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Lot # FR0087
No Reserve

1921 Cadillac

Type 59

VIN: Q59993
Auction:
2024 April
Run Day:
Friday
Year
1921
Make
Cadillac
Model
Type 59
Doors
2
Body Color
Red
Interior Color
Tan
Body Style
Coupe

Four Passenger Victoria


Vehicle Highlights
  • Part of the Pre-War No Reserve Collection
  • Four Passenger Victoria
  • Burgundy with Black Fenders and Upper Body
  • Tan Pleated Cloth Upholstery
  • Roller Shades on the Rear and Side Windows
  • Twelve Spoke Varnished Wood Artillery Wheels
  • 33 x 4 1/2 Black Wall Tires on 23" Demountable Rims
  • Radiator Cap Carriers a Cadillac Crest MotoMeter
  • Pull-Out Electric Cigarette Lighter

A Note From the Seller:
Cadillac ushered in 1915 with the first American mass-produced V-8 engine. Designed by D. McCall White, a Scottish-born engineer, the L-head engine used two cast-iron blocks with integral heads, mounted on an aluminum-copper-alloy crankcase. With the banks of cylinders directly opposite one another, it used Leland's preferred fork-and-blade connecting rods. Introduced in the 1915 Type 51, it carried forward to the Type 57. Nineteen-twenty brought a new Type 59, with modest mechanical improvements, among them an exhaust-heated intake header.

Body contours changed somewhat, and closed cars were very much in the majority. Open styles numbered just three: roadster, phaeton, and seven-passenger touring. Among the closed styles was the Victoria, a four-passenger roomy coupe. Access to the two-person rear seat was gained by folding the front passenger seat forward. For 1921 the same styles were carried over with virtually no changes. Production suffered, however, as the company consolidated operations to a new plant on Clark Avenue in Detroit. Just 11,300 cars were made in the calendar year.

This Type 59 Victoria was shipped to Neel Cadillac, the Philadelphia dealer, on 3 October 1920 and delivered to the customer, D.M. Groome, of Cynwyd, Pennsylvania, on 2 April 1921. It was purchased by the Merrick Auto Museum in 1997 from Irving Kramer of West Bloomfield, Michigan. The recipient of a 770-hour restoration.