Ever seen this ? (with its badge under the radiator cap, which I erased, of course)
Please, respond below and let us know the make and model designation of the car posted here.
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A clue also needed here?
This car comes from Illinois.
This puzzles is beginning to feel lonely.
Another clue?
The maker of this car was once closely associated with the maker of -among other things - lawn mowers, such as mine for instance.
A pretty little car (a real darling so to say) a five month old puzzle, two free of charges clues, and not a single guess?
I think it's a Deere!
Viking?
It's neither a Deere neither a Viking...
BUT... you both made a step towards the answer (Allan's step being much, much more significative than Otto's, though).
Quote from: Allan L on July 15, 2008, 05:50:39 AM
I think it's a Deere!
I haven't been clear enough;
It's not a Deere, but John Deere is what I meant in this former clue "The maker of this car was once closely associated with the maker of -among other things - lawn mowers, such as mine for instance."
Wild guess: Was it by any chance built by Leonard Andrus?
I'll go with Alexander Shanks as my guess...
Shanks, Andrus... Guys, it seems you googled like mad and found those, but both died years before the automobile was invented. I am talking of a make that produced cars for about twenty years.
I Googled like mad too... is it a Velie?
BINGO! It is a Velie.
Stephen Velie was John Deere's son-in-law, having married his daughter Emma. Their son Willard is the man behind the Velie cars built in Moline. Both families were closely linked, and Velie remained a director in Deere & Co until 1921.
Now I found this car in an old magazine, and I thought it was nowhere in te internet. I just found it is, same car, same photograph. You've already earned a point for the make. The year and model will get another to whomever finds it.
I've just found the photograph on the internet too, it's a 1920 Model 48 4 Passenger Speedster.
This goes to show that some of us are better at googling than others, and that some of us are a bit too trigger-happy if we find a name that seems to fit. As a journalist, I should know better, but in my profession, there's a term for what happens when you throw all inhibitions overboard because you sense a scoop: It's the blood mist :o