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cisitalia

Cisitalia, The Brand That Altered Porsche’s Destiny, Reviewed

September 29, 2025 By pete

Review by Pete Vack

Books on Cisitalia are rare. We have found three important books on the subject:

A Dream Called Cisitalia 202 (Un Sogno Chiamato Cisitalia) The True Story of the Most Beautiful Car in the World by Mario Simoni, published in 2004, relates the Cisitalia story in 225 pages, and almost 500 photos. The text is in Italian, but worth every cent of the $100 or so that is being asked for a copy on eBay. [Read more…] about Cisitalia, The Brand That Altered Porsche’s Destiny, Reviewed

Tagged With: Books on Cisitalia, cisitalia, cisitalia 202, Cisitalia history, Cisitalia the brand that altered Porsche's Destiny, Jeroem Vink photography, Mario Simoni, Nino Balestra, SpeedHolics, the brand that altered Porsche's Destiny

Get 20% off Admission at Concorso Italiano

July 14, 2025 By pete

Cisitalias wanted for Concorso Italiano. Plus get a 20 percent VeloceToday discount on admission!

This year marks the 40th Anniversary of Concorso Italiano. Alongside our event’s anniversary, we are observing the following marque milestones and seek additional vehicles for our show field. Overnight transport parking is available at our event for those exhibiting a vehicle. Owners can register directly at www.concorso.com, or they can contact me with any questions or for further details: cindy@carprusa.com

In addition, for VeloceToday readers, we are offering a 20 percent discount, applied to vehicle registration and/or the purchase of General Admission tickets. [Read more…] about Get 20% off Admission at Concorso Italiano

Tagged With: cisitalia, concorso italiano, Concorso Italiano discounts, Diablos needed, Do you have a Cisitalia, monterey car week

Photos of the MOMA Cisitalia, 1951

October 16, 2023 By pete

The Cisitalia number 042 at the MOMA exhibition in 1951. It had just come out of the body shop where “…most dents were removed before the body was sprayed a light metallic blue…”. We might submit that they missed a few here and there!

Could this really be the MOMA Cisitalia?

Story by Pete Vack
Photos by Jerry Lehrer

From the VeloceToday archives, July 2017

Over the years there has been a great deal of press concerning the “8 Automobiles” show at the Museum Of Modern Art held from August 29th to November 11, 1951 in New York. It was, after all, the “first exhibit anywhere of dealing with the aesthetics of automobile design.” The star of the show was the Cisitalia 202, and we have heard much about that as well.

But, does anyone remember seeing what the fabled and famous Cisitalia looked like as it appeared at the automotive exhibition of the century? Fortunately, photographer Jerry Lehrer was there, and took these amazing and previously unpublished photos of the Cisitalia as it was being set up in the Museum of Modern Art. [Read more…] about Photos of the MOMA Cisitalia, 1951

Tagged With: 8 Automobiles, cisitalia, Cisitalia 202 design, cisitalia museum, cisitalias in museums, MOMA cars, Museum of Modern Art Cisitalia

Magnificent Mille Miglia 2022 Part 1

June 27, 2022 By pete

The treasures of the Mille Miglia are back on Piazza Vittoria, in Brescia, where it all started 95 years ago.


Story and Photos by Hugues Vanhoolandt

This 40th re-enactment of the Mille Miglia was a special edition as it marked a return to normality after two editions impacted by the pandemic. The foreign crews, mostly absent in 2020 and 2021, were back in number as well as the public along the roads and in the city centers.

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Tagged With: cisitalia, Facciola Fiat, Ferrari 0109S, Ferrari 015S, Ferrari 0168 ED, Ferrari 225, Ferrari Oblin 0300, Gilco Fiat, hugues vanhoolandt mille miglia, mille miglia 2022

Fiat 1100 Part 2

January 12, 2021 By pete

Cisitalia is the acronym of “Compagnia Industriale Sportiva Italia”, the official name of the conglomerate of Piero Dusio’s business ventures. The logo, a stylistic Alpine goat (Capra ibex), was also an idea of Dusio, because these animals are reputed for their courage, speed and agility. The colors he chose – blue and gold – are those of the city of Turin. At right, the first batch of the Cisitalia D46 racing cars.

