[ last update: 01.26.2015 ]

The (new) Cadillac Database©


Professional Cars

on
Cadillac Chassis

19
59

Return to The (New) Cadillac Database© Index Page
or go to the"D
ream cars" section for 1959
or select "Professional Cars" years from the table below

 

Pick one   >

1902 1903 1904 1905 1906 1907 1908 1909
1910 1911 1912 1913 1914 1915 1916 1917 1918 1919
1920 1921 1922 1923 1924 1925 1926 1927 1928 1929
1930 1931 1932 1933 1934 1935 1936 1937 1938 1939
1940 1941 1942

WW2 years

1946 1947 1948 1949
1950 1951 1952 1953 1954 1955 1956 1957 1958 1959
1960 1961 1962 1963 1964 1965 1966 1967 1968 1969
1970 1971 1972 1973 1974 1975 1976 1977 1978 1979
1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989
1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999-up

 

 

 

1959

Barnett Coach Company (USA)

    


The caption reads: J.Cowan Whitley (?), Douglassville, Georgia, owner of J. Cowan Funeral Home, and president of the
Georgia State Board of Funeral Directors and Embalmers, accepts delivery of the first Barnett Coach Company 1959 Cadillac Combination

 

Cadillac (USA) The Fleetwood 75 limousine and the four models below it appear in the 1959 Cadillac professional car catalog; they are identified as being typical of the independent coach builders Eureka, Miller-Meteor, S&S (Hess & Eisenhardt) and Superior.

5975RES0.JPG (8575 bytes)    59COMMA.JPG (11524 bytes)
Fleetwood 75 limousine

59LIMIN.JPG (4930 bytes)    59LIMSED.JPG (8420 bytes)

59EukHrs.JPG (19286 bytes)   59MM.JPG (21319 bytes)
Eureka (left), Miller-Meteor (right)

 

    59H&E.JPG (22374 bytes)   59Sup.JPG (25572 bytes)
S&S (left), Superior (right)

59COMMD.JPG (5656 bytes)    59COMMG.JPG (5854 bytes)
Improved suspension (left) and heavy duty generator (right)

Eureka (USA) Various commercial vehicles including those below

59EUKFR.JPG (10379 bytes)     59EUKRR.JPG (8917 bytes)     59eurk1.JPG (11072 bytes)

59eureka2.jpg (17251 bytes)   
Eureka Landau, above was offered in six different versions;
prices ranged  form $11,251 to $12,881

59eurk3.JPG (18305 bytes)
Eureka combination ambulance/hearse  with regular roof treatment;
the price ranged from $11,006 to $11,224

59eureka7.jpg (19551 bytes)
This is the Eureka combination with optional, "full view" styling;
prices for this model ranged from $11,006 to $11,224;
the end-loading funeral car with electric table cost $12,636

59eureka6.jpg (21197 bytes)
This is the Eureka ambulance with optional, "full view" styling; it cost $11,552;
note the roof-mounted tunnel lights and the optional Federal siren/light combination

Dr59amb3.jpg (10174 bytes)

Dr59amb4.jpg (9093 bytes)     Dr59amb5.jpg (7300 bytes)
This restorable ambulance does not have the optional, "full-view" styling introduced by Eureka this year and
consisting of  bulbous, wrap-around rear corner windows; this vehicle was fully restored by a member of the
Professional Car Society (PCS); photos taken during the restoration mat be viewed on this Web page
[the foregoing images were picked up on the Internet]

59eurkfc.JPG (9132 bytes)
This Eureka Flower car appears to need restoring
[ Photo: © 1994, Yann Saunders ]

 

Fleetwood (USA) Custom "bubble-top" limousine for the Royal visit to Canada, in June 1959, of HM Queen Elizabeth II.  Photos below were supplied kindly by Swiss enthusiast and friend, Jean-Michel Roux.  Others may be seen on this page of the Database, that I devoted specifically to this car.

