Re: 1940 110 and 1941 Henney-Packard
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Home away from home
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I've never seen this pic posted before, Don. Nice looking 'pair 'o Packards' and they certainly represent a lot of the knowledge and experience you have with the brand. It'll be 9 years in March since I took up stewardship of my car and as is evidenced by my numerous posts and queries, I am still on a steep learning curve with all the mechanics and systems used by Packard. Thanks to this site and all the many regular posters like yourself, 'the answers are out there' and the legacy of these great cars is being preserved. Appreciate all. Chris.
Posted on: Today 16:06
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'If you think you can, or you think you can't - you're right!' Henry Ford.
1939 Packard Six, Model 1700 |
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Re: 1940 110 and 1941 Henney-Packard
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Home away from home
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Yes, as Chris (Packard Newbie) said, never seen that photo before, thanks for that. And you're the only teenager I've ever heard of who owned five cars, and five pre-war cars at that. That was an early breakthrough. How did that come about?
Posted on: Today 16:43
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The story of ZIS-110, ZIS-115, ZIL-111 & Chaika GAZ-13 on www.guscha.de
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Re: 1940 110 and 1941 Henney-Packard
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Home away from home
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Chris and Guscha, thank you for your kind comments!
Quote: How did that come about? Hope this isn't too boring but as you asked, I will try to answer. I was given my first car at 14 by way of a 1937 Chevrolet sedan painted competition orange with - very literally - wall to wall carpeting including the headliner. I was the only kid in Jr High being driver to school in my own car. When moving to Washington state in the mid-'60s, the Chevrolet made it as far as Longview, WA when it threw a rod and, as the family was renting an apartment while house hunting, I had to sign it over to a wrecking yard. I decided then that when I turned 16 and got my driver's license I would buy a car in the '30s which turned out to be a 1939 Packard Six touring sedan that came with a 1940 110 parts car. Keep in mind that the car wasn't even an antique yet! Starting at the back edge of our neighborhood was raw forest and while exploring out there one day I came across a 1938 Packard coupe used as landfill with one side sticking out of a creek wall and beyond that, a 1940 110 surrounded by later '40s and '50s Hudsons and Nashes. Since I could see a house nearby and didn't want to trespass, I later found the front door and introduced myself to the elderly gentleman who lived there. He gave me the Packard and said I could have anything else I wanted as the State was taking over the properly as a reserve. I regret not grabbing a rare Nash Ambassador Brougham 2-door sedan with armchair rear seats but it was very far gone. Not long after, I found another 1940 110 in a classified newspaper ad so bought it too as a parts car for the 1939 which I had been working on and, as the 1940 turned out to be in better condition, I sold the 1939 and owned the 1940 for many decades. It was somewhere in between all that I bought the 1941 Henney-Packard which was also in a newspaper ad and listed as an ambulance, probably due to it having holes in the fender where a siren was once install and stainless plates covering the pockets in the rear floor where the casket rollers would have been. It turned out that it was indeed a hearse which originally had an extension table with the rollers and that's why the floor did not have them! As my everyday car(s), I had the family's old 1957 Ford Fairlane 2-door hardtop that we had bought new, a 1954 Cadillac Sixty Special and a 1956 Cadillac coupe (not a Coupe deVille). The latter was beautiful and I regret selling it when we moved to California in 1972 but I did not know that the cars could be transported so inexpensively. It would have cost only a little more than bringing the Henney-Packard by itself.
Posted on: Today 20:12
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