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  1. 11 wrz 2023 · Normally, people back then didn’t take pictures of “mundane” subjects like gas stations and parked cars. It’s almost as if one of us went back in time and took all these terrific photos. What was formerly mundane becomes exotic and beautiful!

  2. 5 cze 2016 · In the 1930s, it was unheard of to pump your own gas. Filling station attendants, also known as gas jockeys, would primarily pump gas, clean windshields, and check the oil levels in vehicles. 2. Working lighthouses

  3. 28 lut 2024 · Gas prices were quite stable and inexpensive during these two decades, ranging from $0.30 to $0.36 per gallon through the 1960s, and $0.57 to $0.67 per gallon through the 1970s. Prices started rising more rapidly at the end of the 1970s leading into the 1980s.

  4. 28 maj 2024 · By the age of 6, I tracked our road trips on free filling station road maps and knew the next crossroads. By the age of 12, I updated a daily trip diary, recording the cost of a gallon of gas, how much it totalled, and any extra road costs.

  5. 22 maj 2023 · On its first day, the station sold 30 US gallons (110 L) of gasoline at 27 cents per gallon (7 cents per liter). This was also the first architect-designed station and the first to distribute free road maps.

  6. According to the U.S. Department of Energy, the national average for the cost of gasoline remained steady for the first three years of the 1950s at $0.27 per gallon. That low price might sound practically idyllic, but the average household income at the time was $3,300 per year.

  7. 3 dni temu · Lists average prices that rural people paid for certain Ford, Chevrolet, Plymouth and Buick cars; gas price per gallon, motor oil, tires, inner tubes and spark plugs. The 1951 Ford Mercury cost $2,189 new

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