You are currently browsing the tag archive for the ‘1949 Diamond T 201’ tag.
Pollsters say you want more, so here we go. As evidence of some effort to connect this out to tugster’s water focus, I’ll go back to a photo I took in mid-August 2014 in Wolcott NY. If I did the Great Race, I’d want a floating module, like the one of this 1930 Ford woody station wagon/bus.
Now back to Norwich NY and the lunch stop at the Northeast Classic “Car” Museum: I put ” ” on car because today is all trucks. And let’s do this as I did in yesterday’s post: you guess.
#1 You probably noticed yesterday that all the photos were taken in one place; I chose this angle–crossing railroad tracks–because that perspective allowed me framing that kept all (or most) people out of the shots.
#2 I remember milk being delivered in wonderful trucks like this one.
#3 I know hood ornaments and such reveal the manufacturer, but you still might have to struggle for the year.
This 1949 Diamond T was in the museum, and had such an informative sign, that I just had to
include that here.
#4 Yes, this is a pickup.
Again, this is a freebie. Somewhere lost in my past I remember my father driving a Diamond T and speaking reverentially about it. If you click on this photo, you might be able to read the sign. Notice the 10-gallon stainless milk cans loaded on the body.
#5 When was in Iraq almost 30 years ago, I saw this year truck cab fitted with a wooden coach body and used in Basra public transportation. I’d really like to buy one of these and replicate what I saw on the streets there.
#6
#7 It’s not really a truck, but it’s not a car either.
All photos by Will Van Dorp, who reminds you that if you live in New Hampshire, Maine, New Brunswick, or Nova Scotia, you can still catch them.
Answers:
- 1939 Ford pickup
- 1950 Ford milk delivery van
- 1946 GMC 1/2 ton
- 1932 Ford
- 1957 Chevrolet
- 1946 Dodge WD-20
- 1948 Buick Roadmaster hearse
By the way, the 2019 Great Race will run from southern California to Washington state. I guess it’s time to start saving up for/building an Iraq Chevy woody bus.
Let’s close out with one more from the museum, a Brockway from a central NYS company that ran from 1912 until 1977.
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