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1920
- 1931 Rolls-Royce Springfield Silver Ghost
Provided by Hemmings
Two
factors caused Rolls-Royce to establish a manufacturing plant in the United
States. First was the English automaker’s correct perception of
the growing demand in the U.S. for Rolls-Royce cars; second was a punishing
U.S. import duty on automobiles.
In February 1920 the former Wire Wheel Corporation of America
plant in Springfield, Massachusetts, was bought and converted for auto
production to Rolls-Royce standards. About one year later, Springfield
Silver Ghosts began to roll out of the factory and Rolls-Royce of America
was in business. The Springfield location was a fortunate choice as an
excellent source of labor, for the entire Connecticut River valley had
a long tradition of precision manufacturing and machining, including such
diverse products as firearms, bicycles, motorcycles and automobiles.
Initially, the Springfield Rolls was the same as the English
product. In fact, Rolls-Royce declared in a public statement that, “These
will be identical and interchangeable with the chassis produced at the
works in Derby, England.” However, only the first 25 US-built Rolls-Royce
chassis followed this policy. Changes were made that included a US-supplied
electrical system, and American rather than Dunlop wire wheels. As the
years went by a host of changes were incorporated which better suited
the enormously diverse American driving conditions.
Another major difference in the marketing of Springfield
Rolls-Royce versus the Derby cars was the matter of custom coachwork.
A British customer was expected to buy the chassis and then order individual
coachwork to suit his requirements. Americans, however, being from a society
used to immediate gratification, wanted cars with a minimal delivery time
but still carrying outstanding body styles built with the finest craftsmanship.
So Rolls-Royce devised a selection of body styles and designs, built in
small volumes by several of the best U.S. coachbuilders. Most prominent
among these was Brewster, which designed and constructed some of the best-looking
bodies ever to grace Rolls-Royce chassis. Other body-makers, who built
under the badge of Rolls-Royce Custom Coach Work, included Smith Springfield,
Merrimack, Biddle and Smart, New Haven, and Willoughby.
As with most any other marque, the body style on a Springfield
Rolls has a great deal of bearing on the car’s market value. There
have been some exquisite bodies placed on these cars as well as some of
unrelieved ugliness. A good number of the surviving cars may carry second
or even third bodies, as original or second owners tended to keep these
cars for a long time and sometimes switched a formal body to a sporting
one or vice versa. In fact, a Rolls-Royce with a second body—as
long as it is a period conversion—doesn’t carry the stigma
that a body switch does with other Classics. The Rolls-Royce Owners Club
won’t even deduct judging points as long as the second or third
body is legit and not someone’s concoction finished last week.
Being such long-lived cars, the Springfield Ghosts have enjoyed
an excellent survival rate. In terms of purchase price, the trick is to
find and buy a car that doesn’t need a great deal of restoration
as the cost to bring these machines back from the grave can be hair-raising
and wallet-busting. Ascertaining the authenticity of the Springfield cars
is relatively easy thanks to books, which include records of the cars
built there, and in some cases, subsequent bodies and modifications performed
on them. Be warned though, parts are expensive and the cars themselves
are complex and thoroughly overbuilt (it’s been said Henry Royce
would never use one bolt when ten would do).
On the upside, you can buy a closed body Springfield Ghost
in touring condition for well under $50,000. An open Ghost, however, can
climb past $150,000 depending on the state of restoration/originality
and the exact body style. Nobody ever said owning a Rolls-Royce was cheap.
1920-1931 Rolls-Royce Springfield Silver Ghost
Base price: $ 10,900
Base weight: 2,200 lbs.
Body: optional at customer’s preference
Frame: Ladder type with tubular cross members and front diagonal braces
Wheelbase: 143 ½ inches
Height: 143 ½ inches
Suspension: Semi-elliptic leaf springs with Rolls-Royce friction shock
absorbers
Suspension (rear): Cantilever type with Rolls-Royce friction shock absorbers
Steering: Screw and nut
Brakes: Mechanical internal expanding on rear wheels
Engine: Six-cylinder cast in blocks of three each. L-head 4 ½ x
4 ¾ -inch bore and stroke
Transmission: Four-speed manual (later cars have three-speed gearboxes)
*Base price ranges from $10,900 to $13,800 depending on body style
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