Read Part 1

Story by Gijsbert-Paul Berk

The name Cisitalia is inseparably linked to that of Piero Dusio. This Turinese sportsman, racing driver and entrepreneur was president of Juventus, Turin´s successful football (soccer) club and founder of the Scuderia Torino. His business enterprises were registered as Consorzio Industriale Sportivo Italia. Indeed: CISItalia! The business conglomerate included textile mills, a trading house, a bank, many hotels, sportswear manufacturing and bicycles. [Read more…] about Fiat 1100 Part 2

Tagged With: cisitalia, fiat 1100, Fiat race cars, Giacosa Cisitalia

Abarth’s Origins Investigated

June 18, 2019 By pete

By Pete Vack

Although new information has surfaced about the Cisitalia Abarth 204, in looking over years of notes, letters and books, we note that as far back as 30 years ago historian John de Boer got the facts down and got them right. He passed his knowledge on and we absorbed it into the first edition of this author’s Illustrated Abarth Buyer’s Guide. [Read more…] about Abarth’s Origins Investigated

Tagged With: Abarth 204, Abarth 205, Abarth and Cisitalia, Abarth and Porsche, cisitalia, cisitalia savonuzzi, dusio, nuvolari, Porsche in jail, savonuzzi

A Touch of Dante’s Genius: The Cisitalia

July 25, 2017 By pete

Cisitalia is the acronym of “Compagnia Industriale Sportiva Italia”, the official name of the conglomerate of Piero Dusio’s business ventures. The logo, a stylistic Alpine goat (Capra ibex), was also an idea of Dusio, because these animals are reputed for their courage, speed and agility. The colors he chose – blue and gold – are those of the city of Turin. At right, the first batch of the Cisitalia D46 racing cars.

Read Part 1

Story by Gijsbert-Paul Berk

The name Cisitalia is inseparably linked to that of Piero Dusio. This Turinese sportsman, racing driver and entrepreneur was president of Juventus, Turin´s successful football (soccer) club and founder of the Scuderia Torino. His business enterprises were registered as Consorzio Industriale Sportivo Italia. Indeed: CISItalia! The business conglomerate included textile mills, a trading house, a bank, many hotels, sportswear manufacturing and bicycles. [Read more…] about A Touch of Dante’s Genius: The Cisitalia

Tagged With: cisitalia, Cisitalia D 46, Dante Giacosa, fiat 1100, Piero Dusio

And How! Cisitalia at the MOMA

July 18, 2017 By pete

And How! features open and innovative formats for notices, articles and posts.

The Cisitalia number 042 at the MOMA exhibition in 1951. It had just come out of the body shop where “…most dents were removed before the body was sprayed a light metallic blue…”. We might submit that they missed a few here and there!

Could this really be the MOMA Cisitalia?

Story by Pete Vack
Photos by Jerry Lehrer

Over the years there has been a great deal of press concerning the “8 Automobiles” show at the Museum Of Modern Art held from August 29th to November 11, 1951 in New York. It was, after all, the “first exhibit anywhere of dealing with the aesthetics of automobile design.” The star of the show was the Cisitalia 202, and we have heard much about that as well. In fact, next week we’ll publish Gijsbert-Paul Berk’s chapter on the Fiat 1100, Dante Giacosa and the now-immortal Cisitalia so this is an opportune time to comment on the big show itself.

But, does anyone remember seeing what the fabled and famous Cisitalia looked like as it appeared at the automotive exhibition of the century? Fortunately, photographer Jerry Lehrer was there, and took these amazing and previously unpublished photos of the Cisitalia as it was being set up in the Museum of Modern Art.

