Rare Rides Icons: The Cadillac Eldorado, Distinctly Luxurious (Part V)

Corey Lewis
by Corey Lewis

Of the three high-dollar, limited-production two-door convertibles GM debuted in 1953, Cadillac’s Series 62 Eldorado was far and away the most expensive. With its drop-door styling, a loaded interior covered in additional leather, and a sky-high $7,750 price tag, Eldorado was out of the reach of the majority of consumers. And though it sold only 532 examples, GM felt the model’s future was bright. That is if they could just cut the asking price down to something more reasonable. Enter the all-new 1954 Eldorado, swimming in a sea of fins.


The tailfin era of American car design entered the mainstream in the early Fifties. It quickly spread across almost all domestic offerings, and onto European ones as well. The tailfin was a proud Cadillac creation, and first appeared in 1948. 

The ‘48 Cadillacs debuted tailfins at a time when other manufacturers (particularly Nash) launched cars with bulbous bathtub styling. They often featured enclosed fender arches and streamlined flanks that concluded in a fastback design. 


Harley Earl (1893-1969, pictured above) was in charge of styling at GM at the time and rejected the bathtub design for Cadillac. Employee Frank Hershey penned the rear tailfin, and Earl approved it for production. Cadillac went against the grain and featured an open wheel arch at the front, rear fenders that protruded from the body, and an extended trunk with fins. 

They were the sort of styling details that let Cadillac’s late Forties designs stand out and made them more desirable to consumers. In contrast, the bathtub styling trend was dead by 1953 as other manufacturers caught up to debut their own bold fenders and tailfins. Eventually, it became a competition to see who could make the tailfin the most extreme.  

But the tailfin had not reached its peak by 1954, and fin detailing on 1954-1956 Cadillacs was of the earlier and more restrained variety. We’ll talk more about fins that came with length (and height) when we reach the truly shocking Cadillacs of 1959. As seen here, Mr. Earl was a fan of appearing in the marketing pieces of the cars his department designed which was outside the car designer norm.


Like the new finned Eldorado, the rest of the Cadillac lineup was equally new for 1954. The company maintained the same models as were on sale the prior year but with new styling. The entry-level Cadillac was still the Series 62, which continued as the basis for the very expensive Eldorado. 

Available in two- and four-door guises, the 62 rode on the same C-body platform as it did previously. Series 62 entered its fourth generation in 1954 with styling approved by Harley Earl. Worth noting that in his career as VP of design at GM, Earl rarely penned designs himself, but wielded the final seal of approval for production. The main changes to the Series 62 that year were a smoother-looking body, smaller, thinner bumpers, and lesser Dagmars than the 1953. 


The Coupe de Ville continued as before, an upscale two-door hardtop version of the Series 62. It was joined by the four-door hardtop Sedan de Ville in 1956. Those select trims once again had nicer interiors than standard. There were different overall lengths each year for both two- and four-door models and width and height varied annually as well. It was all a part of the planned obsolescence plan Earl implemented for GM cars, where small visual changes occurred each model year. 


Called dynamic obsolescence, the annual model changes ensured onlookers knew what year GM someone drove. Driving a car with current styling was important at the time, and was also to ensure used GM vehicles had higher resale value. It worked, as GM cars had better resale values than any other American made in the Fifties.

Stepping up from the Series 62 was the new fifth-generation 60 Special. It wore very similar styling to the Series 62 and was differentiated by trim, more standard equipment, and a wheelbase that was extended by four inches to 133". Though it was more upmarket than the Series 62, the 60 Special continued with a single, four-door sedan body style. Compensating for the lack of a hardtop option, the 60 Special was a full 11 inches longer than the Series 62. Like the other models, annual changes ensured that no two years of 60 Special had the same length, width, or height. 


The large Series 75 was again the largest offering from Cadillac, available only in four-door sedan guise. All Series 75s from 1954 to 1956 seated eight people. The more expensive limousine variant was called the Imperial Sedan and added a partition between the driver and rear passengers. 

Rear occupants sat on the bench at the very rear, or in middle row jump seats. 1954 was the final year a Series 75 limousine wore the Imperial name, as in 1955 Chrysler took the name for its super luxurious, hand-assembled Imperial. It was manufactured by the newly minted Imperial Division of Chrysler Corporation, which offered its own limousine too. 


It’s worth noting there was a change in the Eldorado’s placement in 1954. Though it was still the brand’s exciting halo car, no longer was it the most expensive Cadillac. With Eldorado’s price intentionally cut to secure affordability for more buyers, both Series 75 models were a bit more expensive. In 1954 the Series 75 Fleetwood sedan was $5,900 ($67,047 adj.), while the Imperial Sedan (limousine) was just over $6,000 ($68,138 adj.).

In Cadillac’s efforts to cut retail pricing and increase Eldorado sales, the second generation was very different from the first. Most notably, the 1954 Eldorado was no longer a low-production vehicle with unique bodywork. It wore a standard Series 62 body and had shared engineering and mechanicals. 


Even the wraparound windshield was no longer an Eldorado-exclusive feature, as it spread to the entire restyled Cadillac lineup in 1954. Eldorado was left to differentiate itself via some bits of trim, badges, and eventually unique rear-end styling and an additional body style. We’ll talk facts, figures, and platform details in our next installment. 


