1903 Stanley Steamer
Flashback to one of our 2013 Participants...

This is a 1903 Stanley Model C Stick-Seat Runabout, serial number 582. It has two cylinders and six-and-a-half horsepower. This is a compound engine, which means that every stroke is a power stroke, as with a four-stroke V8 engine, for example. The bore is 2 ½ inches and the stroke is 3 ½ inches. This car has no transmission, and is always in gear; to back up, you have to stop the engine, and there’s a pedal to push to reverse the valves to make the engine run backwards. It’s the same principle as a locomotive. It carries 13 gallons of fuel and 20 gallons of water. This car will use one gallon of water per mile. Empty it weighs 750 lbs. These cars were built in Newton, Massachusetts by twin brothers Francis Edgar and Freeland Oscar Stanley. The Stanley brothers were very interested in speed and competition. In 1903 this car sold for $670, more than $16,000 today. The original owner was John P. Wahlem, and his address was 1 Castle Street, Wahlem, Massachusetts. The current owner found this car in Chickasha, Oklahoma in 2001 in unrestored condition.





