Our Newsletter page is dedicated to the memory of Arthur Stahl -
the man who exhaustively researched, advocated for,
and loved to work on, these unique vehicles!
These newsletters have
been scanned into .pdf files for your use. To be as accurate as possible, we have scanned in each newsletter that was painstakingly typed on a manual
typewriter by Art Stahl over the years and included the copies of photos,
documents, and drawings in the order that they were sent out by Art via snail
mail.
This is a work in progress and requires hours of work to scan in each
newsletter and their attachments, chronologically arrange them and post them
to this website.
For your convenience they are numbered
sequentially, and have the publication dates in the .pdf filenames.
Enjoy your unique
look back at the Squire SS100's colorful history!
History of the
Squire SS100
Here is the detailed history
of the Squire SS100 as was collected by Ed Spielman, then was passed to me by
Arthur R. Stahl, the founding director of the American Squire SS100 registry.
Reproduced/edited
with permission.
Ed Felbin had owned Jaguars
and other foreign sports vehicles. There were many reliability problems with
them. Felbin saw NBC personality Dave Garroway's white Jaguar SS-100 and thought
it one of the most beautiful cars in the world. Having owned that succession
of troublesome Jaguars, and others, Felbin thought a new car of classic design
with elegant foreign coachwork and modern American power was a good and saleable
idea. In this, before the days of `kit cars', Felbin was ahead of his time.
Ed Felbin (a
well known radio personality in Philadelphia, broadcasting
under the name FRANK FORD) was one of several principals in the
creation of
five music fairs, among them Valley Forge Music Fair (established
1955), Cherry
Hill and Long Island's Westbury Music Fair. Felbin had sufficient
capital
in the late 60's, early 70's to take on such an expensive project as
this
dream car. But Felbin, who was not very technically oriented, worked
with
Mike Wolf, an auto dealer in Philadelphia who sold Saabs and Fiats.
Wolf was
to get a profit percentage in the enterprise, though Felbin was to
fund it.
(Mike Wolf is since deceased.) It was Wolf who had suggested the
particular
Ford power components and he was the principal technical designer of
the Squire SS100. (Spielman met Mike Wolf at the New York coliseum Auto
Show in April,
1971, at the Squire Mezzanine display.)
Felbin and Mike Wolf,
knew a man by the name of Jim Carson, a car dealer and fancier, who had an
old original Jaguar SS-100 in his barn. Ed and Wolf went there and laboriously
drew detailed plans and sketches of every angle of the car.
Felbin
went to Detroit to Ford Motor Company with Ray Heppenstall, a race driver
and builder as consultant. In Dearborn they were made to sign a release to
the effect that whatever idea they presented, Ford had already thought of.
At Ford, Felbin and Heppenstall met with an executive named McDonald who assisted
them. A deal was made for the Ford power and components on the projected new
automobile. The `Squire' name had no connection whatever to a British sports
car briefly made in England decades before by Adrian Squire. Felbin's car
needed an identity, a prefix before `SS-100' to set it apart and give it an
aristocratic sound. Felbin was playing golf at a `Squire's Country Club',
which proved suitable inspiration. Felbin simply removed the `s' and somewhere
before the eighteenth green, the name `Squire SS100' was born.
Felbin decided to build
the car in Italy. The Italian Trade Commission in Philadelphia gave him names
of potential builders, among which, was Giancarlo Ramponi. Felbin and Wolf
went to Milan to see Ramponi (whose secretary was Gina Woerth). Felbin struck
a deal with Ramponi, an Italian industrialist who made agricultural power-plants
with imported Volvo marine engines. Thus, the notion was founded (as indicated
in early Squire SS100 brochures and literature) that the cars were to be
crafted by Carozzeria Ramponi. Ramponi assigned the work to an engineer, Roberto
Vito. Ramponi/Vito built the Squire SS100 prototype in the town of Triuggio,
Italy (near Milan), but never completed it.
After months, Felbin was
concerned about the lack of activity. He visited Italy unannounced and found,
to his disappointment, that no further work had been done and that the prototype
had not been completed. Rather then see the project go wrong, he went to Italian
authorities to find another builder to carry on with the project. They recommended
Frank Reisner American creator of the small coach building company, Intermeccanica.
Reisner, at time was constructing the Indra automobile at his small coach
works.
