Charles Jasper Glidden (1857-1927)
Charles Glidden began work at age 16 and quickly rose to positions of major
importance in the telegraph and telephone company. This enabled him to retire
at age forty three, a very wealth man. He fell in love with the automobile.
Purchasing a car in Europe in 1901, he and his wife traveled the continent
in a party of three that included a mechanic. In the next eight years they
traveled all over the world, more than 46,000 miles through 39 countries.
In this country, automobile owners realized the advantages of banding together
to promote fairer laws, better roads and safety. Glidden led the first
group to travel by car to the World’s Fair in St. Louis in 1904. Yearly
tours were held, and Glidden donated and awarded prizes. He was a "pioneer
in all methods of transportation and communication including the telegraph,
telephone, radio, automobile, balloon and airplane". (In Lowell, major
automobile races were held along Pawtucket Boulevard in the early party
of the 20th century.) Glidden and his wife Emma, who died in 1931, are
buried in one of the largest lots with only a very simple marker.

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