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  1. 4 de abr. de 2018 · Seventy years of style. Max Hoffman and Lloyd Wright: The common bond between two of America’s most influential aesthetes. Driving south through New York State, heading for Manhattan, cold Atlantic rain runs in rivulets up the windscreen and hammers along the taught canvas roof. Small, be-chromed wipers on a time warp 356 Cabriolet beat a ...

  2. Maximilian Edwin Hoffman was an Austrian-born, New York-based importer of luxury European. automobiles into the United States during the 1950s. He was instrumental in development and refinement of some of the most important and beloved. cars to ever reach American Shores. Max’s historic achievements earned him induction into the.

  3. Maximillian Hoffman is credited with single-handedly establishing the imported vehicle business in the United States. Born in Vienna, Austria in 1904, Hoffman was an avid racer who used motorsports as his ticket into the car business. He was the middle European sales representative of marques like Rolls-Royce, Bentley, Alfa Romeo, and Volvo ...

  4. As an avid racer in his youth, Max Hoffman’s automotive career was rooted in motorsports. He was born in Vienna, Austria in 1904 to Jewish lineage. By the 1930s, he had worked his way to become a middle European sales representative for manufacturers like Rolls-Royce, Bentley, Alfa Romeo and Volvo.

  5. 19 de dic. de 2023 · Max Hoffman and BMW outlines BMW’s return to Hoffman’s embrace, which remained problematic even as BMW scored a long-awaited hit with the 2002. The myth of Hoffman’s role in the 2002’s creation are dispelled herein, as well, with proper credit given to the engineers and executives who really brought it to life.

  6. 22 de nov. de 2022 · November 22, 2022. The story of Max Hoffman, who started his career as a racer in Europe, but became the catalyst for getting some of the most celebrated sports cars into the hands of the American public. His dealer network might have been based in North America, but his influence and impact were global.

  7. Max Hoffmann (born Jan. 25, 1869, Homberg an der Efze, Hesse [Germany]—died July 8, 1927, Bad Reichenhall, Ger.) was a German officer who was primarily responsible for several striking German victories on the Eastern Front in World War I.. Hoffmann joined the German army in 1887, studied at the Berlin War Academy, and eventually became the General Staff’s expert on the eastern sector ...