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Carrosserie Pourtout

A Brief History of Disappearing Hardtops

March 9, 2026 By pete

The French make Peugeot pioneered the retractable hardtop in the early 1930 ties by selling Éclipse bodies, made by coachbuilder Marcel Pourtout, on their 301 and 601 chassis. The concept of the Peugeot 402 Éclipse was also based on Georges Paulin’s patent. But this model, introduced in October 1935, was built in Peugeot’s own factory. Between 1936 and 1940 some 580 units were produced.

From the VeloceToday archives, March, 2015

Three important Frenchman who had a tremendous influence on automobile design: Georges Paulin, Marcel Pourtout and Emile Darl’mat, the three Musketeers. Much of their combined work evolved around the development of the disappearing hardtop as conceived by Georges Paulin. To give us a further insight into how clever kinematics conquered the auto industry, Gijsbert-Paul sent us this history.

By Gijsbert-Paul Berk

In the previous decades nearly all the major car manufacturers have introduced retractable hardtops in their popular or premium convertible models.

Opel had them on the Tigra TwinTop, Ford on their Fiesta and Focus models, Renault provided a glass paneled ‘see through’ hard top on the Megane CC, Volvo on the C 70 and BMW on the type 4 cabriolet. There even exist Ferrari California and Ferrari 458 Italia Spider versions with a retractable top.

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Tagged With: 1928 Panhard Cabriolet, Carrosserie Pourtout, disappearing hardtop, disappearing hardtops, Emile Darl’mat, Fédération Française de la Carrosseri, Ferrari hardtops, ford skyliner, french coachbuilders, Georges Paulin, gijsbert-paul berk, Marcel Pourtout, mercedes hardtops, peugeot, Peugeot 301 Eclipse, retractable hardtop, retractable hardtops

The Three Musketeers Part 3

April 7, 2015 By pete

A 1949 Pourtout Delahaye is now part of the Louwman collection in The Hague Netherlands. Photo by Hugues Vanhoolandt.

By Gijsbert-Paul Berk

Of our Three Musketeers, only two survived the war. But despite all odds, both Pourtout and Darl’mat continued to create interesting designs well into the 1950s.

Georges Paulin and the Resistance

While it was sad that the Rolls-Royce Paulin Corniche was destroyed at Dieppe, even more tragic is the fact that Georges Paulin did not survive the war. After Hitler’s troops marched into Paris, Paulin joined the French resistance group Albi, which supplied information to British Intelligence. He produced drawings of German installations and armament and transmitted information using a clandestine radio transmitter. Sadly the activities of the Albi cell were betrayed by people working within the Vichy government for the Deuxième Bureau (the French Military Intelligence Service) to the Abwehr (the German Military Intelligence Service). Georges Paulin, Jacques Kellner, a famous Parisian carrossier and president of the French Coachbuilders Association and Roger Raven, a friend of Paulin who worked at Carrosserie Pourtout and was also part of the Albi resistance group, were arrested and sentenced to death by a German Military Tribunal. Paulin was nearly 40 years old; when on 21 March 1942 he was executed by a firing squad at the fortress of Mount Valérien. In 1944 the government of Charles de Gaulle posthumously awarded Georges Paulin the Medaulle Militaire et Citation à l’Ordre de l’Armée.

Pourtout in the post-war era

During the occupation Carrosserie Pourtout was confiscated by the Germans, who used its workshops and painting facilities to repair army vehicles. When the American troops and the 2nd Armored Division of the Free French army under Général Leclerc advanced to liberate Paris, the retreating German army badly damaged and plundered the buildings. Nearly all the equipment had disappeared.

Because of their reputation with series production Carrosserie Pourtout was commissioned by the French importer of the American Graham-Page cars to convert a number of their ’Sharknose’ business coupés into elegant cabriolets. According to Claude Pourtout a few of these cars were re-exported to the US.

[Read more…] about The Three Musketeers Part 3

Tagged With: 1928 Panhard Cabriolet, Carrosserie Pourtout, disappearing hardtop, Emile Darl’mat, Fédération Française de la Carrosseri, french coachbuilders, Georges Paulin, gijsbert-paul berk, Marcel Pourtout, Peugeot 301 Eclipse, retractable hardtop

The Three Musketeers Part 2: 1930-1939

March 31, 2015 By pete

The remarkable disappearing hardtop, circa 1933. The 1933/1935 Peugoet 301 Eclipses were coachbuilt by Pourtout but marketed by the Peugeot dealer organization.

By Gijsbert-Paul Berk

Read Part 1

During the 1930s, our Three Musketeers, together and individually, were involved in a number of projects with French, Italian and British carmakers.

