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Tuesday, January 30, 2018

McLaughlin Motor Car Company | The Manchester of Canada
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The McLaughlin Motor Car Company Limited was a Canadian manufacturer of automobiles headquartered in Oshawa, Ontario. It became General Motors of Canada.


Video McLaughlin Motor Car Company



McLaughlin

McLaughlin Carriage Company began in 1869 in Robert McLaughlin's blacksmith's shop in Enniskillen, a small village 20 kilometres (12 mi) north east of Oshawa. In need of more workers to build his horse-drawn carriages McLaughlin moved to Oshawa, Ontario in 1876. In 1898 McLaughlin produced more than 25,000 carriages but in 1899 the carriage works was destroyed by fire. The City of Oshawa lent McLaughlin $50,000 to rebuild.

McLaughlin Carriage Company of Canada Limited was incorporated in 1901 to own the new carriage works. By 1915 McLaughlin was making one carriage every ten minutes.

The McLaughlin Motor Car Company Limited was formed in 1907 when McLaughlin began manufacturing automobiles under the leadership of Robert's son, Colonel Sam McLaughlin. Under a fifteen year contract the Canadian automobiles received drive trains bought-in from the Buick plant in Flint, Michigan. These cars were sold with the brand-name McLaughlin though the name McLaughlin-Buick also appeared on some vehicles. This alliance with Buick Motor Company controlled by Sam McLaughlin's friend William C. Durant was confirmed by an exchange of a large parcel of McLaughlin stock for a corresponding amount of Buick stock. Durant was a partner in Durant-Dort and like Sam McLaughlin had been the largest carriage manufacturer in his country.

The following year Buick, controlled by Durant and partner McLaughlin, formed General Motors Company with Charles Stewart Mott. Durant borrowed heavily and bought other automotive businesses for his General Motors including Oldsmobile, Cadillac and Oakland (Pontiac) but vehicle sales collapsed, factories were closed for twelve months and more and in 1910 Durant lost his control of General Motors Company to his bankers. Meanwhile General Motors retained the former Buick shareholding in McLaughlin.

With Sam McLaughlin's financial help Durant started a new business in partnership with racing driver Louis Chevrolet. Durant took control of Chevrolet and sold stock in a new business, Chevrolet Canada, so successfully he was able to regain control of General Motors and in 1916 General Motors Corporation was formed with Sam McLaughlin Director and Vice President. McLaughlin began manufacturing Chevrolet automobiles for Durant and General Motors. By 1914 McLaughlin had built about 1,100 of his own cars.


Maps McLaughlin Motor Car Company



General Motors of Canada Limited

General Motors of Canada Limited was incorporated in 1918 and bought McLaughlin and Chevrolet Canada and General Motors Corporation spent $10 million building a Walkerville, Ontario plant and establishing Canadian Products. In 1923 the name of the Canadian-bodied model was officially changed to "McLaughlin-Buick" and cars with this name continued to be produced until 1942. Later production was labelled Buick without the addition of McLaughlin or Canada.

McLaughlin remained chairman of the board of General Motors of Canada as well as vice-president and executive director of the parent company until his death, aged 100, in 1972.


McLaughlin Carriage Company: then and... later then - Vintage Ads
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Duties and other import taxes

Residents of other rapidly developing countries living under conditions not unlike US and Canada had a strong preference for well-engineered and robust American cars. The countries of the British Empire, England, India, South Africa, Australia and many more, gave preference by charging much lower import taxes on goods from another member of the empire. Taxes were adjusted to the proportion of Canadian content. Canada made and supplied General Motors vehicles to those countries also fitting them with right-hand-drive. During World War I Britain erected high tariff barriers to protect their own industry from America's low-priced mass-produced but good quality cars. By 1923 Canada had the world's second largest automotive industry. These exports fell to a trickle after the Second World War because Canada was part of the dollar area and therefore set apart from the British Empire's sterling area. The British were struggling to repay US War Loans and unwilling to allow their businesses unrestricted access to Canada's currency to buy Canadian cars.


McLaughlin Motor Car Company - Wikipedia
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The automobiles

The first McLaughlin automobile was the 1908 Model F.

Until 1914, the cars were finished with the same paints and varnishes used on carriages. This meant each vehicle required up to fifteen coats of paint.

In 1927 two identical specially designed four-door touring cars were built for the Royal Tour of Canada, one to be shipped ahead to the next city while the other was in use.

In 1936 a McLaughlin-Buick was purchased by the Prince of Wales.

In 1936 the Dunsmuirs, a coal magnate family in Victoria, British Columbia, ordered 3 special order 1936 Buick-McLaughlin Phaetons for 3 of their daughters. In 1937 the Phaeton roadster bought for Elinor Dunsmuir was used to drive US president Franklin Roosevelt around Victoria, BC during his state visit. This is verified by photos appearing in the Daily Colonist and the Victoria Times newspapers Oct 1, 1937 because each of the Dunsmuir phaetons was unique.

Two McLaughlin-Buick Phaetons were built for the 1939 Royal tour. One of these later carried Prince Charles and Princess Diana during their 1986 visit to Canada.


Parkwood Estate: August 2013
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Note


Mclaughlin Ford Used Cars & Honda Civic
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See also

  • General Motors Canada
  • List of automobile manufacturers
  • Reynolds-Alberta Museum
  • Canadian Automotive Museum
  • 1928 McLaughlin Buick Automobile video and essay in the Virtual Museum of Canada
  • McLaughlin Motor Car Showroom

Vintage in a Modern World: April 2016
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References

  • Heather Robertson, Driving Force, The McLaughlin Family and the Age of the Car, McClelland & Stewart Inc., 1995, ISBN 0-7710-7556-1

Vintage in a Modern World: April 2016
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External links

  • Internet Archive Catalogue 1896 The McLaughlin Carriage Co

Source of article : Wikipedia