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History of the automobile

Development of the automobile started in 1672 with the invention of the first steam-powered vehicle,[1] which led to the creation of the first steam-powered automobile capable of human transportation, built by Nicolas-Joseph Cugnot in 1769.[2][3] Inventors began to branch out at the start of the 19th century, creating the de Rivaz engine, one of the first internal combustion engines,[4] and an early electric motor.[5] Samuel Brown later tested the first industrially applied internal combustion engine in 1826. Only 2 of these were made. [6]

The Ford Model T (foreground) and Volkswagen Beetle (background) are among the most mass-produced car models in history.

Development was hindered in the mid-19th century by a backlash against large vehicles, yet progress continued on some internal combustion engines. The engine evolved as engineers created two- and four-cycle combustion engines and began using gasoline as fuel. The first modern car—a practical, marketable automobile for everyday use—and the first car put into series production appeared in 1886, when Carl Benz developed a gasoline-powered automobile and made several identical copies.[7][8] Later automobile production was marked by the Ford Model T, created by the Ford Motor Company in 1908, which became the first automobile to be mass-produced on a moving assembly line.[9]

Power sources edit

The early history of the automobile was concentrated on the search for a reliable portable power unit to propel the vehicle.

Steam-powered wheeled vehicles edit

17th and 18th centuries edit

 
Cugnot's steam wagon, the second (1771) version

Ferdinand Verbiest, a member of a Jesuit mission in China, built a steam-powered vehicle around 1672 as a toy for the Kangxi Emperor. It was small-scale and could not carry a driver but it was, quite possibly, the first working steam-powered vehicle ('auto-mobile').[1][10]

Steam-powered self-propelled vehicles large enough to transport people and cargo were first devised in the late 18th century. Nicolas-Joseph Cugnot demonstrated his fardier à vapeur ("steam dray"), an experimental steam-driven artillery tractor, in 1770 and 1771. As Cugnot's design proved to be impractical, his invention was not developed in his native France. The center of innovation shifted to Great Britain. By 1784, William Murdoch had built a working model of a steam carriage in Redruth[11] and in 1801 Richard Trevithick was running a full-sized vehicle on the roads in Camborne.

19th century edit

 
A replica of Richard Trevithick's 1801 road locomotive 'Puffing Devil'

During the 19th century, attempts were made to introduce steam-powered vehicles. Innovations such as hand brakes, multispeed transmissions and better steering developed. Some successful vehicles provided mass transit until a backlash against these large vehicles resulted in the passage of legislation such as the UK Locomotives Act 1865, which required many self-propelled vehicles on public roads to be preceded by a man on foot waving a red flag and blowing a horn. This effectively halted road auto development in the United Kingdom for most of the rest of the 19th century; inventors and engineers shifted their efforts to improvements in railway locomotives. The law was not repealed until 1896, although the need for the red flag was removed in 1878.

In 1816, a professor at Prague Polytechnic, Josef Bozek, built an oil-fired steam car.[12]: 27  Walter Hancock, builder and operator of London steam buses, in 1838 built a two-seated car phaeton.[12]: 27 

In 1867, Canadian jeweler Henry Seth Taylor demonstrated his four-wheeled "steam buggy" at the Stanstead Fair in Stanstead, Quebec and again the following year.[13] The basis of the buggy, which he began building in 1865, was a high-wheeled carriage with bracing to support a two-cylinder steam engine mounted on the floor.[14] In 1873, Frenchman Amédée Bollée built self-propelled steam road vehicles to transport groups of passengers.

The first automobile suitable for use on existing wagon roads in the United States was a steam-powered vehicle invented in 1871 by Dr. J.W. Carhart, a minister of the Methodist Episcopal Church, in Racine, Wisconsin.[15] It induced the state of Wisconsin in 1875 to offer a US$10,000 (equivalent to $266,485 in 2022) award to the first to produce a substitute for the use of horses and other animals. They stipulated that the vehicle would have to maintain an average speed of more than 8 km/h (5 mph) over a 320 km (200 mi) course. The offer led to the first city to city automobile race in the United States, starting on 16 July 1878 in Green Bay, Wisconsin, and ending in Madison, Wisconsin, via Appleton, Oshkosh, Waupun, Watertown, Fort Atkinson, and Janesville. While seven vehicles were registered, only two started to compete: the entries from Green Bay and Oshkosh. The vehicle from Green Bay was faster but broke down before completing the race. The Oshkosh finished the 323 km (201 mi) course in 33 hours and 27 minutes and posted an average speed of 9.7 km/h (6 mph). In 1879, the legislature awarded half the prize.[16][17][18]

20th century edit

Pre-WWII
 
1924 Doble Model E

Steam-powered road vehicles, both cars and wagons, reached the peak of their development in the early 1930s with fast-steaming lightweight boilers and efficient engine designs. Internal combustion engines also developed greatly during World War I, becoming simpler to operate and more reliable. The development of the high-speed diesel engine from 1930 began to replace them for wagons, accelerated in the UK by tax changes making steam wagons uneconomic overnight. Although a few designers continued to advocate steam power, no significant developments in the production of steam cars took place after Doble in 1931.

Post-WWII

Whether steam cars will ever be reborn in later technological eras remains to be seen. Magazines such as Light Steam Power continued to describe them into the 1980s. The 1950s saw interest in steam-turbine cars powered by small nuclear reactors[19] (this was also true of aircraft), but the fears about the dangers inherent in nuclear fission technology soon killed these ideas.

Electric automobiles edit

 
The German Flocken Elektrowagen of 1888, perhaps the first electric car in the world[20]

19th century edit

In 1828, Ányos Jedlik, a Hungarian who invented an early type of electric motor, created a tiny model car powered by his new motor.[5] In 1834, Vermont blacksmith Thomas Davenport, the inventor of the first American DC electric motor, installed his motor in a small model car, which he operated on a short circular electrified track.[21] In 1835, Professor Sibrandus Stratingh of Groningen, the Netherlands and his assistant Christopher Becker created a small-scale electrical car, powered by non-rechargeable primary cells.[22] In 1838, Scotsman Robert Davidson built an electric locomotive that attained a speed of 6.4 km/h (4 mph). In England, a patent was granted in 1840 for the use of tracks as conductors of electric current, and similar American patents were issued to Lilley and Colten in 1847.

Sources point to different creations as the first electric car. Between 1832 and 1839 (the exact year is uncertain) Robert Anderson of Scotland invented a crude electric carriage, powered by non-rechargeable primary cells. In November 1881, French inventor Gustave Trouvé demonstrated a working three-wheeled car powered by electricity at the International Exposition of Electricity.[23] English inventor Thomas Parker, who was responsible for innovations such as electrifying the London Underground, overhead tramways in Liverpool and Birmingham, and the smokeless fuel coalite, built an electric car in London in 1884, using his own specially designed high-capacity rechargeable batteries.[24] However, some others regard the Flocken Elektrowagen of 1888 by German inventor Andreas Flocken as the first true electric car.[20]

20th century edit

Electric cars enjoyed popularity between the late 19th century and early 20th century, when electricity was among the preferred methods for automobile propulsion. Advances in internal combustion technology, especially the electric starter, soon rendered this advantage moot; the greater range of gasoline cars, quicker refueling times, and growing petroleum infrastructure, along with the mass production of gasoline vehicles by companies such as the Ford Motor Company, which reduced prices of gasoline cars to less than half that of equivalent electric cars, led to a decline in the use of electric propulsion, effectively removing it from important markets such as the US by the 1930s. 1997 saw the Toyota RAV4 EV and the Nissan Altra, the first production battery electric cars to use NiMH and Li-ion batteries (instead of heavier lead acid) respectively.

21st century edit

In recent years, increased concerns over the environmental impact of gasoline cars, higher gasoline prices, improvements in battery technology, and the prospect of peak oil have brought about renewed interest in electric cars, which are perceived to be more environmentally friendly and cheaper to maintain and run, despite high initial costs.

Internal combustion engines edit

Gas mixtures edit

 
1885-built Benz Patent-Motorwagen, the first modern car—a practical, marketable automobile for everyday use
 
Scaled model of the second Marcus car of 1875

The lack of suitable fuels, particularly liquids, hampered early attempts at making and using internal combustion engines—therefore some of the earliest engines used gas mixtures. In 1806, the Swiss engineer François Isaac de Rivaz built an engine powered by internal combustion of a hydrogen and oxygen mixture.[4] In 1826, Englishman Samuel Brown tested his hydrogen-fueled internal combustion engine by using it to propel a vehicle up Shooter's Hill in southeast London.[25][6] Etienne Lenoir's automobile with a hydrogen-gas-fueled one-cylinder internal combustion engine made a test drive from Paris to Joinville-le-Pont in 1860, covering some 9 km (5.6 mi) in about three hours.[26] A later version was propelled by coal gas. A Delamare-Deboutteville vehicle was patented and trialed in 1884.

