O carro acima é um 1934 Hupmobile Model J Aero-Dynamic Sedan
História
Hupmobile was an automobile built from 1909 through 1939 by the Hupp Motor Car
Company. The prototype was developed in 1908 and had
its first successful run on November 8 with investors aboard for champagne at
the Tuller Hotel a few blocks away. The company was incorporated in
November of that year. The first Hupmobile model, the Hupp 20, was introduced
at the 1909 Detroit automobile show. It was an instant success.
In
1909, Bobby Hupp co-founded Hupp Motor Car Company,
with Charles Hastings, formerly of Oldsmobile, who put up the first US$8,500
toward manufacturing Hupp's car. They were joined by investors J. Walter
Drake, Joseph Drake, John Baker, and Edwin Denby. Drake was elected president;
Hupp was vice president and general manager. Emil Nelson, formerly of
Oldsmobile and Packard, joined the company as chief
engineer. Hastings was named assistant general manager. In late 1909 Bobby's
brother, Louis Gorham Hupp left his job with the Michigan Central Railroad in
Grand Rapids and joined the company.
Hupp
Motors obtained $25,000 in cash deposits at the 1909 automobile show (the
lowest capitalization of Detroit's eight major car makers) to begin
manufacturing the Hupp 20. The first cars were built in a small building at 345
(now 1161) Bellevue Avenue in Detroit, Michigan. The company immediately outgrew this space
and began construction of a factory a few blocks away at E. Jefferson Avenue
and Concord, next to the former Oldsmobile plant. The company produced 500 vehicles
by the end of the 1909 model year (the fall of 1909). Production increased to
more than 5,000 in the 1910 model year.
Henry
Ford paid the Hupp 20 the ultimate compliment. "I recall looking at Bobby
Hupp's roadster at the first show where it was exhibited and wondering whether
we could ever build as good a small car for as little money."
When Hupp left Hupp Motors in 1913, he
informed the company his supplier companies would devote their full capacity to
make parts for RCH. Facing the loss of manufactured parts from Hupp
Corporation and increasing demand for the Hupmobile, Hupp Motors acquired seven
acres for a new factory at Mt. Elliott and Milwaukee. It moved into
the new plant in late April 1912 (This factory was demolished as part of site
clearance for General Motors' "Poletown" assembly plant in the early
1980s). Hupp Motors sold the Jefferson Avenue plant to the King Motor Car
Company.
In
1911 Hupp became one of two automakers pioneering the use of all-steel bodies,
joining BSA in the U.K.
Nelson
approached Hale & Kilburn Company
in Philadelphia looking for help with developing an all-metal body for the Hupp
32. Hale & Kilburn had pioneered the replacement of cast iron with pressed
steel for many parts for the interiors of railway carriages. According to
Nelson, “None of the Detroit plants would contract” to make an all-steel body
for the Hupp 32. Edward Budd and Joseph Ledwinka were employed at Hale & Kilburn at
the time, Budd as the general manager and Ledwinka as engineer. Budd was
interested in the project. Hale & Kilburn had built some body panels for
King and Paige but Budd had grander aspirations the Hupp project would permit
him to pursue.
Budd
and Ledwinka worked with Nelson to develop means to manufacture Nelson's design
for this body. They devised a system where the body's numerous steel stampings
were welded together by hand and supported by a crude system of angle iron
supports that held the welded subassemblies together. The disassembled bodies
were shipped by rail to Detroit where they were put back together, painted and
trimmed in the Hupmobile factory. Both the touring car and a coupe were made by
this process and even one Hupmobile limousine. In 1911 no one, not Nelson,
Ledwinka or Budd, thought to patent the process to manufacture all-steel
bodies.
