Ernest Holmes Sr.
Ernest W. Holmes Sr. is the inventor of the tow truck. He founded Ernest Holmes Company and later served a term as a member of the Electric Power Board of Chattanooga and the American Society of Automotive Engineers.
Biography
Holmes was born in Hobbs Island, Alabama.The idea of the tow truck came after assisting a friend from business school, John Wiley, after Wiley's Model T flipped over into a ditch. Holmes modified his 1913 Cadillac to pull cars and transport them to his garage by affixing an iron chain, a pulley, and several poles to the back of his Cadillac. Holmes patented this idea on January 17, 1918.
The basis for Ernest Holmes Sr.'s patents was the concept of having a "split-boom" wrecker that could anchor the truck on one side, and retrieve from the other side without tilting the wrecker. This was especially useful when a wrecked vehicle had gone down a steep embankment.
A few wreckers were sold directly to the United States Government at the tail end of World War I, to be outfitted for military usage. They would be used in full force during the second World War where in which Holmes Co supplied the Allies with 6 to 7 thousand military tier wreckers. The regular wrecker was used in the American racing industry as it was the wrecker of choice for both NASCAR and IndyCar racing for multiple decades.