Visit our gallery and pick up a copy of our exhibition booklet for a gold coin donation or free on presentation of your RAC membership card, or click the image or here to order online
21 February 2019 - 21 July 2019
Decades ago, someone found a beautiful, discarded, old book, The Motor Car in Western Australia. He took it home for safekeeping and, in 2016, donated it to Museum of Perth.
The book is undated, its pages filled with Perth’s glamorous, early elite. Our researchers scoured myriad resources to identify each person and their vehicle, as well as the location and the closest possible date of each beautiful photograph. By this process, we established the book dates from late-1907 to mid-1908.
We then went back a few years, to 1905...
That year, a small, passionate group of Perth’s early motorists - movers and shakers, gathered to form the Automobile Club of Western Australia. The Club had a grand vision: to foster ‘automobilism’ in Western Australia, and lay the foundation for the evolution of motoring.
The motor car was truly revolutionary, yet the journey from hooves to highways was neither easy nor direct.
Our city’s business leaders and its high society fully embraced this new trend of automobilism but, by 1908, some still dismissed the motor car as an expensive novelty and an increasing nuisance to horses, dogs, trams, wagon drivers and pedestrians. Club membership, initially strong, dropped sharply in 1907, almost to what it was when formed. It was then this significant book was published.
Some say it was produced by legendary motoring giant Percy Armstrong, as he contributes significantly to the introduction and sold many of the cars featured. But considering the timing, and that many of the Club’s founding members feature on the pages within, it’s more likely the Club published it themselves in an effort to encourage new membership.
The focus of this exhibition is not cars, so much as the extraordinary pioneering motorists on those pages, and how the Automobile Club of Western Australia, now known as RAC, helped transform Perth, and more broadly Western Australia.