- Documented in the Shelby American Automobile Club Registry
- Originally delivered with numerous desirable Shelby factory accessories and performance options
- Featured in MGM productions including Viva Las Vegas, ...
Shortly after E.L. Cord’s takeover of Auburn in 1924, the Indiana-based manufacturer was enjoying a remarkable renaissance. After years of building good quality but rather ...
The superlative new Duesenberg Model J was inarguably an engineering masterpiece when it debuted in 1928. Boasting a 420-cubic inch inline eight-cylinder engine ...
Citroen shocked the motoring world when it unveiled the revolutionary DS at the Paris Auto Salon in 1955. Looking ...
As a faltering economy (and perhaps overzealous sales goals) led to Duesenberg’s untimely demise, E.L. Cord considered adding a “baby” companion model to ...
When creating the DS, Citroen’s engineering and design teams didn’t bend the rules of conventional car design – they completely obliterated the rule ...
If someone were asked to name the greatest and most advanced car companies of the early 20th century, names like Duesenberg, Packard and Cadillac might ...
At first glance, the Cord 810/812 may not seem like it is a car born of the Great Depression. But at that time, high end manufacturers were struggling ...
The Daimler DS420 was the preferred automobile for many of the world’s government officials and diplomats. Built by the Daimler Company Limited between 1968 and ...
Among the myriad of American automobile manufacturers that have come and gone, there have been a few shining stars that have produced some very important, ...
Handsomely restyled for 1965 with exceptionally clean, European-influenced bodylines, the second-generation Chevrolet Corvair remains an unqualified triumph of Bill Mitchell’s legendary GM design studios. A ...
While Marmon is best known for its exotic and powerful V16 that marked the swansong for the company, the Indianapolis-based marque was long-known for building ...