Dublin Core
Title
Description
In the early days of motoring, traveling by automobile was all about adventure.
America’s love affair with the automobile began with young men like Alva Matheson.
Born in Cedar City in 1903, Alva Matheson began hankering for a car at age 15. He had no money, but was clever and knew how an engine worked. He built a car of his own from discarded parts collected at the dump. “When it was finished,” he recalled, “I had eight different [models] represented, such as a Ford motor, a Buick ignition, a Chevrolet oil pump, a Star radiator, Franklin front springs, a Brisco rear end, Dort clutch, and Studebaker driveshaft.” Matheson’s creation was apparently a sight to behold, a terror on the road, and marked only the beginning of his automotive adventures.
When Matheson later owned a Model-T Ford, he set off one day with his friend Jeff on an old wagon road toward the Nevada border. Washouts, high centers, and deep dust were the hallmarks of such back county roads. Of course, the car threw a rod and began to leak oil. Hoping for a rescue, the pair pulled out their lunch of salt pork, eggs, beans, and bread. As Matheson cut the pork, he noticed how tough the rind was. So he set to work with his wrenches and made a connecting rod bearing from the bacon rind – a wrangled repair that held all the way home.
Matheson's vehicle had a tendency to lose oil on remote roads. The next time he and Jeff were stranded thirty miles from nowhere, they replaced the oil with castile soap dissolved in hot water. Matheson reported that, “By coasting whenever possible and blowing bubbles for miles, we made it back to [town] with the cleanest motor on record..."
Alva Matheson was not the only adventurer on Utah's dirt roads in the early years of motoring, but he and his pals were certainly ever inventive.
Creator
Source
Image: Alva Matheson. Matheson is sitting in a car built of junk parts from eight different vehicles. Courtesy of Utah State Historical Society.
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See S. Alva Matheson, Reflections, Cedar City, 1974, and later republished by Southern Utah University Press, 1988; "Adventures of an Early Hot Rodder, History Blazer, June 1996, accessed http://utahhistory.sdlhost.com/#/item/000000011019702/view/17
Publisher
The Beehive Archive is a production of Utah Humanities. Find sources and the whole collection of past episodes at www.utahhumanities.org
Date
2014-06-27