-“Live, travel, adventure, bless, and don’t be sorry.”
-— Jack Kerouac, On The Road
While the automobile may have spent the better part of the last century as an avatar for hope and a better tomorrow, it’s the road trip that serves as the catalyst for adventure and freedom. Back in 1915, nobody knew this better than a then 21-year-old Edsel Ford, who, along with a group of like-minded young men, all on the cusp of adulthood, saddled up in one of his pappy’s Model T touring cars for a road trip from Detroit to San Francisco. (Cadillac and Stutz vehicles accompanied the T, driven by some of Edsel’s similarly privileged peers.) In addition to sowing their wild oats, Edsel and company had semiprofessional business at hand, in the form of attending the San Francisco–based Panama-Pacific International Exhibition (PPIE)—the word’s fair held in conjunction with the celebration of the opening of the Panama Canal—where Ford exhibits would go on to take several top awards, lending an air of semilegitimacy to the proceedings.
---“The Americans have found the healing of God in a variety of things, the most pleasant of which is probably automobile drives.” — William Saroyan, Short Drive, Sweet Chariot
In a build-up to the PPIE, public campaigns encouraged people to take to the still-emerging road system by automobile to “See America First.” Many heeded the call, including Emily Post, who traveled in a chauffeured vehicle, and Packard president Henry Joy. As such, the Historic Vehicle Association (HVA) identifies the year 1915 as the beginning of the “The Road Trip Century.” From that point on, the road trip wove itself into the fabric of American culture, the automobile offering travelers freedom to move at their own pace and determine destinations on a whim.
--“That’s why I love road trips, dude. It’s like doing something without actually doing anything.”— John Green, An Abundance of Katherines
To mark the 100th anniversary of the Road Trip Century, members of the Historic Vehicle Association are re-creating the cross-country feat in a restored 1915 Ford Model T Touring, the same model Edsel Ford employed in his excellent adventure. HVA president Mark Gessler and HVA historian Casey Maxon are slated for the majority of the wheel time in the Model T. Through the aid of Edsel’s diary, the team has been able to largely reconstruct the route, with stops in Indianapolis, Saint Louis, Kansas City, Albuquerque, the Grand Canyon, Los Angeles, and San Francisco.
-No strangers to long-distance travel in Mr. Ford’s legendary T, we here at C/D wish them the best, and we kindly remind them to pack plenty of lip balm and sunscreen. Any concerns regarding their lack of comfort may be tempered by the fact that a 2015 Ford Mustang EcoBoost convertible will be along for the entire journey, the pair bracketing the Road Trip Century symbolically and chronologically. For an illustration of how far the four-cylinder engine has come in the last 100 years, consider that the 2.9-liter unit in the Model T produces just 20 horsepower, while the turbocharged four in the Mustang cranks out 310 ponies from just 2.3 liters—that’s an increase of approximately 2.9 horsepower per year. Suspension technology didn’t develop as rapidly, with the Mustang content to ride through its first fifty years (1999–2004 Mustang SVT Cobra aside) on a solid-axle setup that shares a passing resemblance with the Model T’s underpinnings. The 2015 Stang rides on an all-new IRS setup.
--“Road trip!” — Boone and Otter, Faber College, Undecided
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The whole shebang departed from Henry Ford’s Fair Lane Estate in Dearborn, Michigan, on Friday, July 17, the very same spot Edsel and his pals kicked off their epic journey a century ago. Scheduled to conclude in San Francisco on August 18, the route will cover 3565 miles, with numerous stops of interest scheduled along the way. Day one concluded in Auburn, Indiana, at the Auburn Cord Duesenberg Museum, after a relatively short 156-mile jaunt with the T averaging 25-to-35 mph; day two had the gang making a 164-mile run to Indianapolis where they visited the Speedway; day three had them overnighting in Saint Louis after covering 260 miles.
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We’ve posted the team’s itinerary below, and from here on out C/D be updating the journey on a regular basis with exclusive photographs and anecdotes from the road, so check back often.
--“Without the automobile and road trips, the American dream would be more of a nightmare.” — Us, Car and Driver
-UPDATE Day 4 — Saint Louis to Jefferson City, Missouri: Due to heavy traffic conditions in and around Saint Louis, the team wasn’t able to get the cars close enough to the Gateway Arch for a photo session before departing. Later in the day, however, the entourage made time for a stop at the Historic Daniel Boone Home and Heritage Center in Defiance, Missouri, where they shot the below photo of the cars in front of the restored Newton Howell house (circa 1814), one of the many restored antique buildings located on the premises.
-Later, after arriving at the day’s destination of Jefferson City, Missouri, the group calculated that it had driven 127 miles for the day and 707 miles overall.
