"something of an extraordinary nature will turn up..."

Mr. Micawber in Dickens' David Copperfield

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CarPort

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CarPort
July 13th, 2005

1942 Oldsmobile ad

World War II began to affect 1942 U.S. passenger cars even before the order came to suspend production by February. In October 1941, the War Production Board forbade the use of bright trim on other than bumpers and bumper guards. Plated parts could be used if painted over; Oldsmobile had perhaps the only ad showing a so-called “blackout car.”

In contrast to Ford Motor Company and Chrysler Corporation, whose pre- and postwar cars we contemplated last week, the independent manufacturers didn’t change their products much for 1946. Hudson, whose
1942 models
adopted the industry trend for light, horizontal grilles, also followed fashion with a bolder, more complex style for
1946
, but little else on the cars changed. Nash’s
postwar grille
was bolder than the prewar item, but gave a better balanced effect, as the upper grille on the ’42 looked a bit
snooty
. Packard changed hardly at all, making the delicate grille bars on the
’42
marginally “stronger” for
’46
. And Studebaker offered only a continuation of the
Champion model
for four months until the all-new ’47 cars were ready. Though austere, the carryover Champion was all but indistinguishable from the
1942 cars
, whose upper-class models were attractively trimmed. The fact that the independents were working hard on all-new postwar cars probably accounts for their lack of effort to facelift the stopgap cars offered for 1946. Willys, on the other hand, dropped production of regular passenger cars until 1952.

The General Motors cars, however, were a mixed bag, many makes being exceptions to the similar-but-bolder-and-more-complex school. Chevrolet’s
1946 grille
was actually a bit simpler than
42’s
. Cadillac gave its
1946 grille
bigger rectangles and reshaped lights from
1942’s
. Buick made minimal changes from
1942
, adding just a
horizontal vent
at the top of the grille and emboldening the bars. Pontiac, whose
1942 face
was a real mix of sizes and shapes, simplified the front of its
1946 cars
, and Oldsmobile, whose ’42 grille was
truly bizarre
(the middle bar was actually part of the bumper), also cleaned up its grille for ’46, although the car had a
permanent frown
.

Perhaps we shall never know what the 1943 cars would have looked like, had there been such models. The 1946 facelifts were likely quick jobs, undertaken in a hurry when most of the styling effort was going into all-new 1947s, ’48s and ’49s. For posterity’s sake, though, I wish there had been more ’42s.

Serendipity: n. An aptitude for making desirable discoveries by accident.
“They were always making discoveries, by accident and sagacity, of things they were not in quest of.”
Horace Walpole, The Three Princes of Serendip
© 2004-2024 Kit Foster
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