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1913 Peerless Model 48-Six

Town Car by Kimbell & Co.

Peerless Motor Company began building motorcars in 1900; along with Packard and Pierce-Arrow it was known as one of the 'Three P's of Motordom.' They began as a producer of clothes ringers; later turning to bicycles in the 1890s. In 1901, they launched a single-cylinder car, followed by a significantly advanced two-cylinder model in 1902 (with shaft-drive and side-entrance bodies). By 1903, a 24-horsepower and 34-horsepower four-cylinder car arrived. A six was introduced in 1907.

Following Cadillac's lead, the firm standardized self-staring in 1913 and became a one-engine company offering only V-8s by 1915. In 1912 General Electric Corporation secured control of the company, and thereafter, electric lights and electric starters were standard on all models. With the introduction of the electric starter, Peerless was able to increase the size of its six-cylinder engines.

This six-cylinder, 48-horsepower Town Car would have sold for around $7,000 in 1913. C.P. Kimball & Co. of Chicago built this large and luxurious town car body. The Kimball family had started a wheelwright and carriage business in 1634, and nine generations of the family had been involved in the trade before the company folded in 1929. Kimball is therefore considered to be America's first coachbuilder.

This vehicle was sold to its current owner by noted collector Barnie Pollard. It was restored to its as-built colors while its upholstery was remade to replicate the original patterns. Power is from a 560 cubic-inch six-cylinder engine offering nearly 50 horsepower.


Roadster
Chassis number: 13269

This Peerless Model 48-Six Roadster was discovered in the early 1960s by helicopter pilot Ed Seville, a California-based Horseless Carriage Club of America member. Prior to its discovery, it had been used as a power source for a gold mine. The rescue of the car was nearly impossible and required an airlift.

The car was purchased new by an official of the La Jolla Mining Company. After several years, it was deemed surplus and driven to the mine head for use as a power source. After its usefulness came to a close, it was just left in the elements for many decades. The original trails used to travel to the mine became overgrown and washed out over the years, and retrieving the vehicle became nearly impossible.

On an HCCA La Jolla regional tour in Southern California during the summer of 1965, Ed Seville, the helicopter pilot, mentioned to Merl Ledford, Jr., a Peerless collector, that he spotted a big Peerless chassis from the air. An expedition was soon planned to survey the vehicle. After hiking 16 miles and wading through streams, the team was unable to reach the vehicle. Over the following three months, no fewer than nine trips were attempted by 14 people, with the eventual sighting of the car made from a ridge 1,200 feet above its resting place. With no trails and no way to access the vehicle, the only practical solution was by helicopter. Ledford secured the title to the car and received permission to airlift it.

Over the next two decades, the car was given a comprehensive restoration, including the fabrication of a new body. Ledford managed to complete 90 percent of the work but passed away before he could finish it. Gerald Luckow became the car's next caretaker. He finished the restoration in time to show it at Pebble Beach in 1984. Next, the Peerless was placed on extended display in a small mining museum, and then in 2008, the current owner acquired it.

In 2010, this Roadster was offered for sale at the Vintage Motor Cars of Hershey auction presented by RM Auctions. The car was estimated to sell for $250,000 - $300,000. As bidding came to a close, the car had been sold for the sum of $200,750 including the buyer's premium.

by Dan Vaughan


Peerless roots date back to 1874 in Cincinnati, Ohio as a manufacturer of clothes wringers, clothespins, and washboards. From the beginning, the Peerless Company was successful and within a short fifteen years, had outgrown its facilities and was searching for new space. The company formed with the Mercantile Manufacturing Company in Cleveland and the new organization became the Peerless Manufacturing Company. The Cleveland location offered several advantages over Cincinnati, mainly better access to shipping.

The Peerless Manufacturing Company of Cleveland, Ohio became the world leader in laundry equipment and continued to find new business in licensing its designs and name to manufacturers outside North America.

Two years after moving to Cleveland, the company embarked on new business ventures; bicycle building had become popular and Peerless followed the boom, entering the business around 1891. Success again followed, but the business of bicycle making was short-lived, as auto production soon surpassed bicycles. Peerless decided to follow the trend and entered the new and uncharted world of automobile production.

Louis P. Mooers had some experience in building automobiles, and he was tasked with leading the Peerless Company in this new direction. Peerless licensed de Dion Bouton designs, building both four-wheeled motorettes and three-wheeled tricycles from the single-cylinder DeDion engines. Mooers first design for Peerless used a two-cylinder engine with a single-throw crankshaft in which both pistons moved in the same direction. The engine layout followed the Panhard System design which had the engine in the front and drive taken through to transmission and onto the rear axle by a driveshaft. This two-cylinder vehicle was elegant, built of high quality, and suitable to traverse the continually evolving roadways.

