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Editor-in-Chief
Mona Nath
Technical Editor
Robert McLellan
Photo Editor
Anil Nath
:: LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
  LITERATURE INVESTMENTS
:: Personal Insights
:: Literature Life
:: Looking Both Ways
:: Golden Eras
:: Good Investment? - Yes!
:: Buying For Tomorrow
:: Good Investment?
:: Profitable Portfolio!
:: Unanticipated Investment
:: Tomorrow's Treasure
:: What Is It Worth?
  CONCEPTS & RUMORS
:: GM Concepts
:: The Future: 70 years ago
:: Annual Concepts
:: Concepts — 1930s
:: Fisher Body Craftsman
:: GM Probes The Future
:: The Nineteen Fifties
:: At Home in Your Garage
:: Discover more auto literature on McLellansAutomotive.com
:: Book review: King of the Boards - The Life and Times of Jimmy Murphy
:: The Compact Revolution
:: The 1912 Milwaukee Races: Vanderbilt Cup and Grand Prize
:: Postwar Buick (1950 - 1979)
:: Ford Created the Hobby
:: The first 50 years
:: Avanti
:: The Big and Little Healeys
:: Stocks, Real Estate and Cars
:: GM Concepts
:: L. Scott Bailey, Founder of Automobile Quarterly, Dies at 87
:: Book review: Ralph DePalma - Gentleman Champion
:: German Orphans
:: Ferrari's Competitor - Lamborghini
:: Book review: Bentley: A Racing History
:: Remembering Pontiac
:: The Front-Engine Porsche Sports Cars
:: Book review: Frank Lockhart: American Speed King
:: Good Customer Appreciation
:: 1928 International
:: The Playboy of Buffalo!
:: Hottest Collectibles
:: Auto designer Earl created the look of GM's glory days...
:: Book review: Phil Berg's
Ultimate Garages III
:: The Salesman's Office
:: From Nash to AMC
:: Book review: Dr. Frederick Simeone's The Spirit Of Competition
:: Automotive Advertising
:: Sports Vehicles
:: Book review: John Jacobus' Inside the Fisher Body Craftsman’s Guild
:: Winter Reading
:: Maserati: The Panini Collection
:: Bridgehampton Racing: From The Streets To The Bridge
:: Small Cars
:: Duntov's Secret - Corvette Gulf Oil Race Car
:: Sports Cars Then and Now
:: Press Kits - 1997 & Newer
:: They Started in MGs
:: The American Automotive Assembly Line
:: Peugeot in Review
:: Big Rigs Rolling
:: Damn Few Died In Bed
:: Auto Paint History and Chips
:: Bill Horton's 'Jezebelle'
:: Chevrolet Trucks
:: Coachbuilder's Renderings
:: British Quality
:: Book review: American Road Racing: 1948 - 1950, The Sport Revived
:: Something Different
:: Teaching Kids about the Hobby
:: Restorations Literature
:: Chrysler Corporation in the 1970s
:: Renault 1939 - 1971
:: Book review: American Road Racing - The 1930s
:: The War Years: 1940s
:: The Serious Collector
:: Mercury's Cool Cat
:: Build It Yourself
:: Tell your story
:: Memorabilia by Make
:: Citroen - Introducing Front Wheel Drive
:: The Memorable 1950s
:: Book: Caribbean Capers
:: Hidden Literature
:: 1965 Cadillac Sedan DeVille
:: Checker Motors
:: Porsche 911 Evolution
:: Technical Automotive Literature
:: Jaguar's Racing Heritage
:: Special Cars: 1975-1995
:: GMC Trucks
:: Vauxhall in England - GM Overseas - 1
:: Opel in Germany - GM Overseas - 2
:: Packard: Ask the Man Who Owns One
:: 1901 Ford Sweepstakes - The Race Car That Changed Everything
:: School Bus Literature
