
Sports cars are often thought to have appeared in the United States  after the conclusion of the Second World War. Soldiers who were exposed  to British and other racing and sports cars returned stateside and  created a market for American-produced vehicles that larger auto  manufacturers were happy to serve

Although it is true that the sports car market really did not mature in  the U.S. until the late 1940s and early 1950s, it is not entirely  accurate to peg that moment in time as the birth of American sports  cars. Sports cars, albeit in very limited numbers, did exist prior to  the 1940s domestically. Some even predated the First World War

These often-forgotten pioneering sports cars deserve attention. Their  performance was startling for the era and many of them competed and  fared favorably against their better-known French and British  counterparts. Here are three early American sports cars that deserve to  be rescued from the dustbin of history

Stutz Motor Car Company, which produced vehicles from its plant in  Wisconsin, produced an assortment of exceptional sporting cars. Stutz  cars won the American Road and Track Championship in 1915 and were  capable of reaching average speeds well in excess of one hundred miles  per hour

The Stutz featured a 4 cylinder, 4-valve motor with a compression ratio  of 5 to 1. Stutz competed admirably in races for an extended period of  time, placing second in the 1919 Indianapolis 500 and winning the  then-prestigious New Zealand Cup on three separate occasions during the  1920s
 
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