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Motorist Makes Portland-to-Klamath Falls Trip in 1916

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on

The first automobile to make the trip from Portland to Klamath Falls, Ore., faced three days of rough and muddy roads more suited for horse-drawn stage coaches.  The Klamath Falls Evening Herald reported on April 22, 1916, that Harry Telford was the driver of the Michigan-built Saxon motorcar.
Telford told the Evening Herald the car covered 465 miles, averaged 19 miles a gallon and burned a quart of cylinder oil every 78 miles.  Today’s roads have cut the distance to 280 miles, about a five-hour drive.
Telford averaged 25 mph on good roads between Portland and Eugene, but encountered a muddy landslide south of Eugene.
The second day he faced muddy roads between Comstock and Glendale.  After a short stop in Ashland, he drove over the Siskiyous without trouble, and spent the night in Hornbrook, Calif.
He left Hornbrook at 10 a.m. the next day, taking the 62-mile Klamath River stage route up the Klamath River, arriving in Klamath Falls at 3 p.m. He said the road was in fair shape with some rough spots and mud holes.
The direct Ashland-to-Klamath Falls highway, State Route 66, wasn’t built until three years later, basically following the Applegate Trail.
Source: "Saxon Makes First Trip Through From Portland." The Evening Herald 22 Apr. 1916 [Klamath Falls, Ore.] : 1. Print.

Episode
2945
Date
Author
Kernan Turner