American Journey: On the Road with Henry Ford, Thomas Edison, and John Burroughs
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- €16.99
Publisher Description
The epic road trips—and surprising friendship—of John Burroughs, nineteenth-century naturalist, and Henry Ford and Thomas Edison, inventors of the modern age.
In 1913, an unlikely friendship blossomed between Henry Ford and famed naturalist John Burroughs. When their mutual interest in Ralph Waldo Emerson led them to set out in one of Ford’s Model Ts to explore the Transcendentalist’s New England, the trip would prove to be the first of many excursions that would take Ford and Burroughs, together with an enthusiastic Thomas Edison, across America.
Their road trips—increasingly ambitious in scope—transported members of the group to the 1915 Panama–Pacific International Exposition in San Francisco, the Adirondacks of New York, and the Green Mountains of Vermont, finally paving the way for a grand 1918 expedition through southern Appalachia. In many ways, their timing could not have been worse. With war raging in Europe and an influenza pandemic that had already claimed thousands of lives abroad beginning to plague the United States, it was an inopportune moment for travel. Nevertheless, each of the men who embarked on the 1918 journey would subsequently point to it as the most memorable vacation of their lives.
These travels profoundly influenced the way Ford, Edison, and Burroughs viewed the world, nudging their work in new directions through a transformative decade in American history. In American Journey, Wes Davis re-creates these landmark adventures, through which one of the great naturalists of the nineteenth century helped the men who invented the modern age reconnect with the natural world—and reimagine the world they were creating.
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In this rambling history, journalist Davis (The Ariadne Objective) views the push-pull between America's "modern bustle" and "dream of agrarian stability" through the unique lens of a series of road trips undertaken in the early 20th century. The centerpiece of the narrative is a 1918 automobile expedition through southern Appalachia led by car manufacturer Henry Ford, naturalist John Burroughs, and inventor Thomas Edison, but Davis also recounts separate excursions made by these friends and others to visit Ralph Waldo Emerson's home in Massachusetts, the 1915 Panama-Pacific International Exposition in San Francisco, and the Green Mountains of Vermont. The unlikely friendship between Burroughs and Ford developed after the former wrote an article complaining that the automobile "could only have a negative impact on the natural world and America's appreciation of its riches and wonders." He became a quick convert to the new technology, however, after receiving a Model T as a gift from Ford and realizing that cars had the potential "to make more of the natural world accessible to more people." Davis conveys the excitement and danger of early automobile travel and crafts memorable set pieces, including a rain-soaked camping adventure reminiscent of a Buster Keaton comedy, but his digressions sometimes stall the narrative's forward momentum. Still, this historical road trip is well worth taking. Photos.