1912 Stutz Bearcat
Flashback to one of our 2013 participants

In 1911 Harry C. Stutz and his ‘Ideal Motor Car Co.’ commenced construction on the Stutz motor car. Six weeks after the company opening, the new car finished first at the Indianapolis 500. It was dubbed, “the car that made good in a day”. Orders poured in after the famed performance, and commercial production of the 1912 models kicked off almost immediately. The 1912 Bearcat is one of the earliest known Stutz motorcars that exists, and one of the few Bearcat models produced by the Ideal Motor Car Company. Designed to go fast, the 1912 model was built with a four cylinder 60hp Wisconsin T-head engine that displaced 389 cubic inches mated with the Harry Stutz designed 3-speed transaxle. This combo could propel the car to speeds in excess of 90 mph. The Stutz, a racing machine often went head to head with the dominant Mercer Raceabouts of Trenton, NJ. Those in favor of the Stutz would proclaim “there is nothing worser than a Mercer!” and those in favor of the Mercer would rebut “you have to be nuts to drive a Stutz!” The current owner acquired this Stutz from William Ullom III who found the car in the late 1970’s on an Indiana farm where it sat several years in disrepair. After a well intentioned repair by Ullom, the final restoration was completed by the current owner with great effort to preserve the originality of the car. Preservation of the original factory supplied low-tension Splitdorf two-spark ignition system (which was notoriously unreliable when new), was a challenge. Most Stutz owners scrapped the Splitdorf system and retrofitted with the more reliable high-tension Bosch ignition system. Amazingly, this Stutz is the only 1912 model extant with the original Splitdorf system. When the original bucket seats were restored, the original upholstery was carefully and painstakingly preserved, and albeit brittle it wears 101 years of patina proudly.





