The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

In 1916, scooters invaded downtown Atlanta

- By Pete Corson pcorson@ajc.com

Today’s AJC Deja News comes to you from the Saturday, Sept. 23, 1916, edition of The Atlanta Constituti­on.

LOOK OUT PEOP L E! STRANGE NEW STEED COMES TO ATLANTA

More than a century ago, motorized scooters made their debut on Peachtree Street, and the Atlanta Constituti­on was there to record the mayhem.

That’s right. Today’s debate over regulating services such as Bird and Lime is nothing new. Similar vehicles were weaving through traffic while the rest of the globe was fighting its first world war, and pedestrian­s at that time reacted with alarm and desire.

A 1916 front-page report describes the “sensationa­l” first sightings of a new fad: the Autoped, which the reporter describes as a “man-toting, animated lawn mower.”

Autoped motor scooters were made from 1915-19 by the Autoped Co. based in Long Island City, N.Y. (a German company made them for two years after that). The gas-powered version was more pop- ular, but the company also made a version powered by a battery. In its heyday, postal carriers and traffic cops used the vehicles in some cities.

The At l anta Cons t itution article describes downtown denizens’ first encounter with the scooter: “About the first that natives of these parts knew of the presence of this snorting, smoke-emit- ting roller skate was when G.C. Dugas, of the Packard agency, owner of the mechanical brute, Friday sailed like a young cyclone into the Ansley hotel lobby, fetched up at the cigar counter, bought a stogie and sputtered out again before anybody had time to realize what was happening.”

“During the rest of the day folks along Peachtree frequently stopped and con- sidered whether to believe their own eyes as they saw Mr. Dugas steering his strange steed through the labyrinth of traffic.”

Despite the article’s mention of Peachtree Street, the Hotel Ansley was one block over on the corner of Williams and Forsyth streets, between today’s Rialto Center and Atlanta-Ful- ton Central Library. The Ansley Hotel was renamed the Dinkler Plaza Hotel and made headlines twice in the early 1960s: in 1961, when its owner Carling Dinkler fell to his death from the building; and in 1964, when it hosted a celebrator­y dinner for Martin Luther King Jr. for his Nobel Peace Prize. The building was demolished in 1972.

Back in 1916, the Consti- tution reporter describes the growing popularity of motorized scooters and how Mr. Dugas’ stogie excursion inspired a dozen new orders.

Signing off like a sales pitch, the reporter advises readers that they too can “just step aboard, give the throttle a twist and you are on your way at twenty-five miles an hour.”

 ?? LIBRARY OF CONGRESS ?? Postmen pose on motorized Autoped scooters circa 1915. The gas-powered version was more popular, but a battery-powered version was sold too.
LIBRARY OF CONGRESS Postmen pose on motorized Autoped scooters circa 1915. The gas-powered version was more popular, but a battery-powered version was sold too.

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