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Auction archive: Lot number 334

1930 Rolls-Royce Phantom 1 Newmarket All Weather Phaeton Coachwork by Brewster & Co. Chassis no. S126PR Engine no. 30260

Estimate
US$0
Price realised:
US$187,000
Auction archive: Lot number 334

1930 Rolls-Royce Phantom 1 Newmarket All Weather Phaeton Coachwork by Brewster & Co. Chassis no. S126PR Engine no. 30260

Estimate
US$0
Price realised:
US$187,000
Beschreibung:

Body No. B5750 7,668cc OHV inline six-cylinder engine Single carburetor 100bhp at 3,000rpm Three-speed manual transmission Front semi-elliptical leaf springs and rear cantilever spring suspension Four-wheel servo-assisted drum brakes -Springfield Phantom with original coachwork from new -CCCA Primary, Senior and Premier award winner -Recent service by marque expert The Phantom 1 Newmarket Rolls-Royce's 'single model' policy had proved an outstanding success for the company, but immediately after the end of The Great War the recession in the motor trade prompted the introduction of a smaller, cheaper 20hp car to be built alongside the existing 40/50hp Silver Ghost. Henry Royce's new design incorporated a number of modern features such as overhead valve-gear for its six-cylinder engine, a centre-change gearbox and 'Hotchkiss drive' rear axle, and the advanced newcomer's arrival only served to emphasise the Silver Ghost's Edwardian origins. However, the 45/50hp model would soon benefit from developments pioneered on its smaller sibling. Introduced by Rolls-Royce in 1925 to replace the Silver Ghost, the New Phantom (retrospectively known as the Phantom I) boasted an entirely new overhead-valve six-cylinder engine displacing 7,668cc and, like the contemporary 20hp model, adopted a disc-type clutch and adjustable radiator shutters. Its chassis though, remained essentially the same as that of the later, four-wheel-braked Silver Ghost and would continue fundamentally unchanged until the arrival of the Phantom II in 1929 brought with it an entirely new frame. Like its 'Ghost predecessor, the New Phantom was also produced by Rolls-Royce of America Incorporated, a subsidiary set up in December 1919 when the parent company purchased the American Wire Wheel Company's plant in Springfield, Massachusetts. Springfield commenced manufacture of the New Phantom in 1926 and by the second half of 1929 production had risen to 12 cars per week. This would prove to be the high point of Rolls-Royce of America's fortunes, the October '29 Wall Street Crash and the introduction of the Phantom II - re-tooling for which the US company could not afford - signalling the beginning of its decline. The Phantom I was in production for only five years and the Derby-built models ran parallel with the Springfield cars but ended in 1929, whereas the Americans continued until 1931. Unlike its British-built counterpart, the American product could be ordered with 'factory' bodywork, usually by Brewster, the latter company having been taken over by Rolls-Royce in December 1925. As well as manufacturing coachwork of the highest quality, Brewster had built its own automobiles from 1915 up to the time of its acquisition by Rolls-Royce, re-emerging as an auto-maker in its own right, using Ford chassis, when US Phantom production finally ceased in 1934 and the company became part of the reconstituted Springfield Manufacturing Corporation. The Motorcar Offered This handsome touring Rolls-Royce Phantom was delivered new to Mrs. E. J. Williams of Cincinnati in December 1930. All told it set her back some $20,075 and 50 cents, a staggering sum for its day, but a number that was clearly affordable to Mrs. Williams, who was part of a family whose interests included ownership of the Cincinnati Reds Baseball team. A fair proportion of the original invoice would have been its coachwork, a fashionable, fully convertible body, termed Newmarket by Rolls-Royce and constructed by the famed house of Brewster & Co. a company whose reputation for quality extended beyond mere automobiles and into popular culture, including reference in the Gershwin song 'You're the tops'. Mrs. Williams Rolls was one of the last of the first series of Phantoms and as such benefited from the latest technologies that the company could offer, including four wheel servo assisted brakes to counteract its 7.7 liter six cylinder motor, Bijur lubrication system to ensure that the car would glide along like the 'magic

