IMAGINE a car that combines the luxury, style
elegance, and mechanical precision of a Rolls-Royce with the amazing
acceleration and blinding speed of a Bugatti. Don't think too hard, just
remember the phrase, "It's a Doozy!" The American built Duesenberg was
so fine a machine that it contributed its name as a superlative to
American slang. The phrase drops easily from the tongues of millions of
people who apply it to the best of anything, but how many remember that
it was an automobile that started it?
Since the time of the Duesenberg there has never been
another American car that could come close to matching it. This polished
piece of craftsmanship was the prestige car of the late twenties and
early thirties. The limousine version carried all sorts of important
personages in luxurious comfort through city streets, but once on the
highway the big car could accelerate at a pace that many contemporary
competition machines would fail to equal.
During the days of the notorious gangland wars, the
long black cars, equipped by their owners with armoured bodies and
bullet-proof glass, took part in many running gun battles. In more
peaceful form, political figures used the Duesenberg as official
transportation, but the "Doozy" made its greatest social splash in the
glittering world of Hollywood.
Outside the huge sound stages of the film industry,
the chauffeur-driven Duesenbergs slipped quietly next to the stage doors
and disgorged the leading actors of the time -hat brims down and dark
glasses over the eyes to avoid the idolizing fans. But when a film was
premiered at Grauman's Chinese or the Pantages Theatre, spotlights
flashed through the night sky, police lines held the crowds back, and
the shining Duesenbergs pulled into the curb in a magnificent
procession. The stars emerged in evening dress with smiles and waves to
the public, for this was the time to be noticed and a leading star
always knew that he should be seen and photographed stepping down from a
Duesenberg.
The two men who designed this wonderful car were far
from this world of glittering notables. Fred and August Duesenberg were
self-taught engineers who came to America from Germany in 1885 when they
were both young boys. Fred built a racing car in 1903, but his main
interest was engines and in 1913 the brothers formed the Duesenberg
Motor Company in St. Paul, Minnesota. They built an ingeniously designed
four-cylinder engine with horizontal valves that performed
magnificently. Eddie Rickenbacker drove a Duesenberg powered car to
tenth place at the 1914 Indianapolis race, and succeeding years found
Duesenberg-engined machines placing among the front runners.
With the coming of World War I the Duesenberg
brothers had cause to change many of their engineering ideas. The
catalyst was a Bugatti engine. The master of Molsheim had designed a
power plant consisting of two straight-eight engines. They were mounted
parallel to each other on a common crankcase with two crankshafts which
were both geared to a single shaft. The Duesenbergs were granted an
American contract to produce the engine for the French government, and
it was their experience with the Bugatti masterpiece that led to the
design of the famous Duesenberg straight-eight engine.
This new engine gave the Duesenberg its fame: In
1920, a Duesenberg set a Land Speed Record at Daytona, with Tommy Milton
urging it to a speed of 156 mph. In 1921 Jimmy Murphy astounded the Euro
pean continent by leaving its best cars and drivers in a cloud of dust
at the Grand Prix of France. As late as 1960 the Duesenberg was still
the only American car to win a European Grand Prix race: The passenger
version of this racing Duesenberg was the Model A, for its time the car
of the future. No other production machine in the 1920's had a
straight-eight engine. It also scooped the market with the first set of
four-wheel hydraulic brakes and followed that by introducing the balloon
tire.
In 1926 Erret Lobban Cord bought out the company to
add to his Auburn-Cord merger, but he was not as interested in the car
as he was in the engineering ability of Fred and August Duesenberg. He
needed them for his other cars, but he wisely continued the Duesenberg
line as well. That year the Model J Duesenberg appeared and some years
later a supercharged model called the SJ. These were the most famous
Duesenbergs. Their racing history is unparalleled and they still hold
three world records. Since 1935 no other car has been able to break the
Duesenberg Class B marks for the one hour, twelve hour, and twenty-four
hour runs. That is a long time for a record to stand especially when one
considers the engineering progress in recent years.

But the stock models were not much slower. It was
possible to purchase an SJ, drive it from the showroom to the open road
and reach 60 mph from a standing start in about 9 seconds! One hundred
mph showed up at 17 seconds. The top speed was around 130 mph. Try that
on any stock car today. As a matter of fact, try it on many competition
models.
The important thing to remember is that the
Duesenberg was not designed to be a racing machine. It was basically a
high speed touring car very much in the tradition of the European Gran
Tourismo models; an automobile that could be driven hour after hour,
mile after mile, over the endless American highways, with no strain on
the mechanical components or the driver. To achieve this performance
required precision manufacture and the resulting price tag was high.
Like Rolls-Royce, Duesenberg mainly sold an operating
chassis and various coach builders supplied bodies to order. Some of
these were as fancifully appointed as a sultan's palace, but a
bewildering array of instruments was always standard equipment. While
the Duesenberg passengers relaxed in luxury, the driver faced a panel
splendidly sprinkled with dials and gauges. Some even informed him of
hydraulic pressure in the brake-lines!
When the Auburn-Cord-Duesenberg empire faded in 1937
only 650 Duesenbergs had been built, but each one was a masterpiece.
Shortly after the war August Duesenberg tried to revive the old make but
the project failed rapidly.