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As the story goes, a 1926 Pontiac 2-door sedan was destroyed in a fire but was sent by the Pontiac dealership in Utica, New York, to coachbuilder Willoughby, also located in Utica, for resurrection. Reborn as a 1926 Pontiac boattail speedster, the car is being offered for sale on ClassicCars.com by a dealer in Morgantown, Pennsylvania.

The result is reported to be the first Pontiac race car.

To this day, the dealer notes, evidence of the fire damage can be seen in charring of part of the car’s wood flooring. The reborn speedster was designed to compete in hill climb races promoting the McRorie-Sautter Pontiac dealership, the dealer adds. 

“Willoughby was famous for high-end coachbuilding, however this was a quick and dirty conversion with simple steel over wood from the dashboard back,” the advertisement explains.

“This documented car is Pontiac’s earliest known race car. Our consigner and his wife have gone to great extents to not only bring the car back to its original racing form, but also document the history of Pontiac racing. Can you say provenance?”

The speedster weighs 1,750 pounds, some 600 less than the damaged donor sedan. 

“It’s in true racing form, stripped to the basics,” the advertisement says. “Sporting a nickel-plated radiator surround topped with a beautiful ‘Chie’” radiator cap, (the likes of which you will not see another, on a race car!), fronting a cowled hood then to the open simple cockpit and for the back of the car of this era the boattail design proved popular although did not do much for actual aerodynamics which really were an afterthought, if thought of at all, at this time. 

“Plenty of racing sponsorship is emblazoned on top of the white paint (its original racing color livery in the ‘20s) with signage hand painted from photos of the period, the name of our dealer/builder McRorie & Sautter, Pontiac letter badges and the rear ‘Pontiac Chief of the Sixes’ with the chief head profile. 



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