Auction archive: Lot number 334
Auction:
Datum:
2 Jun 2013
Auction house:
Bonhams London
Greenwich Greenwich 100 Arch Street Greenwich CT 06830 Tel: +1 415 391 4000 Fax : +1 415 391 4040 motors.us@bonhams.com
Beschreibung:

Body No. B5750 7,668cc OHV inline six-cylinder engine Single carburetor 100bhp at 3,000rpm Three-speed manual transmission Front semi-elliptical leaf springs and rear cantilever spring suspension Four-wheel servo-assisted drum brakes -Springfield Phantom with original coachwork from new -CCCA Primary, Senior and Premier award winner -Recent service by marque expert The Phantom 1 Newmarket Rolls-Royce's 'single model' policy had proved an outstanding success for the company, but immediately after the end of The Great War the recession in the motor trade prompted the introduction of a smaller, cheaper 20hp car to be built alongside the existing 40/50hp Silver Ghost. Henry Royce's new design incorporated a number of modern features such as overhead valve-gear for its six-cylinder engine, a centre-change gearbox and 'Hotchkiss drive' rear axle, and the advanced newcomer's arrival only served to emphasise the Silver Ghost's Edwardian origins. However, the 45/50hp model would soon benefit from developments pioneered on its smaller sibling. Introduced by Rolls-Royce in 1925 to replace the Silver Ghost, the New Phantom (retrospectively known as the Phantom I) boasted an entirely new overhead-valve six-cylinder engine displacing 7,668cc and, like the contemporary 20hp model, adopted a disc-type clutch and adjustable radiator shutters. Its chassis though, remained essentially the same as that of the later, four-wheel-braked Silver Ghost and would continue fundamentally unchanged until the arrival of the Phantom II in 1929 brought with it an entirely new frame. Like its 'Ghost predecessor, the New Phantom was also produced by Rolls-Royce of America Incorporated, a subsidiary set up in December 1919 when the parent company purchased the American Wire Wheel Company's plant in Springfield, Massachusetts. Springfield commenced manufacture of the New Phantom in 1926 and by the second half of 1929 production had risen to 12 cars per week. This would prove to be the high point of Rolls-Royce of America's fortunes, the October '29 Wall Street Crash and the introduction of the Phantom II - re-tooling for which the US company could not afford - signalling the beginning of its decline. The Phantom I was in production for only five years and the Derby-built models ran parallel with the Springfield cars but ended in 1929, whereas the Americans continued until 1931. Unlike its British-built counterpart, the American product could be ordered with 'factory' bodywork, usually by Brewster, the latter company having been taken over by Rolls-Royce in December 1925. As well as manufacturing coachwork of the highest quality, Brewster had built its own automobiles from 1915 up to the time of its acquisition by Rolls-Royce, re-emerging as an auto-maker in its own right, using Ford chassis, when US Phantom production finally ceased in 1934 and the company became part of the reconstituted Springfield Manufacturing Corporation. The Motorcar Offered This handsome touring Rolls-Royce Phantom was delivered new to Mrs. E. J. Williams of Cincinnati in December 1930. All told it set her back some $20,075 and 50 cents, a staggering sum for its day, but a number that was clearly affordable to Mrs. Williams, who was part of a family whose interests included ownership of the Cincinnati Reds Baseball team. A fair proportion of the original invoice would have been its coachwork, a fashionable, fully convertible body, termed Newmarket by Rolls-Royce and constructed by the famed house of Brewster & Co. a company whose reputation for quality extended beyond mere automobiles and into popular culture, including reference in the Gershwin song 'You're the tops'. Mrs. Williams Rolls was one of the last of the first series of Phantoms and as such benefited from the latest technologies that the company could offer, including four wheel servo assisted brakes to counteract its 7.7 liter six cylinder motor, Bijur lubrication system to ensure that the car would glide along like the 'magic

Auction archive: Lot number 334
Auction:
Datum:
2 Jun 2013
Auction house:
Bonhams London
Greenwich Greenwich 100 Arch Street Greenwich CT 06830 Tel: +1 415 391 4000 Fax : +1 415 391 4040 motors.us@bonhams.com
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