A sixty-horsepower four-cylinder Peerless was created by Mooers by 1904. It was used by the company's new driver, Eli 'Barney' Oldfield for use in competition. The car was given the nickname, the 'Peerless Green Dragon', and would become a pillar in defining Peerless's reputation for high performance coupled with quality and durability.

Oldfield and Mooers both left Peerless in 1905 to join a St. Louis business called Moon. Charles Schmidt was given Mooers position; Schmidt was the former chief engineer for Packard and an experienced high-speed driver.

Peerless continued to promote its product through endurance challenges and racing. They faired rather well in the early Glidden Tours, with perfect scores achieved in 1906-1908. They set a 1,000-mile endurance record and the fastest time ever in the Mt. Washington hillclimb in New Hampshire.

Peerless was the first company to successfully use a flyball governor to maintain speeds. They were the first to use a hinged steering wheel which allowed easier access into the cockpits for the driver. Another first was the use of aluminum in their side-entrance tonneau along with being the first closed formal body in American production.

Peerless was one of the first companies to use electric lighting. They used a Gray & Davis system as early as 1910 and then upgrading in 1913 to a single-voltage Gray & Davis system which now included an electric starter.

By the early 1910s, the company was producing nearly every important component in their Cleveland factory for their automobiles. In 1912 a new line of T-head six-cylinder models was introduced, each featuring seven main bearings and dual ignition. Also in their engine lineup was the tried-and-true four-cylinder T-head unit which was rated at about 25 horsepower. The company's products were durable, effective, and built to last. Their methods employed advanced manufacturing processes and the use of the finest materials available.

With this level of quality, their products appealed to the elite in society, the aristocratic and the most demanding. Their list of clients included Cornelius Vanderbilt and John D. Rockefeller.

In the 1912 Peerless catalog were the 415 cubic-inch engine rated at 38 horsepower, a 578 cubic-inch unit with nearly 50 horsepower available, and a massive 825 cubic-inch engine that produced an astonishing 60 horsepower. These horsepower figures were really about half of what the engine truly produced. Peerless did not bother giving horsepower figures; their patrons did not care for these details. The 825 CID engine still holds the Guinness record as the largest engine ever cataloged and built for consumer use.

The Peerless Model 36-Six, also known as the Model K, was outfitted with the 578 CID engine and powered the elegant body which rested on a wheelbase that measured 137 inches. The engine was inline with three pairs of cast-iron cylinders bolted to a large aluminum crankcase. It had a seven-main bearing crankshaft made of imported steel and drove through a unique internally-expanding clutch to the four-speed transmission. The transmission was separately mounted to the frame. Peerless used an open driveshaft and a separate arm between the transmission and the rear axle to help absorb the torque from the rear axle. The suspension was comprised of a live axle setup in both front and rear, with semi-elliptical leaf springs in the front and platform suspension in the rear.

A very unusual and technically advanced aspect of the design was the cambered rear axle which was positioned at a three-degree positive angle in each rear wheel and required a complete rear axle to cope. According to the Peerless Company, the benefit of this design was higher ground clearance for the differential and strong wood-spoke wheels. In modern terms, it would be similar in design to the 'positive offset rims.'

Braking was on the rear wheels through a contracting brake band located on the outside of the brake drums. The hand brake actuated expanding brake shoes with the same drum. In comparison to many other systems of the day, this was a very advanced design. Most other braking systems employed a driveshaft brake that stopped only one rear wheel through the differential.

A Peerless automobile was followed by serious financial obligations. They were not cheap. Prices of the 38-Six started at around $3,500 for the chassis and $4,000 for the Touring model with seating for five. Their pricing scale was rather simple; an extra thousand dollars was applied for each move up the model ladder, plateauing at $6,000 for the Model 60-Six. The addition of accessories only escalated the price. Popular accessories at the time were windshields and lighting, body features and painting, leathers and fabrics, and much more.

During the first World War, the company supplied trucks and military automobile chassis in support of the war effort.

The company survived for many years, struggling through the Great Depression era, and after completing one V-16 prototype the company shut down in mid-1932. When the Volstead Act was repealed, ending Prohibition, the Peerless applied for a license to brew Carling's Black Label beer and Red Cap Ale. The Company prospered and by the 1960's had twenty-three breweries in the US., Canada, and overseas.

by Dan Vaughan