Site icon The Daily Drive | Consumer Guide®

What If…1955 Ford Crown Ranchero

1955 Ford Crown Ranchero
1955 Ford Crown Ranchero

Two of Ford Motor Company’s most memorable vehicles of the Fifties were introduced within a couple years of each other. Launching for 1955 as the flagship of Ford’s dramatically restyled passenger-car line, the Crown Victoria two-door hardtop brought a new level of glamour and style to the brand. Two years later, the 1957 Ford Ranchero melded the passenger car and the pickup truck into a “best of both worlds” proposition—at least for some shoppers.

1955 Ford Crown Victoria

The ’55 Crown Victoria’s, ahem, crowning touch was its “tiara-top” treatment. Accenting the hardtop-style roofline was a stainless-steel band that wrapped from the base of the B-pillars across the top of the roof. Add in the flashier grille, hooded headlights, subtle tailfins, “checkmark” bodyside trim, and eye-grabbing two-tone paint colors of the 1955 Ford’s restyle—not to mention the available Plexiglas fixed sunroof—and the Crown Vic was the most dashing regular-line Ford yet.

What if Lincoln, Chrysler, Cadillac, and AMC Had Designed the 1957 Packard?

1955 Ford Ranch Wagon

The idea of a passenger-car-based pickup was not entirely new when the Ford Ranchero debuted for ’57—a few American automakers had previously offered vehicles that followed the same basic concept, and the car-based “ute” was already commonplace in the Australian auto market. The Ranchero, however, was arguably the best-looking, best-integrated example of the breed, and it was relatively simple and economical to produce. Like other mainstream-brand automakers, Ford had a two-door station wagon body in its passenger-car lineup, and it wasn’t a huge undertaking to shorten the roofline, section off the cab behind the driver, and install a pickup bed in the back.

What if the 1955 Chevy Had Been Built by AMC, Chrysler, Ford, or Studebaker?

1955 Ford Country Squire

A mash-up of these two fondly remembered Fords is a tantalizing idea, and one that Collectible Automobile magazine publisher Frank Peiler couldn’t resist putting to paper. What if Ford had moved forward with the Ranchero concept a couple years earlier, and what if it had decided to produce it as a top-line model in full Crown Victoria regalia? The result might have looked just like Frank’s “Crown Ranchero” rendering shown here, resplendent in Aquatone Blue and Snowshoe White two-tone.

As Frank’s illustration shows, the Crown Victoria’s ornamental roof band is a graceful way to cap off the Crown Ranchero’s cab, though the slanted door frame at the rear would necessitate special parts not shared with station-wagon models. Ranchero “steer’s head” emblems in place of the Crown Victoria badges and an abbreviated tailgate (to line up with the two-tone paint scheme) are other subtle touches. It’s doubtful that Americans would have embraced a full-lux Ranchero in numbers sufficient to justify production, but had Ford made it, it almost certainly would have been a sought-after collectible today. “What if” indeed!

What If…1965 Ford Mustang

1957 Ford Ranchero

Subscribe to Collectible Automobile

1955 Ford Crown Ranchero Gallery

Click below for enlarged images.

1955 Ford Crown Ranchero

What If: A Gallery of Alternate-Universe 1957 Ford Ranchero Designs

Car Stuff Podcast

Share this:
Exit mobile version