VERY RARE Original Letter / Letterhead



The Automobile Club of America

Letter from S.M. Butler

New York, NY 

1907
 

 

For offer, a very nice old Advertising letter head / bill head! Fresh from an old prominent estate. Never offered on the market until now. Vintage, Old, Original - NOT a Reproduction - Guaranteed !!      

This came from a group of letters recently discovered in Upstate, NY that have sat untouched for over a century. From the S.C. Tallman funeral home in Auburn, NY. Nice illustration graphic. Eighth Annual automobile show of the ACA to be held in the Grand central palace, October 24-31 1907. Participated in by the American motor car manufacturers association and the motor and accessory manufacturing inc. Exhibition committee, S.M. Butler, New York. Letter gives a season ticket for the show from the secretary. In good to very good condition. Creases / fold marks. NOTE: will be send partially folded. Please see photos and scans for all details and condition. If you collect 20th century Americana advertisement ad history, American transportation, this is a nice one for your paper or ephemera collection. Genealogy research importance as well. Combine shipping on multiple bid wins! 3048




The Automobile Club of America was the first automobile club formed in America in 1899.[1] The club was dissolved in 1932 following the Great Depression and declining membership.

History
1925 image showing the house as the Automobile Club of America clubhouse
Depicted in 1925 as the Automobile Club of America clubhouse
On June 7, 1899, a group of gentlemen auto racers met at the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel in Manhattan and founded the Automobile Club of America.[2] The Automobile Club of America was officially incorporated on August 15, 1899 in order to "maintain a social club devoted to the sport of automobilism and to its development throughout the country".[3] The original directors of the club were: Frank C. Hollister, Charles R. Flint, George Moore Smith, Winslow E. Busby, Whitney Lyon, George F. Chamberlain, Homer W. Hedge, and William Henry Hall of New York City and V. Everit Macy of Scarborough-on-Hudson.[3] While it was called the Automobile Club of America, it was really a local organization.[4]

In 1907, the organization built its clubhouse, which was essentially a garage at 247 West 54th Street with a terra-cotta exterior. Architect Ernest Flagg "designed a sophisticated factorylike building with great banks of metal windows, set in a rich screen of glazed terra cotta, particularly fulsome on the second floor. There, a double-height assembly hall, modeled on one at Château de Cheverny in the Loire Valley, ran 100 feet across the building’s front, adjacent to a grill room on the same scale at the back."[4] In 1909, after the number of members looking for garage space doubled, the club built an addition on West 55th Street. By 1910, membership in the club was up to 1,000. In 1923, however, the club sold the complex and the original buildings were converted to other uses before being torn down in 2008.[4]

The club relocated to the former Fisk-Harkness townhouse at 12 East 53rd Street and separately negotiated blocks of space in garages around Manhattan.[4][5][6] The Fisk–Harkness House had 28,000 square feet (2,600 m2), which represented an increase of 8,000 square feet (740 m2) over the club's existing space in the automobile district south of Columbus Circle.[6][7] Furthermore, 12 East 53rd Street was close to several other clubhouses along Fifth Avenue, including those of the University Club, Union Club, Calumet Club, Knickerbocker Club, and Metropolitan Club.[8][9] The Club received a $190,000 mortgage on the new building in early 1924.[10] After undergoing $100,000 worth of renovations,[11][12] the clubhouse was dedicated in April 1925.[13][14] The clubhouse was among the locations where New York license plates were distributed.[15][16] Events hosted at the house included a luncheon with a League of Nations Non-Partisan Association official,[17] an annual session of the National Highway Traffic Administration,[18] as well as bridge games and tea dances.[19][20]

The club had a peak membership of 6,000, but following the Great Depression in the United States, several thousand members left the club. As a result, in January 1932, the Automobile Club's governors voted to dissolve the club.[11][12] The East 53rd Street building was placed for sale at a foreclosure auction that August,[21] and it was sold to the Mutual Life Insurance Company of New York for $50,000.[22] The building was later renovated into the showroom of art dealer Symons Galleries in 1938.[23]