This is the "Al G. Barnes Electric Bandwagon", a description of which appears in the Mar-Apr 1958 and Jan-Feb 1961 Bandwagon magazines. It was mounyed on an Alco truck chassis and was 12 feet tall by 22 feet long. The term electric was used to dscribe the motive power of the vehicle. Flint
Old timer James Morrison told me that in 1914 he built a housecar with only a piece of 8" by 10" picture frame glass in front to see through, and that he drove it right through downtown Houston and out Main Street to a date in Victoria with no problems and no complaints from the officialdom.
5 comments:
OK Historians, what's the story on this interesting looking vehicle ?
Inquiring minds want to know.
Paul Gutheil
My dad wrote on the back:
"Al G. Barnes, Allegan, Mich. 1916"
Looks too tall to ride the flats.
I pity the driver on a hot day, entapped in all that exhaust smoke.
This is the "Al G. Barnes Electric Bandwagon", a description of which appears in the Mar-Apr 1958 and Jan-Feb 1961 Bandwagon magazines. It was mounyed on an Alco truck chassis and was 12 feet tall by 22 feet long. The term electric was used to dscribe the motive power of the vehicle.
Flint
The figure carvings from this truck went onto a Barnes tableau.
The body design didn't provide any side viewing for making turns.
Old timer James Morrison told me that in 1914 he built a housecar with only a piece of 8" by 10" picture frame glass in front to see through, and that he drove it right through downtown Houston and out Main Street to a date in Victoria with no problems and no complaints from the officialdom.
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