:: Concept Cars
:: Popular Pickups
:: Family Firebird
:: The Winners Book
:: American Postwar Dropouts
:: Japanese Literature of The 1960s
:: Favorite Press Kits
:: Selecting your literature
:: Cars for professionals
:: Collectible Automobile Literature
:: From Airplanes to Super Cars
:: The British Contribution
:: Press Kit
:: American Light Trucks in Literature
:: GM in the 1950s
:: Octavia and Felicia
:: English Ford
:: Maintaining the MGB in the 21th Century, Barrie Jones, 2009
:: Leader Card Racers - A Dynasty of Speed, Gordon Eliot White, 2009
:: Fun on Wheels
:: Prestige, Status & Works of Art, Selling The Luxury Car 1888 - 1942
:: Chassis 141: The Story of the First LeMans Bentley
:: German Luxury: Two Thoroughbreds & Their Lifestyle
:: Top 10 Collector Cars for 2010-2020
:: An Introduction to Collecting Car Brochures
:: Subcompact automobile: Ford Fiesta
:: Out-of-print-book: A Century of Automotive Style
:: My Auto Literature Collection
:: Automotive Magazines
:: Plymouth 1935-1936
:: History of the Corvette
:: Preservation of literature
:: Z. Taylor Vinson - An era ends
:: Hendrick Motorsports Museum
:: Happy 50th Birthday Corvair!
:: Diamond T
:: Rolls-Royce for India's royalty
:: Original Paint Chips
:: Pontiac Dream Cars of 1953, 1954 & 1955
:: Wallace Wyss - Artist Profile
:: America's Packard Museum
:: Ford's Road Leads To Mustang
:: My Super Beetle
:: Citroen SM (1970)
:: Unanticipated Investment
:: Quality Control
:: How To Decide Which Car You Should Restore
:: The End of the Affair
:: Printed brochures soon to be a memory?
:: Don't Forget Dealer Literature
:: Automotive Books
:: The Fisher Body Craftsman's Guild — An Illustrated History
:: GM Concepts
:: Change Creates Nostalgia
:: Racing (Part 1)
:: Collecting Automotive Literature
:: Investing in Literature
:: Pre-World War II Brochures
:: Showroom Postcards — 1930s through 1950s
:: Ferrari SP1. More Than Unique
:: Fiat
:: The Making of Shelby Cars in Detail
:: Unusual Postcards
:: German Press Kits
:: Everything Cadillac
:: Plymouth Nostalgia
:: Loving Mercedes-Benz Quality
:: Dealer Posters
:: Mercury's Glory Years
:: Racing & Show Programs
:: Buyer's Guide To Brochures
:: 356 Porsche Literature FAKES!
:: Ford Trucks
:: Books And Magazines
:: The Best Increase in Value the Most
:: The Making of a Ford Collection
:: Austins
:: Cars and Literature of the 1970s
:: First Impressions
:: Electric Vehicles
:: Goodbye Viper
:: Land Rover
:: Collectibles vs. Recession
:: See a Classic Car Show, Take a Nostalgia Trip
:: Times Are Changing...
:: Lamborghini's
:: Collectible Tractors
:: From Boxy to Fins
:: How I Met John Conlon
:: One Historian Mourns the Passing of the Black and White Glossy
:: Thanks Dad!
:: My Story
:: Review: Two Press booklets on the Rolls Phantom Drophead coupe
:: Collecting for Fun and Relaxation
:: Rolls-Royce and Bentley
:: Packing for Shipping
:: Dodge Trucks
:: The Family Station Wagon
:: Collecting 'Down Under'
:: Owner's Manuals
:: Press Kit Review
:: "Buy Me a Ferrari"
:: Your Literature
:: MG in America
:: Dealer Stamps
:: Commercial Vehicles
:: Ask the Man Who Owns One
:: Enhance Your Collection
:: The Early Books
:: Triumph
:: Coachbuilder's Literature
