M38 A1s, National Museum of Military Vehicles.
Last edition:
The M151 "Mutt" entered service in 1959 and carried on into the 1990s. It had fantastic off road capabilities, and was also fantastically dangerous, given its independent wheel suspension system.
The last Jeep to see general use in the U.S. military, it was replaced by HumVeh's, although speciality vehicles, and even modern commercial Jeeps, continue to see some use. In these examples, the radio mount for a period radio is displayed.
South Korean Army M35 2.5 Ton 6x6 trucks.
These U.S. military trucks were part of a series of 6x6 trucks that dated back into the 1920s. The 6x6 was developed, for U.S. military use, by the Artillery branch of the U.S. Army which could not find a suitable civilian product for use as an artillery tractor. Developed over the years, the series came into use in a major way at the onset of the Second World War, by which point civilian contractors could and did supply an entire series of 6x6 trucks, all of which closely resemble each other, but which in fact varied by manufacture.
After World War Two the service wished to standardize the trucks and update them, resuling in the M35, which entered service in 1950, just at the start of the Korean War. Produced all the way into the 1990s, the series remains in widespread use around the globe, although it has been replaced by other trucks in U.S. military use.
The 6x6 series of trucks were great vehicles, and in very real terms, the World War Two vintage trucks can legitimately contend for the most important piece of military equipment of the Second World War.
Posted elsewhere some time ago, a beautifully restored Chevrolet panel truck.
Lex Anteinternet: SUVs before SUVs:
A 1962 Dodge Power Giant Carryall. Not mine, I saw it for sale the other day while driving through town. It appears in nice shape, and still features bias ply tires. This is a D100 Carryall, which means its rated at 1/2 ton, although it has a two speed rear axle. Of course, I don't know anything about it or what is, or isn't original. It looks pretty original, however.
Anyhow, it's interesting how SUVs are supposed to be a modern concept, with the Chevrolet Suburban supposedly sort of ushering them in. But Suburban's themselves go way back, and before them were vehicles like this Dodge Carryall. Carryalls, in fact, go all the way back to World War Two.
Of course, these aren't easy to drive. It has a manual transmission and armstrong steering. And, of course, conventional hydraulic brakes. Not something a soccer mom, or dad, would probably drive. Still, it's interesting to note how far back the concept of a full sized 4x4, built on a truck frame, goes. About as far back as 4x4 trucks themselves.
Jeep
I've owned Jeeps twice.
My first car, a 1958 M38A1 Army Jeep. In the words of Iris Dement, "it turned over once, but never went far."*My very first vehicle was a Jeep. I bought it for $500 with money I had earned from a summer job. I was 15 at the time, and not old enough to actually drive, but I still had it when I turned 16.The engine was a mess, in need of rebuilding or replacement, and as you can see, the prior owner had hit a tree with it. As the engine was so worn out, it burned nearly as much oil as gasoline, and I sold it when I was 16 and bought a Ford F100 to replace it.My second Jeep was a 1946 CJ2A, the very first model of civilian Jeep. I kept it for awhile, but ultimately when my son was small, I sold it too. The CJ2A, particularly ones made in the first couple of years of production, was nearly unchanged from the World War Two Army 1/4 ton truck that gave rise to the species, and indeed, the model I had, had some parts commonality otherwise unique to the Army Jeeps of the Second World War.Depiction of Jeep in use on Guadalcanal, bringing in a KIA.Jeeps got their start in that role, as a military vehicle, a 1/4 ton truck, entering service just prior to World War Two. Bantam, a now extinct motor vehicle manufacturer, gets a lot of credit for the basic design, and indeed the Bantam Jeep did enter U.S. and British service.Bantam Jeep being serviced by Army mechanic. The Bantam was actually lighter than the Willys Jeep.But it was Willys, with larger manufacturing capacity, that really gets credit for the design. It was their design that became the Jeep, although Ford made a huge number of Jeeps during the Second World War as well.Coast Guard patrol with Jeep. The Coast Guard also had mounted patrols during the Second World War, acquiring horses and tack from the Army.American and Australian troops with Jeep serving as a field ambulance.Jeeps became synonymous with U.S. troops during World War Two. Indeed, there's a story, probably just a fable, of a French sentry shooting a party of Germans who tried to pass themselves off as Americans, simply because the sentry knew that a walking party of men could not be Americans, they "came in Jeeps." A story, probably, but one that reflected how common Jeeps were and how much they were admired by U.S. forces at the time. It's commonly claimed by some that Jeeps replaced the horse in the U.S. Army, but that's only slightly true, and only in a very limited sense. It might be more accurate to say that the Jeep replaced the mule and the horse in a limited role, but it was really the American 6x6 truck that did the heavy lifting of the war, and which was truly a revolutionary weapon.None the less, the fame of the Jeep was won, and after the war Jeeps went right into civilian production. For a time, Willys was confused over what the market would be for the little (uncomfortable) car, and marketed to farmers and rural workers, who never really saw the utility of the vehicle over other options. Indeed, for farmers and ranchers who needed a 4x4, it was really the Dodge Power Wagon that took off. The