10 hp, three-cylinder engine, two-speed transmission, leaf-spring suspension. Wheelbase: 66"
• Offered from the Estate of John O’Quinn
• Early four-wheeled horseless carriage
• Former AACA award-winner
In automotive circles, the Duryea name is revered for its creation in
1893 of what is generally considered the first successful
gasoline-powered car built in the United States. Credit for its initial
conception goes to Charles Duryea, who was inspired by H.K. Sanks’
gasoline engine at the Ohio State Fair. In the early 1890s, his brother
Frank completed assembly of their first single-cylinder engine.
Producing just four horsepower, it was cloaked by a buggy-type body,
with the cylinder head extending rearward over the axle. The
water-cooled engine featured make-and-break electric ignition and was
mated to a transmission comprised of bevel and spur gears operated by
vertical movement of the steering tiller.
After a successful first test in Springfield, Massachusetts and with its
subsequent racing victories at home and abroad, the newly founded
Duryea Motor Wagon Company became the first American car company to move
beyond “one-off” vehicles into more substantial production. The
brothers went their separate ways in the late 1890s, and in March 1900,
Charles Duryea relocated to Pennsylvania, where he joined with Herbert
Sternbergh, “son of the richest man in town, an iron-master of the
highest character and ability,” and organized the Duryea Power Company
of Reading.
The restored 1901 Duryea Four-Wheeled Phaeton offered here fittingly
represents both the company’s geographic transition from Peoria to
Reading and its abandonment of three-wheeled vehicles, if not its
continued insistence on the tiller steering arrangement. Its prior
owners were George and Arlene Cairns, who won the AACA’s W. Emmet
Swigart Memorial Cup with it in 1994. In August 2006, the vehicle joined
the private automobile collection from which it is now offered, where
it has enjoyed proper, climate-controlled storage. By virtue of its
model year, it could be eligible for London-to-Brighton Veteran Car Run
participation and is certainly a handsome example of the earliest days
of American motoring.
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