TRAVEL FEATURES
Alice Huyler Ramsey set out 100 years ago on the first U.S. cross-country trek with a woman driving. The country's been on a two-way street ever since.
Tuesday is the 100th anniversary of a landmark travel feat in American history: It was the beginning of a journey that marked the first time a woman crossed America behind the wheel of a car.
A century ago, it was thought that driving a car required manly virtues, including sound judgment and thoughtful decision-making -- sort of like voting.
More than a decade before women got the right to vote, Alice Huyler Ramsey proved to the world that a woman had the necessary virtues, driving from
Ride along on the page in 1909 and online in 2009
"Alice's Drive," an annotated 2005 edition of Alice Huyler Ramsey's 1961 autobiography including an account of her 1909 trip, originally published as "Veil, Duster and Tire Iron," can be ordered online at www.patricepress.com. Click on the "Antique Automobiles" link. Paperback: $19.95 plus shipping and handling, payable by check, Visa or MasterCard.
To commemorate Ramsey's cross-country drive, Emily Anderson of Seattle will retrace the route in a 1909 Maxwell rebuilt by her father, Richard Anderson. The trip is to begin Tuesday. To track the journey, go to www.aliceramsey.org and click on the map marked "Follow Along."
She would. And did. It took 59 days, a dozen flat tires and multiple mechanical breakdowns, but Ramsey's journey -- shared with three passengers, not one a man, two of them her sisters-in-law and none of them able to drive -- would later make her the first woman inducted into the Automotive Hall of Fame, now in Dearborn, Mich. The Automobile Assn. of America (today's
In 1961, Ramsey published a short autobiography called "Veil, Duster and Tire Iron." The book was republished in 2005 under the title "Alice's Drive" and includes a detailed annotation of her route as if the journey were made through modern America.
Ramsey's 3,800-mile transcontinental trek can be parsed in two, , halved by the Mississippi River. East of it, smooth going; west of it, a struggle.
In 1909, only 155,000 of 80 million Americans owned cars. Most of the vehicles were in the East, along with the good roads, comfortable lodgings and other amenities of early 20th century travel.
As a result, the expedition's first half was something of a social outing, with Ramsey impatient to make progress but bogged down by Maxwell's promotional meet-and-greets and the locals in each town eager to gawk at and talk to the pioneering women.
The adventurous Ramsey seemed disinterested in this part of the excursion. On Day 2, for instance, she noted, "We drove north past the handsome estates at Hyde Park and of John Jacob Astor near Rhinebeck, N.Y. . . . and continued with little in the way of diversion." In fact, she bypassed the Rhinebeck Hotel, which dated to 1766 and was a place where George Washington actually did sleep.
Things changed dramatically once the group arrived in
After two hours, the party dashed through the downpour to a nearby restaurant where Ramsey sat down at a vintage piano to entertain some "country lads" as she "tossed off a couple light numbers." (This, by the way, was in one of the few buildings Ramsey visited that is thought to be still standing: It's now Bubba's Sports Bar & Grill, 211 1st St. in Mechanicsville, in eastern Iowa.)
Iowa and
The closest to a euphoric moment came not in
"Majestic sugar pines, Douglas firs and redwoods lined our road on both sides. What a land! What mountains! What blue skies and clear, sparkling water! Our hearts leapt within us. None of us had ever seen the like -- and we loved it."
With that introduction to the state and her lifelong passion for the road, it feels appropriate that she settled here on the cusp of the 1950s as California was becoming the car culture capital of the world.
Ramsey died in

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