1949 Ford
About 1949 Ford
The 1949 Ford is a line of cars produced by Ford from the 1949 to 1951 model years. The successor to the prewar 1941 Ford, the model line was the first full-size Ford designed after World War II and was the first Ford car line released after the deaths of Edsel Ford and Henry Ford. Coinciding with the 1948 release of the Ford F-Series, the 1949 Ford was offered solely as a car. Released in June 1948, the 1949 Ford was the first "postwar" car line released by the American Big Three, beating Chevrolet to market by six months and Plymouth by nine. From 1946 to 1948, American automakers concentrated on the restoration of production, initially releasing updates of their 1941-1942 model lines. In response to its design, the generation would be called the "Shoebox Ford", denoting its slab-sided "ponton" design. While the design theme had been in use since the late 1920s to streamline automobiles, the 1949 Ford marked its widest-scale use, removing running boards entirely and integrating front and rear fenders into a single, smooth body form. In other firsts, this generation marked the first use of keyed ignition and the first automatic transmission option in Ford vehicles.
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