International Armor & Limousine - Elgin, Illinois


    International Armor & Limousine
Established: 1990
Terminated: 2001
1100 Davis Rd.
Elgin, IL 60123
Online: www.internationalarmor.com - division of scaletta-moloney

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**Earl Moloney, former owner of Moloney operates two competing firms known as International Armor & Limousine and Chicago Armor & Limousine of Elgin, Illinois - The two group of firms (International & Chicago and Moloney/Moloney Scaletta) are not owned by the same people as assumed by most people(See court ruling at bottom of page).  Earl Moloney sold his limousine assets, together with the name "Moloney Coach Builders" to Jacques Moore 1986 who incorporated Moloney Coachbuilders, Inc., to carry on the business.  

Earle agreed not to compete for five years in the stretch limousine business but reserved the right to make armored limousines and custom vehicles extended by less than 20 inches.

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Another successful Moloney offshoot was Limousine Werks (LW). Started in 1984, LW was to become the largest builder of Cadillac limousines in the late 1980s and early 1990s. Founder Matt Baines grew up with cars, racing street machines in Chicago during high school. In the 1970s, he joined the Moloney operation as a salesman and worked his way upward to vice presi­dent of sales. There and later with LW, Baines was careful to develop strong relationships with car dealerships across the nation. Baines also pioneered the company's cultivation of the burgeoning livery trade, including selling to Fugazy Continental, one of the first operators to bring stretch limousines to New York City.

At LW, Baines worked closely with Detroit. He put those networks to good use with the development of various promotional, show, and concept cars. In 1991, when Buick prepared to re-launch the Roadmaster after a quarter-century sabbatical, Baines made the intro­duction a splash. The first car off the line, serial num­ber one, was sent to L Wand converted into a limousine. Buick dealers were thrilled. This and other projects helped LW maintain strong sales while the rest of the industry was pulling back during the early 1990s recession. When Chrysler's Lee Iacocca asked General Motors to recommend a good builder, the call was placed to Baines, who built eight Chrysler stretches for the opening of the MGM Grand in Las Vegas.

A 1989 Cadillac Limousine Concept Car. In response to the request from Cadillac to stretch a De Ville for an upcoming auto show, coachbuilder Matt Baines replied, "But that's in 25 days!" The Cadillac man­ager replied without humor, "You told me you could do anything. " Reputation and business were salvaged when Baines' Limousine Werks stretched the limousine in 24 days. At the show, everybody loved it. (Courtesy of Matt Baines, Commercial Vehicle Center, Oak Grove Village, Illinois)

Baines says he most enjoys the one-off projects, the individual custom car which, he explains, was the impetus behind the stretch limousine. While Cadillac sold factory limousines to dealers, "the customers were getting more sophisticated," he says. LW was always directed toward the custom car and personalized cus­tomer service. When a client complained of no place to lay his pipe, Baines had a special rack worked up. Another had a particular interest in gadgets and toys. This client, a six-year-old singing phenomenon, wanted "a complete media center," says Baines. "It had 20 speakers and was like someone's living room." For Baines, these are the inspirations and challenges that make the business a joy. Baines sold LW in 1994 to his old employer, Earl Moloney. Today Baines remains in the limousine business with both his enthusiasm and the Commercial Vehicle Center of Oak Grove Village, Illinois, a major limousine distributor.

 

    For more information please read:

The Professional Car (Quarterly Journal of the Professional Car Society)

Gregg D. Merksamer - Professional Cars: Ambulances, Funeral Cars and Flower Cars

Thomas A. McPherson - American Funeral Cars & Ambulances Since 1900

Carriage Museum of America - Horse-Drawn Funeral Vehicles: 19th Century Funerals

Carriage Museum of America -  Horse Drawn - Military, Civilian, Veterinary - Ambulances

Gunter-Michael Koch - Bestattungswagen im Wandel der Zeit

Walt McCall & Tom McPherson - Classic American Ambulances 1900-1979: Photo Archive

Walt McCall & Tom McPherson - Classic American Funeral Vehicles 1900-1980 Photo Archive

Walter M. P. McCall - The American Ambulance 1900-2002

Walter M.P. McCall - American Funeral Vehicles 1883-2003

Michael L. Bromley & Tom Mazza - Stretching It: The Story of the Limousine

Richard J. Conjalka - Classic American Limousines: 1955 Through 2000 Photo Archive

Richard J. Conjalka - Stretch Limousines 1928-2001 Photo Archive

Thomas A. McPherson - Eureka: The Eureka Company: a complete history

Thomas A. McPherson - Superior: The complete history

Thomas A. McPherson - Flxible: The Complete History

Thomas A. McPherson - Miller-Meteor: The Complete History

Robert R. Ebert  - Flxible: A History of the Bus and the Company

Hearses - Automobile Quarterly Vol 36 No 3

Marian Suman-Hreblay - Dictionary of World Coachbuilders and Car Stylists

Daniel D. Hutchins - Wheels Across America: Carriage Art & Craftsmanship

Marian Suman-Hreblay - Dictionary of World Coachbuilders and Car Stylists

Michael Lamm and Dave Holls - A Century of Automotive Style: 100 Years of American Car Design

Nick Georgano - The Beaulieu Encyclopedia of the Automobile: Coachbuilding

Marian Suman-Hreblay - Automobile Manufacturers Worldwide Registry

G.N. Georgano & G. Marshall Naul - The Complete Encyclopedia of Commercial Vehicles

Albert Mroz - Illustrated Encyclopedia of American Trucks & Commercial Vehicles

Beverly Rae Kimes & Henry Austin Clark Jr. - Standard Catalog of American Cars 1805-1942

John Gunnell - Standard Catalog of American Cars, 1946-1975

James M. Flammang & Ron Kowalke - Standard Catalog of American Cars, 1976-1999

 



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