Car Crazy

Americans love their cars and trucks. From classic restorations to rat rods, we as a society are fascinated with our gas guzzling vehicles and the activities surrounding them. Even though fuel prices around the world continue to rise, we can’t get enough of the freedom that owning a vehicle provides.

34 Packard Sedan image from Public Domain

The car craze has been a thing for almost as long as motor vehicles have been amongst us. In the early days, movie stars and entrepreneurs with money to burn pumped wads of cash into the latest and greatest sports cars and luxury sedans for prestige. Their desire to show off their affluence helped push the motor industry to create sleeker, sexier and faster vehicles to fascinate the world with.

Public Domain image of old race car.
Formula Racer image from Public Domain

Racing was an inevitable link in the evolution of the automobile. Everyone wants to know which vehicle is the fastest, or wants to see how far they can push the technology of the day and learn how to push it even further. Drag racing, cross country rallies, and speedways became hot attractions for hundreds of thousands of fans with a need for speed.

1960 Chevy Impala Photo by James F Keck

As cars and trucks became more affordable to the average citizen, the common folk got to enjoy showing off their new rides to their neighbors and friends. Family cars were being developed to accommodate the growth of our nation following World War II. Manufacturers were constantly producing newer models with bigger and better features to sway the public to purchase their brand, which often developed into a life-long love (sometimes generational) for the maker.

30s Model A Ford Hotrod Photo by James F Keck

It was also around this time when the “hotrod” began growing in popularity among the youth. Curious teens, fascinated with the mechanical aspects of the internal combustion engine, would acquire an old jalopy and work out ways to breath new life into them with modifications to the engines, big tires, shiny chrome wheels and trim, and bright flashy paint jobs. They’d race each other in the streets for “pinks”, the titles to their rides, forcing the loser to hand over their pride and joy only to find themselves another old junker and start all over again.

Today, those old jalopies come hotrods, as well as old cars that haven’t been modified are now considered classics or antique autos. The owners of these classic cars, trucks and sometimes motorcycles bring their vehicles to Cruise Ins to show off their hard work and dedication to bringing these beauties back to near original condition. Some builders also choose to build their engines to perfection, but leave the body of the vehicle in an “as found” state. These rusted out relics are known as Rat Rods, and are as well loved by classic restorationists as those built up to near new condition.

Even with all the clamor for newer vehicles to be environmentally cleaner, I don’t believe America will ever lose its love for the fossil burning classics. Those heavy metal bodies and frames, roaring engines, and squealing rubber tires have a deep hold on our national fiber, and I hope they forever will.

All images by James F Keck © 2018 unless noted otherwise.

Fall Festivals

In the months of September and October, towns across the US usually celebrate the season of autumn with festivals that revolve around harvest time. Apple festivals seem to be one of the more popular of these events. All sorts of games and hand-crafted toys for the kids can be found at just about every turn. 

For the adults, the apple festivals also have a lot of craft merchandisers lined up in lanes to peddle their wares. You can find leather goods, wood carvings, clothing of all types, and just about any sort of nicknack under the sun. Oh, and let’s not forget the food! Pulled pork, hamburgers and hotdogs, apple fritters and dumplings are just a few of the goodies you can expect to find to tempt your tastebuds!

Around my town we also have corn mazes with tons of activities for kids of all ages; punkin chunkin, apple launchers, petting zoos and playgrounds. The corn mazes are pretty similar to an apple festival. Games and fun for the kiddos, and good eats for everybody.

Hope everyone has a fun time at whatever festival you find yourself going to this year! Winter is just around the corner, so enjoy this season for as long as you can!

Cruising

Small town life across America has many avenues for entertainment. One of these pastimes that has been around since at least the 40s is cruising. Get in your car or truck, circle through your town as many times as your gas tank allows, park on a side street and hang out with your friends until you had to go home, or head to the big party that everyone is going to. It’s all fun!

Palace
The Historic Palace Theatre in Crossville, TN

In today’s America, cruising seems to have lost its luster with the kids. Back then you didn’t have cell phones that allowed you to find out where your buddies were. Back then if you weren’t cruising, you weren’t cool. You were a square, a nerd, or a wallflower. Today, you’re not “in” unless you’re posting selfies while you’re shopping at the mall or sharing photos of what you’re eating on the latest social media apps. Times have surely changed!

Fortunately, cruising isn’t completely dead. There are still some folks that like to gas up their ride and roll slow and low on Main Street, and there are several auto shows, or Cruise Ins, where lovers of classic vehicles line their rides up and down a city street to show off their beautiful restorations. 

Perhaps cruising town will completely fade away someday. Maybe it will become popular again, become a trend, or a fad. Either way, those that enjoyed it in the old days will always have their memories.

Cumberland Mountain State Park

Grist mill at the base of Byrd Creek Dam.

Cumberland County Tennessee has a true gem hidden in plain sight. The Cumberland Mountain State Park was created in the heart of the Homesteads Community, a product of the New Deal legislation headed by Franklin Delano Roosevelt to assist Americans in finding new work as the nation was climbing out of the Great Depression. This new community, having over 230 resettled families, needed a recreation center, so the construction began.

Workers from Company 3464 of the Civilian Conservation Corps working on the beach area of the new Byrd Lake.

Byrd Creek runs through the midst of the park, and while a creek can be a wonderful place for relaxation, a lake would be much better. The designers and engineers felt that damming up the creek would create a nice reservoir that could be utilized by the families of the Homesteads community, and folks from around the region. The Byrd Creek Dam was completed in 1938, and residents began using the park’s amenities soon after.

Byrd Creek Dam

The park brought the people of the Homesteads, and Cumberland County as a whole, clean and comfortable areas to camp, fish, and swim, as well as courts and fields for various sports activities. Cabins were constructed, picnic tables put in place, and trails were cut to make hiking around the lake and along the creek a pleasurable experience. The Cumberland Mountain State Park has continued to serve the county as a center of recreation ever since.

Welcome to Modern Americana

Americana. The word denotes an air of nostalgia, and gives one a sense of what made, or makes, our country what it is. In days past, it was represented by images and artifacts that were hallmarks of the work, styles and activities of the folk that built our nation. As the country continues to grow and develop, new styles and activities have emerged, and the way we earn a living has evolved as well. Modern Americana is a website designed to document these new ideals. A presence on yet another piece of history that has become one of the very tools being used to make our lives better (or worse, depending on your perspective), the internet. Please, share your view of your neck of the woods of our nation, your Modern Americana.