Anhut Motor Car Company

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The Anhut Motor Car Company was an American brass era automobile manufacturer, based in Detroit, Michigan, from 1909 until 1910.[1]

Anhut Motor Car Company
Company typeAutomobile manufacturing
IndustryAutomotive
GenreTouring cars
Founded1909
Headquarters
Detroit, Michigan (headquarters)
Chatham, Ontario (factory)
ProductsVehicles

History

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The company was founded by Michigan State Senator[2] John Anhut and Detroit mayor Philip Breitmeyer, who became vice-president of the company.[3] It was capitalized at US$150,000.[2]

Organized in October 1909,[2] the factory was located at 510 Howard Street in Detroit.

The car was known as the Anhut 6, and used a Brownell six-cylinder overhead valve engine of 3.7L[citation needed] displacement, producing 36 hp (27 kW; 36 PS), with a 110 in (2,800 mm) wheelbase.[4] Three body styles were offered: a two-seat roadster at US$1700, and a four-seat toy tonneau and a four-seat rumble seat roadster, each at US$1800.[5]

Sales were promising,[2] and the company purchased the factory of the bankrupt Chatham Motor Car Company in 1910,[6] continuing to manufacture badge engineered Chathams under its own brand[7] for the Canadian market.[2]

Anhut relinquished control of the company in order to concentrate on his upcoming re-election to the Michigan State Senate.[5] The company was taken over by factory superintendent HC Barnes, who re-organised the company into the Barnes Motor Car Company in September 1910.[5]

Barnes planned to build a six-cylinder car for $2,250 and a four-cylinder for $1,400, but the company was bankrupt by November 1910.[5] In January 1911, the physical remains of the company was sold to the Autoparts Company of Detroit, who specialised in buying up the assets of automobile companies that had gone out of business.[5]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Chatham Motor Car Co". Windsor Public Library. Retrieved June 13, 2017.; Kimes, Beverly. Standard Catalog of American Cars, p.50.
  2. ^ a b c d e Kimes, p.50.
  3. ^ Rudisill, Alvin. "Anhuts-Father and Son". Ypsilanti Gleanings. Retrieved 10 December 2012.; Kimes, p.50.
  4. ^ Kimes, p.51.
  5. ^ a b c d e Kimes, Beverly Rae (1996). The Standard Catalog of American Cars: 1805-1942. Iola, IA: Krause Publications. p. 51. ISBN 0873414284.
  6. ^ Windsor Public Library online (retrieved 13 June 2017)
  7. ^ Rhodes, John. "Car company made 35 units", written 17 June 2008, at Chatham This Week online Archived 2017-09-20 at the Wayback Machine (retrieved 13 June 2017)
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