relations. He also brought in new talent, including a group of former U.S. Air Force intelligence officers, among them Robert McNamara, who became known as the "Whiz Kids." During his tenure as president, Henry Ford II nursed the Ford Motor Company back to health, greatly expanding its international operations and introducing two classic models, the Mustang and the Thunderbird.

September 21, 1947
The Grand Prix returns after the World War II. Driving his Talbot-Lago across the finish line in Lyon-Parilly, Louis Chrion emerged victorious at the French Grand Prix of 1947. The race was a continuation of the Grand Prix's long history and France's first major post-World War II race. The event had been suspended for several years during the war, along with almost all other car racing. In a side note, the Albert Lory designed CTA-Arsenal made a disgraceful debut at the Grand Prix that year, and was never raced again.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on September 22, 2015, 07:27:45 pm
(http://i645.photobucket.com/albums/uu176/MustangMayhem/this%20day%20in%20HISTORY/duryea-auto-5_zps81fa43bc.jpg) (http://s645.photobucket.com/user/MustangMayhem/media/this%20day%20in%20HISTORY/duryea-auto-5_zps81fa43bc.jpg.html)

On this day, September 22, 1893
America's first automobile was not built by a Henry Ford or Walter Chrysler, but by Charles and Frank Duryea, two bicycle makers. Charles spotted a gasoline engine at the 1886 Ohio State Fair and became convinced that an engine-driven carriage could be built. The two brothers designed and built the car together, working in a rented loft in Springfield, Massachusetts. After two years of tinkering, Charles and Frank Duryea showed off their home invention on the streets of Springfield, the first successful run of an automobile in the U.S.

September 22, 1953
The world's first four-level interchange structure, was opened in L.A. Los Angeles is widely known for its traffic and smog, miles of freeway stretching in every direction. The massive concrete structure connected the freeways of Hollywood, Harbor, Santa Ana, and Arroyo Seco.

September 22, 1989
Chrysler sells interest in Mitsubishi. In a move that sent ripples throughout the automotive world, the Chrysler Corporation sold 50 percent of its interest in the Mitsubishi Motors Corporation. The decision came at a time when most other American automobile manufacturers, including Chrysler's top rivals Ford and General Motors, were eagerly buying up shares of Japanese automobile stock and strengthening ties with Japanese manufacturers. Chrysler claimed that it was taking advantage of a bullish Japanese market at a potential gain of $310 million, but industry pundits speculated that the motive went much deeper. Chrysler's audacious move likely stemmed from disagreements between the two companies over Mitsubishi's U.S. sales and distribution. In many cases, Mitsubishi-made products were being sold under the Chrysler name, often in direct competition with the Mitsubishi marque.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on September 23, 2015, 10:13:19 pm
(http://i645.photobucket.com/albums/uu176/MustangMayhem/this%20day%20in%20HISTORY/Monster-Tajima-Suzuki-Pikes-Peak-Hill-Climb-02_zps4bdc2356.jpg) (http://s645.photobucket.com/user/MustangMayhem/media/this%20day%20in%20HISTORY/Monster-Tajima-Suzuki-Pikes-Peak-Hill-Climb-02_zps4bdc2356.jpg.html)

On this day, September 23, 1939
A.P. MacArthur pulled across the finish line in Ballinascorney, Ireland, winning the last Irish hill climb before World War II. Hill-climbing events usually took place on a public road, and they became wildly popular in Great Britain and Ireland during the early days of the automobile. Cars of all shapes and sizes would race up a hill, with drivers gunning their engines and showing off the prowess of their new motor car. Cheered on by a crowd of onlookers, the fastest car up the hill won. World War II brought an end to hill climbs and car racing in general, as manufacturers funneled their efforts into military production. However, hill climbing returned after the war, more popular than ever, most popular being the Pikes Peak event.

September 23, 1969
Tapio Laukkanen, Finnish rally driver was born in Lahti, Southern Finland.
In 1996 he won the Finnish Rally Championship in a Volkswagen Golf GTi and in 1999 he won the British Rally Championship with a Renault Mégane Maxi twinned with fellow Finn, Kaj Lindström.

September 23, 1972
The famous Crystal Palace racing circuit in London, England, was closed by the Greater London Council, ending a 45-year racing tradition. The closing had been announced a few weeks before the beginning of the 1972 season, prompted by noise complaints and safety concerns. During its long history, the Crystal Palace circuit had hosted everything from the first televised auto race to a few demonstration laps by Chitty Chitty Bang Bang.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on September 24, 2015, 07:56:45 pm
(http://i245.photobucket.com/albums/gg78/badbowtie-blown572/Honda-NSX-040ajrdesigns.jpg) (http://s245.photobucket.com/user/badbowtie-blown572/media/Honda-NSX-040ajrdesigns.jpg.html)

On this day, September 24, 1948
The Honda Motor Company, one of the world's leading automobile manufacturers, began as a research institute founded by engineer Honda Soichiro. The institute focused on creating small, efficient internal combustion engines, before it began incorporating these engines into motorcycles under the Honda name. It was on this day that the Honda Technical Research Institute officially became the Honda Motor Company, establishing a corporation that would become the leading producer of motorcycles in the world.

September 24, 1908
The first factory-built Ford Model T was completed on this day, just one more step in Ford's affordable revolution. Affectionately known as the "Tin Lizzie," the Model T revolutionized the automotive industry by providing an affordable, reliable car for the average person. Ford was able to keep the price down by retaining control of all raw materials, and by employing revolutionary mass production methods. When it was first introduced, the "Tin Lizzie" cost only $850 and seated two people.

September 24, 1974
General Motors announced that the release of the "Monza," its rotary-engine sports compact, would be postponed due to problems complying with new EPA emissions standards. Environmental concerns had become an increasingly high priority with the American public, and the government had been responding accordingly. Pressures on the automotive industry had been riding high since the 1970 Clean Air Act, rising even higher with the new National Ambient Air Quality Standards of 1971. With both public opinion and the federal government against them, GM had no choice but to delay the new model's release.

TODAYS TRIVIA:
...whitehouse.com used to be a #### website, resulting in many schoolchildren in the late 1990s accidentally seeing adult content.
...In 1990, New Zealand became the first country in the modern world to appoint an Official Wizard.
...Russian scientists were able to bring back an arctic flower, extinct for 32,000 years, from a seed that's been borrowed by an ice age squirrel.
...Pringles chips are named after a street in Finneytown, a tiny Cincinnati suburb.
...A person of average size and weight burns about 60 to 70 calories each hour just by sitting and watching television.
...Owning a cat at home reduces the risk of heart attack by 40% and stroke by 30%.
...Emerson Moser retired after making 1.4 billion crayons for Crayola for 37 years, and then announced he was colorblind.
...IKEA stores are designed like mazes in order to prevent customers from leaving.
...None of the Beach Boys actually surfed except for Dennis who died drowning.
...There are 300 registered superheroes living in the US.
...Humans can't taste pure water, but it does have a taste.
...One Direction are the youngest band to ever perform at the Olympic Games.
...More people actually live in caves now than during the Stone Age.
...Google has been buying, on average, more than one company per week since 2010.
...Every year in Ancient Athens, citizens had the chance to vote their least favorite politician into exile.
...The Bible is the most shoplifted book in the world.
...The vibrations from the bass on a loud stereo can cause your lungs to collapse.
...Gandhi once wrote a letter to his "dear friend" urging him not to go to war. This friend was Hitler.
...During the 1960's, Robert F. Kennedy said he believed a black man could become President of the United States within 40 years.
...Even when adjusted for inflation, the movie Titanic cost more to make than the actual Titanic ship.
...You can hire an "evil birthday clown" to stalk your child around for a week.
...If you had one billion dollars and spent $10,000 every day, it would take 275 years for you to spend it all.
...Hearing sarcastic remarks makes you more creative.
...An Indian airline only hires women because they are lighter, so they save up to $500,000 per year in fuel.
...Drinking 16 ounces of cold water on an empty stomach will increase your metabolism by about 30%.
...A bite is taken out of the Apple logo to provide scale, so that the apple wouldn't be mistaken for a cherry.
...When you go swimming, it's estimated that you swallow as many viruses as there are people on Earth.
...If Twitter was a country, it would be the 12th most populated country in the world.
...Bill Gates has impersonators who take his place at events the real Bill Gates cannot or does not want to attend.
...A 2.5 GB disk drive in 1980 was the size of a fridge. Price: US$40,000.
...The letter 'L' is on the right side of the keyboard, and the letter 'R' is on the left side.
...If an ant was the same size as us, it would be twice as fast as a Lamborghini.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on September 25, 2015, 09:29:49 pm
(http://i304.photobucket.com/albums/nn182/dragon5616/Diaries/Indy%20500/42-20Ray20Harroun20winner20at20Indy201911.jpg) (http://s304.photobucket.com/user/dragon5616/media/Diaries/Indy%20500/42-20Ray20Harroun20winner20at20Indy201911.jpg.html)

On this day, September 25, 1987
Ray Harroun's place in history was sealed when the U.S. Postal Service issued a stamp featuring the famous racing champion. Called "Racing Car 1911," the stamp depicted Harroun and the Marmon Wasp which he drove to victory in the first Indy 500. Harroun, an engineer, had built the car himself and was the only driver on the Indianapolis track without a riding mechanic. The mechanics usually accompanied the driver in order to warn him of the other cars in the race, but Harroun went the race alone after he rigged up a device that allowed him to see the cars behind him--the first rearview mirror. The race took over six hours to complete, with Harroun coming from 28th place to finish first. He died in 1968 at the age of 89.

September 25, 1926
Henry Ford of the Ford Motor Company announced the 8-hour, 5-day work week.

September 25, 1936
Bill Schindler, a race-car driver, met with misfortune, crashing during a sprint race in Mineola, New York. Three days after the accident, Schindler's left leg had to be amputated. However, this loss did not prevent him from continuing his career.

September 25, 2004
On September 25, 2004, Chinese officials gather at the brand-new Shanghai International Circuit racetrack in anticipation of the next day's inaugural Formula One Chinese Grand Prix. Though Formula One racing was traditionally a European sport, the builders and boosters of the state-sponsored Shanghai track--part of an elaborate complex called the Shanghai International Auto City--hoped that they could help the sport catch on in Asia. In particular, they hoped their high-tech raceway would draw attention and investment to the fledgling Chinese auto industry.
Formula One racing, in which drivers race around specially-designed circuits built to resemble twisting, irregular city streets is the offspring of European Grand Prix motor racing, an almost century-old sport in which drivers would zip from one town to the next on public roads. As the Grand Prix contests grew more popular, they grew more dangerous--to racers, spectators, and especially the ordinary drivers who happened to be on the roads during a race. Soon, race organizers decided to close the roads on the day of their events and to establish and enforce a set of official rules. In 1947, Grand Prix officials created the Federation Internationale de L'Automobile, which became the central governing authority of the championship races; its set of rules was known as the Formula One. Today, there are seventeen Formula One races every year, and they take place everywhere from Spain, Monaco, Belgium and Italy to Australia, Malaysia, Brazil, Abu Dhabi, Bahrain and, of course, China.
Shanghai's International Circuit raceway was designed to help China cash in on the skyrocketing international popularity of Formula One competitions. It is 3.3 miles long, with two long straightaways and 16 corners. It cost $300 million in public money--about $100 million per mile of track--and can seat 200,000 spectators. The day after the raceway opened, some 150,000 people filled the stands as the Brazilian driver Rubens Barrichello won its inaugural race.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on September 28, 2015, 09:24:58 pm
(http://i764.photobucket.com/albums/xx289/kuretic/American%20Autoracing/1895_chicago-evanston_-_frank__left.jpg) (http://s764.photobucket.com/user/kuretic/media/American%20Autoracing/1895_chicago-evanston_-_frank__left.jpg.html)

On this day, September 28, 1938
Inventor Charles Duryea dies in Philadelphia at the age of 76. Duryea and his brother Frank designed and built one of the first functioning “gasoline buggies,” or gas-powered automobiles, in the United States. For most of his life, however, Charles insisted on taking full credit for the brothers’ innovation. On the patent applications he filed for the Duryea Motor Wagon, for instance, Charles averred that he was the car’s sole inventor; he also loftily proclaimed that his brother was “simply a mechanic” hired to execute Charles’ plans.
Charles Duryea was not the inventor of the first gasoline engine, nor was he the first person to build a gas-powered car. Instead, as his obituary in the New York Times put it, he “had the rare mechanical wit to see how the contributions of his predecessors could be combined into a sound invention.” In 1886, Charles was working as a bicycle mechanic in Peoria when he received a jolt of inspiration from a gasoline engine he saw at a state fair. There was no reason, he thought, why such a motor could not be used to power a lightweight quadricycle. He spent seven years designing and redesigning his machine, a one-cylinder, four-horsepower, tiller-steered car with a water-cooled gas engine, a buggy body, and narrow metal oak-spoked wheels turned by bicycle chains. The car also had an electric ignition and a spray carburetor, both designed by Frank.
In September 1893, Frank Duryea took the finally-completed Motor Wagon out for its first official spin. He only managed to splutter about 600 feet down his block before the car’s friction-belt transmission failed, but even so, it was clear that the Duryea auto was a promising machine. It’s worth noting that Charles missed all this excitement: Frank and the car were in Springfield, Massachusetts, while the elder Duryea was fixing bikes in Peoria.
Two years later, on Thanksgiving Day, an improved Duryea Motor Wagon with pneumatic rubber tires won the first auto race in the United States. In 1896, the brothers built and sold 13 identical Duryeas, making theirs the first American company to manufacture more than one automobile at a time. After that, the brothers parted ways: Frank went on to build and sell the Stevens-Duryea Limousine, while Charles (“unable,” his Times obituary said, “to adapt himself to the public taste”) worked on designing less practical vehicles like tiller-steered mechanical tricycles.
PICTURED: Frank Duryea in 1895

September 28, 1978
Car & Driver Editor Don Sherman set a Class E record at the Bonneville Salt Flats in Utah driving the Mazda RX7, the standard-bearer for the rotary engine in the U.S. market, and reaching 183.904mph. The RX7's unique rotary engine doesn't have the standard pistons, instead, two rounded "rotors" spin to turn the engine's flywheel. Although the rotary engine was not a new concept, the Mazda RX7 was one of the first to conquer the reliability issues faced by earlier rotary engines. Light and fun to drive, with 105hp from its 1.1 liter rotary engine, the RX7 was extremely popular.

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September 28, 1982
Ford took a major step in overcoming its history of poor labor relations opening the joint UAW (United Auto Workers) and Ford National Development and Training Center. The center, located in Dearborn, Michigan, provides education and training to workers, as well as community programs. Workers can participate in any of six major programs, learning about everything from math skills to pension plans. More importantly, the center also offers relocation assistance and several unemployment programs for laid-off workers. Ford subsidizes the training center with grants and tuition assistance.

September 28, 1988
The Ahrens Fox Model AC fire engine had its 15 minutes of fame when the U.S. Postal Service featured the 1913 fire engine as part of its transportation series. The Ahrens-Fox Company was one of the most successful fire engine manufacturers in the country, thriving on the competition between volunteer fire companies that developed in the early twentieth century. These rivalries spurred ingenuity and innovation, as well as sales of fancy new fire-fighting equipment. The Model AC depicted on the stamp was bought by the town of San Angelo, Texas, for its fire department and featured new technology like the steam pump and chemical tank.

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Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on September 29, 2015, 08:55:46 pm
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On this day, September 29, 1888
Daimler cars managed to make it to New York long before other imports due to an auto enthusiast named William Steinway. Steinway, concluded licensing negotiations with Gottlieb Daimler, gaining permission to manufacture Daimler cars in the U.S. He founded the "Daimler Motor Company" and began producing Daimler engines, as well as importing Daimler boats, trucks, and other equipment to the North American market. Still, the U.S. was just a small portion of Daimler's market, and when he introduced a new line in 1901, he christened it Mercedes because he feared the German-sounding Daimler would not sell well.
PICTURED: Karl Benz received a patent for the first Automobile in 1866, which had three wheels. A year later, Gottlieb Daimler introduced the first four wheel automobile in the Industrial Age.

September 29, 1908
William Durrant merged Buick, Oldsmobile (Lansing, MI) into General Motors. He also added Cadillac (Detroit) for $4.4 million cash, Oakland (Pontiac predecessor), dozens of parts suppliers (AC Spark Plug) into GM.

September 29, 1913
Rudolf Diesel, inventor of the engine that bears his name, disappears from the steamship Dresden while traveling from Antwerp, Belgium to Harwick, England. On October 10, a Belgian sailor aboard a North Sea steamer spotted a body floating in the water; upon further investigation, it turned out that the body was Diesel’s. There was, and remains, a great deal of mystery surrounding his death: It was officially judged a suicide, but many people believed that Diesel was murdered.
Diesel patented a design for his engine on February 28, 1892,; the following year, he explained his design in a paper called “Theory and Construction of a Rational Heat Engine to Replace the Steam Engine and Contemporary Combustion Engine.” He called his invention a “compression ignition engine” that could burn any fuel--later on, the prototypes he built would run on peanut or vegetable oil--and needed no ignition system: It ignited by introducing fuel into a cylinder full of air that had been compressed to an extremely high pressure and was, therefore, extremely hot.
Such an engine would be unprecedentedly efficient, Diesel argued: In contrast to the other steam engines of the era, which wasted more than 90 percent of their fuel energy, Diesel calculated that his could be as much as 75 percent efficient. The most efficient engine that Diesel ever actually built had an efficiency of 26 percent--not quite 75 percent, but still much better than its peers.
By 1912, there were more than 70,000 diesel engines working around the world, mostly in factories and generators. Eventually, Diesel’s engine would revolutionize the railroad industry; after World War II, trucks and buses also started using diesel-type engines that enabled them to carry heavy loads much more economically.
At the time of Diesel’s disappearance , he was on his way to England to attend the groundbreaking of a new diesel-engine plant--and to meet with the British navy about installing his engine on their submarines. Conspiracy theories began to fly almost immediately: “Inventor Thrown Into the Sea to Stop Sale of Patents to British Government,” read one headline; another worried that Diesel was “Murdered by Agents from Big Oil Trusts.” It is likely that Diesel did throw himself overboard--as it turns out, he was nearly broke, but the mystery will probably never be solved.

