The King Midget story reminds us what a middle-class nation the U.S. was
in the '50s. Claud Dry and Dale Orcutt, of Athens, Ohio, buddies from
the Civil Air Patrol, wanted to sell bare-boned utility car that anybody
could afford, unlike that bloody elitist peacenik Henry Ford with his
fancy Model T. King Midget's cars made the Model T look like a Bugatti
Royale. In the late 1940s, they began offering the single-seat Model I
as a home-built, $500 kit, containing the frame, axles and sheetmetal
patterns, so that the body panels could be fabricated by local
tradesmen. Any single-cylinder engine would power it. The result was a
truly crap-tastic little vehicle, the four-wheel equivalent to those
Briggs-and-Stratton powered minibikes. Amazingly, Midget Motors
continued to develop and sell mini-cars until the late 1960s. The crown
jewel was the Model III, introduced in 1957, a little folded-steel
crackerbox powered by a 9-hp motor. Government safety standards, at long
last, put the King Midget out of our misery.
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