(Editor's Note: This article is part 4 of a 4 part series. Part 1, 2, 3, & 4.) Essentially, we told the Bob Roddick story as it unfolded. We were presented first with a batch of black a... <BR><BR>To read the rest of this blog entry from The Jalopy Journal, click here.
Thanks Ryan for coordinating this effort and sharing this great story! I'm hooked and always looking for the next post.
Hey guys, check out the back tires on that roadster with the 21 stud flattie in it. Those look like military jeep tires to me. That's cool.
Looking at the pictures, I don't think the Marmon was at Ray's Brown. Check the left side of the sign and compare it with Browns sign. You probably already noticed this, but when researching it helps to have another set of eyes. This is really a find and these pictures are a warm story of the day. Sometimes the backgrounds are as fascinating as the subject of the picture. Great work by all concerned.
really fin work Ryan? Was bib is a club and did he have a special jacket that could be made for his family? Alb
Glossy paper? A book would be great. Perhaps Don Montgomery would help. Flatheadalb, I'd guess that Bob might have been a Sidewinder.
Very special thanks,to everyone that made this happen,it's what defines the "Traditions"we strive to relive.
Thank you Ryan for your hard work.....I can say you captured the Hot Rodding life of this man perfectly and that I can only have dreamed of being there.....remarkably for him to capture what he did on film makes me feel like I was there. Skip
that's what I'm thinking too... there are side curtain buttons on both cars in the same location, and Bob's has frame horns in the first picture with the trophy. Ryan, I really enjoyed going through these pictures - a few times I could smell the musty attic. It was almost a time warp in the other direction too... turn the clock forward fifty years and what influential pictures are people going to be influenced by?