The Maryland automobile was built by the Sinclair-Scott Company of Baltimore, Maryland, between 1907 and 1910.[1]
History
Sinclair-Scott was a maker of food canning machinery and in the early 1900s started to make car parts. One of their customers, Ariel, failed to pay and in recompense Sinclair-Scott took over production,[1] moved the factory to Baltimore, and marketed the car as the Maryland.[1]
The car was powered by a 30-hp[2] four-cylinder, overhead camshaft engine. The Ariel design was initially unchanged, and the Maryland was originally available as a four-seat roadster or a five-seat touring car. The wheelbase was later lengthened from the initial 100 in to 116 in. Limousines became available in 1908 and town cars in 1909.[3] Prices ranged from $2,500 to $3,200, .[4]
Production stopped in 1910 after 871 Marylands had been made, as producing the cars was not profitable. The company returned to the manufacture of food-canning machinery.[1]
References
- Georgano, Nick, The Beaulieu Encyclopedia of the Automobile, 2000, p. 1792^
- Georgano, G. N., Encyclopedia of American Automobiles, 1971, p. 21: "Ariel"^
- Georgano, G. N., Encyclopedia of American Automobiles, 1971, p. 126: "Maryland (ii)"^
- Kimes, Beverly Rae, The Standard Catalog of American Cars: 1805-1942, 1996, p.1612^