The first Hudson Super Six was introduced on 16 January 1916. Also known as the Series H, the Super Six was an early performance car. Its
inline-six developed , compared to the of the equally dimensioned engine fitted to the contemporary Hudson Model Six-40. The model series from 1921 to 1923 had a wheelbase of 3187 mm. The six-cylinder engine had a displacement of 6757 cc with a bore of 88.9 mm and a stroke of 127 mm. Before its introduction, Super Sixes made a series of speed runs on a track in
Long Island, New York, followed by a new record transcontinental run (San Francisco to New York in 5 days, 3 hours, and 31 minutes - returning after an eight-hour break), a stock chassis speed record at
Daytona Beach, a record at
Pikes Peak, and the stock chassis 24-hour record at an average speed of . The last record stood until 1931, when a
Marmon took it. Ellerbeck was granted a patent (No. 1,379,906) on 31 May 1921 and built several scale models to show at the 1922 Automobile Body Builders Exhibition in New York City. Ellerbeck's "flip top' on the Hudson was operated a crank handle located at the rear of the passenger door. When fully lowered, the roof was positioned behind the rear trunk and thus did not impede luggage capacity. When raised, the front of the top went over the windshield giving the appearance of a large air scoop. The make and condition of the cars are important to the people who took the journey to California as well as revealing a family's socioeconomic status. In
The Grapes of Wrath, the Joad family depends on a 1926 Hudson Super Six sedan converted into a truck. It is now difficult for contemporary readers to place cars such as Hudson Super Six in a meaningful social context. This car was put into storage after filming ended. After having been discovered in a dilapidated condition, it was converted into a
speedster in 2009. File:Hudson Super Six car in front of State, War and Navy building 31100v.jpg|The 24-hour record-setting special-bodied 1916 Hudson Super Six File:1917 Hudson Super Six Phaeton (3734024756).jpg|1917 production car (Series J Phaeton) File:1917 Hudson Super Six (9694517485).jpg|1917 open-drive limousine ==Second generation (1927)==