We took a cruise through the Library of Congress archives and found out what a farm truck is supposed to look like.
[mf_h5 align=”left” transform=”uppercase”]A Farm Security Administration Truck ready to hit the road in 1939.[/mf_h5]1
[mf_h5 align=”left” transform=”uppercase”]A Farmer’s Exchange Co-op Organization truck delivering chickens to Selma, Alabama 1941.[/mf_h5]1
[mf_h5 align=”left” transform=”uppercase”]A local farmer loads up his truck on a trip to town during gas-rationing in San Augustine, Texas 1941.[/mf_h5]1
[mf_h5 align=”left” transform=”uppercase”]A Two Rivers Co-op Milk-truck in Waterloo, Nebraska 1941.[/mf_h5]1
[mf_h5 align=”left” transform=”uppercase”]Filling up a farm truck with beans in Bridgeton, New Jersey 1942.[/mf_h5]1
[mf_h5 align=”left” transform=”uppercase”]Loading up a cabbage truck to take to market in Belle Glade, Florida 1939.[/mf_h5]1
Source: Library of Congress