1954 Cadillac Fleetwood
The Fleetwood name started as a body manufacturer, and was acquired by General Motors in the purchase of Fisher Body in 1929, who purchased Fleetwood in 1925. From 1925-29 Fleetwood Body built Cadillac bodies exclusively, offering them as an option from 1927-1934. After 1934 Fleetwood bodies were only available on the exclusive Series 75 and Series 90 Cads. By the 1950s it was used as an umbrella to designate more expensive, exclusive Cads, and also as the body manufacturer for the Fleetwood Brougham from 1957-1961. With the addition of the Eldorado Biarritz in 1963 Fleetwood was the body manufacturer. The Eldorado, Sixty Special on the extended Cadillac chassis, and high end Series 75 models were placed under the Fleetwood banner, but there was no separate Fleetwood model. Bare Fleetwood chassis were used for professional coach builders. In 1977 the Sixty Special Brougham and Series 75 were renamed “Fleetwood Brougham” and “Fleetwood Limousine” respectively. In 1985 the Fleetwood name was used on the new front-wheel drive GM C-body platform, while the Brougham became a separate make on the rear-wheel drive GM D-body platform for a single year. In 1986 it became a DeVille option package, before becoming part of the Fleetwood Sixty Special on the stretched C-body platform, and the Fleetwood Series 75 used an even longer stretched C-body chassis. In this period there was a lot of back and forth with the Fleetwood designations and other models. In 1993 the Fleetwood name landed on the rear-wheel drive C-body four-door sedans. When this platform was retired in 1996 the Fleetwood name was as well.
1954 Fleetwood Sixty Special/Series 75
All-new for 1954, Cadillac bodies were more taunt with crisper styling and massive bumpers both in front and back. Cadillac carried through many of the styling cues to make these new Cadillacs resemble their ancestors, but they were much more modern-looking. Fins increased, but not overly so. All models received wrapping windshields, and wrapping rear windows. The Fleetwood name was assigned to the Sixty Special, which rode on a longer 133-inch wheelbase chassis. The professional Fleetwood chassis featured a 158-inch wheelbase, while the Fleetwood limousine chassis was a 149.8-inch wheelbase.
AVAILABLE MODELS:
1954
- Body Style
- 60-Four-Door Sedan
- 75-Four-Door Sedan
- 75-Imperial Sedan
- 86-Commercial Chassis
1954 Cadillac VIN Decoder:
First Two Characters: Year
Third and Fourth Characters: Series
- 75 ~ Series 75
- 60(S) ~ Series 60 Special
Fifth-Ninth Characters: Production Numbers