Auburn, Indiana has a pair of car museums: The Auburn-Cord-Duesenberg Museum and the National Auto & Truck Museum. The Auburn-Cord-Duesenberg Museum is in the former showroom and headquarters of the Auburn Automobile Company. The National Auto & Truck Museum is a former Auburn Automobile Company factory.

The Auburn-Cord-Duesenberg Museum concentrates on Auburns, Cords, and Duesenbergs. It includes other manufacturers’ historic cars and exhibits of cars made in Indiana. The National Auto & Truck Museum covers a wide variety of cars.

I’ll break this series into three parts. Part One will cover a little history of the companies and pictures of some of their cars. Part Two will cover cars from other manufacturers exhibited in the Auburn-Cord-Duesenberg Museum. Part Three will cover a selection of cars from the National Auto & Truck Museum.

Thanks again to Don Escaped Texas for posting about this museum.

History

The Auburn Automobile Company is the oldest of the three companies. The Auburn Automobile Company started in Auburn, IN as the Eckhart Carriage Company in 1874. The founder’s sons turned the company towards producing automobiles. The company turned into the Auburn Automobile Company in 1900. The company ran into hard times and its factory closed during the First World War. In 1919, the brothers sold the company. The new owners tried to revive the company, but failed. The new owners approached Errett Lobban Cord to help with the company. Cord proposed a buyout, which the then-owners accepted. Cord completed his buy-out in 1925.

In 1929, Cord founded the Cord Corporation as a holding company for all of his interests, including Auburn Automobile. Auburn’s factories produced Cord automobiles.

The Duesenberg Automobile and Motors Company, Inc was founded in 1920 by brothers Fred and August Duesenberg. This wasn’t the brothers’ first stint with car manufacturing. They started the Mason Motor Car Company and an earlier iteration of the Duesenberg Automobile and Motors Company. The 1920 iteration of the Duesenberg company was founded after the brothers moved to Indianapolis, IN. This iteration was known for the straight eight engine. The company entered receivership in 1924. E. L. Cord purchased the company in 1926.

The Depression was not good for the company. E. L. Cord’s illegal stock manipulation of his company did not help. After the SEC issued an injunction against Cord, he sold his shares in 1937. Shortly afterwards, the company stopped producing automobiles.

Museum Pictures

Before I show you a selection of my pictures from the museum, let me show you a video of the most expensive Duesenberg ever made. Jay Leno owns several Duesenberg cars. I suggest if you like Duesenbergs that you spend some time on his channel watching his Duesenberg videos.

I mentioned earlier the museum is in a building housing the former showroom and headquarters of the Auburn Automobile Company. The museum preserved the CEO’s office and several of the designers’ offices.

President’s office
The device around the model was used to help the designers’ scale a model up to a full size car.

The ground floor of the building is the showroom, and houses some of the automobile exhibits.

The museum preserved the showroom’s Art Deco decorations.

We’ll start with some early Auburn cars, and then go through a selection of other Auburn, Cord, and Duesenberg cars.

1908 Auburn Model G Touring.
1910 Auburn. This car only had a simple placard with no further information about the car.
This is a 1927 Duesenberg Model X Phaeton. The museum believes this is the only example of a Model X Phaeton still in existence.
1928 Auburn 8-88.
1929 Cord L-29. The Cord L-29 was the first mass produced American front wheel drive car.
1931 Duesenberg Model J Sedan Beverly. Gordon Beuhrig designed this car.
1932 Auburn 12-160A Coupe. This car has a 12 cylinder engine. These were among the cheapest 12 cylinder cars produced. Auburn thought that if the company sold 12 cylinder cars at eight cylinder car prices, the company would have success. The company didn’t.
1932 Duesenberg Model J Speedster. Cliff Durant, the son of GM founder William Durant, is the original owner of this car. Cliff Durant traded it to J. Paul Getty for a different Duesenberg and some cash. The car passed through other owners until Don Carr bought it in 1953. Carr donated the car to the museum in 1981. This is the first Duesenberg donated to the museum.
1933 Checker Cab. E. L. Cord bought the Checker Cab Manufacturing Company in 1933.
1935 Auburn 851 Speedster. Another Gordon Buehrig design.
1936 Cord 810. This is another Gordon Buehrig design.
1937 Cord 812 Coupe. This was one of three hardtop coupes from 1936-1937 and was built with several custom features.
1937 Cord 812 Sedan. E. L. Cord had the company obtain a Cord for him when he sold his stake in the company. The company obtained this car. This car stayed in the Cord family until the family donated it to the museum in 2007.

I’ll wrap up with my favorite car from the museum. First, pictures of the car, then pictures of the two placards with information about the car. I found its history quite interesting.

Wrap-Up

That’s it for this part. These pictures scratch the surface of the Auburn, Cord, and Duesenberg cards in the museum. The next part will cover automobiles in the museum which aren’t Auburns, Cords, or Duesenbergs.