When Gasoline-Powered Cars Were First Used, Where Did They Get Gasoline?
This fall I taught a class at the Osher Institute at UCLA; the class was called American Moments and one day I was talking about early automobiles and why gas-powered engines became the norm instead of electric-powered, which were also being made in the early 1900s.
“Where did people buy gasoline?” asked a member of my class.
I didn’t know the answer, but I promised to look into it before the next class. The best information I could find was that before there were gas stations, drivers could buy gasoline in canisters at a general store. None of us were totally satisfied, but that was what I could find.
I should have thought of calling the Ford Museum in Dearborn, Michigan. Today in the Wall Street Journal there was a review of the newly revamped museum, and my attention was riveted by these sentences:
“Gasoline engines were initially troublesome because they were smelly, noisy and often broke down. Also, gasoline was hard to find. That changed in 1901 when oil was discovered in Texas. There were still no gas stations, but a picture here from the early 20th century shows a home-heating-oil truck also delivering gasoline. Even though they had to carry gasoline cans when taking longer trips, drivers liked the unlimited range of cars propelled by a gasoline-powered, internal-combustion engine. “
So there it is! A much more satisfactory answer to how early drivers obtained gas for powering their cars.
For more information on early cars, see “Auto Sales Stimulus, 1909.“




Author and historian David C. McCullough has said, “History is who we are and why we are the way we are.”
In Washington, D.C. this weekend for the White House Correspondents’ Dinner, I have three experiences to share with you, each of which has been changed by the news of the success of the daring plan to bring down Osama bin Laden.
Tonight people from around the world will pack into Times Square in anticipation of being at the “center of the universe” for the countdown to midnight. In addition to the one million people expected to be there in person, an estimated audience of one billion people around the world will be viewing the climactic moment when the ball descends into New York’s Times Square to mark the beginning of a new year.