by MonteQuest » Sun 28 Jan 2007, 21:19:32
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('JPL', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MonteQuest', '
')I'm approaching 56, so this is all first hand that I write.
42 but I was a very serious and assiduous young-person back then ;o)
Do you remember all the stuff about 'What would happen when we ran out of oil?'
Of course, the complacency that has returned will be our undoing.
While we are reminiscing the "old days" of the 70's energy crisis, perhaps a revisit of what it was like before and after the crisis with regard to "gas stations."
In many towns in the business district,
each corner of almost
every intersection had a full service gas station
and garage. Or at least one station at
every intersection.
You drove over an air hose that rang a bell inside the station. You did not have to exit your vehicle unless you wish to use the restroom (which every station had..both men's and women's.)
At a first class Texaco station, two or three guys would run out wearing dapper uniforms with bowties and caps like the soldiers wore in WWII or a policemen's type hat. One would raise your hood and check your oil, battery, and radiator water, another would check the air in your tires, clean your
windows, while another pumped your gas, brought you your change, S&H green stamps, and a free glass or mug.
All for about $.35 cents a gallon.
Then there was The Texaco Star Theater. A Tuesday night TV staple from 1948 to 1954.
Click on the link below, scroll down until you see: From Chevron's Video Archive. Then click on the Men of Texaco Milton Berle Show video. Very campy and nostalgic. Good shot of the uniforms.
Men of Texaco
In a few short years, as gas started becoming scarcer and more expensive most of the stations went out of business. The stations were torn down and replaced with what you see today. Perhaps the greatest change in the gas station experience started in the 1970s, when the oil companies realized that it was expensive to provide free maps, free windshield washings, and free air for your tires.
It is expensive to pay for a squad of people to fuss over your car. Today, one clerk takes your money while you do all the work.
What's the lesson to be learned here? Increasing oil and gas prices will once again change the American landscape.
A Saudi saying, "My father rode a camel. I drive a car. My son flies a jet-plane. His son will ride a camel."