FACTOID # 87: 22% of American women aged 20 gave birth while in their teens. In Switzerland and Japan, only 2% did so.
 
 Home   Encyclopedia   Statistics   Countries A-Z   Flags   Maps   Education   Forum   FAQ   About 
 
WHAT'S NEW
RECENT ARTICLES
More Recent Articles »
 

FACTS & STATISTICS    Simple view

  1. Select countries to view: (hold down Control key and click to select several)

     

     

    Compare:

     

     

  1. Select fact or statistic: (* = graphable)

     

     

     

  2. (OPTIONAL) Compare to statistic: (both need to be graphable)

     

     

     

  3. View result as:

     

       
(OR) SEARCH ALL encyclopedia, stats & forums:   

Encyclopedia > Horatio Nelson Jackson

Horatio Nelson Jackson (1872 - January 14, 1955) was a physician who had practiced for a few years in the towns of Brattleboro, Vermont and Burlington, Vermont, who became the first person to drive an automobile, The Vermont, across the United States. He married Bertha Richardson Wells in 1899, the daughter of one of the richest men in Vermont, the founder of Payne's Celery Compound, a popular cure-all that was twenty percent grain alcohol. Jackson was a 31-year-old auto enthusiast who differed with the then-prevailing wisdom that the automobile was a passing fad and the plaything of rich men. While in San Francisco's University Club as a guest on May 18, 1903, he agreed to a $50 wager to prove that a car could be driven across the country. He accepted even though he did not own a car, had practically no experience driving, and had no maps to follow. Jackson and his wife planned to return to their Burlington, Vermont home in a few days anyway and both had been taking automobile driving lessons while in San Francisco. She returned home by train, allowing him to take his adventure by automobile.


Jackson convinced a young mechanic and chauffeur, Sewall K. Crocker, to serve as his travel companion, mechanic, and backup driver. Crocker suggested that Doctor Jackson buy a Winton Motor Carriage Company car. He bought a slightly used Winton, which he named The Vermont, after his home state, bid his wife goodbye (she took the train to Vermont to meet him when he arrived), and left San Francisco on May 23, carrying coats, suits, canvas protective suits, sleeping bags, blankets, canteens, a water bag, an axe, a shovel, a telescope, tools, spare parts, a block and tackle and cans for extra gasoline and oil, a camera, a rifle, a shotgun and pistols.


Heeding the failed attempt by automobile pioneer Alexander Winton (founder of the Winton Motor Carriage Company) to cross the Southwestern desert, Jackson decided to take a more northerly route. A route through the Sacramento Valley and along the Oregon Trail also allowed them to avoid the higher passes in the Rocky Mountains.


The car was transported by ferry from San Francisco to Oakland and points eastward. But only fifteen miles into the journey, the car blew a tire. Jackson and Crocker replaced it with the only spare they had, in fact, the only right-sized spare tire they could find in all of San Francisco.


The second night of their journey, they replaced the side lanterns, having discovered on the first night that they were too dim. They stopped early in Sacramento to accomplish this. The duo was assisted in Sacramento by bicyclists who offered them road maps. Jackson was unable to buy a new tire, but purchased some used inner tubes.

Image:HoratioJacksonNelson.jpeg
Jackson on 1903 cross-country drive

Going northwards out of Sacramento, the noise of the car covered the fact that the duo's cooking gear was falling off. They were also given a 108-mile wrong turn when the directions they were given by a woman proved to be a lie so that she could send them to the spot where her family could see an automobile.


The rough trek towards Oregon required them to haul the car across deep streams with the block and tackle. Somewhere along this route, Jackson lost his glasses. And they were forced to pay $4 by an enterprising entrepreneur who required the toll before allowing them to cross his property. When their tires blew out they were required to wind rope around the wheels. Jackson did manage to find a telegraph office and wired back to San Francisco for replacement tires to be transported to them along the journey.


