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Selden Motor Vehicle Company

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Selden Model 25

The Selden Motor Vehicle Company was an early American manufacturer of automobiles. The Company, founded in 1905, was based in Rochester, New York.

History

The Selden Motor Vehicle Company was named for inventor George B. Selden, whose 1877 patent was the first U.S. patent of a "horseless carriage" and thus, controversially, is considered the inventor of the automobile. (Misleading: Selden developed his engine by 1877 & filed for a patent in 1879, which because of numerous later amendment was not granted until 1895.)

The company produced cars for only three years, from 1909 through 1912. In 1913 the company was reorganized towards the production of trucks, where it had significantly more success, producing trucks until the company's sale to the Bethlehem Truck Company in 1930.

Advertisements

A 1911 Selden Advertisement - Model 46, Six-passenger, Tandem Torpedo, Price $2,600 - Syracuse Post-Standard, January 28, 1911

See also

References

  • Barnes, J. W. (1981, April). Rochester and the Automobile Industry. Rochester History, XLIII