1952 Chicago Auto show Pictures (Hudson Sedan)

Matt1950
Matt1950 Senior Contributor
edited November -1 in HUDSON
1952-30.jpg
I stumbled on to this website and found a picture of a 1952 Hudson that is sectioned and on it side to show its interior and engine-bay (Twin H-power).
The Site is:
ChicagoAutoshow.com

Lot of great pics of other brands as well

Comments

  • Matt1950
    Matt1950 Senior Contributor
    edited January 2011
    766EBF442FF54329BD219DE1F5E2710F.jpg
    From Site: Scene in front of the Hudson exhibit features several 1954 models. On the raised platform at the center of the photo is an Italian-built, aluminum-bodied Hudson Italia. (Only 26 were produced.) A Hornet Hollywood 2-door hardtop coupe is on the right foreground. Note the split windshield, at a time when nearly all makes had gone to a single-piece curved windshield. In the background, a Hornet was turned on its side to expose the undercarriage.
  • Matt1950
    Matt1950 Senior Contributor
    6BC8A7D990524B5E835E8A60CE0665C8.jpg
    From Site:
    At the Hudson exhibit area on the show floor, Chicago Mayor Martin H. Kennelly poses with female model and the Italian-built, aluminum-bodied Hudson Italia coupe. Only 26 Italias were produced. The car is sitting on a raised, chained-off platform.
  • Matt1950
    Matt1950 Senior Contributor
    03DEED57FEE94BDD9E83A83A997391FB.jpg
    From Site:
    Initially introduced as a dream car called Super Jet, Hudson renamed the prototype Italia, because the body was designed and produced in Italy. Unique styling cues included a triangle-centered front bumper, scoops above the headlights, taillights mounted in three exhaust pipe-like tubes, and real wire wheels. Both the concept and production models used the 114 horsepower engine and three-speed transmission out of the Hudson Jet compact car. The streamlined silhouette was nearly 10 inches lower than standard Hudson models. A small run of 25 Italia units was manufactured in 1954
  • Matt1950
    Matt1950 Senior Contributor
    1DA8CBE716284F68B3B50493895AB2F4.jpg
    1956 Autoshow:
    From Site:
    Pre-show scene reveals the Nash and Hudson exhibit that is under construction, looking across to the Ford exhibit. The car in front, seen in 3/4-rear view, is a 1956 Hudson 4-door sedan. A Rambler wagon is next to the Hudson. Visible in part on the far right are the tail of a Studebaker, and above it the rear of a 1956 Ford. The Ford Mystere dream car is under covers. On a turntable sits a Ford Sunliner convertible.
  • Those are great images and a fantastic site! Thanks for sharing.
  • Sarah Young
    Sarah Young Senior Contributor
    edited January 2011
    Here's a photo I have of the 1952 Chicago Auto Show. Lee Hesterman of Hesterman Motor Sales in Glen Ellyn, IL is seen in center. More pictures and information on that dealership can be seen on HudsonJet.net
    ChicagoAutomobileShow_1952_LeeHestermanInCenter_resize.jpg
  • hornet53
    hornet53 Senior Contributor
    Matt1950 wrote:
    1952-30.jpg
    I stumbled on to this website and found a picture of a 1952 Hudson that is sectioned and on it side to show its interior and engine-bay (Twin H-power).
    The Site is:
    ChicagoAutoshow.com

    Lot of great pics of other brands as well

    That 52 probably didn't drive very well. Look at that Toe Out!
  • 54SuperWasp
    54SuperWasp Expert Adviser
    Matt1950 wrote:
    766EBF442FF54329BD219DE1F5E2710F.jpg
    From Site: Scene in front of the Hudson exhibit features several 1954 models. On the raised platform at the center of the photo is an Italian-built, aluminum-bodied Hudson Italia. (Only 26 were produced.) A Hornet Hollywood 2-door hardtop coupe is on the right foreground. Note the split windshield, at a time when nearly all makes had gone to a single-piece curved windshield. In the background, a Hornet was turned on its side to expose the undercarriage.
    Thanks for sharing. But it's not a split windshield. It's the reflexion of the light from the ceiling. Hudson had a single pie;) ce windshield in 54.
  • Matt1950
    Matt1950 Senior Contributor
    Yes I see that too. I just copied what the author from the website had stated. I can how the reflection could make the author assume that it was a split window. All in all some great classic pictures of car on that website.
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