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When they entered California, Ramsey and her passengers marveled at the sugar pines and redwoods, of which “None of us had ever seen the like.” The same could be said for the media’s reaction upon their arrival. “PRETTY WOMEN MOTORISTS ARRIVE AFTER TRIP ACROSS THE CONTINENT” the San Francisco Chronicle proclaimed. “The car for a lady to drive,” self-congratulated the Maxwell-Briscoe Company. It was August 7, 1909, and they had made it. In total, the trip had taken 59 days and covered 3,800 miles.
After her brief bout with fame, Ramsey returned to New Jersey by train, where she resumed a relatively low-key profile raising two children. She continued her cross-country drives, losing count after her thirtieth. In 1960, the Automobile Manufacturers Association named her their “First Lady of Automotive Travel” for her trek across a “trackless land.” The next year Ramsey published Veil, Duster, and Tire Iron, a chronicle of the 1909 trip. She later drove five of the six passes of the Swiss Alps, giving up the last under doctor’s orders regarding her pacemaker. Ramsey died in 1983. The achievements of the Maxwell-Briscoe Company were shorter-lived; Chrysler absorbed the company in 1926.
In 1999, when Alaska Airlines Magazine printed an article about the 90th anniversary of Ramsey’s trip, the story inspired car buff Richard Anderson and Emily, his daughter. On June 9, 2009, Anderson, a 37-year-old, Seattle-based event manager and new mother, will commemorate the drive’s centennial by making her own cross-country trip in a 1909 Maxwell rebuilt by her father.
Learning to drive the Maxwell has been challenging at times. Anderson often misses second gear and struggles with the clutch and brake, which use the same pedal, and she has been known to stall mid-intersection. But she calls her challenges “easy, when I consider what [Alice Ramsey] had to face.” There is one trial that, if accomplished, might impress even Ramsey: wearing period garb, Anderson and co-pilot Christie Catania will begin their trip by navigating through Manhattan on a weekday morning during rush hour!
Richard Anderson has already had to explain himself and his seatbelt-free car to one concerned police officer during a practice drive. Whether the car will also face flack for its lack of blinkers (they will use hand signals to turn) or slow pace (the Maxwell still maxes out near 40 mph) remains to be seen. But if the precedent set by Ramsey holds, there will be no problem with the authorities: throughout her entire driving career, she received just one ticket. She had made an illegal U-turn—though not, of course, on her famed cross-country trip—in 1909, Ramsey forged only straight ahead.


Comments
What a great story! i will be following their trek across country.
Posted by Esther Kligman-Frey on June 7,2009 | 04:10PM
Good luck to all of the participants. This summer I will be venturing out on the Lincoln Highway and hope to catch site of the historic recreation of Alice Ramsey's trip.
Posted by Chris Hutter on June 7,2009 | 04:22PM
Totally inspiring! What a great read. This is yet another reason to love Smithsonian magazine! I will share this with other friends.
Posted by Iris Marshall on June 9,2009 | 03:56PM
By July, Emily will be the most experienced Maxwell driver in the entire world. I am anxious to hear more!! Bill
Posted by Bill McDonald on June 9,2009 | 04:37PM
An Inspiring story. I remember my Dad talking about his first car, a 1908 Maxwell purchased in Blufton Ind.
Posted by Don Eversole on June 10,2009 | 11:53AM
......and I thought the trip from Long Island to Cape Cod was a treck! We woman have always been remarkable!
Posted by Ruth Wickline on June 10,2009 | 02:04PM
Their living my dream!
Posted by Sally on June 11,2009 | 08:23AM
I know someone on this year's drive and we're all going with her in spirit. She, too, is a tough lady.
Posted by Kathy Armstrong on June 12,2009 | 05:56AM
Everyone can follow the trip through the blogs on aliceramsey.org, It has already been an adventure and well worth the daily read.My family is leaving tommorrow to see the trip in person around North Indiana and Chicago area, something I recommend to all - especially families with daughters!!
Posted by sam barnett on June 13,2009 | 06:46AM
I saw the cars in Park City, Ut on the 27th & 28th of June. Wow! I love those old wonderful cars. It was of the best birthday presents I could have asked for. Thank you for teaching me something that I did not know about such a wonderful woman that had such love of adventure and unknowingly inspired both women and men.
Posted by Christopher Olsen on July 1,2009 | 12:00PM