A close look at the 1899 Winton makes it clear why early automobiles were called “horseless carriages.” Our Winton, one of exactly 100 that were produced in 1899, has a wooden body and still has the original tires!
1915 Stutz Bearcat
2025-01-21T10:15:57-05:00The Stutz was one of America’s first real sports cars. It was designed for speed and racing with an early version of a performance engine. The car was built low to the ground with fenders, running boards, and lighting equipment which could all be easily removed to reduce weight. Stutz’s victories were highly publicized. Based on a favorable outing in the first Indianapolis 500 in 1911, Stutz adopted the motto “The car that made good in a day.”
1909 White Steam Car Model M
2025-01-16T16:09:22-05:00In 1909, newly-elected president William Howard Taft turned the White House stables into a garage and purchased four automobiles: two [...]
1924 Brewster Brougham
2025-01-21T10:17:22-05:00The Brewster Company began in 1810 as a producer of high-quality horse-drawn carriages for wealthy clients. They made their first auto body in 1896, and continued building car bodies for American and imported European chassis until the outbreak of World War I in Europe. With their supply of chassis threatened, Brewster turned to making their own complete automobiles.
1965 Ford Country Squire Station Wagon
2025-01-21T10:30:05-05:00A classic example of the American station wagon, the Country Squire is emblematic of suburban life in the 1960s and [...]
1919 Pierce-Arrow Model 48 Touring
2025-01-21T10:22:00-05:00Between 1905 and 1925, there were thousands of automobile manufacturers in the United States. The most successful were those that [...]