See also: Pontiac Le Mans.
Cadillac Le Mans | |
Manufacturer: | Cadillac (General Motors) |
Production: | none |
Model Years: | 1953 |
Designer: | Harley Earl Irv Rybicki (interior) |
Class: | Concept luxury roadster |
Body Style: | 2-door convertible |
Layout: | FR layout |
Assembly: | Clark Street Assembly, Detroit |
Related: | Cadillac Series 62 Cadillac Eldorado convertible |
Engine: | 3311NaN1 V8 engine |
Length: | 1960NaN0 |
The Cadillac Le Mans was a concept car designed by Harley Earl and developed by Cadillac. It was named for the 24 Hours of Le Mans race in France, in which Cadillac competed in 1950. Displayed at the 1953 General Motors Motorama in New York City, the design was a low-profile (51inches to the windshield frame), two-seat, fiberglass-bodied roadster. This concept showcased Cadillac's first wrap-around windshield. It was powered by a 2500NaN0 version of Cadillac's 331cid V8 engine, a power output not realized in production Cadillacs until 1955. The overall length of the Le Mans was 1960NaN0. Though four prototypes were built, the model never went into production.
Of the four Cadillac Le Mans cars, the fate of three is known. One car, which was customized by George Barris, was acquired by Harry Karl, a wealthy shoe manufacturer who gave it to his wife, Marie "The Body" MacDonald. Another was sold to a Cadillac dealer in Beverly Hills, California. The George Barris custom was destroyed in a fire in 1985, while another one is currently displayed in the Cadillac Historical Collection in Warren, Michigan.[1] The revised car, restyled by GM stylists with quad headlights and sleeker fins, is in possession of the GM Heritage Center.
The fourth Cadillac Le Mans was displayed at the Oil Progress Exhibition at Will Rogers Field in Oklahoma City in 1953, along with two other show cars from the 1953 Motorama exhibition (the Wildcat I and the Starfire). After that, this car went on exhibit at Greenhouse-Moore Cadillac Chevrolet in Oklahoma City during the first week of November. The vehicle went missing on November 8, 1953, and has not been seen since that time.[2] Numerous investigators and auto enthusiasts have tried to find the missing Le Mans, but so far their efforts have yielded no results.[3]