Curbside Classic/Automotive History: 1959 Edsel Corsair And A History Of Edsel Dealers – A Different Perspective

Advertising

No discussion of dealerships would be complete without looking at the advertising intended to get customers into those dealers.  In fact, Larry Doyle, the man who established Edsel’s dealer network, was also in charge of advertising.  Over the winter of 1955-56, Doyle and his team interviewed over 20 advertising firms before settling on Chicago-based Foote, Cone & Belding.  Facing the daunting prospect of introducing a completely new car brand to the American public, Foote, Cone & Belding opened a Detroit office with 60 employees just to manage this one account.

Fairfax Cone, principal of Foote, Cone & Belding, and head of the Edsel account.


Ford’s hiring of Foote, Cone & Belding for the Edsel account was significant because the company purposefully did not choose one of its existing ad agencies.  While the agency had little direct auto experience, it was well known for successfully introducing novel products.

The first project between Ford and its new ad agency was the car-name fiasco in which Foote, Cone & Belding suggested thousands of possible names before Ford management chose Edsel (a name previously said to be off the table) instead.  Fairfax Cone, who was in charge of the Edsel account, was appalled at the dull name, joking that Ford might as well have named their new car “Flab” instead.

Though disappointed by Ford’s name choice, the ad team put it behind them and set to work on an overall strategy.  Edsel benefited from tons of free publicity in the form of newspaper and magazine articles, and by the public’s seemingly insatiable curiosity about the new car.

Actual Edsel ads first appeared only weeks before the car’s debut – a brief series of ads with shadowy pictures and simple yet oblique prose.  These ads presaged what was to come.

1958 Edsel Citation ad

Early Edsel ads were plain – focusing on the car itself without using dramatic or artistic settings.  Even the text was relatively simple, bereft of grandiloquent verbiage.  The thinking here was that following three years of rising publicity, boastful ads were considered unnecessary… that Edsel ads should focus exclusively on the car.  Or, said Edsel’s Assistant General Sales Manager Robert F.G. Copeland said in a quote that’s probably unique in automotive history, “We have not tried to make our advertising and promotion exciting.”

1958 Edsel Citation Hardtop ad

This strategy of plain ads changed quickly as it became clear that the public was unenthusiastic about the car itself.  While insipid ads probably wouldn’t crack the Top 10 list of Things That Went Wrong With Edsel, it was the focus of stinging criticism from dealers and Ford insiders at the time, who often blamed the car’s ills on insufficient promotion.  However, what was unique about the ad program was that unlike Edsel’s many other struggles (quality, styling, value, etc.), advertising could be rapidly changed.  Within a few months, more ebullient, lavishly illustrated ads appeared, showing Edsels in picturesque settings accompanied by words such as “Beautiful.”

Cheerful ads were eventually merged with desperation… such as “The Edsel Look is Here to Stay.”  This tagline began in May 1958 and was later embellished to point out that “the ’59s will prove it.”

1959 Edsel ad

After transitioning to a more flamboyant advertising regimen, Edsel’s ads remained similar throughout the remainder of the brand’s life.  Ultimately, Edsel’s travails exceeded advertising’s ability to help.  Even the most optimistic, memorable or catchy ads can’t overcome a product besieged by problems.

Perhaps the most accurate assessment of Edsel ads came 20 years later, when Lincoln-Mercury Advertising Manager John Vanderzee, who presided over an ad campaign of Farrah Fawcett posing with live big cats and wearing a cougar pendant around her neck, joked that such a campaign may have been the only thing that could have saved Edsel.  He might have been right.

Irrespective of ads, sometimes it seemed that derision was heaped upon Edsel from all quarters, as the Edsel name quickly became synonymous with failure, and the car itself the butt of many jokes.  Even what should have been good press turned bad.  In May 1958, US Vice President Richard Nixon toured South America, and was provided with an Edsel convertible in Peru.  While motorcading through Lima in the open-top Edsel, Nixon was pelted with eggs and rocks from protestors.  Later on, Nixon quipped that “They were throwing eggs at the car, not me.”

Ultimately, Edsel sold 68,000 1958 model cars – about one-third of Ford’s intentions, and far below what was needed to sustain the brand.  In February 1958, Larry Doyle, who had built Edsel’s entire sales organization from scratch, and superintended the brand’s marketing, took a leave of absence, never to return to Ford.

We’ll now journey to Edsel’s second (and second-to-last) model year, to look at our featured car sitting on a used car lot.

The 1959 Edsel

Our featured car hails from 1959, the second of Edsel’s three model years, and a year that is notable for its de-emphasis of what had been Edsel’s signature design features.

1959 Edsel Corsair front

Most significant is the front end, still featuring the vertical “jet grille,” but now flanked by horizontal grille elements connecting the center piece to the headlights, and also a new bumper and lower hood line.  These features more smoothly integrate the grille into the overall front end design.  Given the poor reception that Edsel’s grille was given upon introduction, this was as good an attempt as possible to divert attention from that design element, while still maintaining a brand identity.

1959 Edsel Corsair left side

The large side scallop was reworked into more of a side spear.  Similar to its introductory year, Edsel sedans were offered in pillared (like our featured car) or hardtop versions.