59bubl22b.jpg (6870 bytes)     59bubbl2.jpg (5751 bytes)
Two bird's eye views of the passenger compartment, with bubble-top removed
The British royal standard was affixed to the front of the roof

59bubl02.jpg (4684 bytes)     59bubl00.jpg (5407 bytes)     59bubl01a.jpg (5129 bytes)     59bubl24b.jpg (6145 bytes)
Two-man operation to remove the Plexiglas "Bubble" top

 

Köng, Walter [Basel, Switzerland] ambulance conversion on stretched chassis; non-Cadillac from the cowl back. Köng built similar ambulance bodies on the 1960 and 1963 chassis. This car carries a special order body tag : #SO 002923 and the [commercial] chassis number is 59Z101265. On the Swiss title, it is given as a "6-seater". It was owned for many years by Heinrich Kaech who operated an ambulance/taxi service out of Dornach, near Basel, in Switzerland. The vehicle was first registered as an ambulance on April 14, 1960. Its gross weight is over 7000lbs. This custom ambulance was acquired in the summer of 2003 by a French collector who decided (lightly) to drive it to Paris (nearly 400 miles) on one of the hottest days of the year. Result:  he blew an engine gasket at the halfway mark and all but destroyed the motor !

59ambsw2.JPG (8420 bytes)     59ambsw3.JPG (8308 bytes)     59ambswi.JPG (6109 bytes)
Sorry for the poor image quality; these are stills from  video footage I made in 1984
of the International Cadillac meet I organized that year in Geneva, Switzerland

59ambc.jpg (7734 bytes)     59ambb.jpg (6709 bytes)     59ambe.jpg (5753 bytes)

59ambd.jpg (7857 bytes)     59ambf.jpg (7036 bytes)     59amba.jpg (5304 bytes)
[Above two rows]: These photos were taken in Geneva. by my son, Philip, in 2003; the
customized Köng ambulance was acquired by my friend Christian Vaney who subsequently sold it

to a French collector; on the rear LH door, an inscription reads "I'm only 40 Years Young..."

 

Miller-Meteor (USA) Various commercial vehicles including the selection, below

li59mlrg.jpg (8519 bytes)     li59mlrhint.jpg (6449 bytes)
Here is the Miller Meteor Landau Traditional   end-loading hearse, with a starting
price of $10,482.  The Duplex combination model went for $10,694

li59mlrcombi.JPG (9218 bytes)
The reversible floor of the "combi9nation" car quickly converted
the vehicle from hearse to ambulance, at the flick of a switch

li59mlrkInt.JPG (4682 bytes)     59mlrsideload.jpg (5184 bytes)
Manual or electric-powered rear and side loading (left or right) capabilities;
the manual version cost $ $11,516 and the electric version was $12,079

li59mlrc.jpg (9164 bytes)
This (unlikely?) two-tone job depicts the Miller Meteor Futura limousine/ambulance;
the Futura models have small, wrap-around corner windows in the rear;
prices started at $10,474 and rose to $11,865 for the 3-way model with power casket table

li59mlrClas.JPG (8528 bytes)
This is the Miller Meteor Classic funeral coach
prices started at $10,474 and rose to $11,865 for the 3-way model with power casket table

 

    

    

 

59mlrFlc.jpg (5576 bytes)
The Miller-Meteor flower car for 1959; roof styling appears borrowed from the Superior line;
this model sold for $10,799 with the hydraulic, stainless-steel flower deck; a cheaper version,
with Chicago-styled flower trough was also available

59MMflc.jpg (17733 bytes)
This is the model with the Chicago-styled flower trough
[ Photo: © and courtesy Phantom Coaches Hearses Club ]

li59mlramb.JPG (7909 bytes)     li59mlrambfrt.JPG (4269 bytes)
Miller-Meteor's Sentinel ambulance:
this version, with 42˝" roof height, sold for $10,600;
the version with the 48" roof height cost $10,962

59MlrAmb1.JPG (9539 bytes)     59MlrAmb2.JPG (10667 bytes)
Left: the Volunteer, right: the Ambulandau
[ Above three photos are from a period ad supplied kindly by the owner of the MM Sentinel survivor, below ]

dr59amb6.jpg (8630 bytes)
This is the 42" headroom, straight   ambulance model

59mmflc2.jpg (6874 bytes)     59mmflc3.jpg (8122 bytes)     59mmflc6.jpg (5815 bytes)     59mmflc1.jpg (4980 bytes)
Despite its sorry state, this survivor is such a rare
model as to be worthy of a total restoration
[ Photos:  Internet, 2008 ]

59mmhrs.jpg (6632 bytes)
Here's another restoration project
...but not for the faint of heart!

