Recent Comments

Oct 29 2014 Ted 11:12 PM

You know I’ll be there. As it is all the time, it’s going to be a very interesting night.

From Hold the Date:11/20/14: "A Tribute to Henry Austin Clark, Jr & the Long Island Automotive Museum"

Oct 29 2014 Rodger 8:57 PM

My late father, John Craig owned Heritage Coachworks in Ramona Ca and restored the Joel Naive Alco in the late ‘80’s. I remember him fabricating the fenders, cutting grooves for seals on the shifter fork shafts, doing the upholstery, final assembly etc. The last time I saw the car it was in Manny Dragones showroom in Bridgeport Ct about 15 years ago.

From In Search of Alcos: #8 1911 40-HP Alco Toy Tonneau Touring Car on Long Island

Oct 28 2014 Ted 10:35 PM

There’s an event on this Saturday, rain date Sunday, at the Smith Haven Mall in Lake Grove, Touch A Truck. You can get details on WBAB

From Video of the Week "Willie K. in an Auto Boat Race on the Hudson"

Oct 28 2014 Ted 5:20 PM

I’m glad I went to the Cradle of Aviation show on Sunday. It was a good turn out. even if I thought the 1962 Chrysler Imperial was going to be there and it wasn’t. You were there and to watch the people looking at YOUR CAR in amazement and some saying. I have never seen such detailed work of beauty and the interest they had in it, asking you questions. The best part was you showing the power windows, most of them were amazed at that. I just enjoyed watching all the reaction of the people looking at the car and it’s all live and in person

From Video of the Week "Willie K. in an Auto Boat Race on the Hudson"

Oct 28 2014 chad 7:05 AM

i have one of the tokens and some info if you want to email me

From Film "The Inaugural Indy 500 Race"

Oct 27 2014 Ted 9:41 PM

O well, I’m a little late, but I was going to say the car is a 1924 Buick, I guess I’m wrong and I think Buick had some kind of connection with the Vanderbilt Cup Races, I didn’t recognize the gentleman, maybe if I did I would have gotten it right

From Mystery Foto #91 Solved: Walter P. Chrysler with a Maxwell 1924 Chrysler B-70 Roadster

Oct 27 2014 Len Williams 12:04 PM

the man in the photo is Walter Chrysler
the car is a 1924 or 1925 Chrysler roadster
i think it is the first year of production.
i was not aware that Chrysler had any connection to the races.

From Mystery Foto #91 Solved: Walter P. Chrysler with a Maxwell 1924 Chrysler B-70 Roadster

Oct 27 2014 Joby 9:27 AM

Hi rmw,

The name of the street was originally Queens Road because it was the road that took you from Flushing to the Village of Queens (a.k.a. Queens Village) in the Town of Jamaica.

I believe that they renamed all the streets in Queens after the western half of the County of Queens was consolidated into NYC. It was probably in the 1910s and 1920s and I bet that’s when the street was first renamed as Hollis Court Blvd.

You are right that after the Clearview opened, the section south of 73rd Ave (Blackstump Road) became known as Hollis Hills Terrace.

From Long Island Motor Parkway Bridge Series: #3 The Hollis Court Boulevard Motor Parkway Bridge in Queens

Oct 27 2014 Ariejan Bos 8:17 AM

This must be Walther P. Chrysler with a 1924 Chrysler B-70 roadster. The B-70, the first Chrysler model, was also the first medium-priced car with a high compression engine.
The only link I could find with the Vanderbilt Cup races, was that Walther P. Chrysler worked as a works manager for Alco in the locomotive branch of the company around 1910, when Alco won the Vanderbilt Cup twice (in 1909 and 1910 of course). In 1911 he became works manager of the Buick Motor Company.

From Mystery Foto #91 Solved: Walter P. Chrysler with a Maxwell 1924 Chrysler B-70 Roadster

Oct 27 2014 Henry Duke 1:34 AM

Walter Percy Chrysler
Maxwell-Chrysler (or just Maxwell) made it.  The Chrysler Corporation was formed in June of 1925. This is a 1924 model Chrysler roadster with the 2-tone paint scheme (all had black fenders). This was the introduction of the new Chrysler, with 4-wheel hydraulic brakes, full pressure lubrication (with a replaceable oil filter element), and a high-compression (4.7 to 1) 200 cu. in. engine developing 68 horsepower.  This may have been taken at the introduction at the NY Auto Show at the Commodore Hotel.  Walter Chrysler entered the automobile manufacturing business via his employment at the American Locomotive Company who made ALCO cars, which won the Vanderbilt Cup in 1909 and 1910.  Chrysler, never with the auto side of ALCO, left for GM and Buick in 1911, and Durant bought him out in 1919, enabling Chrysler to buy Maxwell.

