Chicago Sun-Times

Co-founder of suburban Volo Auto Museum

- BY DAVE OBERHELMAN Daily Herald For more suburban news, turn to the Daily Herald at dailyheral­d.com.

Bill Grams, who with his brother turned a 20-acre farm property into the renowned Volo Auto Museum, has died.

Mr. Grams, 77, of Volo, died of a heart attack Tuesday at Advocate Good Shepherd Hospital near Lake Barrington after battling cancer, according to a news release.

In an indication of his hierarchy within the collectibl­e automobile­s market, Mr. Grams’ bidder number was 4 with the popular Mecum Auctions company.

“The car industry is a little less full without him,” said Brian Grams, his nephew and the museum’s director. “He was very well known and liked by the car community, very much a staple in the collector car world.”

Bill Grams and his younger brother, Greg, grew up on a nonoperati­ng dairy farm northwest of U.S. 12 and Illinois 120, and as teenagers they enjoyed renovating automobile­s “put out to pasture” by area farmers, according to the museum website.

Their handiwork paid off when they sold a 1931 Chrysler CD-8 Roadster, which Greg Grams had restored, for $25,000.

The brothers co-founded the Volo Auto Museum in 1960. It’s now a 35-acre family destinatio­n that includes various exhibits and a collection of 400 cars dating to the 1900s.

Mr. Grams was a proponent for Volo’s incorporat­ion in April 1993 and served on its first village board.

Greg Grams said his brother continued to attend car auctions until last winter, when his illness worsened.

“He was the one who always cheered me up,” Greg Grams said. “I’m going to miss my best friend.”

Bill Grams also is survived by his wife of 56 years, Carolyn; a daughter, Lisa; a son-in-law, Keith Santiago; a sister-in-law, Marilyn Miller; a granddaugh­ter, Mila; and nephews Brian (Lesa) and Jay (Kandie).

Services and burial will be private, with a memorial reception at a later date.

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Bill Grams

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