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Gas station attendants peer over their "Out of gas" sign in Portland, on day before the state's requested Saturday closure of gasoline stations. Image courtesy national archives, united states, 1973.
Smith Collection/Gado/Getty Images

Nobody’s happy to be at a gas station, but maybe that’s a recent development of society. Back in the day, gas stations were a nice, relaxing break. You could unwind, have somebody else pump your gas, enjoy a snack, and not spend half the money you have to your name.

Miss those days? Here are 20 vintage photos of gas stations from way back when.

Texaco Station in the ‘60s, when gas was cheap

Texaco Station on the 60’s
brolbo/Reddit.com

Cool old-school hose. I bet teenagers tried to spray each other with those things.

American gas station owned by Pan-Gas in the 1920s, before the Great Depression

1920s Gas Station
Xi_JinpingXIV/Reddit.com

Look at this official-looking guy right here. He’s pouring himself some motor oil like a cup of coffee.

Green stamps and gas price wars – ‘50s and ‘60s

Green Stamps Vintage Gas Station
LeastCoolUser/Reddit.com

15 cent gas! My, oh, my.

Gulf station from the 1950s checking out a Studebaker

Gulf station from the 1950’s checking out a Studabaker. Unknown location. Back in the 1950s, it was common to see all employees wear uniforms and bow ties at your local gas station.
jasonvoorhees2582/Reddit.com

Gas station attendants used to wear suits and ties, which is pretty wild.

A service station on Stone Way in Seattle, circa mid ‘50s

A service station on Stone Way in Seattle (WA), circa mid-50s. Shared from The Great American Gas Station FB page. The Safeway is now condos.
AxlCobainVedder/Reddit.com

Color blast! The Safeway here has allegedly been converted to condos.

Gas Station in Toronto, 1980

Gas station in Toronto, Canada 1980
Beelzebubs-Barrister/Reddit.com

Ladas, Russian-made cars, were clearly on blast here during the Cold War.

Gas Station on Highway 50, Winchester, Virginia, 1940

February 1940: Gas station on Hwy. 50, Winchester, Virginia.
morganmonroe81/Reddit.com

Texaco isn’t even advertising its own name as hard as it’s advertising “apple candy,” which are small cube-shaped candies made with apples, sugar, and gelatin. Those things must have been flying off the shelves in ‘50s Virginia. You can still buy apple candy from the family-owned Millcroft Farms, which bought the historic Shenandoah Candy Co. (advertised here) in 1997.

My grandfather’s service station, September 1955

My grandfather’s service station Sept 1955. My 19yr old father at the pumps helping a customer - Portland OR
Virnman67/Reddit.com

I am salivating over that 28 cent price tag here at Signal Gas.

Old filling station in Ann Arbor, 1938

Old filling station in Ann Arbor, 1938
Remarkable_Put_7952/Reddit.com

If I were driving around Ann Arbor in 1938, I too would make sure that I only pulled up in a car that was the exact same color as the pumps.

Gas station in New York, 1920s

Gas station in NY 1920s.
lilac2481/Reddit.com

It’s easy to comment on how cheap gas was here at 9 and a half cents per gallon, but tax is 4 cents? That’s almost 50 percent!

Pumping gas in the 1970s

Pumping gas in the 1970s
j3434/Reddit.com

There’s something satisfyingly symmetrical about pumping gas directly through the center of the car like this. Car fans deduced that this bad boy was ‘69-’71 Chevy Nova.

A gas station in Germany, 1958

A Gas Station in Germany (1958)
f__h/Reddit.com

This looks simultaneously extremely old, and also extremely futuristic. The car port looks like the underside of the dang ship from “Space Jam.”

My grandfather, a gas station mechanic during the Depression in 1934

My grandfather 1934, gas station mechanic during the Depression
Gnarlodious/Reddit.com

This guy is apparently a gas station attendant, but he looks more like somebody who’s been assigned to work on the atomic bomb. He’s got a fistful of miscellaneous electronics, and he’s staring down the barrel of the camera like he’s gonna die. This is not a happy fella.

Me pumping gas when Unleaded was just becoming a thing. Circa 1975-76

Are you this old? Me pumping gas when Unleaded was just becoming a thing. Circa 1975-76
AmateurPhotog57/Reddit.com

Metal can: check. ‘80s hair: check. Faded and yellowed image: check. Vintage photo achieved.

The 1973 Gas Crisis

The 1973 Gas Crisis cars lined up for gas
Longjumping_Prune852/Reddit.com

One time I had to wait about four extra minutes for gas and I nearly threw a fit. Good thing I didn’t have to live through the Gas Crisis of ‘73, which occurred when a huge petroleum company stopped exporting oil to America (and anybody else supporting Israel at the time of the Yom Kippur War), which made prices explode, and lines end up like this.

A Gulf gas station 1981

A Gulf gas station 1981 woman at pump
j3434/Reddit.com

Am I losing my mind or does this woman look like a cardboard cutout? Is this a real town? Or is this the Universal backlot?

Grandpa’s gas station, late 1940s, corner of Bay Blvd & E St, Chula Vista

Grandpa's gas station, late 1940's, corner of Bay Blvd & E St, Chula Vista. Wish I knew which direction the photographer was facing.
Gnaedigefrau/Reddit.com

Do you know Chula Vista? Sleuths in the comments section of this one have deduced that the photo is facing north.

Grandpa’s first filling station, 1982

rlprice74/Reddit.com

If you’re stuck in the middle of nowhere on a dusty roadtrip, and you see a sign that says “Flats fixed” and “Ice,” then things are probably about to start looking up. Unless you’re in a horror movie. Then things are certainly not looking up.

Gas station, 1970s

1970s Gas Station Man Pumping Gas
looster2018/Reddit.com

The more you look at this, the more it looks like both men on the right side of the photo are staring at the woman on the left side of the photo as she pumped gas. There are storylines everywhere, folks.

Gasoline Selling for 2 Cents a Gallon, 1920s

Gasoline Selling for 2 Cents a Gallon, 1920s.
DiosMioMan2/Reddit.com

When tax for the gas cost more than the actual gas itself. I wonder if anybody is going to go to Chop Suey.

Meet the Writer

Wilder Shaw is a staff writer at Cheapism who has written for publications like The Washington Post