The six Vanderbilt Cup Races held on Long Island from 1904 to 1910 were the greatest sporting events of their day, and the first international automobile road races held in the United States. The races had a far-reaching impact on the development of American automobiles and parkways. This site provides comprehensive information on the races, the Long Island Motor Parkway and current Long Island automotive events, car shows and news.
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I’m probably wrong, but it looks to me like Austin Clark.
Rog
From Mystery Friday Foto #6 Solved: Henry Austin Clark, Jr. visiting Lynhurst in Tarrytown in his 1912 Simplex Toy Tonneau in1970
Austin Clark is behind the wheel of his Simplex toy tonneau. Location 9is Tarrytown, NY at the Lyndhurst historic site. The New York Region of the Veteran Motor Car Club of America ( now name changed to Vintage Motor Car Club of America) used to have an annual pre WWII era car meet there that Austin organized and got a few of us to volunteer to help run, work the registration table, and judge cars. I did all of those areas but never liked to judge cars nor have my own cars judged. I usually drove up there in my 1931 Franklin but one year rode up with noted modern sculptor Richard Lippold of Locust Valley in his 1929 Bentley 4 1/2 litre tourer. That was an exhausting trip in the Bentley - top down lots of wind and Richard drove that car flat out as often as possible. We were doing 75 mph when on the Cross Westchester Expressway. Richard also owned a R-R Phantom II convertible victoria that was bought new by Charlie Chaplin for his new wife Paulette Goddard. Richard was a well known sculptor in gold wire ( yes real gold) and his main work is in the a museum of art in NY City.
From Mystery Friday Foto #6 Solved: Henry Austin Clark, Jr. visiting Lynhurst in Tarrytown in his 1912 Simplex Toy Tonneau in1970
Henry Austin Clark, Jr., driving his 1912 Simplex Toy Tonneau with the Misses Margaret Hoffman, Anne Adams and Mary Ryan as passengers, stopped before the Gothic Revival Mansion owned and maintained by the National Trust for Historic Preservation.
From Mystery Friday Foto #6 Solved: Henry Austin Clark, Jr. visiting Lynhurst in Tarrytown in his 1912 Simplex Toy Tonneau in1970
Oswald Jacoby in his 1962 book “Mathemetics for Pleasure” used a race on the Motor Parkway between “Newcar” and “Jalopy” in one of his math problems. According to the author the race actually did occur in 1914.
From UPDATE - Kleiner's Korner: The Motor Parkway and the Vanderbilt Cup Race in Literature and Entertainment (Part 2)
Mystery Foto Questions
1) Henry Austin Clark Jr.
2) 1912 Simplex Touring Car
3) ?
From Mystery Friday Foto #6 Solved: Henry Austin Clark, Jr. visiting Lynhurst in Tarrytown in his 1912 Simplex Toy Tonneau in1970
That’s Henry Austin Clark, Jr. driving his 1912 Simplex Toy Tonneau at Lyndhurst Mansion in Tarrytown, NY. His lovely passengers are Margaret Hoffman, Anne Adams, and Mary Ryan. And yes, Gary, I’ve seen the postcard.
From Mystery Friday Foto #6 Solved: Henry Austin Clark, Jr. visiting Lynhurst in Tarrytown in his 1912 Simplex Toy Tonneau in1970
Awesome listen, motivating
From Video of the Week: Gararageinsidertv.com- Rob Ida tells the inside story behind Tucker 1044 and the Holman-Moody Challenger III
Lee During WW 1 the Government leased the property which would become Mitchel Field, the lease had language that the lease would terminate at the end of the war. At the same time the government leased most of the Motor parkway spur south of Stewart Ave. paying $31.90 per month per acre under the same conditions. There came a time when the Government extended Mitchel Field to Oak St. In September 1939 the Parkway sold the 50 foot wide portion of the Hempstead Spur south of Stewart Ave. for $8900.
From Mystery Friday Foto #5 Solved: A 1930's view of the Motor Parkway area around Merrick Avenue in Westbury and East Meadow
This May, 1958 map of the Central extension indicates in hand written notes the approximate location of where Uniondale Ave. (referred to as ‘ex Uniondale Rd.’) once extended past Hempstead Turnpike and crossed through the area that became Mitchel.
I believe the reference to ‘ex Westbury Rd.’ was actually the extension of California Ave. north of Hempstead Turnpike. It would not meet Westbury Road until after crossing Stewart Ave. but before they got to the LIMP, the merged route continuing northeastward to Merrick Ave. just south of Old Country Road.
From Mystery Friday Foto #5 Solved: A 1930's view of the Motor Parkway area around Merrick Avenue in Westbury and East Meadow
Al,
Could this the 1906 atlas image you are referring to? It shows two access roads from Stewart Ave. down the to Salisbury Plains station, one on either side of it, but both to the west of Merrick Ave.
From Mystery Friday Foto #5 Solved: A 1930's view of the Motor Parkway area around Merrick Avenue in Westbury and East Meadow
Also, this 1914 map showing Westbury Road further east of the LIMP Spur across the soon to be Camp Mills, crossing the Central railroad tracks, then Stewart Ave. and merging south of the LIMP with the northern extension (beyond Hempstead Turnpike) of California Ave. from Uniondale.
