The photo is so ordinary, it's shocking.
A woman in a long dress stands beside her car—not at a gas pump, but in her own garage. She's not cranking a stubborn engine. She's not smelling like petrol.
She's plugging it in.Because in 1912, electric cars weren't the future.
They were already here.
The Golden Age of EVs (That You Never Heard About)
At the turn of the century, electric cars dominated the roads. They were quiet.They didn't spew smoke.
They didn't require hand-cranking like gas cars (which was dangerous—broken arms were common).
Women loved them. Cities preferred them. Even Thomas Edison swore they were the next big thing.
So… what happened?
The Three Death Blows to Electric Cars
Texas Struck Oil (A Lot of It). Gas became dirt cheap overnight. Meanwhile, electricity was still a luxury in rural areas.
Henry Ford's Assembly Line
The Model T rolled out in 1908 for half the price of an electric car. Suddenly, gas was affordable—and EVs were "rich people toys."
The Road Trip Boom
America fell in love with long-distance driving. Electric cars? They maxed out at 40 miles per charge. By 1935, electric cars were gone.
The Irony? We Just Caught Up to 1912.
Today's EVs boast:
-
- "No emissions!" (Like 1912.)
- "No noise pollution!" (Like 1912.)
- "Convenient home charging!" (Like 1912.)
We didn't invent the future. We rediscovered it.
Final Thought
That woman in the garage? She was a century ahead of her time. And we spent 100 years pretending gas was progress.