The Stanwood was an American automobile manufactured by the Stanwood Motor Company from 1920 until 1922 in St Louis, Missouri.
[1] Fred H. Berger was the chief engineer of the Stanwood Motor Car Company.
[1] The Stanwood Six was an "assembled car" with Continental 7R six-cylinder engine.
Parts advertised as fitted included Stromberg Carburetor, Westinghouse starting and lighting, Grant-Lees transmission, Borg & Beck clutch, Standard Parts rear axle, Bock roller bearings, Stewart-Warner vacuum feed fuel system, Gemmer steering gear, Atwater-Kent ignition, Perfection springs and Alemite chassis lubrication system.
[2][3] Offered in the first year only as a Touring car, on a 118-inch wheelbase at $2,050 (equivalent to $31,179 in 2023), a roadster and closed sedan were added for 1922.