Classic Cars A to Z

Classic Cars and Trucks - History and Information

After WW2, an enormous amount of design talent began to emerge. Raymond Loewy, Harley Earl, Elwood Engel - just to name a few who gave us styles and innovations that last to this day. The Chrysler 300 and Corvette, both introduced in the fifties, are still with us, and the retractable hardtop has made a comeback.

classic cars through history

The Independents

By the early 1950's, the "Big Three" (General Motors, Ford Motor Company and Chrysler Corporation) dominated new car sales, leaving the smaller companies such as Crosley, Hudson, Kaiser-Frazer, Nash, Packard, Studebaker, and Willys to fight for their share of the market.

Studebaker car history

These smaller, independent car companies introduced many innovative features that the Big Three would go on to incorporate into their own models.

Corvette vs Thunderbird

early Corvette history

Development of the Ford Thunderbird began in February of 1953, just one month after GM debuted their Corvette Dream Car at the Motorama show in New York.

post WW2 automotive history

Ford would use parts off existing models for their new car, as did Chevy. Ford would also copy the long-nose/short-tail and 102-inch wheelbase of the Jaguar XK120 as did Chevy. But similarities ended there - Ford's answer to the Corvette was not a bare-bones sports car, but rather a stylish and practical personal luxury car.

Muscle Car Early Years

Designed for straight-line speed, muscle cars lacked sophisticated chassis, brakes, and suspension, but they were durable, affordable, and fast. Starting in the early sixties, both Ford and Dodge were building cars specifically to compete at the drag strip.

muscle car history

Chrysler's 426 Hemi motor was first seen in 1964 and offered in street trim in 1966, including the first-gen Dodge Charger.

The Import Car Market

In the early 1960's, very few Americans were concerned with gas prices when premium fuel was 35 cents-a-gallon. Cheap gas and cheap horsepower was the order of the day.

In 1960, the total import car share of the U.S. market was just 7.58 percent. The air-cooled, rear-engine VW Beetle was most popular, with 159,995 sold.

Volkswagen Beetle history

During the original Beetle's 65-year production run, more than 21 million were sold world-wide, and is presently the fourth highest selling automobile of all time.

The Malaise Era

Starting in 1973, the OPEC oil embargo, skyrocketing fuel prices, and a rising foreign car market, brought about a big change in the way American cars were designed and produced.

1975 Olds Cutlass ad

In 1975, America's best-selling car was the Oldsmobile Cutlass, with 324,610 units produced.

Unique Classic Cars

Styled after the 1927-1928 Mercedes Benz SSK, the Excalibur was America's first repli-car. In it's first and most successful carnation, a hand-laid fiberglass body was fitted over a Studebaker chassis and drivetrain. After the original company failed in 1986, the Excalibur was revived several times.

Excaliber Series 3

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