Gasoline edit

Nicolaus Otto and Eugen Langen had built a working engine in 1867. About 1870, in Vienna, Austria-Hungary, inventor Siegfried Marcus put a liquid-fueled internal combustion engine on a simple handcart which made him the first man to propel a vehicle by means of gasoline. Today, this is known as "the first Marcus car" but would be better described as a cart. His second car, built and run in 1875, was the first gasoline-driven car and is housed at the Vienna Technical Museum.[27][28] In 1883, Marcus secured a German patent for a low-voltage ignition system of the magneto type; this was his only automotive patent. During his lifetime, he was honored by some as the originator of the motorcar but his place in history was all but erased by the Nazis during World War II. Because Marcus was of Jewish descent, the Nazi propaganda office ordered his work to be destroyed, his name expunged from future textbooks, and his public memorials removed.[29] John Nixon of the London Times in 1938 considered Marcus' development of the motor car to have been experimental, as opposed to Carl Benz who took the concept from experimental to production. Nixon described Marcus' cars as impractical.[30]

Benz built his first automobile, the Benz Patent Motorcar, in 1885 in Mannheim. It is considered the first modern car—a practical, marketable automobile for everyday use—and the first car put into series production.[31] Benz was granted a patent for his automobile on 29 January 1886,[32] and began the first production of automobiles in 1888, after Bertha Benz, his wife, had proved—with the first long-distance trip in August 1888, from Mannheim to Pforzheim and back—that the horseless coach was capable of extended travel. Since 2008 a Bertha Benz Memorial Route commemorates this event.[33]

Soon after, Gottlieb Daimler and Wilhelm Maybach in Stuttgart in 1889 designed a vehicle from scratch to be an automobile, rather than a horse-drawn carriage fitted with an engine. They also are usually credited with invention of the first motorcycle in 1885.[12]: 26 

In 1891, John William Lambert built a three-wheeler in Ohio City, Ohio, which was destroyed in a fire the same year, while Henry Nadig constructed a four-wheeler in Allentown, Pennsylvania.[12]: 25 

The first four-wheeled gasoline-driven automobile in the United Kingdom was built in Walthamstow by Frederick Bremer in 1892.[34] Another was made in Birmingham in 1895 by Frederick William Lanchester, who also patented the disc brake. The first electric starter was installed on an Arnold, an adaptation of the Benz Velo, built in Kent between 1895 and 1898.[12]: 25 

George Foote Foss of Sherbrooke, Quebec built a single-cylinder gasoline car in 1896 which he drove for four years, ignoring city officials' warnings of arrest for his "mad antics".[13]

Eras of invention edit

Horseless carriage or veteran era edit

 
The Selden Road-Engine
 
The Präsident automobile
 
The first automobile in Japan, a French Panhard-Levassor, in 1898
 
Fiat 4 HP, the first car model produced by Italian manufacturer Fiat in 1899

The American George B. Selden filed for a patent on 8 May 1879. His application included not only the engine but its use in a four-wheeled car. Selden filed a series of amendments to his application which stretched out the legal process, resulting in a delay of 16 years before the patent was granted on 5 November 1895.[35] Selden licensed his patent to most major American automakers, collecting a fee on each car they produced and creating the Association of Licensed Automobile Manufacturers. The Ford Motor Company fought this patent in court,[36] and eventually won on appeal. Henry Ford testified that the patent did more to hinder than encourage development of autos in the United States.[37]

The first production of automobiles was by Carl Benz in 1888 in Germany and, under license from Benz, in France by Emile Roger. There were numerous others, including tricycle builders Rudolf Egg, Edward Butler, and Léon Bollée.[12]: 20–23  Bollée, using a 650 cc (40 cu in) engine of his own design, enabled his driver, Jamin, to average 45 km/h (28 mph) in the 1897 Paris-Tourville rally.[12]: 23  By 1900, mass production of automobiles had begun in France and the United States.

The first company formed exclusively to build automobiles was Panhard et Levassor in France, which also introduced the first four-cylinder engine.[12]: 22  Formed in 1889, Panhard was quickly followed by Peugeot two years later. By the start of the 20th century, the automobile industry was beginning to take off in Western Europe, especially in France, where 30,204 were produced in 1903, representing 48.8 percent of world automobile production that year.[38]

Across the northern US, local mechanics experimented with a wide variety of prototypes. In the state of Iowa, for example, by 1890 Jesse O. Wells drove a steam-powered Locomobile. There were numerous experiments in electric vehicles driven by storage batteries. First users ordered the early gasoline-powered cars, including Haynes, Mason, and Duesenberg automobiles. Blacksmiths and mechanics started operating repair and gasoline stations.[39] In Springfield, Massachusetts, brothers Charles and Frank Duryea founded the Duryea Motor Wagon Company in 1893, becoming the first American automobile manufacturing company. The Autocar Company, founded in 1897, established a number of innovations still in use[40] and remains the oldest operating motor vehicle manufacturer in the US. However, it was Ransom E. Olds and his Olds Motor Vehicle Company (later known as Oldsmobile) who would dominate this era with the introduction of the Oldsmobile Curved Dash. Its production line was running in 1901. The Thomas B. Jeffery Company developed the world's second mass-produced automobile, and 1,500 Ramblers were built and sold in its first year, representing one-sixth of all existing motorcars in the US at the time.[41] Within a year, Cadillac (formed from the Henry Ford Company), Winton, and Ford were also producing cars in the thousands. In South Bend, Indiana, the Studebaker brothers, having become the world's leading manufacturers of horse-drawn vehicles, made a transition to electric automobiles in 1902, and gasoline engines in 1904. They continued to build horse-drawn vehicles until 1919.[42]

The first motor car in Central Europe was produced by the Austro-Hungarian company Nesselsdorfer Wagenbau (later renamed to Tatra in today's Czech Republic) in 1897, the Präsident automobile.[43] In 1898, Louis Renault had a De Dion-Bouton modified, with fixed drive shaft and differential, making "perhaps the first hot rod in history" and bringing Renault and his brothers into the car industry.[44] Innovation was rapid and rampant, with no clear standards for basic vehicle architectures, body styles, construction materials, or controls; for example, many veteran cars use a tiller, rather than a wheel for steering. During 1903, Rambler standardized on the steering wheel[45] and moved the driver's position to the left-hand side of the vehicle.[46] Chain drive was dominant over the drive shaft, and closed bodies were extremely rare. Drum brakes were introduced by Renault in 1902.[47]: 62  The next year, Dutch designer Jacobus Spijker built the first four-wheel drive racing car;[48]: 77  it never competed and it would be 1965 and the Jensen FF before four-wheel drive was used on a production car.[48]: 78 

Within a few years, a dizzying assortment of technologies were being used by hundreds of producers all over the western world. Steam, electricity, and gasoline-powered automobiles competed for decades, with gasoline internal combustion engines achieving dominance by the 1910s. Dual- and even quad-engine cars were designed, and engine displacement ranged to more than 12 L (3.2 US gal). Many modern advances, including gas/electric hybrids, multi-valve engines, overhead camshafts, and four-wheel drive, were attempted and discarded at this time.

Innovation was not limited to the vehicles themselves. Increasing numbers of cars propelled the growth of the petroleum industry,[47]: 60–61  as well as the development of technology to produce gasoline (replacing kerosene and coal oil) and of improvements in heat-tolerant mineral oil lubricants (replacing vegetable and animal oils).[47]: 60 

There were social effects, also. Music would be made about cars, such as "In My Merry Oldsmobile" (a tradition that continues) while, in 1896, William Jennings Bryan would be the first presidential candidate to campaign in a car (a donated Mueller), in Decatur, Illinois.[49]: 92  Three years later, Jacob German would start a tradition for New York City cabdrivers when he sped down Lexington Avenue, at the "reckless" speed of 19 km/h (12 mph).[49]: 92  Also in 1899, Akron, Ohio, adopted the first self-propelled paddy wagon.[49]: 92 

By 1900, the early centers of national automotive industry developed in many countries, including Belgium (home to Vincke, that copied Benz; Germain, a pseudo-Panhard; and Linon and Nagant, both based on the Gobron-Brillié),[12]: 25  Switzerland (led by Fritz Henriod, Rudolf Egg, Saurer, Johann Weber, and Lorenz Popp),[12]: 25  Vagnfabrik AB in Sweden, Hammel (by A. F. Hammel and H. U. Johansen at Copenhagen, in Denmark, which only built one car, ca. 1886[12]: 25 ), Irgens (starting in Bergen, Norway, in 1883, but without success),[12]: 25–26  Italy (where FIAT started in 1899), and as far afield as Australia (where Pioneer set up shop in 1898, with an already archaic paraffin-fueled center-pivot-steered wagon).[12] Meanwhile, the export trade had begun, with Koch exporting cars and trucks from Paris to Tunisia, Egypt, Iran, and the Dutch East Indies.[12]: 25  Motor cars were also exported to British colonies, for example, the first was shipped to India in 1897.

Throughout the veteran car era, the automobile was seen more as a novelty than as a genuinely useful device. Breakdowns were frequent, fuel was difficult to obtain, roads suitable for traveling were scarce, and rapid innovation meant that a year-old car was nearly worthless. Major breakthroughs in proving the usefulness of the automobile came with the historic long-distance drive of Bertha Benz in 1888, when she traveled more than 80 km (50 mi) from Mannheim to Pforzheim, to make people aware of the potential of the vehicles her husband, Karl Benz, manufactured, and after Horatio Nelson Jackson's successful transcontinental drive across the US in 1903 on a Winton car. Many older cars made were made with an assembly line that would help mass-produce cars, a system that continues to be used because of its efficiency.

Brass/Edwardian era edit

 
A Stanley Steamer racecar in 1903. In 1906, a similar Stanley Rocket set the world land speed record at 205.5 km/h (127.7 mph) at Daytona Beach Road Course.
 
Model-T Ford car parked near the Geelong Art Gallery at its launch in Australia in 1915

The Brass or Edwardian period lasted from roughly 1905 through 1914 and the beginning of World War I. It is generally referred to as the Edwardian era, but in the United States is often known as the Brass era from the widespread use of brass in vehicles during this time.