It then crossed the LIMP and made its way to a rendezvous with Merrick Ave. (Whaleneck Road) just south of Old Country Road.
From Mystery Friday Foto #5 Solved: A 1930's view of the Motor Parkway area around Merrick Avenue in Westbury and East Meadow
Al,
Found this 1923 map showing Westbury Road east of Oak Street continuing in a northeasterly direction and terminating at the LIMP Spur.
From Mystery Friday Foto #5 Solved: A 1930's view of the Motor Parkway area around Merrick Avenue in Westbury and East Meadow
Al,
Having spent virtually my entire childhood and adolescence growing up on Mitchel Field, I have always had a particular interest in the Westbury Blvd. that you speak of.
Many times we would take the portion of what’s left of it through East Garden City as a short cut to get to Garden City proper and/or Hempstead.
As for the part of the roadway that cut across what became Camp Mills / Mitchel,
I have never found any remnant of it (at least South of Stewart Avenue).
Would you happen to have a map of that area East of Oak Street from back in time?
Thanks!
From Mystery Friday Foto #5 Solved: A 1930's view of the Motor Parkway area around Merrick Avenue in Westbury and East Meadow
Al,
I have very distant memories of reading somewhere the extant bridge was not the original one; there had been another one very close to it just to the west of it which preceded it but by only a few years. If I’m not mistaken, the original purpose of (let’s call it West trestle #1) was to go over water, possibly related to nearby Meadow Brook Creek.
And of course you are correct. The Meadow Brook Club Road did indeed go UNDER the (let’s call it East trestle #2).
Could you please post the image from the 1906 atlas?
From Mystery Friday Foto #5 Solved: A 1930's view of the Motor Parkway area around Merrick Avenue in Westbury and East Meadow
Al Prete, The Westbury Blvd. you referred to had no connection with the Meadow Brook Club. But , it does have an interesting history of it’s own and a connection to the Motor Parkway. Today the northern end is at Oak St. There was a time when it’s northern terminus was at Merrick Ave. just south of Old Country Rd. , Westbury. away from built up areas. At that time it was known as the Sheep’s Pen Rd. Sheep farmers from Hempstead and the surrounding areas kept their sheep at the northern end of the road. It was only when the Motor Parkway ROW was being built thru the Hempstead Plains that they were told that what looked like a dirt path was actually and legally a Town road ( since pre- revolutionary times) and would have to be bridged by the Parkway. For obvious reasons the bridge was never paved. When the federal government took over the property where Mitchel Field was located, it closed off the road at both the Parkway spur to Hempstead Tpke. and Stewart Ave. That part of the road north of Stewart Ave. fell into misuse, remember it was just a dirt path, and eventually gobbled up by developers of that area.
From Mystery Friday Foto #5 Solved: A 1930's view of the Motor Parkway area around Merrick Avenue in Westbury and East Meadow
I’m not saying it’s a fake. I asked the gentleman who runs the sight for his input on it. You’ve obviously seen his response. So I believe you are addressing the wrong individual here. You must understand the amount of fraud with signs and plates? I certainly hope it’s real!
From Fraud Alert Update: Guide to Identifying Authentic Versus Reproduced Long Island Motor Parkway and Roosevelt Field Porcelain Plates
After checking with the 1906 Atlas of Nassau County I came up with why the Club didn’t have the entrance south of the CRR. Originally they didn’t have frontage on today’s Merrick Ave. south of the CRR. It appears the entrance from Merrick Ave. came later ( with the advent of the automobile ? ) as the Atlas shows two entrances from Stewart Av. straddling the first CRR station.
From Mystery Friday Foto #5 Solved: A 1930's view of the Motor Parkway area around Merrick Avenue in Westbury and East Meadow
George, here is the response from the person selling the plate when I asked about its authenticity:
“I have had the plate 40 years. It came from my father who was a classic car collector. The plate came off of one of the cars he had. It probably came off a 1932 Plymouth or a Ford model a. Also the wear marks are consistent with other plates I see online, with the rusted grommets.”
From Fraud Alert Update: Guide to Identifying Authentic Versus Reproduced Long Island Motor Parkway and Roosevelt Field Porcelain Plates
You know, we keep referring it as the CRR bridge… but technically isn’t it an underpass ? The CRR was there before the Meadow Brook Hunt Club and they didn’t “bridge” the CRR, they went under it. While I’m at it…why didn’t the club have the entrance to the grounds south of the CRR ?
From Mystery Friday Foto #5 Solved: A 1930's view of the Motor Parkway area around Merrick Avenue in Westbury and East Meadow
Henry Austin Clark Jr. driving a 1912 Simplex at Gould’s Lyndhust Castle in Tarrytown.
https://lyndhurst.org/
From Mystery Friday Foto #6 Solved: Henry Austin Clark, Jr. visiting Lynhurst in Tarrytown in his 1912 Simplex Toy Tonneau in1970
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