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#1 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 2010
Location: Danville, CA
Posts: 1,566
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My very first Model A
This story is not in my book. I was a young firefighter in Oakland. At that time we were called Firemen and we were just that, men that fought fires. Anyway, over the fence from the firehouse I worked in I could see what appeared to be some old car with four doors and no top of any sort. One day I saw movement in that yard and ran out and got the attention of some guy that was taking his trash to his burn barrel. That was before we cared about the ecology and instead of throwing our old papers and such into landfill or the creek we burned them. The gentleman came to the fence and we discussed the car to the point I knew I had to have it and he knew I would bring him $25.00 come payday. Like all Model A’s for sale, then as now, it had run when they parked it with a new rebuild on the engine and though it had been a fordor sedan it had been made into a rough phaeton by his brother that owned a good hacksaw. What I saw was what I would get. Come payday we exchanged $25 for a piece of paper that said I could have the car and that all paperwork had been lost. He was a cop and so I trusted that he hadn’t stolen it, so the deal was wrapped up. I would pull it out of there when I could find someone fool enough to help me. Finding that fool didn’t take long. My oldest brother had a 55 Ford truck and a piece of parachute cord, some type of nylon line that was very strong. He and I went to the house and a few of us and friends of the cop pushed the car out to the street and we tied the two vehicles together, leaving plenty of room between them for emergencies, though we all knew nothing could possible go wrong. My brother leaped in his truck and I into the Model A and immediately he was in motion. I sat there and watched as he drove a good hundred feet with the cord getting tighter and tighter, yet I hadn’t moved. Then suddenly I was under way. Boy was I underway. Went from zero to hundred feet in two seconds as my brother made sure to outrun me. I thought we had discussed going easy at first until we knew I had some brakes and I guess Perry (my brother) missed that part of the conversation. When we got to the first intersection, he slowed down and I didn’t so he made a sharp right onto Piedmont Avenue and yanked me around that corner as once more he outran me, By now I knew that there were very little if an brakes and that it had very stiff steering. Though I was a young bull, I had the devil of a time turning the steering wheel. The next major intersection was a breeze, Perry drove threw the yellow light a good hundred feet in front of me and made his left turn onto Mac Arthur Blvd, a four lane major thoroughfare threw Oakland. Of course I was now approaching a red light at half the speed of sound, screaming at cars to stay where they were. They did because they saw a while thread across there path and then I came threw with half flat tires squealing as I attempted the turn to follow my brother. The nylon shrank back to its normal size as I now began to approach his rear bumper. He drove faster and I began to regain a bit of distance between us. He then had to stop for the signal at Fruitvale Avenue. I had no such trouble, running into the back of him and knocking him about up to Lincoln Avenue. A very long block. We next had to cross 35th Avenue, High Street and eventually make the turn on 73rd Avenue to Bancroft. Each time I knocked his poor truck threw the intersection and each time the Good Lord was kind to us both. He didn’t die of whiplash and I wasn’t skewered by the steering column. We got to my brother in laws service station and had our last collision of the day as Perry stopped, I passed him and hit a barrier behind the station. Other than my brothers back bumper and fenders there appeared to be no lasting damage. We pulled and pushed, kicked and pried and shortly his truck looked good enough for who it was for and the Model A was probably in better shape, because now all the wheels turned and the steering had lightened up as some of the grease finally worked its way over the steering gears. It also had lost about 100 pounds of muds caked onto it. The car sat there for a couple of months and eventually it disappeared and I didn’t even ask where it went for years. Then I asked the brother in law and he said he thought I came and got it. So it really did just disappear. Probably best for all involved, |
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