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  2. Hudson Commodore - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hudson_Commodore

    1949 Hudson Commodore sedan. For the 1949 model year, the Commodore line was enlarged to include more luxurious Custom models. As a marketing promotion, Hudson had plastic specialists use scaled-down blueprints to develop transparent models of the Commodore Eight sedan to demonstrate and promote the design and construction of the cars. [18]

  3. Hudson Motor Car Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hudson_Motor_Car_Company

    1947 Commodore Eight Convertible 1949 Hudson Commodore 4-Door Sedan 1951 Hornet Club Coupé 1952 Hornet Sedan Hudson Hornet race car. Production resumed after the war and included a 128 in (3,251 mm) wheelbase three-quarter-ton pickup truck. [28] In 1948, the company launched its "step-down" bodies, which lasted through the 1954 model year.

  4. Hudson Hornet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hudson_Hornet

    The Hornet, introduced for the 1951 model year, was based on Hudson's "step-down" design [5] that was first seen in the 1948 model year on the Commodore.Unlike a unibody, the design did not fully merge the body and chassis frame into a single structure, but the floor pan footwells recessed down, in between the car's chassis rails, which were, in turn, routed around them – instead of a ...

  5. Nash Motors - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nash_Motors

    The aerodynamic 1949 Nash "Airflyte" was the first car of an advanced design introduced by the company after the War. Its aerodynamic body shape was developed in a wind tunnel. A "radically aerodynamic" format was first proposed around 1943 by two independent designers, Ted Pietsch and Bob Koto, to Nash's vice president of engineering, Nils E ...

  6. American automobile industry in the 1950s - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_automobile...

    The 1955 Hudson was actually a rebadged Nash auto with different trim. It were offered with a V8 in 1955, but it was too little to save the brand, which was discontinued two years later. [11] Packard began the 1950s on a difficult note, as sales dropped from 116,248 in 1949 to an underwhelming 42,627 in 1950. [79]

  7. Category:1940s cars - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:1940s_cars

    Cars introduced in 1949 (36 P) C. Cars discontinued in 1942 (7 P) ... Hudson Motor Car Company; Hudson Utility Coupe; Humber FWD; Humber Super Snipe; I. International ...

  8. Minnesota Parents Who Locked Their Kids in Cages for ‘Their ...

    www.aol.com/minnesota-parents-locked-kids-cages...

    A Minnesota couple has reportedly been sentenced to four years after they locked their children in cages for "their safety." Benjamin and Christina Cotton from Red Wing, were sentenced by a ...

  9. Hudson Wasp - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hudson_Wasp

    The Hudson Wasp is an automobile built and marketed by the Hudson Motor Car Company of Detroit, Michigan, from the 1952 through the 1956 model years.After Hudson merged with Nash Motors, the Wasp was then built by American Motors Corporation in Kenosha, Wisconsin, and marketed under its Hudson marque for model years 1955 and 1956.