Re: "Death of a Salesman"
|
||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Home away from home
|
Thanks, John, for sharing your artwork and story to add to what could be quite a collection of Packard dealer stories. The few characters I know would include Wendell Hawkins of Texas, Irv Albrecht of St Louis, and Harry DuBois of Northern Virginia. Most would sell their wares in the massive shadow cast by Earle C. Anthony of the West Coast.
People like these folks burnished the reputation of Packard as they sold them in good times and bad. Because of them, well-healed patrons like my grandmother would not think of buying another brand elsewhere. I'm sure others have a legendary Packard dealer story or two to relate, adding to the lore of the cars we collect. Your John Williams story reminds me of Henry Ford's last ride in a Packard hearse in April 1947 when no equivalent Lincoln could be found.
Posted on: 2016/7/19 12:21
|
|||
|
Re: "Death of a Salesman"
|
||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Home away from home
|
Thanks for your commentary and all I can say is "Ahmen." I was lucky enough to know Wendell Hawkins through my good friend Donald Taccone. I was honored to drive Wendell and Donald in my 1956 Patrician to the Mississippi Gulf Coast. I have a photograph somewhere. This Packard dealer was a refined, erudite gentleman. And, indeed, he was typical of so many Packard dealers who had to have these qualities because their clientele expected it--just as they expected a Packard to be the ultimate expression of good taste and old money.
Posted on: 2016/7/19 12:45
|
|||
1956 Packard Caribbean Convertible
1956 Packard Patrician Touring Sedan 1938 Eight Touring Sedan 1949 Custom Eight Touring Sedan |
||||
|