Pedal cars have been around nearly as long as the automobile.
Early pedal cars, like the one made by the Kirk—Latty Manufacturing Company, reflected the design of their larger gasoline driven counterparts: they often didn't come with lights and, before the self starter engine became standard, they had cranks on the front. This Kirk-Latty's lights seem to have been added to the car at a later date (and they look like they are a product of the 1930s). There is no crank, it seems likely the car was manufactured before in the late 1910s or early 1920s.
Almost as soon as the first automobile took to the roads, American children played with car toys, read car books, and even learned how combustion engines worked. Making cars a part of kids’ lives—even kids whose families didn’t own cars—helped make automobile ownership appealing to future generations of car buyers. Because much of this material targeted boys, it helped shape a society in which women were far less likely to own and drive a car.
We now have a great selection of metal pedal cars at our online shop in all shapes and sizes including some that aren't even cars (pedal tractors, pedal planes and more)
Friday, 29 December 2006
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