Carrosseriefabriek Pennock, short for Carrosseriefabriek P. J. Pennock & Zonen, was a Dutch coachbuilding company.[1]
History
editJohannes Jacobus Pennock founded the company in The Hague in 1884.[2] Another source states 1898.[3] Initially he manufactured carriages. After his death his son Piet ran the company. In 1886 Jacob van den Bergh took over the company.[2]
In 1900, the production of bodies for automobiles and buses began. Customers included FN. From the 1920s, both individual bodies and larger series production of convertibles were produced, mainly based on somewhat more expensive chassis from Buick, Nash, Packard and Studebaker.[1]
In the 1940s, bodies were made for the Story brand electric cars of the Internationale Automobiel Maatschappij. Pennock also built individual bodies on the basis of Alvis, Alfa Romeo, Kaiser, Riley, Healey, Lagonda, Talbot-Lago, Minerva and Škoda chassis'.[3] The Dutch royal family took delivery of an Austin A125 from Pennock, which still exists today.
In 1953 or 1954 the company was dissolved.
Gallery
edit-
Alvis TA 14 with a cabriolet body by Pennock
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1947 Delahaye 135M Cabriolet bodied by Pennock
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1950 Talbot Lago T26 GS bodied by Pennock
Literature
edit- George Nicholas Georgano : Routledge, New York 2001, ISBN 1-57958-367-9, p. 267–269.
References
edit- ^ a b Georgano, George Nicolas (2001). The Beaulieu Encyclopedia of the Automobile. Coach building. Routledge. ISBN 1-57958-367-9.
- ^ a b Pennock & Zn., Carrosseriefabriek N.V. (1849 – 1954) Auf shie.nl, retrieved 3 July 2021 (in Dutch).
- ^ a b Pennock auf www.coachbuild.com, retrieved 31 July 2023 .