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The
Hupp Motor Car Company was organized in 1908 and began
producing its first automobiles shortly thereafter.
Founder Robert C. Hupp had the ambition of producing a
smart, reliable motorcar, which offered far more than
the very basics of the period, and of producing this car
at an economical price.
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This
ambition served as the company’s guiding principle
and, following this principle, the company was able to
last through the turbulent years following the Great War
and right through the Great Depression. The company
produced its last automobile in 1940, after producing
fine but undistinguished cars for 32 years. Each early
Hupmobile bore the words Guaranteed
for Life, right
on the car’s nameplate and the Hupp was a reliable car
for its day, as well as offering as regular features
many items considered optional or even unobtainable for
most other cars. In 1909, the year this lovely
two-passenger Hupp roadster was produced, the
company’s advertised slogan was The smartest and
best little car ever marketed in America at anything
like the money! When one considers that the snappy
little car offered good road performance from a
four-cylinder, 2O~horsepower engine, a folding
windshield, elliptical-spring suspension, Pres-To-Lite
headlamps and kerosene side and tail-lamps,
artillery-type wheels, repair kit, tool kit and tire
pump, all for $750, it is obvious that the slogan meant
what it said.
This
1909 Hupmobile roadster has a long local history, but
the original purchaser is unknown. The late Matthew
Black, known for years as Municipal Councilor for Two
Creeks, who used the car on his rounds for the Rural
Municipality of Wallace, purchased it second-hand in
1918 or 1919 for $15. The car was purchased years later
by Mr. Clarkson and restored prior to being housed in
the Museum. In fine running order today, this car was
Mr. Clarkson’s first restoration and so is the
foundation piece of the Museum’s collection.
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