September 29, 1983
Henry Ford II, grandson and namesake of Henry Ford, joined his grandfather today as a member of the Automotive Hall of Fame in Midland, Michigan. When he succeeded his father as president of the Ford Motor Company, the automotive giant was crumbling, losing several million dollars a month and mired in old-fashioned practices. Henry Ford II quickly set about modernizing the company and is often credited with its revitalization.

TODAYS TRIVIA:
...American school buses are yellow because you see yellow faster than any other color, 1.24 times faster than red in fact.
...There’s a man who is ‘allergic’ to Wi-Fi. It’s a condition called “Electromagnetic Sensitivity.”
...There are four people in USA with the name "Herp Derp."
...An elephant weighs less than a blue whale's tongue.
...In 1898 Bayer introduced diacetylmorphine, marketed as a cure for morphine addiction and cough suppressant. The drug is now known as Heroin.
...Krusty the Clown was originally supposed to be Homer Simpson's secret identity, which is why he looks like Homer with clown make-up.
...The famous ring announcer Michael Buffer has earnt over $400 million from his trademarked phrase "Let's get ready to rumble!"
...Adolf Hitler almost drowned in a river when he was 4 years old but was saved by a local priest.
...There's a word for mishearing a lyric for a different but similar sounding word in a song - it's "mondegreen."
...If Dr Seuss was stuck with his writing, he & his editor would go to a secret closet filled with 100s of hats & wear them till the words came
...Jerusalem Syndrome is when you visit Jerusalem and suddenly have religious delusions, believing that you are the next coming of Jesus.
...Bananas, pumpkins and watermelons are berries.
...Egypt isn't the country with the most pyramids. It's Sudan and they have approximately 255 pyramids.
...In France, by law a bakery has to make all the bread it sells from scratch in order to have the right to be called a bakery.
...Between Egypt + Sudan, there's a territory no one owns. It is is one of the few unclaimed regions on earth.
...Marilyn Monroe had six toes.
...No women or children die in any of the Jurassic Park movies.
...There is a place called 'Cat Island' where the ratio of cats to humans is 4 to 1.
...Domino's Pizza canceled their '30 minutes or less' guarantee because drivers caused accidents while rushing to deliver pizzas on time.
...A Megadeath is a unit of measurement. 1 Megadeath = 1 million deaths caused by nuclear explosion.
...Winston Churchill once defined tact as "the ability to tell someone to go to hell in such as way that they look forward to the trip."
...America's first slave owner was a black man.
...Every month, humans spend more than 35 billion hours on the Internet.
...Dolphins, whales and apes are the only animals, other than humans, known to commit suicide.
..."Limerence" = The technical term for having a crush on a person.
...The word “Android” refers only to a male looking robot. For one that looks like a female, the proper term is “Gynoid.”
...A man named Jack Ass tried to sue Jackass for $10 million.
...In television commercials, the icecream you see is actually mashed potatoes & the milk is just white glue.
...Cracking your knuckles does not actually hurt your bones or cause arthritis.
...A single sperm contains 37.5 MB of DNA information. One ejaculation represents a data transfer of 15,875 GB.
...Christopher Columbus, on the way to the New World, was stranded in Jamaica in 1503 A.D. Knowing that he was wearing out his welcome with the natives and that a lunar eclipse was near, Columbus warned the natives that moon would vanish if they did not continue to feed him and his sailors.
...In 1700 the average person consumed 4 pounds of sugar a year - today, most Americans consume that much every 8 days.
...The German word for 'birth control pill' is "antibabypille."
...Most professional soccer players run 7 miles in a game.
...Tupac danced ballet in high school and ended up portraying the Mouse King in a production of The Nutcracker.
...Not swinging your arms when you walk increases the effort of walking by 12%, that's equal of walking 20% faster or carrying a 10kg backpack.
...A Boeing 727 aircraft was stolen out of an airport in 2003. Neither the plane, nor the two men aboard were ever found.
...There was an experiment where three schizophrenic men who believed they were Jesus Christ were all put in one place to sort it out.
...An electric bell has been running off the same battery for 170 years and no one knows what the battery is made of.
...Beethoven's last words were "I shall hear in Heaven."
...People who can naturally detect when someone's lying, are called "Truth Wizards."
...Drinking too much water can kill you.
...The average computer user spends more time touching their computer keyboard than their spouse or partner.
...An internet addict is someone who spends more than 6 hours a day online, not doing anything important, regularly for 3 or more months.
...Everybody who carries the red-head gene is directly related to the 1st person ever to have red hair.
..."Eargasm" describes the chill and tingling sensation down your spine when listening to very good music.
...When a contestant leaves Hell’s Kitchen, they are immediately taken for a psychiatric evaluation.
...It takes 59 minutes to make an Oreo cookie.
...Japan has over 50,000 people that are over 100 years old.
...Lady Gaga and Brad Pitt were once strippers.
...Cooked tarantula spiders are considered a delicacy in Cambodia.
...China builds one skyscraper every five days.
...University of Oregon plagiarized the section on plagiarism in its student handbook from Stanford's teaching handbook.
...When asked why she had shot 11 people at her school, the shooter, 16-year old Brenda Ann Spencer, replied, "I don't like Mondays."
...Sid Vicious was such a poor bassist that when performing with the Sex Pistols his band mates would often unplug his amplifier mid-performance.
...Levi Strauss never wore a pair of jeans.
...King Shapur ll of Persia ruled longer than he lived, having been crowned king before his birth.
...Pitbulls and similar Pit breeds accounted for 61% of all serious dog attacks in the U.S. and Canada from 1982 through 2012.
...In Russia, it's now illegal to tell kids that gay people exist.
...People were confused how a Chinese couple managed to run a busy restaurant 21 hours a day without getting tired. Locals named it "robot couple restaurant". Turns out the restaurant is run by two couples … both the men and women are identical twins.
...Pac-Man is the highest grossing arcade game of all time - having sold 400,000 hardware units. If adjusted for inflation it made $7.61 billion in revenue.
..."siri" spelled backwards is "iris" who was the messenger between the gods and humans in Greek mythology
...Mountain Dew contains flame retardant.
...There are so many kind of apples, that if you ate a new one everyday, it would take over 20 years to try them all.
...14-year-old Kurt Cobain announced to a schoolmate that he'd be a superstar musician, get rich and famous, kill himself and go out in a blaze of glory like Jimi Hendrix.
...President Lyndon Johnson was infamous for having meetings while on the toilet.
...A Japanese customs officer planted marijuana in a traveller's suitcase, forgot who it was and the sniffer dogs missed it.
...Prisoners in the 1800s were fed lobster - and it was considered cruel and unusual punishment.
...Camel bites can cause your bones to dissolve.
...World's largest single food item on any menu is whole camel stuffed with sheep stuffed with chicken stuffed with fish.
...Stephen Hawking has survived for over fifty years after being diagnosed with a disease that only 4% of people survive 10 years with.
...The plural, gender-neutral term for "nieces and nephews" is "niblings"
...In Bulgarian legends, it is said that if you walk beneath a rainbow, you will change genders.
...An octopus's testicles are in its head.
...Coca-Cola only sold 25 bottles the first year but kept going.
...Jimi Hendrix failed his high school music class.
...The scientist who developed the vaccine to fight leprosy is almost 100 years old, and he is still working to find a vaccine for cancer.
...Brown eyes are actually blue underneath, and as a result you can actually get surgery to turn brown eyes blue

And Finally the best one

A man in Florida woke up with a severe headache. When he went to the hospital they found a bullet in his head. It turned out that his wife had shot him in the head while he was sleeping.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on September 30, 2015, 07:49:42 pm
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On this day, September 30, 1955
24-year-old actor James Dean is killed in Cholame, California, when the Porsche he is driving hits a Ford Tudor sedan at an intersection. The driver of the other car, 23-year-old California Polytechnic State University student Donald Turnupseed, was dazed but mostly uninjured; Dean’s passenger, German Porsche mechanic Rolf Wütherich was badly injured but survived. Only one of Dean’s movies, “East of Eden,” had been released at the time of his death (“Rebel Without a Cause” and “Giant” opened shortly afterward), but he was already on his way to superstardom--and the crash made him a legend.
James Dean loved racing cars, and in fact he and his brand-new, $7000 Porsche Spyder convertible were on their way to a race in Salinas, 90 miles south of San Francisco. Witnesses maintained that Dean hadn’t been speeding at the time of the accident--in fact, Turnupseed had made a left turn right into the Spyder’s path--but some people point out that he must have been driving awfully fast: He’d gotten a speeding ticket in Bakersfield, 150 miles from the crash site, at 3:30 p.m. and then had stopped at a diner for a Coke, which meant that he’d covered quite a distance in a relatively short period of time. Still, the gathering twilight and the glare from the setting sun would have made it impossible for Turnupseed to see the Porsche coming no matter how fast it was going.
Rumor has it that Dean’s car, which he’d nicknamed the Little *******, was cursed. After the accident, the car rolled off the back of a truck and crushed the legs of a mechanic standing nearby. Later, after a used-car dealer sold its parts to buyers all over the country, the strange incidents multiplied: The car’s engine, transmission and tires were all transplanted into cars that were subsequently involved in deadly crashes, and a truck carrying the Spyder’s chassis to a highway-safety exhibition skidded off the road, killing its driver. The remains of the car vanished from the scene of that accident and haven’t been seen since.
Wütherich, whose feelings of guilt after the car accident never abated, tried to commit suicide twice during the 1960s--and in 1967, he stabbed his wife 14 times with a kitchen knife in a failed murder/suicide--and he died in a drunk-driving accident in 1981. Turnupseed died of lung cancer in 1981.

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September 30, 1937
The Duesenberg were considered the most luxurious cars in the world, hand-crafted and custom-made, heeded as the epitome of flamboyance and elegance. Their clientele included the great, the near-great, the famous, and the infamous. For almost 10 years, Duesenbergs were acknowledged as the ultimate in quality and value, inspiring the expression "it's a duesy." However, this symbol of opulence suffered during the hard times of the Great Depression, and Duesenberg was forced to close its doors forever on this day.
PICTURE: 1929, Bill Spence's Indianapolis-built Duesenberg special

September 30, 1901
Compulsory car registration for all vehicles driving over 18mph took effect throughout France.

TODAYS TRIVIA:
...When Nike approached Zach Galifianakis from The Hangover for advertising, Zach asked: Do you guys still have 7-year-olds making your stuff?
...3 years of your life will be spent on the toilet.
...The phrase "and they lived happily ever after" was originally "happily until they died."
...Worrying about getting sick can make you sick.
...Popcorn has been eaten for almost 7,000 years.
...Relationships that start during the spring to summer months are the most long lasting relationships!
...Crying releases extra stress hormones, which is why you feel better after crying!
...A study found that morning people are happier and more satisfied with life overall than night owls.
...Apple makes $302,000 per minute.
...The original Ronald McDonald was fired for being overweight.
...According to a study, most people are happiest at 7:26 PM on Saturday night.
...Prime Minister of India's salary is only $2,400 USD.
...1.5 billion people do not have access to electricity, 2.5 billion have no toilet, and 1 billion go hungry every day.
...Only 8% of the world's currency exists as physical cash; the rest is electronic.
...There were 53 kilobytes of digital memory worldwide in 1953.
...Studies show that it is harder to tell a convincing lie to someone you find sexually attractive.
...On an average working day, waiters and waitresses walk twice as much as lawyers and police officers do.
...The most abused drug in the world is caffeine
..."Batman" is actually the real name of a city in Turkey.
...Arnold Schwarzenegger was so into working out when he was young, that he broke into local gyms when they were closed on weekends.
...Broccoli is the only vegetable that is also a flower.
...The "Pinky Promise" originally indicated that the person who breaks the promise must cut off their pinky finger.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on October 01, 2015, 10:01:18 pm
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October 1, 1908
Beginning in 1903, Henry Ford and his engineers struggled for five difficult years to produce a reliable, inexpensive car for the mass market. It wasn't until their 20th attempt, christened the Model T after the 20th letter in the alphabet, that the fledgling Ford Motor Company hit pay dirt. The Ford Model T was introduced to the American public, and Ford's affordable revolution had begun. Affectionately known as the "Tin Lizzie," the Model T revolutionized the automotive industry by providing an affordable, reliable car for the average American. Ford was able to keep the price down by retaining control of all raw materials, and by employing revolutionary mass production methods. When it was first introduced, the "Tin Lizzie" cost only $850 and seated two people, and by the time it was discontinued in 1927, nearly 15,000,000 Model Ts had been sold. Who'd of thought that after 100 years, these cars would be modified into such cars as "Rat Rods"

Today's Trivia:
...People who are sad are likely to spend more money than those who are happy.
...It is possible to die from a broken heart -- This condition is called Stress Cardiomyopathy.
...James Bond killed 352 people in 22 films and Pierce Brosnan was the deadliest Bond (killed 47 people in GoldenEye)
...People who were born in September, October and November are the most likely to live to be 100 years old.
...According to an Oxford study, falling in love costs you two close friends.
...One Direction's band member, Harry Styles was born with 4 nipples.
...Leonardo da Vinci could draw with one hand and write with the other at the same time.
...A woman was found dead on the couch of her London apartment 3 years after her death. The TV was still on.
...When the Arctic Monkeys started their band, none of them could play instruments.
...We actually live about 80 milliseconds in the past because that's how long it takes our brains to process information.
...United States is the only country in the world where property owners own the rights to the underground resources beneath their property.
...Air Jordans were banned from the NBA, however Michael Jordan always wore them as Nike was willing to pay the fine for each game.
...When Charlie Chaplin met Einstein he said: They applaud me because everybody understands me. They applaud you because no one understands you
..."Never odd or even" spelled backwards is "Never odd or even"
...When any of your body parts fall asleep, wake it up by shaking your head.
...Cost of college degree in the U.S. has increased 1120% in only 30 years.
...Left-handers are more prone to certain diseases, such as dyslexia, but they are also more likely to be geniuses.
...One in five people in Singapore is a millionaire, making it the city/state with the most millionaires per capita.
...There's a Japanese movie called "Zombie ass" about zombie's which come out of toilet seats.
...The cost of being a real world Batman would be about $300 million dollars.
...20% of all Google searches done daily have never been done before.
...WiFi does not stand for Wireless Fidelity. It stands for... nothing. It's a made up catchy name developed by a marketing company.
...Sexually frustrated people are actually more likely to rip and tear the labels off of their drink bottles.
...You have a better chance of becoming President of the United States than winning Saturday's $600 million Powerball jackpot.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on October 02, 2015, 08:38:55 pm
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October 2, 1947
On this day, the Federation Internationale de l'Automobile (FIA) formally established F1 racing in Grand Prix competition for the first time. Technological leaps made during World War II had rendered pre-war racing rules obsolete, so the Formula One guidelines were established in order to encompass the new type of racing, faster and more furious than anything the racing world had ever seen. Formula One was initiated for cars of 1,500cc supercharged and 4,500cc unsupercharged, and the minimum race distance was reduced from 500km to 300km, a change that allowed the famous Monaco Grand Prix to be reintroduced into official Grand Prix racing. In 1950, Giuseppe "Nino" Farina, driving an Alfa Romeo 158, won the first Formula One World Championship at the Silverstone British Grand Prix, and racing's most thrilling tradition was born.
PICTURED: Achille Varzi leading the race. 1947 GP Spa - Varzi

October 2, 1948
Law student Cameron Argetsinger's vision of bringing European style racing competition to the place where he spent his summer vacations became a reality. Under the guidance of Argetsinger and the Sports Car Club of America (SCCA), the village of Watkins Glen, located in the scenic New York Finger Lakes region, hosted its first automobile races along a challenging course that encompassed asphalt, cement, and dirt roads. It was the first post-World War II road race in the United States, and Frank Griswold, driving a 2.9 liter prewar Alfa Romeo, won both events offered, a 26.4-mile Junior Prix, and the 52.8-mile Grand Prix. Cameron Argetsinger competed as well, driving an MG-TC, but proved to be a better racing organizer than actual participant. The Watkins Glen Grand Prix went on to have a prestigious history as a racing venue, hosting a variety of premium racing events through the years.