Within the 15 years that make up this era, the various experimental designs and alternate power systems would be marginalized. Although the modern touring car had been invented earlier, it was not until Panhard et Levassor's Système Panhard was widely licensed and adopted that recognizable and standardized automobiles were created. This system specified front-engine, rear-wheel drive internal combustion-engine cars with a sliding gear transmission. Traditional coach-style vehicles were rapidly abandoned, and buckboard runabouts lost favor with the introduction of tonneaus and other less-expensive touring bodies.

By 1906, steam car development had advanced, and they were among the fastest road vehicles in that period.[citation needed]

Throughout this era, development of automotive technology was rapid, due in part to hundreds of small manufacturers competing to gain the world's attention. Key developments included the electric ignition system, independent suspension, and four-wheel brakes.[12]: 27 [47]: 61  Leaf springs were widely used for suspension, though many other systems were still in use, with angle steel taking over from armored wood as the frame material of choice. Transmissions and throttle controls were widely adopted, allowing a variety of cruising speeds, though vehicles generally still had discrete speed settings, rather than the infinitely variable system familiar in cars of later eras. Safety glass also made its debut, patented by John Crewe Wood in England in 1905.[47]: 62  (It would not become standard equipment until 1926, on a Rickenbacker.)[47]: 62 

Between 1907 and 1912 in the United States, the high-wheel motor buggy (resembling the horse buggy of before 1900) was in its heyday, with over 75 makers including Holsman (Chicago), IHC (Chicago), and Sears (which sold via catalog); the high-wheeler would be killed by the Model T.[12]: 65  In 1912, Hupp (in the US, supplied by Hale & Irwin) and BSA (in the UK) pioneered the use of all-steel bodies,[47]: 63  joined in 1914 by Dodge (who produced Model T bodies).[47]: 62  While it would be another two decades before all-steel bodies would be standard, the change would mean improved supplies of superior-quality wood for furniture makers.[12]

The 1908 New York to Paris Race was the first circumnavigation of the world by automobile. German, French, Italian, and American teams began in New York City 12 February 1908 with three of the competitors ultimately reaching Paris. The US-built Thomas Flyer with George Schuster (driver) won the race covering 35,000 km (22,000 mi) in 169 days. Also in 1908, the first South American automobile was built in Peru, the Grieve.[50] In 1909, Rambler became the first car company to equip its cars with a spare tire that was mounted on a fifth wheel.[51]

Some examples of cars of the period included:[citation needed]

  • 1907 Takuri—the first entirely Japanese-made gasoline engine car produced by Komanosuke Uchiyama in April 1907. Also, in Japan, the Hatsudoki Seizo Co. Ltd. is formed, which was later renamed in 1951 as Daihatsu Kōgyō Kabushiki-gaisha.
  • 1908–1927 Ford Model T—the most widely produced and available four-seater car of the era. It used a planetary transmission, and had a pedal-based control system. Ford T was proclaimed as the most influential car of the 20th century in the international Car of the Century awards.
  • 1909 Hudson Model 20—named after its rated power output, and sold on its first market for US$900 (equivalent to $29,313 in 2022).
  • 1909 Morgan Runabout—a popular cyclecar, cyclecars were sold in far greater quantities than four-seater cars in this period.[52]
  • 1910 Mercer Raceabout—regarded as one of the first sports cars, the Raceabout expressed the exuberance of the driving public, as did the similarly conceived American Underslung and Hispano-Suiza Alphonso.
  • 1910–1920 Bugatti Type 13—a notable racing and touring model with advanced engineering and design. Similar models were Types 15, 17, 22, and 23.
  • 1914–1917 Dattogo—a two-cylinder, 10 hp (7,500 W) "all-Japanese" car manufactured in seven units by the Kaishinsha Motor Works operated by Masujiro Hashimoto in Tokyo, while importing, assembling, and selling British cars. Kaishinsha was the first automobile manufacturing business in Japan.
  • 1917 Mitsubishi Model A—an all hand-built car built by Japanese company Mitsubishi in limited numbers for Japanese executives.

Vintage era edit

 
1926 Bugatti Type 35
 
1929 Austin Seven
 
1929 Alfa Romeo 6C

The vintage era lasted from the end of World War I (1918), through to the Wall Street Crash at the end of 1929. During this period the front-engine car came to dominate with closed bodies and standardized controls becoming the norm. In 1919, 90 percent of cars sold were open; by 1929, 90 percent were closed.[12]: 7  Development of the internal combustion engine continued at a rapid pace, with multivalve and overhead camshaft engines produced at the high end, and V8, V12, and even V16 engines conceived for the ultrarich. Also in 1919, hydraulic brakes were invented by Malcolm Loughead (cofounder of Lockheed); they were adopted by Duesenberg for their 1921 Model A.[47]: 62  Three years later, Hermann Rieseler of Vulcan Motor invented the first automatic transmission, which had two-speed planetary gearbox, torque converter, and lockup clutch; it never entered production.[47]: 62  (It would only become an available option in 1940.)[47]: 62  Just at the end of the vintage era, tempered glass (now standard equipment in side windows) was invented in France.[47]: 62  In this era the revolutionary pontoon design of cars without fully articulated fenders, running boards and other noncompact ledge elements was introduced in small series but mass production of such cars was started much later (after WWII).

American auto companies in the 1920s expected they would soon sell six million cars a year but did not do so until 1955. Numerous companies disappeared.[53] Between 1922 and 1925, the number of US passenger car builders decreased from 175 to 70. H. A. Tarantous, managing editor of "MoToR Member Society of Automotive Engineers", in a New York Times article from 1925, suggested many were unable to raise production and cope with falling prices (due to assembly line production), especially for lowpriced cars. The new pyroxylin-based paints, eight-cylinder engine, four-wheel brakes, and balloon tires as the biggest trends for 1925.[54]

Examples of period vehicles:[citation needed]

Pre-war era edit

 
Isotta Fraschini Tipo 8A
 
Rolls-Royce Phantom III
 
Volkswagen Beetle

The pre-war part of the classic era began with the Great Depression in 1930, and ended with the recovery after World War II, commonly placed during 1946. It was in this period that integrated fenders and fully-closed bodies began to dominate sales, with the new saloon/sedan body style even incorporating a trunk or boot at the rear for storage. The old open-top runabouts, phaetons, and touring cars were largely phased out by the end of the classic era as wings, running boards, and headlights were gradually integrated with the body of the car.

By the 1930s, most of the mechanical technology used in today's automobiles had been invented, although some things were later "re-invented", and credited to someone else. For example, front-wheel drive was re-introduced by André Citroën with the launch of the Traction Avant in 1934, though it had appeared several years earlier in road cars made by Alvis and Cord, and in racing cars by Miller (and may have appeared as early as 1897). In the same vein, the independent suspension was originally conceived by Amédée Bollée in 1873, but not put in production until appearing on the low-volume Mercedes-Benz 380 in 1933, which prodded American makers to use it more widely.[47]: 61  In 1930, the number of auto manufacturers declined sharply as the industry consolidated and matured, thanks in part to the effects of the Great Depression.

Examples of pre-war automobiles:[citation needed]

Postwar era edit

 
1946 GAZ-M20 Pobeda, one of the first mass-produced cars with pontoon design
 
1954 Plymouth Savoy Station Wagon, one of the first US all-metal station wagons
 
1958 Lancia Appia
 
1959 Morris Mini-Minor
 
1974 Citroën DS
 
Gurgel Supermini

A major change in automobile design since World War II was the popularity of pontoon style, in which running boards were eliminated and fenders were incorporated into the body. Among the first representatives of the style were the Soviet GAZ-M20 Pobeda (1946), British Standard Vanguard (1947), US Studebaker Champion, and Kaiser (1946), as well as the Czech Tatra T600 Tatraplan (1946) and the Italian Cisitalia 220 sports car (1947).

Automobile design and production finally emerged from the military orientation and other shadow of war in 1949, the year that in the US saw the introduction of high-compression V8 engines and modern bodies from General Motors's Oldsmobile and Cadillac brands. Hudson introduced the "step-down" design with the 1948 Commodore, which placed the passenger compartment down inside the perimeter of the frame, that was one of the first new-design postwar cars made and featured trend-setting slab-side styling.[55] The unibody/strut-suspended 1951 Ford Consul joined the 1948 Morris Minor and 1949 Rover P4 in the automobile market in the UK. In Italy, Enzo Ferrari was beginning his 250 series, just as Lancia introduced the revolutionary V6-powered Aurelia.

Throughout the 1950s, engine power and vehicle speeds rose, designs became more integrated and artful, and automobiles were marketed internationally. Alec Issigonis's Mini and Fiat's 500 diminutive cars were introduced in Europe, while the similar kei car class became popular in Japan. The Volkswagen Beetle continued production after World War II and began exports to other nations, including the US. At the same time, Nash introduced the Nash Rambler, the first successful modern compact car made in the US,[56] while the standard models produced by the "Big Three" domestic automakers grew ever larger in size, featuring increasing amounts of chrome trim, and luxury was exemplified by the Cadillac Eldorado Brougham. The markets in Europe expanded with new small-sized automobiles, as well as expensive grand tourers (GT), like the Ferrari America.

