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Walter P. Chrysler Museum

Big Wally’s Treasure Trove
By Geoff Stunkard
Photography by Geoff Stunkard
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The 1934 Chrysler Airflow
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One of only six LeBaron Newports
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A Challenger T/A at a local drive-in
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Dave Strickler’s altered-wheelbased Dodge
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Dodge Sweepside pick-up truck
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Few cars evoke the feelings of the musclecar as much as the purpose-built 440-6 BBL Road Runners and Six Pack Super Bees from the mid-1969 model run. These A12-coded models remain the most purpose-built street-strip cars of the ’60s era.
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Here is the mini-race track in the Boss Chrysler’s Garage, full of vehicles from the ’50s to the ’90s. Until April 2001, this area was full of race machinery from Chrysler’s history.
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For the big-fin brigade, the basement also hosts this Plymouth Fury, a 1957 exercise in Virgil Exner’s styling influences. The turnpikes never had it so good...
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Born for the NASCAR wars and debuting at the first race at Talledega in 1969, the street versions of the Dodge Daytona came in only two speeds—fast and faster. This 440 Magnum-powered edition is from Texas.
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The museum doesn’t only display as-built production cars. This 1992 Chrysler LeBaron coupe set land-speed records at the Bonneville Salt Flats in Modified competition.
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If the Fury was too mundane for your tastes, 1957 also offered the 300C, a Chrysler legend that packed 392 inches of early Hemi power under the bonnet. Passes everything but the gas station.
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The Hemi went by the wayside and was replaced by the long-ram 413 wedge motor. This red 300G is a classic example of the breed. In the background is a 300-H built by Hurst in 1970.
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According to legend, the testing of the 426 Hemi on dynos in Highland Park roared through the city streets. This is an original dyno, Cell 13, from the plant, complete with a NASCAR-breed Hemi mounted to the inertia wheel.
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If you like trucks, the museum has a place for you.
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The truck section includes competition models, such as this Class 4 four-wheel drive desert Dodge.
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There is a great selection of utility vehicles in the garage, ranging from prewar classics through the ’80s, plus a solid display of Jeeps and military units. Upstairs is a monstrous Dodge Power Wagon, a bombed-out street scene from World War II, and a motor from a Sherman tank that was recently found in Argentina.
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Strickler’s 1965 altered-wheelbase car is on loan from collector Steve Atwell, who spent years restoring it to what it is in today. Fuel injected, it is one of the 11 built for the factory program that year at Amblewagon, a Detroit-area subcontractor, giving birth to the “Funny Car” name.
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Of course, no collection would be complete without a Hemi ’Cuda, and this pristine 1970 model features the Shaker hood treatment and hockey-stick stripes to boot.
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The earliest models in the collection are on display on the first floor. This quadrant features the 1909 Hudson, 1902 Rambler (shown), a 1915 Dodge Brothers, and a 1932 Desoto.
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Walter P. Chrysler was a fascinating man. This is a realistic diorama of an early machine shop that features Chrysler’s original tools and a plaster rendition of W.P. at work.
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The car that started an empire. The 1924 Chrysler B-70 Phaeton would be the start of Chrysler’s legacy after several decades in the railroad and auto-manufacturing business. From its success would come many innovations to the world of car building.
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As the Depression wound down, styling became more crucial. Here is a 1939 Dodge Hayes coupe, reflecting the styling from the late prewar era.
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Displays located throughout the museum’s three floors highlight Chrysler’s technical innovations. This one shows the development and construction of the PowerFlite transmission, the predecessor of the Torqueflite.
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Chrysler Corporation’s products played a big role in winning the Second World War, and the extent may never be fully appreciated. While Willys Jeeps were perhaps the most visible vehicles of the 1941-’45 era, Chrysler built hundreds of military transports, Flying Fortress bomber engines, and played a vital hardware role in the Manhattan Project that produced the first atomic bomb.
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The immediate postwar era brought about cars like this classic Chrysler Town & Country convertible, complete with the wood treatment. This is a 1948 model.
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The Ghia custom that took the auto-show world by storm, this 1953 Chrysler Thomas Special is at the top of the landing coming up to the final floor of the collection. With only six built, it was one of the toughest vehicles for the museum to find.
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Two years later, the first Chrysler 300 was introduced, and this version is displayed with the “Million Dollar Look” billboard in the background.
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Dodge’s Custom Royal Lancer may well have found its habitat in suburbia, the postwar ideal for living. The museum did a masterful job in replicating this facade of the ’50s “atomic family.” Is there a bomb shelter out back?
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For the well-off, there was the spectacular 1957 Chrysler Imperial Southampton. With chrome galore and bullet taillights, this was the highway star that could be summed up with the two words: “wretched excess.” A Mopar classic from the Exner era.
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The end of the supercar era brought about cars like the Cordoba. This 1976 edition was built for the show-car circuit.

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