Some time ago, I took a spin in my imaginary time machine to go back to a Packard dealer of 1958. Today we do not need the time machine because this almost new-condition Dodge truck was in the real live present. At least the real live present of when I took these pictures some years back. But what did I have besides pictures of a cool old truck that brought more questions than answers?
From 1960 to 1970 there was a great leap in the American pickup truck. 1950 to 1960 had seen big changes too, but most of those changes had to do with styling. OK, except at Studebaker where that hadn’t changed either. But the next decade would be one of refinement. What had formerly been a rough old thing with I-beam front axles and very little in the way of creature comforts became almost as comfortable as a car. Almost.
Chevrolet (and GMC) trucks were becoming quite civilized, with one brand new design in 1960 and another in 1967, when things like carpeted floors and even air conditioning were beginning to be seen. Ford had three generations in that span with new designs in 1961 and 1966-67, where they too revamped their suspensions and frames and greatly improved their high-end cabs so that they were more car-like than ever.
And then there was Dodge. The 1960 Dodge truck was a hard riding old thing with an I-beam axle up front. The 1970 Dodge truck? Still a hard-riding old thing with an I-beam axle up front. There was one gigantic leap in 1961, which was among the last products from the short, muddled styling era that was part Virgil Exner and part Bill Schmidt. What may have been the most attractive thing to come out of Chrysler Corporation in 1961, this truck was looking a little offbeat five years later. No matter how artful the brochure photography might have been.
But the brand new 1967 Dodge pickup introduced in a classic era for styling and quality at Chrysler was a game-changer. No wait, that was what Mopar fans only wished had happened. Dodge would have to wait until 1972 for their new truck, and would have to squeeze that 1961 design for every drop of life that could be coaxed from it.
Burton Bouwkamp, who spent the 1960’s in engineering and product planning at Chrysler Corporation, once recalled that by the mid 1960’s the guys over in the Dodge truck division really needed a fresh pickup. The problem was that there never seemed to be enough money to get it done. Which is not surprising given that the car lines were completely revamped for 1965 (C body) 1966 (B body) and 1967 (A body) in addition to major 1964 introductions of a heavily revised Imperial and a new A series of compact Dodge pickups and vans.
There were some much-needed updates to the pickup line, though. The original 1961 front end and cargo box were replaced in the middle of the 1965 model year with the design seen here. The unique single “pie plate” headlights up front were the most noticeable change, but the most important functional update was the double-walled pickup bed with a central tailgate latch. Up through 1966 power came from either the slant six or the A block 318 V8, an engine that finished its long run that year.
Besides engines, there were other old parts that remained on the 65-66 pickup such as the “refrigerator style” door handles. Modern pushbutton door handles and a big block V8 would not show up on these trucks until 1967 and a more socially acceptable grille by 1968.
Dodge trucks were never very common in my part of the Midwest. The only time I saw them with any frequency was on television screens. Chrysler was very active in the 1960’s providing vehicles for use on shows from The Beverly Hillbillies to Mannix – and whenever the script called for a truck one of these Dodges would get the spotlight. Such as this screenshot from an episode of Mayberry RFD. But as in so many ways, television was completely unlike real life. In Fort Wayne, Indiana I probably saw International trucks as frequently as I saw Dodges. I knew one Studebaker Champ owner, which was exactly one more than the number of Dodge pickup owners of my acquaintance.
I took these pictures in my earliest months contributing to CC. It was a mystery. What, I wondered, was this truck’s story. It had to be a great one. I was driving into Lebanon, Indiana for my day job and saw it sitting outside of a small body shop. Was it for sale? Was it some kind of prop? Was it just an old truck that someone owned and kept there? It looked virtually new. Well, in new condition, at least. New Old Stock is a term that describes old parts that have never been out of the box or off of a warehouse shelf since they were manufactured, and this truck looked mighty close to falling in that definition.
The threshold challenge was to figure out what year this thing might have been – which turned out to be quite a task even for this longtime Mopar-head. Maybe this was the reason I never wrote up this truck. This exact image is used in the Dodge truck brochure for 1965, 1966 and 1967. Only a careful eye will note the new door handles airbrushed onto the ’67 picture.
Another reason was that I always kind of thought I might see this D100 again and learn more of its story. Then as time went on I became more and more critical of my early pictures. We have seen Shaky Hand Jim’s early work in which he developed his skills at capturing 80% of a car in the frame. Perhaps this makes me Blurry JPC who took so many early pictures with a cell phone camera lens that looked like it had been dropped in a bucket of fried chicken.
This one clearly had the standard interior with the plain seats and no armrests. And the standard exterior that lacked chrome bumpers and a bright metal grille. It did, however, come with the optional “Sweptline Side Moulding” that was available on all Sweptline models. Sweptline, by the way, was DodgeSpeak for the full-width bed. The old style bed remained available on the Utiline model.