:: Wolseley
:: International Opportunities
:: The Innovative Hudson
:: Chevrolet Literature
:: Buses/Engines/Fire Trucks/Tractors/Trains...
:: The Schödel Collection
:: Beyond the Mustang II
:: Kaiser-Frazer
:: Sunbeam & Sunbeam-Talbot
:: The Dawn of the Auto
:: Taxi Cabs, Police Cars & Emergency Vehicles
:: U.S. Postwar Econocars
:: Jaguar in the 1950s
:: Inquiring Minds
:: Exotic Dropouts
:: Rare Maserati Find
:: The Beautiful Brute
:: Dune Buggy/ATV Escapes
:: Remembering Oldsmobile
:: Original Paint Chips
:: Vintage Bentleys
:: Trucks of the 1930s and 1940s
:: BMW
:: Collecting Memories
:: Auto Books - 50 Years
:: Imperial is Back
:: Mitchel DeFrancis: Automobilia Enthusiast
:: Lincoln As Art
:: The Golden Age of Press Kits
:: Iron Curtain Literature
:: Toyota Sports
:: Planning an Advertising Campaign
:: Happy Halloween
:: Styled — For — Tomorrow
:: Automotive Archeology
:: Paint, Upholstery, Data & More
:: 14 Steps: From Our Shop To Your Maildrop
:: Cadillac Memories
:: British Luxury
:: My IHC Fever
:: A Collector's Story - Fifty Years and Counting
:: 1907 "Washington Times" Race
:: Postwar Studebaker
:: The Popularity of AMC / Nash / Rambler
:: Mazda Miata Memories
:: 2020 'Think Tank' Results
:: Letteratura Di Automobile
:: Magazines Are Literature
:: Camaro Fever
:: Grandad's Cars
:: Star Cars — Year 2020
:: Australian Auto Literature
:: Jeep History
:: Porsche on Parade
:: David Greeney: Automobilia Collector
:: Building Dreams
:: Flathead V-8 Fords
:: The Japanese Invasion
:: Touring India
:: Auto Shows
:: The Buick Flashback
:: Meeting Tarun Thakral
:: The Mysterious Dale
:: Ford Overseas
:: Swedish Brothers
:: Pre-War Orphans
:: Pinto or Corvette?
:: Fisher Body Craftsman's Guild
:: Rick Lenz - 10 Years Later
:: Best of Buick
:: Comments on Packing
:: Diamond T
:: 1959+
:: AC In The News — AAA
:: Getting Home Alive!
:: Motorizing The Army
:: Posters & Transparencies as Automotive Art
:: Contemporary Automotive Photographs
:: Convertible Fever
:: French Auto Literature
:: MoPaR
:: Automobile Quarterly Collections
:: History of the Ambulance
:: Oddities
:: The Traveling Salesman
:: Ultra Luxury
:: Finnish Brochures
:: Postcard Paradise
:: Limited Editions
:: German Thoroughbreds
:: Auto Galleria LUCE
:: Fisher Guild Reunion
:: Them VS. Us
:: The Corvair Legend
:: RR - World's Best Car
:: Recreational Vehicles
:: Datsun Z Literature
:: Ford Flower Power
:: News You Can Use
:: Connoisseurs' Choice
:: Automotive Books
:: Pate's Hidden Treasure
:: Every Boy's Dream
:: Jeep Literature As Art
:: My Beloved Hillman
:: Adios Cuba
:: Reprint News
:: British Sports Cars
:: International Customers
:: Corvette: A Legend
:: Automotology
:: Literature In Norway
:: Salvage Literature
:: Volkswagen As Art
:: Brass Era Literature
:: Society: Auto Historians
:: Pontiac Art: Insights
:: Truck Literature?
:: Quality Control
:: Bentley
:: The Exotics
:: Kit Cars & Replica Cars
:: Pontiacs as Art
:: High Speed Pursuits
:: Robert's Tips
:: Honest Reprint Lit
:: Literature on Lincoln
:: Dealer Stamps
:: Original or Fake?
:: The Rolls-Royce
:: Counterfeit Literature
:: World of Auto Literature
:: Z. Taylor Vinson
:: Junichiro Hiramatsu
:: Ed Whitt
 