-UPDATE Day 5 — Jefferson City, Missouri to Kansas City, Kansas:
-Although otherwise uneventful, day five included two items of historical significance: First, a short stint on the Santa Fe Trail, the 19th-century trade route that connected the Missouri River—and by proxy the Ohio and Mississippi Rivers—with the largely unsettled (at the time) western territories and Mexico. Second, the entourage stopped for refreshments at the J. Huston Tavern at Arrow Rock, the very same place Edsel Ford and his contemporaries dined 100 years earlier. Opened in 1834, the tavern is the oldest continuously operating restaurant and tavern west of the Mississippi.
-Once arriving in Kansas City, the HVA group checked in to the Muehlebach Hotel, which was constructed in 1915, and hosted every U.S. President from Theodore Roosevelt to Ronald Reagan.
-UPDATE Day 6 — Kansas City, Kansas to McPherson, Kansas:
-Before setting sail from the historic Muehlebach Hotel, the gang was met by Maria Brown, the niece of this particular Model T’s former owner, Leon Brown. Maria shared stories and photos of her family enjoying the car in the 1970s, and the team reciprocated by taking her and her children for a ride in the Model T.
-Next up on the day’s agenda was a stop in Baldwin, Kansas, where several friends and relatives of HVA road-trip team driver/mechanic/photographer Casey Maxon would greet the travelers. Not content to simply make the scene, the Maxon clan arrived fully loaded, with Kevin Maxon, Casey’s father, rumbling in with his 1957 Chevy gasser, Tim Maxon astride a WWII-style sidecar motorcycle (complete with machine gun), and Chris Maxon behind the wheel of his Model A.
-Maxon’s mechanic skills would come in handy later, when the T decided to throw its leather fan belt. A quick call to David George at D.L. George Historic Motorcars put the team on the road to recovery, George recommending they adjust the pulley alignment. After reseating the belt, the car ran the rest of the day without issue. Traveling Route 56 for most of the 160-mile day, the group reached McPherson before dark, bringing the trip total to approximately 1100 miles.
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Projected Itinerary:
Day 1: 7/17 Dearborn, MI to Auburn, IN 147 miles
-Day 2: 7/18 Auburn, IN to Indianapolis, IN 151 miles
-Day 3: 7/19 Indianapolis, IN to St. Louis, MO 264 miles
-Day 4: 7/20 St. Louis, MO to Jefferson City, MO 127 miles
-Day 5: 7/21 Jefferson City, MO to Kansas City, MO 143 miles
-Day 6: 7/22 Kansas City, MO to McPherson, KS 235 miles
-Day 7: 7/23 McPherson, KS zero miles (rest/repair day)
-Day 8: 7/24 McPherson, KS to Dodge City, KS 160 miles
-Day 9: 7/25 Dodge City, KS to La Junta, CO 210 miles
-Day 10: 7/26 La Junta, CO to Colorado Springs, CO 109 miles
-Day 11: 7/27 Colorado Springs, CO zero miles (rest/repair day)
-Day 12: 7/28 Colorado Springs, CO to Trinidad, CO 168 miles
-Day 13: 7/29 Trinidad, CO to Las Vegas, NM 194 miles
-Day 14: 7/30 Las Vegas, NM to Santa Fe, NM 137 miles
-Day 15: 7/31 Santa Fe, NM to Albuquerque, NM
-Day 16: 8/1 Albuquerque, NM to Chambers, AZ 199 miles
-Day 17: 8/2 Chambers, AZ to Flagstaff, AZ 137 miles
-Day 18: 8/3 Flagstaff, AZ to Grand Canyon, AZ 79 miles
-Day 19: 8/4 Grand Canyon, AZ to Kingman, AZ 156 miles
-Day 20: 8/5 Kingman, AZ to Barstow, CA 163 miles
-Day 21: 8/6 Barstow, CA to Los Angeles, CA 190 miles
-Day 22: 8/7 Los Angeles, CA zero miles (rest/repair day)
-Day 23: 8/8 Los Angeles, CA to Pismo Beach, CA 210 miles
-Day 24: 8/9 Pismo Beach to Carmel-by-the-Sea, CA 144 miles
-Day 25: 8/10 Carmel-by-the-Sea, CA
-Day 26: 8/11 Carmel-by-the-Sea, CA
-Day 27: 8/12 Carmel-by-the-Sea, CA
-Day 28: 8/13 Carmel-by-the-Sea, CA
-Day 29: 8/14 The Quail
-Day 30: 8/15 Monterey Motorsports Reunion
-Day 31: 8/16 Pebble Beach Concours d’Elegance
-Day 32: 8/17 Stanford University
-Day 33: 8/18 San Francisco, CA/PPIE
-Day 34: 8/19 San Francisco, CA/PPIE
-*Note: Travel distances listed here are pre-departure estimates. We’ll have actual mileage figures in the updates whenever available.
-The story was originally published on July 21; it is being updated as the T makes its stops along the way to California.
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