An Antique Mercedes You've Probably Never Heard Of Just Sold For $12 Million

An Antique Mercedes You've Probably Never Heard Of Just Sold For $12 Million

Image: Gooding&Company

I’ll admit that even as a car enthusiast, some parts of automotive history escape me. A big gray area for me is pre-WWII stuff; early automotive history. While I’d be hard-pressed to name some of the more obscure models from this time, one car from the period I never even knew existed just sold for a record setting price.

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By most accounts, most people credit the invention of the automobile to Karl Benz, one-half of what would eventually become Mercedes-Benz. One of the predecessors to the company was DMG or Daimler-Motoren-Gesellschaft which by 1902 had been making cars for over a decade (the company was founded in 1890). That same year DMG introduced the Simplex. The Simplex was a massive car that came with powerful engines. It quickly became a favorite of the wealthy.

A so-called early performance model of the Simplex was the 60 HP model. Powered by a massive 9.3-liter four-cylinder engine, the 60 HP became a favorite of enthusiasts and racers. The 60 HP even set a record at the Mount Washington Hillclimb Race in Mount Washington, New Hampshire in 1904. There, it ran the hillclimb in 24:37. It’s said that only 102 of the 60 HP were ever made.

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Image: Gooding&Company

Now, over 120 years later, the 60 HP set another record. Southern California-based classic car auction house Gooding & Company recently had the rare opportunity of having a 60 HP cross their auction block. Gooding & Company described the 60 HP that the company auctioned as “undoubtedly among the most significant cars to come to market in recent memory.” And for good reason: of the 102 made, just four exist today, and this example was well preserved and had a unique history. It was owned by British newspaper and publishing magnate Alfred Harmsworth, founder of the Daily Mail.

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This history and its excellent condition helped push the price of the 60 HP to new levels. Gooding & Company says the 60 HP sold for a whopping $12,105,000. Not only is this a record for the first antique vehicle to sell for more than $10,000,000, it’s all a world record-setting price for all vehicles from before 1930 according to Gooding & Company. While we usually balk at cars going for prices like this, this is an exception. With just four left in the world, this 60 HP is truly a piece of history