When we first saw the photos, we couldn’t believe our eyes. [Read more…] about And How! Cisitalia at the MOMA

Tagged With: 8 Automobiles, cisitalia, Cisitalia 202 design, cisitalia museum, cisitalias in museums, MOMA cars, Museum of Modern Art Cisitalia

Abarth Ascending

April 19, 2016 By pete

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Was this the first Abarth or the last Cisitalia?

By Pete Vack

Although new information has surfaced about the Cisitalia Abarth 204, in looking over years of notes, letters and books, we note that as far back as 30 years ago historian John de Boer got the facts down and got them right. He passed his knowledge on and we absorbed it into the first edition of this author’s Illustrated Abarth Buyer’s Guide.

De Boer, along with collector and owner Serge Lugo, was one of the first to realize that the Cisitalia Abarth 204 is a car which marked a transitional phase in the history of Cisitalia and Abarth, and as such an important milestone for both companies; he also recognized that the ensuing Abarth 204 A berlinetta was not a 204 buy more correctly a 205, ending the confusion and properly assuming that the first Abarth built with the Abarth badge was the 205.

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The 205 Abarth with a Vignale body by Michellotti; the first Abarth and badged as such. Photo by Alessandro Gerelli.

[Read more…] about Abarth Ascending

Tagged With: Abarth 204, Abarth 205, Abarth and Cisitalia, Abarth and Porsche, cisitalia

Cisitalia Ford

April 14, 2015 By pete

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The unusual Cisi Ford..no match for the classic 202. Photo by Hugues Vanhoolandt.

By Brandes Elitch

A few years ago, the organizers of the Pebble Beach concours, in an effort to dispel the image of the entrants as so called trailer queens, initiated a drive for the entrants around the Monterey Peninsula.

In the event of a tie in class, the car that has completed the drive gets the nod in the judging. As part of this procession, the cars are parked in downtown Carmel for a few hours in the middle of the day, and in the middle of the street, for everyone to see. As I was threading my way through them, I saw something I had never seen before. It was obviously an early fifties car, obviously Italian, and the script said “Cisitalia.” I approached the owner, Urs Jakob, and said, “I’ve never seen a Cisitalia this big before,” he replied. “This isn’t a Cisitalia; it’s a Ford!” Boy, was that a shock.

Interior is similar to the early Corvettes. Photo by Brandes Elitch.

Interior is similar to the early Corvettes. Photo by Brandes Elitch.

He went on to explain that in the early 1950’s, Ford was considering the idea of what we now call a personal luxury car, which later became, of course, the two-seater Thunderbird. Keep in mind that, unlike GM and Chrysler, up until then, Ford did not really have any dream cars except the three cars made for Edsel Ford for his own personal use, which were never displayed for the public to see. In the early 1950s, Ford commissioned the building of six prototypes: two were bodied by Ghia, and four by Vignale, including Mr. Jakob’s car. Ford shipped 6 stock Ford chassis to Vignale; this particular car had a straight six, some of the others had the V-8. The current owner told me that he owns two of the cars, and he is hot on the trail of a third.

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Tagged With: Alfredo Vignale, brandes elitch, cisitalia, cisitalia 202, Cisitalia cars, Cisitalia Ford, ford cisitalia, Henry Ford II, vignale

European Influence, American Know How: America’s First Postwar Sports Cars

July 22, 2014 By pete

Instant Cisitalia. Americans wanted a low cost reliable sports car with European styling. What better way to go than taking a mold from the Cisitalia driven from New York to L.A. by race driver Bill Pollack and creating a new car with American running gear. This was called the Allied Swallow. Another effort, called the Vale, was inspired by the Cisitalia Nuvolari Spider (see below).


Geoff Hacker and Rick D’Louhy are dedicated enthusiasts who are breaking new ground by doing significant research on early American sports cars – those built between 1946 and 1954 – which used both fiberglass and other materials for the construction of the body (metal in the case of Paul Farago’s remarkable Fiat special)

As we’ll demonstrate in future articles, these pioneering constructors were highly influenced by Italian and French designs. To set the stage, we begin with an article taken in part from their excellent website, www.forgottenfiberglass.com, which describes the beginnings of the American postwar sports car.

