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The mysterious Noma: a speedster fit for a mobster

If this isn’t a striking image of a similarly striking car, we don’t know what is. Unfortunately, there's very little information about it. The original image comes from a glass negative, which was gifted to the Library of Congress collection in 1947 by a man named Herbert A. French. The library lists it as ‘Noma? Car, 1920’. We think it’s safe to say the marque indeed is Noma as the name is well visible on the radiator badge.

Although the car here wears a Washington D.C. plate and 'NoMa' is the colloquial name for an industrial area (‘North Of Massachusetts Avenue) in that very city, the Noma Motors Corporation hailed from New York, we understand. The marque first appeared there in 1919 with its two-seater speedster and four-seater ‘close-coupled phaeton’, both using straight-six engines. This here is the speedster, very sleek due to the lack of running boards, with only step plates instead. Alas, Noma lasted just a handful of years—the curtain fell as early as 1923. One source mentions that "An estimated total of 625 Nomas was built." That seems a reasonable number, but there can't be many survivors, can there?

Perhaps there is one, as the same source says: “Some time after 2000 an enthusiast was searching in an old, closed down salvage yard. In a shed was a 1922 Noma car, with a restored chassis and the body still intact but off the car. The grandson of the yard’s founder confirmed that it was a one-owner car that had belonged to Jack ‘Legs’ Diamond, the mobster. The car had been impounded from his hideout in 1933 after his murder and had been stored since.”

We’d certainly love to see pictures of it!

Words: Jeroen Booij; picture: Library of Congress
 

This article was originally published on March 22, 2024

 

Published:
Tuesday August 12th, 2025
Wesley Ciampo
12 August 2025, 08:54
There are many family stories about the Noma. The young boy on the hood is my uncle, Charles R. Hladik.
The car was owned by my Grandfather, Charles A. Hladik.
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Dana Pence
05 January 2025, 22:29
Just yesterday I saw a Noma at the Rolling Through Time car museum in Tucson, Arizona. Had I not, I would not have known the name to look up.
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David Edwards
08 January 2025, 22:32
That Noma is in the picture below this text. My father restored it and I'm trying to find as much as I can so we can make a plaque for the car museum. Rolling Through Time is now open and is amazing. Please tell folks to visit. It's at 4750, South Park Avenue, Tucson, AZ.
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David Edwards
25 June 2024, 22:03
The core is a 1923 Noma speedster, slightly modified with aftermarket GM body parts.
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Laurent Zoller
04 April 2024, 20:51
Hello
Voici une autre photo d'une automobile Noma.
(Photo de ma collection).
--------------------------------------------
Here is another photo of a Noma automobile.
(Photo from my collection).
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Rutger Booy
22 March 2024, 09:42
At least one Noma was imported in The Netherlands. It's licenceplate G-19194 was issued on January 4, 1921 to mr. Johann Oldigs from Amsterdam.
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Herman van Oldeneel
22 March 2024, 08:01
Noma had a Dutch importer. If any Nomas were imported, I don't know.
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David Liepelt
22 March 2024, 01:03
Standard Catalog suggests perhaps only 300 were built. The image matches one identified as 1919 in the book. Its original price would have been $2,600.
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