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» » 110 year-old electric car sells for $95,000

110 year-old electric car sells for $95,000

A real automotive rarity went under the hammer at Bonhams over the weekend with the only known 1905 Woods Queen Victoria Brougham selling for DKK632,500 (US$94,548). Part of the Frederiksen auction at Ebeltoft, Denmark on September 26, the electric vehicle acts as a window into the early days of motor cars when new technologies fought for supremacy on the roads and in the show rooms.

 /ШУУД ҮЗЭХ/

Formerly the property of James E. Cousens, the 1905 Woods Electric Style 214A Queen Victoria Brougham chassis no. 284 was built by the Woods Motor Vehicle Company. The company was formed in Chicago in 1899 by Standard Oil executives, Toronto businessmen, and notables like August Belmont, who built the Belmont Park racetrack, and Samuel Insull, who was Thomas Edison's personal secretary and co-founder of Edison General Electric.
With US$10 million in capital stock, the company used patents purchased from electric vehicle pioneer Clinton Edgar Woods to construct 500 electric cars annually, including a rear-entrance Tonneau. Despite a belated effort to get into gasoline and hybrid cars in 1916, the company closed in 1918.
The Queen Victoria that went on auction is believed to be the only one known to still exist and in its day it was by no means an economy model. With a price tag of US$3,000, which is about US$71,000 in today's dollars, it only has a 72-in (1,829-mm) wheelbase that belies its 2,600 lb (1,179 kg) weight. However, it's still drivable after 110 years thanks to an upgrade with lightweight modern batteries and a fast-charging system, though it still retains its four-wheel full elliptic leaf-spring suspension and rear drum brakes.
Inside, the Queen Victoria demonstrates that it's more of a two-seater luxury car than a track monster thanks to its all-leather interior complete with glass flower vase and discrete controls. It even has a removable cab for open-air touring, but that doesn't keep it from doing about 30 mph (48 km/h) flat out, which is fairly impressive for a town car of its vintage.

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