October 2, 1959
At a news conference broadcast to viewers in 21 cities on closed-circuit television, Henry Ford II introduces his company’s newest car--the 90-horsepower, 30 miles-per-gallon Falcon. The Falcon, dubbed “the small car with the big car feel,” was an overnight success. It went on sale that October 8 and by October 9, dealers had snapped up every one of the 97,000 cars in the first production run.
In 1959, each one of Detroit’s Big Three automakers began to sell a smaller, zippier, lower-priced car: Ford had the Falcon, while General Motors had the Corvair and Chevrolet had the Valiant. After years of building huge, gas-guzzling, lavishly be-finned cars, American companies entered the small-car market because European carmakers like Volkswagen, Fiat, and Renault were selling their little cars to American buyers by the thousands.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on October 04, 2015, 11:46:08 pm
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On this day, October 3, 1912
In the first professional racing victory for a car fitted with a Duesenberg engine, race car driver Mortimer Roberts won the 220-mile Pabst Blue Ribbon Trophy Race, held in and around the village of Wauwatosa, Wisconsin. The engine was designed by Duesenberg brothers who had immigrated to Iowa from Germany in the late-nineteenth century. After honing his mechanical talents by repairing early automobiles, Frederick Duesenberg became enthralled with the prospect of motor racing, and with his brother August opened an automobile shop. After establishing their reputation with engines and other racing parts, the Duesenberg brothers began construction of the first complete Duesenberg racing cars. The first great racing triumph of one of their cars came in 1921 when a Duesenberg was driven to victory in the 24-Hour event at Le Mans, France. The mid-1920s found the Duesenbergs in the racing world's spotlight, especially at the Indy 500, where their cars won the event outright in 1924, 1925, and 1927. But the Duesenberg's most significant contribution to automotive history came after automobile manufacturer E.L. Cord bought Duesenberg Motors in 1926, with the sole purpose of obtaining the design expertise of Fred Duesenberg. Cord wanted to produce the most luxurious car in the world, and in 1928, the Duesenberg-designed Model J was presented, widely considered to be one of the finest automobiles ever made.
PICTURED: A 16 Cylinder Duesenberg engine

October 3, 1961
The United Auto Workers (UAW) called the first company-wide strike against Ford Motor Company since the Ford's first union contract was signed in 1941. During the late 1930s, Ford was the last of the Big Three auto firms still holding out against unionization, and it employed strong-arm tactics to suppress any union activity. In 1937, tension between Ford and its workers came to a head at the "Battle of the Overpass," an infamous event where Ford's dreaded security force beat union organizers attempting to pass out UAW leaflets along the Miller Road Overpass in Dearborn, Michigan. Several people were brutally beaten while many other union supporters, including 11 women, were injured in the melee that followed. It took four more years of struggle and a 10-day strike before Ford agreed to sign its first closed-shop contract with the UAW, covering 123,000 employees. The ascension of Henry Ford II, Henry Ford's grandson, to the Ford leadership position in 1945 brought a period of stability in Ford-UAW relations, especially after Henry Ford II fired the powerful Personnel Chief Harry Bennett, whose anti-union stance had made Ford notorious for its bad labor relations. But in 1961, negotiations between the Ford Motor Company and the UAW fell apart again, and it took 17 days of striking before a tenuous three-year agreement was signed.

(http://i190.photobucket.com/albums/z276/RikMcCloud/Thrust2.jpg) (http://s190.photobucket.com/user/RikMcCloud/media/Thrust2.jpg.html)

On this day, October 4, 1983
After nearly 20 years of domination by Americans, British racer Richard Noble raced to a new one-mile land-speed record in his jet-powered Thrust 2 vehicle. The Thrust 2, a 17,000-pound jet-powered Rolls-Royce Avon 302 designed by John Ackroyd, reached a record 633.468mph over the one-mile course in Nevada's stark Black Rock Desert, breaking the 631.367mph speed record achieved by Gary Gabelich's Blue Flame in 1970. Previous to Gary Gabelich there was Craig Breedlove, the American driver who recorded a series of astounding victories in jet-powered vehicles during the 1960s, breaking the 400mph, 500mph, and 600mph barriers in 1963, 1964, and 1965, respectively. In 1997, Breedlove and Noble returned to Black Rock Desert again, this time in a race to break the elusive 700mph barrier. On September 25, team leader Noble watched as British fighter pilot Andy Green set a new land-speed record in their Thrust SSC vehicle, jet-powering to an impressive 714.144mph over the one-mile course. But the greatest victory for the British team came on October 13 of that same year, when Andy Green roared across Black Rock Desert at 764.168mph, or 1.007 percent above the speed of sound. Appropriately, the first shattering of the sound barrier by a land vehicle came on the eve of the 50th anniversary of the first supersonic flight, achieved by American pilot Chuck Yeager in 1947.

October 4, 1946
Berna Eli "Barney" Oldfield, an automobile racer and pioneer died on this day at the age of 68. He was the first man to drive a car at 60 miles per hour (96 km/h). His accomplishments led to the expression "Who do you think you are? Barney Oldfield?"

October 4, 1983
Sarah Marie Fisher, an American professional race car driver competing in the IndyCar Series was born in Columbus, Ohio. She was the youngest woman to compete in the Indianapolis 500 at age 19 in 2000.

October 4, 1992
Denis Clive "Denny" Hulme, a New Zealand car racer who won the 1967 Formula One World Champion for the Brabham team died on this day, While competing in Bathurst 1000, held at the famous Mount Panorama track in Australia.
In the 1992 event he was sharing a Benson & Hedges-sponsored BMW M3 with Paul Morris. After complaining of blurred vision Hulme suffered a massive heart attack at the wheel whilst travelling part the way down the 200-mph Conrod Straight. After veering into the wall on the right side of the track, he managed to bring the car to a relatively controlled stop sliding against the safety railing and concrete wall. When marshals reached the scene they found Hulme still strapped in, dead.

TODAYS TRIVIA:
...There are tiny bugs closely related to spiders living in the pores of your face, which crawl about your face in the dark to mate.
...'Ultracrepidarian' is a person who doesn't know what they're talking about.
...Bill Cosby's son was murdered in 1997. His character "Little Bill" was based on his son.
...A Pennsylvania elementary school had and entire class made of 6 sets twins and 2 sets of triplets.
...A 15 year old hacked NASA computers and caused a 21 day shutdown of their computers.
...Eskimos use refrigerators to stop their food from freezing.
...From 1979 to 1992 Soviets drilled a super deep bore that reached 40,230 ft (12,262m) just to see how deep they could drill.
...Only 2% of women describe themselves as beautiful.
...The pleasant smell of earth after it has rained is call 'petrichor' and is caused by bacteria in the soil.
...Johnny Depp has played guitar for Marilyn Manson, Oasis, and Aerosmith.
...A greetings card that can play 'Happy Birthday' has more computing power than existed in the whole world in 1950
...The human body burns 3-6 calories when your nipples become hard.
...It's completely legal for women to walk around topless in New York State. (love New York)
...There is a mineral named Cummingtonite.
...The average person looks at their phone 150 times a day
...Every Harry Potter movie is on the list of top 50 highest grossing films of all time.
...Robert Downey Jr. only made 500k for Iron Man, but two years later made 10 million for Iron man 2.
...It is possible to die from a broken heart -- This condition is called Stress Cardiomyopathy.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on October 05, 2015, 10:12:44 pm
(http://i645.photobucket.com/albums/uu176/MustangMayhem/Ferrari/10460410_933623929996828_3755712931250437996_n_zps9cfed106.jpg) (http://s645.photobucket.com/user/MustangMayhem/media/Ferrari/10460410_933623929996828_3755712931250437996_n_zps9cfed106.jpg.html)

On this day, October 5, 1919
A young Italian car mechanic and engineer named Enzo Ferrari takes part in his first car race, a hill climb in Parma, Italy. He finished fourth. Ferrari was a good driver, but not a great one: In all, he won just 13 of the 47 races he entered. Many people say that this is because he cared too much for the sports cars he drove: He could never bring himself to ruin an engine in order to win a race.
In the mid-1920s, Ferrari retired from racing cars in order to pursue his first love: building them. He took over the Alfa Romeo racing department in 1929 and began to turn out cars under his own name. Annoyed with Ferrari's heavy-handed management style, Alfa Romeo fired him in 1939. After that, he started his own manufacturing firm, but he spent the war years building machine tools, not race cars.
In 1947, the first real Ferraris appeared on the market at last. That same year, Ferrari won the Rome Grand Prix, his first race as an independent carmaker. In 1949, a Ferrari won the Le Mans road race for the first time and in 1952 one of the team's drivers, Alberto Ascari, became the world racing champion: He won every race he entered that year.
That decade was Ferrari's most triumphant: Year after year, his cars dominated the field, winning eight world championships and five Grand Prix championships. Ferrari won so much because his cars were ruthless. They were bigger and stronger than everyone else's and (in part to compensate for their excess weight) they had much more powerful engines. He also ensured success by flooding races with his cars and by hiring the boldest, most daredevil drivers he could find. Unfortunately, this combination of reckless drivers and heavy, superpowered cars was a recipe for tragedy: Between 1955 and 1965, six of Ferrari's 20 drivers were killed in crashes and on five different occasions his cars careened into crowds of spectators, killing 50 bystanders in all. (In 1957, Ferrari was even tried for manslaughter after one of these bloody wrecks, but he was acquitted.)
Ferrari tended to scorn technological advances that he did not come up with himself, so he was slow to accept things like disc brakes, rear-mounted engines and fuel-injection systems. As a result, the stranglehold his cars had on races around the world began to loosen. Still, by the time he died in 1988, Ferrari cars had won more than 4,000 races.
Unique thing about Enzo is that he used to build and sell his car so that he could race. Unlike other's who enter racing to sell their cars.
PICTURED:Sheri's 1961 Modena Ferrari GT250 california
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on October 06, 2015, 09:19:39 pm
(http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v102/leadpoisoned/cars/1899_Daimler_Tonneau.jpg) (http://smg.photobucket.com/user/leadpoisoned/media/cars/1899_Daimler_Tonneau.jpg.html)

On this day, October 6, 1888
William Steinway, car enthusiast, son of Heinrich Engelhard Steinweg (Henry Steinway, piano manufacturer), acquired licensing rights from Gottlieb Daimler to manufacture Daimler cars in U.S. He founded the "Daimler Motor Company", began producing Daimler engines, importing Daimler boats, trucks, other equipment to North American market.
PICTURED: 1899 Daimler Tonneau

October 6, 1926
Duesenberg Company was incorporated into the Auburn-Cord company. Frederick (design) and August Duesenberg began working toward E L. Cord's dream of the ultimate luxury automobile.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on October 08, 2015, 11:32:21 pm
(http://i645.photobucket.com/albums/uu176/MustangMayhem/this%20day%20in%20HISTORY/duryea_zps80986dc3.jpg) (http://s645.photobucket.com/user/MustangMayhem/media/this%20day%20in%20HISTORY/duryea_zps80986dc3.jpg.html)

On this day, October 8, 1869
The inventor and mechanic Frank Duryea is born on a farm in Washburn, Illinois. When Duryea was just 24 years old, he and his older brother, Charles, designed and built the Duryea Motor Wagon, one of the first successful gas-powered motor vehicles in the United States. Ever since then, there has been a great deal of disagreement over exactly which brother was responsible for the invention of the Motor Wagon. Because he outlived Charles by almost 80 years, Frank had the last word. Until the day he died in February 1967, the younger Duryea brother insisted that the pioneering automobile was entirely his own creation (except, that is, for the troublesome steering tiller that never worked quite correctly).
What is beyond dispute is that Frank Duryea was the first automobile driver on the American road. In September 1893, he was behind the wheel as the Duryea car made its first successful trip, 600 yards down his street in Springfield, Massachusetts. When he tried to turn the corner, the Motor Wagon's transmission blew; however, Frank managed to patch it back together and putter down the road for another half-mile or so.
In September 1895 the two brothers organized the first car company in the United States, the Duryea Motor Wagon Company, to build and sell their gas-powered contraptions. On Thanksgiving Day of that year, in a brilliant promotional stunt, Frank won the country's first automobile race, the Chicago Times-Herald race from Chicago to Evanston. (The race unfolded despite an enormous snowstorm that made the roads nearly impassable; still, Frank managed to complete the 50-mile loop in a little more than 10 hours.)
Frank left the Duryea Motor Wagon Company in 1899 and two years later he helped start the Stevens-Duryea Company, another auto manufacturing concern in Chicopee Falls, Massachusetts. He retired in 1915 and spent the rest of his days living comfortably in Connecticut, traveling, gardening and puttering around his workshop.

October 8, 1955
William Clyde Elliott most famously known as Bill Elliot was born in Dawsonville, Georgia. Elliott was inducted into the Motorsports Hall of Fame of America on August 15, 2007. He won the 1988 NASCAR Winston Cup Championship and has garnered 44 wins in that series.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on October 09, 2015, 11:06:04 pm
(http://i1011.photobucket.com/albums/af233/carl44s/motorsports%201920-1942/dario-resta-peugeot-1916.jpg) (http://s1011.photobucket.com/user/carl44s/media/motorsports%201920-1942/dario-resta-peugeot-1916.jpg.html)

On this day, October 9, 1915
Racer Gil Anderson set a new auto speed record on the opening day of races at the Sheepshead Bay Speedway, located in Brooklyn, New York. Driving a Stutz automobile, Anderson achieved an average speed of 102.6mph over a 350-mile course, breaking the 100mph barrier while setting a new speed record for such a distance. Anderson was participating in the celebrated Vincent Astor Cup event, an annual auto race that attracted thousands of auto enthusiasts to Sheepshead Bay for several decades.

October 9, 1992
Thousands of people in the Eastern United States witnessed an above-average-size meteorite enter the Earth's atmosphere with a sonic boom, and burst into flames as it streaked across the sky over several states. Photographed and videotaped by over a dozen people, the fireball flew over an open football stadium before crashing into Peekskill, New York, a small city 50 miles north of New York City. The 30 pound, football-size meteorite struck a 1980 Chevy Malibu parked in a driveway, penetrating the trunk of the car and missing the gas tank by inches. The owner of the totaled automobile reportedly expressed wonder at the fact that an object in orbit around the sun for millions of years ended up in the trunk of his Chevy, but worried if his insurance would cover the damage.

Video Link of Meteorite
http://fireball.meteorite.free.fr/meteor/fr/1/1992-10-09/peekskill/video (http://fireball.meteorite.free.fr/meteor/fr/1/1992-10-09/peekskill/video)
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on October 11, 2015, 11:09:21 pm
(http://i764.photobucket.com/albums/xx289/kuretic/American%20Autoracing/1938_indy_500_-_ted_horn__wetteroth.jpg) (http://s764.photobucket.com/user/kuretic/media/American%20Autoracing/1938_indy_500_-_ted_horn__wetteroth.jpg.html)

On this day, October 10, 1948
Ted Horn, an American race car driver was involved in a serious accident at DuQuoin, Illinois during the second lap. He was taken to the hospital alive but died a short time later. He was 38. He was inducted in the Motorsports Hall of Fame of America in 1993.
PICTURED: TED Horn at the 1938 INDY 500

October 10, 1930
Eugenio Castellotti was born in Lodi, Italy. He used to race for Ferari and later for Lancia. Castellotti was considered the greatest Italian driver after Alberto Ascari.
PICTURED: At the Gran Premio del Valentino: Luigi Villoresi, Alberto Ascari, Eugenio Castellotti e Vittorio Jano

(http://i183.photobucket.com/albums/x207/Starcowboy/Enzo/D50_012.jpg) (http://s183.photobucket.com/user/Starcowboy/media/Enzo/D50_012.jpg.html)

October 10, 1974
Ralph Dale Earnhardt, Jr., a NASCAR driver was born in Kannaplois, North Carolina. He currently drives the #88 AMP Energy/National Guard Chevrolet Impala SS in the NASCAR Sprint Cup series for Hendrick Motorsports.

(http://i139.photobucket.com/albums/q309/deifan1/Ralph%20Dale%20Earnhardt/44dd.jpg) (http://s139.photobucket.com/user/deifan1/media/Ralph%20Dale%20Earnhardt/44dd.jpg.html)


October 11, 1967
David Starr, a NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series driver was born in Houston, Texas. He made his first start in 1998 and got his first win in 2002 at Las Vegas Motor Speedway on his way to his best points finish, 5th. He grabbed 2 more wins in 2004. He currently drives for Red Horse Racing the #11 Toyota Tundra.

