Dominion Motors Frontenac
Durant Motors of New York, New York first used the Frontenac marque in 1931 on vehicles built and sold in Canada. The Canadian Durant firm was acquired by a group of Canadian investors and renamed Dominion Motors Limited. The firm continued building Durant and Frontenac cars. The first Frontenac, for 1931, was model 6-18, a 109-inch-wheelbase car based on the Durant 619.
After Durant Motors went under in 1932, Dominion Motors switched to De Vaux for a source of car designs. The 1932 Frontenac range consisted of two sixes, 6-70 (109-inch wheelbase), an update of the 1931 6-18, and the 6-85 (114-inch wheelbase) based on the De Vaux 6-80.
And just as Durant got into trouble, so did De Vaux. The firm was taken over by its major creditor, Continental Motors, in late 1932. Continental decided to continue car production under the Continental name and Dominion Motors decided to base their cars on Continental vehicles. Just as the 1933 Continental line consisted of three models, so did Frontenac.
The last Frontenac models were the C-400, a 101 1⁄2-inch-wheelbase four-cylinder car based on the Continental Beacon and the C-600, based on the 107-inch-wheelbase, six-cylinder Continental Flyer. Frontenac imported the 114-inch-wheelbase Continental Ace, putting a Frontenac nameplate on the grille and selling them as the Frontenac Ace.
Although Continental continued into 1934, Frontenac called it quits in 1933. Dominion Motors also built Reo cars and trucks for the Canadian market. Reo continued to use the plant into the early 1950s and in 1950 and 1951 Kaiser used part of the plant to assemble Kaiser sedans for the Canadian market.
Only Dominion carried on and Continental was already out of the picture[when?] and the majority of the plant was being operated by Reo on its own.[citation needed][when?]
Riverdale Tire & Auto Exchange bought up the entire stock from Dominion.[citation needed][when?]
In January 1934, Frontenac Cars and Rugby Trucks announced the purchased of Dominion Motors' stock of cars and trucks.[1] A March 1934 advertisement advised 75% of the stock of Dominions was sold, advising the Standard four-cylinder sedan offered a radio.[2]
when Dominion Motors Ltd finally sold off their last section of factories and the remaining lands to Frigidaire on June 23, 1944.[citation needed][when?]
Sources
- Zavitz, Perry R. Canadian Cars, 1946–1984, Bookman Publishing, Baltimore, Maryland, 1985, ISBN 0-934780-43-9
- Canadian Automotive Information Handbook, Canadian Automotive Information Service, Oakville, Ontario, 1939.
External links
References
- Vague or ambiguous time from January 2016
- Articles with unsourced statements from January 2016
- Durant Motors
- Canadian automobiles
- Cars introduced in 1931
- Companies established in 1931
- Companies disestablished in 1944
- Canadian companies
- 1931 establishments in Ontario
- 1944 disestablishments in Canada
- Vehicle manufacturing companies established in 1931
- Vehicle manufacturing companies disestablished in 1944
- Defunct motor vehicle manufacturers of Canada
- Motor vehicle manufacturers based in Ontario
- Canadian brands
- Economic history of Canada