This Day

November 22, 1893 – Harley Earl is born

Automotive designer and executive Harley J. Earl was born on this day in 1893 in Hollywood, California. Earl began his automotive career when he dropped out of Stanford to join his father’s coachbuilding business, Harley Automotive Works. There he learned the art of crafting custom car bodies, many of which were going to Hollywood’s biggest stars at the time, including Tom Mix. After Cadillac dealer Don Lee purchased the business, he named Earl director of the custom body shop. Cadillac General Manager Lawrence P. Fisher would pass through the shop and witness Earl’s talent.

Top: Harley Earl in the Buick Y Job. Above: Harley Earl in a 1927 LaSalle 303 Roadster

While on a national tour of dealerships, Fisher observed Earl at work. He noticed how he used innovative design methods for sculpting his bodies, such as using clay to define lines. Fisher, impressed with what he saw, commissioned Earl to design a body for the 1927 LaSalle, Cadillac’s brand new companion brand. Earl accepted the task. When it finally rolled onto showrooms it sold in great numbers. Its success landed Earl as the director of GM’s new Art and Color Section. 

The caption from this c. 1953 Look Magazine photo reads, “T.H. Keating, Chevrolet’s top man, takes “cornering” demonstration in the Corvette, first mass-produced plastic-body car. Designer Harley Earl is at the wheel.

Harley Earl’s Car Contributions

In 1937 the Art and Color Section was renamed the Styling Section. GM President Alfred Sloan soon promoted Harley Earl to VP, making him the first styling person to ever make VP at a large automotive corporation. In his career, Earl would introduce many iconic vehicles, including the Buick Y-Job in 1939, recognized as the first concept car. He would also assist with Allied camouflage research during WWII and authorized Frank Hershey’s 1948 Cadillac design, which would usher the tailfin era. Perhaps his most lasting contribution was starting Project Opel, which would become the Chevrolet Corvette

Earl retired as a VP in 1958 at 65 years old, then a mandated retirement age. His influence on the automotive industry lasted well beyond that. His own motto of making American cars long and low remained in practice among most major automakers through the 1970s. Earl passed away in 1969 following a stroke. In 1986 the Automotive Hall of Fame

inducted him and the Detroit Free Press named him the third most influential Michigan artist of the 20th century, behind Aretha Franklin and Stevie Wonder.
Brian Corey

Recent Posts

February 24, 1973 – AMC Levi edition cars debut

1974 AMC Gremlin X with the Levi's package. By Christopher Ziemnowicz, CC BY-SA 4.0 On…

1 week ago

6 Running PreWar Cars for Sale Under $10,000! + bonus barn find

If you've never driven a prewar car, you don't know what you're missing! It takes,…

1 week ago

February 23, 1963 – The Chrysler 426 Hemi debuts on the track

In the annals of motorsport history, the 1964 Daytona 500 stands as a watershed moment,…

2 weeks ago

February 22, 1959 – The first Daytona 500

On this day 1959, the first Daytona 500 was held, marking the beginning of what…

2 weeks ago

February 21, 1937 – First successful flight of a flying car

The Waterman Arrowbile emerged from the innovative mind of Waldo Waterman, who had previously experimented…

2 weeks ago

February 20, 1909 – Hudson is founded

When eight businessmen from Detroit approached department store founder Joseph L. Hudson requesting an investment…

2 weeks ago