zzdcar
Home
/
Reviews
/
Buying
/
1922 Rochester Newspaper Ad Shows How Car Prices Have Changed Over 100 Years
1922 Rochester Newspaper Ad Shows How Car Prices Have Changed Over 100 Years-June 2024
2024-02-19 EST 22:09:21

This intersection leads to a bridge, if you take a right, and I lived just on the other side of it

Once upon a Wednesday dreary, while I posted, weak and weary,

Blogging many a quaint and curious volume of —

While I typed there, keyboard singing, suddenly there came a Slack ding,

As of someone gently pinging, pinging the Jalopnik horde.

“’Tis some Twitter link,” I muttered, “pinging the Jalopnik corps—

Only this and nothing more.”

The Twitter link was to this, a page from the August 27, 1922 issue of the Rochester Democrat and Chronicle. The D&C has been one of Roc’s hometown papers since time immemorial, but it’s interesting to see a page from precisely 100 years ago — just after . Even better, it’s a list of car prices at various local dealers.

To my knowledge, none of these dealers are around anymore — certainly, none under the same names. Even many of the automakers listed here have fallen into obscurity, ruin, or whatever Buick’s whole deal is now that it can’t cheat off Opel’s work. The world of western New York has changed, but a few of these automakers are still around. How different are the prices?

I can see my (old) house from here

Of these 33 automakers listed, only one in 11 remain: Buick, Cadillac, and Chevrolet. Out of curiosity, I checked what’s now holed up in the husks of their former Rochester dealerships:

C. L. Whiting’s Buick dealer, just off the infamous corner of East and Alexander, is a recently-defunct oriental rug shop.Mabbett Motor Car Co, former Cadillac dealer, became the health insurance office across the street from my old apartment. A. H. Boyce Chevrolet, even closer to East and Alex, is now an addiction recovery facility.

It’s wild to imagine East and Alex, now a neighborhood known for insufferable undergrad debauchery, as a quiet little row of car dealers. That honestly sounds better.

The bar that’s in this building, Brass, is very bad. But the adjoining bar-slash-coffee-shop-slash-brunch-joint, Locals Only, rules. Most Instagrammed bathroom in the world, apparently.

Anyway, you’re here for cars, not me complaining about a row of bars I went to once between a Joywave show and a gig at the Bug Jar. So, how do these prices compare to a modern dealership selling 2022 Chevy, Buick, and Cadillac models?

Let’s take a look at , right around the corner from my college. We’ll take and as well. For each, we’ll look at the most economical and most extravagant model on the showroom floor today, and see how time and inflation have hit the three GM brands. Those 1922 prices include destination and freight charges, along with a war tax, so we’ll include destination fees for our modern offerings to make things roughly equal.

Image for article titled 1922 Rochester Newspaper Ad Shows How Car Prices Have Changed Over 100 Years

The cheapest Chevy you could buy in Rochester 100 years ago was the Model Superior Touring, for a mere $356 — and it was “fully equipped,” at that. A quick inflation calculation puts that at $6,278.23 in 2022 dollars. West Herr’s cheapest new car, , costs nearly three times as much — $17,595 including destination.

The most expensive Chevy of 1922, the Model F B Sedan, came in at a whopping $1,497 — $26,400.31 in today’s money. West Herr’s priciest offering is a . It costs $89,865, which is only slightly more than $26,400.

Image for article titled 1922 Rochester Newspaper Ad Shows How Car Prices Have Changed Over 100 Years

Back in 1922, Buick’s cheapest car was the descriptively named Two-Passenger Four-Cylinder Runabout. It cost $950, or $16,753.70 in today’s bucks. Now, the cheapest Buick on Vision’s lot is with a “sale price” of $28,255 — which is $1,500 over MSRP.

In 1922, Buick’s most expensive model was the Seven-Passenger Six-Cylinder Sedan at $2,345, or an inflation-adjusted $41,355.19. That’s much closer to modern car prices, but pales in comparison to the most expensive Buick on Vision’s lot: , for $61,515.

No, this didn’t upload wrong. This is actually how small the images are on Cadillac dealer websites.

Cadillac’s cars, even in the Roaring ‘20s, were considerably pricier. The entry-level model was the 2-Passenger Roadster at $3,491, or $61,565.45 today. In a twist, that’s actually more expensive than the cheapest Cadillac on Valley’s showroom floor — , listed for a mere $45,710.

The priciest Caddy of the bunch was the 7-Passenger Imperial, at $5,051. That model name could easily apply to an Escalade, and the inflation-adjusted $89,076.79 price tag wouldn’t be too far off — at least, from a base model. But Vision goes beyond the base, offering as its most expensive new vehicle, to the tune of $153,965. Ouch.

If you’re in the market for a deal on a new car, you’d be better off shopping in 1922 than you would be today. Across the board, prices are up, aside from the luxury market aiming to get more buyers into its brands. Now, if you’ll excuse me, it’s Labor Day. I have garbage plates to eat.

Comments
Welcome to zzdcar comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
Buying
The 2018 Volkswagen Up GTI Is As Fun As Tiny Cars Get
The 2018 Volkswagen Up GTI Is As Fun As Tiny Cars Get
We knew that the 2018 Volkswagen Up GTI was last May. A year later, and after a week of driving it across Europe, I’m happy to confirm that the 2018 Volkswagen Up GTI is, in fact, the greatest car ever made forever and ever, amen. It’s just a shame that...
Jun 24, 2026
The 2019 Acura RDX Is Grown Up And Ready To Sell Like Crazy
The 2019 Acura RDX Is Grown Up And Ready To Sell Like Crazy
Crossovers and SUVs are all the rage—“all the rage” as in the lame way to say they’re what people call cool, and in that their astonishing sales numbers are causing a lot of rage among those of us who . But crossovers and SUVs are what sells, and the will...
Jun 24, 2026
At $9,900, Could This 2008 BMW 550i Prove To Be Pretty Nifty?
At $9,900, Could This 2008 BMW 550i Prove To Be Pretty Nifty?
When someone says five-point-oh you probably go straight to visions of Mustangs and white rappers. Well, today’s BMW is almost a five-litre and has a stick to boot. Lets decide if its price has you saying five-point-oh yesss. Nostalgia ain’t what it used to be. The appropriation of that bon...
Jun 24, 2026
I Proved The BMW X6 M Is Actually Useful
I Proved The BMW X6 M Is Actually Useful
Like many people, I could never quite understand the BMW X6. And I can understand the even less. Help me out, friend: do you get why BMW makes an SUV that’s essentially the X5, but with a steep, sloping roof purely for dubious aesthetics, then has the gall to add...
Jun 24, 2026
At $3,977, Could This 1992 Chevy Lumina Z34 Be The Light Of Your Life?
At $3,977, Could This 1992 Chevy Lumina Z34 Be The Light Of Your Life?
You’ll be forgiven if you never knew today’s Lumina Z34 even existed. Given its specs and price, you might just suddenly wish that you had. Is there anything worse than being a teen? Too young to fully enjoy all the trappings and responsibilities of adulthood, but old enough that those...
Jun 24, 2026
I Lost My Right Arm In Iraq And I Want To Drive Something Cool For $50,000! What Car Should I Buy?
I Lost My Right Arm In Iraq And I Want To Drive Something Cool For $50,000! What Car Should I Buy?
Jason is looking for what he calls a mid-life crisis car to supplement his Jeep Cherokee. The challenge is that it has to be something fun to drive for someone that only has use of their left arm. What car should he buy? (Welcome back to ? Where we give...
Jun 24, 2026
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.zzdcar.com All Rights Reserved