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Did you know this? In the 1920's American engineer's were working on aerodynamic designs before Dr. Ferdinand Porsche came out with the Volkswagen.

Their are substantiated rumors that Porsche's engineers had viewed monocoque streamlined designs of the Lincoln Zephyr/Briggs Manufacturing Company project prior building and producing the Volkswagen in 1932.

Henry Ford and Adolph Hitler were pretty friendly business wise in the automotive industry of the 1930's. It took Ford a long time to believe about the concentration camps of WW II. When he finally realized it was a fact, prior his death, he wept terribly.

This is a rear engine prototype V-12 Lincoln from 1933 Century of Progress in Chicago. From other articles I've read over the past 35 years I have read on the subject, I personally believe the Volkswagen came right out of Briggs Manufacturing Company, Ford's major body supplier. I believe this happened in the late 1928 or 1929.
1933



At the Chicago Century of Progress Exhibition (1933-1934), Ford displayed a concept vehicle called the Briggs Dream Car, a rear-engine car with unitized body designed by John Tjaarda of Briggs Manufacturing Company, Ford's major body supplier.

Tjaarda based his design on aero- dynamic monocoque designs and models he began working on in 1926, called the Sterkenberg Series, which he refined in 1930 while working for Harley Earl. In 1932, he was hired by Briggs as chief of body design in their new in-house design center. Briggs had just bought out LeBaron, Inc., and became Detroit's largest independent body producer.

John Tjaarda (say "charda"), 1897- 1962, was born in Holland of a titled family in the Sterkenberg area. He trained in aeronautical design in England and served as a Dutch Air Force pilot before emigrating to US in 1923. He worked first on custom bodies in Holly- wood, then pioneered in monocoque streamlined designs while working for Duesenberg and Harley Earl.

Tjaarda and others were inspired toward aerodynamic car design by initial work started in 1921 by Austro-Hungarian engineer Paul Jaray, who began testing car models in aircraft wind tunnels. Jaray later used this data to design the streamlined 1933 Tatra 77 built in Czechoslovakia, which remained in production into the 1990s.

The Tjaarda Dream Car bore an uncanny resemblence to the 1932 inexpensive rear-engine small car developed in Germany by Dr. Ferdinand Porsche for the NSU Company called the Type 32, or Kleinauto, which in 1933 was already on its way to becoming the Volkswagen Beetle. On the other hand, Porsche's design owes a lot to Tjaarda's Sterkenberg Series of the late 1920s.

Chrysler picked up on aerodynamic research in 1927, prototyping a design in 1932 which resulted in their infamous Airflow design of 1934.

Ford, in 1933, had begun annual styling changes (pioneered by Chevrolet in 1928 and causing the demise of Ford's Model T). Ford authorized development of the Briggs Dream Car to fill its need for a "small" Lincoln, and indeed, the design was patented in 1935 and became the prototype for the 1936 Lincoln Zephyr.

The Zephyr was designed by John Tjaarda and Howard Bonbright, both of the Briggs Manufacturing Company, for Ford, under the supervision of Henry's son, Edsel, and Eugene T. (Bob) Gregorie (b. 1908), head of Ford's first internal styling department (which was initiated by Edsel in 1935). The Zephyr, however, looked quite different from the 1933 Dream Car because its engine was moved to the front and a "prow" added by Gregorie. The Museum of Modern Art later called the Zephyr the first success- ful "streamlined" car in the US.

PS: John Tjaarda's son Tom (b.1934) re-located to Italy in 1959, where he worked as a car designer at Ghia, designing the DeTomaso Pantera and the Ford Fiesta (1977), and later at Pininfarina. He established his own small automotive design office, Dimensione Design, in 1984.

