To anyone involved in the burgeoning American sports car scene in the 1950s, Bill Frick is a legendary character. As early as the 1930s, Frick ...
When Cadillac launched its flagship sixteen-cylinder Series 452 in 1930, America was staring down the barrel of an unprecedented economic depression. In the first year ...
Nearly from the inception of the original Chevrolet Corvette, serious sports car fans and racers were critical of it for compromising performance in the name ...
One of two known survivors of the glamorously styled 8-126 White Eagle Speedster. Equipped with a powerful, Kissel-modified Lycoming 8-cylinder engine fitted in a low-slung ...
Lincoln Motor Company entered the luxury automobile market in 1921 with the V8-powered Model L. Henry Leland founded Lincoln in the wake of an acrimonious ...
James Brewster began building carriages in New Haven in 1810; his son Henry succeeded to the business, passing the company, now based in New York ...
With the world still reeling in the aftermath of World War II, Rolls-Royce and Bentley dusted off and set to work returning to the business ...
It is likely that only a handful of the staunchest of motoring enthusiasts would be able to name an automobile manufacturer besides Minerva or FN ...
Following in the wake of Rolls-Royce’s contentious takeover of Bentley Motors in 1931, the first new Bentley model to come out of Rolls-Royce’s Derby Works ...
In 1968 Triumph introduced the latest edition in their long-running line of “TR” roadsters. The TR6 replaced the stopgap TR5/TR250, sharing much of the older ...
The Bentley S-type and Rolls-Royce Silver Cloud represented important changes for Bentley and Rolls-Royce with an all new independent front suspension X-braced chassis, wider track, ...
Mercedes-Benz’s success with the 300SL and its tamer and more luxurious relative the 190SL led it to introduce a new series based on the W113-series ...