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  2. Buick City - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buick_City

    Buick City was a massive, vertically-integrated automobile manufacturing complex in northeast Flint, Michigan, which served the Buick home plant between 1904 and 1999. In the early 1980s, after major renovations were completed to better compete with Japanese producers, the plant was renamed to "Buick City".

  3. Gilmore Car Museum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gilmore_Car_Museum

    The Gilmore Car Museum is an automobile museum located in Hickory Corners, Michigan, United States. The museum exhibits over 400 vintage and collector vehicles and motorcycles from all eras in several vintage buildings located on a 90-acre campus. [1] The museum claims to be the largest automobile museum in North America.

  4. Jackson Automobile Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jackson_Automobile_Company

    The engines used by the company continued to grow, with a Northway six-cylinder engine becoming available in 1913, and a Ferro V8 available in 1916. Later cars resembled the contemporary Rolls-Royce. Indeed, the company used the phrase "The Car with the Keystone Radiator" in advertisements. [3]

  5. Stahls Automotive Collection - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stahls_Automotive_Collection

    The oldest car in the collection is an 1899 De Dion-Bouton tricycle, and the first one that Ted Stahl purchased is a 1930 Ford Model A Roadster Deluxe. Among the most prominent cars in the collection are a 1934 Duesenberg Model J , a Tucker 48 , and a handful of cars built for films, such as The Great Race , How the Grinch Stole Christmas , and ...

  6. Automotive industry in Flint, Michigan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Automotive_industry_in...

    A 1925 Flint car at a 2008 rally in Perth, Western Australia. This plant was located on South Saginaw Street, and manufactured Buick bodies and pressed-metal parts. GM bought the plant from Durant Motors before 1935; it had opened in the early 1920s as Durant Motors headquarters, producing the "Flint" car.

  7. Simon Garber - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Simon_Garber

    Garber had bought salvaged police cars, cleaned the titles of the salvage designation, and then illegally added the vehicles to his fleet. City officials fined Garber and his business associates up to $50,000 per vehicle for a total of $9 million. Garber's 183 salvage vehicles represented approximately 20% of his entire fleet.

  8. Checker Motors Corporation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Checker_Motors_Corporation

    Checker cars and taxicabs used the same basic body and chassis design from 1956 until production ceased, as Morris Markin declared that there would be no major changes as long as there was a demand for the car. However, numerous alterations in the appearance of the cars were made throughout production, especially in the late 1960s and 1970s.

  9. Dort Motor Car Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dort_Motor_Car_Company

    1918 Dort sedan and sedanet Certificate for shares in the Dort Motor Car Company. The Dort Motor Car Company of Flint, Michigan, built automobiles from 1915 to 1924.The company was founded by Josiah Dallas Dort as a spinoff from the Durant-Dort Carriage Company, and produced vehicles at Durant-Dort Factory One until its dissolution.