From Mystery Foto #91 Solved: Walter P. Chrysler with a Maxwell 1924 Chrysler B-70 Roadster

Oct 26 2014 Ted 7:02 PM

On my way home today, from Cradle Aviation Museum, I took a look at what Salisbury Park Drive is like. They improved on it since I last updated it in July. Warning signs on path conditions were put up and there’s lines now. It looks better than it did the last time I saw it, just driving by at a quick glance

From Pilot Section of the Motor Parkway Trail Is Under Construction in East Meadow(Updated:June 17, 2014)

Oct 26 2014 Gary Hammond 5:48 PM

I believe that the 1920’s photos don’t show foundations for new buildings, but are leftover remains of the now gone WWI buildings.  Along the north side of Commercial Ave. still stood some wooden WWI vintage warehouses in the 1980’s, which slowly were destroyed by fire & replaced by newer brick/concrete structures.  One of these seems to be on the lower left side of the Oct. 10, 1927 photo.  I believe that Camp Mills had extended quite a distance to the east from Clinton St, where the Rainbow Division monument now stands, and ended close the Mitchel during the “Great War”.  I believe photos do exist showing this.

From Then & Now: The Long Island Motor Parkway, Mitchel Field and Sonny Corleone

Oct 26 2014 Roger Price 11:22 AM

Howard,
I grew up in W. Hempstead and remember riding with my father through Hempstead and past Mitchel Field on the way to the farm stands, which were in E. Meadow and what became Uniondale just before the building boom.  Back then (the ‘40s & ‘50s) Mitchel was an active Army Air Force and USAF base.  I remember seeing B-25 bombers flying over our heads coming in for a landing.  Hofstra College, across Hempstead Tpke was just a small college at that time.  Many of my fellow graduates from W. Hempstead High School went to either Hofstra or Adelphi after our graduation in 1955.
Rog

From Then & Now: The Long Island Motor Parkway, Mitchel Field and Sonny Corleone

Oct 26 2014 Ken Harris 9:33 AM

Thanks for the Mitchell Field presentation—it brought back some memories.  In the late fifties and into the early sixties I spent some some time in that area.  The father of a young lady I was dating was the food service director at the air force base so we had dinner there a couple of times.  Also, I was taking evening classes toward a masters degree at Hofstra during that time so I was right across the street (Hempstead Turnpike) several evenings a week when the base was still in operation.

From Then & Now: The Long Island Motor Parkway, Mitchel Field and Sonny Corleone

Oct 26 2014 Bob Greenhaus 5:21 AM

I’m not sure if I hit submit on my follow-up, but I’m going to guess that the gentleman is Walter P. Chrysler.  Sorry if I already sent it.

From Mystery Foto #91 Solved: Walter P. Chrysler with a Maxwell 1924 Chrysler B-70 Roadster

Oct 26 2014 Arthur Emerson 4:51 AM

Just as a correction, the northern piece of runway off of the NCCC access road is actually being used for police EVOC driver training as far as I know—NOT a go-cart track Other groups would *love* to have access to that site for public motorsport events, but alas we are stuck with what’s left of Nassau Coliseum…..

From Then & Now: The Long Island Motor Parkway, Mitchel Field and Sonny Corleone

Oct 26 2014 Bob Greenhaus 4:43 AM

The car is a 1924 Chrysler B-70 six cylinder roadster. The model car is historically significant as it was the first Chrysler and the first production car with four wheel hydraulic brakes, among other technological innovations.  Perhaps the connection to the Vanderbilt Cup Races is that Chrysler worked for ALCO, builder of the Black Beast race car, before going into the automobile business.  I don’t recognize the gentleman.

From Mystery Foto #91 Solved: Walter P. Chrysler with a Maxwell 1924 Chrysler B-70 Roadster

Oct 25 2014 Ted 10:52 PM

Hope to see the Chryslers Chrysler tomorrow. I wasn’t going to go, but now I want to see the 1962 Chrysler Imperial that you posted, then leave, after taking a quick look at the rest of the vehicles, then go to another show.

From Video of the Week "Willie K. in an Auto Boat Race on the Hudson"

Oct 24 2014 Andy Soffian 7:23 PM

Congrats Howie. Just learned about your win from Darrell. Don’t get no better. would love to see the car some time.

Andy

From The 26 First in Class Winners at the 2014 Pebble Beach Concours d'Elegance

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