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Related: Culture Forums, Support ForumsBelated anniversary: June 25, 1956: the last Packard rolls off the assembly line.
Last edited Tue Jun 26, 2018, 11:21 AM - Edit history (1)
They mean real Packards, not rebadged Studebakers.
I have always wanted a Packard, ever since I was a little kid. I'm partial to the '55s and '56s, even though they have V-8s instead of a straight-8. I'll take a Caribbean any day.
#OnThisDay in 1956, the last Packard rolled off the production line in Detroit, Michigan
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Photos tagged with 1956packardcaribbeanconvertible
The Last Real Packard
On this date in 1956, Detroit built the last Packard that was actually designed by Packard.
BY BLAKE Z. RONG
JUN 25, 2016
Fifty years ago today, American automotive history lost one of its oldest carmakers when Packardonce the vanguard of American automotive luxury, the last great independent carmakerfaded into ignominy and died a quiet death.
Packard was once America's foremost luxury car maker, perhaps second only to Duesenberg, or Pierce-Arrow. Beloved on both sides of the Atlantic, it became known for its smooth engines and handmade craftsmanship. FDR rode in a Packard, the first armored limousine in the world. Japan's royal family owned ten. When its factory was built in Detroit in 1903, it was the most modern automotive production facility in the world. It was building V12 engines by 1916, its legendary "Twin Six." Ask the Man Who Owns One! Packard survived the Depression and both world wars, building Rolls-Royce Merlin engines under license for P-51 Mustangs, surviving World War II with nearly all of its finances intact.
And it took just four years for the Packard name, founded in 1899 by James and William Packard, to be run into the dirt. Studebaker was in debt when Packard merged with it in 1955, and the once-healthy latter took on the former's debt. What could an independent American carmaker do against the Big Three? Nash and Hudson and Packard and Studebaker nearly formed America's Auto Union, instead creating American Motors (AMC) and Studebaker-Packard. Around that time, president James Nance tried valiantly to bring Packard back upmarket, but he was faced with too many modelssome formed from the rear ends of one with the front ends of anotherand too much interest by management in making an "everyman" car to achieve his goals. He couldn't secure tooling. The cars were unreliable, badly-built, and consumers revolted. Richard Teague's sharper styling didn't help (he eventually went to the aforementioned AMC). Packard's last defender was ousted and eventually went to Ford, and Packard's fate was sealed.
The last car fully designed by Packard, a four-door Patrician, rolled off the assembly line at Connor Avenue on June 25, 1956. Packard-branded cars would continue to scrape by for three more years, fully in the wraps of the company now known as Studebaker-Packard, built in South Bend, Indiana, and amounting to nothing more than rebadges. (Ask The Man Who Owns A "Packardbaker." ) Studebaker-Packard wouldn't drop the latter portion of its name until 1962, right around when the Avanti came out. Out with the old, and all that, and yet still clinging onto the past. And maybe Only Nineties Kids Will Remember the wholly unnecessary neoclassical "revival" of 1999, but that's a bizarre footnote for another time, or perhaps no time at all.
On this date in 1956, Detroit built the last Packard that was actually designed by Packard.
BY BLAKE Z. RONG
JUN 25, 2016
Fifty years ago today, American automotive history lost one of its oldest carmakers when Packardonce the vanguard of American automotive luxury, the last great independent carmakerfaded into ignominy and died a quiet death.
Packard was once America's foremost luxury car maker, perhaps second only to Duesenberg, or Pierce-Arrow. Beloved on both sides of the Atlantic, it became known for its smooth engines and handmade craftsmanship. FDR rode in a Packard, the first armored limousine in the world. Japan's royal family owned ten. When its factory was built in Detroit in 1903, it was the most modern automotive production facility in the world. It was building V12 engines by 1916, its legendary "Twin Six." Ask the Man Who Owns One! Packard survived the Depression and both world wars, building Rolls-Royce Merlin engines under license for P-51 Mustangs, surviving World War II with nearly all of its finances intact.
And it took just four years for the Packard name, founded in 1899 by James and William Packard, to be run into the dirt. Studebaker was in debt when Packard merged with it in 1955, and the once-healthy latter took on the former's debt. What could an independent American carmaker do against the Big Three? Nash and Hudson and Packard and Studebaker nearly formed America's Auto Union, instead creating American Motors (AMC) and Studebaker-Packard. Around that time, president James Nance tried valiantly to bring Packard back upmarket, but he was faced with too many modelssome formed from the rear ends of one with the front ends of anotherand too much interest by management in making an "everyman" car to achieve his goals. He couldn't secure tooling. The cars were unreliable, badly-built, and consumers revolted. Richard Teague's sharper styling didn't help (he eventually went to the aforementioned AMC). Packard's last defender was ousted and eventually went to Ford, and Packard's fate was sealed.
The last car fully designed by Packard, a four-door Patrician, rolled off the assembly line at Connor Avenue on June 25, 1956. Packard-branded cars would continue to scrape by for three more years, fully in the wraps of the company now known as Studebaker-Packard, built in South Bend, Indiana, and amounting to nothing more than rebadges. (Ask The Man Who Owns A "Packardbaker." ) Studebaker-Packard wouldn't drop the latter portion of its name until 1962, right around when the Avanti came out. Out with the old, and all that, and yet still clinging onto the past. And maybe Only Nineties Kids Will Remember the wholly unnecessary neoclassical "revival" of 1999, but that's a bizarre footnote for another time, or perhaps no time at all.
Curbside Classic: 1956 Packard Patrician Please Proceed to The Lifeboats
BY J P CAVANAUGH OCTOBER 12, 2015
{snip a great article}
BY J P CAVANAUGH OCTOBER 12, 2015
{snip a great article}
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Belated anniversary: June 25, 1956: the last Packard rolls off the assembly line. (Original Post)
mahatmakanejeeves
Jun 2018
OP
Ohiogal
(32,057 posts)1. Have you ever been to the Packard Museum in my home town of Warren, Ohio?
mahatmakanejeeves
(57,600 posts)2. No. It's Dave Grohl's hometown too. NT
Ohiogal
(32,057 posts)3. Warren and Niles fight over Dave Grohl, LOL
Nuclear Pyle
(51 posts)4. Dang, what gorgeous cars!
As Steve Earle might have put it,
Now she ain't too good on gasoline, she burns a little oil
But she was built by union labor on American soil.
Wounded Bear
(58,706 posts)5. My Dad had a Packard...
rode in the back seat many times.
bif
(22,745 posts)6. I drive by the old Packard plant every day
Cool article. Thanks for posting.