1959 Edsel Corsair rear

Around back, the ’58’s space-age horizontal tail lights were replaced by more conservative “dual-cluster” round light sets from the Ford parts bin.  ’58 Edsels were certainly distinguishable from a block away.  The ’59s?  Not so much.

Equally important as the styling changes was the shuffling of Edsel’s lineup – an arrangement that redefined the brand’s place in the market, and also downplayed the Edsel lineup among Ford’s total offerings.  The two costliest of Edsel’s four 1958 models were dropped, leaving a base model Ranger and a slightly higher trimmed Corsair, like our featured car.  Early customers thought Edsel to be overpriced for what it offered – now the car was firmly positioned farther downmarket than what was originally planned.

Underhood, the 1959 Edsels saw some changes as well, none of them for the better.  The ’58 top-line Edsels came with a powerful 410-cu. in. “E-475” V-8, but like the top-line models in which it was installed, this engine didn’t survive to the second model year.  While even lesser ’58 Edsels came with a V-8 (Edsel’s 361-cid. E-400), by ’59 that became optional – an “economy six” was standard on the Ranger and Villager wagon, while two smaller V-8s were also available.  It’s unclear what originally powered our featured car, however it is equipped with Ford’s 2-speed Mile-O-Matic transmission, meaning that it didn’t come equipped with the E-400, which was only offered with a 3-speed automatic.

1959 Edsel Corsair interior

Edsel lost its unique dashboard for ’59, replaced by this unit shared with other Fords.  Also gone was the Teletouch transmission, a unique Edsel feature by which a driver selected gears via pushbuttons in the steering wheel hub.  The seat covers here conceal the well-upholstered “contour seats,” which were a step up from the plain Ranger’s, but one can see the tapestry pattern on the door sill – this fabric was also used on the seat cushion.  It probably didn’t wear terribly well, so the seat cover isn’t surprising.

1959 Edsel Corsair intererior

Although this is a pricier Corsair model, this example is only moderately equipped.  It was ordered with power steering and the optional station-seeking radio, both commonly-chosen options.  However, many of the costlier options such as the “Dial-Temp heater/air conditioner” (the costliest single option) or power windows, were left unchecked on this particular build sheet.

1959 Edsel Corsair interior rear

As one would expect for a car advertised as having “king-size economy,” the rear seat is roomy, though not exceptionally elaborate.

1959 Edsel Corsair left front

Two-tone paint (like this Snow White / Aqua example) was a frequently-ordered $21 option, and with its contrasting-color roof and side spear, the extra color does the car’s profile quite a lot of favors.  The fender-mounted side view mirror was optional.

1959 Edsel Corsair right rear

Our featured car was undoubtedly sold by a dual Edsel-Mercury or Edsel-Ford dealer.  Most of the original exclusive Edsel dealers relinquished their franchises by the 1959 model year.

It’s hard to look at one of these 1959 Edsels and not feel a tinge of sadness for what at that point had become a tragic underdog.  Dealers at the time probably felt more scorn than sadness.

Edsel production by model year and body style

Source of production figures: edselclub.org


Sales figures tell the rest of the story.  Ford’s goal of 200,000 annual sales never came close to being realized, with only 68,045 Edsels produced for 1958.  It was all downhill from there.  Sales fell 30% for ’59, with only 47,396 leaving the factories.  The composition of those cars also changed over the two years.  For example, the more upscale hardtops accounted for a significantly higher proportion of 1958 sales than they did in ’59 – nearly 60% of 1958 Edsel 4-dr. sedans were hardtops, but that proportion fell to under 19% in the next model year.  A similar proportional tumble occurred with two-doors.  Increasingly, the recession-squeezed public saw Edsels as value-oriented appliances, rather than the stylish newcomer that was envisioned prior to introduction.

The last Edsel – a 1960 Villager wagon, produced November 19, 1959.


Production did dribble into the 1960 model year, when Edsels were redesigned as a slightly modified Ford Fairlane.  On November 19, 1959 – just 806 days after Edsel was introduced with great fanfare – Ford announced the brand would be discontinued.  By that time, hardly anyone was surprised, except possibly the 1,208 people who had already purchased 1960 Edsels.  To make amends to those folks, Ford issued $300 “Allowance Certificates” to each customer, redeemable towards the purchase of any future Ford Motor Co. passenger car.  Interestingly, the certificates came with no expiration date.  In his 1980 book The Edsel Affair, former Edsel Public Relations Director Gayle Warnock noted that all but 159 certificates had been redeemed by that time.  According to an Edsel enthusiast website, the last known certificate was redeemed in 1995 on a Crown Victoria.

The Edsel story has been told so many times that the term “Edsel” itself is largely synonymous with failure.  However, the story is usually told by focusing on Ford’s corporate organization.  For over a thousand Edsel dealerships – owned by people who had faith in Ford Motor Company, and staffed by many others who counted on this new product to earn their livings – their version of the story was much more personal.

The Edsel Division did get some things right, and establishing a solid nationwide dealer network in a remarkably short time frame was one of them.  It’s too bad that the product those dealers sold had little chance of succeeding, but in business, as in life, nothing is guaranteed.  Still, when you happen to see your next Edsel, maybe spare a few thoughts for the dealers who took a chance and the Edsel Division employees who created one of the few things that went well for this short-lived brand.

 

1959 Edsel photographed in Monroe City, Missouri in July 2021.

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