October 11, 1928
Spanish racer Don Alfonso Cabeza de Vaca y Leighton, Carvajal y Are, the 17th Marquis de Portago and 13th Conde de la Mejorada, was born in London, England. Better known as Marquis Alfonso de Portago, the Spanish nobleman became interested in motor racing as a young man, soon finding his way into some of the world's most prestigious and dangerous racing events, owning more to his social standing than his racing skills. For a two-year period beginning in 1956, the reckless Marquis Alfonso drove for the Lancia Ferrari team, managing to rack up four points in five Grand Prix starts, but failing to win any race. In 1957, Alfonso brought tragedy to the classic Mille Miglia event, a 1,600-kilometer race from Brescia to Rome and back, when he lost control of his Ferrari and plunged into a crowd of spectators. Alfonso, his co-driver Ed Nelson, and 10 spectators died in the accident, bringing to an end the 30-year tradition of the Mille Miglia. Twenty years after the Marquis' tragic run along the course, the event was revived, and to this day the Mille Miglia attracts thousands to the streets of Italy to watch a nostalgic run of classic racing cars.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on October 12, 2015, 11:57:21 pm
(http://i280.photobucket.com/albums/kk171/crabber1967/NASCAR%201960-s/1965-nascar_Daytona-Feb-Ned-Jarrett.jpg) (http://s280.photobucket.com/user/crabber1967/media/NASCAR%201960-s/1965-nascar_Daytona-Feb-Ned-Jarrett.jpg.html)

On this day, October 12, 1932
Ned Jarrett, two time NASCAR champion was born in Newton, North Carolina. Jarrett was best known for his calm demeanor, and he became known as "Gentleman Ned Jarrett".
PICCTURED: Ned Jarrett Feb-Daytona
(Ford Racing Archives) In Daytona FL 1965 Ned Jarrett posing with his Ford for that year's upcoming Daytona 500 Jarrett ran 352 stock car races over 13 years winning 50 of them while capturing 35 poles and 239 top tens He won two NASCAR championships (1960 1965) and retired in 1966 at the age of 34 the only NASCAR driver to retire as reigning champion Jarrett named one of NASCAR's 50 Greatest Drivers then went on to have a long career in race broadcasting Ned is of course the father of Dale Jarrett who earned his first NASCAR championship in 1999 and who is now a race broadcaster for ABCESPN Ned and Dale became only the second father-son combination to win championships in NASCAR's top division (Lee Petty and Richard Petty were the first)

October 12, 1940
Tom Mix, the highest-paid actor in silent films during the 1920s, and unquestionably the best-known cowboy star of the era, perished in a car accident in Arizona. Driving at about 80mph, Mix lost control of his car after hitting a dirt detour, and was instantly killed. Many took solace in the fact that Mix died in the Old West that he had depicted in film so many times, still wearing his cowboy costume from a performance the previous day.

October 12, 1993
The Camry was first introduced by the Toyota Motor Company in 1983 as a replacement for its Corona Sedan. Hoping to follow in the path of the popular Toyota flagship, the Cressida, the roomy and durable Camry immediately proved a best-seller, faring well against the likes of the Honda Accord and domestic U.S. compacts. In the late '80s, the Camry, now Toyota's most popular model, saw an upsized redesign, boasting a new twin-cam 2.0 liter 4-cylinder engine with 16 valves and a much greater horsepower potential than the previous model. In 1992, the Camry was again stylishly redesigned, approaching mid-size while maintaining its original efficiency. On this day, a decade after it was first introduced, the one-millionth Camry rolled off a Toyota assembly line. Four years later, in 1997, the Toyota Camry became the best-selling car in America.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on October 13, 2015, 09:42:16 pm
(http://i954.photobucket.com/albums/ae27/Chiltern-u3a/Visit%20to%20Coventry%2025%20July%202011%20Architecture%20Grp/075IMG_5500.jpg) (http://s954.photobucket.com/user/Chiltern-u3a/media/Visit%20to%20Coventry%2025%20July%202011%20Architecture%20Grp/075IMG_5500.jpg.html)

On this day, October 13, 1997
Less than three weeks after breaking the elusive 700mph land-speed barrier, British fighter pilot Andy Green set a new land-speed record in the Thrust SuperSonic vehicle, jet-powering through the sound barrier along a one-mile course in Nevada's Black Rock Desert. Coached by previous land-speed record-holder and Thrust team leader Richard Noble, Green roared across Black Rock Desert at 764.168mph, or 1.007 percent above the speed of the sound. An hour later, Green flashed across the dusty desert floor again, moving 1.003 percent faster than the speed of sound. The second run was required before the feat could be officially entered into the record book, a requirement that may have prevented past records. In 1979, at Edwards Air Force Base, American Stan Barrett is reputed to have reached 739.666mph, or Mach 1.0106, in a rocket-engined three-wheeled car called the Budweiser Rocket. But the speed was unsanctioned by the United States Air Force, and the official record remained unbroken until Green's historic run. Appropriately, the first official breaking of the sound barrier by a land vehicle came on the eve of the 50th anniversary of the first supersonic flight, achieved by American pilot Chuck Yeager in 1947.

October 13, 2013, is International "No Bra day"

(http://i1163.photobucket.com/albums/q548/tOphEoriginal/397300_498920496799965_713350728_n.jpg) (http://s1163.photobucket.com/user/tOphEoriginal/media/397300_498920496799965_713350728_n.jpg.html)

October 13, 1953
The "Artmobile," a novel way of exposing fine art to the public, was conceived of and designed by the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts located in Richmond, Virginia. The Artmobile, the world's first mobile art gallery, began touring Virginia with an exhibition of art objects, making its first stop in Fredericksburg. The Artmobile was an all-aluminum trailer, measuring over 30 feet in length with an interior height of nearly 80 feet.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on October 15, 2015, 11:33:47 pm
(http://i268.photobucket.com/albums/jj31/stolarek/Land%20Speed%20Bonneville/Breedlove-2.jpg) (http://s268.photobucket.com/user/stolarek/media/Land%20Speed%20Bonneville/Breedlove-2.jpg.html)

On this day, October 15, 1964
While trying to set a new one mile land-speed record, Craig Breedlove inadvertently set another kind of record after he lost control of the Spirit of America jet-powered car on the Bonneville Salt Flats testing area in Utah. The vehicle began a skid moments into the run, taking nearly six miles to decelerate from an initial speed of well over 400mph. When the dust cleared, Breedlove emerged shaken from the vehicle as the not-so-proud record-holder for the longest skid marks ever recorded. Nevertheless, Breedlove, who already held the land-speed record, did manage to break the 500mph speed barrier that year, just as he had broken the 400mph barrier the year before, and just as he would surpass 600mph in the year following.
PICTURED: Craig Breedlove 1999

October 15, 1978
Lee Iacocca was ousted from Ford.

October 15, 1978
The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration rules that hearse manufacturers no longer have to install anchors for child-safety seats in their vehicles. In 1999, to prevent parents from incorrectly installing the seats using only their cars' seat belts, the agency had required all car makers to put the standardized anchors on every passenger seat in every vehicle they built. Though it seemed rather odd, most hearse-builders complied with the rule and many thousands of their vehicles incorporated baby-seat latches on their front and back passenger seats.
However, the year after the agency issued the rule, one of the largest "funeral coach" manufacturers in the United States petitioned for an exemption. "Since a funeral coach is a single-purpose vehicle, transporting body and casket," the petition said, "children do not ride in the front seat." In fact, typically that seat is empty—after all, most people do try to avoid riding in hearses. On October 15, the agency agreed: All funeral coaches (now officially defined as "a vehicle that contains only one row of occupant seats, is designed exclusively for transporting a body and casket and that is equipped with features to secure a casket in place during the operation of the vehicle") were permanently exempt from all child-safety provisions. According to this formulation, those rare hearses that do have rear seats are not technically funeral coaches; therefore; they are subject to the same child-restraint rules as every other car maker.

TODAYS TRIVIA:
...When the U.S President is unmarried or his wife dies during his term, another female relative will become the First Lady. Three president's daughters, two president's sisters, two nieces and two daughters-in-law have been First Lady.
...The Romans used to use a plant called Silphium as contraception but, they had so much sex that they drove it into extinction.
...In 1970, there were half as many people in the world as there are now.
...Almost all pens, janitorial products, and other office supplies used by the US government are made by blind people.
...Regardless of how hard you try, it is always nearly impossible to remember how your dreams started.
...Smoking 1.4 cigarettes increases the statistical risk of death as much as flying a 1000 miles in a jet- or eating a thousand bananas.
...In 1885 a woman fell 240ft from the Clifton Suspension bridge and survived after her billowing skirt acted as a parachute.
...A man born premature with cerebral palsy, was unable to swallow on his own until the age of 1, is blind, was unable to speak or walk until the age of 16, began playing Tchaikovsky's Concerto No.1 on piano in the middle of the night at age 16. He now can play any song after hearing it only once.
...Christian Bale starved himself for over four months prior to filming The Machinist, consuming one cup of black unsweetened coffee and an apple or a can of tuna each day
...In 2002 NASA bought parts for the space shuttle on ebay because intel wouldn't make them anymore.
...On 5th April 2010 there were four women in space at the same time, the largest female gathering off planet to that point.
...There are 36 companies that spend over $1 Billion on advertising each year.
...Steve Jobs' had a habit of soaking his feet in the toilet and his hygiene was so bad that he was put on the night shift at Atari so he wouldn't have to interact with people.
...Teddy Roosevelt was shot prior to giving a speech. Noticing it missed his lung since he wasn't coughing up blood, he proceeded to give a ninety minute speech.
...1.5 billion people do not have access to electricity, 2.5 billion have no toilet, and 1 billion go hungry every day.
...The word "set" has 464 definitions, the most of any word in the English language.
...A suicidal painter was saved from death 3 times by the same "mysterious" monk. Nobody knew who the monk was; the painter didn't even know the monk's name.
...There was a woman named Veronica Seider had vision 20x better than average. She could identify people more than a mile (1.6km) away.
...The Hoover Dam was built to last 2,000 years. Its concrete will not be fully cured for another 500 years.
...Neil Armstrong's astronaut application arrived about a week past the deadline. His friend saw the late arrival of the application and slipped it into the pile before anyone noticed.
...A baby elephant will suck it's trunk like a baby sucks it's thumb for comfort.
...A Woman sues Google for showing her underwear on Street View.
...When Mel Blanc (Voice of Bugs Bunny, Porky Pig, Tweety and 100's of others) was in a coma the doctors asked him, "Bugs, can you hear me?" and he replied, "What's up Doc?" in Bugs' voice.
...In late 90s Will Smith told Eminem, "You'll either be the biggest flop, or the biggest thing we've ever seen".
...A man took 23 years to travel to every country and region in the world.
...In 2001 a man died from injuries caused by a shooting in 1966; his death was ruled a homicide, despite it occurring 35 years after the death of the shooter.
...Racism and homophobia is linked to having a lower IQ.
...Queen's "We Are the Champions" was scientifically proven to be the catchiest song in the history of pop music
...Hermit crabs form gangs to steal other hermit crabs' shells.
...On average, a person walks past 7 psychopaths a day.
...Napping improves stamina, boosts creativity, reduces stress, increases productivity, decision making ability, sex life and much more.
...Despite making up only 14.5% of the worlds population, Africa is believed to contain 69% of all people with HIV.
...There is a village in Wales called Llanfairpwllgwyngyllgogerychwyrndrobwllllantysiliogogogoch.
...The dolphin that played Flipper on the TV show committed suicide by refusing to breathe.
...A mentally ill young man who shot himself in the head in a suicide attempt suffered a brain injury that apparently eliminated his phobia of germs and his obsession with washing his hands.
...Although pancreatic cancer is usually deadly, Steve Jobs had the one variety that's curable. But for nine months, he refused treatment and instead tried a vegan diet, acupuncture, herbal remedies, psychics, juice fasts, and bowel cleansings. Many experts think it cost him his life.
...'Ultracrepidarian' is a person who doesn't know what they're talking about.
...Bill Cosby's son was murdered in 1997. His character "Little Bill" was based on his son.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on October 16, 2015, 06:52:35 pm
(http://i451.photobucket.com/albums/qq233/swinnyjr/53hudson.jpg) (http://s451.photobucket.com/user/swinnyjr/media/53hudson.jpg.html)

On this day, October 16, 1951
Hudson launched its new Monobuilt design, an innovation that is still found in most cars to this day. The Monobuilt design consisted of a chassis and frame that was combined in a unified passenger compartment, producing a strong, light-weight design, and a beneficial lower center of gravity that didn't affect road clearance. Hudson coined this innovation "step-down design" because, for the first time, passengers had to step down in order to get into a car. Most cars today are still based on the step-down premise. Hudson introduced the Hornet, and put some sting into the step-down design. The Hornet was built with a 308 cubic-inch flat head in-line six cylinder motor, producing generous torque and a substantial amount of horsepower. And it was with this popular model that Hudson first entered stock car racing in 1951. After ending their first season in a respectable third place, Hudson began a three-year domination of the racing event. In 1952 alone, Hudson won 29 of the 34 events. A key factor in Hudson's racing success was the innovative step-down design of their cars. Because of their lower centers of gravity, Hornets would glide around corners with relative ease, leaving their clunky and unstable competitors in the dust.
The Hornet "dominated stock car racing in the early-1950s, when stock car racers actually raced stock cars." During 1952, Hornets driven by Marshall Teague, Herb Thomas and Tim Flock won 27 NASCAR races driving for the Hudson team. In AAA racing, Teague drove a stock Hornet that he called the Fabulous Hudson Hornet to 14 wins during the season. This brought the Hornet's season record to 40 wins in 48 events, a winning percentage of 83%.
Overall, Hudson won 27 of the 34 NASCAR Grand National races in 1952, followed by 22 of 37 in 1953, and 17 of 37 in 1954 — "an incredible accomplishment, especially from a car that had some legitimate luxury credentials."
The original Fabulous Hudson Hornet can be found today fully restored in Ypsilanti, Michigan at the Ypsilanti Automotive Heritage Museum. It is also depicted in the movie 'CARS' as Doc Hudson.

October 16, 1958
Chevrolet introduced the El Camino, a sedan-pickup (ute) created to compete with Ford's popular Ranchero model. Built on the full-size Chevrolet challis, the big El Camino failed to steal the Ranchero's market and was discontinued after two years. But four years later, in 1964, the El Camino was given a second life as a derivative of the Chevelle series, a line of cars commonly termed "muscle cars." The Chevelles were stylish and powerful vehicles that reflected the youthful energy of the 1960s and early 1970s, and sold well. The Chevelle Malibu Super Sport was the archetypal muscle car, featuring a V-8 as large as 454 cubic inches, or 7.4 liters. Chevelles came in sedans, wagons, convertibles, and hardtops, and, with the reintroduction of the El Camino in 1964, as a truck. The station wagon-based El Camino sedan-pickup had a successful run during its second manifestation as a Chevelle, and proved an attractive conveyance for urban cowboys and the horsey set.
Many El Caminos are still used as daily drivers, and some are used in various racing venues. The 1980s version is the most common of any of that generation of body styles, though the late 60s command the highest prices and inspire the most replicas from Hot Wheels, Matchbox and Johnny Lightning.
The Discovery Channel program Monster Garage once turned an El Camino into a Figure-8 racer (dubbed the "Hell-Camino").
The drift team Bubba Drift uses a 1986 El Camino as the only drifting truck. It is unusual in that it uses an automatic transmission instead of a manual transmission.
On a production note, it has been constantly rumored for years now that GM may bring back the El Camino. During the 1995 model year, GM had a concept El Camino based on the full-size Caprice station wagon using the grille of a 1994-96 Impala SS; this concept was destined for production but terminated due to GM's profitable SUV sales. GM already has a vehicle ready in Australia in the form of the Holden Ute.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on October 17, 2015, 10:46:24 pm
(http://i967.photobucket.com/albums/ae158/monterey2013/Monterey%20Road%20trip/DSCN4145_zps64369df7.jpg) (http://s967.photobucket.com/user/monterey2013/media/Monterey%20Road%20trip/DSCN4145_zps64369df7.jpg.html)

On this day, October 17, 1902
The first Cadillac was completed and was given its maiden test drive by Alanson P. Brush, the twenty-four-year-old Leland and Faulconer engineer who had contributed substantially to the car's design and who would later build the Brush Runabout. As you can see, Cadillac has come a long way

October 17, 1973
11 Arab oil producers increased oil prices and cut back production in response to the support of the United States and other nations for Israel in the Yom Kippur War. The same day, OPEC, (The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries), approved the oil embargo at a meeting in Tangiers, Morocco. Almost overnight, gasoline prices quadrupled, and the U.S. economy, especially its automakers, suffered greatly as a result. The U.S. car companies, who built automobiles that typically averaged less than 15 miles per gallon, were unable to satisfy the sudden demand for small, fuel-efficient vehicles. The public turned to imports in droves, and suddenly Japan's modest, but sturdy, little compacts began popping up on highways all across America. Even after the oil embargo crisis was resolved, American consumers had learned an important lesson about the importance of fuel efficiency, and foreign auto manufacturers flourished in the large American market. It took years for the Big Three to bounce back from the blow; eventually they gained ground with the introduction of their own Japanese-inspired compacts in the 1980s.

October 17, 1994
Taxicab driver Jeremy Levine returned to London, England, from a round-trip journey to Cape Town, South Africa. Passengers Mark Aylett and Carlos Aresse paid 40,000 pounds, or approximately $65,000, for the 21,691-mile trip, setting a world record for the longest known taxicab ride. The route, through Eastern Europe, Turkey, Syria, Jordan, and down into Africa, was recently adopted by the Historic Endurance Rallying Organization for their London to Cape Town Classic Reliability Trial. The race, held for the first time in 1998, is a competitive event for all types of classic and historic cars made before 1978. Divided into six age categories, from vintage to '70s, the event challenges racers to brave demanding terrain and conditions as they witness some of the most dramatic and breathtaking scenery in the world.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on October 19, 2015, 01:00:13 am
(http://i798.photobucket.com/albums/yy268/menno1311/Stavanger/Flymuseum%20Sola/Rolls-RoyceAvonMk527B_28jul13ENZV.jpg~original) (http://s798.photobucket.com/user/menno1311/media/Stavanger/Flymuseum%20Sola/Rolls-RoyceAvonMk527B_28jul13ENZV.jpg.html)

On this day, October 18, 1919
Rolls-Royce America, Inc., was established, and their luxurious motor cars would prove a favorite means of transport for America's elite during the roaring 1920s.
PICTURED: Rolls-Royce Avon MK. 527B

October 18, 1939
Group of men who had dedicated their lives to the progress of the motor vehicle industry, met in New York City to create an organization that would perpetuate the memories of the early automotive pioneers as well as the contemporary leaders in the industry. From the beginning, this organization – originally called "Automobile Old Timers" -- was dedicated to honoring automotive people from all industry segments and from around the world. Now its more famously known as Automotive Hall of Fame. Over 200 individuals have been inducted into the Automotive Hall of Fame. Dedicated to: Recognizing outstanding achievement in the automotive and related industries; Preserving automotive heritage; Educating future generations of industry participants.

