Calgary Herald

TEAM OF VOLUNTEERS RESTORING '24 HAYNES

Rare vintage automobile will be displayed at Call of the West Museum in High River

- GREG WILLIAMS Greg Williams is a member of the Automobile Journalist­s Associatio­n of Canada. Have a column tip? Contact him at 403-287-1067 or gregwillia­ms@shaw.ca. Driving.ca

Every Monday since last November, members of the Call of the West Museum have gathered in Al Millard's shop on his acreage near Okotoks.

One of the group members brings lunch. They start work at 9 a.m., break for a sandwich at noon, and carry on until 3 or 3:30. Together, they're restoring a rare 1924 Haynes automobile.

“It's a long story,” Millard says of how the Call of the West Museum came to acquire the Haynes car. “Erhard Gorski had a Sea Can filled with three Haynes cars, and he needed to sell them. I wasn't immediatel­y interested, but in a roundabout way, last October the museum ended up with the cars and parts and we decided to do something with them.”

Located in High River on the Ag Society Rodeo Grounds, the Call of the West Museum is dedicated to preserving automobile­s, tractors and petroleum memorabili­a such as gasoline pumps and signs.

Millard, who worked for 52 years in the refrigerat­ion industry, pioneered the concept of the museum. It opened in 2013.

“We emptied out Erhard's Sea Can to see what we had,” Millard says. “There were three frames and three bodies, and we chose this one because it was a sedan and was fairly complete. We could build another car if we had another Haynes engine, so we're looking for one.”

Elwood Haynes of Kokomo, Ind., built his first car in his kitchen in 1893. When starting the single-cylinder gasoline-powered engine in his home didn't go as planned, he paid brothers Edgar and Elmer Apperson to complete the job. Haynes named his conveyance The Pioneer, and it successful­ly completed a six-mile test run.

In 1898, the trio formed the Haynes-apperson Automobile Company. The Apperson brothers left in 1902, leaving Haynes to start the Haynes Automobile Company. Haynes vehicles were built until 1924, when the company declared bankruptcy.

Haynes had a background in metallurgy and was one discoverer of stainless steel. He also invented the hard-wearing alloy Stellite. Many mechanical advancemen­ts, including the early use of an oil pump instead of relying on splash lubricatio­n, were employed in Haynes automobile­s.

The history of the Call of the West Museum's Haynes car can be traced to the collection of Stan Reynolds of Wetaskiwin. Reynolds originally bought the car from Barney Pollard of Detroit, who amassed a collection of more than 1,000 vintage vehicles before selling them at auction in 1976.

Millard's 30-by-52-foot shop is equipped with a lathe, milling machine and some sheet-metal gear. He's usually working on antique tractors in the space, but after the museum crew stripped down the Haynes car, it has taken priority.

Millard believes their Haynes Model 60 running gear was updated with a later Haynes brougham body. The sedan features unique oval windows behind the rear passenger doors, and the group is determined to resurrect the rare automobile.

“We each have different skill sets,” Millard says of the crew. “It's about 10 of us, and some have mechanical skills, and others have carpentry skills. I fit in wherever I can.”

The frame was sandblaste­d and painted, and the in-line, six-cylinder engine taken apart to the crank. Surprising­ly, for a car that's close to 100 years old, Millard says there was very little wear on any of the engine's internals.

Everything needed a good cleaning, and Millard machined a new water pump shaft and also modified the timing cover to accept a modern oil seal. The antique carburetor was a complicate­d affair but was successful­ly rebuilt. With an original coil installed, the engine, which should make about 50 horsepower, was brought to life a few weeks ago.

“We didn't run it long because we're waiting for a radiator to be built,” Millard says. “We had to find clutch discs, and used some from a Hyster winch clutch between the engine and threespeed transmissi­on. The engine runs beautifull­y.”

The wood wheels have been restored and fitted with Firestone tires. As of this writing, the group is assembling much of the body's woodwork and attaching it to the chassis. Millard expects to have the car ready to be sent out for upholstery by late April.

“There aren't a lot of Haynes cars around,” Millard says. “Best guess is less than 100 exist, and this one will be a part of the Call of the West collection and will be brought out and driven on special occasions.”

 ?? KEN EDGECOMBE/DRIVING ?? A group from the Call of the West Museum is restoring this 1924 Haynes in Al Millard's shop in Okotoks. It will be displayed at the museum once completed.
KEN EDGECOMBE/DRIVING A group from the Call of the West Museum is restoring this 1924 Haynes in Al Millard's shop in Okotoks. It will be displayed at the museum once completed.
 ?? LARRY KYNOCH/DRIVING ?? As pulled from the Sea Can storage container, the 1924 Haynes Model 6 chassis was in rough condition.
LARRY KYNOCH/DRIVING As pulled from the Sea Can storage container, the 1924 Haynes Model 6 chassis was in rough condition.
 ?? KEN EDGECOMBE/DRIVING ?? Al Millard made room in his shop in Okotoks to restore the 1924 Haynes.
KEN EDGECOMBE/DRIVING Al Millard made room in his shop in Okotoks to restore the 1924 Haynes.
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