The market changed in the 1960s, as the US "Big Three" automakers began facing competition from imported cars, the European makers adopted advanced technologies and Japan emerged as a car-producing nation. Japanese companies began to export some of their more popular selling cars in Japan internationally, such as the Toyota Corolla, Toyota Corona, Nissan Sunny, and Nissan Bluebird in the mid-1960s. The success of American Motors's compact-sized Rambler models spurred GM and Ford to introduce their own downsized cars in 1960.[57] Performance engines became a focus of marketing by US automakers, exemplified by the era's muscle cars.[58] In 1964, the Ford Mustang developed a new market segment, the pony car.[59] New models to compete with the Mustang included the Chevrolet Camaro, AMC Javelin, and Plymouth Barracuda.[60]

Captive imports and badge engineering increased in the US and the UK as amalgamated groups such as the British Motor Corporation consolidated the market. BMC's space-saving and trend-setting transverse engine, front-wheel-drive, independent suspension and monocoque bodied Mini, which first appeared in 1959, was marketed under the Austin and Morris names, until Mini became a marque in its own right in 1969.[61] Competition increased, with Studebaker, a pioneering automaker, shutting down, and the trend for consolidation reached Italy where niche makers like Maserati, Ferrari, and Lancia were acquired by larger companies. By the end of the decade, the number of automobile marques had been greatly reduced.

Technology developments included the widespread use of independent suspensions, wider application of fuel injection, and an increasing focus on safety in automotive design. Innovations during the 1960s included NSU's Wankel engine, the gas turbine, and the turbocharger. Of these, only the last endured, pioneered by General Motors, and adopted by BMW and Saab, later seeing mass-market use during the 1980s by Chrysler. Mazda continued developing its Wankel engine, in spite of problems in longevity, emissions, and fuel economy. Other Wankel licensees, including Mercedes-Benz and GM, never put their designs into production because of engineering and manufacturing problems, as well as the lessons from the 1973 oil crisis.

The 1970s were turbulent years for automakers and buyers with major events reshaping the industry such as the 1973 oil crisis, stricter automobile emissions control and safety requirements, increasing exports by the Japanese and European automakers, as well as growth in inflation and the stagnant economic conditions in many nations. Smaller-sized cars grew in popularity. During the Malaise era, the US saw the establishment of the subcompact segment with the introduction of the AMC Gremlin, followed by the Chevrolet Vega and Ford Pinto.[62][63] The station wagon (estate, break, kombi, universal) body design was popular, as well as increasing sales of noncommercial all-wheel drive off-road vehicles.

Toward the end of the 20th century, the US Big Three (GM, Ford, and Chrysler) partially lost their leading position, Japan became for a while the world's leader of car production and cars began to be mass manufactured in new Asian, East European, and other countries.

Examples of postwar cars:

Modern era edit

 
The Toyota Corolla is the world's bestselling nameplate.
 
A Tesla Model Y electric car, the world's best selling car in the first and second quarters of 2023.

The modern era is normally defined as the 40 years preceding the current year.[66] The modern era has been one of increasing standardization, platform sharing, and computer-aided design—to reduce costs and development time—and of increasing use of electronics for both engine management and entertainment systems.

Some particular contemporary developments are the proliferation of front- and all-wheel drive, the adoption of the diesel engine, and the ubiquity of fuel injection. Most modern passenger cars are front-wheel-drive monocoque or unibody designs, with transversely mounted engines.

Body styles have changed as well in the modern era. Three types, the hatchback, sedan, and sport utility vehicle, dominate today's market.[citation needed] All originally emphasized practicality, but have mutated into today's high-powered luxury crossover SUV, sports wagon, and two-volume Large MPV. The rise of pickup trucks in the US and SUVs worldwide has changed the face of motoring with these "trucks" coming to command more than half of the world automobile market.[citation needed] There was also the introduction of the MPV class (smaller noncommercial passenger minivans), among the first of which were the French Renault Espace and the Chrysler minivan versions in the US.

The modern era has also seen rapidly improving fuel efficiency and engine output. The automobile emissions concerns have been eased with computerized engine management systems.

The financial crisis of 2007–2008 cut almost a third of light vehicle sales from Chrysler, Toyota, Ford, and Nissan. It also subtracted about a fourth of Honda's sales and about a seventh of sales from General Motors.[67]

Since 2009, China has become the world's largest car manufacturer with production greater than Japan, the US, and all of Europe. Besides the increasing car production in Asian and other countries, there has been growth in transnational corporate groups, with the production of transnational automobiles sharing the same platforms as well as badge engineering or rebadging to suit different markets and consumer segments.

Since the end of the 20th century, several award competitions for cars and trucks have become widely known, such as European Car of the Year, Car of the Year Japan, North American Car of the Year, World Car of the Year, Truck of the Year, and International Car of the Year.

Examples of modern cars:[citation needed]

See also edit

Beginnings
  • Benz Patent Motorwagen ("patent motorcar"; 1885), three-wheel vehicle widely regarded as the world's first production automobile
  • Benz Velo (1894), followup 4-wheel model of the Benz Patent Motorwagen
Early developments essential to the development of automobiles
Car and car engine designers, chronologically by first vehicle/engine built
  • Nicolaus Otto, developer of the first successful compressed charge gaseous fueled internal combustion engine (1860s-70s)
  • Wilhelm Maybach, designed engines starting in the 1870s-80s; first motorbike (1885), second internal combustion car (1889)
  • Gottlieb Daimler, German engineer, pioneer of internal-combustion engines and automobile development (1870s and on)

References edit

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Further reading edit

  • Berger, Michael L. (2001). The automobile in American history and culture: a reference guide. Greenwood Publishing Group. ISBN 9780313245589.
  • Black, Edwin (2006). Internal Combustion: How Corporations and Governments Addicted the World to Oil and Derailed the Alternatives. St. Martin's Press. ISBN 9780312359089.
  • Clarke, Sally H. (2007). Trust and Power: Consumers, the Modern Corporation, and the Making of the United States Automobile Market. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521868785. discusses trust, consumerism, and the modern corporation
  • Halberstam, David (1986). The Reckoning. Morrow. ISBN 0688048382.
  • Horner, Craig (2021). The Emergence of Bicycling and Automobility in Britain. Bloomsbury Academic. ISBN 978-1-4725-7209-7.
  • Norton, Peter D. (2011). Fighting Traffic: The Dawn of the Motor Age in the American City. The MIT Press. ISBN 978-0262516129.
  • Kay, Jane Holtz (1997). Asphalt nation: how the automobile took over America, and how we can take it back. Crown Publishers. ISBN 0517587025.

Early sources edit

  • Krarup, M.C. (November 1906). "Automobities for Every Use". The World's Work: A History of Our Time. Vol. XIII. pp. 8163–8178. Retrieved 8 November 2020. Includes photos of many c.1906 special purpose automobiles.
  • "New England in Motor History; 1890 to 1916". The Automobile Journal. 41: 9. 25 February 1916.
  • Norman, Henry (April 1902). "The Coming of the Automobile". The World's Work: A History of Our Time. Vol. V. pp. 3304–3308. Retrieved 10 July 2009.

External links edit

  • Bertha Benz Memorial Route
  • University of Washington Libraries Digital Collections – Transportation photographs Digital collection depicting various modes of transportation (including automobiles) in the Pacific Northwest region and western US during the first half of the 20th century.
  • History of the automobile on About.com:Inventors site
  • on NYC.net
  • – An ongoing photographic history of the automobile.
  • Taking the Wheel, Manufacturers' catalogs from the first decade of American automobiles