A deal was struck for
Reisner/Intermeccanica to construct one hundred Squire SS100 automobiles
for Felbin's Auto Sport Inc. of Philadelphia. Felbin shipped 100 Ford 250
cubic inch, 6 cylinder engines with transmissions and rear ends to Reisner's
shop in the town of Trofarello near Turin (across the street from the Fiat
railroad yard). Ford engines and complete power units were shipped to
Italy under bond. No duty would be imposed if they left the country in
completed cars. Therefore, though Italian made, no Squire automobiles
were sold in Italy (or a tax would have to have been paid).
According to Felbin there
were one hundred power units at Reisner's shop and security was lax.
Fifty
of the units disappeared from the plant. The order of cars to be constructed
was then cut to fifty.
Problems arose; Felbin
paid for trips for himself and Mike Wolf to Italy to try to solve them. As
per the original brochure, the prototype sported Borrani wire wheels, which
were to have been used, but Borrani wouldn't guarantee that the chrome wouldn't
crack due to natural flex of the wire wheels. Felbin contacted Dunlop who
would guarantee the chrome on their wheels. Felbin bought 250 wheels (five
wheels for fifty cars). They were shipped by air from England.
The U.S.
government prohibited
use of `knockoff' spinners in wheels therefore octagonal hubs were
made. They
used expensive units that appear on no other automobile. These
knockoff hubs
were custom made by Reisner/Intermeccanica. Felbin had the finished
prototype returned to America anticipating arrival
of the other cars. Felbin took the completed prototype to the
Department of
Transportation. He had to make a trailer to haul the car to Michigan
to Ethyl
Corporation for exhaust emissions tests, which it passed. The cars
had pre-approved
stock Ford parts. According to Felbin, Reisner's
Intermeccanica completed fifty cars that were shipped to the U.S.
The first
shipment of six cars went to Heppenstall for preparation before
sale. Upon
arrival much additional work was necessary to prepare all of the
Squires for
sale. Febbin contracted with a mechanic named Armando to do the
additional work on the Squires to make them street legal in the USA.
Later when Felbin couldn't pay Armando, Felbin gave his the Squire
prototype to Armando to settle his debt.
All the Squire SS100's
came to Felbin at either Baltimore or Newark. Ed Felbin recalled that a D.B.
Kaufmann in Louisiana had bought one of the cars, liked it and became a Squire
dealer in Kenner, Louisiana.
There was a press luncheon
at Tavern On The Green in New York City when the car was first announced.
Felbin showed his new Squire SS100 in Boston and in April 1971 at the New
York Auto Show. He then flew the car to the Los Angeles Auto Show and to Pasadena.
The International Auto Show at the Place Bonaventure in Montreal, Canada made
the Squire SS100 their `star car' and put it on the cover of their souvenir
book. Pictures of the Squire SS100 appeared in Playboy magazine about February
1972.
Felbin had the car shown
at Miami's Doral Country Club in May of 1972. Felbin expected production cars
to arrive at his Auto Sport, Inc. by July of 1972.
Listed as having been
manufactured between 1972-73, fifty Squire SS100's were actually made and
shipped to America. Ed Felbin began the project in 1969-70. The entire enterprise,
both in America and Italy took four to five years.
The following information
came from a conversation between Paula Reisner and Ed Spielman in July 1991:
Frank and Paula
Reisner
were principals in the company of Intermeccanica that made the fifty
Squire SS100 automobiles. According to Paula Reisner in Vancouver, the
original
body mold was made for Ramponi. Intermeccanica used that mold to
make the
bodies one at a time. Though Paula verifies that Mike Wolf was the
original
technical designer of the Squire SS100 automobile, Frank Reisner
re-designed
the chassis. Paula recalled Intermeccanica's fabrication of certain
parts.
The expensive brass knockoff hubs were cast in Turin then machined
there.
The knockoff hubs were made for the Squire SS100 only.
Each of the fifty Squire
grill shells was hand-made in the old coach-built manner, panels beaten over
a wooden buck. The Squire chrome headlights were made in Turin specifically
for Intermeccanica and this car. The windshields and glass were custom fabricated
by Saint Gobain-Vis.
Paula Reisner recalled
that the torsion bars were originally Alfa Romeo but were modified by having
the ends machined to a square fitting. Torsion bar bushings were machined
from Teflon.
According to Paula Reisner,
after so many years, all of the original molds have been lost and no spare
parts are available.
T
he Squire SS-100 Registry has been happy to provide photos/information for this website.
Our group has located
forty-three of the fifty Squire SS100s ever made and would like to track
down the other seven. In addition, there are a few Squires
for sale at what we consider a "good" deal for anyone interested
in obtaining a classic car at bargain prices.
Please check out the contact page if you would like further information.