 

This Miller-Meteor Futura-styled ambulance was offered for sale at auction on eBay in December, 2003. According to the vendor, tens of thousands of dollars went into restoring this car ...even though he said the gauges, wipers, blinkers and A/C were o/s.  Note that the leather front bucket seats are from a 1964 model; the steering wheel from a 1965; the wire wheels are from the nineties, the boat horn is non-authentic, as is the upper chrome side trim running from the front door to the rear bumper. Late Extra, 4/2004:   According to Sarah, my young friend and professional car enthusiast from Cleveland, OH, the base vehicle is a Miller-Meteor Sentinel model; Sarah is right!  The car was acquired by an enthusiast in England for less than the $25K asking price.  Corrigendum 5/2004: At first I thought those rectangular roof-mounted tunnel lights, blue lens siren and curved chrome side trim were not authentic, however, the new owner has sent irrefutable proof that all these items are genuine MM issue; he sent a period advertisement for Miller Meteor's Sentinel, Volunteer and Ambulandau models (see below). He added that the vendor had repaired most of the outstanding defects before shipping the car to Europe; he found the original front bench seat and sent that over with the car.

59AM6.JPG (13944 bytes)

59AMB.JPG (12082 bytes)     59AM0.JPG (9907 bytes)

59AM9.JPG (6103 bytes)     59AM0B.JPG (4038 bytes)     59AM7.JPG (8036 bytes)

59AM4.JPG (4990 bytes)     59AM0A.JPG (6475 bytes)

59AM3.JPG (6710 bytes)     59AM2.JPG (6975 bytes)

59AM5.JPG (9849 bytes)
These photos from Internet, courtesy of Dan Hillebrandt
and
www.motoeXotica.com


The car above was subsequently  acquired by a company in England
[ Photo:  © 2012, Cunningham Classic Cars, UK ]

 

S&S [Hess & Eisenhardt] (USA) Various other commercial vehicles for the ambulance and funeral trades, including this one:

59hrs2.jpg (18426 bytes)
A surviving S&S Park Place end-loading funeral car; according to enthusiast, Sarah, this may be one of
only a  few combination hearse/flower cars made by S&S  that feature a removable roof section; enthusiast and professional car expert,
Bernie de Winter says this was the third and final year such a car was offered; 
S&S listed a price for it, but nobody knew if such a car was ever built until this one showed up on EBay


Another lovely survivor

59ssphil.jpg (32029 bytes)
Partial view of the Park Hill combination coach

Dr58ss5.jpg (10408 bytes)
Superline Parkway

S&S [Hess & Eisenhardt] (USA) conversions

59AMBU.JPG (10024 bytes)
This billboard car was offered for sale on e-Bay in April, 2003;
the base car is the S&S Kensington ambulance from Hess & Eisenhardt

59cusamb1.jpg (11799 bytes)     59cushrs1.jpg (5453 bytes)     59cushrs2.jpg (4067 bytes)

59cusamb3.jpg (7453 bytes)      59cusamb2.jpg (7016 bytes)
This people-hauler conversion was found on the Internet, 2008

 

Superior Coach (USA), 9 or 12-passenger Caravelle or Skyview sight-seeing coach. Only six of these SUPERB wagons were built ['59 aficionado, Bob Waldock, believes there were eight of them but he and his '59 Cadillac collector buddy, Ted Grill, can account for only six of them].  All  (six?) were delivered to the renowned Broadmoor Hotel in Colorado, to replace the aging fleet of 1955 and 1956 S&S observation coaches. These were the next generation of Broadmoor Skyview buses. Superior printed literature showing those cars with similar Pontiac models known as Cargo Cruisers, but later changed the name of the Pontiacs also to Caravelles. The Caravelle combined Cadillac's eye-catching beauty for 1959 with large seating capacity, wide door clearances and plenty of interior roof height . It was built on the heavy duty commercial chassis, on special, heavy-duty springs and heavy duty 8.90x15, 6-ply tubeless tires; it was quite similar in outward appearance to the firm's Royale funeral limousine. Wheel base was 156" and overall length 251" (just an inch short of an astounding 21 feet!). The width at the side doors was 64˝". Superior probably hoped to sell more of these to private buyers; to this effect they put out a colorful flyer (it too a rare collector's item). It boasted "special custom exterior and interior appointments to customer preference". The plexiglas observation roof panels were optional, as was also a roof-mounted luggage rack;  it is believed that ALL these wagons were ordered with the observation roof, but NONE with a roof rack.  Buyers were free to decide on the body color and interior layout. There was a split back driver's seat and all seats were genuine leather over foam rubber. Like the 1955 and 1956 S&S models from Hess & Eisenhardt, these cars carried the Broadmoor nameplate in gold on the upper portion of the tail-fins. There are few survivors. One of these was offered for sale in Mansfield, OH, in October, 1978; condition and price were not stated. My friend Ted Grill, formerly of Bayshore, LI (who moved later to Florida), owned one of these in the early seventies; it was in restorable condition. Bob was able to acquire one in Oklahoma, circa 1987.