history, automobile, development, automobile, started, 1672, with, invention, first, steam, powered, vehicle, which, creation, first, steam, powered, automobile, capable, human, transportation, built, nicolas, joseph, cugnot, 1769, inventors, began, branch, st. Development of the automobile started in 1672 with the invention of the first steam powered vehicle 1 which led to the creation of the first steam powered automobile capable of human transportation built by Nicolas Joseph Cugnot in 1769 2 3 Inventors began to branch out at the start of the 19th century creating the de Rivaz engine one of the first internal combustion engines 4 and an early electric motor 5 Samuel Brown later tested the first industrially applied internal combustion engine in 1826 Only 2 of these were made 6 The Ford Model T foreground and Volkswagen Beetle background are among the most mass produced car models in history Development was hindered in the mid 19th century by a backlash against large vehicles yet progress continued on some internal combustion engines The engine evolved as engineers created two and four cycle combustion engines and began using gasoline as fuel The first modern car a practical marketable automobile for everyday use and the first car put into series production appeared in 1886 when Carl Benz developed a gasoline powered automobile and made several identical copies 7 8 Later automobile production was marked by the Ford Model T created by the Ford Motor Company in 1908 which became the first automobile to be mass produced on a moving assembly line 9 Contents 1 Power sources 1 1 Steam powered wheeled vehicles 1 1 1 17th and 18th centuries 1 1 2 19th century 1 1 3 20th century 1 2 Electric automobiles 1 2 1 19th century 1 2 2 20th century 1 2 3 21st century 1 3 Internal combustion engines 1 3 1 Gas mixtures 1 3 2 Gasoline 2 Eras of invention 2 1 Horseless carriage or veteran era 2 2 Brass Edwardian era 2 3 Vintage era 2 4 Pre war era 2 5 Postwar era 2 6 Modern era 3 See also 4 References 5 Further reading 5 1 Early sources 6 External linksPower sources editThe early history of the automobile was concentrated on the search for a reliable portable power unit to propel the vehicle Steam powered wheeled vehicles edit Main article History of steam road vehicles 17th and 18th centuries edit nbsp Cugnot s steam wagon the second 1771 versionFerdinand Verbiest a member of a Jesuit mission in China built a steam powered vehicle around 1672 as a toy for the Kangxi Emperor It was small scale and could not carry a driver but it was quite possibly the first working steam powered vehicle auto mobile 1 10 Steam powered self propelled vehicles large enough to transport people and cargo were first devised in the late 18th century Nicolas Joseph Cugnot demonstrated his fardier a vapeur steam dray an experimental steam driven artillery tractor in 1770 and 1771 As Cugnot s design proved to be impractical his invention was not developed in his native France The center of innovation shifted to Great Britain By 1784 William Murdoch had built a working model of a steam carriage in Redruth 11 and in 1801 Richard Trevithick was running a full sized vehicle on the roads in Camborne 19th century edit nbsp A replica of Richard Trevithick s 1801 road locomotive Puffing Devil During the 19th century attempts were made to introduce steam powered vehicles Innovations such as hand brakes multispeed transmissions and better steering developed Some successful vehicles provided mass transit until a backlash against these large vehicles resulted in the passage of legislation such as the UK Locomotives Act 1865 which required many self propelled vehicles on public roads to be preceded by a man on foot waving a red flag and blowing a horn This effectively halted road auto development in the United Kingdom for most of the rest of the 19th century inventors and engineers shifted their efforts to improvements in railway locomotives The law was not repealed until 1896 although the need for the red flag was removed in 1878 In 1816 a professor at Prague Polytechnic Josef Bozek built an oil fired steam car 12 27 Walter Hancock builder and operator of London steam buses in 1838 built a two seated car phaeton 12 27 In 1867 Canadian jeweler Henry Seth Taylor demonstrated his four wheeled steam buggy at the Stanstead Fair in Stanstead Quebec and again the following year 13 The basis of the buggy which he began building in 1865 was a high wheeled carriage with bracing to support a two cylinder steam engine mounted on the floor 14 In 1873 Frenchman Amedee Bollee built self propelled steam road vehicles to transport groups of passengers The first automobile suitable for use on existing wagon roads in the United States was a steam powered vehicle invented in 1871 by Dr J W Carhart a minister of the Methodist Episcopal Church in Racine Wisconsin 15 It induced the state of Wisconsin in 1875 to offer a US 10 000 equivalent to 266 485 in 2022 award to the first to produce a substitute for the use of horses and other animals They stipulated that the vehicle would have to maintain an average speed of more than 8 km h 5 mph over a 320 km 200 mi course The offer led to the first city to city automobile race in the United States starting on 16 July 1878 in Green Bay Wisconsin and ending in Madison Wisconsin via Appleton Oshkosh Waupun Watertown Fort Atkinson and Janesville While seven vehicles were registered only two started to compete the entries from Green Bay and Oshkosh The vehicle from Green Bay was faster but broke down before completing the race The Oshkosh finished the 323 km 201 mi course in 33 hours and 27 minutes and posted an average speed of 9 7 km h 6 mph In 1879 the legislature awarded half the prize 16 17 18 20th century edit Pre WWII nbsp 1924 Doble Model ESteam powered road vehicles both cars and wagons reached the peak of their development in the early 1930s with fast steaming lightweight boilers and efficient engine designs Internal combustion engines also developed greatly during World War I becoming simpler to operate and more reliable The development of the high speed diesel engine from 1930 began to replace them for wagons accelerated in the UK by tax changes making steam wagons uneconomic overnight Although a few designers continued to advocate steam power no significant developments in the production of steam cars took place after Doble in 1931 Post WWIIWhether steam cars will ever be reborn in later technological eras remains to be seen Magazines such as Light Steam Power continued to describe them into the 1980s The 1950s saw interest in steam turbine cars powered by small nuclear reactors 19 this was also true of aircraft but the fears about the dangers inherent in nuclear fission technology soon killed these ideas Electric automobiles edit nbsp The German Flocken Elektrowagen of 1888 perhaps the first electric car in the world 20 See also History of the electric vehicle 19th century edit In 1828 Anyos Jedlik a Hungarian who invented an early type of electric motor created a tiny model car powered by his new motor 5 In 1834 Vermont blacksmith Thomas Davenport the inventor of the first American DC electric motor installed his motor in a small model car which he operated on a short circular electrified track 21 In 1835 Professor Sibrandus Stratingh of Groningen the Netherlands and his assistant Christopher Becker created a small scale electrical car powered by non rechargeable primary cells 22 In 1838 Scotsman Robert Davidson built an electric locomotive that attained a speed of 6 4 km h 4 mph In England a patent was granted in 1840 for the use of tracks as conductors of electric current and similar American patents were issued to Lilley and Colten in 1847 Sources point to different creations as the first electric car Between 1832 and 1839 the exact year is uncertain Robert Anderson of Scotland invented a crude electric carriage powered by non rechargeable primary cells In November 1881 French inventor Gustave Trouve demonstrated a working three wheeled car powered by electricity at the International Exposition of Electricity 23 English inventor Thomas Parker who was responsible for innovations such as electrifying the London Underground overhead tramways in Liverpool and Birmingham and the smokeless fuel coalite built an electric car in London in 1884 using his own specially designed high capacity rechargeable batteries 24 However some others regard the Flocken Elektrowagen of 1888 by German inventor Andreas Flocken as the first true electric car 20 20th century edit Electric cars enjoyed popularity between the late 19th century and early 20th century when electricity was among the preferred methods for automobile propulsion Advances in internal combustion technology especially the electric starter soon rendered this advantage moot the greater range of gasoline cars quicker refueling times and growing petroleum infrastructure along with the mass production of gasoline vehicles by companies such as the Ford Motor Company which reduced prices of gasoline cars to less than half that of equivalent electric cars led to a decline in the use of electric propulsion effectively removing it from important markets such as the US by the 1930s 1997 saw the Toyota RAV4 EV and the Nissan Altra the first production battery electric cars to use NiMH and Li ion batteries instead of heavier lead acid respectively 21st century edit In recent years increased concerns over the environmental impact of gasoline cars higher gasoline prices improvements in battery technology and the prospect of peak oil have brought about renewed interest in electric cars which are perceived to be more environmentally friendly and cheaper to maintain and run despite high initial costs Internal combustion engines edit Gas mixtures edit nbsp 1885 built Benz Patent Motorwagen the first modern car a practical marketable automobile for everyday use nbsp Scaled model of the second Marcus car of 1875The lack of suitable fuels particularly liquids hampered early attempts at making and using internal combustion engines therefore some of the earliest engines used gas mixtures In 1806 the Swiss engineer Francois Isaac de Rivaz built an engine powered by internal combustion of a hydrogen and oxygen mixture 4 In 1826 Englishman Samuel Brown tested his hydrogen fueled internal combustion engine by using it to propel a vehicle up Shooter s Hill in southeast London 25 6 Etienne Lenoir s automobile with a hydrogen gas fueled one cylinder internal combustion engine made a test drive from Paris to Joinville le Pont in 1860 covering some 9 km 5 6 mi in about three hours 26 A later version was propelled by coal gas A Delamare Deboutteville vehicle was patented and trialed in 1884 Gasoline edit Nicolaus Otto and Eugen Langen had built a working engine in 1867 About 1870 in Vienna Austria Hungary inventor Siegfried Marcus put a liquid fueled internal combustion engine on a simple handcart which made him the first man to propel a vehicle by means of gasoline Today this is known as the first Marcus car but would be better described as a cart His second car built and run in 1875 was the first gasoline driven car and is housed at the Vienna Technical Museum 27 28 In 1883 Marcus secured a German patent for a low voltage ignition system of the magneto type this was his only automotive patent During his lifetime he was honored by some as the originator of the motorcar but his place in history was all but erased by the Nazis during World War II Because Marcus was of Jewish descent the Nazi propaganda office ordered his work to be destroyed his name expunged from future textbooks and his public memorials removed 29 John Nixon of the London Times in 1938 considered Marcus development of the motor car to have been experimental as opposed to Carl Benz who took the concept from experimental to production Nixon described Marcus cars as impractical 30 Benz built his first