October 18, 1977
On September 5, Hanns Martin Schleyer, a Daimler-Benz executive and head of the West German employers' association, was kidnapped in Cologne by the Red Army Faction (RAF) during an assault in which his driver and three police were killed. The Red Army Faction was a group of ultra-left revolutionaries who terrorized Germany for three decades, assassinating at least 30 corporate, military, and government leaders in an effort to topple capitalism in their homeland. Six weeks after the kidnapping of Schleyer, Palestinian terrorists, who had close ties with the RAF, hijacked a Lufthansa airliner to Somalia, and demanded the release of 11 imprisoned RAF members. On October 17, after the pilot was killed, a German special forces team stormed the plane, releasing the captives and killing the hijackers. The RAF's imprisoned leaders responded by committing suicide in their jail cell in Stammheim, and Schleyer's murder was ordered. The next day, October 18, Hanns Martin Schleyer was found dead in Alsace, France.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on October 19, 2015, 09:20:31 pm
(http://i211.photobucket.com/albums/bb92/mtwojs247/Harley-Davidson.jpg) (http://s211.photobucket.com/user/mtwojs247/media/Harley-Davidson.jpg.html)

October 19, 1920
Harley-Davidson Motor Co. registered "Harley-Davidson" trademark first used in June 1906 for motorcycles, bicycles, side cars and parcel cars.

October 19, 1958
Briton Mike Hawthorn, driving a Ferrari Dino 246, clinched the Formula One World Championship at the Moroccan Grand Prix at Ain-Diab near Casablanca. But the triumph of Britain's first World Championship was marred by the death of British driver Stuart Lewis-Evans, who died a few days later from injuries sustained during an accident in the race, and by the tragic death of Hawthorn himself, who died in a road accident just two months later

October 19, 1982
John DeLorean began his automotive career with Packard in the 1950s, and was recruited to Pontiac in 1959. A rising star at Pontiac, DeLorean pioneered the successful GTO and Grand Prix, and by the late 1960s had risen to the top position in a company that was behind only Chevrolet and Ford in sales. In 1970, DeLorean was moved to manage the Chevrolet Division, and by 1973 Chevy was selling a record 3,000,000 cars and trucks, with DeLorean seeming a top candidate for General Motors' (GM) next presidency. But in late-1973, he walked away from his $650,000 job at GM, boasting he was "going to show them how to build cars." After raising nearly $200 million in financing, DeLorean formed the DeLorean Motor Company in 1974, and constructed a car factory in Northern Ireland. Interest in DeLorean's sleek and futuristic DMC-12 car was high, but by the early 1980s the company was in serious financial trouble. Failing to find additional investors, the proud DeLorean became involved in racketeering and drug trafficking in a desperate attempt to save his beleaguered company. On this day in 1982, after being caught on film during an FBI sting operation trying to broker a $24 million cocaine deal, DeLorean was arrested on charges of drug trafficking and money laundering. But two years later a federal jury ruled that he was a victim of entrapment, and DeLorean was acquitted of all charges. Nevertheless, the debacle ruined his credibility, and John DeLorean's fall from the top of the automotive industry was complete. He died from a stroke at the age of 80, on March 19, 2005.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on October 20, 2015, 10:53:39 pm
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On this day, October 20, 1965
The last PV544 was driven off the Volvo assembly line at its Lundy plant in Sweden by longtime Volvo test driver Nils Wickstrom. Gustaf Larson, the engineer who had co-founded Volvo with businessman Assar Gabrielsson in 1927, was present at the ceremony. An impressive total of 440,000 Volvo PV544s had been produced during its eight-year run, over half of which had been exported. The Volvo PV544 was first introduced in 1958 as an updated version of its popular predecessor, the PV444. Like the PV444 with its laminated windscreen, the PV544 featured an important safety innovation--it was the first car to be equipped with safety belts as standard fitting. But the PV544 was also a powerful automobile, boasting a 4-speed manual transmission option and power up to 95bhp. Shortly after its introduction, the 544 became one of the most successful rally cars, dominating rally racing into the 1960s. Yet, the PV544 was also affordably priced, and its first-year sales put Volvo over the 100,000-exported automobiles mark. The PV544 was successfully reintroduced every year until 1965, when it was decided by Volvo that production of the model would cease.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on October 21, 2015, 04:44:26 pm
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On this day, October 21, 1891
A one-mile dirt track opened for harness races at the site of the present-day Tennessee State Fairgrounds in Nashville. Harness racing proved a popular event at the annual Tennessee State Fair, but it was nothing compared to the excitement generated by the fair's first automobile race, held at the fairgrounds in 1904. For the next 50 years, motor racing events were the highlight of the annual state fair, drawing top American drivers to compete, and launching the careers of others. In 1956, the track was paved and lighted, and the tradition of weekly Saturday night racing at the fairgrounds was born. And in 1958, NASCAR came to Nashville with the introduction of the NASCAR Winston Cup to be run on a brand-new half-mile oval. The legendary driver Joe Weatherly won the first Winston Cup, beating the likes of Fireball Turner, Lee Petty, and Curtis Turner in the 200-lap event. Between 1958 and 1984, the fairgrounds hosted 42 NASCAR Winston Cups, and Richard Petty and Darrell Waltrip were the overall leaders in victories, with nine and eight Winston Cups respectively. The last Winston Cup race to descend onto the Tennessee State Fairgrounds was a 420-lap event won by driver Geoff Bodine. But despite the departure of the Winston Cup, the Nashville Speedway continued to improve on its racetrack, and illustrious racing events such as the Busch Series are held on the historic track every year.
PICTURED: Joe Weatherly

October 21, 1891
The 50th birthday of the incandescent light bulb, Henry Ford throws a big party to celebrate the dedication of his new Thomas Edison Institute in Dearborn, Michigan. Everybody who was anybody was there: John D. Rockefeller Jr., Charles Schwab, Otto H. Kahn, Walter Chrysler, Marie Curie, Will Rogers, President Herbert Hoover—and, of course, the guest of honor, Thomas Edison himself. At the time, the Edison Institute was still relatively small. It consisted of just two buildings, both of which Henry Ford had moved from Menlo Park, New Jersey and re-constructed to look just as they had in 1879: Edison's laboratory and the boarding-house where he had lived while he perfected his invention. By the time the Institute opened to the public in 1933, however, it had grown much more elaborate and today the Henry Ford Museum (renamed after Ford's death in 1947) is one of the largest and best-known museums in the US.
Ford's museum was an epic expression of his own interpretation of American history, emphasizing industrial and technological progress and the "practical genius" of great Americans. Its collection grew to include every Ford car ever built, along with other advances in automotive and locomotive technology. There were also farm tools, home appliances, furniture and industrial machines such as the printing press and the Newcomen steam engine. On a 200-acre tract next door, Ford built a quaint all-American village by importing historic homes and buildings from across the United States.
Today, there are more than 200 cars on display at the Ford museum, including the 15 millionth Model T, the Ford 999 racer that set the world speed record in 1904, the first Mustang ever produced and a 1997 EV1 electric car made by General Motors. More than 2 million people visit "The Henry Ford," as it's now called, every year.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on October 22, 2015, 09:39:42 pm
(http://i424.photobucket.com/albums/pp325/rubioSS/porsche.jpg) (http://s424.photobucket.com/user/rubioSS/media/porsche.jpg.html)

October 22, 1936
In 1934, German automaker Ferdinand Porsche submitted a design proposal to Adolf Hitler's new German Reich government, calling for the construction of a small, simple, and reliable car that would be affordable enough for the average German. Only about one in 50 Germans owned cars at the time, and the motor industry had only a minor significance in Germany's economy. Nazi propagandists immediately embraced the idea, coining "Volkswagen," which translates as "people's car," at an automobile show later in the year. Hitler himself hoped the "people's car" would achieve the kind of popularity in Germany as Ford's Model T had in the United States, and began calling the Volkswagen the "Strength Through Joy" car. Porsche received a development budget from the Reich's motor industry association, and began working on the Volkswagen immediately. Porsche completed the first prototype in secret in October of 1935. The simple, beetle-shaped automobile was sturdily constructed with a kind of utilitarian user-friendliness scarcely seen in an automobile before. On this day in 1936, the first test-drives of the Volkswagen vehicle began, and employees drove the VW 3-series model over 800 kilometers a day, making any necessary repairs at night. After three months of vigorous testing, Porsche and his engineers concluded, in their final test verdict, that the Volkswagen "demonstrated characteristics which warrant further development." In 1938, the first Volkswagen in its final form was unveiled, a 38-series model that The New York Times mockingly referred to as a "Beetle." However, the outbreak of World War II prevented mass-production of the automobile, and the newly constructed Volkswagen factory turned to war production, constructing various military vehicles for the duration of the conflict. After the war, the Allies approved the continuation of the original Volkswagen program, and, under the leadership of Heinrich Nordhoff in the late 1940s and 1950s, sales of the Volkswagen Beetle began to take off. In the 1960s and early 1970s, sales of the compact Volkswagen Beetle worried even America's largest automakers, as the Third Reich's simple people's car became a popular symbol of the growing American counterculture.
PICTURED: The Porsche of today's era

October 22, 1903
Association of Licensed Automobile Manufacturers (ALAM) filed suit against Ford Motor Company as an unlicensed (by ALAM) manufacturer of internal combustion vehicles (controlled 1895 Selden patent); claimed patent applied to all gasoline-powered automobiles; ALAM launched PR campaign, threatened to sue those who bought Ford automobiles.

October 22, 1906
Henry Ford became President of Ford Motor Company.

October 22, 1987
Canadian Garry Sowerby and American Tim Cahill completed the first trans-Americas drive, driving from Ushuaia, Tierra del Fuego, Argentina, to Prudhoe Bay, Alaska, in a total elapsed time of 23 days, 22 hours, and 43 minutes. The pair drove the 14,739-mile distance in a 1988 GMC Sierra K3500 four-wheel-drive pickup truck powered by a 6.2-liter V-8 Detroit diesel engine. Only on one occasion did Sowerby and Cahill trust another form of transportation to their sturdy Sierra: the vehicle and team were surface-freighted from Cartagena, Colombia, to Balboa, Panama, so as to bypass the dangerous Darien Gap of Colombia and Panama.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on October 23, 2015, 09:16:19 pm
(http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v316/TimV69/Goodwood/2013_Festival_of_Speed/Daytona%20International%20Speedway/IMG_6305.jpg)

On this day, October 23, 1970
At the Bonneville Salt Flats in Utah, American Gary Gabelich attained a record 631.367mph average speed in The Blue Flame, a rocket-powered four-wheeled vehicle. Momentarily achieving 650mph, Gabelich's vehicle was powered by a liquid natural gas, hydrogen peroxide rocket engine that produced a thrust of up to 22,000 pounds. Gabelich's achievement ended the domination of Craig Breedlove, the American driver who set a series of astounding victories in jet-powered vehicles during the 1960s, breaking the 400mph, 500mph, and 600mph barriers in 1963, 1964, and 1965, respectively. The Blue Flame's land-speed record stood until 1983, when Briton Richard Noble raced to a new record in his jet-powered Thrust 2 vehicle. The Thrust 2, a 17,000-pound jet-powered Rolls-Royce Avon 302 designed by John Ackroyd, reached a record 633.468mph over the one-mile course in Nevada's stark Black Rock Desert.

October 23, 1973
Toyota U.S.A. held its first (three-day) national news conference in Los Angeles, CA to discuss the fuel efficiency of its automobiles (5 days after 11 Arab oil producers increased oil prices and cut back production in response to the support of the United States and other nations for Israel in the Yom Kippur War); American consumers suffered gasoline rationing, a quadrupling of prices, huge lines at gas stations - foreign auto manufacturers flourished in the large American market.

October 23, 1983
A suicide bomber drives a truck filled with 2,000 pounds of explosives into a U.S. Marine Corps barracks at the Beirut International Airport. The explosion killed 220 Marines, 18 sailors and three soldiers. A few minutes after that bomb went off, a second bomber drove into the basement of the nearby French paratroopers' barracks, killing 58 more people. Four months after the bombing, American forces left Lebanon without retaliating.
The Marines in Beirut were part of a multinational peacekeeping force that was trying to broker a truce between warring Christian and Muslim Lebanese factions. In 1981, American troops had supervised the withdrawal of the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) from Beirut and then had withdrawn themselves. They returned the next year, after Israel's Lebanese allies slaughtered nearly 1,000 unarmed Palestinian civilian refugees. Eighteen hundred Marine peacekeepers moved into an old Israeli Army barracks near the airport—a fortress with two-foot–thick walls that could, it seemed, withstand anything. Even after a van bomb killed 46 people at the U.S. Embassy in April, the American troops maintained their non-martial stance: their perimeter fence remained relatively unfortified, for instance and their sentries' weapons were unloaded.
At about 6:20 in the morning on October 23, 1983, a yellow Mercedes truck charged through the barbed-wire fence around the American compound and plowed past two guard stations. It drove straight into the barracks and exploded. Eyewitnesses said that the force of the blast caused the entire building to float up above the ground for a moment before it pancaked down in a cloud of pulverized concrete and human remains. FBI investigators said that it was the largest non-nuclear explosion since World War II and certainly the most powerful car bomb ever detonated.
After the bombing, President Ronald Reagan expressed outrage at the "despicable act" and vowed that American forces would stay in Beirut until they could forge a lasting peace. In the meantime, he devised a plan to bomb the Hezbollah training camp in Baalbek, Lebanon, where intelligence agents thought the attack had been planned. However, Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger aborted the mission, reportedly because he did not want to strain relations with oil-producing Arab nations. The next February, American troops withdrew from Lebanon altogether.
The first real car bomb—or, in this case, horse-drawn-wagon bomb—exploded on September 16, 1920 outside the J.P. Morgan Company's offices in New York City's financial district. Italian anarchist Mario Buda had planted it there, hoping to kill Morgan himself; as it happened, the robber baron was out of town, but 40 other people died (and about 200 were wounded) in the blast. There were occasional car-bomb attacks after that—most notably in Saigon in 1952, Algiers in 1962, and Palermo in 1963—but vehicle weapons remained relatively uncommon until the 1970s and 80s, when they became the terrifying trademark of groups like the Irish Republican Army and Hezbollah. In 1995, right-wing terrorists Timothy McVeigh and Terry Nichols used a bomb hidden in a Ryder truck to blow up the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City.

October 23, 2014
One of the best people I have had the pleasure of meeting and also a fellow car man "Rod Frencham" AKA Rocket, passed away in his sleep. A man that was greatly appreciated by his family and a man that will be greatly missed by all. Rest in Peace brother...we will keep the love alive in your family through us
Matt N Sheri
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on October 24, 2015, 11:37:43 pm
(http://i773.photobucket.com/albums/yy18/HowardKroplick/Heritage%20Museum/07-17-2007-22-37-04-396_edited-5.jpg) (http://s773.photobucket.com/user/HowardKroplick/media/Heritage%20Museum/07-17-2007-22-37-04-396_edited-5.jpg.html)

On this day, October 24, 1908
The Locomobile Old 16, driven by George Robertson, became the first American-made car to beat the European competition when it raced to victory in the fourth annual Vanderbilt Cup held in Long Island, New York. The Vanderbilt Cup, an early example of world-class motor racing in America, was created in 1904 to introduce Europe's best automotive drivers and manufacturers to the U.S. George Heath won the first Vanderbilt Cup in a French-made Panhard automobile, beginning a French domination of the event that would last until Old 16's historic victory. Old 16 was first built in 1906 by the Connecticut-based Locomobile Company, and showed promise when it raced to a respectable finish in the second Vanderbilt Cup. With some modifications, Old 16 was ready to race again in 1908. Americans pinned their hopes on the state-of-the-art road racer to end the European domination of early motor racing. Designed simply for speed and power, Old 16 had an 1032 cc, 4-cylinder, 120 hp engine with a copper gas tank, and a couple of bucket seats atop a simple frame with four wooden-spoked wheels completed the design. At the fourth Vanderbilt Cup, Robertson pushed Old 16 to an average speed of 64.38 mph, dashing around the 297-mile course to the cheers of over 100,000 rowdy spectators, who lined the track dangerously close to the speeding motor cars. With a thrown tire in the last lap and a frantic fight to the finish against an Italian Isotta, America's first major racing victory was a hair-raising affair. Old 16 is one of the oldest American automobiles still in existence, and is currently on display at the Henry Ford Museum in Dearborn, Michigan.
PICTURED: Old 16 Locomobile-winner of the 1908 Vanderbilt Cup Race at the Westbury Turn