By Geoff Hacker and Rick D’Louhy
All photos courtesy Geoff Hacker

In the late 40s’ and early ‘50s, if you wanted a sports car in America your options were mostly European. Making this choice meant evaluating a high purchase price, problems with parts availability, and complicated maintenance. It was during this time that a critical phase of automotive history took place – the emergence of the American sports car. These new sports cars often used designs based on European cars, if not actual copies.

American muscle, French influence. Kurtis-Omohundro Comet, from 1947, one of two designed by Indy race car builder Frank Kurtis and built by Paul Omohundro’s Comet Company. This is also been shown to be the earliest postwar sports car built and documented after the end of WWII.

Prior to 1953, there were few American sports cars available; the Crosley Hotshot (1949) the Cunningham (1951), the Kurtis (1949) and Nash-Healey (1951), but these were rare and or expensive. In a very real sense, American sports cars didn’t exist until a number of enterprising young men and small companies began to create them.

These enthusiasts often shared the following attributes:
* Pioneers of the first automotive “Start Ups” building “something out of nothing”
* American innovators advancing from novice to expertise with their resourcefulness and “can-do” attitude
* Fueled not by large corporate investment but shoe-string budgets and trial and error prototyping as small builders and independent shops.

This pivotal movement was captured in December, 1949 by author Thomas E. Stimson Jr., who penned a comprehensive article on American sports cars titled “The New Breed of Sports Cars” in Popular Mechanics. In this article he showcased the best of what was being built in America, and the reasons why they were being built. “Sports car enthusiasts who have preferred European automobiles because they could find no domestic makes that satisfy them are beginning to build cars for themselves. Scores of owners have spent from $2500 to $20,000 each to build the kind of cars they desire. One manufacturer of race cars, in answer to the demand, has tooled up for limited production of a sports car of his own design.”

The use of a reliable (usually domestic) chassis/engine a combination promised to solve the problem of expensive and often unreliable foreign mechanicals. In 1952, writer Ralph Stein wrote:

“If you’re a fairly good mechanic, you can arm yourself with some metric or Whitworth wrenches and the instruction book and do pretty well. Even if you’re a lousy mechanic, it’s worth trying because you can’t do much worse than the so-called professionals. The servicing situation is a disgrace to the foreign manufacturers who sell their cars in this country. Spare parts, except for one or two makes, are rarely available without a long wait, charges are high, and workmanship poor.”

1955 Woodill Wildfire, a popular fiberglass car, was featured in the Hollywood movie 'Johnny Dark'.

Early American sports cars bear names that few recognize such as Glasspar, Wildfire, Victress, Meteor, Devin, LaDawri, Kellison, Byers and many others. Sometimes just one car was built, but in many cases five, ten or more examples were produced. It’s been forgotten that over 50 American sports cars were already on the road, both as one-off designs and in limited production, by the time the Corvette began appearing in showrooms in the fall of 1953. Many of these newly designed sports cars were available for purchase – and more were on the way. American sports cars were “born” in the early postwar era by motivated Americans who decided to build their own.

Not as easy as it sounds

The process of building a sports car was not for the faint of heart. Period magazines reported that building a car using an available fiberglass or aluminum body took an average of 2000 hours. That’s 50 weeks at 40 hours a week and 2 weeks off for good measure to complete a car in a full year. If you use a modern rate of $50 an hour, labor alone would top $100,000 before buying your first part.

Individuals who choose to design and build their own bodies had a more challenging course to follow. In these cases, it took an additional 1000 hours to design and build your own body. This is clearly seen by the special built by Jules Heumann (now Chairman Emeritus of the Pebble Beach Concours d’Elegance), on a Singer chassis in the mid 1950s where he reported that the entire enterprise took closer to 3000 hours to complete. For more on the Singer special click here.

These cars allowed enthusiasts to satisfy their desire to own an affordable American sports car. Individuals got their hands dirty and went out and built what they wanted. Handcrafted American sports cars are often seen as quintessential “Americana” showing what individuals achieved when they brought forth their creativity, design, engineering, innovation, tenacity, and hand-crafting expertise.

