In the 1930’s my paternal grandfather owned a syrup mill that employed four. He had several mules to work cotton and other mules to work sugar cane. He also owned a car because he butchered once a week and used the car to deliver meat before it spoiled. In that neighborhood he was the exception rather than the rule.JV Puleo wrote:I suppose it depends on what we think of as average which makes it a very hard question to answer. Certainly the rural and urban poor of 1920 had a much lower standard of living than virtually any "poor" people in America today and they wouldn't have had automobiles. There were also many more of them. Probably most of what we would think of as the "middle class" did have cars by 1920 although in purchasing power they would be closer to the "upper middle class" today. The well-to-do who wanted to own automobiles probably all had them by 1910 but in most cases the cars they bought implied the need of servants to operate them. At that level car ownership was purely a matter of desire rather than need or aspiration.
An example: One of my grandfathers never owned a car. He was a successful small businessman, owning considerable property in the Providence area. But, it was an urban environment and the street car and train ran everywhere he wanted to go. He died in 1936.
My other grandfather was a postman. He owned his own home, which was unusual, but had very little extra money. He finally bought a used Chevrolet around 1930 and owned only one other car, another used Chevy. It was put up on blocks in the back yard when the war began and eventually one of my uncles drove it the Carolinas where he was stationed. It was left behind when my uncle went overseas. My grandfather died in 1941 and those were the only two cars he owned. Both men would have fallen into the "average" category today but both lived in urban environments and grew up before the widespread ownership of automobiles so their habits were formed long before they could aspire to owning one.
I also had relatives that did own cars but in every case it was because they wanted them, not because anyone felt they needed them. In a reasonably urban setting I suspect that automobile ownership was discretionary well into the 30s and maybe until WWII.
Someone else would have to answer for more rural settings but in those, of course, animal transport was often still available so I wonder if the move to the automobile was much faster.
My maternal grandfather, in the 1950’s, had a 1947 Chevrolet one-ton, long-bed pickup that served to haul hay and grain, animals to market and served as ‘the bus’ for about five families in that particular neighborhood. At the same time he owned a tractor but maintained a team of mules, with which he also plowed, and a couple of horses to work cattle. He died in 1960 and my Dad purchased the truck. I inherited it in 1964 as my personal transportation. It was a chick magnet! In one generation we went from one motorized vehicle in the neighborhood to my mother driving a car, my Dad driving a truck and a tractor and I, as a 15-year-old, having his own truck.