At 5:00 am, our Alexa went wild, saying we had to get up and move. I threw a pillow at it, but she kept squealing! We gave up and assumed the vertical position.
We prepped for a full day like we were training for the Olympics and then picked up Dianne at 6:40 am. I was so tired that I almost forgot how to drive and thought Mary would guide the sleigh this morning.
We rode to Sylmar in a friend’s 1951 Packard, which was interesting; it reminded me of the old days when I drove with my parents. That sucker is a beast!
The Packard 200 was an automobile model produced by the Packard Motor Car Company of Detroit, Michigan between 1951 and 1952. Models in the 200 designations represented the least expensive Packard model range, on the firm’s shortest wheelbase, and least powerful 288 cu in (4.7 L) 8-cylinder in-line engine. It replaced the Packard One-Twenty and the Packard One-Ten and was renamed the Packard Clipper for the 1953 model year.
We saw the Rolls Royce collection first, and they were beautiful! MAry of course found a green Rolls Phantom IV.
Most of the Rolls were black and a seemed like 30 feet long. I was surprised they sold for about $6000 in 1962, or three times the price of my first car, a 1962 Chevy Impala SyperSport.
In the old movies, all the cars were black but that is because the film was shot in black and white.
This car would have looked like this:
Al Riley, a sales director n for Whitman Publishing, was a friend of my parents, and he always drove a new Packard. BTW, Al and I went to Hawaii for a week in 1955 as had to sell books and had an entire suite set up for the displays. I slept with the books.
Whitman Publishing is an American book publisher that started as a subsidiary of the Western Printing & Lithographing Company of Racine, Wisconsin. In about 1915, Western began printing and binding a line of juvenile books for the Hamming-Whitman Publishing Company of Chicago. A few years later, Hamming-Whitman went bankrupt. Western took over the company, found success selling its inventory of low-cost juvenile books, and formed the Whitman Publishing Company.
Old cars were indeed bright. From 1914-1926, there were only Black Ford Model T’s. The 1920s saw the first use of color to reflect personal taste. The economic boom of the period (the “Roaring Twenties”) following World War I increased the demand for automobiles.
Overlooking the showroom, the marble floors shone with the reflection of the chandeliers.
The showroom was a sight to behold.
We walked up the stairs into the music room, a formal dining room where the Nethercutts would host dinner parties. The kitchen in the next room is almost 3,000 square feet.
After listening to the fantastic music boxes, we ate lunch at a local Mexican restaurant and enjoyed an excellent meal. Mary spotted the wings, and I could not resist!
We had a two hour ride home as the traffic, even on a Sunday, was heavy! We dropped off Dianne and went straight to Campus Jax to see Matt Mauser.
After the show we went VFR to home and crashed.