Hank R
Senior Member
- Joined
- May 28, 2014
- Messages
- 2,089
- Location
- Princeton B.C. Canada
- Occupation
- Retired Truck driver and School bus driver
Allrighty then... I was given this image to scan by a guy that I hung around with for 33 years he was one of my dearest friends. He flipped up a really bad card and I lost him in 2012 I have this image of who I believe is a uncle or Grandfather to my buddy. It was very laborious to communicate for him so I never have known the answers. I believe it is taken Snoqualmie at the mill. All the strength for that assumption is based on the family living around Issaquah. I have been trying to identify the make of the truck. It's mark is on the upper tank of the radiator. I have tried to pull it up in both Lightroom and Photoshop... no joy. The hood is unusual the way the sheets break to open them. Isn't a Garford, Jimmy, Packard or Fageol. Can anybody identify the make? View attachment 192483
I tried that also but Gersix had a vertically ribbed top radiator tank and a very prominent grill badge cast into the tank. . The 23 Kenworth continued with that tank. I am thinking west coast maker as well.Possibly a Gersix, a forerunner to Kenworth? I'll do some hunting.
Did some Google Fu and that's what it resembles.
Didn't Gerlinger build a truck prior to Gersix? Your right about that hood being about spot on. I sent you a message with a link. I think it is a 1918 Federal. I am looking for an image of a wartime FederalPossibly a Gersix, a forerunner to Kenworth? I'll do some hunting.
Did some Google Fu and that's what it resembles.
Good Morning Truck Shop, Thanks for your help on this. I just needed a little nudge off in the right direction. I was not looking back far enough.Tthe Gerlinger/ Gersix discussion kind of turned on the light plus a little weirdness in my glasses prescription helped a little. I was wondering about that cab too. I searched military Federal images thinking maybe the Army was it's first stop, didn't find anything. The cab must be the result of "advanced backyarding."Good call on Federal, those models ran up to 1925. One problem with your photo is the back portion of the cab was home made.
Truck Shop
With all the dirt on the machine and the blur to the photo I thought I could make out the E and D next E of Federal earlier, was not certain eye was playing tricks.
Make a REAL man out of ya to drive those old machines. Armstrong Steering and Mechanical brakes on solid rubber across dirt rut roads. May have made 20 or 30 mph on a good day?
What was your last driving gig was my first one. I raced around Sumas, Lynden, Belligham, Ferndale, Sedro Wooley, Bow, Allen and Mt. Vernon. Fly past Jack Mackners place on the Guide, dump a trailer out on Eastt Badger and get rockin' then race into Seattle and unload.The last year I ran was 94 then pulled the plates. For the last three of those years I crossed the boarder at Blaine or Sumas headed into Vancouver around 12 to 1 four to five
nights a week. I went back to the repair and hired a old hand the last year. I delivered to Tom Yee, Mac Donald and Oppenheimer. I always liked laying on the jake in the
Fraser Tunnel. Always left through the Portman scale. I will have three rashers of beacon with two over easy please.
During the winter I ran to Kelowna and Kamloops. Don't miss it.
Truck Shop