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Matthew Farfan
Apart
from Henry Seth Taylor, who built Canada's first steam-powered horseless
carriage in 1867, another Eastern Townships man who deserves mention
as an early carmaker is George Foote Foss. Born in 1876, Foss was
a prosperous mechanic, blacksmith, and bicycle repairman from Sherbrooke.
Like Taylor before him, he was also an ingenious tinkerer. In 1897,
he built and demonstrated Canada's first gasoline-powered automobile.
MODEL TRAINS
AND MOTOR BOATS
When he wasn't working on a piece of machinery or repairing a bicycle
for a customer, Foss passed his time building model train locomotives
from scratch. After casting all of the intricate brass and aluminum
parts himself, he would enjoy the models for a while. Then he would
get bored with them and turn to some other project, like building
an electric motor (one of the first outboard motors) for his boat
or an engine for his steam-powered yacht.
George Foote Foss.
(Photo: Recollections of Sherbrooke)
TRIP TO BOSTON
It was in 1896, during a trip to Boston to buy a lathe for his expanding
machine shop, that Foss saw his first automobiles. These cars, electrically-driven
broughams, were rented out at the Cyclorama building for $4.00 an
hour. Foss gladly paid the fee. Unfortunately, after a ride of only
half an hour, the batteries died. As Foss, himself, put it in his
memoir (written in 1954), "I experienced the same old trouble
I had with my electric boat." Returning to Sherbrooke, Foss
decided to build an automobile. He hoped that his would be better:
it would run on gasoline and would not depend on a battery that
needed constant recharging.
Gas-powered
cars had been known for several years by the time Foss started work
on his. German Karl Benz had manufactured a three-wheeled model
in 1885. The following year, Gottlieb Daimler had produced a four-wheeled
version. The first gas-powered car in the United States was produced
in 1893 by brothers Charles and Frank Duryea, bicycle makers by
trade. The Duryeas were the first in North America to sell their
cars, and by 1896, they had built thirteen. The days of mass-production,
however, were still a long way off, and Henry Ford had yet to make
his mark.
CANADA'S
FIRST GAS-POWERED CAR
Back in Sherbrooke, George Foote Foss worked diligently throughout
the winter. The following spring, he completed his automobile, the
first of its kind to be built in Canada. A four-horsepower single-cylinder
car that could travel up to 15 m.p.h.
(24 km per hour) and climb any of Sherbrooke's steep hills, the
"Fossmobile," as it was later dubbed, was different from
what had been produced to that point.
The "Fossmobile" going up a steep Sherbrooke
grade. (Photo: Recollections of Sherbrooke)
While other designers had placed their engines beneath the seat,
Foss's was housed at the front of the car. This made maintenance
much easier and produced considerably less upward vibration through
the seat. The gears were also mounted directly on the steering column,
another innovation that was far ahead of its time. According to
the modest Foss, the little car "worked fine," and was
"a great convenience in my business."
MISSED OPPORTUNITIES
Foss never tried to market or mass-produce his car. In fact, he
turned down an offer from William Farwell, president of the Eastern
Townships Bank, who offered to finance a production line. Foss told
Farwell that he would "think about it." Apparently he
did not, which, he later admitted, was his "first big mistake."
In 1900, Foss made what would prove to be another mistake. He met
Henry Ford who offered him a chance to invest in a new company he
was trying to establish. Foss turned him down, as well. There was
"something about him," he later wrote, that led Foss to
believe that Ford would be "hard to get along with." He
also felt, at the time, that his own car was superior to Ford's.
Shortly after their encounter, Ford founded the Ford Motor Company.
In Sherbrooke,
Foss, who later became an automobile salesman, had the opportunity
to drive a Ford for himself. As a dealer, he got to test drive all
the various models that came onto the market. The Ford, he admitted,
was the "most reliable and satisfactory little car" to
be found anywhere at that time. In 1908, Henry Ford made history
when he launched his revolutionary Model T.
Back in Sherbrooke,
Foss sold his car for $75. He never built another one. He died in
1968.
Reference:
George Foote Foss, Recollections of Sherbrooke - The True Story
of a Small Town Boy, 1954.
The following is an excerpt from the Stanstead Journal, June 9, 1904:
“Mr. George Foss of Sherbrooke has been the guest of Mr. A. C. Cowles during the past few days.
Mr. Foss arrived at Derby Line, Saturday, coming through from Boston, with an automobile. He
accomplished the journey without mishap until he reached the Sivright place when the “auto”
was disabled by the breaking of one [of] the axels.”
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