October 24, 1944
French automaker and accused Nazi collaborator Louis Renault died in a Paris military prison hospital of undetermined causes. Born in Paris, Renault built his first automobile, the Renault Type A, in 1898. Inspired by the DeDion quadricycle, the Type A had a 270 cc engine (1.75hp), and could carry two people at about 30mph. Later in the year, Renault and his brothers formed the Societe Renault Freres, a racing club that achieved its first major victory when an automobile with a Renault-built engine won the Paris-Vienna race of 1902. After Louis' brother, Marcel, died along with nine other drivers in the Paris-Madrid race of 1903, Renault turned away from racing and concentrated on mass production of vehicles. During World War I, Renault served his nation with the "Taxis de la Marne," a troop-transport vehicle, and in 1918, with the Renault tank. Between the wars, Renault continued to manufacture and sell successful automobiles, models that became famous for their sturdiness and longevity. With the German occupation of France during World War II, the industrialist, who had served his country so well during World War I, mysteriously offered his Renault tank factory and his services to the Nazis, perhaps believing that the Allies' cause was hopeless. The liberation of France in 1944 saw the arrest of Louis Renault as a collaborator, and the Renault company was nationalized with Pierre Lefaucheux as the new director. The 67-seven-year-old Renault, who likely suffered torture during his post-liberation detainment, died soon after his arrest.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on October 25, 2015, 10:25:15 pm
(http://i280.photobucket.com/albums/kk171/crabber1967/Facebook/Ford%20Racing%20100%20Years/63291_10152244032745261_1311846187_n.jpg) (http://s280.photobucket.com/user/crabber1967/media/Facebook/Ford%20Racing%20100%20Years/63291_10152244032745261_1311846187_n.jpg.html)

On this day, October 25, 1902
Racing was in Barney Oldfield's blood long before he ever had the opportunity to race an automobile. Born in Wauseon, Ohio, Oldfield's first love was bicycling, and in 1894, he began to compete professionally. In his first year of racing, the fearless competitor won numerous bicycling events and, in 1896, was offered a coveted position on the Stearns bicycle factory's amateur team. Meanwhile in Dearborn, Michigan, the entrepreneurial inventor Henry Ford had completed his first working automobile and was searching for a way to establish his name in the burgeoning automobile industry. In the early days, it was not the practical uses of the automobile that attracted the most widespread attention, but rather the thrill of motor racing. Recognizing the public's enthusiasm for the new sport, Ford built a racer with Oliver Barthel in 1901. Ford himself even served as driver in their automobile's first race, held at the Grosse Point Race Track in Michigan later in the year. Although he won the race and the kind of public acclaim he had hoped for, Ford found the experience so terrifying that he retired as a competitive driver, reportedly explaining that "once is enough." In 1902, he joined forces with Tom Cooper, the foremost cyclist of his time, and built a much more aggressive racer, the 999, that was capable of up to 80hp. On this day in 1902, the 23-year-old Barney Oldfield made his racing debut in the 999's first race at the Manufacturer's Challenge Cup in Grosse Point. The race was the beginning of a legendary racing career for Oldfield, who soundly beat his competition, including the famed driver Alexander Winton. The cigar-chomping Oldfield went on to become the first truly great American race-car driver, winning countless victories and breaking numerous speed and endurance records. But Oldfield's victory in the 999 was also Ford's first major automotive victory, and together they went on to become the most recognized figures in early American motoring--Ford as the builder and Oldfield as the driver.
PICTURED: 1902 Ford 999 and Oldfield -- Barney Oldfield in 999, the car that made him famous. [photo from Henry Ford Museum]

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October 25, 1910
White race car driver Barney Oldfield beats prize fighter Jack Johnson, the first African-American heavyweight champion of the world, in two five-mile car races in Sheepshead Bay, Brooklyn.
Oldfield and Johnson had a history: Oldfield's friend, the white heavyweight champ James J. Jeffries, had quit boxing in 1908 because he did not want to fight a black man for his title. In July 1910, Jeffries came out of retirement to fight Johnson at last, but lost in 15 rounds. (Twenty-six people were killed and hundreds were injured in the nationwide riots that followed the black fighter's victory.) After that, Johnson was unable to find anyone who would fight him—so, he turned to car racing instead. In October 1910, he challenged Oldfield to a race.
Oldfield, a flamboyant daredevil who had just set a new land-speed record (131 mph) in his Blitzen Benz, accepted the challenge at once. The competitors bet $5,000 on the contest—the driver who won two out of three five-mile heats would win the bet—and invited a Hollywood crew to film the race. But there was a problem: in order to make the race official, Johnson needed a license from the American Automobile Association, but the AAA refused to license black drivers. What's more, the organization told Oldfield that it would rescind his license if he went through with the race. But bets had been made and contracts signed, so the race was on!
Rain delayed the race several times, but on October 25 the skies were clear. Five thousand people gathered at the Brooklyn track, waving their hats and cheering for the movie cameras. Oldfield, driving a 60-horsepower Knox car, won the first heat by a half-mile, in 4:44. In the second, he slowed down a bit—he kept just ahead of Johnson's bright-red car, taunting the boxer as he drove--but won the race in 5:14. There was no need for a third heat: Barney Oldfield was the winner.
Eighteen months later, the AAA reinstated Oldfield and he began to race again. A few years later, he drove the first 100-mph lap in the history of the Indianapolis 500 race. Johnson's luck was not as good: Many people resented his success, and especially his habit of dating white women, and he was arrested several times on trumped-up violations of the Mann Act. As a result, he spent a year in federal prison. Johnson died in a car accident in 1946. He was 68 years old.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on October 26, 2015, 08:00:39 pm
(http://i487.photobucket.com/albums/rr232/jameswithelder/Old%20Time%20Racing/Sammy20Swindell201980.jpg) (http://s487.photobucket.com/user/jameswithelder/media/Old%20Time%20Racing/Sammy20Swindell201980.jpg.html)

On this day, October 26, 1955
Sammy Swindell, who becomes a star in the outlaw sport of sprint-car racing, is born in Germantown, Tennessee. In 1971, when he was just 15 years old, Swindell raced for the first time on a dirt track at the Riverside Speedway in Arkansas. Since he started dirt-track racing, Swidell has never finished a season outside the top 10.
When Swindell began his career, he was a member of a motley crew of drivers known as the Band of Outlaws. These men, according to the Los Angeles Times, were "a gypsy bunch of maverick sprint car drivers who made their mark racing… on seedy little tracks, running with virtually no rules, sometimes wearing only T-shirts and Levi's. They went where the money was and no questions asked." Their races were unsanctioned by the U.S. Auto Club, the organization that ran the Indianapolis 500 and other "respectable" paved-track races. Instead, the Band of Outlaws competed in catch-as-catch-can affairs put on at county fairgrounds and makeshift clay loops across the Midwest.
Outlaw-style racing, usually called sprint-car racing, was a throwback to the early, scrappy days of motorsports, when drivers like Barney Oldfield and A.J. Foyt careened around hard-packed dirt roads in big, open-topped cars. Sprint cars banged into one another as they screeched around the track; they churned giant grooves into the dirt and dared one another to clatter over them without flipping; they used oversized tires, called "humpers," on their right rear wheels to help them accelerate more flamboyantly; and they had wings, or huge canopies that held them down on the track and helped them go faster. And sprint-car racing was dangerous: in the 1970s and 1980s, at least one driver was killed almost every weekend. Today, sprint-car racing is a little safer but no less pugnacious.
In the 1980s, Sammy Swindell dabbled in more mainstream racing—he joined the Indy Car circuit first, then NASCAR—but his heart remained with the Outlaws. In 2009, he rejoined the sprint-car circuit full time. In all, he has won three Outlaw titles and 268 races.

October 26, 1908
Champion incorporated Champion Ignition Company, in Flint, MI, with backing of Buick Motor Co., for manufacturing of spark plugs. Spencer Stranahan, former partner refused to sell rights to "Champion" name.

October 26, 1954
Chevrolet introduced the V-8 engine.

October 26, 1980
General Motors announced a $567 million loss, biggest quarterly drop ever posted by an American company; pre-tax losses for quarter topped out at $953 million.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on October 27, 2015, 10:30:18 pm
(http://i912.photobucket.com/albums/ac325/spect84/volkswagen-beetle-hitler-2_zpscf2d14a8.png) (http://s912.photobucket.com/user/spect84/media/volkswagen-beetle-hitler-2_zpscf2d14a8.png.html)

On this day, October 27, 1945
After the Allied victory in the World War II, Porsche, like other German industrialists who participated in the German war effort, was investigated on war-crime charges. Ferdinand Porsche was arrested by U.S. military officials for his pro-Nazi activities, and was sent to France where he was held for two years before being released. Meanwhile, the Allies approved the continuation of the original Volkswagen program, and Volkswagen went on to become a highly successful automobile company. As his brainchild Volkswagen grew, Porsche himself returned to sports-car design and construction, completing the successful Porsche 356 in 1948 with his son Ferry Porsche. In 1951, Ferdinand Porsche suffered a stroke and died, but Ferry continued his father's impressive automotive legacy, achieving a sports car masterpiece with the introduction of the legendary Porsche 911 in 1963.

October 27, 2006
The last Ford Taurus rolls off the assembly line in Hapeville, Georgia. The keys to the silver car went to 85-year-old Truett Cathy, the founder of the Chick-fil-A fast-food franchise, who took it straight to his company's headquarters in Atlanta and added it to an elaborate display that included 19 other cars, including one of the earliest Fords.
When Ford added the Taurus to its lineup in 1985, the company was struggling. High fuel prices made its heavy, gas-guzzling cars unattractive to American buyers, especially compared to the high-quality foreign cars that had been flooding the market since the middle of the 1970s. The Taurus was smaller than the typical Ford family car, and its aerodynamic styling appealed to design-conscious buyers. Almost immediately, the car was a hit: Ford sold 263,000 in 1985 alone. Sales figures climbed higher each year, and in 1992, the Taurus became the best-selling passenger car in the United States. (It wrested this title away from the Honda Accord, and kept it for the next five years.) It was, according to the Henry Ford Museum, "a winner in the marketplace that saved Ford Motor from disaster."
But by the 2000s, the Taurus had lost much of its appeal. Even after a 1996 facelift, its once cutting-edge design now looked dated, and it still did not have the fuel efficiency of its Japanese counterparts. (In fact, in contrast to cars like the Accord and the Toyota Camry, which overtook the Taurus to become the nation's best-selling car, by the mid-1990s Ford was selling the majority of its Tauruses to rental-car companies, not individuals.) Ford discontinued the Taurus station wagon at the end of 2004, and idled the Hapeville plant—across the street from the original Chick-fil-A—two years later. Fifteen hundred workers lost their jobs.
In place of the Taurus, Ford pushed its full-size Five Hundred sedan along with its midsize Fusion. Neither sold especially well, however, and in 2007 the company re-released the Taurus (actually just a renamed version of the Five Hundred). It unveiled a revamped, sportier Taurus in July 2009.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on October 28, 2015, 09:56:35 pm
(http://i88.photobucket.com/albums/k180/chiefengineer17/T600RamshorstTulpenrallyLowres.jpg) (http://s88.photobucket.com/user/chiefengineer17/media/T600RamshorstTulpenrallyLowres.jpg.html)

On this day, October 28, 1918
The Tatra was christened. The company later known as Tatra constructed its first automobile in 1897, a vehicle largely inspired by the design of an early Benz automobile. Based in the small Moravian town of Nesselsdorf in the Austro-Hungarian empire, Tatra began as Nesselsdorf Wagenbau, a carriage and railway company that entered automobile production after chief engineer Hugo von Roslerstamm learned of the exploits of Baron Theodor von Liebieg, an avid Austrian motorist who drove across Eastern Europe in a Benz automobile. The Baron himself took the Nesselsdorf Wagenbau's first automobile, christened the President, on a test drive from Nesselsdorf to Vienna. He was impressed with the design and pushed von Roslerstamm and Nesselsdorf Wagenbau to enter racing.
The company put its faith in the talented young engineer Hans Ledwinka, and under his leadership the Rennzweier and the Type A racers were produced, demonstrating modest racing success and encouraging the beginning of large-scale production of the Type S in 1909. The company continued to grow until 1914, when, with the outbreak of World War I, it shifted to railroad-car construction. On this day in 1918, just two weeks before the end of the war on the Western front, the Moravian town of Nesselsdorf in the old Austro-Hungarian empire became the city of Koprivnicka in the newly created country of Czechoslovakia, necessitating a name change for the Nesselsdorf Wagenbau.
Soon after the war, Hans Ledwinka and the newly named Koprivnicka Wagenbau began construction of a new automobile under the marque Tatra. The Tatra name came from the Tatra High Mountains, some of the highest mountains in the Carpathian mountain range. Ledwinka settled on Tatra in 1919 after an experimental model with 4-wheel brakes passed a sleigh on a dangerously icy road, prompting the surprised sleigh riders to reportedly exclaim: "This is a car for the Tatras." In 1923, the first official Tatra automobile, the Tatra T11, was completed, and Ledwinka's hope for an affordable "people's car" had come to fruition. The rugged and relatively small automobile gave many Czechoslovakians an opportunity to own an automobile for the first time, much as Ford's Model T had in the United States. In 1934, Tatra achieved an automotive first with the introduction of the Tatra 77, an innovative model that holds the distinction of being the world's first aerodynamically styled automobile powered by an air-cooled rear-mounted engine.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on October 29, 2015, 09:17:24 pm
(http://i113.photobucket.com/albums/n233/glasscottage/Affiliate%20Mkt/1954_Hudson_Hornet.jpg)

On this day, October 29, 1954
The last true Hudson was produced. The Hudson Motor Car Company was founded in 1909 by Joseph L. Hudson, and by its second year ranked 11th in the nation for automobile production. Although rarely a top-seller, Hudson was responsible for a number of important automotive innovations, including the placement of the steering wheel on the left side, the self-starter, and dual brakes. In 1919, the Hudson Essex was introduced, a sturdy automobile built on an all-steel body that sold for pennies more than Ford's Model T. Hudson production peaked in 1929 with over 300,000 units, including a line of commercial vehicles. During the early 1930s, Hudson became increasingly involved in motor sports, and the Hudson Essex-Terraplane cars set records in hill climbing, economy runs, and speed events. After World War II, the modest automobile company set its sights on stock racing, launching its new Monobuilt design in 1948. The Monobuilt design consisted of a chassis and frame that were combined in a unified passenger compartment, producing a strong, lightweight design, and a beneficial lower center of gravity that didn't effect road clearance. Hudson coined this innovation "step-down design" because, for the first time, passengers had to step down in order to get into a car. Most cars today are still based on the step-down premise.
In 1951, Hudson introduced the powerful Hornet, a model that would dominate stock car racing from 1952 to 1954. In 1952 alone, Hudson won 29 of the 34 events. A key factor in Hudson's racing success was the innovative step-down design of its cars. Because of their lower centers of gravity, Hornets would glide around corners with relative ease, leaving their clunky and unstable competitors in the dust. During this period, Hudson hoped that its stock-racing success would help its lagging sales, but the public preferred watching the likes of Marshall Teague racing around in a Hornet to actually purchasing one. In 1954, the Hudson Motor Company and the Nash-Kelvinator Corporation merged to form the American Motors Corporation, and Hudson, which had been suffering severe financial problems, signed on as the weaker partner. Soon after, it was announced that all 1955 models would be made in Nash's facilities, and that most of Hudson's recent innovations would be discontinued. On this day, the last step-down Hudson was produced. Although the Hudson name would live on for another two years, the cars no longer possessed the innovative elegance and handling of models like the Hornet of the early 1950s.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: IGALOP on October 29, 2015, 10:29:36 pm
That timber runabout boat center/rear would be worth big moolah if it were real & around now. There is quite a few resto's of these around Melbourne now. Such cool looking classic boats.  :thumb:
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on October 30, 2015, 07:23:23 pm
(http://i389.photobucket.com/albums/oo339/2005rjs/Cars%20I%20Love/lamborghini_350_gtv_3_63.jpg) (http://s389.photobucket.com/user/2005rjs/media/Cars%20I%20Love/lamborghini_350_gtv_3_63.jpg.html)

On this day, October 30, 1963
The first Lamborghini, the 350GTV (made by tractor maker Ferruccio Lamborghi to compete with Ferrari) debuted at Turin auto show.
Sports car maker Ferruccio Lamborghini was born in Renazzo di Cento, Italy, on April 28, 1916. After studying mechanical engineering in Bologna, Lamborghini served as a mechanic for the Italian Army's Central Vehicle Division in Rhodes during World War II. Upon his return to Italy, he worked on converting military vehicles into agricultural machines, and, in 1948, began building and designing his own tractors. His well-designed agricultural machinery proved a success, and with this prosperity Lamborghini developed an addiction for luxury sports cars. In the early 1960s, he purchased a Ferrari 250 GT, made just a few miles away in Enzo Ferrari's factory. After encountering problems with the car, Ferruccio reportedly paid Enzo a visit, complaining to him about his new Ferrari's noisy gearbox. Legend has it that the great racing car manufacturer Ferrari responded in a patronizing manner to the tractor-maker Lamborghini, inspiring the latter to begin development of his own line of luxury sports cars--automobiles that could out perform any mass-produced Ferrari.
On this day in 1963, the Lamborghini 350GTV debuted at the Turin auto show. But Lamborghini had not completed the prototype in time for the deadline, and the 350GTV was presented with a crate of ceramic tiles in place of an engine. With or without the engine, Lamborghini's first car was not particularly well received, and only one GTV was ever completed. But the former tractor-maker was not discouraged, and in 1964 the drastically redesigned 350GT went into production, and Lamborghini managed to sell over 100 of the expensive cars. The GT was a quiet and sophisticated high-performance vehicle, capable of achieving 155mph with a maximum 320hp. The elegant Lamborghini 350GT indeed provided a smoother ride than most of its Ferrari counterparts, and Ferruccio's old tractor factory, located just a few miles from the Ferrari factory, began constructing some of the most exotic cars the world had ever seen, such as the Miura, the Espada, and the legendary Countach.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on November 06, 2015, 11:02:16 pm
(http://i122.photobucket.com/albums/o244/race42008/1907_packard_touring.jpg)

On this day, November 6, 1899
James Ward Packard, an electrical-wire manufacturer from Warren, Ohio, first demonstrated his interest in automobiles when he hired Edward P. Cowles and Henry A. Schryver to work on plans for a possible Packard automobile in 1896. Although a functional engine was completed in 1897, it would take another two years, and James Packard's purchase of a Winton horseless carriage, before his company fully flung itself into the burgeoning automobile industry. In 1898, James Packard purchased an automobile constructed by fellow Ohio manufacturer Alexander Winston, and Packard, a first-time car owner, experienced problems with his purchase from the start. Finally, in June of 1899, after nearly a year of repairing and improving the Winston automobile on his own, Packard decided to launch the Packard Motor Company. On this day, only three months after work on his first automobile began, the first Packard was completed and test-driven through the streets of Warren, Ohio. The Model A featured a one-cylinder engine capable of producing 12hp. Built around the engine was a single-seat buggy with wire wheels, a steering tiller, an automatic spark advance, and a chain drive. Within only two months, the Packard Company sold its fifth Model A prototype to Warren resident George Kirkham for $1,250. By the 1920s, Packard was a major producer of luxury automobiles, and this prosperity would continue well into the late 1950s.