I had once traveled to southern Indiana to look at some old cars owned by the estate of a guy who had years earlier been a car dealer in a small community. He had kept two cars that had been brand new and never put them into service. One was a red ’59 DeSoto convertible, which he kept because he knew it was the last year for a soft top model from DeSoto. The car registered about 3,000 miles on the odo (and might be the very car pictured above – at least after it got a full restoration a few years later.) The other was a yellow ’69 Plymouth Fury III 2 door hardtop which he kept because it was the last car he had in inventory when he closed. It registered about 400 miles on the odometer when I saw it in the mid 1990’s.
I could not read the odo on this Dodge so have no idea of the mileage, but this truck gave every indication of having a somewhat similar story. The red paint turning a little pink due to lack of polishing, the lack of any rust, dents or stone chips, the perfect interior – this looked like a brand new truck, aside from the natural effects of weather. And while this one had seen some weather, it had not seen a whole lot of it.
In 1978 my best friend’s father bought a used 1974 Dodge Charger. It was unlike any Charger I had ever seen, a completely stripped 6 cylinder car with a three-on-the-tree, rubber floors and no radio. The story was that the first owner had bought it during the first Energy Crisis – it was evidently a Buick owner’s idea of an economy car. In four years the guy put 10,000 miles on it. And had never washed it. Its red paint looked almost exactly like the paint on this truck.
After too much time spent peering at old brochures for interior details in an effort to pin down this truck’s year of manufacture, I resorted to the hack of just googling Dodge D 100 Indiana. And there it was, showing up in a for sale ad. [Note to self – try this first next time, it’s a lot quicker, And the pictures are better, like the one above]. The ad said “1966 Dodge D100 Pickup 318 V8 3 speed transmission. Runs good, drives good. Interior in great shape. Older frame off restoration. $9950.”
Which brings up a “whole nuther” set of questions. Like who would have spent the money to do the kind of full restoration on this truck that would make it indistinguishable from new? And then let it sit outside long enough for the red paint to oxidize? And how much money got lost along the way if this truck could now be purchased for (slightly) under ten large?
So I guess I ended where I started – with some iffy pictures of a great truck that came with more questions than answers. But isn’t that enough?
Note: a rerun of an older post.
Nice rig .
These Dodges had a tendency to rust out in the forward cab to frame mounts if they weren’t kept vacuumed out of dirt & gravel .
-Nate
Surprising that Dodge hadn’t modernized their trucks, even International offered independent front suspension on the 1/2 tons. I briefly owned a 69 Dodge pick up 1/2 ton, the cab was so incredibly cramped that I couldn’t stand it.
I grew up in a time and place where pickup trucks weren’t often seen. Most of the ones I saw were municipal fleet trucks, and the basic stepside (Utiline) Dodges were prevalent. In order to help keep the production lines running, The Chrysler Corporation made aggressive bids on government fleet contracts. This same basic body was also used on a lot of one ton (and higher) chassis cabs that were made into all sorts of utility trucks, flatbeds and wreckers and box trucks. I couldn’t quote prices, but I think that like-for-like, Dodge almost always had the lowest prices, if sometimes only by a few bucks, but that was enough to keep them busy selling to cost conscious fleet buyers.
Those 60s Dodges were always rare. More recent ones from the 80s are still fairly common among the landscapers here.
I drove a ’61 for work in the 70s, doing furniture delivery. The only thing I remember about it is the neat plastic squeeze-handle on the glovebox.
Proving thrift, Dodge appears to have carries over the Utiline bed when they finally updated the cabs in 72. I’ve a seen aone ton dually that may be late gos since it has a full width grille rather than the “pie plates” and also a bit of extra sheet meta, like GM did with the heavier GMT400 trucks
Chrysler subsdiairies in South America keep the 1961-71 D-100 design until the late 1970s when they sold their Argentinian and Brazilian operations to VW and there was also available with a Perkins diesel engine.
https://pickups-classic.blogspot.com/2013/04/dodge-d-100.html
https://noticias.autocosmos.com.ar/2025/01/30/autos-clasicos-de-argentina-dodge-d-100
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zUhx2R7qsKQ
And the Sweptline trucks never made it Down Under in Australia, where Aussie Dodge trucks got a International body with Chrysler engines. https://www.curbsideclassic.com/blog/cohort-sighting-australian-dodge-truck-wearing-an-international-cab-and-possibly-with-a-chrysler-engine-cast-by-international/
Despite their shortcomings and odd style, these trucks are among my favorite 60’s era pickups. It is interesting to look at the styling progression from 1961 to 1971 and see how Chrysler ‘calmed down’ the look of these trucks. This truck has the longer wheelbase and wider Sweptline tailgate that came in ’65, along with the ‘pie pan’ headlight surrounds and new grille. Also note the trim moldings go straight back, completely ignoring the funny dip in the bed quarter panels. 1968 saw a better grille, but the funky hood with the fake louvers continued another year until a very restrained slightly domed hood was introduced in 1969. A new and nice looking aluminum grille appeared in 1970. Dodge also resorted to offering more trim levels than GM or Ford culminating in the flashy Adventurer SE. And who could forget the Dodge Dude?
