Recent Comments

Nov 03 2013 Greg Oreiro 10:48 PM

I learned ALOT about Ronkonkoma and it’s history this weekend, but it wasn’t enough to solve all the questions!

-What was the M.G. Babcock Company?
One of many NYC real estate brokers selling large vacation homes to the NYC wealthy at that time.

-Identify the building featured on the postcard.
Unknown. Looked at dozens of historic homes, hotels, pavillions, 1930 aerials and couldn’t find a match. Possibly the postcard is just a generic M.G. Babcock sales brochure of sorts for their estates that are for sale in the area?

-Was the Long Island Motor Parkway ever officially called the “Vanderbilt Motor Parkway” in 1910?
I always understood it was never ‘officially’ called the ‘Vanderbilt Motor Parkway’ at any time and any reference to it as such was incorrect.

On a side note; I did find the exact postcard for sale on Ebay if anyone is interested!
http://www.ebay.com/itm/c-1910-BEV-Home-Lake-Ronkonkoma-LI-NY-post-card-/350895278960?_trksid=p2054897.l4276

From Mystery Foto #40 Solved:The Von Osterman Family House in Lake Ronkonkoma in 1910

Nov 03 2013 Robert Thomas 9:08 PM

I stumbled on a collection of photos of George Eastman of the Quaker State 200 race held in Philadelphia in the 1911 era, they are without descriptions, but perhaps you can identify some of the cars and drivers.

http://www.geh.org/fm/lazar/quaker200_sum00001.html

Cheers and keep up the good work.

From Blog Updates (Latest: 3/9/2014)

Nov 03 2013 L.K. 5:32 PM

Wonderful outcome from just a small post.  But it all boils down to Howard and this great newsletter and all the research that goes in to it…...Thanks Howard for sharing all of this…....The photos , the stories ....It’s just fabulous….

From Cousins of Drivers Montague and Mortimer Roberts Reunited With the Help of VanderbiltCupRaces.com

Nov 03 2013 Wayne Carroll Petersen 4:18 PM

Good job Howard, That is so Kool!
Best regards,
Wayne Carroll Petersen
Barney Oldfield Great Great Nephew

From Cousins of Drivers Montague and Mortimer Roberts Reunited With the Help of VanderbiltCupRaces.com

Nov 03 2013 Howard Kroplick 10:36 AM

From Kathy C:

“Watching you ( the fastest man in America ) be beaten by Henry Ford on the History Channel! What great fun! I know you use it in your talks but so cool to see it on the tube….You bring history alive & help all of us in the field by making history breathe & relevant… you give so many connections. My goal is linking history on many levels… You & the BB create wild links: socially politically economically culturally in an incredibly crafted machine & the roadways & races it traveled… what fantastic &  powerful links to offer in the study of history to reach wildly diverse interests!  “

From Film "The Black Beast in the Finale of "Men Who Built America"

Nov 03 2013 Kenneth J. Harris 9:21 AM

What a nice story!  It will keep me in a good mood for the rest of the year.  Thanks!

Ken

From Cousins of Drivers Montague and Mortimer Roberts Reunited With the Help of VanderbiltCupRaces.com

Nov 03 2013 Mark desantis 8:05 AM

That is great news,  good job!!!!

From Cousins of Drivers Montague and Mortimer Roberts Reunited With the Help of VanderbiltCupRaces.com

Nov 02 2013 Steve Lucas 6:06 PM

That looks like the Von Osterman house which was located near the north-west corner of the lake. Today the property is occupied by a beer & soda distributor at the south-east corner of Rosevale Ave. and Smithtown Ave. The M. G. Babcock Co. was one of many real estate development companies that promoted and sold land around the Lake Ronkonkoma area in the 1910’s and 1920’s. I don’t think the LIMP was ever officially called the Vanderbilt Motor Parkway although it obviously was referred to as such on the postcard and probably other publications as well.

From Mystery Foto #40 Solved:The Von Osterman Family House in Lake Ronkonkoma in 1910

Nov 02 2013 Ted 1:22 PM

MY computer is down,so I can’t research this one. I’m at the library doing this right know,this is a very interesting one too. Well good luck guys,it would take me too long here to do it.

From Mystery Foto #40 Solved:The Von Osterman Family House in Lake Ronkonkoma in 1910

Nov 01 2013 Mike Cain 5:04 PM

Thanks for these fabulous photos Howard! I grew up no more than 1/4 mile from the site of this bridge. I can still remember in the 1960s seeing railroad ties from the Central Branch near where the bridge was located. My guess is that the bridge came down around 1949-1950.

