Born in 1925, Chrysler Corporation was founded by Walter P. Chrysler, a
noted machinist; he'd purchased the Maxwell Motor Corporation of
Detroit and used it as the foundation for his new company. The
automaker quickly earned a reputation for advanced engineering. In
1928, Chrysler Corporation expanded with the purchase of Dodge and the
creation of the DeSoto and Plymouth divisions.
The 1930s saw Chrysler boldly looking toward the future with
the introduction of its revolutionary Airflow. Powered by a
front-mounted inline-8, the car was one of the first to be designed
with aerodynamics in mind, and featured swooping lines and a prominent
grille. Perhaps a bit too ahead of its time, the Airflow was a flop
with the public. Chrysler was able to survive the lean years of the
Depression due to strong sales generated by its entry-level Dodge and
Plymouth brands, whose vehicles boasted more traditional designs and
much lower price tags.
Chrysler shined postwar. For a period in the late 1940s, it
even surpassed Ford as the No. 2 U.S. automaker. The company's storied
"Hemi" V8 engine made its debut in 1951. Offering 180 horsepower, it
was a significant improvement over Chrysler's previous 135-hp V8. The
Hemi engine was meant to trounce the V8 offered by Cadillac, Chrysler's
rival, and it kick-started Detroit's horsepower race of the '50s and
'60s. The '50s also saw the debut of treasured Chrysler classics like
the handsome Town and Country and the sleek 300C.
By 1961, Chrysler had trimmed its line of brands by dropping
the DeSoto nameplate. New technologies were also afoot, such as unibody
construction (Chrysler was the first of the Big Three to introduce it)
and the replacement of generators with alternators for a car's charging
system. In the latter half of the '60s, Chrysler was heavily involved
with NASCAR and producing performance-oriented cars.
At the same time, however, dark clouds were gathering. As with
other domestic automakers, the 1970s proved to be a difficult decade
for Chrysler due to the oil crisis, new government regulations and
changing consumer tastes. A costly and ineffective overseas expansion
further hurt the company's bottom line. By the late '70s, the company
was in such financial disarray that it petitioned the government for
$1.5 billion in loan guarantees to save it from bankruptcy.
Thanks to impressive public campaigning by then-chairman Lee
Iacocca, the debut of the well-received K-car platform and the creation
of the modern minivan, sales had improved dramatically by the mid-'80s.
The government's loan was paid off seven years early. The picture
further brightened in the late 1980s with Chrysler's purchase of
American Motors Corporation (which netted the company the Jeep brand)
and a joint venture with Mitsubishi known as Diamond Star Motors.
Success continued through the early 1990s. In 1998,
German-based Daimler-Benz merged with Chrysler to form DaimlerChrysler.
At the time, this deal was presented as a merger of equals. But it
quickly became apparent that it was more of a purchase, with Daimler
being the dominant partner. To Daimler's chagrin, however, Chrysler's
reliance on high-powered, fuel-slurping cars, trucks and SUVs caught it
completely unprepared for rising gas prices and environmental
awareness. The company's financial situation never stabilized, and
Daimler sold Chrysler for a loss to a private equity group in 2007.
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