Chrysler 300: A Look Back

© FCA US© FCA US
Past, Present and Future
As Chrysler approaches the end of the 300, it is satisfying to see the brand building on its heritage, giving today’s consumer a taste of Chrysler style, performance, and power — as it did with the original 300 in 1955. The future will bring a new twist for Chrysler as it becomes a premium electric vehicle brand, with its first battery-electric model arriving by 2025 and eventually offering a full-electric lineup by 2028. Perhaps this won’t be the absolute end of the 300 — we can live with the hope of an electric Chrysler 300 in years to come.
Sources: Hagerty, Chrysler LLC, Allpar.com

<>
<Slide 31/31>

3 thoughts on “Chrysler 300: A Look Back

  1. My Dad bought one of the first 300’s in 1955, only about 1,700 made. It roared like a lion when you stepped down on the throttle and took off like a rocket.You could almost see the gas guage dropping at 100mph +/ I ran it once (based on the speedometer) at 130mph in North Dakota where we lived.. Went from Minot to Bismarck in 1hr 10 min. 120 miles. That was quite a car for the times, broke the Daytona record flying mile for stock production cars…

  2. I bought a brand new 300C convert. at Ennis Motors in Mil. WI. in 1957. In the 70’s bought a 57 C HT for $750 and restored it. Drove it to the Nationals in Reno in 77, got a trophy for driven daily. Started the “Lower Puget Sound 300 Club” along with others. Bought 2 300 E’s, and a 300L, never restored them. In 1979 bought a brand new 1979 300. Sold them all, and today have a 300 M and a Dodge Magnum and belong to Mopars Unlimited, and Modern Mopars of Snohomish County. Also belonged to WPC club at one time.

  3. I especially liked the old vs. new picture with the similarities and differences. Both the old and the new are beautiful cars. M

Comments are closed.

%d bloggers like this: