Saturday, December 15, 2018

The first automobile ever spotted in Salt Lake City: 1899

                    Illustration from the Salt Lake Herald newspaper of April 13, 1899.


THE very first automobile was spotted in Salt Lake City on April 12, 1899.
"First horseless carriage seen on Salt Lake Streets" was an April 13, 1899 headline in the Salt Lake Herald newspaper.
That first machine of its kind in Salt Lake was a Winton Motor Carriage and sold for $1,500. (That equals more than $37,000 in 2018 dollar values.)
The newspaper report stated that the auto attracted "much attention" as it traveled along Main Street, State Street and West Temple Street. It seemed to especially delight young boys in town, who lined up along the road to watch it.
The Salt Lake Hardware Company bought the horseless carriage and brought it to Salt Lake from Cleveland, Ohio, with the help of George E. Aris, son of a well-known Utah miner.
By 1906, autos were much more common along Salt Lake City streets. However, traffic control was an increasing concerns, as well as "fast driving," the earliest term for speeding.

(-Originally published in the Deseret News on Dec. 15, 2018.)