November 6, 1986
The destitute Alfa Romeo company approved its acquisition by fellow Italian automobile manufacturer Fiat, shortly after rejecting a takeover bid by the Ford Motor Company. Alfa Romeo was founded by Nicola Romeo in 1908, and during the 1920s and 1930s produced elegant luxury racing cars like the RL, the 6C 1500, and the 8C 2900 B. Alfa Romeo saw its peak business years during the 1950s and 1960s, when Alfa Romeo chairman Giuseppe Luraghi oversaw a company shift toward more functional and affordable cars. The Giuletta, the Spider, and the Giulia series received enthusiastic responses from consumers, and Alfa Romeo flourished. However, during the 1970s, the company fell out of touch with a changing market, and, like many other automobile companies, failed to meet the demands of recession-era consumers who preferred fuel efficiency and reliability to luxury and design. By the mid-1980s, Alfa Romeo was bankrupt, and Fiat took over the company, assigning it to a new unit called Alfa Lancia Spa, which opened for business in 1997.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on November 08, 2015, 12:23:37 am
(http://i241.photobucket.com/albums/ff37/viking_berserker/Trabant_P50_red_1964.jpg) (http://s241.photobucket.com/user/viking_berserker/media/Trabant_P50_red_1964.jpg.html)

On this day, November 7, 1957
Before World War II, Audi-founder August Horch cranked out his innovative Audis in the Zwickau Automobile Factory in the eastern German state of Sachsen. It was here that Audi manufactured the first automobiles with four-wheel hydraulic brakes and front wheel drive, decades before these innovations became standard throughout the automobile industry. After World War II, Germany was separated into Eastern and Western occupation zones, and Audi, like most other significant German corporations, fled to the capitalist West. Among the deserted factories the Soviet occupiers faced in postwar East Germany was the former Horch-Audi works in Zwickau. Under the authority of the Soviet administrators, and later under the East German Communist government, the Zwickau factory went back into service in the late 1940s, producing simple, pre-war German automobiles like the Das Klein Wonder F8, and the P70, a compact car with a Duroplast plastic body. In 1957, the East German government approved the updated P50 model to enter the market under a new company name--Trabant. On this day, the first Trabant, which translates to servant in English, was produced at the former Horch auto works in Zwickau. For the Trabant's first marque, the designers settled on "Sputnik," to commemorate the Soviet Union's launching of the first artificial Earth satellite the month before. The Trabant Sputnik was the first in the P50 series, featuring a tiny engine for its time--a two-cylinder 500 cc engine capable of reaching only 18bhp. In design, the Trabant Sputnik was the archetypal eastern European car: small, boxy, and fragile in appearance. Yet, despite the lack of style or power found in the Sputnik and its descendants, these automobiles were affordable, and provided the citizens of East Germany and other Soviet bloc countries with a capable means of getting from here to there.

November 7, 1965
In 1964, Art Arfons, a drag racer from Ohio, built a land-speed racer in his backyard using a military surplus J79 jet aircraft engine with an afterburner. Arfons christened the vehicle Green Monster, and in September took the racer to the Bonneville Salt Flats in Utah to join in the race to set a new land- speed record. On October 5, the Green Monster jet powered to 434.022--a new land-speed record. However, Arfons' record would only stand for six days, for on October 13, Craig Breedlove set his second land-speed record when he reached 468.719 in his jet-powered Spirit of America. In 1965, Arfons returned to the Bonneville Salt Flats in a revamped Green Monster, and on this day shattered Breedlove's record from the previous year, when he raced to 576.553mph across the one-mile course.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on November 08, 2015, 11:16:54 pm
(http://img.photobucket.com/albums/1003/PeterS/WolseleyUlrich1903.jpg) (http://smg.photobucket.com/user/PeterS/media/WolseleyUlrich1903.jpg.html)

November 8, 1866
Herbert Austin, the founder of the Austin Motor Company, was born the son of a farmer in Little Missenden, Buckinghamshire, England. At the age of 22, Austin moved to Melbourne, Australia, where he served as an apprentice engineer at a foundry, before becoming the manager of the Wolseley Sheep Shearing Company. Long journeys into the wide-open spaces of Australia gave him insight into the benefits of gasoline-driven vehicles, and Austin decided to try his luck in the burgeoning automobile industry. In 1893, Austin returned to England with the Wolseley Company and began work on his first automobile. Like his American counterpart, Henry Ford, Austin hoped to produce an affordable motor car for the masses, and by 1895 the Wolseley Company completed its first vehicle, a three-wheeled automobile, followed by the first four-wheeled Wolseley vehicle in 1900. In 1905, Herbert Austin founded the Austin Motor Company in Birmingham, England, and by 1914, the company was producing over 1,000 automobiles a year. During World War II, Austin and his factories joined in the British war effort, a service for which he was knighted in 1917. In 1922, with the introduction of the Austin 7 Tourer, Sir Herbert Austin finally fulfilled his ambition to produce a mass-produced automobile. The diminutive vehicle, boasting four-wheel brakes and a maximum speed of 50mph, was an instant success in England. In 1930, the Austin 7 was introduced to America, and enjoyed five years of modest U.S. sales before falling prey to the hard times of the Depression in 1935.

November 8, 1895
Diamler returned to his own company as chief engineer. He received shares worth 30,000 marks that he was entitled to through 1882 contract with Daimler. In mid 1893 - Daimler was forced to sell his stake in company, rights to his inventions for 66,666 marks to avoid bankruptcy. In 1895 - group of British industrialists, fronted by Frederick R. Simms, looked to acquire license rights to Maybach-designed Phoenix engine for Britain for 350,000 marks only if Daimler and Maybach returned to company. Daimler returned as expert advisor, general inspector. His stake in company returned (worth 200,000 marks) additional 100,000 mark bonus was also paid.

November 8, 1918
McLaughlin Carriage and Motor Company Limited and Chevrolet Motor Company of Canada Limited merged and formed General Motors of Canada Limited. R.S. "Sam" McLaughlin) became president but GM already owned 49% of company.

November 8, 1956
The Ford Motor Company decided on the name "Edsel" for a new model in development for the 1958 market year. The new addition to the Ford family of automobiles would be a tribute to Edsel Bryant Ford, who served as company president from 1919 until his death in 1943. Edsel Ford was also the oldest son of founder Henry Ford and father to current company President Henry Ford II. The designer of the Edsel, Roy Brown, was instructed to create an automobile that was highly recognizable, and from every angle different than anything else on the road. In the fall of 1957, with great fanfare, the 1958 Edsel was introduced to the public. With its horse collar grill in the front and its regressed side-panels in the rear, the Edsel indeed looked like nothing else on the road. However, despite its appearance, the Ford Edsel was a high-tech affair, featuring state-of-the-art innovations such as the "Tele-Touch" push-button automatic transmission. Nevertheless, buyer appeal was low, and the Ford Edsel earned just a 1.5 percent share of the market in 1958. After two more years, the Edsel marque was abandoned, and its name would forever be synonymous with business failure.

November 8, 1992
Daredevil Jacky Vranken of Belgium set a record for the highest speed ever attained on the rear wheel of a motorcycle. At St. Truiden Military Airfield in Belgium, Vranken reached 157.87 while performing an extended "wheelie" with his Suzuki GSXR 1100 motorcycle. The year before, Yasuyuki Kudo of Japan had set the record for the longest wheelie when he covered 205.7 miles nonstop on the rear wheel of his Honda TLM 220 R motorcycle at the Japan Automobile Research Institute in Tsukuba, Japan.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on November 10, 2015, 10:55:30 pm
(http://i893.photobucket.com/albums/ac138/anhsuutam/vnamwar64/vnw64_14.jpg) (http://s893.photobucket.com/user/anhsuutam/media/vnamwar64/vnw64_14.jpg.html)

On this day, November 9, 1960
Robert McNamara becomes the president of the Ford Motor Company. He would hold the job for less than a month, heading to Washington in December to join President John F. Kennedy's cabinet. McNamara served as the secretary of defense under Presidents Kennedy and Johnson until he resigned in 1968. That year, he became the president of the World Bank, a job he held until 1981.
At the end of World War II, Ford was in tatters. Henry Ford was still in charge, but he was getting old and increasingly senile; furthermore, since he had made no secret of his pacifist, anti-Semitic and anti-union convictions, many people were reluctant to do business with him or to buy one of his cars. The company had been steadily losing money since the stock market crash of 1929, and by 1945 it was losing about $9 million every month.
At GM and Chrysler, by contrast, business was booming. In order to catch up, in September 1945 Henry Ford's wife and daughter-in-law presented the elderly man with an ultimatum: make 28-year-old Henry Ford II (the elder Ford's grandson) the company's president, or his mother would sell her controlling stake in the company to the highest bidder.
Left without much choice, the elder Ford gave in and put his grandson in charge. Right away, Ford II hired 10 "Whiz Kids," including McNamara, all straight out of the Army Air Corps and all with training in economics and statistics from places like Harvard, Stanford, Berkeley and Princeton. These "Whiz Kids" managed to streamline the company and make it profitable again, in part by creating a sleek new look for Ford cars. The company's '49 coupe, with its "spinner" grille, slab sides and integrated fenders, was an immediate hit.
In all, McNamara spent 14 years at Ford, before heading to Washington, D.C., where he served under both Kennedy and President Lyndon Johnson. McNamara was a key advisor to Kennedy during the Cuban Missile Crisis and is credited with using his management skills to help the Pentagon function more efficiently. He is also known as an engineer of America's Vietnam War policy under both Kennedy and Nixon, an often-criticized role that he later discussed in the 2003 documentary The Fog of War.
McNamara left the Pentagon in early 1968, and then spent 12 years as head of the World Bank.
He died on July 6, 2009 at 93 years old.

November 9, 1989
East German citizens were allowed to buy western cars.


(http://i637.photobucket.com/albums/uu95/video80/autos/eddieIrvine.jpg~original) (http://s637.photobucket.com/user/video80/media/autos/eddieIrvine.jpg.html)

November 10, 1965
Formula One racer Eddie Irvine was born in Newtownards, Northern Ireland. In 1996, Irvine won a coveted place on the Ferrari team, racing alongside the likes of World Champion Michael Schumacher, but Irvine is also famous as one of the last of Formula One's most endangered species--the playboy racing driver. The popular bachelor, who maintains an impressive neutrality in regard to his British or Irish nationality, has not won a grand prix as of 1998, yet enjoyed seven career-podium finishes and reached a Formula One ranking of fourth in the world in 1998. Irvine got his start in racing at the young age of 17, competing in his father's Crossle FF 1600 Chassis, and by 1988 had worked his way up to British Formula Three series. 1990 saw him driving for the Jordan F3000 team, and he won his first race at Hockinheim that year, finishing third overall in the series. In the fall of 1993, Irvine made his Formula One debut driving for Sasol Jordan, and at the Suzuki racetrack in Japan he placed sixth, becoming the first driver since Jean Alesi to score points on a Formula One debut. In his first few years of Formula One racing, Irvine, a notoriously fearless and reckless driver, earned the nickname "Irv the Swerve." However, he also demonstrated enough driving potential to be offered the number-two position on the championship Ferrari team in 1996.

November 10, 1885
Paul Daimler, son of German engineer Gottlieb Daimler, became first motorcyclist when he rode his father's new invention for six miles; frame and wheels made of wood; leather belt transferred power from engine to large brass gears mounted to rear wheel; no suspension (front or rear); single cylinder engine had bore of 58mm, stroke of 100mm giving a displacement of 264cc's, gave 0.5hp at 700 rpm, top speed was 12 km/h.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on November 11, 2015, 11:59:01 pm
(http://i31.photobucket.com/albums/c394/CountryIconsYEEHAW/gen_lee_rising.jpg) (http://s31.photobucket.com/user/CountryIconsYEEHAW/media/gen_lee_rising.jpg.html)

On this day, November 11, 1978
A stuntman on the Georgia set of "The Dukes of Hazzard" launches the show's iconic automobile, a 1969 Dodge Charger named the General Lee, off a makeshift dirt ramp and over a police car. That jump, 16 feet high and 82 feet long (its landing totaled the car), made TV history. Although more than 300 different General Lees appeared in the series, which ran on CBS from 1979 until 1985, this first one was the only one to play a part in every episode: That jump over the squad car ran every week at the end of the show's opening credits.
The General Lee was a neon-orange Charger with "01" painted on the doors, a Confederate flag on the roof, and a horn that played the first 12 notes of the song "Dixie." It belonged to the Dukes of Hazzard themselves, the cousins Bo (played by actor John Schneider) and Luke Duke (actor Tom Wopat), who used it to get out of dangerous scrapes and away from the corrupt county commissioner Boss Hogg. Scenes featuring the General Lee are some of the show's most memorable: Luke Duke sliding sideways across the car's hood; the boys hopping feet-first through the windows (the Charger's doors were welded shut, so the windows were the only way to get in and out); the General flying over ditches, half-open drawbridges and police cruisers.
Because practically every one of the General Lee's stunts ended up wrecking the car, the show's prop masters bought every 1969 Dodge Charger they could find (and there were plenty: the Chrysler Corporation sold about 85,000 in all). Then they outfitted each one for action, adding a roll cage to the inside, a protective push bar to the nose and heavy-duty shock absorbers and springs to the suspension. The prop masters also tampered with the brakes to make it easier to do the 180-degree "Bootleggers' Turn" that so often helped the Duke boys evade Boss Hogg. Cars used for jumps also got trunks full of concrete or lead ballast to keep them from flipping over in midair.
While "The Dukes of Hazzard" was on the air, the General Lee got about 35,000 fan letters each month. Fans bought millions of remote-controlled and toy versions of the car, and some even modified their real cars to look like the Dukes' Charger. Indianapolis DJ Travis Bell restored the original General Lee in 2006.

November 11, 1926
Official numerical designation 66 (Will Rogers Highway) assigned to the Chicago-to-Los Angeles Route (2,448 miles). It is one of nation's principal east-west arteries; diagonal course linked hundreds of predominately rural communities in Illinois, Missouri, Kansas to Chicago; enabled farmers to transport grain, produce for redistribution; diagonal configuration of Route 66 particularly significant to trucking industry (rivaled railroad for preeminence in American shipping) traversed essentially flat prairie lands, enjoyed more temperate climate than northern highways.

November 11, 1949
Rex Mays, a 1993 inductee into the International Motorsports Hall of Fame, earned his place among the all-time greats of motor racing as much for his willingness to put the welfare of others before his own as for his actual racing ability. Mays got his start on the West Coast midget racing circuit in the 1930s, winning numerous races before entering national competition where he added sprint and champ-car racing to his repertoire. In 1934, he entered the racing big leagues when he placed ninth in his first Indianapolis 500. Mays never managed to win the esteemed event, but he placed second in 1940 and 1941, the same two years that he won the national titles for champ-car racing. In 1941, Mays gave up the fame and fortune of motor racing to serve his country as an Air Force pilot during World War II. After the war, Mays returned to racing. Although he was not as winning a racer as before the war, two separate incidents demonstrated the distinction of his character, and guaranteed his venerable place in the racing history books. In June of 1948, while competing in a champ-car race at the Milwaukee Mile in Wisconsin, Mays deliberately crashed into a wall, nearly ending his life, in order to avoid hitting racer Duke Dinsmore, who was thrown from his car a moment before. And in the fall of 1949, at the New York State Fairgrounds in Syracuse, New York, May prevented a possible fan riot when he silently took to the racetrack alone after other racers refused to compete because of a dispute over prize money. One by one the other racers joined him and violence was prevented. A few months later, on November 11, 1949, Rex Mays was killed during a race held at Del Mar, California, when he was run over by another car after being thrown from his vehicle in a mishap. In addition to his place in the Motorsports Hall of Fame, Rex is honored with a special plaque at the Milwaukee Mile, at the exact spot on the Turn One wall where he nearly gave up his life to save another.

