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Bertha Benz: A woman moves the world – Women’s History Month at the Newport Car Museum
The Newport Car Museum exhibit in March pays tribute to Bertha Benz and her contribution to automotive history. “The First Motor Car” Exhibit is a Tribute to Bertha Benz
No celebration of Women’s History Month would be complete without commemorating the vital role Bertha Benz played in the development of the automobile. In a nutshell, she was the financial backer of the first internal-combustion automobile and the world’s first driver. Thankfully, the Newport Car Museum keeps her spirit alive in the form of a multi-media exhibit that explains the full story.
he 1886 Benz Patent-Motorwagen was the brainchild of Karl Benz, Bertha Benz’s husband, who was awarded the German patent DRP 37435 on January 29, 1886 for the first vehicle to be propelled by a motor. Although Mrs. Benz financed the development process, as a woman she was unable to hold patent rights under German law. On July 3, 1886, Karl Benz officially unveiled his invention to the public at the Ringstrasse in Mannheim, Germany.
Ironically, later in 1886, some 60 miles away, Gottlieb Daimler (Mercedes) patented an internal combustion engine and began construction of a four-wheeled horseless carriage. Neither Benz nor Daimler was aware of the other’s work. The rest, as they say, is history.
But this is where the story gets really good…
In 1888, Bertha Benz drove the Benz Patent-Motorwagen (without Karl Benz’s knowledge) on a 65-mile trek from Mannheim to her hometown of Pforzheim, Germany. Before she returned along that same route, she had fixed the carburetor with her hat pin and an electrical short with her garter belt and even refueled with Ligroin cleaning fluid bought from a pharmacy in Wiesloch that is famous to this day as “the world’s first filling station.”
The Patent-Motorwagen is somewhat like a horse-drawn carriage, most notably having a small front wheel and two larger rear wheels. Construction used a lightweight tubular frame with wire spoke wheels and steering was by rack and pinion connected to a tiller. The brake was a leather pad manually operated with a lever.
The original vehicle was restored in 1906 and donated to the Deutsches Museum in Munich, Germany. The Newport Car Museum’s reproduction was made by Mercedes-Benz and is an extremely accurate recreation of the original.
Though the Newport Car Museum focuses on cars from the early 1950s through to current models, this car was a must for the collection, if not for its historical significance, then for its sentimental value to Museum Founder Gunther Buerman. A native of Mannheim, Buerman, as a child, remembers his mother’s great uncle helping Karl Benz work on his invention.
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Regular admission: $18/adults; $15/Seniors, Military, Students; $8/Ages 5-15 (with an adult); Free/Ages 4 and under (with an adult) – Hours are 10am to 5pm
Free parking. 1947 West Main Rd., Portsmouth, R.I. 02871, 401-848-2277,www.newportcarmuseum.org
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Hoods Up Weekend
March 12-13 – 10am – 5pm
True beauty comes from within; check out the engines on more than 85 magnificent cars in the Museum’s six galleries and Pop-Up Porsche Exhibit.
Museum open 10-5. Admission: $18/adults; $15/Seniors, Military, Students; $8/Ages 5-15 (with an adult); Free/Ages 4 and under (with an adult)
Free parking. 1947 West Main Rd., Portsmouth, R.I. 02871, 401-848-2277,www.newportcarmuseum.org
More About the Newport Car Museum
The Newport Car Museum, with over 85 cars displayed in six galleries and a Pop-Up Porsche Exhibit, tells the story of Ford/Shelby, Corvettes, World Cars, Fin Cars, Mopars and American Muscle Cars. Within 18 months of its 2017 opening, it was included in USA Today’s “Top 10 Best New Attractions” and named Yankee Magazine’s “Best Specialty Museum.” It also has won an award from the National Association of Automobile Museums for its originally produced historic videos and in 2021 won Tripadvisor’s Travelers’ Choice award for a second consecutive year and further designation as among the top 10% of attraction worldwide.
The Newport Car Museum is handicap accessible and hours are daily 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tickets can be bought at the door or online at www.newportcarmuseum.org(401-848-2277). Admission: $18/adults; $15/Seniors, Military, Students; $8/Ages 5-15 (with an adult); Free/Ages 4 and under (with an adult).
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