Lancia

When Pourtout showed the first special bodies for the French made Lancia Belnas at the Paris Motor Show, he still worked in Bourgival . That can be seen on the sign above his stand. But in order to manufacture these bodies in limited series, he acquired the Hurtu car factory and moved his activities to Rueil-Malmaison.

In 1934-35, Carrosserie Pourtout transferred it activities from Bourgival to the Paris suburb of Rueil-Malmaison. In fact Marcel Pourtout acquired the factory of Hurtu Automobiles in the Rue Paul Doumer. The extra space, facilities, and its trained workers were what he needed to produce small series of special coachwork. There was another reason, however; the proximity to a new factory opened by Lancia.

Sorry, you are too late! On Wednesday February 4, 2015 this 1934 beautiful Lancia Belna Eclipse by Pourtout went under the hammer at RM Auctions and was sold for € 212.800 It was estimated at over 300.000 so the new owner must be a happy person. (Photo courtesy RM auctions).

To avoid paying the sky-high import duties in France, the Italian car manufacturer Lancia, had opened a factory in Bonneuil-sur-Marne (in the Ile de France region). There, Lancia was building the Belna berlina (sold as Lancia Augusta in Italy and elsewhere) and Pourtout had got a contract to build their roadsters, fixed-head coupes and a number of ‘Eclipses’. The order for the first year was no less than 365 of these special-bodied Lancias. [Read more…] about The Three Musketeers Part 2: 1930-1939

Tagged With: 1928 Panhard Cabriolet, Carrosserie Pourtout, disappearing hardtop, Emile Darl’mat, Fédération Française de la Carrosseri, french coachbuilders, Georges Paulin, gijsbert-paul berk, Marcel Pourtout, Peugeot 301 Eclipse, retractable hardtop

The Three Musketeers, Part 1

March 24, 2015 By pete

Combination of the three: Emile Darl'mat asked Marcel Pourtout to clothe this Peugeot 601 with a design by Georges Paulin. At the 1935 Concours d’Elegance in Monte Carlo, the actress Josette Day presented this dramatic, ultra-modern, full-width pontoon with Paulin's disappearing hardtop.

By Gijsbert-Paul Berk

This is the story of three men who, in the prewar years and especially during the 1930 ties, combined their ambition, enthusiasm and skills to create a number of unforgettable and trendsetting automobiles. The names of these ‘three musketeers’: Emile Darl’mat (1892 – 1970), a successful Paris car dealer, Marcel Pourtout (1894 -1979), a master craftsman and coachbuilder and Georges Paulin (1902 – 1942), a dentist and a very talented ‘amateur’ body designer.

Read Part 2
Read Part 3

In 2002 I was lucky enough to interview Claude Pourtout in his office at the Fédération Française de la Carrosserie. Claude was at the time a Vice-President and the historian of this organization. He was also the son of Marcel Pourtout, whose coachbuilding company had built a number of these magic Darl’mat sports cars. He told me quite a lot about the endeavors of his father, his friends Emile Darl’mat, Georges Paulin and the history of the company Carrosserie Pourtout. He also lent me a number of unique drawings and photos, which I was allowed to copy. The originals I returned to him with a draft of my article. We met again at the next Rétromobile show and made an appointment to continue our conversation soon. Unfortunately his health deteriorated and that never happened. When in 2004 he died, I filed my notes because they were incomplete and I more or less forgot about them.

But now I have retrieved them and – with some additional information – here is what he told me.

Emile Darl’mat

The name Darl’mat literally means ‘a very good person’ in Breton, the language of the French province of Brittany. Although born in the north of France, Emile Darl’mat was indeed a very good person. After he had completed his training as a mechanic and worked in a Renault garage, a wealthy businessman offered him a job as chauffeur/mécanicien. He had to accompany the man to San Francisco and remained there for a year. When in 1921 he returned to France, Darl’mat wanted to become a car dealer. During his stay in the US he had managed to save some money and with a loan from his former employer he could sign a lease contract for a garage at 35 Rue Malar in Paris (a stone’s throw from the Esplanade des Invalides). Darl’mat was a man of action with a clear vision about what he wanted to achieve and from 1923 onward his dealership represented Panhard, Peugeot and La Buire automobiles. [Read more…] about The Three Musketeers, Part 1

Tagged With: 1928 Panhard Cabriolet, Carrosserie Pourtout, disappearing hardtop, Emile Darl’mat, Fédération Française de la Carrosseri, french coachbuilders, Georges Paulin, gijsbert-paul berk, Marcel Pourtout, Peugeot 301 Eclipse, retractable hardtop

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