Elwood Paul Engel (February 10, 1917 – June 24, 1986) was
Chrysler Corporation
Stellantis North America (officially FCA US and formerly Chrysler ()) is one of the " Big Three" automobile manufacturers in the United States, headquartered in Auburn Hills, Michigan. It is the American subsidiary of the multinational automoti ...
's design chief from 1961 until 1974.
Early days
Engel first joined
General Motors
The General Motors Company (GM) is an American Multinational corporation, multinational Automotive industry, automotive manufacturing company headquartered in Detroit, Michigan, United States. It is the largest automaker in the United States and ...
as a student under
Harley Earl's watchful eye at GM's school of design. In 1939 he met classmates
Joe Oros Joseph E. Oros Jr. ( ro, Oroș; June 15, 1916 in Cleveland, Ohio – August 2, 2012) was an automobile stylist for Ford Motor Company over a period of 21 years — known as the Chief Designer of the team at Ford that styled the original Mu ...
and
George W. Walker
George W. Walker (May 22, 1896 – Deceased) Was an American industrial and automotive designer. His most notable work was the original Ford Thunderbird.
Early life
Walker was born in Chicago, Illinois. His father worked for the Erie Railroad a ...
at the school. During
World War II, Engel served four years in the
U.S. Army as a mapmaker, in both the European and Pacific theaters of operation. He and Oros remained in touch throughout the war, and after the war when Oros took a position in Walker's design firm, he recommended that Engel be hired as well. Although Walker's firm had
Nash as an account, Engel worked on designs for farm equipment, women's shoes and household appliances. However, when Walker obtained a contract with
Ford Motor Company in 1947 (and dumped Nash), Engel and Oros went to work full-time designing automobiles. Engel and Oros were such close friends that Oros was best man when Engel was wedded to Marguerite Imboden.
While Oros worked under Walker on Ford car and truck designs, Engel concentrated on
Lincoln and
Mercury
Mercury commonly refers to:
* Mercury (planet), the nearest planet to the Sun
* Mercury (element), a metallic chemical element with the symbol Hg
* Mercury (mythology), a Roman god
Mercury or The Mercury may also refer to:
Companies
* Merc ...
vehicles.
Ford
When Walker became Ford's vice president for design in 1955, he made Engel and Oros his lieutenants. The trio was responsible for most of the ever-increasing sizes of Ford's late 1950s models, and their ornate chrome adornments.
Engel and Oros came up with competing designs for the 1958 Thunderbird. Oros's four-seater design was ultimately chosen. Engel's team was instructed by Ford President
Robert S. McNamara to add two more doors and two more seats to their roadster design - and that became the basis for the 1961
Lincoln Continental. McNamara had considered terminating the Lincoln brand, along with the
Edsel, after the 1960 model year. The Continental, however, convinced him to keep the line going, and it became such a success it was credited with saving the brand. Engel also scaled down the
Ford Thunderbird and turned it into a four-seater to create the 1959
Ford Anglia 105E, a popular saloon in Britain.
Chrysler
In 1961 Walker retired from Ford at age 65. When
Eugene Bordinat, not Engel, was chosen as his replacement, the well-connected Walker helped orchestrate Engel's move to Chrysler in November 1961.
At Chrysler, Engel replaced chief stylist
Virgil Exner, who had designed the successful "
Forward Look" models of the latter 1950s. Exner was responsible for the era of large tail fins; Engel was credited with replacing fins with a slab-sided look, reminiscent of his Lincoln Continental design.
Engel generally delegated the majority of work to his design teams; he then would fine-tune the clay models with his touches. Co-workers said he had an uncanny eye for the "commercial viability" of designs.
Engel oversaw the design and development of the 1963
Turbine car, of which 55 were manufactured and 50 of them road tested until 1966. The two-door model was said to strongly resemble his original two-door design for the 1958 Thunderbird, which had evolved into the '61 Continental. Although most of Chrysler's legendary "Muscle Cars" were credited to specific designers, Engel oversaw, worked on, and approved all of them.
Retirement and death
Engel retired in 1973 but stayed on at Chrysler as a consultant until 1974.
Engel died of cancer on June 24, 1986.
References
*
{{DEFAULTSORT:Engel, Elwood
1986 deaths
Deaths from cancer
Chrysler designers
Ford designers
American automobile designers
1917 births
United States Army personnel of World War II