market for Jeeps was with civilian outdoorsmen, who rapidly adopted it in spite of the fact that it's very small, quite uncomfortable, and actually, in its original form, a very dangerous vehicle prone to rolling. Still, the light truck's 4x4 utility allowed sportsmen to go places all year around that earlier civilian cars and trucks simply did not. The back country, and certain seasons of the year, were suddenly opened up to them. For that reason, Jeeps were an integral part of the Revolution In Rural Transportation we've otherwise written about. You can't really keep a horse and a pack mule in your backyard in town, but you can keep a Jeep out on the driveway.Not surprisingly, Willys (and its successor in the line, Kaiser) soon had a lot of competition in the field. The British entered it nearly immediately with the Land Rover, a light 4x4 designed for the British army originally that's gone on to have a cult following, in spite of being expensive and, at least early on, prone to the faults of British vehicles. Nissan entered the field with the Nissan Patrol, a vehicle featuring the British boxiness but already demonstrating the fine traits that Japanese vehicles would come to be known for. Toyota entered the field with its legendary Land Cruiser, the stretched version of which I once owned one of, and which was an absolutely great 4x4. Indeed, their smaller Jeep sized vehicle, in my opinion, was the best in this vehicle class. Ford even entered the field with the original Bronco. Over time, even Suzuki would introduce its diminutive Samurai.So, what's happened here to this class of vehicles anyway?Recently, for reason that are hard to discern, I decided to start looking once again for a vehicle in this class. I know their defects. They are unstable compared to trucks, and they don't carry much either. But there is something about them. Last time I looked around there were a lot of options, and costs were reasonable for a used one. Well, not anymore.I don't know if its the urbanized SUV that's taken over everything. But whereas once a fellow looking for a Jeep like vehicle could look for Jeeps, Land Cruisers, Land Rovers, Samurais, Broncos and International Scouts, now you are down to Jeeps, the Toyota FJ Cruiser or the soon to be extinct Land Rover Defender. The Defender is insanely expensive, but the Jeep and Cruiser sure aren't cheap. Even used vehicles in this class now command a crazy price. I'm actually amazed I see so many around, given that most people don't use them for what they are designed for, and they're so darned expensive.
Oh no, Yeoman, not another blog.
Well, yes.
This one is dedicated to trucks, more specifically work trucks.
I've always had a thing for trucks. And by that I mean real trucks. Not the cards masquerading as trucks that are so common today.
I'm sure I picked this up as a kid.
My father always had a truck. Indeed, he always had a truck when most men of his occupation had cars, and perhaps a truck at home (most did). Most men who did what my father did, and at the time he did it they were all men, drove a car to work day by day. Not my father. He drove a truck.
I don't think my father ever actually owned a car of his own, although he co-owned there with my mother after they were married. Before my grandfather died in the late 1940s, and my father worked as a teenager at the company packing house, my father drove a packing house sedan that had been converted into a truck. It was a 1949 Chevrolet Sedan that had the bonnet removed from the truck, and a box installed.
If that doesn't sound like a truck, rest assured it is. The suspensions on late 40s and early 50s sedans were pretty truck like. I myself had a 1954 Chevrolet Sedan for many years, and I drove it fishing fairly routinely, just like you would a truck. I've owned two other cars since then, and I'd certainly not do that with them.
He had the 1949 prior to going into the Air Force and when he came back out, he bought the truck depicted above, the only new one he ever owned. He had that until some point in the 1960s. I'm told that I cried when he traded it in.
At that time, he acquired a 1965 Chevrolet Camper Special, which oddly enough was a half ton. I recall it well. A stick shift, light green truck with a white tonneau tarp, he had it for many years. I learned how to drive on it. Indeed, when I was old enough to test for my license at age 16, he had only just recently replaced it with a 1972 GMC. I can recall this as I had a hard time with the driving test as I took it on my parent's 1973 Mercury Comet, which I later owned. It was an automatic and I kept going to shift during the test, something which was emphasized by the fact that I was nervous.
I already owned a type of truck at that time, that being what the Army called a 1/4 ton utility truck or vehicle. I.e., a Jeep. Mine was a 1958 M38A1, my first vehicle.
The 58 M38A1 was ultimately replaced by a 1974 F100 4x4 pickup, a light half ton. It's amazing to think that the 74 was "old" when I got it, as couldn't have been more than six or so years old in reality. It was well-used however, and I only drove it for a year or so before I traded it in, myself, for a Dodge D150, the first great truck I ever owned.
As you can probably tell, I've owned a lot of trucks over the years. If you stick to just pickup trucks, I've owned seven of them, of which four were half tons and the remainder one tons (or heavier). All have been 4x4s. If you include Jeeps as little trucks, which I think they are, I've owned an additional three.
I'm likely done buying them. The last one I bought that I regularly drive, I've had now almost twenty years. Petroleum vehicles are coming to an end, and at age 60, I'm also coming to an end.
But I've never gotten over my love for real trucks, and hence this blog on them.