Two brothers, Horace and John Dodge, began the Dodge Brothers Motor
Vehicle company in 1914, after having worked as manufacturers of
bicycles and automotive parts. Their first vehicle was a touring car
that proved a fast favorite with car buyers; it was soon joined by a
roadster and a four-door sedan. By 1917, the company's model line had
grown to include trucks. Dodge cars and trucks were used as staff
vehicles and ambulances in World War I.
Dodge was briefly owned by a banking firm and subsequently sold by its
new owner to the Chrysler Corporation in 1928. From there, the brand
slowly evolved into the division responsible for trucks and
performance-oriented cars. Post WWII, Dodge introduced vehicles like
the military-inspired Power Wagon truck, Hemi-powered Coronet and the
Royal Lancer; in addition, the manufacturer began offering
dealer-installed air conditioning.
Vehicles like the Dodge Dart and the Custom 880 kept the
manufacturer in American driveways throughout the 1960s. That decade
also saw the launch of one of Dodge's most iconic vehicles, the
Charger. Dodge's muscle car was based on the Coronet platform, and
featured a fastback roofline, hidden headlamps and a full-width
taillamp panel. Best of all, the Charger could pack one heck of a
wallop under the hood. A 318-cubic-inch V8 was standard, but buyers
seeking maximum brawn could upgrade to a 426-cubic-inch, 425-hp Hemi
V8. The company also introduced a Mustang-fighting pony car, called the
Challenger, in 1970.
Like other American auto manufacturers, Dodge's fortunes
started to slip in the '70s due to changing tastes and increased
competition. The company was saved from extinction in the early '80s
thanks to government loans and the sales success of its Omni and Aries
economy cars (the former a blatant copy of the VW Rabbit). But 1984 was
when Dodge made its mark in the history books with the introduction of
the wildly popular Caravan. Ideal for families and able to seat up to
seven, the space-efficient Caravan started a whole new vehicle segment
-- the minivan. The early '90s saw the company wow the public with the
V10-powered Viper roadster and an all-new Ram pickup.
Success continued through the 1990s. In 1998, Dodge came under
the wing of German-based Daimler-Benz as part of the DaimlerChrysler
merger. This merger brought an influx of German technology into the
Dodge fold, with Mercedes platforms underpinning new rear-drive
products to go along with Dodge's Hemi engine revival. Things went well
for a while, but they quickly soured as Dodge and the rest of Chrysler
Group were caught unprepared for rising gas prices and increased
environmental awareness. With record losses piling up, Daimler sold the
Chrysler Group to a private equity group in 2007. If Chrysler is to
survive, Dodge will no doubt be a big part of any resurgence.
|