Who, or what, is a Hudson Hornet? And why should anyone care? Serious devotees of the National Association for Stock Car Auto Racing (NASCAR) are likely aware that it was the upstart Hudson Hornet ...
Established in 1909, the Hudson Motor Car Company disappeared in 1957, three years after it merged with Nash-Kelvinator to form the American Motors Corporation (AMC). While largely forgotten outside ...
Believe it or not, there was a time when people were suckers for cars sporting hidden rear wheels. A feature that was most visible in Europe, this approach had its fair share of representatives in the ...
Jay Leno has a soft spot for Hudson Hornets, partly because he finds them to be the best driving American cars of the early 1950s, and perhaps more importantly because he bought his first one while ...
Since 2014, 30 vehicles have been added to the National Historic Vehicle Register, a program created in partnership with the U.S. Dept. of the Interior and Library of Congress. The program catalogs ...
The Hornet has lived many lives. The Hornet name, that is. It was first used on the Hudson Hornet, which became one of the most famous stock car racers of the 1950s and was later immortalized in the ...
The Hornet, the last vehicle designed and built by Hudson Motor Car Co., came off the line at a Jefferson Avenue plant in Detroit on Oct. 29, 1954. Hudson and Nash had merged to form American Motors ...