Hot Cars
Thieves
stole a range of models, but mostly low-priced Chevrolets, Plymouths,
Chryslers, and Fords.[1] For example, in Buffalo, New York, between
May 15 and July 15, 1924, the following makes of cars (and numbers) were
reported stolen:[2]
Make of
Motor Vehicle
|
Number
Reported Stolen, May 15 to July 15, 1924
|
Auburn
|
2
|
Buick
|
26
|
Cadillac
|
5
|
Chevrolet
|
61
|
Chalmers
|
1
|
Chandler
|
1
|
Cole
|
2
|
Dodge
|
8
|
Dort
|
1
|
Durant
|
4
|
Elcar
|
1
|
Essex
|
1
|
Ford
|
172
|
Franklin
|
3
|
Gardner
|
1
|
Haynes
|
4
|
Holmes
|
2
|
Hudson
|
7
|
Hupmobile
|
1
|
Jewett
|
2
|
Jordan
|
5
|
Marmon
|
3
|
Maxwell
|
5
|
Moon
|
1
|
Nash
|
7
|
Oakland
|
3
|
Oldsmobile
|
3
|
Overland
|
15
|
Packard
|
2
|
Paige
|
1
|
Peerless
|
2
|
Star
|
1
|
Stearns-Knight
|
2
|
Studebaker
|
10
|
Velie
|
2
|
Wills St.
Claire
|
5
|
Willys
Knight
|
5
|
The Automobile
Protective and Information Bureau reported a similar distribution of makes and
models stolen during 1920-21 on a national scale; recovery figures averaged
less than one third of the vehicles initially taken, with Ford’s being her
overwhelming choice of car thieves, followed
by Buick, Hudson, Cadillac, Chandler, Studebaker, and Overland.[3]
Place
mattered. Automobiles were most likely
to be stolen in business or entertainment districts, where individuals parked
the same models in the same place. Often a thief caught red-handed simply
claimed that they had hopped in the wrong car. When interrogated by a judge,
one thief explained why he was in the wrong Ford: “Because both cars are Fords,
and all Fords look alike, not only to me but to their owners.”[4] Charges
were dropped. Despite preferences to steal the commonplace vehicle, elite and
unusual automobiles such as the Auburn, Cadillac, Franklin, and Packard, were
not exempt from the threat of theft. Expensive cars were stolen, disassembled,
and repainted.
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