While these Dodges were quite rugged, their chassis was a generation behind the competition. No disc brakes, leaf springs/beam axle up front on 4X2 models, and relatively straight frame rails which resulted in a high cab floor and required step wells. Sometime in the late 60’s Dodge added plastic liners between the leafs on the front springs for a modest improvement in ride.
All in all the Dodge light trucks of this era were mostly competitive up until 1967 when the new GM light trucks in particular made the Dodges look positively prehistoric. Ford was also way ahead with their new 1967’s and even International had a new and quite contemporary light line in 1969.
Bought an extended length cab over camper in 87 on a 74 chev 3/4ton. It felt like it would tip over at any moment. My car guy friend said put it on your old 70;straight axel 3/4 ton dodge. The old dodge never new it was there up mtn hwys at 50 even weighing 9000 lbs. There it stayed for 30 years. Never a problem from Washington to Mexico and back many times. Also had red DeSoto conv like in pic
IH touted their pickup’s “8 points of suspension” due to leaf springs front and rear as being more stable for use with a camper than the other trucks that had coil springs and only “6 points of suspension” because of it. Never mind that IH also offered a IFS for their 1/2 tons.
In the fall of 1972 my parents bought a house on a rural property a couple of miles outside of town. The property was beyond the the city water mains and wells were not practical due to the area’s geology so the builder of the house (it was only a couple of years old) built a 5000 imperial gallon cistern in the basement with a pressure system to provide water to the kitchen and bathrooms. The previous owner paid a contractor to keep the cistern full, $10 for 1000 gallons if I recall. My father decided it would be cheaper in the long run to buy a truck and a water tank and haul our own water. Our second car, a 1967 Chevelle 300, was sacrificed as trade-in fodder on a 1966 Dodge D-100 with a slant six, three on the tree and overload springs, the dealer threw in a set of new six ply tires to close the deal. A 300 imperial gallon steel tank was placed in the box (3000 pounds of water!) and number one Dodge kept us in water until 1978 when Dad bought a 1976 Dodge D-100 Club Cab with the Adventurer package 400 V8 and Torque Flite to replace it. When I was in high school I would ride to school with Dad (he was the guidance councilor at the same school). I still remember getting dressed for school while Dad went out to start the truck on cold winter mornings (40 below, Fahrenheit or Celsius). Pull out the choke, pump three times on the accelerator and hit the starter. About half a revolution and the slant six would roar to life. Between 1972 and 1994 Dad owned five different Dodge trucks, the 1966, a 1971, a 1976, a 1983 and a 1989. The last two bought new. The 1971 was the only one that didn’t regularly haul water. A 1994 Ford F-150 broke the Dodge rule.
I live in South Africa and have owned a few Dodge pickups, over the years. I currently own a wreck of a 1970 D200. There is one peculiarity that I have noticed about South African Dodge Sweptline pickups: The “sweptline” isn’t swept at the end of the load-bed! It remains parallel down the whole length of the truck! I have attached a photo of my D200 to show what I mean.
Now then you mention it, I find it intriguing then South Africa got the Sweptline but not Australia. There’s a 1962 South African D-series who was featured in the movie “Target of an assassin” also known under the title “Tigers don’t cry”.
https://www.imcdb.org/vehicle_287685-Dodge-D-Series-1962.html
Oh yes, I recognize the ‘TJ’ (Johannesburg, Transvaal) number plate of the D-series in ‘Target of an Assassin’. I can’t understand why Australia never received sweptlines. It’s strange. Another odd thing about South African Dodge pickups was the fact that they were not available in 4-wheel-drive (the W-series). There were PLENTY of D-series two-wheel-drive dodge pickups available but zero W-series.
Ford and International Harvester two-wheel-drive and four-wheel-drive pickups were plentiful in South Africa. Chevrolet also sold a small quantity of 4-wheel-drive (K-series) pickups alongside their two-wheel-drive C-Series, so it’s not like there wasn’t a 4-wheel-drive pickup market in South Africa. I’ve always wanted a right-hand-drive Dodge W-series (Power Wagon) pickup, but they are unobtanium in South Africa!
Australia built a different pickup, Aussie built Dodges were ambulance converted in NZ they hung on well into the 80s, later models adopted the hemi 6 which was an improvement, well side bodies were locally made, they arrived as cab n chassis but most had flatdecks from new. Cabs were shared with IH, alternate universe pikups.
It was simply a marriage of convenience between Chrysler and International, Chrysler Australia had large stamping and toolroom facilities with the extra capacity.
Australia had strong tariffs against imported cars and parts.
The market just wasn’t worth Chrysler tooling up the the US D series.
They were popular trucks back in the 60s and 70s with Dodge, International very well represented on the roads, along with the GMH built Bedfords.
The Dodge pickups sold in Argentina and Brazil also used that style of bed.