Chevrolet El Camino 1959-1960 |
Both the Ranchero and El Camino were pioneering examples of what are now dubbed "crossovers," vehicles that attempt to appeal to both car and truck customers with a mixed bag of creature comforts and utility features.
Before delving into origins, though, we need to address the question just what is a sedan pickup? For purposes of this article, consider it to be a utility vehicle built on a passenger-car chassis, with passenger-car frontal and cabin styling, and -- this is key -- a cargo box seamlessly integrated into the passenger-car design elements.
Chevrolet El Camino 1959-1960 |
There are antecedents to the Ranchero and El Camino, however. GM, Ford, and other automakers manufactured and marketed "utility" coupe-pickup models in Australia as early as the mid 1930s. These Aussie "utes" typically combined the styling of a five-window coupe body with an integrated pickup box. (GM's export organization offered a Chevrolet utility as late as 1952, and GM's Australian Holden model line continues to feature a distinctly El Camino-like "ute.")
Chevrolet El Camino 1959-1960 |
The Cameo Carrier's genesis can be found in design exercises executed in the early 1950s by a talented and enthusiastic young stylist in the GM truck design group. His name was Charles M. "Chuck" Jordan, and he was destined to retire from GM in 1992 as its fourth vice president of design.
One of Jordan's early renderings for GM showed a 1952 Chevrolet passenger car with an integrated pickup box. Jordan recalls that the design sketch resulted from a discussion with GM's legendary design chief, Harley Earl. It was Earl, Jordan says, who suggested, "taking the Chevrolet passenger-car sedan and making a deluxe pickup out of it."
But Jordan says that his 1952 drawing had no direct connection to the original El Camino; he had already been named chief designer in the Cadillac studio by the time the 1959 Chevrolet styling program got under way. (The drawing was, however, the first in a chain of luxury pickup explorations that led up to Jordan's design for the Cameo Carrier.) Jordan also recalls there was a later sketch done of a passenger-car pickup based on the 1955 Chevrolet design.
The Cameo no doubt inspired Dodge, International, and Ford to offer flush-side cargo boxes on some of their 1957 pickups. But Ford had another surprise in store for the competition in 1957. It was, of course, the Ranchero.
In the next section, learn how -- and when -- Chevrolet countered its rival's "surprise."