The "big" cab orders in the late 1930's came from a gentleman named Waters, who also owned a large Plymouth-DeSoto distributorship in the San Franscisco area and owned the DeSoto cab company there. He ordered long-wheelbase DeSoto sedans and modified them for use in New York City where regulations dictated that only the driver rode in front (thus the need for a long-wheelbase to make room for jump seats) and there could not be a rear luggage compartment (which is why suit cases, etc., were placed in the compartment beside the driver, where the passenger seat normally would be). Chrysler supplied their corporate long-wheelbase model, used by Plymouth (1935-41), Dodge (1935-51), DeSoto (1936-54), Chrysler (1935-54) and Imperial (1937-54). The 1955-56 Crown Imperials were drived from the 1949-54 long wheelbase sedan body. To see these cabs in operation, watch The Yellow Cab Man (1950) with Red Skelton. In it he drives a 1946-48 DeSoto S-11 cab and you get a pretty good feel for its size and use. As for saving the company, consider the following sales figures from the first cab in 1936 to 1942 : 1936 - 2,941 1937 - 225 1938 - 372 1939 - 1,250 1940 - 2,323 1941 - 2,502 1942 - 756 As you can tell, the numbers really are not that spectacular. They would not have been enough to save any company, although they did provide enough sales to make corporate long-wheelbase sedan production at least break even. When New York City changed their regulations in 1955, in favour of shorter cabs, it was no longer a feasible operation for Chrysler. DeSoto did build a 6-cylinder Firesweep taxis in 1957, though - all 139 of them. General Motors tried to follow Chrysler's example with the 1936-38 General Cab, a stretched Chevrolet sedan. But it bombed. GM of Canada offered the car as a regular Chevrolet production model in 1937-38, if you can call a couple of dozen production. As for Mr. Waters, he never forgave Chrysler for dropping the DeSoto. In 1963 his DeSoto Cab Co. placed an order with Studebaker for a couple of hundred Lark taxis, but the order was never filled. Bill Vancouver, BC ----- Original Message ----- From: "Kenyon Wills" <imperialist1960@xxxxxxxxx> To: <mailing-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> Sent: Tuesday, June 28, 2005 6:18 PM Subject: Re: IML: Airflow's affect on Chrysler during the 1930's > > > --- David Duricy <desotobravo@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > --- Kenyon Wills <imperialist1960@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > Despite the Airflow almost dragging the company > > > under > (it was a sales disaster) > > > > Shame on the person who told you this. > > > > Hmmm. Always willing to eat crow when it's the only > thing on the menu. > > Up at Harrah's in Reno (now called the Natn'l > Automobile Collection/Museum/whatever) they have a 37 > Sunshine Cab. I think it was a Plymouth, but not > certain. That car is featured pretty prominently and > the story on the long placard next to it says that it > was part of a giant Chicago(?) cab co. order that > partially saved Chryco. near the end of the depression > - not that you can believe everything that you read > (much less remember in my case). > > I got that impression from the following sources, > also: > http://imperialclub.com/Articles/35OldCars/Page01-reg.jpg > ----------------- http://www.imperialclub.com ----------------- This message was sent to you by the Imperial Mailing List. Please reply to mailing-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx and your response will be shared with everyone. Private messages (and attachments) for the Administrators should be sent to webmaster@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx To UN-SUBSCRIBE, go to http://imperialclub.com/unsubscribe.htm