Reaching Alturas, California, Jackson and Crocker stopped to wait for the tires. They offered locals rides in the car in exchange for a "wild west show". When the tires failed to materialize, however, they continued on after a three-day wait.


On June 6, the car broke down, and they had to be towed to a nearby ranch by a cowboy. Crocker made repairs, but a fuel leak caused them to lose all of their available gasoline, and Jackson rented a bicycle to travel 25 miles to Burns, Oregon for fuel. After suffering a flat tire on the bicycle, he returned with fuel, and they returned to Burns to fill up.


On June 9, outside of Vale, Oregon, the The Vermont ran out of oil. Jackson walked back to the last town to get oil, only to discover eventually that they had been stopped only a short distance outside of Vale. The next day they arrived in Ontario, Oregon, where supplies waited for them.


Somewhere near Caldwell, Idaho, Jackson and Crocker obtained a bulldog named Bud. Newspapers at the time gave a variety of stories of how he was acquired including that he was stolen. In a letter to his wife Nelson says a man sold him the dog for $15. It turned out that the dusty alkali flats the travelers would encounter would bother Bud's eyes so much, that Jackson eventually put goggles over the dog's eyes. (The Winton had neither a roof nor windshield.) At one point, Bud drank bad water and became ill, but survived.


 Bud


At this point, the trio became celebrities. The press came out at every stop to take their picture and conduct interviews. At Mountain Home, Idaho, citizens warned them that the Oregon Trail was not good further east, so Jackson and Crocker veered off their original course along the southern edge of the Sawtooth Mountains. At Hailey, Idaho, Crocker wired the Winton Company for more parts.


On June 16, somewhere in Idaho, Jackson's coat, containing most of the travelers' money, fell off and was not missed. At their next stop, Jackson had to wire his wife to send them money to Cheyenne, Wyoming. Before reaching Cheyenne, however, the car's wheel bearings gave out, and Crocker had to talk a farmer into letting them have the wheel bearings of his mowing machine.


The travelers eventually reached Omaha, Nebraska on July 12. From there on, they were able to use a few paved roads, and their trip was much easier. They arrived in New York City on July 26, 1903, almost two months after they left San Francisco.


Horatio Nelson Jackson eventually settled in Burlington, Vermont with his wife Bertha and Bud the bulldog. In Burlington he met President Theodore Roosevelt. When World War I broke out, Jackson was considered too old, but he contacted Roosevelt, and was commissioned an officer. Following the war, he became one of the founders of the American Legion, and twice ran for Governor of Vermont. He owned the Burlington Daily News and radio station WCAX.


Documentary film maker Ken Burns has produced a film, Horatio's Drive, for PBS. The film is based on the book of the same name by Dayton Duncan.


External link

  • Travels With Horatio (http://www.letmeshowyouvermont.com/roadtrip.htm)

  Results from FactBites:
 
Ken Burns . Horatio's Drive | PBS (695 words)
Throughout it all, Jackson's indomitable spirit and sheer enthusiasm was as indispensable as the fuel for his car.
Using a treasure trove of photographs Jackson took along the way, and relying on the previously unpublished letters he wrote to his wife from the road (read masterfully by Hanks), the film puts the viewer in the front seat of the Vermont and rides across the continent with Jackson, Crocker and Bud.
Background on the occupants of the car: Dr. Horatio Nelson Jackson; Sewall Crocker, his mechanic and co-driver; and Bud, the bulldog Jackson purchased during the trip.
  More results at FactBites »


 

COMMENTARY     


Share your thoughts, questions and commentary here
Your name
Your comments
Please enter the 5-letter protection code

Want to know more?
Search encyclopedia, statistics and forums:

 


Lesson Plans | Student Area | Student FAQ | Reviews | Press Releases |  Feeds | Contact
The Wikipedia article included on this page is licensed under the GFDL.
Images may be subject to relevant owners' copyright.
All other elements are (c) copyright NationMaster.com 2003-5. All Rights Reserved.
Usage implies agreement with terms.