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Auction archive: Lot number 224•

The ex-Tom Mix 1937 Cord 812 Supercharged Phaeton Chassis no. FC2634

Estimate
US$0
Price realised:
US$155,500
Auction archive: Lot number 224•

The ex-Tom Mix 1937 Cord 812 Supercharged Phaeton Chassis no. FC2634

Estimate
US$0
Price realised:
US$155,500
Beschreibung:

In the hierarchy of American heroes cowboy stars have long occupied the top rung of the ladder. Laconic, principled and straightforward, the cowboy – facing uncertainties ranging from the Great Plains’ nasty weather to unprincipled sheriffs and outlaws – pursued simple lives of freedom and individualism. That’s the legend, at least. The stereotype has taken many forms. In post-World War II film and television it rose to allegorical heights, but when it began with cowboys like Tom Mix it wasn’t allegorical at all. Tom Mix was a real cowboy, even though he was born in Pennsylvania. He went west in the last days of the nineteenth century, finding his spiritual home in the American West, wrangling horses and driving beef across the vast stretches of the plains. A superb horseman, he was an innate showman. He positioned himself in the forefront of public events including riding with the Rough Riders in Teddy Roosevelt’s 1905 inaugural parade despite having left the Army on less than formal terms after the Spanish-American War. His talent and flair made itself felt in subsequent years’ Wild West shows, then wrangling horses for the Circle D ranch which provided horses, cowboys and Indians (no disrespect intended, but that’s the term of the day) to Hollywood’s early silent pictures. Mix’s break came in 1910 when Circle D’s client Selig Pictures recognized his flair and featured him in the silent film Ranch Life in the Great Southwest. The rest is history. There were other cowboy stars of the era. Hoot Gibson and William S. Hart made many films, but it was Tom Mix who built an unparalleled following. Gary Cooper, Henry Fonda and even Ronald Reagan reprised the role which Tom Mix created, albeit with greater production values (and better scripts.) Mix’s broad-brimmed 10-gallon hat, his proud gait, clear-eyed gaze, principled restraint in the use of six-gun authority and his intimate relationship with his horse, Tony, established a pattern which persists to today. Mix, it should be added, did his own stunts, which added rodeo and wild west show spectacle to his films, and not a few injuries to his career. He was as fearless and daring as the characters he played. Risen from a family of Pennsylvania loggers, Mix established other less formidable precedents. He married no less than five times. He made millions, even in the currency of the Teens and Twenties. He spent it all, and then some. The Tom Mix Circus went broke in the Thirties, but his personality and unique persona continued to rise from the ashes of silent pictures, serials, radio and Wild West Shows to reinforce itself upon generations of American kids well into the Fifties. Tom Mix was an authentic American hero. He starred in over 300 films. His work was the basis of a genre which still attracts millions of fans to films and television over a century after Tom Mix headed west to find his fortune. His dedication to the history of the American West is embodied in his serving, along with William S. Hart, as one of the pallbearers at the 1929 funeral of Wyatt Earp. Decades after his death in 1940 “Tom Mix” was still shorthand for the American cowboy legend, featured in Saturday movie serials, comic books, cereal boxes and on the lunch pails of postwar youth. Generations of stars – Audie Murphy, Glenn Ford, even Yul Brynner’s character in The Magnificent Seven– trace their heritage to Tom Mix. His legacy is reflected in many later homages, from the cover of The Beatles’ Sergeant Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band to the boot prints, hand prints and Tony’s hoof prints in the cement outside Grauman’s Chinese Theatre in Hollywood. Sidney Craig’s 1937 Cord 812 Supercharged Phaeton is the last monument in Tom Mix’s career. It is documented in Josh Malks’ Cord 810/812 The Timeless Classic as delivered new to Mix. One of the great designs of the classic era, the Cord’s front wheel drive chassis, supercharged Lycoming V-8 engine and open 5-seat coachwork was inimitably linked with Tom Mix,