 
 
November 2004 Issue
 
ARTICLE
 
Fisher Body Craftsman's Guild Reunion
By Robert McLellan
 
Guild Members Reminisce
(Photo by Harry Schoepf)
Click for larger view

In late June of 2004 a reunion of Fisher Body Craftsman's Guild design competition contestants from 1930 to 1968 was held. As a past participant and winner, I would like to thank General Motors for the opportunity the company gave us to prove to ourselves and to others that we could do more than just sketch designs in our school notebooks. The competition provided the springboard for many of us to launch careers in design and/or establish that we had the ability to see a job through and be rewarded for it. That sense of accomplishment meant a lot to us and, after all these years, we are grateful to meet one another and admire each other's models.

1966 - John Melberg
( Photo by Ron Will)
Click for larger view

As young boys interested in building a model for the contest we had minimal information provided to us by the Guild and I doubt that many of us knew previous contestants or had friends who were also building entries. Presumably GM wanted to keep information to a minimum. They sought originality and did not want us to have studied the work of others. A review of most of the models certainly conveys a variety of ideas mostly very original.

Anticipation of the arrival of the small envelope of information from GM, outlining the contest rules, objectives and instructions, was countered by shock. It was an enormous challenge to do something that I had never done anything like before and did not know how to do. Could I do it?

A 1932 Coach Entry
(Photo by Harry Schoepf)
Click for larger view

My father, who had entered the contest in the 1930s with a Napoleonic coach, was an engineer and believed that without detailed plans nothing could be properly built. Although supporting me, he dismissed the project as a folly. After all "art and design people always interfere with good engineering. You cannot have it both ways and be successful", he would say.

Starting with four wheels attached to axles mounted to a wooden base, I affixed a large blob of green modeling clay. Slowly I sculpted an object that was similar to my drawings. Using a small lathe, I cut headlamps out of clear plastic and hubcaps from aluminum. To form trim and bumpers, a hacksaw and files shaped aluminum which could be polished to give a chrome appearance. Red epoxy was molded into tail light lenses.

Now for the hard part. The body had to be transformed into wood and both sides had to be identical! It gets worse. All the plastic and metal parts had to fit exactly as they were in the clay model! This gargantuan task had to be the breaking point for many contestants. What should have taken weeks was taking months. Weekends were extending into time for sports, television and social activities. Finally, with little time left, the last coat of paint was applied and the shipping box was built. No sooner was it shipped than plans for the next model were begun. All the lessons learned on the first model would be incorporated into the next one — a better design, along with revised or new techniques and refined skills. The challenge had to be met.

A reunion gave participants in the competition their first opportunity to compare results. It is very strange that most of us never saw more than black and white photographs of the top winners and learning how other contestants constructed their entries was a mystery.

Click for larger view
Guild Members Hold Fond Memories
 
1937 - John Rauth
(Photo by Ron Van Gelderan)
1947 - Tom Goad
(Photo by Steve Purdy)
1947 - Chuck Jordan
(Photo by Harry Schoepf)
     
1949 - Elia Russinoff
(Photo by Ron Will)
1959 - Bill Scott
(Photo by John Perkins)
1961 - Ron Will
(Photo by Ron Will)
     
1963 - Bob Aikins
(Photo by Ron Will)
1968 - Stewart Reed
(Photo by Steve Purdy)
Bill Moore
(Photo by Ron Will)
     
Phillip Bonine
(Photo by Ron Van Gelderan)
Ron Hill
(Photo by Ron Will)
Virgil Exner Jr.
(Photo by Ron Van Gelderan)
 

To capture the spirit of the reunion, an article in "Collectible Automobile", December 2004, by Steve Purdy is highly recommended. "Recaptured Youth: A Reunion of the Fisher Body Craftsman's Guild" provides a thorough review of the activities and history, but most of all introduces you to the guildsmen and their models.