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LeBaron designers were responsible for the design of the aerodynamic 1933 Ford V8 and the influences of various Briggs’ and LeBaron designers can be seen in a number of vehicles they designed later on. Historically, Briggs most important designer was John Tjaarda, and his most important design, the Briggs Dream Car that was exhibited at the Chicago Century of Progress Exhibition (1933-1934). Tjaarda based it on a series of aerodynamic monocoque rear-engined cars he began working on starting in 1926 called the Sterkenburg Series, named after his family’s Tjaarda van Sterkenburg estate which was located in the Dutch province of Friesland.

The very first Sterkenburg was designed while Tjaarda was working for Rochester, New York coachbuilder Locke & Co. He continued working on the vehicle in his spare time and even entered it into a contest while working at General Motors’ Art & Colour. Harley Earl showed very little interest in Tjaarda's design and after some unsuccessful attempts at getting it financed he went to work for Briggs, who were more receptive to the streamlined concept.

At about the same time Briggs had hired a friend of Edsel’s named Howard Bonbright, in a bid to get more business from Ford. Bonbright was put in charge of Briggs’ Ford Policies and Relations Department and one of its first projects was a unit-bodied, rear-engined car based on Tjaarda’s Sterkenburg concepts. Three proposals were submitted to Edsel, the first a unit-bodied rear-engined car that closely resembled Tjaarda’s original concept. The second looked just like the first, but substituted a conventional front-engined drivetrain. The third was a convertible coupe version of the first rear-engined design.

Briggs built a full-size wooden mock-up of the first rear-engined prototype for exhibition at the December, 1933 Ford Exhibition of Progress in New York City. The car then made the rounds of a few of the country’s larger Lincoln dealers, winding up at the Chicago Century of Progress exhibition where it was prominently displayed in the Ford Rotunda for the rest of 1934.

Although, that particular vehicle never made it to production, Tjaarda’s basic design served as the basis for the 1936 Lincoln Zephyr. The production Zephyr featured Tjaarda’s bridge-truss structure with a conventional front-engine layout and drivetrain. With input from Edsel, Ford’s E.T. (Bob) Gregorie restyled Tjaarda’s Sterkenburg concept creating one of the most striking cars of the pre-war period. The Zephyr provided the basis for Lincoln’s 1939-1948 Continental and heavily influenced other builder’s streamlined offerings during the later thirties and forties.

The engineering work of Tjaarda is also evident in the monocoque designs of the 1934 Chrysler and DeSoto Airflow. Holden “Bob” Koto facelifted the 1935 Ford to become the 1936 model and assisted Ford designer E.T. “Bob” Gregorie in the design of the Zephyr front end. The work of Philip O. Wright can be seen in the streamlined Packard LeBaron’s of 1934-35, the 1935 Ford and the 1935 Chrysler and DeSoto Airstream. Alex Tremulis is credited with the aerodynamic Thunderbolt re­tractable hardtop convertible of 1940 and Ralph Roberts handled the design of its sister showcar, the Newport parade phaeton. Six examples of each idea car were built and taken around the country to introduce Chrysler’s all-new 1941 line-up.

Ironically, Ray Dietrich joined Chrysler Corp.'s Art & Colour staff in 1932 and worked indirectly with Briggs and LeBaron on Chrysler Corp. styling projects through 1940.

The clay model was used extensively under Roberts’ and Tjaarda’s tenure at Briggs. They became a major ingredient of Briggs’ successful styling presentations to Ford, Packard, Plymouth, DeSoto, Dodge, Chrysler, Hudson, Studebaker, British Ford, Graham, and Franklin. Additionally, if they placed their body orders with Briggs, auto manufacturers would get the use of Briggs/LeBaron’s designer’s and body engineers at no additional cost. Briggs employed a number of talented engineers in addition to their much-recognized designers. Albert Ball and Trygre Vigmostad served the firm for many years in their experimental laboratories, and Briggs’ capable body engineering department was headed by Clifford Doty.

THE ABOVE TAKEN FROM A PIECE ON BRIGGS:

http://tinyurl.com/l5qbrj

Larry

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