1954 Corvette Coupe |
2014 Corvette Coupe |
In the early 1950s, Harley Earl
(1893-1969), the influential head designer for GM, then the world's largest
automaker, became interested in developing a two-seat sports car. At the time,
European automakers dominated the sports car market. Following the debut of the
Corvette prototype at the Motorama show in January 1953, the first production
Corvette was completed at a Flint, Michigan, plant on June 30, 1953.
The car featured an
all-fiberglass body, a white exterior and red interior, a relatively
unremarkable 150-horsepower engine and a starting price tag of around $3,500
(not including taxes or an optional AM radio and heater). In an effort to give
the Corvette an air of exclusivity, GM initially marketed the car to
invitation-only VIP customers.
This plan met with
less-than-desirable results, as only a portion of the 300 Corvettes built that
first year were sold. GM dropped the VIP policy the following year; however,
Corvette sales continued to disappoint. In 1954, GM built around 3,600 of the
10,000 Corvettes it had planned, with almost a third of those cars remaining
unsold by the start of 1955.
There was talk within GM of
discontinuing the Corvette; however, GM rival Ford launched the sporty two-seat
Thunderbird convertible in 1955 and the car quickly became a hit. GM didn't
want to discontinue the Corvette and look like a failure next to its Big Three
competitor, so the car remained in production and performance enhancements were
made.
That same year, a Belgian-born,
Russian-raised designer named Zora Arkus-Duntov became head engineer for
Corvette and put the car on a course that would transform it into a legend.
Duntov had applied to work at GM after seeing the Corvette prototype at the
1953 Motorama show. According to The New
York Times: "Once hired, he pushed through the decision to turn the
Corvette into a high-performance sports car with a succession of more powerful
engines. Chevrolet offered a 195-horsepower engine on the 1955 Corvette, a
240-horsepower engine on the 1956 Corvette and a 283-horsepower engine on the
1957 model."
During the second half of the
1950s, Corvettes began setting speed records on the racing circuit. The car
also got a publicity boost when it was featured on the TV show "Route
66," which launched in 1960 and followed the story of two young men
driving around America in a Corvette, looking for adventure.
By 1977, the 500,000th Corvette
was built. Two years later, according to the Times, yearly Corvette production
peaked at 53,807. In 1992, the 1-milllionth Corvette came off the assembly line
in Bowling Green, Kentucky; the 1.5-millionth Corvette followed in 2009.
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