Click for larger view
Guild Models Represented at Reunion
 
1932 - Coach
(Photo by Harry Schoepf)
1937 - Rauth
(Photo by Terry Graboski)
1947 - Virgil Exner Jr Model
     
1947 - Chuck Jordan
(Photo by Harry Schoepf)
1949 - Elia Russinoff
(Photo by David Chartier)
1953 - Thomas McDonnel
(Photo by David Chartier)
     
1954 - George Chartier
(Photo by Ron Will)
1955 - George Anderson
(Photo by Harry Schoepf)
1955 - John Perkins
(Photo by Harry Schoepf)
     
1956 - Allen Wiedeman
(Photo by Ron Will)
1956 - Bill Moore
(Photo by Harry Schoepf)
1956 - Henry Huizenga
(Photo by David Chartier)
     
1957 - Bill Scott
(Photo by Harry Schoepf)
1958 - Bill Scott
(Photo by Harry Schoepf)
1959 - Bill Molzon
(Photo by Ron Will)
     
1959 - Bill Scott
(Photo by Harry Schoepf)
1960 - Darwin Hawthorn
(Photo by David Chartier)
1960 - Ronald Pellman
(Photo by Harry Schoepf)
     
1960 - Stuart Shuster
(Photo by Ron Will)
1961 - Anthony Simone
(Photo by Ron Will)
1961 - Ron Will
(Photo by Harry Schoepf)
     
1962 - Philip Bonine
(Photo by Ron Will)
1965 - Bud Magaldi
(Photo by Ron Will)
1965 - Glenn Hagen
(Photo by Harry Schoepf)
     
1965 - John Hambrock
(Photo by Harry Schoepf)
1966 - John Mellberg
(Photo by Ron Will)
1968 - Stewart Reed
(Photo by David Chartier)
 

In 1987 John L. Jacobus wrote an article, "Once & Future Craftsmen: A Fisher Guild Scrapbook, 1930 to 1968", which appeared in "Automobile Quarterly", Volume 25, Number 2. It was the first significant effort to document the Guild's history and gave insight into the efforts and accomplishments of thousands of contestants. Jacobus' soon to be published book, The Fisher Body Craftsman's Guild: An Illustrated History will be much more comprehensive and enlightening. For more information see a previous Automotive Chronicles article here and to purchase please go to www.McFarlandPub.com.


Also available are two CD-ROM diskettes that cover the reunion and the models, as follows:

"Fisher Body Craftsman's Guild Reunion" by George Chartier and his son, David. Photos shown above are only a sampling and have come from various sources. Only ones credited to David Chartier are on this CD. $11.00 (includes shipping). Diskette is organized as follows:

Day One ~
Craftsmans Guild Reunion
Concept cars
Day Two ~ Eyes on Design Show
Fisher Body Models
Auto Exhibits
In the Parking Lot

Order diskette from:

George Chartier
28067 Southfarm Lane
Northville, MI 48167
E-Mail: DAVkeychain@aol.com

 

George Chartier and Ron Will are working together to gather all past Guild literature to build a historic file before it all disappears. If anyone has literature, old Guildsman newsletters, instruction books, photos etc., they would be interested in buying, trading or even copying these to fill in all the missing chapters of the Fisher Body Guild history from 1930 to 1968. George can be contacted at the address above. Write to: Ron Will, 39 Oak Ridge Drive, Voorhees, NJ 08043 or send an e-mail to him at Rwill@subaru.com

 

Eyes on Design, a benefit for the Detroit Institute of Ophthalmology, was pleased to host the reunion which was a very popular highlight of the car show. Held each year at the Edsel & Eleanor Ford House in Grosse Pointe, Michigan, the 2005 car show will celebrate International Vehicle Design on June 26th. While there will be several special exhibits related to the theme International Vehicle Design, it would be very difficult, indeed, to match the tremendous interest that was generated in the Fisher Body Craftsman's Guild display at Eyes on Design 2004.

For updated information on this year's event go to
http://www.eyeson.org/html/evn_eod_evn.htm

 
 
 
The Automotive Chronicles, November 2004
 
 
 
 
 
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