Horses of Iron

This is actually an educational film from the `50's but it starts out with the horsedrawn carriages and stage coaches etc. It's in two parts.
Actually part way through the first part they introduce the Woman Driver then it all seems to go downhill from there :wink:

Part 1:
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Part 2:
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Talking Book recording made for the library for the blind of "Farewell to Model T" by Lee Strout White, read by William T. Lazar.
[youtube]oqBspPc24bQ[/youtube]
 
Damn.

Can someone coin the phrase "Cell-punk"?

Something has to compete with steam.

Lock, check with Curbside Cycles in about a month, they're bringing in WorkCycles bikes.... :mrgreen:
 
...Market Street, the year before their big `quake:
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Yah man... Pedestrians still ruled and the pace on the streets was horse-drawn... so civilized... sigh
I'm guessing many of the horseless carriages were still EVs. Trollies for sure.
lock
 
"Frank Powers, Sanitary and Hot Water Engineer, manufacturer of The Celebrated 'Electric Bicycle'" Lunenburg, Nova Scotia 1896
FrankPowers_1896.jpg
 
On 25 February 1890 James Adair of New York was issued patent #421,887 for an "Electrically Propelled Vehicle."
patents
 
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