November 11, 1989
In 1935, British car designer William Lyons introduced the SS Jaguar 100 as a new marque for his Swallow Sidecar Company. Swallow Sidecar had been manufacturing complete luxury cars for four years, but the SS Jaguar 100 was Lyons' first true sports car. During World War II, Lyons dropped the Swallow Sidecar name, and the politically incorrect SS initials, and Jaguar Cars Ltd. was formally established. The first significant postwar Jaguar, the XK 120, was introduced in 1948 at the London Motor Show to great acclaim. Capable of speeds in excess of 120mph, the XK 120 was the fastest production car in the world, and is considered by many to be one of the finest sports cars ever made. Over the next three decades, Jaguar became the epitome of speed coupled with elegance, and the company flourished as its racing division racked up countless trophies. On this day in 1989, Jaguar entered a new era when the company became a subsidiary of the Ford Motor Company. The integrity of the Jaguar marque was recognized and maintained, and throughout the 1990s the company continued to produce distinguished automobiles such as the Jaguar XK8 and the luxurious Vanden Plas.

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Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on November 13, 2015, 12:16:51 am
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On this day, November 12, 1965
Brothers Bill and Bob Summers set a world land-speed record—409.277 miles per hour—on the Bonneville Salt Flats in Utah. They did it in an amazing, hemi-powered hot rod they called the Goldenrod. The car got its name from the '57 Chevy gold paint the brothers used. Today, the Goldenrod is on display at the Henry Ford Museum in Dearborn, Michigan.
The Summers brothers—Bill was the levelheaded engineer and Bob was the daredevil driver—had been hot-rod racing near their home in Southern California and at the Bonneville Salt Flats for years. In 1963, they decided to get serious: if they could find the parts and equipment they needed to build the right car, they agreed, they would try to go faster than any man had ever gone. (The land-speed record at that time, 394.196 miles per hour, had been set by Briton John Cobb in 1947.) But the Summers brothers weren't the only people to have this idea: In July 1964, Englishman Donald Campbell broke Cobb's record (403.10 mph), and in 1964 and 1965, two American drivers used jet engines to go more than 600 miles per hour.
But the Summers brothers thought that using jet engines was cheating: They believed, wrote one reporter, "that real cars were driven by friction between tires and the ground." The brothers wanted their car to be as fast as possible by being as aerodynamic as possible, and it was: The finished Goldenrod was the sleekest, lowest, narrowest racer in history. It was 32 feet long, 48 inches wide and 42 inches tall, with a pointed nose and four 426 cubic-inch V8 hemi engines on loan from Chrysler. Firestone Tire and Rubber donated the specially-built low-profile tires, and Mobil Oil provided the fuel.
The Goldenrod's first six-mile run across the Bonneville Salt Flats broke Campbell's record easily, averaging 417 miles per hour. To set an official record, however, a car must make two record-breaking runs, one out and one back, within an hour. With five minutes to spare, the yellow car headed across the desert for a second time. When she screamed past the timers, her achievement was official: she'd hit an average speed of 409.277 miles per hour.
Because the Summers brothers had to return the Goldenrod's engines to Chrysler, they never tried to break their own record. It stood until Al Teague's supercharged Spirit of '76 broke it until 1991. In 2002, the Henry Ford bought the Goldenrod, paying for the car's restoration with a grant from the federal Save America's Treasure's Fund. The car is on display at the museum today.

November 12, 1927
The Holland Tunnel between New York City and Jersey City, New Jersey, was officially opened when President Calvin Coolidge telegraphed a signal from the presidential yacht, Mayflower, anchored in the Potomac River. Within an hour, over 20,000 people had walked the 9,250-foot distance between New York and New Jersey under the Hudson River, and the next day the tunnel opened for automobile service. The double-tubed underwater tunnel, the first of its kind in the United States, was built to accommodate nearly 2,000 vehicles per hour. Chief engineer Clifford Milburn Holland resolved the problem of ventilation by creating a highly advanced ventilation system that changed the air over 30 times an hour at the rate of over 3,000,000 cubic feet per minute.

November 12, 1946
The Exchange National Bank of Chicago, Illinois, instituted the first drive-in banking service in America, and anticipated a cultural phenomenon that would sweep across America in the coming decade. In 1946, America's Big Three automobile companies were still engaged in the laborious process of retooling from war production to civilian automobile company. With the influx of returning soldiers, and economic signs pointing to a period of great American prosperity, market demand for automobiles was high. At first, U.S. carmakers responded by offering their old pre-war models, but beginning in 1949, the first completely redesigned postwar cars hit the market, and Americans embraced the automotive industry as never before. By the early 1950s, the U.S. was a nation on wheels. With a seemingly endless reserve of cheap gas available, drive-in culture--featuring everything from drive-in movie theaters to drive-in grocery stores--flourished alongside America's highways and main streets. In 1946, the Exchange National Bank of Chicago anticipated the rise of America's drive-in society by several years, featuring such drive-in banking innovations as tellers' windows protected by heavy bullet-proof glass, and sliding drawers that enabled drivers to conduct their business from the comfort of their vehicle.

November 12, 1998
Daimler-Benz completed merger with Chrysler to form Daimler-Chrysler.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on November 14, 2015, 12:19:40 am
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On this day, November 13, 1916
Errett Lobban Cord, the genius behind the Auburn, Cord, and Duesenberg family of automobiles, first became involved with automobiles as a racing car mechanic and driver. On this day, the 20-year-old Cord won his first motor race in Arizona. Cord, driving a Paige vehicle designed by Harry Jewett, won the 275-mile race from Douglas, Arizona, to Phoenix, Arizona. From his racing beginnings, Cord moved into automobile sales, and in 1924 came to Auburn, Indiana, to save the faltering Auburn Automobile Company. Cord, a brilliant salesman, rapidly pulled the company out of debt by clearing out hundreds of stockpiled Auburn vehicles and excess parts, and was subsequently named the vice president and general manager at Auburn. Under Cord's guidance, the Auburn line was entirely refashioned, and the new Auburns were known as some of the most luxurious and fashionable cars on the road. In 1926, Cord acquired the expert design skills of Fred Duesenberg, and in 1928, the Duesenberg Model J, one of the finest automobiles ever made, was introduced to the public. To make the family complete, the Auburn plant introduced the Cord L-29 in 1929, which was America's first successful front-wheel drive car. The Auburn, Cord, and Duesenberg automobiles that sold so well in the roaring 1920s also proved surprisingly resilient during the early years of the Depression, but by 1937, America's hard times were too much even for E. L. Cord, and manufacturing ceased as his entire corporation was sold.

November 13, 1940
Willys-Overland completes original Jeep prototype. In 1939, the U.S. Army asked America's automobile manufacturers to submit designs for a simple and versatile military vehicle. It would be two full years before the official U.S. declaration of war, but military officials, who knew this declaration to be inevitable, recognized the need for an innovative troop-transport vehicle for the global battlefields of World War II. The American Bantam Car Company, a small car manufacturer, submitted the first design approved by the army, but the production contract was ultimately given to Willys-Overland, a company that had a larger production capability and offered a lower bid. The Willys Jeep, as it would become known during the war, was similar to the Bantam design, and featured four-wheel drive, an open-air cab, and a rifle rack mounted under the windshield. On this day, the first Willys-Overland Jeep prototype was completed, and submitted to the U.S. Army for approval. One year later, with the U.S. declaration of war, mass production of the Willys-Overland Jeep began. By the war's end in 1945, some 600,000 Jeeps had rolled off the assembly lines and onto the battlefields of Asia, Africa, and Europe. The efficient and sturdy four-wheel drive Jeep became a symbol of the American war effort--no obstacle could stop its advance. Somewhere along the line the vehicle acquired the name "Jeep," likely evolving from the initials G.P. for "general purchase" vehicle, and the nickname stuck. In 1945, Willys-Overland introduced the first civilian Jeep vehicle, the CJ-2A--the forefather of today's sport utility vehicles
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on November 15, 2015, 11:41:13 pm
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On this day, November 15, 1977
At the Mahwah plant in New York, workers completed the 100,000,000th Ford to be built in America: a 1978 Ford Fairmont four-door sedan. The Fairmont series was introduced at the beginning of the 1978 model year, to replace the discontinued Ford Maverick. Several Fairmont models were available in the first year of the series, and the available power ran from a 140 cubic-inch, four-cylinder engine to a 302 cubic-inch V-8. The most popular Ford Fairmont was the Sporty Coupe, which was introduced midway through the 1978 model year, and featured styling reminiscent of the Thunderbird. The vehicle was two inches longer than the other Fairmont models, and featured quad headlights and a unique roof design featuring a decorative wrap-over. In the 1979 model year, the Fairmont Sporty Coupe became the Fairmont Futura Sport, and, by 1980, was available as a four-door sedan in addition to the original two-door coupe. By 1981, the Fairmont Futura series was more of a high-trim automobile than its original manifestation as a sporty vehicle, and a Futura station wagon became available. At the end of the 1983 model year, the entire Fairmont line was discontinued.

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November 15, 1965
Craig Breedlove, driving his jet-powered Spirit of America--Sonic 1 vehicle, raced to 600.601 mph over the Bonneville Salt Flats in Utah, and set a new land-speed record. Breedlove, a four-time land-speed record holder, was also the first driver to break the 400 mph and 500 mph land-speed barriers, in 1963 and 1964 respectively. Five years later, Gary Gabelich, in his Blue Flame rocket-powered vehicle, would break Breedlove's record by reaching 622.407 mph over the Bonneville Salt Flats.

PICTURED BELOW: Craig Breedlove's Spirit of America

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Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on November 17, 2015, 10:21:58 pm
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On this day, November 17, 1906
Honda Motor Company founder Soichiro Honda was born the son of a blacksmith in Hamamatsu, Japan, about 150 miles southwest of Tokyo. Honda, who displayed remarkable mechanical intuition even at a young age, began working in an auto repair shop in Tokyo at age 15. In 1928, Honda returned to Hamamatsu to set up another branch of the repair shop, and also began pursuing his youthful passion for motor car racing. In 1936, Honda won his first racing trophy at the All-Japan Speed Rally, but nearly died when his car crashed shortly after setting a speed record. After a prolonged recovery, Honda left racing, and during World War II constructed airplane propellers for his country. When the war was over, Japan's industry was in shambles, and Honda saw an opportunity to beat swords into plowshares by starting an automotive company of his own. He bought a surplus of small generator engines from the military at a bargain price and began attaching them to bicycle frames. Honda's fuel-efficient vehicles were popular in a time when fuel was scarce, and in September of 1948, with only $1,500, Honda formed the Honda Motor Company in Hamamatsu. The company began building a full line of powerful and well-made motorcycles that by 1955 led motorcycle production in Japan. Honda proved as effective a company manager as he was a talented engineer, and by the early 1960s, Honda was the world's largest manufacturer of motorcycles. From this immense success, Honda was inspired to begin automobile production in 1962. Honda's first vehicle, the pint-size S-360, failed to make a dent in the American market, and it was not until 1972, and the introduction of the Civic 1200, that Honda became a serious contender in the industry. The fuel crisis of 1973 was the catalyst that thrust Honda and other Japanese auto manufacturers into the forefront of the international market. Cars like the Honda Civic proved far more durable and fuel efficient than anything being produced in Detroit at the time, and American consumers embraced Japanese-made automobiles. In 1973, Soichiro Honda retired from the top position at Honda, but the company he founded went on to become an industry leader, establishing such successful marques as the Accord, which by 1989 was the best-selling car in America.

November 17, 1970
First wheeled-vehicle on the moon. An unmanned Soviet lunar probe, Luna 17, soft-landed in the Sea of Rains on the surface of the moon on this day. Hours later, Lunokhod 1, a self-propelled vehicle controlled by Soviet mission control on earth, rolled out of the Luna landing probe, and became the first wheeled vehicle to travel on the surface of the moon. Lunokhod, which explored the Mare Imbrium region of the Sea of Rains, sent back television images and took soil samples. Despite this notable space first, the Soviet space program was trailing considerably behind the U.S. program which, in 1969, had succeeded in putting an American on the moon with the Apollo 11 lunar mission. In August of 1971, during the fourth manned lunar landing, the United States achieved another first: astronauts David R. Scott and James B. Irwin drove the Lunar Rover--the first manned lunar automobile--on the surface of the moon.

November 17, 1998
The brand-new Daimler Chrysler began trading its shares on the New York Stock Exchange. The company had formed five days earlier, when the American Chrysler Corporation merged with the German conglomerate Daimler-Benz AG. As a result of the merger, DaimlerChrysler became the world's fifth-largest automaker behind General Motors, Ford, Toyota and Volkswagen.
The Daimler-Chrysler merger, for which Daimler-Benz AG paid $36 billion, was supposed to create a single powerhouse car company that could compete in all markets, all over the world. Daimler-Benz was known for its high-quality luxury cars and sturdy trucks, while Chrysler's minivans and Jeeps had a big chunk of the growing sport- utility vehicle market; meanwhile, the American company seemed to have mastered the art of high-volume, low-cost manufacturing. However, things did not quite work out that way. Chrysler actually lost so much money—$1.5 billion in 2006 alone—that in 2007 Daimler paid a private equity firm to take the company off its hands.
In 2009, Chrysler filed for bankruptcy again. In order to stay afloat, it merged with the Italian company Fiat.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on November 21, 2015, 08:29:39 pm
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On this day, November 21, 1970
One of the rarest of Ford Mustangs--the Boss 351--debuted at the Detroit Auto Show in Detroit, Michigan. Ford first introduced the Mustang marque in 1964 and the car was an instant success, appearing on the covers of both Time and Newsweek. The car, known as a "pony car" for its small size, had the appearance of a sports car. However, the Mustang was far more reasonably prized than the average sports car, and it possessed a rare popular appeal that made it one of the greatest automotive success stories of the 1960s. By 1970, the Ford Mustang had grown considerably in size, and the Boss 351 could better be described as a "muscle car" than a "pony car." The car featured a powerful 8-cyclinder engine built on Ford's new "Cleveland" block, and was factory rated at 300bhp. The Boss 351 was also unquestionably one the rarest Mustangs ever released--it was manufactured for just a single production year, 1971, and only 1,806 units were made--compared with the 500,000 Mustangs manufactured and sold by Ford in 1965 alone.

November 21, 1937
Howard E. Coffin, who founded the Hudson Motor Company along with Joseph L. Hudson in 1909, died from an accidental gunshot wound at Sea Island Beach in Georgia at the age of 64. Coffin served as vice president and chief engineer of Hudson from 1909 to 1930, and was responsible for a number of Hudson's important automotive innovations, including the placement of the steering wheel on the left side, the self-starter, and dual brakes. Under Coffin's influence the Hudson Essex was introduced in 1919, a sturdy automobile built on an all-steel body that sold for pennies more than Ford's Model T. Coffin's last production year with Hudson was also the company's most prosperous--Hudson production peaked in 1929 with over 300,000 units.

November 21, 2005
General Motors Corp. announced it would close 12 facilities, lay off 30,000 workers in North America.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Shermatt on November 25, 2015, 10:17:55 pm
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On this day, November 25, 1973
In response to the 1973 oil crisis, President Richard M. Nixon called for a Sunday ban on the sale of gasoline to consumers. The proposal was part of a larger plan announced by Nixon earlier in the month to achieve energy self-sufficiency in the United States by 1980. The 1973 oil crisis began in mid-October, when 11 Arab oil producers increased oil prices and cut back production in response to the support of the United States and other nations for Israel in the Yom Kippur War. Almost overnight, gasoline prices quadrupled, and the U.S. economy, especially its automakers, suffered greatly as a result. The Sunday gasoline ban lasted until the crisis was resolved in March of the next year, but other government legislation, such as the imposing of a national speed limit of 55mph, was extended indefinitely. Experts maintained that the reduction of speed on America's highways would prevent an estimated 9,000 traffic fatalities per year. Although many motorists resented the new legislation, one long-lasting benefit for impatient travelers was the ability to make right turns at a red light, a change that the authorities estimated would conserve a significant amount of gasoline. In 1995, the national 55mph speed limit was repealed, and legislation relating to highway speeds now rests in state hands.

November 25, 1920
Gaston Chevrolet, the younger brother of famous automobile designer and racer Louis Chevrolet, was killed during a race in Beverly Hills, California. Gaston, born in La-Chauz-de-Fonds, Switzerland, came to America in the early nineteenth century to join his brothers Louis and Andre in the establishment of a racing car design company: the Frontenac Motor Corporation. Frontenac replaced Louis' earlier racing car design company, the Chevrolet Motor Company, which he sold to William C. Durant in 1915. After some initial success, the Chevrolet brothers were faced with obsolete vehicles after World War I, and not enough financial resources to make them competitive again. However, in 1920, the new management at the Monroe Motors Company asked Louis to run his racing team. The Chevrolets moved their operations to Indianapolis, and rapidly made the Monroe racers ready for the 1920 Indy 500, the first to be held since 1914. During the 1920s, the Indy 500 was the most important racing event in America, and Gaston Chevrolet, driving a Chevrolet-adapted Monroe, won the first post-war competition with an average race speed of 86.63mph. The Chevrolet brothers did not have long to enjoy their success, however, because just a few months later Gaston was killed along with his riding mechanic Lyall Jolls during the Beverly Hills race.
Title: Re: This day in History
Post by: Juanball mustang on December 14, 2015, 07:01:40 pm
Where's Shermatt and his this day in history. I know after 365 posts it might become a little repetitive but guessing most of us are at an age we'd love to remember something from a year ago !