From Long Island Motor Parkway Bridge Series #39: Newbridge Road Bridge in Hempstead Plains

Oct 31 2013 Ted 12:12 AM

Getting back to the mysery#39. Will you really know about that faded#5,your reasoning sounds very possible,were they the same car or not? there’s uncertainty there,this turned out to be a mind boggling mystery,whose going to come up with the true answer? Greg,Howard or even Ariejan Bos,go for it. You guys seem to know how to do it. It would be interesting for us all to know,don’t you think so? I would be

From Then & Now: The Proposed Fulton Avenue Entrance to the Motor Parkway in Hempstead (Part II)

Oct 30 2013 Ted 4:43 PM

Just to let you,I went to the presentation last nite, a lot of people showed up. What a collection of car photos he has,ones that I’ve seen at car shows or something else and others I didn’t and probably will never see One other thing,that library is the best I’ve seen,It’s huge,so many things going on,maybe you can see if you can book a presentation,you’ll like the accommodations I’ll tell you. I just thought I’d bring that up

From Then & Now: The Proposed Fulton Avenue Entrance to the Motor Parkway in Hempstead (Part II)

Oct 30 2013 Greg Oreiro 2:51 PM

I have another possible theory about the faint #5 on the radiator. In the Lowell Trophy Race, in Massachusetts, on September 8, 1909, The ALCO was #5. In that race, the ALCO did not use the protective grill in front of the radiator and it appears to be the only race from what I see that the ALCO did not use the grill. The number was painted directly on the radiator itself unlike all others where the number was painted on the grill. The faded numeral seems to be the same size and similar font as the black 5 from the Lowell race in 1909.

From Mystery Foto #39 Solved: The Alco Racer Practicing at the Indy 500 Track

Oct 29 2013 Howard Kroplick 4:24 PM

From Ariejan Bos:

I must admit that I completely missed the American Grand Prize. After reading your comments I thought that maybe there was a second car. However the resemblance between the AGP car and the Indy mystery car is so strong, that they must be the same car. It puzzled me why this car would practice at Indy until I realized that Indianapolis was on the way between Elgin and Long Island (or the factory at Providence). They had been at Indy in July for the Cobe Trophy and passed there of course again after the Elgin race. On September 3 and 5, 1910 races were held at Indy and there was a nr. 10, Joe Dawson on Marmon. On the official Indy Alco photo you can spot the number 10 on a shield at the back of a car, comparable with Harroun’s number shield on his Marmon in 1911. I do not know how long in advance the starting positions for the Vanderbilt Cup race were known, but apparently already early September. In my opinion the frontal number was painted on the radiator protection shield, which is absent on the mystery photo. So it is my impression now, that they were at Indy early September on their way back to Long Island and were photographed there during the race weekend, just as guests, not as competitors. They were of course famous already after their first Vanderbilt Cup win.
Anyway, Howard, thank you as always for keeping us busy!

Regards,
Ariejan

From Mystery Foto #39 Solved: The Alco Racer Practicing at the Indy 500 Track

Oct 29 2013 Howard Kroplick 11:40 AM

Ted, good catch! Roy Jaffe’s presentation is at 7:00 PM at the Sachem Public Library in Holbrook

http://wwww.vanderbiltcupraces.com/events/details/presentation_automotive_styling_at_general_motors_plainview_thursday_august

From Mystery Foto #39 Solved: The Alco Racer Practicing at the Indy 500 Track

Oct 29 2013 Ted 11:33 AM

I’m never on the computer this early in the day,but I had to this time,there’s just too much here and so informative. You and Greg didn’t give up on this one and certainly found alot that you didn’t know about. If there’s something to be found you always pull thru and find it and let us all know about it. The stuff you find is unbelievable. Now while I’m on here to change the subject is the presentation tonite at the Shelter Rock Library 165 Searingtown Road in Albertson? because it says Holbrook at the top. I’ll be back on about 4pm or give me a call and leave a message. Thanks alot Howard,I would really appreciate it

From Mystery Foto #39 Solved: The Alco Racer Practicing at the Indy 500 Track

Oct 28 2013 Howard Kroplick 10:49 PM

Greg, I am impressed. You have raised some great points. I have revised the post above based on your comments.

Logically, it makes sense that the Alco Black Beast may have been practicing for the Vanderbilt Cup Race on the Indy track in September 1910. It raced in Elgin, Indiana on August 27, 1910 (as #6). It also does not make sense that the racer would have the #18 on its hood in May 1911 since its prior race on November 12, 1910 it ran as #7.

My best guess is the official Alco photo used for the 1911 Indy 500 Race may have been taken while the car was practicing in September 1910. Accordingly, I now agree with your original answers to the Mystery Foto! Kudos!!!

From Mystery Foto #39 Solved: The Alco Racer Practicing at the Indy 500 Track

Oct 28 2013 Ted 10:16 PM

Hay Greg we both got thrown off on that one didn’tt we? We almost had it

From Mystery Foto #39 Solved: The Alco Racer Practicing at the Indy 500 Track

Oct 28 2013 Greg Oreiro 9:53 PM

Further looking at the photos of the car from 1910 VCR and Indy…Are the car numbers removable panels between the hood straps and not the car itself? That would explain my confusion. It would have been easy to remove the protective radiator grill and quickly swap numbers on the hood while at Indy for photo ops.

From Mystery Foto #39 Solved: The Alco Racer Practicing at the Indy 500 Track

Oct 28 2013 Ted 9:45 PM

I didn’t know about the brick and never payed attention to the grandstands at Indy. I also should have realized that it didn’t look like a race

From Mystery Foto #39 Solved: The Alco Racer Practicing at the Indy 500 Track

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