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- "...And My Good Ford Has Brought All My Delight," Ford Motor Company, circa 1915 - It's not usual for an advertisement to credit a car for feelings of freedom, pride, or even youth. But this postcard from 1915 goes further, with the owner crediting his Ford Model T for "all my delight."

- circa 1915
- Collections - Artifact
"...And My Good Ford Has Brought All My Delight," Ford Motor Company, circa 1915
It's not usual for an advertisement to credit a car for feelings of freedom, pride, or even youth. But this postcard from 1915 goes further, with the owner crediting his Ford Model T for "all my delight."
- Ford Model T Joke Postcard, circa 1915 - People loved the Ford Model T. It took you where you wanted to go, was easy to operate, parts were cheap, and you could fix it yourself. Thousands of jokes celebrated the Model T's sturdiness and reliability -- and poked fun at its homeliness and rattles. These jokes always amused Henry Ford. He often said that every Ford joke sold a car.

- circa 1915
- Collections - Artifact
Ford Model T Joke Postcard, circa 1915
People loved the Ford Model T. It took you where you wanted to go, was easy to operate, parts were cheap, and you could fix it yourself. Thousands of jokes celebrated the Model T's sturdiness and reliability -- and poked fun at its homeliness and rattles. These jokes always amused Henry Ford. He often said that every Ford joke sold a car.
- Ford Model T Cartoon, circa 1915, "Every Dog Has His Day, but the Man Who Owns a Ford is Always Popular" - Humorous postcards depicting cartoons were popular in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries and focused on the size, price, or idiosyncrasies of Ford cars. Cartoons with humor about Ford and the Model T were most common from 1914 to 1920, when production and sales rose each year.

- circa 1915
- Collections - Artifact
Ford Model T Cartoon, circa 1915, "Every Dog Has His Day, but the Man Who Owns a Ford is Always Popular"
Humorous postcards depicting cartoons were popular in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries and focused on the size, price, or idiosyncrasies of Ford cars. Cartoons with humor about Ford and the Model T were most common from 1914 to 1920, when production and sales rose each year.
- Ford Model T Joke Postcard, circa 1915 - People loved the Ford Model T. It took you where you wanted to go, was easy to operate, parts were cheap, and you could fix it yourself. Thousands of jokes celebrated the Model T's sturdiness and reliability -- and poked fun at its homeliness and rattles. These jokes always amused Henry Ford. He often said that every Ford joke sold a car.

- circa 1915
- Collections - Artifact
Ford Model T Joke Postcard, circa 1915
People loved the Ford Model T. It took you where you wanted to go, was easy to operate, parts were cheap, and you could fix it yourself. Thousands of jokes celebrated the Model T's sturdiness and reliability -- and poked fun at its homeliness and rattles. These jokes always amused Henry Ford. He often said that every Ford joke sold a car.
- Ford Model T Joke Postcard, circa 1915 - People loved the Ford Model T. It took you where you wanted to go, was easy to operate, parts were cheap, and you could fix it yourself. Thousands of jokes celebrated the Model T's sturdiness and reliability -- and poked fun at its homeliness and rattles. These jokes always amused Henry Ford. He often said that every Ford joke sold a car.

- circa 1915
- Collections - Artifact
Ford Model T Joke Postcard, circa 1915
People loved the Ford Model T. It took you where you wanted to go, was easy to operate, parts were cheap, and you could fix it yourself. Thousands of jokes celebrated the Model T's sturdiness and reliability -- and poked fun at its homeliness and rattles. These jokes always amused Henry Ford. He often said that every Ford joke sold a car.