1958 Chevrolet Bel Air 4-door sedan. |
It was also the year of the Eisenhower Recession. The worldwide economic slump affected the automobile industry with car sales in the United States dropping 31% in 1958 relative to 1957. In the nine months following 1957’s peak automobile production fell 47%, compared with an 11% decline following 1953’s economic downturn. [1]
Chevrolet's Sweet 17. |
The following sales invoice, dated January 29, 1958, illustrates what the buyer of a new Bel Air 4-door sedan would have purchased for $2,986 (a relative value today of $25,176).
A sales invoice for a Bel Air 4-door sedan (see photo at beginning). |
The code in the serial number box, “F58T 109568”, refers to the car’s production information. F: eight cylinder engine 58: 1958 model year T: Tarrytown, New York (North Tarrytown Assembly) 109568: vehicle serial number
The selected exterior color scheme was Sierra Gold and Artic White. Chevrolet offered fifteen other color combinations to choose from, all of which were coordinated to six interior combinations.
1958 Best-Sellers: Chevrolet surpassed Ford. |
The new V8 big block. |
Chevrolet’s chief designer, Clare MacKichan, was responsible for the “Sculpturamic Styling”. Noticeably, the iconic tailfins of the 1957 models were rounded and the fenders were given a gull-wing treatment for a “Jet Age” appearance. The side trim was meant to resemble a rocket ship in flight. A broad grille and quad headlights were added to the front end. The models were made longer, lower, and heavier, with a total weight of 3,470 pounds (1,874 pounds front, 1,596 pounds rear). An improved “Safety Girder” x-frame chassis featured box-section side rails and a boxed front cross member, with its rear tied together by a channel-section cross member.
Clare MacKichan's "Sculpturamic Styling". |
• • •
The Tarrytown Assembly plant, circa 1953. |
The location for the Tarrytown Assembly plant was originally the site of the Stanley Steam Car Company. John Brisben Walker, the publisher of Cosmopolitan magazine, and partner Amzi Barber purchased the patents to the Stanley Steamer for $250,000. In 1899 they brought land on the banks of the Hudson River in North Tarrytown (now Sleepy Hallow) and commissioned Stanford White, the noted New York architect, to design the 700-windowed building. Production of the Walker Steamer commenced in 1900.
Over the years the plant grew in size and changed hands. In 1903 the plant was sold to John D. Maxwell and Benjamin Briscoe for the Maxwell-Briscoe Motor Co. By 1912 five different Maxwell gasoline-powered models were produced.
Chevrolet purchased portions of the complex in 1914 and 1915. Within a few years the company integrated into General Motors in 1918. By 1930 the original buildings were replaced by a new facility. During the World War II years the plant concentrated on building military vehicles and aircraft components. Production for civilian vehicles resumed in 1946 with Chevrolet prospering during the post-war automotive boom. The last models to come off the plant’s assembly line were GM’s second-generation minivans, the Chevrolet Lumina, Pontiac TransSport and Oldsmobile Silhouette.
The plant was closed at the end of June 1996 and demolished in the summer of 1999. Diversified Realty Advisors and SunCal acquired the land in late 2014 for $39.5 million. The “Edge-On-Hudson” property is currently being developed into housing with green spaces and recreational amenities.
Sources:
“1958 Classic Chevrolet: ’58’s Real Eye Opener is CHEVY!” http://58classicchevy.com/ . Retrieved 2017-03-27.
“After 100 Years, 12 Million Autos, Venerable Tarrytown Turns to Dust” http://www.autonews.com/article/19990712/ANA/907120709/after-100-years-12-million-autos-venerable-tarrytown-turns-to-dust . Retrieved 2017-03-27.
“Chevrolet 1958 Specifications – Passenger” https://www.gmheritagecenter.com/docs/gm-heritage-archive/vehicle-information-kits/Chevrolet/1958-Chevrolet.pdf .
“Chevrolet Bel Air” https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chevrolet_Bel_Air . Retrieved 2017-03-27.
“North Tarrytown Assembly” https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/North_Tarrytown_Assembly . Retrieved 2017-03-27.
1. ^ “The Economic Report of the President.” Monthly Labor Review 82.3 (1959): 1-225. The American Presidency Project. U.S. Government Printing Office, January 20, 1959. Web. 2017-03-27. http://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/economic_reports/1959.pdf .