Antique Buick Parts

Between the year 1899 and 1900, David Dunbar Buick, a Detroit plumbing executive
and inventor who began building and selling gasoline engines late in the 19th
century, and his engineer Walter L. Marr, produced the first experimental Buick
automobile. That very year, Buiick created Buick Auto-Vim and Power Co. in the
Boydell Building, which still proudly stands at Beaubien and Lafayette, six blocks
from Renaissance Center. He created Buick Manufacturing Co. in 1901 or 1902. However
his first corporation was Buick Motor Co., a Detroit firm he incorporated on May
19, 1903.
Within the short four years, in 1908, Billy Durrant organized Buick into such
a success to become the No. 1 producer of automobiles in 1908, surpassing the
combined production of Ford and Cadillac, its closest competitors. Several names
were also contributed to the success of the company like Charles W. Nash, a founder
of what later became American Motors; Walter P. Chrysler, founder of Chrysler
Corp. and Harlow H. Curtice, a GM president and chief executive after the war.
Louis Chevrolet, co-founder with Durant of the Chevrolet automobile, had earlier
achieved fame as a Buick race team driver.

Buick sold thousands of units over the next few years, especially after the war
when first torque converter automatic transmission, Dynaflow, was introduced on
the 1948 Roadmaster; a high-compression V-8 was introduced in 1953. The sales
grew from 550,000 in 1950, to 745,000 in 1955. Other famous name models define
the road during the 60's like Lesabre, Invicta, Wildcat, Electra 225, Centurion,
and Apollo. Buick sales continued to rise through the 1960s and hit a record 821,165
in the 1973 model year. But the bottom fell out again with the oil embargo late
that year, and sales totaled fewer than 500,000 in both 1974 and '75. Over the
next few years, Buick rebounded and marked rapid sales increase up to the present.
The success of Buick is truly remarkable. That is why many car enthusiasts still
appreciate the beauty of antique Buick cars. And to support the demand of antique
collectors and restorers, antique Buick parts such as clutch, engine, cooling,
grills, oiling, electrical, lamps, carburetion, exhaust, fuel, brakes, transmission,
propeller shaft, rear axle, wheels, front suspension, steering, bumpers, frame,
shocks, springs, front fenders, hood, running boards, air conditioner, firewall,
heater, radio, antenna, cowl, dash, doors, glass, weatherstrip, wiper, dome lenses,
door sills, rear 1/4 glass, seats, deck lid, rear sheet metal, rocker panels,
convertible tops & parts, door panels, headlining, misc. interior, carpet,
floor mats, hardware section (moulding clips,etc.), buick stuff license plates,
key chains, etc are still much available. In this way, the legacy and heritage
of the antique Buick car remains alive.