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March 28, 2016

Gilmore Car Museum Honors Founders With NEW Pre-WWII Car Show

Donald Steamer SMThe Gilmore Car Museum near Kalamazoo, MI celebrates its golden anniversary with an all-new event in honor of its founder with “The Donald Gilmore Classic.” This pre-WWII car show and swap meet will be held Saturday, May 21st, with a driving tour taking place on Friday, May 20th. (click here to download the show flyer and registration form) The Museum, which turns 50 this summer, considers this new show a homage to its roots. The non-profit’s very first event, held in the spring of 1966, was a “Brass & Gas” car show, so named for the pre-1916 autos that had brass head lamps, bulb horns and windshield frames, rather than the chrome we know today. “The Donald Gilmore Classic” will be dedicated to all pre-WWII vehicles dating from 1896 - 1942, representing both the first fifty years of the automobile as well as cars that established the Gilmore Car Museum. “The Museum hosts more than a dozen car shows each year,” Michael Spezia, Executive Director explains, “and for this one, we honor the legacy of Museum founders Donald and Genevieve Gilmore.” With encouragement from his wife Genevieve, Donald Gilmore became a reluctant antique car hobbyist in 1963 when he acquired just two “old” cars. Within three years however, he had obtained 57 vehicles, ranging from the pioneering 1903 Columbia Electric (pictured right) to a 1929 Duesenberg, the auto of the ultra-wealthy.Columbia 1903 medium Those are also the types of cars to be featured at the May 21st event, as well as such exceptional models as the rarely seen high-wheeled motor buggies—true horseless carriages, and one-cylinder autos like the 1903 Curved Dash Oldsmobile, as well as the classic luxury cars of the 1930s from the likes of Cadillac, Lincoln and Packard. Today, Donald Gilmore’s legacy is that three years after starting his unique collection, he not only opened it to the public in 1966, but he and his wife shared their passion with the community—and world—by gifting it to a non-profit foundation to secure it for generations to come. It was likely unfathomable to the Gilmores that their very first antique car would grow into a venue that has become North America’s largest auto museum. Today, the Gilmore Car Museum is home to seven independent auto museums and displays over 400 vehicles in two dozen historic structures on a 90 acre park-like campus. The public is invited to help celebrate that legacy and the Museum’s fiftieth anniversary during “The Donald Gilmore Classic” pre-war car show and swap meet on Saturday, May 21st. Guests will enjoy antique car rides, narrated auto parades through the Museum’s historic campus, and meeting the show car owners—many of who will be dressed in the period attire of these magnificent vehicles. Demonstrations will showcase the crank starting of the popular Model T Ford “Tin Lizzy,” lighting a fire under a steam-powered Stanley, and revealing the mammoth 522 cubic inch engine of a 1909 Thomas Flyer—something you’d expect to find only in the high-performance muscle cars of the 1960s. The Museum anticipates this one-day event to be the largest public gathering of pre-WWII vehicles—passenger automobiles, commercial vehicles and trucks, and motorcycles—in the region. In addition to the more well-known brands of Buick, Chevrolet, and Dodge Brothers, many of the cars expected to attend carry names long lost to history, including Desoto, Hudson, Kissel, Nash, Overland, Packard, Pierce, Reo, Studebaker, and Winton. The show will also include a swap meet area for car parts, tools, vintage attire, and antiques. Those that enter a vehicle built between 1896 and 1942 into the show (Sorry—no hot rods, customs or modified vehicles will be included) are eligible for a limited edition of awards unique to this show and are invited to take part in a free driving tour on Friday prior to the event. Registration information is available HERE. Whether you’re exhibiting, touring, admiring or vending at the swap meet, “The Donald Gilmore Classic” is certainly the “don’t miss” event of the season. Spectator admission to the Show is only $12.00 per person and includes visiting the entire Gilmore Car Museum campus and all exhibits at no extra charge, and those under 11 are FREE! This is also a room block held at the Four Points by Sheraton for Thursday, Friday and Saturday - May 19, 20 & 21. The block is only until April 29 and then rooms will be released. 3600 East Cork Street, Kalamazoo, MI. Standard room with breakfast for two is $118 plus tax, dual room with breakfast is $146 plus tax. (Normally $166 plus tax). To make reservations they can call (866) 961-3003 and reference the “Gilmore Car Museum.” The Gilmore Car Museum—North America’s Largest Auto Museum—is located just 20 minutes northeast of Kalamazoo on M-43 and Hickory Road. You can learn more about the Museum and its events at www.GilmoreCarMuseum.org or call 269-671-5089 for more information.