Extraordinary lives are often marked by artifacts of accomplishment. Whether it’s a culture-shifting image, an inspired body of work, or a Nobel prize, revered objects can come to represent ...
Amelia Earhart's last car is also the perfect automobile to represent the inspiring historical feats she accomplished. The car in question is none other than this 1937 Cord 812 Phaeton – a vehicle ...
Barrett-Jackson Scottsdale is auctioning off a classic car with a history like no other. Come January, a 1937 Cord 812 Custom Beverly will go under the hammer, but this is no regular Cord. It’s the ...
Jacob is a former Audi mechanic turned automotive journalist. His love for cars started the first time he held a Porsche 911 Hot Wheels car in his hands, and the very same car continues to fascinate ...
Film star Charlie Chaplin owned this 1936 Packard Twelve All Weather Cabriolet. One of only two known to exist out of 682 produced, it will be featured at the Studebaker National Museum's 2023 ...
It’s a historic car in many ways. Not only was the bespoke silver sedan one of just two 812s built that year with spare tire carriers on both fenders, but it also has bulletproof plates inside the ...
View post: Honda and Acura Sales Stumble In August, Prologue Shines Bright Mention Amelia Earhart, and we instantly connect the name with the flight of an airplane … her Lockheed Electra that vanished ...
Dublin resident Keith Olszewski and his supercharged 1937 Cord 812 Phaeton have been together nearly all his life. The four-seat convertible built by the now defunct Indiana-based Auburn Automobile Co ...
DUNNELLON - Bruce Earlin’s 1937 Cord Model 812 Coupe has been described by students of the short-lived make built in Indiana as both an elegant rolling sculpture and an example of a revolution in ...
Courtesy of the National Automotive History Collection, Detroit Public Library The modern collector car auction as we know it arguably began in Auburn, Indiana (Kruse held its first sale there on ...
It’s the car that saved a car company a half-century ago, and it may help keep it running today. Glenn Pray, a high school shop teacher from Tulsa, Okla., got the wild idea in 1960 that he’d buy the ...