Someone was asking about MoPar hardtop model names in the '50s. For those who do not know, this was an era where pillarless hardtops were considered a big enough deal to warrant their own model name or subname. It was not unusual for these hardtop subnames to evolve into names of whole series (Plymouth's "Belvedere", and for example Chevy's "Bel Air", being good examples. Plymouth = "Belvedere" '51-'53 (Belvedere became a series designation in the US for '54, the name having been extended to 4-door sedans in the Canadian market in spring of '53) Dodge = "Diplomat" '50-'53 not sure about '54 "Lancer" '55-'59 Dodge (Canadian Plymouth-based) = "Mayfair" '51-'53 (see "Belvedere" history under Plymouth; the Mayfair followed suit AFAIK exactly) DeSoto = "Sportsman" '50-'59 Less fancy models offereed under "Seville" name in '56 and '59 Chrysler = "Newport" '50-'56 at least ('55 and '56 saw Windsors offered under "Nassau" [low-level] and "Newport" [high-level], and New Yorkers offered under "Newport" [low level] and "St. Regis" [high-level] Imperial = "Newport '51-'55 (Imperial still a Chrysler model thru '54) "Southhampton" '56 through at least '59 Hope this helps. ----------------------------------------------------- Get free personalized email at http://email.lycos.com |