Starting in the late 1700's, European engineers began tinkering with
motor powered vehicles. Steam, combustion, and electrical motors had all
been attempted by the mid 1800's. By the 1900's, it was uncertain which
type of engine would power the automobile. At first, the electric car
was the most popular, but at the time a battery did not exist that would
allow a car to move with much speed or over a long distance. Even
though some of the earlier speed records were set by electric cars, they
did not stay in production past the first decade of the 20th century.
The steam-driven automobile lasted into 1920's. However, the price on
steam powered engines, either to build or maintain was incomparable to
the gas powered engines. Not only was the price a problem, but the risk
of a boiler explosion also kept the steam engine from becoming popular.
The combustion engine continually beat out the competition, and the
early American automobile pioneers like Ransom E. Olds and Henry Ford
built reliable combustion engines, rejecting the ideas of steam or
electrical power from the start.
Automotive production on a commercial scale started in France in
1890. Commercial production in the United States began at the beginning
of the 1900's and was equal to that of Europe's. In those days, the
European industry consisted of small independent firms that would turn
out a few cars by means of precise engineering and handicraft methods.
The American automobile plants were assembly line operations, which
meant using parts made by independent suppliers and putting them
together at the plant. In the early 1900's, the United States had about
2,000 firms producing one or more cars. By 1920 the number of firms had
decreased to about 100 and by 1929 to 44. In 1976 the Motor Vehicle
Manufacturers Association had only 11 members. The same situation
occurred in Europe and Japan.
The first automobile produced for the masses in the US was the
three-horsepower, curved-dash Oldsmobile; 425 of them were sold in 1901
and 5,000 in 1904--this model is still prized by collectors. The firm
prospered, and it was noted by others, and, from 1904 to 1908, 241
automobile-manufacturing firms went into business in the United States.
One of these was the Ford Motor Company which was organized in June
1903, and sold its first car on the following July 23. The company
produced 1,700 cars during its first full year of business. Henry Ford
produced the Model T to be an economical car for the average American.
By 1920 Ford sold over a million cars.
At the beginning of the century the automobile entered the
transportation market as a toy for the rich. However, it became
increasingly popular among the general population because it gave
travelers the freedom to travel when they wanted to and where they
wanted. As a result, in North America and Europe the automobile became
cheaper and more accessible to the middle class. This was facilitated by
Henry Ford who did two important things. First he priced his car to be
as affordable as possible and second, he paid his workers enough to be
able to purchase the cars they were manufacturing. This helped push
wages and auto sales upward. The convenience of the automobile freed
people from the need to live near rail lines or stations; they could
choose locations almost anywhere in an urban area, as long as roads were
available to connect them to other places. Many states in the US
established motor fuel taxes that were used only to build and maintain
highways helping the auto highway system become self-supporting.
Popularity of the automobile has consistently moved with the state
of the economy, growing during the boom period after World War I and
dropping abruptly during the Great Depression, when unemployment was
high. World War II saw a large increase in mass transit because
employment was high and automobiles were scarce. The rapid growth of car
owners after World War II, particularly in the United States and
Western Europe demonstrated the population's favor towards automobiles.
During the war, automobile motors, fuel, and tires were in short supply.
There was an unsatisfied demand when the war ended and plenty of
production capacity as factories turned off the war machine. Many people
had saved money because there was little to buy, beyond necessities, in
the war years. Workers relied heavily on mass transportation during the
war and longed for the freedom and flexibility of the automobile.
A historian has said that Henry Ford freed common people from the
limitations of their geography. The automobile created mobility on a
scale never known before, and the total effect on living habits and
social customs is endless. In the days of horse-drawn transportation,
the practical limit of wagon travel was 10 to 15 miles, so that meant
any community or individual farm more than 15 miles from a city, a
railroad, or a navigable waterway was isolated from the mainstream of
economic and social life. Motor vehicles and paved roads have narrowed
the gap between rural and urban life. Farmers can ship easily and
economically by truck and can drive to town when it is convenient. In
addition, such institutions as regional schools and hospitals are now
accessible by bus and car.
Yet, the effect on city life has been, if anything, more prominent
than the effect on the farms. The automobile has radically changed city
life by accelerating the outward expansion of population into the
suburbs. The suburban trend is emphasized by the fact that highway
transportation encourages business and industry to move outward to sites
where land is cheaper, where access by car and truck is easier than in
crowded cities, and where space is available for their one or two story
structures. Better roads were constructed, which further increased
travel throughout the nation. As with other automobile-related
phenomena, the trend is most noticeable in the United States but is
rapidly appearing elsewhere in the world.
Before the automobile, people both lived in the city and worked in
the city, or lived in the country and worked on a farm. Because of the
automobile, the growth of suburbs has allowed people to live on the
outskirts of the city and be able to work in the city by commuting. New
jobs due to the impact of the automobile such as fast food, city/highway
construction, state patrol/police, convenience stores, gas stations,
auto repair shops, auto shops, etc. allow more employment for the
world's growing population.