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This photograph shows four members of the Chicago Club on the way to the Convention. John Binton at the wheel, 'Doc' Neff beside him. In the back seat are A.M. Ramsay, and Pete Powers.

The full caption reads 'Official car and a beauty it was- at the first Rotary Convention, held in Chicago, Aug 1910'. Little is known about Binton. Neff, a dentist, was Financial Secretary of the Chicago Club for 13 years. Ramsay was club President 1910/1911. Powers had been on the stage and was said to '"enliven our meetings with fun".

It is interesting to note that the car is a right hand drive car but perhaps all American cars (if it is an American car) were right hand drives when it was manufactured.

Teamsters in the United States began hauling farm products pulled by several pairs of horses.  These wagons had no driver's seat; instead the driver sat on the left rear horse so that he could keep his right arm free to lash the team.  Since he was sitting on the left,  naturally he wanted others to pass on the left so that he could look down and make sure that he kept clear of passing wagon's wheels.  Thus he kept to the right hand side of the road.   By the 1860s, right hand driving was followed in almost every state with the driver sitting on the right to ensure that their wagon did not run into a roadside ditch.  Automobile designers copied this with the driver placed on the curbside and this remained normal practice till 1915.  However, in 1908 Ford's Model T became the first popular car to feature a left hand position for the driver and by 1915, all the other car makers had followed Ford's lead.

 
Contributed by RGHF member PDG Ian Harley Campbell, D1230 UK 14 May 2008

This ongoing project is the work of RGHF historian Basil Lewis, first posted 7 April 2006 This section is maintained by RGHF webmaster Paul D. McLain. If you can help identify or supply more information about anything on this page, please contact us at www.historycomment.org

We acknowledge the assistance of DG 11/12 David Templin, ROTARY/One (RGHF Member), Neil Dahlmann of Rotary Club of Highland Park in District 6440, and Jack Selway, USA, with providing photos used in this section.

After you see the museum office, meet his partners and office workers at Harris Dodds & Brown. (A page of photographs of the actual office in the early 2000's)

Learn more about tours of Rotary International Headquarters

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