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1914 tail lamp bracket
Posted: Sat Feb 14, 2026 12:37 pm
by Art Ebeling
My 14 Runabout has a taillamp bracket with vertical mounting holes but the vendors show them with horizontal holes. Which is correct? Thanks, Art
Re: 1914 tail lamp bracket
Posted: Sat Feb 14, 2026 5:56 pm
by George House
This is correct….and don’t go using hex nuts. They’re square
Re: 1914 tail lamp bracket
Posted: Sat Feb 14, 2026 11:21 pm
by Art Ebeling
Thank you George. Art
Re: 1914 tail lamp bracket
Posted: Sun Feb 15, 2026 3:21 pm
by Original Smith
What you have there is 100% correct! Don't pay attention to those stupid vendors!
Re: 1914 tail lamp bracket
Posted: Sun Feb 15, 2026 5:05 pm
by George House
Thank you for the confirmation Larry, but we Need our many vendors. I have a question however. You’ll see in my photo a Neverout accessory bracket was inserted between the Ford taillamp bracket and the Ford taillamp. Does anyone know the license plate procedure 112 years ago when a new Ford was purchased ? Was there a municipal ‘grace period’ in which the new owner was expected to go to ye olde Autozone and procure a license plate bracket ? We’ve seen 1915 Ford tail light/license plate brackets but what was expected the previous year ? ….I’ll now donate the balance of my time to Wayne Shelton..
Re: 1914 tail lamp bracket
Posted: Mon Feb 16, 2026 1:14 pm
by Original Smith
I have Neverout license plate brackets on both my '13s. My roadster is exactly like yours.
Re: 1914 tail lamp bracket
Posted: Fri Feb 20, 2026 6:05 am
by George House
***btt*** to hopefully have my question answered
Re: 1914 tail lamp bracket
Posted: Fri Feb 20, 2026 9:03 am
by DanTreace
George House wrote: ↑Fri Feb 20, 2026 6:05 am
***btt*** to hopefully have my question answered
Early years not all states required front or rear registration or licensing plates. Ford in 1914 didn’t offer plate brackets. For the front plate an owner would affix with either straps to the axle, or fasten somewhere. Same with rear plate, affix to body or where the owner wanted. Early years some states required the rear numerals to be illuminated, so brackets, aftermarket and later factory put the tag near the tail lamp to be illuminated.
Re: 1914 tail lamp bracket
Posted: Fri Feb 20, 2026 9:19 am
by George House
Most interesting. Thanks for the history lesson Dan.

Re: 1914 tail lamp bracket
Posted: Sat Feb 21, 2026 10:47 pm
by OilyBill
During the very earliest of licensing, they gave you a piece of paper, and then YOU HAD TO MAKE YOUR OWN LICENSE PLATE, usually out of leather or thin sheet metal, and paint your registration number, or use address numbers from the local hardware store to attach to it, in accordance to your registration number. This was not that much of a chore, considering that your registration number could be "17" or "23", or maybe even "248" depending on how early your car was. I recall someone was reproducing these early leather license plates a few years ago. I have no idea if they are still selling them or not. States quickly decided to cash in on selling state produced license plates, made by convicts, who may as well have been doing something useful, making license plates, instead of being idlers and layabouts, standing around all day. Those were big profit items for the states, since they cost next to nothing to produce, and quickly displaced the early, hand-made owner license plates.
I will still frequently mention to blind dates when they arrive: "HEY! What a COINCIDENCE! I MADE your license plate!". Sometimes they know where license plates come from, and catch on instantly, and other times, they don't. Oh, well!