dr59cvl2.jpg (13023 bytes)     Dr59sky.jpg (11614 bytes) 
(Left) Publicity photo on location in Miami, (right)   outside the Broadmoor Hotel, Colorado


The above three color illustrations are from a Superior Coach Corporation product sheet from 1959

59carvel.jpg (5939 bytes)
This is Bob's car; I photographed it in 1994
[ Photo: © 1994, Yann Saunders ]

59carav1.jpg (25950 bytes)     59carav4.jpg (21469 bytes)

59carav2.jpg (14163 bytes)      59carav3.jpg (14576 bytes)      59carav6.jpg (18438 bytes)
Bob's car, now superbly restored
[ Photos:  © 2005 and courtesy of the owner ]

                  

                

     
Here you can admire the Plexiglas observation windows from above and below;
the car is believed to be currently [2010] in the former LeMay collection, in Colorado

     

    


Photos in the above two rows are from a 2014 Facebook entry by Robert L. Burns in 2014

 

Superior (USA) Various commercial vehicles including the selection, below


Four versions of the Crown Royale Landaulet hearse, de-luxe Model DL-604 were available, ranging from $10,781 to $12,427

59SUP_A.JPG (10079 bytes)
Royale Landaulet combination

59SUP_B.JPG (10573 bytes)     59SUP_C.JPG (7298 bytes)
Crown Royale end loading landaulet

59SUP_E.JPG (13970 bytes)     59SUP_F.JPG (5974 bytes)

59SUP_D.JPG (16147 bytes)

59SUP_G.JPG (17466 bytes)
Illustrations in the preceding four rows are from a Superior Coach Corporation product catalog

dr59hrs8.jpg (12730 bytes)
Crown Royale combination car (left) could be driven away for $11,047;
Standard Royale landaulet (right) was slightly less costly

   pr59suprHrs.jpg (10446 bytes)     59sup3w.jpg (8091 bytes)     59HRSE.JPG (8709 bytes)
  Far ritght: surviving Crown Royale Landaulet combination

    
[ Photo:  Internet, 2014 ]

59hrs.jpg (11103 bytes)     59hrsrr.jpg (4556 bytes)     59sshrs2.jpg (7291 bytes)
Surviving Royale Landaulet

   59hrsfr.jpg (8611 bytes)    
Surviving Royale combinations (the car in  color is located in France)

59supr2.jpg (9090 bytes)    
Surviving Crown Royale limousine combinations

   59SUP_J.JPG (10866 bytes)
Royale ambulance

59SUP_K.JPG (5805 bytes)     59SUP_L.JPG (5459 bytes)     59SUP_M.JPG (7093 bytes)
Superior Royale ambulance, Model 606 [starting at $10586]
Illustrations in the preceding two rows are from a Superior Coach Corporation product catalog


59amb2.jpg (13029 bytes)     59supamb.jpg (11187 bytes)
Superior Royale ambulance survivor; it is owned by Dan, a PCS member from Ohio

59sup_amba.jpg (12381 bytes)

59sup_ambb.jpg (9341 bytes)     59sup_ambc.jpg (8486 bytes)     59_example.jpg (11389 bytes)

59sup_ambd.jpg (7812 bytes)     59sup_ambe.jpg (8473 bytes)
Here is another surviving ambulance that was converted from a funeral coach
by McPeck Motor Coach of Denver, CO.  It is owned [1996] by Joe Unrein
[ Photos: © 1996 and courtesy of Emergency Vehicle Owners & Operators Association, Inc. ]


[ Photo: from advertising brochure ]


This photo from (I'm guessing) the 60s, shows a "Superior" ambulance in a stunning color
(we had a 1960 Eldorado Seville in that same, "Heather metallic" hue)


I wonder if this one survived ...


59SUP_H.JPG (13290 bytes)

59SUP_I.JPG (8193 bytes)
Superior Royale Coupe de Fleur, