Jordan Motor Car Company: Difference between revisions
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{{Short description|Former american car manufacturer}} |
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{{More footnotes|date=February 2019}} |
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{{Infobox company |
{{Infobox company |
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| name = Jordan |
| name = Jordan Motor Car Company, Inc. |
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| logo = JordanEmblem1916.png |
| logo = JordanEmblem1916.png |
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| logo_size = 200px |
| logo_size = 200px |
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| logo_caption = Jordan Motor Car Company "Red Arrow" emblem |
| logo_caption = Jordan Motor Car Company "Red Arrow" emblem |
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| |
| trade_name = Jordan Motor Car Company |
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| native_name = <!-- Company's name in home country language --> |
| native_name = <!-- Company's name in home country language --> |
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| native_name_lang = <!-- Use ISO 639-2 code, e.g. "fr" for French. If there is more than one native name, in different languages, enter those names using {{tl|lang}}, instead. --> |
| native_name_lang = <!-- Use ISO 639-2 code, e.g. "fr" for French. If there is more than one native name, in different languages, enter those names using {{tl|lang}}, instead. --> |
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| type = |
| type = Corporation |
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| traded_as = |
| traded_as = |
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| industry = [[Automotive]] |
| industry = [[Automotive]] |
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| predecessor = *Jordan Motor Car Company (1916-1919) |
| predecessor = *Jordan Motor Car Company (1916-1919) |
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*Jordan Motor Car Company, Inc. (1919-1931) |
*Jordan Motor Car Company, Inc. (1919-1931) |
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| foundation = |
| foundation = {{start date and age|1916}} |
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| founder = [[Edward S. Jordan]] |
| founder = [[Edward S. Jordan]] |
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| location_city = [[Cleveland, Ohio]] |
| location_city = [[Cleveland, Ohio]] |
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| area_served = |
| area_served = |
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| key_people = |
| key_people = |
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| products = [[Automobiles |
| products = [[Automobiles]] |
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| brands = |
| brands = |
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| production = |
| production = |
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| owner = |
| owner = |
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| num_employees = |
| num_employees = |
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| parent = |
| parent = |
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| divisions = |
| divisions = |
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| subsid = |
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| bodystyle = |
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}} |
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[[File:1920 Jordon.jpg|thumb|1920 Jordon Playboy at Crawford Auto-Aviation Museum]] |
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The '''Jordan Motor Car Company |
The '''Jordan Motor Car Company''' was founded in 1916 in [[Cleveland]], [[Ohio]] by [[Edward S. Jordan|Edward S. "Ned" Jordan]], a former advertising executive from [[Thomas B. Jeffery Company]] of [[Kenosha, Wisconsin]]. The factory produced what were known as "assembled cars" until 1931, using components from other manufacturers. Jordan cars were noted more for attractive styling than for advanced engineering, although they did bring their share of innovations to the marketplace. The company's advertising was often more original than the cars themselves; said Jordan, "Cars are too dull and drab." He reasoned that since people dressed smartly, they were willing to drive "smart looking cars" as well.<ref name=":0">{{Cite book |last=Kimes |first=Beverly Rae |title=Standard Catalog of American Cars 1805-1942 |last2=Clark Jr. |first2=Henry Austin |publisher=Krause Publications |year=1996 |isbn=978-0-87341-428-9 |edition=3rd |author-link=Beverly Rae Kimes}}</ref> |
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==Establishment in Cleveland== |
==Establishment in Cleveland== |
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Jordan Motor Car established its plant east of downtown Cleveland at 1070 East 152nd Street in the [[Collinwood]] neighborhood along the [[Nickel Plate Railroad]] tracks. This not only provided an ideal location for shipping the finished cars |
Jordan Motor Car established its plant east of downtown Cleveland at 1070 East 152nd Street in the [[Collinwood]] neighborhood along the [[Nickel Plate Railroad]] tracks. This not only provided an ideal location for shipping the finished cars but also provided Jordan with ready access to out-of-area suppliers. The plant was built in two stages: the first {{convert|30000|sqft|m2|adj=on}} building was begun on April 5, 1916 and finished some seven weeks later, while the second addition was completed within months of the first structure. In their first year of production (1916), Jordan sold over one thousand vehicles.{{Cn|date=January 2024}} |
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==Manufacturing Methods== |
==Manufacturing Methods== |
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[[Image:JordenSedan1928 2.jpg|right|thumb|300px|A 1928 Jordan Sedan prior to restoration work]] |
[[Image:JordenSedan1928 2.jpg|right|thumb|300px|A 1928 Jordan Sedan prior to restoration work]] |
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Jordan |
The Jordan was an "assembled automobile", with parts obtained from outside vendors. The cars were powered by [[Continental Motors Company|Continental engines]], used [[Timken Company|Timken]] axles, Bijur starters and [[Robert Bosch GmbH|Bosch]] ignitions. According to Ned Jordan's biographer, James Lackey, the source of early Jordan bodies was somewhat a mystery.<ref name=":1">{{cite book |author=Lackey |first=James H. |title=The Jordan Automobile |publisher=McFarland & Company |year=2005 |isbn=0-7864-1667-X}}</ref> While Jordan had the capacity to paint the automobile bodies, attach them to the chassis and outfit the passenger compartment, the facility was unable to fabricate the bodies themselves. Later production bodies were shipped from a variety of manufacturers in [[Ohio]] and [[Massachusetts]], fabricated from aluminum.<ref>Clymer, Floyd. ''Treasury of Early American Automobiles, 1877-1925'' (New York: Bonanza Books, 1950), p.163.</ref> |
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While most automobile producers limited themselves to a single color combination |
While most automobile producers limited themselves to a single color combination and Ford relied exclusively on the fast-drying [[Japan Black]] lacquer which cured in a matter of hours, Jordan automobiles were available in three colors of red - "Apache Red", "Mercedes Red", and "Savage Red"- as well as "Ocean Sand Gray", "Venetian Green", "Briarcliff Green",<ref name="Clymer, p.163">Clymer, p.163.</ref> "Egyptian Bronze", "Liberty Blue"<ref name="Clymer, p.163"/> and "Chinese Blue". Black was also available. The most-flamboyant of color schemes was on the four-passenger Sport model, which could be ordered in "Submarine Gray", with khaki top and orange wheels.<ref name=":1" /> |
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Details given the cars were unusually advanced for an independently made assembled car |
Details given the cars were unusually advanced for an independently made assembled car; for example, Jordans boasted one of the first cowl fresh-air ventilation systems. Jordan also went to all-steel construction in the mid-1920s, some ten years before [[Buick]] and eight years before [[Chrysler]] introduced the advanced [[Chrysler Airflow|Airflow]] models.<ref name=":1" /> |
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In 1917, Jordan's 60 Series Limousine had a 6-cylinder 303.1 |
In 1917, Jordan's 60 Series Limousine had a 6-cylinder, 303.1-cubic-inch Continental engine.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.classiccardatabase.com/specs.php?series=2993&year=1917&model=10942|title=Classic Car Specifications, Engine, Wheelbase, production numbers, VIN numbers for Antique Cars, Classic Cars, Vintage Cars and Muscle Cars|website=Classiccardatabase.com|accessdate=24 February 2019}}</ref> Jordan purchased and installed straight-six engines for its 1919 Series F and 1920-1921 Series M cars.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.hemmings.com/magazine/hcc/2011/02/The-Jordan-Playboy/3695921.html|title=The Jordan Playboy : Off-the-shelf parts combined with pleasing styling created a distinctively attractive automobile|website=Hemmings.com|accessdate=24 February 2019}}</ref> In 1922, the Series MX model featured a 246-cubic-inch, six-cylinder flathead engine.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.conceptcarz.com/z22947/jordan-motor-model-mx.aspx|title=1923 Jordan Motor Model MX History, Pictures, Value, Auction Sales, Research and News|website=Conceptcarz.com|accessdate=24 February 2019}}</ref> In 1926, their Line Eight and Great Line Eight models offered, corresponding to their names, eight-cylinder engines.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.conceptcarz.com/vehicle/z16925/jordan-motor-line-eight.aspx|title=1926 Jordan Motor Line Eight History, Pictures, Value, Auction Sales, Research and News|website=Conceptcarz.com|accessdate=24 February 2019}}</ref> The 1931 Model 90 was powered by an eight-cylinder, 85-horsepower engine.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.conceptcarz.com/z24015/jordan-motor-model-90.aspx|title=1931 Jordan Motor Model 90 History, Pictures, Value, Auction Sales, Research and News|website=Conceptcarz.com|accessdate=24 February 2019}}</ref> |
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==Jordan marketing== |
==Jordan marketing== |
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Jordan was also one of the first automakers to christen its model types with unique, evocative names such as the '''Sport Marine''' (with "fashionably low" 32×4-inch {81×10 cm} wheels, it was "essentially a woman's car"),<ref name="Clymer, p.163"/> '''Tomboy''', and '''Playboy'''. He originally wanted to name the car with the World War I term |
Jordan was also one of the first automakers to christen its model types with unique, evocative names, such as the '''Sport Marine''' (with "fashionably low" 32×4-inch {81×10 cm} wheels, it was "essentially a woman's car"),<ref name="Clymer, p.163"/> '''Tomboy''', and '''Playboy'''. He originally wanted to name the car with the World War I term "Doughboy," but decided on the common-sensical-but-provocative Playboy instead.<ref>{{cite news|last1=Theiss|first1=Evelyn|title=Ned Jordan's car company failed, but Jordan Model Z Speedway Ace is restored|url=http://www.cleveland.com/arts/index.ssf/2008/11/ned_jordans_car_company_failed.html|accessdate=6 September 2016|website=Cleveland.com|date=9 November 2008|location=Cleveland Ohio}}</ref> In 1920, the company issued the '''Friendly Three''' coupe, with the slogan "Seats two, three if they're friendly". |
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Jordan used the |
Jordan used the suburbs of [[Cleveland Heights, Ohio|Cleveland Heights]] and [[Shaker Heights, Ohio|Shaker Heights]] as backdrops for his advertising photographs, setting the cars in front of the mansions of Overlook and South Park Drives. |
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Appearing in the June, 1923 edition of the [[Saturday Evening Post]], the ad promoted the |
Appearing in the June, 1923 edition of the [[Saturday Evening Post]], the ad promoted the Jordan Playboy in art by Fred Cole, driven by a [[cloche hat]] wearing [[flapper]] hunkered down behind the wheel in abstract fashion, racing a cowboy and the clouds.<ref name=":1" /><br> [[Image:Jordancarad.jpg|thumb|left|200px|"Somewhere West of Laramie" advertisement for the Jordan Playboy]]: |
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{{Cquote|SOMEWHERE west of Laramie there's a bronco-busting, steer |
{{Cquote|SOMEWHERE west of Laramie there's a bronco-busting, steer-roping girl who knows what I’m talking about. She can tell what a sassy pony, that’s a cross between greased lighting and the place where it hits, can do with eleven hundred pounds of steel and action when he's going high, wide and handsome. The truth is - the Playboy was built for her. Built for the lass whose, face is brown with the sun when the day is done of revel and romp and race. She loves the cross of the wild and the tame. There's a savor of links about that car - of laughter and lilt and light - a hint of old loves - and saddle and quirt. It’s a brawny thing - yet a graceful thing for the sweep o' the Avenue. Step into the Playboy when the hour grows dull with things gone dead and stale. Then start for the land of real living with the spirit of the lass who rides, lean and rangy, into the red horizon of a Wyoming twilight.}} |
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While other Jordan ads contained the same winsome prose, one in particular had an unseen outcome |
While other Jordan ads contained the same winsome prose, one in particular had an unseen outcome: Jordan's "Port of Missing Men", which also appeared in the ''[[Saturday Evening Post]]'' (1920), featured Jordan's musings on restless men and those places where they travel to when they needed to get away. The ad featured art work showing a Jordan Playboy in front of a cottage in winter by the sea, with a young boy walking by, looking up to the second story window aglow red from within. |
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Jordan wrote to the editor of the ''Post'': |
Jordan wrote to the editor of the ''Post'':<ref name=":1" /> |
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{{Cquote|We regret that our recent advertisement has offended your high moral sense... perhaps had we placed lights in the downstairs windows as well, the suggestive implications would have been minimized.}} |
{{Cquote|We regret that our recent advertisement has offended your high moral sense... perhaps had we placed lights in the downstairs windows as well, the suggestive implications would have been minimized.}} |
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==Final years of production (1927-1931)== |
==Final years of production (1927-1931)== |
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[[Image:JordanSedan1928.jpg|right|thumb]] |
[[Image:JordanSedan1928.jpg|right|thumb|Another view of a 1928 Jordan Sedan, prior to restoration work]] |
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In 1927, the firm introduced its only significant misstep |
In 1927, the firm introduced its only significant misstep: the '''Little Custom''', a luxury compact. Not only did consumers ignore the car but its financial drain on the company was a leading factor in the takeover by bankers of JMC, leaving Ned Jordan as the company’s titular head.<ref name=":0" /> Both Jordan and his wife began divesting their interests in the company in 1928. |
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The company survived the [[Wall Street Crash 1929| |
The company survived the [[Wall Street Crash 1929|stock market crash of 1929]], but with intense competition among the many US automakers then extant, and personal problems besetting Ned Jordan, the company ceased production in 1931.<ref name=":0" /> |
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The true total production of Jordan cars is unclear |
The true total production of Jordan cars is unclear; some sources list the total amount as high as over 100,000 units, while other sources list the production as low as 30,000. |
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Some other sources{{Who?|date=January 2024}} estimate the production of Jordan as below: |
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{| class="wikitable sortable" |
{| class="wikitable sortable" |
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==References== |
==References== |
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* Howley, Tim. "Ned Jordan: The spell he wove". |
* Howley, Tim. "Ned Jordan: The spell he wove". ''Automotobile Quarterly''; Second Quarter, 1975. |
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* {{cite book | author = Kimes, Beverly R., Editor. Clark, Henry A. | title = The Standard Catalog of American Cars 1805-1945 | publisher = Kraus Publications | year = 1996 | isbn = 0-87341-428-4}} |
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* {{cite book | author = Lackey, James H. | title = The Jordan Automobile| publisher = McFarland & Company | year = 2005 | isbn = 0-7864-1667-X}} |
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==External links== |
==External links== |
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*[http://clubs.hemmings.com/frameset.cfm?club=jordanmotorcar Jordan Motor Car Preservation Association] |
*[http://clubs.hemmings.com/frameset.cfm?club=jordanmotorcar Jordan Motor Car Preservation Association] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060211182858/http://clubs.hemmings.com/frameset.cfm?club=jordanmotorcar |date=2006-02-11 }} |
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*[https://thejordanregister.com/ The Jordan Register] |
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{{commons category|Jordan Motor Car Company}} |
{{commons category|Jordan Motor Car Company}} |
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[[Category:Defunct motor vehicle manufacturers of the United States]] |
[[Category:Defunct motor vehicle manufacturers of the United States]] |
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[[Category:Luxury motor vehicle manufacturers]] |
[[Category:Luxury motor vehicle manufacturers]] |
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[[Category:1910s cars]] |
[[Category:1910s cars]] |
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[[Category:History of Cleveland]] |
[[Category:History of Cleveland]] |
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[[Category:Manufacturing companies based in Cleveland]] |
[[Category:Manufacturing companies based in Cleveland]] |
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[[Category:Defunct companies based in Ohio]] |
[[Category:Defunct manufacturing companies based in Ohio]] |
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[[Category:Vehicle manufacturing companies established in 1916]] |
[[Category:Vehicle manufacturing companies established in 1916]] |
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[[Category:Vehicle manufacturing companies disestablished in 1931]] |
[[Category:Vehicle manufacturing companies disestablished in 1931]] |
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[[Category:1916 establishments in Ohio]] |
[[Category:1916 establishments in Ohio]] |
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[[Category:1931 disestablishments in Ohio]] |
[[Category:1931 disestablishments in Ohio]] |
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⚫ | |||
[[Category:1930s cars]] |
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[[Category:Pre-war vehicles]] |
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[[Category:Cars introduced in 1916]] |
Latest revision as of 01:46, 29 September 2024
Jordan Motor Car Company | |
Company type | Corporation |
Industry | Automotive |
Predecessor |
|
Founded | 1916 |
Founder | Edward S. Jordan |
Headquarters | , United States |
Products | Automobiles |
The Jordan Motor Car Company was founded in 1916 in Cleveland, Ohio by Edward S. "Ned" Jordan, a former advertising executive from Thomas B. Jeffery Company of Kenosha, Wisconsin. The factory produced what were known as "assembled cars" until 1931, using components from other manufacturers. Jordan cars were noted more for attractive styling than for advanced engineering, although they did bring their share of innovations to the marketplace. The company's advertising was often more original than the cars themselves; said Jordan, "Cars are too dull and drab." He reasoned that since people dressed smartly, they were willing to drive "smart looking cars" as well.[1]
Establishment in Cleveland
[edit]Jordan Motor Car established its plant east of downtown Cleveland at 1070 East 152nd Street in the Collinwood neighborhood along the Nickel Plate Railroad tracks. This not only provided an ideal location for shipping the finished cars but also provided Jordan with ready access to out-of-area suppliers. The plant was built in two stages: the first 30,000-square-foot (2,800 m2) building was begun on April 5, 1916 and finished some seven weeks later, while the second addition was completed within months of the first structure. In their first year of production (1916), Jordan sold over one thousand vehicles.[citation needed]
Manufacturing Methods
[edit]The Jordan was an "assembled automobile", with parts obtained from outside vendors. The cars were powered by Continental engines, used Timken axles, Bijur starters and Bosch ignitions. According to Ned Jordan's biographer, James Lackey, the source of early Jordan bodies was somewhat a mystery.[2] While Jordan had the capacity to paint the automobile bodies, attach them to the chassis and outfit the passenger compartment, the facility was unable to fabricate the bodies themselves. Later production bodies were shipped from a variety of manufacturers in Ohio and Massachusetts, fabricated from aluminum.[3]
While most automobile producers limited themselves to a single color combination and Ford relied exclusively on the fast-drying Japan Black lacquer which cured in a matter of hours, Jordan automobiles were available in three colors of red - "Apache Red", "Mercedes Red", and "Savage Red"- as well as "Ocean Sand Gray", "Venetian Green", "Briarcliff Green",[4] "Egyptian Bronze", "Liberty Blue"[4] and "Chinese Blue". Black was also available. The most-flamboyant of color schemes was on the four-passenger Sport model, which could be ordered in "Submarine Gray", with khaki top and orange wheels.[2]
Details given the cars were unusually advanced for an independently made assembled car; for example, Jordans boasted one of the first cowl fresh-air ventilation systems. Jordan also went to all-steel construction in the mid-1920s, some ten years before Buick and eight years before Chrysler introduced the advanced Airflow models.[2]
In 1917, Jordan's 60 Series Limousine had a 6-cylinder, 303.1-cubic-inch Continental engine.[5] Jordan purchased and installed straight-six engines for its 1919 Series F and 1920-1921 Series M cars.[6] In 1922, the Series MX model featured a 246-cubic-inch, six-cylinder flathead engine.[7] In 1926, their Line Eight and Great Line Eight models offered, corresponding to their names, eight-cylinder engines.[8] The 1931 Model 90 was powered by an eight-cylinder, 85-horsepower engine.[9]
Jordan marketing
[edit]Jordan was also one of the first automakers to christen its model types with unique, evocative names, such as the Sport Marine (with "fashionably low" 32×4-inch {81×10 cm} wheels, it was "essentially a woman's car"),[4] Tomboy, and Playboy. He originally wanted to name the car with the World War I term "Doughboy," but decided on the common-sensical-but-provocative Playboy instead.[10] In 1920, the company issued the Friendly Three coupe, with the slogan "Seats two, three if they're friendly".
Jordan used the suburbs of Cleveland Heights and Shaker Heights as backdrops for his advertising photographs, setting the cars in front of the mansions of Overlook and South Park Drives.
Appearing in the June, 1923 edition of the Saturday Evening Post, the ad promoted the Jordan Playboy in art by Fred Cole, driven by a cloche hat wearing flapper hunkered down behind the wheel in abstract fashion, racing a cowboy and the clouds.[2]
:
SOMEWHERE west of Laramie there's a bronco-busting, steer-roping girl who knows what I’m talking about. She can tell what a sassy pony, that’s a cross between greased lighting and the place where it hits, can do with eleven hundred pounds of steel and action when he's going high, wide and handsome. The truth is - the Playboy was built for her. Built for the lass whose, face is brown with the sun when the day is done of revel and romp and race. She loves the cross of the wild and the tame. There's a savor of links about that car - of laughter and lilt and light - a hint of old loves - and saddle and quirt. It’s a brawny thing - yet a graceful thing for the sweep o' the Avenue. Step into the Playboy when the hour grows dull with things gone dead and stale. Then start for the land of real living with the spirit of the lass who rides, lean and rangy, into the red horizon of a Wyoming twilight.