Influencing Detroit

An important view was offered by Walt Woron, founding editor of Motor Trend magazine. He wrote about the topic of handcrafted cars in a November, 1951 editorial titled “Amateurs are Creating New, American Designs.” Here he said:

“It has been freely admitted by top Detroit automotive designers that many innovations on production cars are the result of watching the developments of these enthusiasts who build their own custom cars, sports cars and hot rods.”

Another insight was offered by famed automotive writer Ken Purdy, in his 1952 book on sports cars titled The Kings of the Road. In this book, he dedicated his final chapter on the hope for modern sports cars – from his vantage point in early 1952. While praising young hot rodders for their clean designs, Purdy wrote “… most of the designs Detroit threatens to ram down our throats in the next few years look like something by Captain Video out of Superman. Why an automobile should look like a jet plane is hard to fathom. Jet planes do not try to look like automobiles. Jet planes, being mature and sensible things, are satisfied to look like what they are. The American automobile is still in adolescence.”

Sports car enthusiasts and hot-rodders were both being influenced by designs outside of Detroit, and in turn influencing the shape of the automobile in Detroit.

Shown here is the 1952 Vale designed by Vale Wright, an architectural designer from Berkeley, California. Design was based on the 1948 Cisitalia 202 Nuvolari Spyder. It won many awards - most notably first place in the 1953 International Sports Car Show in Oakland, California. This same design was modified by Wright and raced throughout California in a car he called “Lil Stinker.” An interesting side note - Chairman Emeritis of the Pebble Beach Concours d’Elegance, Jules “J” Heumann, borrowed these molds from Vale Wright in the mid ‘50s, and created his own sports car based on a Singer chassis/drivetrain.

“Fiberglass” – The New Wonder Material

For an individual to build a sports car body using either steel or aluminum required a high level of skill, time, and experience. Fiberglass solved this problem and was a far easier material to master.

When fiberglass bodies were introduced at the 1951 Petersen Motorama in Los Angeles, California, they were seen as the “carbon fiber” equivalent of their day. Fiberglass bodied sports cars received immediate attention everywhere they appeared. Lightweight, strong, readily able to conform to beautiful shapes and designs, and cost effective too, fiberglass was the optimal choice for designers building race cars, sports cars, and concept cars alike. Composite materials remain the primary choice of sports and racing car bodies to this day.

The most famous and successful of the American fiberglass companies was Devin, who made a mold from the Ermini 357, S/N 1255, belonging to Jim Orr.

Shows, Exhibitions, and Fame

Throughout the late 1940s and 1950s, handcrafted sports cars were celebrated across the land at shows as large as GM’s Motorama. They appeared in shows which including:
* The Hot Rod Exposition, Los Angeles, California. America’s first postwar custom and hot rod show – 1948 to 1949.
* National Roadster Show – also known as the Oakland Roadster Show, originally held in Oakland, California, held from 1950 to the present.
* Petersen Motorama in Los Angeles, California sponsored by Trend Inc., which published Motor Trend, Hot Rod, and other magazines. Held from 1950 to 1955.
* The World Motor Sports Show held in New York City. This was held from 1953 to 1954.
* And many others

Each of these venues showcased production cars, foreign cars, concept cars, and handcrafted cars. The stars of all of these shows were often the handcrafted cars – designed and built by talented individuals as well as small fabrication shops across America. We now refer to these shows, collectively, as “America’s Motoramas”.

Denny Larsen’s SR100 Sorrell at the Petersen Motorama in 1955.

Fame Beyond the Motoramas

People came to these shows to see what Americans had designed – and most of the handcrafted show cars on display could be bought or built by the public. One person’s dream could be another person’s reality. These cars were famous – they were the “rock stars” of their day, and appeared on:

* In TV
* In Movies
* In Newsreels

In fact, these cars appeared on over 100 magazine covers in this era – more than the Corvette did during this same timeframe.

