
In 1926, one of Henry Ford’s original workshops was knocked down in order to build the Michigan Theater. It was designed to be the pride of Detroit and to capture the metro’s dedication to the arts.

In 1926, one of Henry Ford’s original workshops was knocked down in order to build the Michigan Theater. It was designed to be the pride of Detroit and to capture the metro’s dedication to the arts.

This is cooler than spit. The image above was sent to me by Joe Young out of Slapout, Alabama. The milk truck belonged to his grandfather – his grandfather’s two sons (Hey Joe, doesn’t that make one of them your father? Maybe?) stand proudly beside. YES!
I love old images like this.

A lot of you guys have probably already seen this. We featured it on jalopyjournal.com a few years ago and it was a frequent email bomb for years as well. However, Glenn Smith recently reminded me of it and decided a repost was in order. It’s pretty amazing to see the prices and the marketing pitch is glorious.

Charles Harper (1922- 2007) was an extremely gifted illustrator who drew his prime work from the late 40s throughout the 60s. If you have old copies of Ford Times from these years, you’ll see many of his charming wildlife bird and rural scene drawings throughout many issues. In 1955 he teamed up with famous author Philip Van Doren Stern on the amazing book “Tin Lizzie- The Story of the Fabulous Model T”. Stern had previously written “The Greatest Gift” in 1943, which inspired the Christmas classic film “It’s a Wonderful Life” a few years later.

Check this out… It’s the Duz delivery truck parked outside the St. James Hotel in Washington D.C. sometime around 1925.