Here is a richly detailed account of one of the most important men in American automotive history, based on full access to both Chrysler Corporation and Chrysler family historical records.
Chrysler emerges as a man who loved machines, an accomplished mechanic who also had highly developed managerial skills derived from half a lifetime on the railroads, a man whose success came from his deep understanding of engineering and his total commitment to the quality of his vehicles.
Walter P. Chrysler was a man who loved machines, an accomplished mechanic who also had highly developed managerial skills derived from half a lifetime on the railroads, and whose success came from his deep understanding of engineering and his total commitment to the quality of his vehicles.
Here, Vincent Curcio presents a richly detailed account of one of the most important men in American automotive history, based on full access to both Chrysler Corporation and Chrysler family historical records.
Curcio traces Chrysler's rise from a locomotive wiper in a Kansas roundhouse to his rescue of the Maxwell-Chalmers car company, which led to the successful development of the 1924 Chrysler--the world's first modern car--and the formation of Chrysler Corporation in 1925. Chrysler was quite different from the other auto giants--a colorful and expansive man deeply involved in the design of his cars, he established his headquarters in New York City and built the world's most famous art deco structure, the fabled Chrysler Building. Because of his emphasis on quality at popular prices, the company weathered the Great Depression with flying colors and remained profitable right up to Chrysler's death in 1940.
The definitive portrait, Chrysler is a must read for all car enthusiasts and for everyone interested in the story of a giant of industry. **
Author(s): Vincent Curcio
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Year: 2001
Language: English
Tags: Biography, History, Automotive, Chrysler
Front Cover
Front Flap
Walter Chrysler (Photo)
Title Page
ISBN 0-19-507896-9
Contents
Preface
Introduction
PART I: THE EARLY YEARS
1 The Land from Which Walter Chrysler Sprang, 3
2 The Background of the Chrysler Family, 7
3 Kansas, the Plains Indians, the Stage Coach,and the Coming of the Railroad, 16
4 The Birth of Walter Chrysler; How Financial Corruption Built the Railroads:What Texas Cattle Meant to Kansas, 26
5 Ellis, Kansas: The Cradle of Walter Chrysler's Life, 37
6 Boyhood in Ellis, 44
7 Going to Work at the Union Pacific Roundhouse, 55
8 Working on the Railroad, 68
9 Getting Married, and the First Big Break, 77
10 Putting a Lid on It, and the Go-Ahead Signal, 83
11 Trinidad: The First Major Responsibility, 86
12 Childress: Springboard to the Future, 99
13 Oelwein, Iowa: Superintendent of Motive Power and the First Car, 104
14 The First Manufacturing Job: ALCO, 117
PART II: THE AUTOMOBILE AND THE ASSEMBLY LINE
15 The Early History of the Automobile, 127
16 The Development of Mass Production, 178
PART III: GREATNESS
17 Chrysler at Buick, 215
18 Chrysler at Willys, 261
19 Putting Together the First Chrysler Car, 281
20 The Significance of the First Chrysler Car, 307
21 Maxwell Becomes the Chrysler Corporation, 323
22 Art and Color Take Over the Car Business, 336
23 Chrysler Makes it the Big Three, 361
24 The Chrysler Building, 400
25 1929: The Crash, 445
26 The Great Depression Hits the Automobile Industry, 466
27 Streamlining and the Airflow Car, 518
28 Labor and the Strike of 1937 , 558
29 How He Lived: Summing Up, 603
Acknowledgments, 667
Sources, 671
Index, 691
Back Flap
Back Cover