- Rare Willys sport coupe
- High-quality restoration
- Staid and stylish
As the Great Depression took hold, John North Willys rethought his
marketing strategy. His low-priced Whippet had done well before the
stock market crash, while the sleeve-valve Willys-Knight held a
prestige niche. Willys' new approach manifested itself in the
smaller and lower-priced Willys 77 in 1933, but the transition
trajectory was a bit convoluted. For 1929, there were Whippets with
both four and six cylinders. Then, in 1930, the Whippet became, in
effect, the Willys Six, Series 98B.
For 1931 there were two Willys Sixes, 97 and 98D, with wheelbases
of 113 and 121 inches, and sharing a 193-cubic-inch L-head
six-cylinder engine. Just to make things interesting, there was
also a straight eight, but it would last for only two seasons. The
Willys Six carried on, however, as Model 6-90 in 1932 and 79 in
1933. Thereafter, there was but one Willys, the four-cylinder 77.
The Willys-Knight had last breathed up its sleeve alongside the Six
in 1933.
This 1931 Willys Model 97A was purchased by the Merrick Auto Museum
in 2014. Painted blue with black fenders, it is very handsome,
particularly the harmony of the tan canvas roof, landau irons,
cream wire wheels, and whitewall tires. The interior is upholstered
in light brown mohair, while the instrument panel is a study in
contrasts. Trapezoidal gauges include a drum speedometer,
oil-pressure gauge, ammeter, and a hydrostatic fuel gauge, while
temperature is indicated on a remote-sensing MotoMeter. Modern
directional signals have been unobtrusively installed.
The car has been the subject of a body-off restoration, so the
quality is high. Willys-Overland, in its entirety, produced some
75,000 cars in 1931. The next year would deliver less than half
that many. This is a rare car from a turbulent era.To view this car
and others currently consigned to this auction, please visit the RM
website at
rmsothebys.com/en/auctions/hf19.