Auction archive: Lot number 224•
Auction:
Datum:
14 Aug 2009
Auction house:
Bonhams London
Carmel, Quail Lodge Quail Lodge's West Field 7000 Valley Greens Drive (at Rancho San Carlos Rd) Carmel CA 93923 Tel: +1 415 391 4000 Fax : +1 415 391 4040 motors.us@bonhams.com
Beschreibung:

In the hierarchy of American heroes cowboy stars have long occupied the top rung of the ladder. Laconic, principled and straightforward, the cowboy – facing uncertainties ranging from the Great Plains’ nasty weather to unprincipled sheriffs and outlaws – pursued simple lives of freedom and individualism. That’s the legend, at least. The stereotype has taken many forms. In post-World War II film and television it rose to allegorical heights, but when it began with cowboys like Tom Mix it wasn’t allegorical at all. Tom Mix was a real cowboy, even though he was born in Pennsylvania. He went west in the last days of the nineteenth century, finding his spiritual home in the American West, wrangling horses and driving beef across the vast stretches of the plains. A superb horseman, he was an innate showman. He positioned himself in the forefront of public events including riding with the Rough Riders in Teddy Roosevelt’s 1905 inaugural parade despite having left the Army on less than formal terms after the Spanish-American War. His talent and flair made itself felt in subsequent years’ Wild West shows, then wrangling horses for the Circle D ranch which provided horses, cowboys and Indians (no disrespect intended, but that’s the term of the day) to Hollywood’s early silent pictures. Mix’s break came in 1910 when Circle D’s client Selig Pictures recognized his flair and featured him in the silent film Ranch Life in the Great Southwest. The rest is history. There were other cowboy stars of the era. Hoot Gibson and William S. Hart made many films, but it was Tom Mix who built an unparalleled following. Gary Cooper, Henry Fonda and even Ronald Reagan reprised the role which Tom Mix created, albeit with greater production values (and better scripts.) Mix’s broad-brimmed 10-gallon hat, his proud gait, clear-eyed gaze, principled restraint in the use of six-gun authority and his intimate relationship with his horse, Tony, established a pattern which persists to today. Mix, it should be added, did his own stunts, which added rodeo and wild west show spectacle to his films, and not a few injuries to his career. He was as fearless and daring as the characters he played. Risen from a family of Pennsylvania loggers, Mix established other less formidable precedents. He married no less than five times. He made millions, even in the currency of the Teens and Twenties. He spent it all, and then some. The Tom Mix Circus went broke in the Thirties, but his personality and unique persona continued to rise from the ashes of silent pictures, serials, radio and Wild West Shows to reinforce itself upon generations of American kids well into the Fifties. Tom Mix was an authentic American hero. He starred in over 300 films. His work was the basis of a genre which still attracts millions of fans to films and television over a century after Tom Mix headed west to find his fortune. His dedication to the history of the American West is embodied in his serving, along with William S. Hart, as one of the pallbearers at the 1929 funeral of Wyatt Earp. Decades after his death in 1940 “Tom Mix” was still shorthand for the American cowboy legend, featured in Saturday movie serials, comic books, cereal boxes and on the lunch pails of postwar youth. Generations of stars – Audie Murphy, Glenn Ford, even Yul Brynner’s character in The Magnificent Seven– trace their heritage to Tom Mix. His legacy is reflected in many later homages, from the cover of The Beatles’ Sergeant Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band to the boot prints, hand prints and Tony’s hoof prints in the cement outside Grauman’s Chinese Theatre in Hollywood. Sidney Craig’s 1937 Cord 812 Supercharged Phaeton is the last monument in Tom Mix’s career. It is documented in Josh Malks’ Cord 810/812 The Timeless Classic as delivered new to Mix. One of the great designs of the classic era, the Cord’s front wheel drive chassis, supercharged Lycoming V-8 engine and open 5-seat coachwork was inimitably linked with Tom Mix,

Auction archive: Lot number 224•
Auction:
Datum:
14 Aug 2009
Auction house:
Bonhams London
Carmel, Quail Lodge Quail Lodge's West Field 7000 Valley Greens Drive (at Rancho San Carlos Rd) Carmel CA 93923 Tel: +1 415 391 4000 Fax : +1 415 391 4040 motors.us@bonhams.com
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