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Let’s take a visit back to 1923, the year Charles Lindbergh flew his first solo flight, the first home game is played at Yankee Stadium with the Yankees winning 4-1 with the legendary Babe Ruth against the Boston Red Sox, and the first issue of Time magazine is published.

If you were part of the privileged class during that time, you might have been lucky enough to be transported around in a luxurious and hand-crafted ride such as the Pick of the Day, 1923 Rolls-Royce Silver Ghost Mayfair Town Car.

This Rolls, advertised by a Solon, Ohio, dealer on ClassicCars.com, was built by the coachbuilder Holbrook Company of Hudson, New York, in 1923 (body 768 and chassis 143JH) as a right-hand-drive model, and it has had only four owners since. It’s traveled all over the U.S., Canada, New Zealand and Australia, winning many awards.

“The name Silver Ghost originally christened chassis no. 60551, emphasizing its ghost-like quietness,” the seller says. “Other cars were given their own individual appellations, but the phrase Silver Ghost was picked up by an enamored press, turning it into the name of an entire automotive series instead of just one specific car.”

Production of the Silver Ghost began in England in 1907 but halted during World War I, although its chassis and engines were found on numerous armored cars made fam0us by Lawrence of Arabia’s exploits in the Middle East.  

After the war ended, Rolls opened a new factory in Springfield, Massachusetts, to supplement its UK plant, and Silver Ghosts were produced there from 1921 to 1926. Apparently, this car was one of the Silver Ghosts built in Springfield.

“In all, a total of 7,874 Silver Ghosts were produced from 1907 to 1936, including 1,701 built in the Springfield plant,” the dealer says. “Remarkably, it is estimated that nearly 1,500 of them survive today.”

1923 Rolls-Royce Silver Ghost side  view



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