automobile the Benz Patent Motorcar in 1885 in Mannheim It is considered the first modern car a practical marketable automobile for everyday use and the first car put into series production 31 Benz was granted a patent for his automobile on 29 January 1886 32 and began the first production of automobiles in 1888 after Bertha Benz his wife had proved with the first long distance trip in August 1888 from Mannheim to Pforzheim and back that the horseless coach was capable of extended travel Since 2008 a Bertha Benz Memorial Route commemorates this event 33 Soon after Gottlieb Daimler and Wilhelm Maybach in Stuttgart in 1889 designed a vehicle from scratch to be an automobile rather than a horse drawn carriage fitted with an engine They also are usually credited with invention of the first motorcycle in 1885 12 26 In 1891 John William Lambert built a three wheeler in Ohio City Ohio which was destroyed in a fire the same year while Henry Nadig constructed a four wheeler in Allentown Pennsylvania 12 25 The first four wheeled gasoline driven automobile in the United Kingdom was built in Walthamstow by Frederick Bremer in 1892 34 Another was made in Birmingham in 1895 by Frederick William Lanchester who also patented the disc brake The first electric starter was installed on an Arnold an adaptation of the Benz Velo built in Kent between 1895 and 1898 12 25 George Foote Foss of Sherbrooke Quebec built a single cylinder gasoline car in 1896 which he drove for four years ignoring city officials warnings of arrest for his mad antics 13 Eras of invention editHorseless carriage or veteran era edit nbsp The Selden Road Engine nbsp The Prasident automobile nbsp The first automobile in Japan a French Panhard Levassor in 1898 nbsp Fiat 4 HP the first car model produced by Italian manufacturer Fiat in 1899The American George B Selden filed for a patent on 8 May 1879 His application included not only the engine but its use in a four wheeled car Selden filed a series of amendments to his application which stretched out the legal process resulting in a delay of 16 years before the patent was granted on 5 November 1895 35 Selden licensed his patent to most major American automakers collecting a fee on each car they produced and creating the Association of Licensed Automobile Manufacturers The Ford Motor Company fought this patent in court 36 and eventually won on appeal Henry Ford testified that the patent did more to hinder than encourage development of autos in the United States 37 The first production of automobiles was by Carl Benz in 1888 in Germany and under license from Benz in France by Emile Roger There were numerous others including tricycle builders Rudolf Egg Edward Butler and Leon Bollee 12 20 23 Bollee using a 650 cc 40 cu in engine of his own design enabled his driver Jamin to average 45 km h 28 mph in the 1897 Paris Tourville rally 12 23 By 1900 mass production of automobiles had begun in France and the United States The first company formed exclusively to build automobiles was Panhard et Levassor in France which also introduced the first four cylinder engine 12 22 Formed in 1889 Panhard was quickly followed by Peugeot two years later By the start of the 20th century the automobile industry was beginning to take off in Western Europe especially in France where 30 204 were produced in 1903 representing 48 8 percent of world automobile production that year 38 Across the northern US local mechanics experimented with a wide variety of prototypes In the state of Iowa for example by 1890 Jesse O Wells drove a steam powered Locomobile There were numerous experiments in electric vehicles driven by storage batteries First users ordered the early gasoline powered cars including Haynes Mason and Duesenberg automobiles Blacksmiths and mechanics started operating repair and gasoline stations 39 In Springfield Massachusetts brothers Charles and Frank Duryea founded the Duryea Motor Wagon Company in 1893 becoming the first American automobile manufacturing company The Autocar Company founded in 1897 established a number of innovations still in use 40 and remains the oldest operating motor vehicle manufacturer in the US However it was Ransom E Olds and his Olds Motor Vehicle Company later known as Oldsmobile who would dominate this era with the introduction of the Oldsmobile Curved Dash Its production line was running in 1901 The Thomas B Jeffery Company developed the world s second mass produced automobile and 1 500 Ramblers were built and sold in its first year representing one sixth of all existing motorcars in the US at the time 41 Within a year Cadillac formed from the Henry Ford Company Winton and Ford were also producing cars in the thousands In South Bend Indiana the Studebaker brothers having become the world s leading manufacturers of horse drawn vehicles made a transition to electric automobiles in 1902 and gasoline engines in 1904 They continued to build horse drawn vehicles until 1919 42 The first motor car in Central Europe was produced by the Austro Hungarian company Nesselsdorfer Wagenbau later renamed to Tatra in today s Czech Republic in 1897 the Prasident automobile 43 In 1898 Louis Renault had a De Dion Bouton modified with fixed drive shaft and differential making perhaps the first hot rod in history and bringing Renault and his brothers into the car industry 44 Innovation was rapid and rampant with no clear standards for basic vehicle architectures body styles construction materials or controls for example many veteran cars use a tiller rather than a wheel for steering During 1903 Rambler standardized on the steering wheel 45 and moved the driver s position to the left hand side of the vehicle 46 Chain drive was dominant over the drive shaft and closed bodies were extremely rare Drum brakes were introduced by Renault in 1902 47 62 The next year Dutch designer Jacobus Spijker built the first four wheel drive racing car 48 77 it never competed and it would be 1965 and the Jensen FF before four wheel drive was used on a production car 48 78 Within a few years a dizzying assortment of technologies were being used by hundreds of producers all over the western world Steam electricity and gasoline powered automobiles competed for decades with gasoline internal combustion engines achieving dominance by the 1910s Dual and even quad engine cars were designed and engine displacement ranged to more than 12 L 3 2 US gal Many modern advances including gas electric hybrids multi valve engines overhead camshafts and four wheel drive were attempted and discarded at this time Innovation was not limited to the vehicles themselves Increasing numbers of cars propelled the growth of the petroleum industry 47 60 61 as well as the development of technology to produce gasoline replacing kerosene and coal oil and of improvements in heat tolerant mineral oil lubricants replacing vegetable and animal oils 47 60 There were social effects also Music would be made about cars such as In My Merry Oldsmobile a tradition that continues while in 1896 William Jennings Bryan would be the first presidential candidate to campaign in a car a donated Mueller in Decatur Illinois 49 92 Three years later Jacob German would start a tradition for New York City cabdrivers when he sped down Lexington Avenue at the reckless speed of 19 km h 12 mph 49 92 Also in 1899 Akron Ohio adopted the first self propelled paddy wagon 49 92 By 1900 the early centers of national automotive industry developed in many countries including Belgium home to Vincke that copied Benz Germain a pseudo Panhard and Linon and Nagant both based on the Gobron Brillie 12 25 Switzerland led by Fritz Henriod Rudolf Egg Saurer Johann Weber and Lorenz Popp 12 25 Vagnfabrik AB in Sweden Hammel by A F Hammel and H U Johansen at Copenhagen in Denmark which only built one car ca 1886 12 25 Irgens starting in Bergen Norway in 1883 but without success 12 25 26 Italy where FIAT started in 1899 and as far afield as Australia where Pioneer set up shop in 1898 with an already archaic paraffin fueled center pivot steered wagon 12 Meanwhile the export trade had begun with Koch exporting cars and trucks from Paris to Tunisia Egypt Iran and the Dutch East Indies 12 25 Motor cars were also exported to British colonies for example the first was shipped to India in 1897 Throughout the veteran car era the automobile was seen more as a novelty than as a genuinely useful device Breakdowns were frequent fuel was difficult to obtain roads suitable for traveling were scarce and rapid innovation meant that a year old car was nearly worthless Major breakthroughs in proving the usefulness of the automobile came with the historic long distance drive of Bertha Benz in 1888 when she traveled more than 80 km 50 mi from Mannheim to Pforzheim to make people aware of the potential of the vehicles her husband Karl Benz manufactured and after Horatio Nelson Jackson s successful transcontinental drive across the US in 1903 on a Winton car Many older cars made were made with an assembly line that would help mass produce cars a system that continues to be used because of its efficiency Brass Edwardian era edit Main article Brass Era car See also Antique car nbsp A Stanley Steamer racecar in 1903 In 1906 a similar Stanley Rocket set the world land speed record at 205 5 km h 127 7 mph at Daytona Beach Road Course nbsp Model T Ford car parked near the Geelong Art Gallery at its launch in Australia in 1915The Brass or Edwardian period lasted from roughly 1905 through 1914 and the beginning of World War I It is generally referred to as the Edwardian era but in the United States is often known as the Brass era from the widespread use of brass in vehicles during this time Within the 15 years that make up this era the various experimental designs and alternate power systems would be marginalized Although the modern touring car had been invented earlier it was not until Panhard et Levassor s Systeme Panhard was widely licensed and adopted that recognizable and standardized automobiles were created This system specified front engine rear wheel drive internal combustion engine cars with a sliding gear transmission Traditional coach style vehicles were rapidly abandoned and buckboard runabouts lost favor with the introduction of tonneaus and other less expensive touring bodies By 1906 steam car development had advanced and they were among the fastest road vehicles in that period citation needed Throughout this era development of automotive technology was rapid due in part to hundreds of small manufacturers competing to gain the world s attention Key developments included the electric ignition system independent suspension and four wheel brakes 12 27 47 61 Leaf springs were widely used for suspension though many other systems were still in use with angle steel taking over from armored wood as the frame material of choice Transmissions and throttle controls were widely adopted allowing a variety of cruising speeds though vehicles generally still had discrete speed settings rather than the infinitely variable system familiar in cars of later eras Safety glass also made its debut patented by John Crewe Wood in England in 1905 47 62 It would not become standard equipment until 1926 on a Rickenbacker 47 62 Between 1907 and 1912 in the United States the high wheel motor buggy resembling the horse buggy of before 1900 was in its heyday with over 75 makers including Holsman Chicago IHC Chicago and Sears which sold via catalog the high wheeler would be killed by the Model T 12 65 In 1912 Hupp in the US supplied by Hale amp Irwin and BSA in the UK pioneered the use of all steel bodies 47 63 joined in 1914 by Dodge who produced Model T bodies 47 62 While it would be another two decades before all steel bodies would be standard the change would mean improved supplies of superior quality wood for furniture makers 12 The 1908 New York to Paris Race was the first circumnavigation of the world by automobile