Image credit: © conceptcarz.com (Reproduction Or reuse prohibited).

1910 Brush Model D background image

1910 Brush Model D Runabout

    1910 Brush Model D Navigation
    Alanson P. Brush founded the Brush Runabout Company in 1906 in Detroit, Michigan. Alanson was a respected technical innovator though he had no formal technical training. His resume included working for Henry Leland's manufacturing company, where he was engaged in solving design problems on the first Oldsmobiles, Buicks, and Cadillacs.

    The Brush Company would be later absorbed into the United States Motor Company. U.S. Motors collapsed in 1912 and would bring the end of the Brush automobiles.

    The Brush automobiles were built using mainly Michigan hardwoods, with axles and wheels fabricated from hickory, frame and flooring from oak, and the seat structure from poplar.

    The Model D rode on an 80-inch wheelbase and was powered by a single-cylinder engine offering ten horsepower. The car weighed 950 pounds and cost $485.

    A California man purchased this car and it remained in his family for three generations. In 2008, the current owner acquired the car from the original family in a partially assembled condition. The restoration work took two years to complete.

    By Daniel Vaughan | Aug 2010

    No auction information available for this vehicle at this time.

    Recent Sales of the Brush Model D

    (Data based on Model Year 1910 sales)

    Brush Model Ds That Failed To Sell At Auction

    1910 Brush Model D's that have appeared at auction but did not sell.
    VehicleChassisEventHigh BidEst. LowEst. High

    Vehicles With Comparable Market Values

    Similar sales to the range.

    1910 Brush Model D

    Additional valuation insight and sales data
    History
    Specifications
    Image gallery

    1910 Brush Model D Vehicle Profiles

    Vehicle information, history, and specifications from concept to production.