Ah, the dreams of frustrated inventors. When every other issue of
Popular Science is predicting flying cars just over the horizon, you
almost start believing that traffic jams and rutted roads will become a
thing of the past and that we will soon take to the skies en masse the
same way we took to the streets in our regular, non-flying automobiles.
Gustave Berman very well may have bought into the fantasy. All we
really know about him is that he operated Yale Clothing in Springfield,
Massachusetts, a men's clothing store that once operated out of
Pittsfield and burned down in 1956, leading to a merger with another
clothing store a year later. But in 1928, Berman applied for a design
patent for an automobile body adorned with wings, a propeller and tailsection.
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