German French Italian and American teams began in New York City 12 February 1908 with three of the competitors ultimately reaching Paris The US built Thomas Flyer with George Schuster driver won the race covering 35 000 km 22 000 mi in 169 days Also in 1908 the first South American automobile was built in Peru the Grieve 50 In 1909 Rambler became the first car company to equip its cars with a spare tire that was mounted on a fifth wheel 51 Some examples of cars of the period included citation needed 1907 Takuri the first entirely Japanese made gasoline engine car produced by Komanosuke Uchiyama in April 1907 Also in Japan the Hatsudoki Seizo Co Ltd is formed which was later renamed in 1951 as Daihatsu Kōgyō Kabushiki gaisha 1908 1927 Ford Model T the most widely produced and available four seater car of the era It used a planetary transmission and had a pedal based control system Ford T was proclaimed as the most influential car of the 20th century in the international Car of the Century awards 1909 Hudson Model 20 named after its rated power output and sold on its first market for US 900 equivalent to 29 313 in 2022 1909 Morgan Runabout a popular cyclecar cyclecars were sold in far greater quantities than four seater cars in this period 52 1910 Mercer Raceabout regarded as one of the first sports cars the Raceabout expressed the exuberance of the driving public as did the similarly conceived American Underslung and Hispano Suiza Alphonso 1910 1920 Bugatti Type 13 a notable racing and touring model with advanced engineering and design Similar models were Types 15 17 22 and 23 1914 1917 Dattogo a two cylinder 10 hp 7 500 W all Japanese car manufactured in seven units by the Kaishinsha Motor Works operated by Masujiro Hashimoto in Tokyo while importing assembling and selling British cars Kaishinsha was the first automobile manufacturing business in Japan 1917 Mitsubishi Model A an all hand built car built by Japanese company Mitsubishi in limited numbers for Japanese executives Vintage era edit Main article Vintage car See also Antique car and Cars in the 1920s nbsp 1926 Bugatti Type 35 nbsp 1929 Austin Seven nbsp 1929 Alfa Romeo 6CThe vintage era lasted from the end of World War I 1918 through to the Wall Street Crash at the end of 1929 During this period the front engine car came to dominate with closed bodies and standardized controls becoming the norm In 1919 90 percent of cars sold were open by 1929 90 percent were closed 12 7 Development of the internal combustion engine continued at a rapid pace with multivalve and overhead camshaft engines produced at the high end and V8 V12 and even V16 engines conceived for the ultrarich Also in 1919 hydraulic brakes were invented by Malcolm Loughead cofounder of Lockheed they were adopted by Duesenberg for their 1921 Model A 47 62 Three years later Hermann Rieseler of Vulcan Motor invented the first automatic transmission which had two speed planetary gearbox torque converter and lockup clutch it never entered production 47 62 It would only become an available option in 1940 47 62 Just at the end of the vintage era tempered glass now standard equipment in side windows was invented in France 47 62 In this era the revolutionary pontoon design of cars without fully articulated fenders running boards and other noncompact ledge elements was introduced in small series but mass production of such cars was started much later after WWII American auto companies in the 1920s expected they would soon sell six million cars a year but did not do so until 1955 Numerous companies disappeared 53 Between 1922 and 1925 the number of US passenger car builders decreased from 175 to 70 H A Tarantous managing editor of MoToR Member Society of Automotive Engineers in a New York Times article from 1925 suggested many were unable to raise production and cope with falling prices due to assembly line production especially for lowpriced cars The new pyroxylin based paints eight cylinder engine four wheel brakes and balloon tires as the biggest trends for 1925 54 Examples of period vehicles citation needed 1922 1939 Austin 7 a widely copied vehicle serving as a template for many cars such as BMW and Nissan 1922 1931 Lancia Lambda an advanced car for the time first car to feature a load bearing monocoque and independent front suspension citation needed 1924 1929 Bugatti Type 35 one of the most successful racing cars with over 1 000 victories in five years citation needed 1925 1928 Hanomag 2 10 PS early example of pontoon styling 1927 1931 Ford Model A 1927 1931 after keeping the brass era Model T in production for too long Ford broke from the past by restarting its model series with the 1927 Model A More than four million were produced making it the bestselling model of the era The Ford Model A was a prototype for the beginning of Soviet mass car production GAZ A 1930 Cadillac V 16 developed at the height of the vintage era the V16 powered Cadillac would join Bugatti s Royale as a legendary ultraluxury car of the era Pre war era edit nbsp Isotta Fraschini Tipo 8A nbsp Rolls Royce Phantom III nbsp Volkswagen BeetleMain article Classic car The pre war part of the classic era began with the Great Depression in 1930 and ended with the recovery after World War II commonly placed during 1946 It was in this period that integrated fenders and fully closed bodies began to dominate sales with the new saloon sedan body style even incorporating a trunk or boot at the rear for storage The old open top runabouts phaetons and touring cars were largely phased out by the end of the classic era as wings running boards and headlights were gradually integrated with the body of the car By the 1930s most of the mechanical technology used in today s automobiles had been invented although some things were later re invented and credited to someone else For example front wheel drive was re introduced by Andre Citroen with the launch of the Traction Avant in 1934 though it had appeared several years earlier in road cars made by Alvis and Cord and in racing cars by Miller and may have appeared as early as 1897 In the same vein the independent suspension was originally conceived by Amedee Bollee in 1873 but not put in production until appearing on the low volume Mercedes Benz 380 in 1933 which prodded American makers to use it more widely 47 61 In 1930 the number of auto manufacturers declined sharply as the industry consolidated and matured thanks in part to the effects of the Great Depression Examples of pre war automobiles citation needed 1932 1939 Alvis Speed 20 the first with all synchromesh gearbox citation needed 1932 1948 Ford V 8 Model B introduction of the flathead V8 in mainstream vehicles 1934 1938 Tatra 77 first serial produced car with an aerodynamical design 1934 1940 Bugatti Type 57 a refined automobile for the wealthy 1934 1956 Citroen Traction Avant first mass produced front wheel drive car built with monocoque chassis 1936 1955 MG T series sports cars 1938 2003 Volkswagen Beetle a design that was produced for over 60 years with over 20 million units assembled in several countries 1936 1939 Rolls Royce Phantom III V12 engine Postwar era edit nbsp 1946 GAZ M20 Pobeda one of the first mass produced cars with pontoon design nbsp 1954 Plymouth Savoy Station Wagon one of the first US all metal station wagons nbsp 1958 Lancia Appia nbsp 1959 Morris Mini Minor nbsp 1974 Citroen DS nbsp Gurgel SuperminiMain article Classic car A major change in automobile design since World War II was the popularity of pontoon style in which running boards were eliminated and fenders were incorporated into the body Among the first representatives of the style were the Soviet GAZ M20 Pobeda 1946 British Standard Vanguard 1947 US Studebaker Champion and Kaiser 1946 as well as the Czech Tatra T600 Tatraplan 1946 and the Italian Cisitalia 220 sports car 1947 Automobile design and production finally emerged from the military orientation and other shadow of war in 1949 the year that in the US saw the introduction of high compression V8 engines and modern bodies from General Motors s Oldsmobile and Cadillac brands Hudson introduced the step down design with the 1948 Commodore which placed the passenger compartment down inside the perimeter of the frame that was one of the first new design postwar cars made and featured trend setting slab side styling 55 The unibody strut suspended 1951 Ford Consul joined the 1948 Morris Minor and 1949 Rover P4 in the automobile market in the UK In Italy Enzo Ferrari was beginning his 250 series just as Lancia introduced the revolutionary V6 powered Aurelia Throughout the 1950s engine power and vehicle speeds rose designs became more integrated and artful and automobiles were marketed internationally Alec Issigonis s Mini and Fiat s 500 diminutive cars were introduced in Europe while the similar kei car class became popular in Japan The Volkswagen Beetle continued production after World War II and began exports to other nations including the US At the same time Nash introduced the Nash Rambler the first successful modern compact car made in the US 56 while the standard models produced by the Big Three domestic automakers grew ever larger in size featuring increasing amounts of chrome trim and luxury was exemplified by the Cadillac Eldorado Brougham The markets in Europe expanded with new small sized automobiles as well as expensive grand tourers GT like the Ferrari America The market changed in the 1960s as the US Big Three automakers began facing competition from imported cars the European makers adopted advanced technologies and Japan emerged as a car producing nation Japanese companies began to export some of their more popular selling cars in Japan internationally such as the Toyota Corolla Toyota Corona Nissan Sunny and Nissan Bluebird in the mid 1960s The success of American Motors s compact sized Rambler models spurred GM and Ford to introduce their own downsized cars in 1960 57 Performance engines became a focus of marketing by US automakers exemplified by the era s muscle cars 58 In 1964 the Ford Mustang developed a new market segment the pony car 59 New models to compete with the Mustang included the Chevrolet Camaro AMC Javelin and Plymouth Barracuda 60 Captive imports and badge engineering increased in the US and the UK as amalgamated groups such as the British Motor Corporation consolidated the market BMC s space saving and trend setting transverse engine front wheel drive independent suspension and monocoque bodied Mini which first appeared in 1959 was marketed under the Austin and Morris names until Mini became a marque in its own right in 1969 61 Competition increased with Studebaker a pioneering automaker shutting down and the trend for consolidation reached Italy where niche makers like Maserati Ferrari and Lancia were acquired by larger companies By the end of the decade the number of automobile marques had been greatly reduced Technology developments included the widespread use of independent suspensions wider application of fuel injection and an increasing focus on safety in automotive design Innovations during the 1960s included NSU s Wankel engine the gas turbine and the turbocharger Of these only the last endured pioneered by General Motors and adopted by BMW and Saab later seeing mass market use during the 1980s by Chrysler Mazda continued developing its Wankel engine in spite of problems in longevity emissions and fuel economy Other Wankel licensees including Mercedes Benz and GM never put their designs into production because of engineering and manufacturing problems as well as the lessons from the 1973 oil crisis The 1970s were turbulent years for automakers and buyers with major events reshaping the industry such as the 1973 oil crisis stricter automobile emissions control and safety requirements increasing exports by the Japanese and European automakers as well as growth in inflation and the stagnant economic conditions in many