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“Woodie” Exhibit Brings Summer Fun to the California Automobile Museum

“Carved Elegance” Shows Beauty of Wood in the World of Steel Cars

     wood-smThe California Automobile Museum’s Summer-time exhibit highlights the polished craftsmanship of wood in a car world that is dominated by steel.

     The exhibit, Carved Elegance: Woodies, Wheels, and Waves, opens July 1      and will run through September 19.

To most car enthusiasts, Woodies bring back memories of lazy California  summer days on the beach, complete with surfboards and campfires.  But long before they were considered cheap transportation and an icon of the Beach Boys, Woodies were prized by elite customers for their unique styling and craftsmanship.

“In their early years, Woodies were not produced on an assembly line, but were hand-made by independent craftsmen that added a look of carved elegance to what began as an unfinished body,” said Karen McClaflin, Executive Director of the California Automobile Museum.  “Later, U.S. car makers turned to wood to re-create that elegance in cars that stood out from the crowd as buyers were starved for a new, stylish look after years of war when no cars were produced at all.”   

The cars in the California Automobile Museum’s exhibit this summer represent that era when car makers embraced the warmth and color of wood to create an upscale, suburban “town and country” look with model names that suggested the affluence of the “Country Squire.”  The exhibit includes eight varieties of Woodies including Ford, Pontiac and Dodge models from the early 1930s through the 1960s, detailing the evolution of the Woodie Wagon. To compliment the vehicles, various art pieces, vintage surfboards, and period memorabilia will also be on display.

At the turn of the century, the first cars were made primarily from wood, reflecting their evolution as carriages.  By the mid-1920s, some of Europe’s most elite car makers, including Rolls Royce, Duesenberg, Delage, Hispano-Suiza and Renault, relied on wood to carve unique shapes for their exquisite and expensive models which usually included distinctive, customized bodies for each customer.

In the U.S., however, the first Woodies were built for their utility.  Wooden bodies were added to truck chassis which could handle the weight of many passengers and luggage at travel resorts, train stations or by sports teams, and became known as station wagons or estate wagons.  In 1928, Henry Ford began mass producing Woodie bodies for the Model A after purchasing a half-million acres of hardwood forest in Michigan's Upper Peninsula. In the ‘40s, General Motors followed suit by producing Woodies on its own assembly lines.

“Popularity of the station wagon body style grew steadily throughout the 1940s, but production was limited by the labor-intensive wood frame-and-panel construction which made these models the most expensive in the line,” states John Lee, editor of the Woodie Times.  “In the early 1950s the car companies switched to steel station wagon bodies that could be more easily and economically mass produced,” states Lee.

This change in design trends flooded used car lots with Woodies that were far from carved or elegant, many of them rotted and in poor shape after years of neglect.  They then became the perfect transportation for beach boys and surfers, looking for something unique and cheap and were commemorated in song and art and nicknamed, "Woodies."   

Today, Woodies are prized collector cars, valued for their distinctive styling, craftsmanship and polish and are given the same exacting care as any other exquisite wood products.

The California Automobile Museum, formerly known as the Towe Auto Museum, is located at 2200 Front Street, between Broadway and Old Sacramento. The Museum is open daily from 10am – 6pm, taking the last admission at 5pm. Extended hours on Thursdays from 6pm – 9pm through the Summer. Museum admission: $8 Adults, $7 Seniors, $4 Students, children under 5 free. For more information, call (916) 442-6802 or visit www.calautomuseum.org.

1917-Ford-Model-T-Depot-Hac  1964-Morris-Minor-Traveller  Untitled-by-Eddie-Stein-and-Ianna-Frisby

Editor’s Note: Photo opportunities available. To request additional photos of the exhibit, please contact Kaela Nelson, Marketing and Education Coordinator at pr@calautomuseum.org or
(916) 442-6802.

FAST FACT:

Woodies have influenced our language:  The first Woodies, which were used to ferry passengers from train stations to hotels, were called “depot hacks.”   Later, “hack” became a slang term for taxicabs that provided the same service.  In the ‘60s, the early history of Woodies influenced the name for another form of transportation that carried a lot of people and luggage:  the station wagon.             

Woodie Club Logo1
For more information about the National Woodie Club visit
http://www.nationalwoodieclub.com/home.htm.

Thank you to the following people for their generous  time and donations to our museum;

Woodie exhibit display photographs and magazines donated by the National Woodie Club
 
www.nationalwoodieclub.com/home.htm.

Additional exhibit preparation provided by Mark Ayer, Joe Montgomery, Stephen Kashiwada, and Tom Mason

 

Due to vehicle maintenance schedules, web updates and other circumstances, vehicles represented on this website may not be on exhibit during your visit to the Museum. For the most current admission prices and hours of operation, please visit click here.

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