- Errett Lobban Cord
Errett Lobban "E. L." Cord (
20 July 1894 -2 January 1974 ) was a leader inUnited States transport during the early and middle 20th century.Cord founded the
Cord Corporation in 1929 as a holding company for over 150 companies he controlled, mostly in the field of transportation. The corporation controlled the Auburn Automobile Company, which built theAuburn Automobile and theCord Automobile ;Lycoming Engines ;Duesenberg Inc.;New York Shipbuilding ;Checker Cab ;Stinson Aircraft Company ; and American Airways (laterAmerican Airlines ), amongst other holdings.Born in
Warrensburg, Missouri , Cord had been a race car driver, mechanic and car salesman before he was offered the opportunity to manage the dying Auburn Automobile Company in 1924. By 1928 he controlled Auburn, which by 1931 was the 13th largest seller of autos in the United States. In 1937 he sold the Cord Corporation to theAviation Corporation and retired toLos Angeles to earn even more millions in real estate. Cord owned several of the firstradio andtelevision station s inCalifornia and laterNevada , where he moved in the 1940s. In thecall letters of his Los Angeles radio station,KFAC , the A.C. stands for Auburn Cord.During the 1940s he filled in for a Nevada state legislator who died in the middle of his term and again rose to fame as a politician in his later life. In 1958 he was asked to run for
governor of Nevada , but he refused and never explained why. He died inReno, Nevada fromcancer in 1974, aged 79.An excellent collection of his autos of interest is in
Auburn, Indiana (1600 S. Wayne St) at the Auburn *Cord* Duesenberg Museum.Trivia
E. L. Cord served as the inspiration for
Gram Parsons ' song, "The New Soft Shoe". Fact|date=October 2007External links
* [http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=19245 Find-A-Grave profile for Errett Lobban Cord]
* [http://automotivehistoryonline.com/cord.htm Automotive History Online - Cord History and Photos]
* [http://www.acdclub.org Auburn-Cord-Duesenberg Club Website]
* [http://www.automaven.com CordNet - Cord lore for the enthusiast]
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