While other Jordan ads contained the same winsome prose, one in particular had an unseen outcome: Jordan's "Port of Missing Men", which also appeared in the Saturday Evening Post (1920), featured Jordan's musings on restless men and those places where they travel to when they needed to get away. The ad featured art work showing a Jordan Playboy in front of a cottage in winter by the sea, with a young boy walking by, looking up to the second story window aglow red from within.
Jordan wrote to the editor of the Post:[2]
We regret that our recent advertisement has offended your high moral sense... perhaps had we placed lights in the downstairs windows as well, the suggestive implications would have been minimized.
Final years of production (1927-1931)
[edit]In 1927, the firm introduced its only significant misstep: the Little Custom, a luxury compact. Not only did consumers ignore the car but its financial drain on the company was a leading factor in the takeover by bankers of JMC, leaving Ned Jordan as the company’s titular head.[1] Both Jordan and his wife began divesting their interests in the company in 1928.
The company survived the stock market crash of 1929, but with intense competition among the many US automakers then extant, and personal problems besetting Ned Jordan, the company ceased production in 1931.[1]
The true total production of Jordan cars is unclear; some sources list the total amount as high as over 100,000 units, while other sources list the production as low as 30,000.
Some other sources[who?] estimate the production of Jordan as below:
Year | Units |
---|---|
1917 | 1,788 |
1918 | 5,713 |
1919 | 3,218 |
1920 | 7,817 |
1921 | 8,913 |
1922 | 4,167 |
1923 | 6,691 |
1924 | 6,159 |
1925 | 6,531 |
1926 | 8,469 |
1927 | 6,357 |
1928 | 7,386 |
1929 | 4,323 |
1930 | 985 |
1931 | 263 |
Total | 78,780 |
See also
[edit]Notes
[edit]- ^ a b c Kimes, Beverly Rae; Clark Jr., Henry Austin (1996). Standard Catalog of American Cars 1805-1942 (3rd ed.). Krause Publications. ISBN 978-0-87341-428-9.
- ^ a b c d e Lackey, James H. (2005). The Jordan Automobile. McFarland & Company. ISBN 0-7864-1667-X.
- ^ Clymer, Floyd. Treasury of Early American Automobiles, 1877-1925 (New York: Bonanza Books, 1950), p.163.
- ^ a b c Clymer, p.163.
- ^ "Classic Car Specifications, Engine, Wheelbase, production numbers, VIN numbers for Antique Cars, Classic Cars, Vintage Cars and Muscle Cars". Classiccardatabase.com. Retrieved 24 February 2019.
- ^ "The Jordan Playboy : Off-the-shelf parts combined with pleasing styling created a distinctively attractive automobile". Hemmings.com. Retrieved 24 February 2019.
- ^ "1923 Jordan Motor Model MX History, Pictures, Value, Auction Sales, Research and News". Conceptcarz.com. Retrieved 24 February 2019.
- ^ "1926 Jordan Motor Line Eight History, Pictures, Value, Auction Sales, Research and News". Conceptcarz.com. Retrieved 24 February 2019.
- ^ "1931 Jordan Motor Model 90 History, Pictures, Value, Auction Sales, Research and News". Conceptcarz.com. Retrieved 24 February 2019.
- ^ Theiss, Evelyn (9 November 2008). "Ned Jordan's car company failed, but Jordan Model Z Speedway Ace is restored". Cleveland.com. Cleveland Ohio. Retrieved 6 September 2016.
References
[edit]- Howley, Tim. "Ned Jordan: The spell he wove". Automotobile Quarterly; Second Quarter, 1975.
External links
[edit]- Jordan Motor Car Preservation Association Archived 2006-02-11 at the Wayback Machine
- The Jordan Register
- Motor vehicle manufacturers based in Ohio
- Defunct motor vehicle manufacturers of the United States
- Luxury motor vehicle manufacturers
- 1910s cars
- History of Cleveland
- Manufacturing companies based in Cleveland
- Defunct manufacturing companies based in Ohio
- Vehicle manufacturing companies established in 1916
- Vehicle manufacturing companies disestablished in 1931
- 1916 establishments in Ohio
- 1931 disestablishments in Ohio
- Vintage vehicles
- 1920s cars
- 1930s cars
- Pre-war vehicles
- Cars introduced in 1916