# 2262 - 1987 17.5c Transportation Series: Race Car, 1911
US #2262 – from the Transportation Series

On November 28, 1895, the Chicago Times-Herald Race was held between six cars.

Months earlier, on July 10, 1895, the Chicago Times-Herald first announced that they would hold a race through the city. A prize of $5,000 ($688,000 in today’s wages) was up for grabs. The paper had planned the race as a way to accelerate the still-young automotive industry in America. America’s first automobiles were produced just two years earlier, and the paper wasn’t even sure what to call them. They ultimately decided on “Moto-Cycle.”

The original route for the race led from Chicago to Milwaukee, but they discovered the roads selected would be too difficult for cars to travel. Instead they settled on a 54-mile route from Chicago to Evanston and back. The finish line would be at the Palace of Fine Arts from the 1893 Columbian Exposition (today’s Chicago Museum of Science and History).

1995 32c Antique Automobiles: 1893 Duryea
US #3019 – from the Antique Autos set

The race was planned to be held on November 2, 1895, but not many cars showed up. It was then rescheduled. In all, 83 cars were initially entered into the race. However, most of the drivers didn’t have their cars done in time or were unable to make the trip to Chicago. An early favorite, Elwood Haynes, was unable to make the trip when his car was damaged on the way there. Police stopped him and another driver when they made their way into Chicago. The police insisted that they use horses to pull their cars, because they didn’t have the right to drive their vehicles on the city’s streets. This forced the race to again be postponed. The paper’s editors then address city leaders and convinced them to get an ordinance passed giving them the right to drive on the streets. With that obstacle cleared, they set the date of the race for Thanksgiving Day, November 28.

# 3546 - 2001 34c Thanksgiving
US #3546 was the first US Holiday Celebrations stamp to honor Thanksgiving.

The day of the race was snowy with 38-degree temperatures. A German car made by Karl Benz was the first to arrive. There were two other Benz cars that arrived and participated in the race. There was also Charles Duryea and his motorized wagon as well as two other drivers with their two-wheeled vehicles. Another car that arrived that day was electric, but its battery died from the cold weather.

The race began at 8:55 that morning and shortly after one of Benz’s cars hit a horse and had to leave the race. Duryea took an early lead, but his left front wheel got stuck and broke off the steering arm. He quickly stopped at a blacksmith shop and got a replacement arm and continued on the race. Though one of the Benz cars took the lead during this time, Duryea caught up and regained the lead on the return trip from Evanston.

# 4904494 - 1995 Antique Auto-1893 Duryea Proofcard
Item #4904494 – First Day Postal Card

Then along the way two of Duryea’s cylinders stopped firing. He stopped for about 55 minutes to repair his car, and was sure he had lost the race. But as he drove through unpacked snow, he realized all the other racers were still behind him. Duryea stopped for gas and a passing train, but still managed to cross the finish line first at 7:18 p.m. Only one other car managed to cross the finish line, the Mueller Benz. But its driver, Mr. Mueller, had passed out from exhaustion and someone else drove it across the finish line.

Stories of the race were published in newspapers across the country. Soon many speculated that these vehicles, which could travel even in harsh weather, would soon replace horse-drawn vehicles. Some credit this race with speeding up the development of the automobile in America by at least five years.

Click here for more Transportation stamps.

Click here for an article about the race.

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6 Comments

  1. This article was not only informative but hilarious. If they made a movie out of this say 75 years ago it would have starred the Keystone cops, Laurel and Hardy, and the 3 Stooges. Thank you Mystic, you have made my day and as you can see it has just started

  2. Great story! I wonder if the winner of the race Mueller Benz…a German name for sure, had anything to do with the Mercedes Benz automobile that is today made in Stuttgart, Germany?

    1. That was the name of the car. In 1892 Hieronymus imported a Benz automobile from Germany and, together with his sons, began refining it with such features as a reverse gear, water-cooled radiator, newly-designed spark plugs, and a make-and-break distributor – all leading to patents. His automobile innovations were such that his “Mueller-Benz” won the first unofficial road race in the nation in 1895 and finished 2nd in the the first official race held a few weeks later in Chicago.

  3. Picturesque narration of events made the article very fascinating. I would like to add that first woman to circumnavigate the world by automobile was German car racer Clara Eleonore Stinnes (January 21, 1901 —September 07, 1990 ). She was accompanied by Swedish cinematographer Carl Axel Soderstom. She traveled 47,000 kms by car . Journey started on May 25, 1927 and she returned to Berlin on June 24, 1929. America saluted her spirit of adventure, when she arrived in Washington D C and was welcomed by President Herbert Hoover then .

  4. Your first responder, Edward Saramak, got it right. What a novel and hillarious movie this would have made. The frustration when your car broke down, the enthusiasm of the crowd, the joy of the winner zooming across the finish line at 5 mph. What a nice memory you have conjured up. Also enjoyed the extra newspaper artilce you folks supplied. History unfolded once again.

  • Be nice and remember, we are all here to collect stamps!

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