While
the Hupp 32 bodies were in production, Budd and Ledwinka left and formed
the Edward G. Budd Manufacturing Company. In
1914, Ledwinka filed for and received a patent for the process of making
all-steel bodies. However, Budd later lost a patent infringement litigation it
brought against C.R. Wilson Body Company when
the court held that the Ledwinka patent was invalid. "[A]fter the art had
developed...Ledwinka has endeavored to go back and cover by a patent that which
had become public property.... [H]e is endeavoring to bring under his patent
those things which belong to the public." The court relied on the
production of the Hupp 32 in 1911 as a major example of the prior art. The
opinion does provide insight as to what was or was not novel about the process
to manufacture the Hupp 32's body.
Several
thousand all steel touring cars were made before Nelson resigned as Chief
Engineer in 1912. Hupmobile's commitment to this leading edge approach did not
survive his departure. The rest of the Hupp 32 production used conventional
body assembly processes.
Carl Wickman, a car dealer in Hibbing, Minnesota, used an unsold 7-passenger model as the first
vehicle for what became Greyhound. In 1913 Frank E. Watts was hired as a
designer.
Hupp
Motor Car Company continued to grow after its founder left. Hupp competed
strongly against Ford and Chevrolet. DuBois Young became company
president in 1924, advancing from vice-president of manufacturing. By 1928
sales had reached over 65,000 units. To increase production and handle sales
growth, Hupp purchased the Chandler-Cleveland Motors Corporation (Chandler Motor Car) for
its manufacturing facilities.
Sales and production began to fall even
before the depression in 1930. A strategy to make the Hupmobile a larger,
more expensive car began with the 1925 introduction of an 8-cylinder model,
followed by the elimination of the 4-cylinder Hupmobile after 1925 (Hupmobile
made only 4-cylinder cars from 1909 to 1924). While aiming for a more
lucrative market segment, Hupp turned its back on its established clientele.
This was the same mistake that many other medium-priced carmakers made at the
same time. In an attempt to capture every possible sale, they offered many different
models. With Hupmobile's low production volume, the result was that no model
could be produced in sufficient quantity to achieve economy of scale.
Hupp abandoned its more conservatively
styled product line and turned to industrial designer Raymond
Loewy to design its 1932 Hupp cyclefender, a flashy roadster that did well at the track, but sales
continued to decline. 1934 saw the introduction of a striking restyle called
the "Aerodynamic" by Loewy, as well as the lower-priced series 417-W
using Murray-built slightly-modified Ford bodies.
Despite
technical innovations, squabbles among stockholders and an attempted hostile
takeover in 1935 took their toll on the company. By 1936 the company was forced
to sell some of its plants and assets and in 1937 Hupmobile suspended
manufacturing.
A
new line of six- and eight-cylinder cars was fielded for 1938, but by this time
Hupp had very few dealers, and sales were disappointingly low.
Desperate
for a return to market strength, on February 8, 1938, Hupmobile acquired the
production dies of the Gordon Buehrig-designed Cord 810, paying US$900,000 for the tooling. Hupmobile
hoped using the striking Cord design in a lower-priced conventional car, called
the Skylark, would return the company to
financial health. Enthusiastic orders came in by the thousands, but production
delays soured customer support.
Lacking adequate production facilities,
Hupmobile partnered with the ailing Graham-Paige
Motor Co.to share the Cord dies. Hupmobile and Graham both sold
similar models, all to be built at Graham-Paige's facilities. While each marque
used its own power train, the Graham edition, called the Hollywood, differed from the Skylark in a few minor details.
In 1939, deliveries of the Hupmobile
Skylark finally began. Unfortunately, it had taken too many years
to produce and most of the orders had been canceled. Production lasted only a
couple of months, and only 319 Skylarks were produced. Hupmobile ceased
production in late summer. Graham-Paige suspended production shortly after the
last Hupmobile rolled off the line.
In a constant effort
to remain competitive, Hupp introduced a number of new features. They were one
of the very first U.S. automakers to equip their cars with "free wheeling" a device that
enjoyed immense, but brief, popularity in automobiles in the 1930s. Hupmobile
also pioneered fresh-air car heaters with the Evanair-Conditioner.

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