Carroll Six (1 G.) `1920 - Легковой автомобиль (США) | |
HW100 - 45000
UAW55 - 105000 RRW100 - 175000 PKRR - 7500 |
Carroll Six
The Carroll Six, commonly known as Carroll Car, was an automobile built by the
Carroll Motorcar Company of Lorain, Ohio, from 1920 to 1922.
History
Charles F. Carroll, the company's founder, was an advertising mogul who had
success in an account with Fisk Tires through an agency he operated in nearby
Cleveland. He attempted to purchase the Moon Automobile Company of St. Louis,
Missouri, following the death of Joseph W. Moon in 1918 but did not succeed.
Carroll's earnings from the advertising business financed his car-building
venture, and he built automobiles in a factory located in a former brass works
on Washington Avenue in Lorain, Ohio.
The Carroll car was first distributed by Lucas and Christensen of Cleveland,
according to an October 23, 1920 article in Motor Age magazine.
Car details
The Carroll Six was offered in both a two-door roadster model and as a four-door
open touring sedan. The four-door had a distinctive black leather over steel
California top, which was a non-folding hardtop with an opera window in the
C-pillar. The car was also unusual in that the radiator was placed behind the
front axle. Two paint colors were available, Carroll Green and Burgundy Red,
each in two-tone finishes.
It sold for US$3985 FOB and offered many items as standard, such as a leather
interior, at a time when options were becoming popular among car buyers.
The cars were assembled from parts purchased from various manufacturers. Carroll
Cars were fitted with a Buda six-cylinder engine, but there are records showing
that Beaver sixes and Rochester sixes may have been used. The 66 hp engine's top
speed was 62 mph/100 km/h.
Production
Actual production figures vary. Approximately 600 cars were built; however, some
sources state that the number is about 400 cars, mostly touring sedans. Other
sources state 183 cars. Only one confirmed survivor, a Carroll Green touring
sedan, is on display at the William E. Swigart, Jr. Antique Automobile Museum
located in Huntingdon, Pennsylvania. This car was purchased directly from
Charles F. Carroll in 1967 and had been his personal car for many years.
End of the line
Although accounts vary, it has been said that a number of cars were assembled
and placed on a train bound for California to fill dealer orders. The cars were
shipped with missing or inadequate radiator fluid and the train was held over
during a blizzard in Chicago. When the cars arrived in California, none of them
would start or could be driven; all had damaged engine blocks. They were
scrapped and were a total loss, costing the company its business. This, along
with a national economic downturn, brought the assembly of the Carroll Six to a
halt in 1922.
Gallery
1921 illustration of Carroll Six Five-Passenger Close-Coupled Touring Car
1921 illustration of Carroll Six Roadster
The 1920 Carroll Six Five-Passenger Close-Coupled Touring Car
The 1921 logo of Carroll Six
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