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Jan. 28, 1922. "Snow -- Washington, D.C." A frosty Ford Model T during the blizzard of 1922. Harris & Ewing Collection glass negative. View full size.
The Southern Railroad moved from F Street to McPherson Square about 1930. Its enormous, somewhat Art Deco building is still there on 15th Street between I and K.
There were plenty of monster plows back in the good old days. One example of a Winther rotary plow from 1919 is shown below. The second photo is a Cletrac 30 from about 1926.
I owned one of these for many years, and always enjoyed how the upright windows avoided snow buildup in situations like this. The inherent draftiness of the body also prevented windshield fogging. In warm weather, the upright design kept the car cool, even when left parked outside for long periods.
The car performed quite well in snow if equipped with the proper tires, but had only rear wheel "brakes" (actually just a band in the transmission), so speed had to be kept down.
The narrow tires cut through the snow better than wide ones and when stuck one could rock back and forth on the clutch and reverse pedals; no grinding of gears as the gears are always in mesh.
in cranking the engine over. There was no multi-viscosity oil back then. So whatever weight oil they were running would have been like syrup. Imagine trying to turn that over with a handcrank.
"Honey, call the boss and tell him I'm sick today".
The 20 horsepower engine of the Model T was actually a selling point at that time. I have a 315 horsepower Mustang with winter tires and it has a whole lot of difficulty moving through a snow blizzard. I wonder how much fun it would have been trying to plow through that snow with a Model T and those old fashioned tires?
This view is looking east on F Street NW, from approximately 15th Street. The Westory Building still stands on the corner of 14th and F, as well as the Sun Building at 1317 F (the Sun Building no longer has the tall spire seen in the image - a better view of it is below).
What did they use as antifreeze in those days? Maybe glycerine?
[Methyl alcohol. - Dave]
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