Racing

While most of the first postwar sportscars were constructed for street use, at the same time there was tremendous growth in sports car racing from coast to coast. From the tiny 750cc class to the unlimited V8 classes, there were American specials throughout the grids. They were fabricated in metal, but that began to change once the potential of fiberglass was seen in sports car bodies at the November, 1951 Petersen Motorama, for it was at this show that sports cars with fiberglass bodies were first seen. The Glasspar G2, the Lancer, the Skorpion and the Wasp all made their debut.

A Glasspar G2 body graced the Morgensen Special I, which was a dual-purpose sports car.

Dick Morgensen’s first special (better known as Morgensen Special I) used a handcrafted Glasspar bodied on a modified 1950 Ford chassis – power was a 220 horsepower ’52 Cadillac mill. This car raced in December, 1952 at Torrey Pines and took first place (some sources say second). He was 31 years old when he built this car with typical construction for a handcrafted special at that time – a modified ‘50 Ford chassis (independent front suspension) with work being completed at his engine bearing company based in Phoenix, Arizona.

As with many early race cars in the late ‘40s and early ‘50s, the Morgensen Special was a dual-purpose sports/race car. This was the same quality embodied by an earlier car built by Sterling Edwards – the R26. This car, an aluminum coachbuilt car by Diedt and Lesovsky, debuted on the cover of the December, 1949 issue of Road & Track. This car was conceived by Sterling during his postwar trips to the Continent where “Edwards decided his car must have comparable appearance, performance, and roadability” (R&T, December, 1949) of a European sports car. And what an impressive car this was!

He won the first three times he entered races in Palm Springs, Buchanan Field, and Pebble Beach. And won “Best of Show” at the first ever Pebble Beach Concours d’Elegance too – an event that he helped create in California.

_________________________________________________

More about www.forgottenfiberglass.com

For the aforementioned reasons concerning the time and effort it took to complete a sports car, more – or less – of these cars were built than one might have imagined. When looking at production numbers from the large companies of this era (Glasspar, Woodill, and Victress), each built approximately 100 bodies of their most popular design. And when you add in the smaller companies such as Meteor, Byers, Allied, Grantham Stardust, and other such manufacturers, you only get to about 1000 bodies being produced by companies, coachbuilders, and one-off fabricators from 1947 through 1956.

This estimate coincides nicely with a letter written in 1977 from John Bond, owner and editor of Road & Track magazine in the ’50s and ’60s to Ray Scroggins about these very cars – handcrafted cars. In this letter, based on his knowledge of the era, John Bond estimated that nearly a 1000 of these cars were individually and collectively built in the 1950s.

Our goal is to accurately portray the lineage, document the practices, and reveal the hidden history behind the innovators and their very first American sports cars. Through interviews, archives, and expert historians, we hope to tell the story of America’s Sports Car legacy.

Through period magazines and literature, interviews with builders and their families, and discussions with historians across America, the story of the design and building of these early American sports cars unfolds as a complex and detailed undertaking, revealing multiple twists and turns along our adventure.

The text was prepared in collaboration with our research team: Guy Dirkin, Rollie Langston, Raffi Minasian, Paul Sable, Harold Pace, Erich Schultz, and Phil Fleming. Click for more about the Emergence of the American Post War Sportscar.

For more about the Ermini 357, click here.

Tagged With: american sportscars, cisitalia, devin, ermini, fiberglas sports cars, fiberglass specials

Brooklands Italian Car Day

May 13, 2014 By pete

The Pininfarina lines of a Fiat Dino Spyder contrast nicely with the starkness of the Brooklands memorial erected to commemorate the home of motor racing 1907 - 1939.

Story and photos by Jonathan Sharp

Judging by the three lines of cars, all of which were made in Italy, waiting to pass through the Campbell gate of the Brooklands Motor Circuit in Surrey, the Italian car community is alive and thriving. [Read more…] about Brooklands Italian Car Day

Tagged With: Alfa Romeo, brooklands Italian car day, cisitalia, Ferrari, Fiat, Jonathan Sharp

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