Visible Gas Pump, Birch Tree, Missouri, 1979
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Artifact Overview
In the mid-1970s, John Margolies began to assemble a visual record of America's built roadside landscape. Over the following three decades, he traveled thousands of miles to photograph the overlooked and often quickly vanishing structures that had grown out of American automobile culture and main street commerce. His photographs of hotels, motels, diners, service stations, drive-ins and attractions celebrate and capture a unique chapter of American history.
Artifact Details
Artifact
Slide (Photograph)
Subject Date
1979
Creators
Collection Title
Location
By Request in the Benson Ford Research Center
Object ID
2013.150.182
Credit
From the Collections of The Henry Ford.
Technique
Chromogenic processes
Color
Multicolored
Dimensions
Height: 2 in
Width: 2 in
Inscriptions
at top on slide mount:
Visible Pump / Birch Tree, MO / @1979
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Related Content
SetGas Stations
- 25 Artifacts
After falling from favor in the mid-1930s due to their cost and complexity, canopy roofs reappeared over American gas stations three decades later. The transition to self-service pumps required that customers be protected from inclement weather. The mushroom-style canopies at this Mobil station also provided plenty of light for motorists filling up their cars at night.