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1954
Dodge Firearrow
Provided by Hemmings
This attractive mid-1950s dream car is one of the few that
did become a reality, no matter how short-lived its production run.

Small, sleek and sporty roadsters and coupes were the hot
body styles with which American manufacturers wowed the crowds at the
auto shows in the early to mid 1950s. Chevrolet already had its Corvette
in production, albeit in very limited numbers; and it was this type of
car, the small, nimble "personal" car, that seemed to be on
the minds of designers and stylists in all the studios. The wildly futuristic
design elements that would become the norm at the auto shows in a few
short years were not present in the concept cars yet. Instead, most of
the offerings in 1954 were very realistic interpretations of the sporty
personal car.
Oldsmobile showed its open roadster, the F-88 of Corvette
dimensions, along with a 188-inch-long Cutlass powered by a Rocket V-8.
Pontiac's Bonneville Special, a Harley Earl creation of which two were
built, also came out in 1954. Buick had a new version of its Wildcat,
the Wildcat II, with a unique open-wheel and flying-wing front-end treatment.
Chevrolet pushed its Corvette styling in two-door station wagon form with
the first Nomad, a Corvette hardtop; and a Corvette derivative, the fastback
coupe-styled Corvair. Ford perhaps ventured into the unknown the furthest
with the FX Atmos, a 3-seat affair with a clear bubble-top roof, high-flying
fins at the rear and needle-equipped bullet-shaped protrusions off the
front fenders. Ford also created a more conventional two-seater, a stub-nosed
bubble top called the Muroc. Then again, GM also went way out there with
its Firebird I, a single-seat concept that was little more than a metal
cigar with wings and a vertical fin with working gas turbine engine and
joystick controls. Even Cadillac had a pair of show cars in the sporting
theme in its open La Espada two-seater and closed-top El Camino. Then,
of course, there was Packard's Panther Daytona, the story of which you
can find in our "Oddies but Goodies" archives.
The Chrysler Corporation's divisions were not about to overlook
the idea of creating their own versions of what the ultimate fun little
car should be. Plymouth had its fiberglass-bodied Belmont built on a 1954
Dodge chassis and a two-place fastback-styled coupe, the Explorer. Even
De Soto was in on the act with its highly aerodynamic Adventurer II. The
venerable Dodge nameplate hit the show scene with not one, but four versions
of its Firearrow.
The first two of these were open two-seaters with very smooth
overall body shapes accented by a single large trim piece running tip
to tail. The third Firearrow was a closed sport coupe, again a two-seater,
that went on to earn driver Betty Skelton the Women's Closed Course World
speed record with a 143.44-mph run around the Chrysler Proving Grounds'
high-speed test track.
The fourth Firearrow was a convertible, with styling nearly
identical to that of the coupe. Though designed within Chrysler's studios,
all four of the Firearrows were built by GHIA of Italy. At the time, Ghia
was under the direction of Luigi Segre, who had succeeded Mario Boano.
Segre is generally credited with being the person responsible for Ghia
becoming involved with the construction of various specials and one-offs
for various American automakers. For Chrysler Corporation, the first show
car that Ghia built was the Virgil Exner-designed 1951 K-310.
The Firearrow convertible as shown here is unchanged from
the form in which it appeared at the auto shows. Its bright red paint
and white/black diamond-quilted leather upholstery must have been a real
show-stopping combination. Like the other Firearrows, it was based on
the basic 1954 Dodge running gear. Among its features were adjustable
bucket seats, with the rear seats being removable to allow access to a
mahogany luggage platform. Of all the previously mentioned show cars of
1954, the Firearrow convertible perhaps proved its worth the most, which
inspired a limited production run of automobiles.
Having seen the Firearrows on display, Gene Casaroll, the
owner of an automotive shipping company, negotiated for and acquired the
rights to put a car of very similar design into production. Organized
as Dual-Ghia, Casaroll's company had Ghia construct the cars on modified
Dodge chassis with D-500 V-8 engines and Powerflite transmissions. Production
spanned 1956-1962, with the original Firearrow styling only mildly changed
during the initial production run; later, the styling was revamped, giving
an even more Italian look to the front end. All told, some 117 Dual-Ghias
were built.
Few and far between are the show cars that have gone from
creative concept status to actual production. Dodge's Firearrow convertible
can make that claim.
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