Sunday, June 03, 2007

My Other Car is a 1957 Imperial


Yes, my other car, the one I don't drive a lot, is an antique. I've had these pictures almost since we bought it in 2001, and never got around to putting them up on the web. Well, here they are!

Chrysler's 1957 cars were exuberant fantasies. They were the first cars to have huge tailfins. When they appeared, so they say, General Motors' design team literally threw away their plans for the 1959 cars and started over. The Chrysler cars were designed by a genius named Virgil Exner (his friends called him "Ex"), who said he was inspired by speedboat designs and by science fiction pictures of rocket ships. He said that his goal with these designs was to make cars that looked like they are moving even when they are standing still. He succeeded! There are a people around who loathe these cars for their flamboyant individualism, their naked assertion of human power, their extravagance, their seeming refusal to be safe and sensible. I love them for all the same reasons.

I've heard the front of this model described as "intimidating." Hm. Well, it does have a stylized eagle -- a bird of prey-- in the middle of the hood. The grill looks like a row of gleaming teeth. It seems to be saying "I eat Volkswagens for lunch." Yeah, I guess "intimidating" is a fair enough description. That's not what I love about it, but I have to admit, that's what it is.


The strips of chrome over the headlights are called the "eyebrows." People have a tendency to anthropomorphize cars. Or maybe they are designed to be anthropomorphic.


They say that the 1957 Chrysler cars were the first in the world to have curved side windows. Evidently, "Ex" wanted curved doors, and realized that if the doors are curved, then the windows that slide in and out of them can be curved as well. It's part of the extremely sleek look he was after. Though the car is very long -- nineteen and a half feet! -- it is also very low. The top of the car is well below shoulder level for me. (My Jeep Wrangler is half as long and almost a food taller!) The effect Ex achieved is striking.



Think of driving a great white shark.


A driver's-eye-view. The gauges are set in deep wells rimmed with gleaming steel. It somehow gives the thing a futuristic rocket-ship sort of look. This is a two tone car: white, and something Chrysler called "Indian Turquoise". The interior is dominated by the blue color. The windshield is lightly tinted blue, so driving it you feel as if it's just a blue world out there -- the whole cosmos. It's an experience of blueness.


The "doughnut" on the lid of the trunk contains -- absolutely nothing. The spare tire is in a completely different area of the trunk. It's there for looks. Frank Lloyd Wright would have a cow.


The famous "gunsight" taillights. I always thought they looked more like jets of flame shooting out the back of a rocket. The chrome halos are like those glare circles that show up in photographs of bright lights.

The original owner of this car was a Wisconsin farmer. He never married, and lived and farmed with his sister. She hated going to church in his pickup truck, so he went to Gillespie Bloomer Motors (now Don Miller Chrysler-Plymouth) in Madison and brought home an Imperial. There was something about it she didn't like, so he took it back to the dealer, and brought this one home. This one, she liked. For many, many years, they drove it to church, and nowhere else. And they would not even take it to church if it was snowing, and usually not if it was raining. Church and God are important, sure enough, but -- this is an Imperial after all! ... I respect that. This was a guy with a clear sense of values.

12 comments:

Anonymous said...

I'm with you 100% on this. I like the unashamed sense of power too. There's nothing self-effacing or egalitarian about the car.

Cars can be so cool!

Lester Hunt said...

Now that you mention it, there is one thing that is egalitarian about this car. There were three American luxury cars in those days: Cadillac, Lincoln, and Imperial. Imperial was the number three seller, year after year. This year, 1957, was the one and only year in which they almost overtook Lincoln in sales and became number two. In other words, this car was the underdog! That's the one thing about it that appeals to one's egalitarian urges and hankerings.

Kali Fontecchio said...

I kind of like the environment better! Where you live is so pretty!!!!!

Lester Hunt said...

Thanks -- I think! My gardener (back when I thought I could afford to have a gardener) told me he that thehuge maple tree that you see dropping all the yellow leaves might be to tallest one in the whole village.

Kali said...

You live in a village???!!! How rustic!!!!

Lester Hunt said...

We are a simple people, but proud.

Anonymous said...

A beautiful car! Made in the era when many models had distinctive styles and characters that you could recognize a block away.

Anonymous said...

My dad had a light blue Imperial just like yours..I was 16 and was the first in my class to get a license...he let me drive it!!..and I was a hit with all my classmates...now even years later my classmates sitll talk about the Blue Imperial...am looking to see if I can find one again to buy..thanks for posting this it brought back good memories...

Eu Fahrzeuge said...

The race against the time, cannot be chased using cars. Time is precious so buy fastest car and save your time driving the car. I like Eu Neuwagen cars which are very fast and had great attraction with there stylish model.

Anonymous said...

Nice car.

I got my license in one of those. In 1963 my Dad bought the 57. It was a white Crown hardtop. Man, what a car! It was GREAT having access to that car in High School. All the jocks were driving around in Mustangs, Pontiacs and older rods, I was driving a Luxoboat. dad traded it in for a 1960 LeBaron around 1963. That was even better.

Lester Hunt said...

"Luxoboat" is a good word for it!

Unknown said...

It is great to know that you also have a vintage car. I also have a 1985 Pontiac GTO which is still running and every time I drive it, it gives me a pleasant experience of a journey.
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