Best of Show
1961 Best of Show Winner
April 29, 2020
Three decades into its existence, this Packard was lying in shambles in a San Francisco garage. Then Scott Newhall stepped in to rescue it.
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April 29, 2020
Three decades into its existence, this Packard was lying in shambles in a San Francisco garage. Then Scott Newhall stepped in to rescue it.
April 25, 2020
The 1964 Best of Show winner was the 1935 Bugatti Type 50 Coupé Profilé shown by William Harrah.
April 24, 2020
A striking example of automotive engineering, a marvelous chassis wedded to a stunning piece of coachwork
Bentleys will constitute about a quarter of this year’s Concours competitors, filling six complete classes that include several special groupings.
Zagato is one of the very few — and by far the most important — Italian coachbuilders still owned and managed by the family that founded it.
The timing was good, as I had just been told the family’s 1912 Packard Model 30 was accepted to the Pebble Beach Concours d’Elegance...
Hot rodders have always yearned to have their home-built, stripped-down, souped-up cars featured on the cover of a magazine — especially one published just for them.
One hundred years back, in 1919, Ugo Zagato founded the coachbuilding company that continues to this day in his name — Carrozzeria Zagato.
The closest these hot rods came to “side by side” was when racing against each other.
I think the Tour is incredibly important — quite possibly the most important event of the whole darn Concours!
An Unmatched Tradition of Automotive Excellence since 1950
August 17, 2025 — Just 69 Days left!