Not so in 1963 when editor Bill Tuckey, photographer John Keesing, together with their families, drove Sydney to Melbourne on the Hume, returning via the Olympic Way through Bathurst, in a Pontiac Laurentian. The 1932 kilometres (1200 miles) occupied 30 hours. The reason: “just to photograph a car” for the magazine, although we are never told the make or model, only that the location was outside a suburban Melbourne mansion called Goodwood.
Fifty-five years ago, the Hume Highway was a challenging two-lane road, even then a national disgrace. The so-called ‘highway’ included a dangerous 280-degree bend, where Tuckey remembers, “I once got a 2.5-litre Riley completely sideways on bald tyres in the damp.” Narrow, often wooden, bridges added to the ordeal. (Less than a decade earlier, one bridge on the…