[Images: GM, Nash, Hudson, Lincoln]


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Corey Lewis
Corey Lewis

Interested in lots of cars and their various historical contexts. Started writing articles for TTAC in late 2016, when my first posts were QOTDs. From there I started a few new series like Rare Rides, Buy/Drive/Burn, Abandoned History, and most recently Rare Rides Icons. Operating from a home base in Cincinnati, Ohio, a relative auto journalist dead zone. Many of my articles are prompted by something I'll see on social media that sparks my interest and causes me to research. Finding articles and information from the early days of the internet and beyond that covers the little details lost to time: trim packages, color and wheel choices, interior fabrics. Beyond those, I'm fascinated by automotive industry experiments, both failures and successes. Lately I've taken an interest in AI, and generating "what if" type images for car models long dead. Reincarnating a modern Toyota Paseo, Lincoln Mark IX, or Isuzu Trooper through a text prompt is fun. Fun to post them on Twitter too, and watch people overreact. To that end, the social media I use most is Twitter, @CoreyLewis86. I also contribute pieces for Forbes Wheels and Forbes Home.

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  • Redapple2 Redapple2 on Sep 09, 2023

    EvillGM = Motors Liquidation: I love it.

    PS- Just looked at a GMC Terrain on dealer lot. Not to buy. To make fun of as a pile of shite. 20% : TWENTY percent n. american content.

    So; you get the worst smallish cuv AND 80 % 3RD WORLD CONTENT. You are insane if you buy one.

    • See 5 previous
    • Lou_BC Lou_BC on Sep 11, 2023

      @Art - in today's era the moniker "3rd world" is used for backwater low quality product countries. The origins of the term are as I have stated.



  • Jer65725303 Jer65725303 on Oct 16, 2023

    I love these retro-series articles but do NOT like that I cannot click and enlarge every photo and brochure graphic to read the text and inspect details. That's half the fun! A few years ago you could click on them and they would open in another resizable/zoomable window, fyi. Why the change, TTAC? It ruins the fun.

  • Fred Do what GM wants, cut costs. Pull out of racing hyper cars, defund the F1 program. Finally make more SUVs.
  • Cprescott I would do the following for Cadihack:[list=1][*] Make the V-Series as the base model and then add hybrid to the upgrade;[/*][*]Can the hideous Arts and Scientology (!) design disaster and bring out smoother yet crisp and sleek styling - no more boxes or tacky lighting. Let the body sculpturing win the day. I'd say take Audi and cross it with Genesis to give the vehicles stance and easily identifiable brand cues.[/*][*]Come up with interiors that are unique with quality materials and not something that looks like you ripped off Hyundai and Kia. The car must have four bucket seats that are all adjustable. [/*][*]Build to order. Get rid of this buying a Cadihack off the lot and sell at retail for a car built specifically for the client. Nothing makes a premium statement than a car built specifically for the customer - dealer will like because car will be sold at sticker.[/*][*]Expand exterior and interior colors and combinations.[/*][*]Share nothing with any other GM product. Each car / vehicle has to be a standout model even if the basis is common platform - if Hyundai/Kia/Genesis can pull this off, GM must be able to do.[/*][*]Do not mistake sticker price for luxury. The car's design and material integration will do that for you. If it does not feel, look, and smell premium, it is a Chevrolet.[/*][*]Special customer service - at the time of delivery, client gets to meet the service team that will deliver five years of complimentary service PLUS free tires for the first 50k. Special appointments and pick up car from customer and then bring it back. [/*][*]Loaner car delivered if vehicle is in the shop more than routine maintenance and picked up free of charge for first five years.[/*][*]Thoughtful design trumps technology. Vehicle should be intuitive to use and built to coddle the customer beyond his/her expectations. Vehicle must have "Wow!" - not just good enough.[/*][/list=1]
  • KOKing Kinda hate to say this but they need to be an American Land Rover sans the offroad image (and capability). Leave the Escalade alone and do a shrunken Escalade-esque lineup (the first time I saw a Hyundai Palisade I thought that was the XT6 that Cadillac shoulda made) and dump the alphabet soup models and trims.
  • Theflyersfan How to fix Cadillac? Blackwing.Now I know (because I've asked) dealers are still thinking they are selling Demons with the kinds of markups on Blackwings, but for enthusiast drivers in the know, those cars are legit. They get lost in the shuffle of M-this and AMG-that, but they hold their own. However, with rising CAFE standards and upcoming emissions requirements, along with European CO2 limits, they all can't be turbo V8s with no hybrid propulsion. So at least mild hybrid them to try to eke out another 8-10 mpg average. That's a good start. Do something with the Escalade. These aren't the early 2000s when they had the hip hop image and every corner had a jet black Escalade with chrome rims. In my area, you just don't see them any longer as money has moved to the Germans. If they want to compete with the Germans, they have to downsize it and crank the engine up to 11. It's still way too truckish to compete with the Q8, X7, and GLS. Even though they probably don't want to, keep the sedans. Don't give those up to the Germans, Japanese, and Koreans as well. And with all that, go all in with performance. Become what BMW was over 15 years ago. They tried that before and half assed it, but they have the tools to make it happen now. Try to appeal to the audience that BMW and Mercedes left behind and that Genesis and Acura are trying to claim (or reclaim). Good luck Cadillac...you'll need it.
  • SCE to AUX Introduce a modern V-16 and put it into a Celestiq-like vehicle instead of electric.
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