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Gooding and Company - The Scottsdale Auction
1911-1950
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1911-1950 Vehicles
1911 Ford Model T
1913 Hudson Model 37
1916 Ford Model T
1927 Bentley 6 ½-Litre
1927 Bugatti Type 38
1927 Chevrolet Series AA
1927 Rolls-Royce Phantom I
1929 Bentley 4.5 Litre
1929 Rolls-Royce Phantom I
1930 Alfa Romeo 6C 1750 GS
1930 Austin Seven Ulster
1930 Duesenberg Model J Murphy
1930 Packard 740 Custom Eight
1932 Packard Model 905 Twin Six
1933 Packard 1005 Twelve
1934 Packard 1101
1934 Packard 1107 Twelve
1936 Ford Model 68
1936 Packard Model 1407 Twelve
1936 Packard Model 1408
1937 BMW 328
1937 Jaguar 100 SS
1938 American Bantam Series 60
1938 Buick Series 40 Special
1939 Ford DeLuxe V8 Model 91A
1939 Pontiac Deluxe Six Series 26
1941 Lincoln Continental
1948 Dodge Custom Series
1949 Chrysler Town & Country
1949 Rolls-Royce Silver Wraith
 
  • Information on the 1927 Chevrolet Series AA
  • More photographs of the 1927 Chevrolet Series AA
  • 1927 Chevrolet Series AA1927 Chevrolet Series AA1927 Chevrolet Series AA1927 Chevrolet Series AA1927 Chevrolet Series AA
    1927 Chevrolet Series AA1927 Chevrolet Series AA1927 Chevrolet Series AA1927 Chevrolet Series AA

    1927 Chevrolet Series AAChevrolet produced 1,001,820 Chevrolet vehicles for 1927. Their vehicle was the Capitol Series AA which featured a new radiator shell and fuller crown fenders. Mechanical changes included a parking brake release and a rectangular brake and clutch pedal. A new bodystyle joined the lineup - a Sports Cabriolet. Other body styles options included the roadster, tourer, coupe, coach, sedan, and landau sedan. An Imperial Landau was added in May.

    Powering the Chevrolet Capitol was a four-cylinder, overhead valve engine that displaced 171 cubic-inches and delivering just over 25 horsepower. They had a three-speed selective sliding gearbox and rode on steel disc wheels.

    Pricing began at $525 for the 4-door tourer and 2-door roadster, and rose to $745 for the landau sedan.

    This 1927 Woodie began life as a rolling chassis that was shipped to the Martin-Parry Corporation of Indianapolis. Martin-Parry clothed the chassis in their seven-person station wagon design.

    By the 1960s, the car was in the care of Clark Woolston of Kentfield, California. In October of 1967, the Woodie Wagon was purchased by the Harrah Collection, followed by a sympathetic restoration a short time later.

    In 1986, this AA Wagon was sold from the collection. By the 2000s, the car was acquired by a California collector.

    In 2012, this vehicle was offered for sale at the Gooding & Company auction held in Scottsdale, Arizona. It had a pre-auction estimated value of 35,000 - $45,000 and was offered without reserve. As bidding came to a close, the vehicle had been sold for the sum of $39,600 inclusive of buyer's premium.