Tuesday, April 16, 2013

Seeking special Cadillacs

What's a Cadillac without a fin.
 
This time of year I really look forward to the daily visit from my mailman.  The deadline for vehicle entries for the upcoming Concours car show in August is approaching and I receive a number of applications each day.   I have a smile on my face when I open each envelope; eagerly anticipating what vehicle has been submitted.

When all the entries have been received by mid-April and made into a PowerPoint presentation, the volunteer Concours selection committee will meet and review all the submitted vehicles.  From the volume of mail so far, it appears we will have a record number of vehicle owners wishing to have their car, commercial vehicle, motorcycle or bicycle in the fundraising event.

This year the Concours selection committee will again descend on Hickory Corners in late April and assemble in a meeting room of the Gilmore Car Museum.  From the submitted entries the committee will select approximately 90 vehicles, including a representative sampling of Cadillacs, this year’s featured marque. 

As I write this column, 12 Cadillacs have been submitted.  That’s a good number but we are short of Cadillac entries for the 1915 – 1940 period and for the 1950s.  The decade of the sixties is well represented with a large number of entries submitted.

Naturally we want a selection of Cads that represent the luxury brand throughout its long history.  We are especially interested in showing some of the magnificent Classic Cadillac offerings from the twenties and thirties and also two other key examples; a 1948 model to show the beginning of the fin age – which Cadillac introduced that year – and the iconic 1959 model that took the fin age to its outrageous zenith.

There are two “special feature” classes in the Concours this year.   We are seeking a number of vehicles from the turn of the 20th century for the “High Wheeler” class and a few more for the “Lady Owned Cars” special class.

Fortunately, we already have a nice selection of entries for the “Lady Owned Cars” class.  Female interest in the collector car hobby is growing and this year the Concours leadership thought it was time we highlight this car-collecting phenomenon with a special group.

So far we have no entries for the “High Wheeler” class.   If none are received by April 20, committee members and I will get busy and contact the various high wheeler car clubs in the country and see if we can stir up some interest.

For those not familiar with a high wheeler vehicle, here’s a short history lesson.  The high wheeler is an early car body style that is unique only to the United States.  As the name implies, vehicles called high wheelers were built with slender, large-diameter wheels beginning in the late 19th century.  The last high wheeler was probably built around 1910.

Prior to the advent of gasoline engines, high wheelers were powered by electric motors or steam engines.  The high wheeler’s popularity began to wane when standard automobiles became both less expensive and more sophisticated.  It has been written that when Henry Ford introduced the Model T, the high wheeler era rapidly came to an end.

Automobiles with the slender high wheels often used solid tires.  The wide diameter of the wheels provided ample ground clearance.  This was a necessary feature because most roads in America at the time were primitive.  High wheelers also were designed with a wider track than those found on a standard automobile.

The high wheelers were available in many body styles (utility vehicles, runabouts/roadsters; some with detachable tonneaus) and often shared features found on horse-drawn wagon like wood-spoke wheels, similar suspensions and boxy bodies made of wood.

Over 40 high wheeler companies were in business at one point in the United States.  A few had names that might be recognizable – like the Cole, Duryea, Economy, International Harvester, and Sears – but most had a moment in the sun and then disappeared.

Attendees of the Concours car show may recall last year the 1909 Economy G Surrey high wheeler that was featured in the “Family Owned Vehicle” class.  Brady and Emily Mann of Roanoke, IL brought the Economy that his grandfather had purchased new over one hundred years ago.

Readers who know someone who owns a well-preserved high wheeler is urged to contact me.  We’ve had a few of high wheelers in our show in the past and the quaint and almost pre-historic looking automobiles are huge crowd pleasers.

The Concours featured designer this year is retired GM designer Bill Porter of Whitmore Lake, Michigan.  I interviewed Bill a while back and will share highlights of his exciting career with readers in an upcoming column.  

Bill headed both Pontiac and Buick design studios during his career.  Without a doubt his most notable effort while at Pontiac was overseeing the creation of the second gen 1970 Pontiac Firebird.  He takes extra special pride in developing the Firebird Trans Am of that period. 

Bill will join narrator Ed Lucas during the noon Pass in Review and discuss all the cars in the show that he had a hand in designing.   Take a look at the list below and contact me if you or if someone you know owns one of these Porter-influenced vehicles. 

The Porter-designed cars we’d like to have in this year’s Concours include:
1968 – 69 Pontiac Le Mans and GTO, 1970 – 72 Pontiac Catalina, Bonneville, 1970 ?  – 73 Firebird and Firebird T/A, 1973 Pontiac Le Mans, Grand Am, 1978 Pontiac Grand Prix, 1985 Buick Electra, 1982 Pontiac Firebird, 1991 Buick Regal 4-door sedan, 1986, 1992 and 2000 Buick LeSabre, 1991 and 1996 Buick Park Avenue and Ultra and 1995 Buick Riviera. 

Mr. Porter, now in his eighties, is a dynamic speaker and will give a pre-Concours presentation on Friday night, August 9.  Details on location and time of the program are incomplete.  Watch for announcements in this column in July.

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