AUTOMOTIVE HISTORY – NOVEMBER 2, 1983 - The Birth of The Minivan

AUTOMOTIVE HISTORY – NOVEMBER 2, 1983 - The Birth of The Minivan

A few years before automotive executives?Lee Iacocca?and his Mustang sidekick Hal Sperlich found themselves kicked to the curb outside of Ford headquarters, the two spearheaded a new concept car known as the Carousel.?Henry Ford II, who tended to butt heads with Iacocca, was less than impressed.

It’s design was radical, unlike anything else on the road. The Edsel fiasco also weighed heavy on Hank’s shoulders, which further reduced his will to take a chance on a new type vehicle. In the late 1970s Iacocca and Sperlich would be let go from Ford, despite record profits at the company. The struggling Chrysler Corporation welcomed them with open arms. With Iacocca as president (later chairman and CEO), the two brought their concept back to life.

Renamed the?Magic-wagon?during development, the project would result in a production vehicle that the?New York Times?would describe as “the hot cars coming out of Detroit.” What were they talking about? The Chrysler minivans of course. It was on this day in 1983 that the Plymouth Voyager and Dodge Caravan began to roll off of the assembly line.?

The new vehicles combined the driveability of a passenger car with the storage and seating capacity of a cumbersome station wagon. American drivers gobbled up the new minivans. The vehicles cemented Chrysler’s financial recovery in the early 1980s following years of massive losses.

They would soon become the best selling vehicle’s in America. Ford, reeling from a lost opportunity, responded with the Aerostar while Chevrolet’s answer was the Astro van. The minivan craze was born!

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Jerry McNeil

Insurance Consultant at J.Z. McNeil and Associates

3 年

They had the Market in the palms of their hands, and still got beat.

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