✅ SOLVED Automobile Window Crank, what's it to?

DeepseekerADS

Gold Member
Mar 3, 2013
14,880
21,727
SW, VA - Bull Mountain
Detector(s) used
CTX, Excal II, EQ800, Fisher 1260X, Tesoro Royal Sabre, Tejon, Garrett ADSIII, Carrot, Stealth 920iX, Keene A52
Primary Interest:
Other
I found this several years ago up under my 200 year old pear tree. I found it again when I returned home to retire. My grandfather had a 1940 Plymouth Coup:

1940 Plymouth Coupe.jpg

He had a stroke and lost both legs due to gangrene when I was 12 years old. He offered to sell me his car for $10. Another of those lost opportunities.

But I don't fully believe this window crank was to his '40 Plymouth, Granny had a 1948 Studebaker - but not that either. But just maybe someone will know :)

A challenge here!

IMG_1344.JPG IMG_1347.JPG

IMG_1346.JPG IMG_1350.JPG

Sun Feb 18 11-34-46.jpg
 

It sure looks like a window crank
 

Upvote 0
Very difficult to nail down exactly what vehicle this was originally attached to... certainly Deco Period in date. :icon_scratch:
Hopefully an automobile expert will chime in.

Dave
 

Upvote 0
Looks like a window crank handle to me. Somewhere somebody restoring needs that handle. Great find.:thumb_up:
 

Upvote 0
It’s seems the makers mark was trademarked in 1942... for what the that’s worth;

Thanks! That lead me to The Dura Company

I contacted that site with pictures to see what he knows. Apparently the company made chrome plated composite materials for many industries. As shown in my pictures, that is in fact a chrome plated composite material used for the crank. Since the trademark was founded in 1942, and ended in 1945, that rules out the 1940 Plymouth Coupe and the 1948 Studebaker.....
 

Upvote 0
Those old handles are readily available. Nice as a hunting memento, but worthless to a car restorer. Sorry.
 

Upvote 0
Those old handles are readily available. Nice as a hunting memento, but worthless to a car restorer. Sorry.

It's not about value, it's about family history.

I found this picture of Mom at age 16 in Newport News, VA

I don't know what this car is - anyone?

Mom at car copy.jpg
 

Upvote 0
Cute Mom Seek. The AACA web site has a "what is it" type section. Also the HAMB site. I once had 2500 hits on those 2 sites to ID a 29' Packard radiator. Guy just down the road from their Museum went there to ID it. Sold it to a guy in Australia for scrap price. They used it as a pattern to build a new one. BTW, Packard had 3 different radiators that yr. Good luck.
 

Upvote 0
DURA is still in business it is a window crank very similar to one on my 47 ford, but is has been gone a long time
 

Upvote 0
The car is a 1939 Mercury. The image appears to be reversed as that year Merc had the gas filler on the other side.

1939%u00252BMercury%u00252BEight%u00252B4-door%u00252Bsedan%u00252B-%u00252Bfor%u00252Bsale%u002.png

BTW - Mom is a hottie. :love5:
 

Upvote 0
The car is a 1939 Mercury. The image appears to be reversed as that year Merc had the gas filler on the other side. BTW - Mom is a hottie. :love5:

Now, Mom is still with me at 92 :)

It may well be a '39 Merc, Just because the DURA trade stamp wasn't official until 1942 doesn't mean they didn't use it before. My brother & I spent over an hour yesterday looking at images of vehicles trying to pin it down - we always had doubts on each.
 

Upvote 0
Ford 1941 - 48

That appears to be BINGO!

Thanks Matt!

Edit: Hmmmmm.... I used "Thread Tools" to mark this as "Solved" but it's not showing up as solved......
 

Last edited:
Upvote 0
Mom at car copy.jpg 1939%u00252BMercury%u00252BEight%u00252B4-door%u00252Bsedan%u00252B-%u00252Bfor%u00252Bsale%u002.png

Looks like the car in the original pic has some deluxe trim on it. Pretty confident it is a '39 Merc.
 

Upvote 0
9B433E2A-12B7-4B2F-BD66-86493B76480C.jpegHere are few oldies to add to your scrapbook

32467142-813A-47ED-97DE-28EE6BC476B8.jpeg51260268-B452-4B7A-ABA2-0D6195101934.jpeg
6BAA35AE-9E7C-4F55-B856-A6B433A4B109.jpeg7B01EF05-223D-44CD-BD73-401B162DB3DC.jpeg
E7A50B80-FC16-433B-803C-70E8D2781BB5.jpeg
 

Upvote 0
Oops! I was WRONG on the make. It's a '39 Chrysler Royal sedan.

39chryslerroyal compare.JPG
 

Upvote 0
Looking at the design of the window crank in question, I'd say that it comes from a lower priced vehicle. 'High End' cars, like the '39 Chrysler Royal (Royal would stand for 'top of the line') would have had a very fancy window crank. 'Fancy' is what people wanted back then, in order to show their good taste and to show they had money. Ford & Chevy just didn't rate that kind of superiority. You bought a Lincoln, a Chrysler or a Cadillac because you were somebody.
 

Upvote 0

Top Member Reactions

Users who are viewing this thread

Back
Top