Brands like Ford, Buick, Chrysler, Nash and Chevrolet are named after their mechanically innovative inventors, but that was not the case for Hudson. Hudson was named after the man with the bucks, ...
Established in 1909, the Hudson Motor Car Company disappeared in 1957, three years after it merged with Nash-Kelvinator to form the American Motors Corporation (AMC). While largely forgotten outside ...
Introduced for the 1951 model year, the Hudson Hornet was a groundbreaking automobile. Based on the company's "step-down" design and featuring a sleek body and a low center of gravity, the Hornet ...
Hundreds of vehicles rolled by bidders at this past weekend's Toronto Fall Classic Car Auction – a mobile montage of automotive history, spanning the Model T era through 1960s muscle to modern times – ...
Can a cartoon—excuse us, animated feature film—influence the collector car scene? Will Cars stoke interest in old iron the way Toy Story fueled a surge of nostalgia for little green plastic army men?
In the early 1950s, American car culture was obsessed with one thing: bigger engines with more cylinders. The V8 was quickly becoming king, and Detroit's giants were racing to prove who built the ...
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Back in 2010, Larry Kennedy noticed two old Hudsons listed for sale in Port Huron, Michigan, $5,000 for both. One was a 1950 Commodore Six from California that had been someone's daily driver nearly ...
Brands like Ford, Buick, Chrysler, Nash and Chevrolet are named after their mechanically innovative inventors, but that was not the case for Hudson. Hudson was named after the man with the bucks, ...