nations Smaller sized cars grew in popularity During the Malaise era the US saw the establishment of the subcompact segment with the introduction of the AMC Gremlin followed by the Chevrolet Vega and Ford Pinto 62 63 The station wagon estate break kombi universal body design was popular as well as increasing sales of noncommercial all wheel drive off road vehicles Toward the end of the 20th century the US Big Three GM Ford and Chrysler partially lost their leading position Japan became for a while the world s leader of car production and cars began to be mass manufactured in new Asian East European and other countries Examples of postwar cars 1946 1958 GAZ M20 Pobeda Soviet car with full pontoon design 1947 1958 Standard Vanguard British mass market car with full pontoon design 1948 1971 Morris Minor an early postwar car exported around the world 1953 1971 Chevrolet Bel Air and 1953 2002 Cadillac Eldorado Brougham first generations were representative of tailfin design 1955 1976 Citroen DS aerodynamic design and innovative technology awarded third place as Car of the 20th Century 1959 2000 Mini a radical and innovative small car that was manufactured for four decades awarded second place as Car of the 20th Century 1960 1990 Volkswagen Brasilia 1961 1975 Jaguar E Type a classic sports car design 1963 1989 Porsche 911 a sports car was awarded fifth place as Car of the 20th Century 1964 present Ford Mustang the pony car that became one of the bestselling cars of the era 1966 end of the 20th century Fiat 124 an Italian car that was produced under license in many other countries including the Soviet Union 1966 1971 Subaru 1000 one of the first Japanese built sedans using a boxer engine front wheel drive and introducing the double offset joint driveshaft to the front wheels 1967 NSU Ro 80 the basic wedge profile of this design was emulated in subsequent decades 64 unlike its Wankel engine late 1960s early 1980s Gurgel BR 800 late 1960s early 1980s Gurgel Supermini 1969 Nissan S30 Japanese sports car 65 1977 present Lada Niva the first mass produced full time all wheel drive car Modern era edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed June 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp The Toyota Corolla is the world s bestselling nameplate nbsp A Tesla Model Y electric car the world s best selling car in the first and second quarters of 2023 The modern era is normally defined as the 40 years preceding the current year 66 The modern era has been one of increasing standardization platform sharing and computer aided design to reduce costs and development time and of increasing use of electronics for both engine management and entertainment systems Some particular contemporary developments are the proliferation of front and all wheel drive the adoption of the diesel engine and the ubiquity of fuel injection Most modern passenger cars are front wheel drive monocoque or unibody designs with transversely mounted engines Body styles have changed as well in the modern era Three types the hatchback sedan and sport utility vehicle dominate today s market citation needed All originally emphasized practicality but have mutated into today s high powered luxury crossover SUV sports wagon and two volume Large MPV The rise of pickup trucks in the US and SUVs worldwide has changed the face of motoring with these trucks coming to command more than half of the world automobile market citation needed There was also the introduction of the MPV class smaller noncommercial passenger minivans among the first of which were the French Renault Espace and the Chrysler minivan versions in the US The modern era has also seen rapidly improving fuel efficiency and engine output The automobile emissions concerns have been eased with computerized engine management systems The financial crisis of 2007 2008 cut almost a third of light vehicle sales from Chrysler Toyota Ford and Nissan It also subtracted about a fourth of Honda s sales and about a seventh of sales from General Motors 67 Since 2009 China has become the world s largest car manufacturer with production greater than Japan the US and all of Europe Besides the increasing car production in Asian and other countries there has been growth in transnational corporate groups with the production of transnational automobiles sharing the same platforms as well as badge engineering or rebadging to suit different markets and consumer segments Since the end of the 20th century several award competitions for cars and trucks have become widely known such as European Car of the Year Car of the Year Japan North American Car of the Year World Car of the Year Truck of the Year and International Car of the Year Examples of modern cars citation needed 1966 1992 Oldsmobile Toronado First modern era American car with front wheel drive as well as introduced electronic antilock braking system and airbag 68 69 1972 present Mercedes Benz S Class Seat belt pretensioner and electronic traction control system 1975 present BMW 3 Series the 3 Series has been on Car and Driver magazine s annual Ten Best list 17 times 1977 present Honda Accord saloon sedan a Japanese sedan that became popular in the US 1983 present Chrysler minivans the two box minivan design nearly pushed the station wagon out of the market 1984 present Renault Espace first mass one volume car of noncommercial MPV class 1986 2019 Ford Taurus a midsized front wheel drive sedan that dominated the US market in the late 1980s 1997 present Toyota Prius launched in the Japanese market and became a popular hybrid electric vehicle in many markets 70 1998 present Ford Focus a popular hatchbacks and Ford s bestselling world car 2008 2012 Tesla Roadster first highway capable all electric vehicle in serial production for sale in the US in the modern era Sold about 2 500 units worldwide 2008 2013 BYD F3DM first highway capable series production plugin hybrid launched in China in December 2008 sold over 2 300 units 71 72 2009 present Mitsubishi i MiEV first highway capable series production all electric car launched in Japan in July 2009 for fleet customers and in April 2010 for retail customers Rebadged versions of the i MiEV are sold in Europe by PSA Peugeot Citroen PSA as the Peugeot iOn and Citroen C Zero 73 74 2010 present Nissan Leaf and Chevrolet Volt all electric car and plugin hybrid correspondingly launched in December 2010 are the world s top selling mass production vehicles of their kind 75 As of December 2015 update global Volt sales totaled over 100 000 76 Nissan Leaf global sales achieved the 300 000 unit milestone in January 2018 making the Leaf the world s all time bestselling highway capable electric car in history 77 2012 present Tesla Model S Plugin electric vehicle was ranked as the world s bestselling plugin electric vehicle in 2015 78 It was also named car of the century by Car and Driver 79 See also edit nbsp Cars portalAutomotive industry current production and companies History of the internal combustion engine History of transport Motocycle List of motorcycles of the 1890s Timeline of motor vehicle brands Timeline of North American automobilesBeginningsBenz Patent Motorwagen patent motorcar 1885 three wheel vehicle widely regarded as the world s first production automobile Benz Velo 1894 followup 4 wheel model of the Benz Patent MotorwagenEarly developments essential to the development of automobilesNicolas Leonard Sadi Carnot physics of the internal combustion engine Illuminating gas first internal combustion engine fuel Ligroin or heavy naphtha first liquid automotive fuel n hexaneCar and car engine designers chronologically by first vehicle engine builtNicolaus Otto developer of the first successful compressed charge gaseous fueled internal combustion engine 1860s 70s Wilhelm Maybach designed engines starting in the 1870s 80s first motorbike 1885 second internal combustion car 1889 Gottlieb Daimler German engineer pioneer of internal combustion engines and automobile development 1870s and on References edit a b 1679 1681 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2008 China s First Plug In Hybrid Car Rolls Out Bloomberg Business Retrieved 17 February 2015 Voelcker John 29 January 2015 2016 BYD Tang Plug In Hybrid SUV Is First Of Four To Come Green Car Reports Retrieved 17 February 2015 BYD was the first company in the world to launch a production plug in hybrid its F3DM in 2008 was two years ahead of the 2011 Chevrolet Volt Gordon Bloomfield Nikki 15 October 2014 Mitsubishi Recalls 2009 2014 i Miev Electric Cars for Faulty Brake Vacuum Pump Transport Evolved Retrieved 16 February 2015 Mitsubishi Motors unveils cheaper i MiEV electric car Automotive News Reuters 6 July 2011 Retrieved 16 February 2015 Cobb Jeff 16 September 2015 One Million Global Plug In Sales Milestone Reached HybridCars com Retrieved 6 November 2015 Cobb Jeff 8 December 2015 Plug in Pioneers Nissan Leaf and Chevy Volt Turn Five Years Old HybriCars com Retrieved 15 December 2015 See table with ranking World s Top Best Selling Plug in Electric cars Accounting for global cumulative sales by early December 2015 plug in electric car sales are led by the Nissan Leaf 200 000 followed by Volt Ampera family 104 000 and the Tesla Model S 100 000 As of November 2015 update ranking next are the Mitsubishi Outlander P HEV 85 000 and the Prius Plug in Hybrid 75 000 Nissan delivers 300 000th Nissan LEAF Press release Yokohama Nissan 8 January 2018 Retrieved 8 November 2020 Cobb Jeff 6 October 2015 Tesla Model S is America s Best Selling Plug in Car This Year HybridCars com Retrieved 16 March 2018 Tesla Model S Reviews Car and Driver Retrieved 16 March 2018 Further reading editBerger Michael L 2001 The automobile in American history and culture a reference guide Greenwood Publishing Group ISBN 9780313245589 Black Edwin 2006 Internal Combustion How Corporations and Governments Addicted the World to Oil and Derailed the Alternatives St Martin s Press ISBN 9780312359089 Clarke Sally H 2007 Trust and Power Consumers the Modern Corporation and the Making of the United States Automobile Market Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521868785 discusses trust consumerism and the modern corporation Halberstam David 1986 The Reckoning Morrow ISBN 0688048382 Horner Craig 2021 The Emergence of Bicycling and Automobility in Britain Bloomsbury Academic ISBN 978 1 4725 7209 7 Norton Peter D 2011 Fighting Traffic The Dawn of the Motor Age in the American City The MIT Press ISBN 978 0262516129 Kay Jane Holtz 1997 Asphalt nation how the automobile took over America and how we can take it back Crown Publishers ISBN 0517587025 Early sources edit Krarup M C November 1906 Automobities for Every Use The World s Work A History of Our Time Vol XIII pp 8163 8178 Retrieved 8 November 2020 Includes photos of many c 1906 special purpose automobiles New England in Motor History 1890 to 1916 The Automobile Journal 41 9 25 February 1916 Norman Henry April 1902 The Coming of the Automobile The World s Work A History of Our Time Vol V pp 3304 3308 Retrieved 10 July 2009 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to History of automobiles Automuseum Dr Carl Benz Ladenburg Germany Bertha Benz Memorial Route University of Washington Libraries Digital Collections Transportation photographs Digital collection depicting various modes of transportation including automobiles in the Pacific Northwest region and western US during the first half of the 20th century History of the automobile on About com Inventors site History of Automobile Air Conditioning on NYC net Automotive History An ongoing photographic history of the automobile Taking the Wheel Manufacturers catalogs from the first decade of American automobiles Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title History of the automobile amp oldid 1204974052, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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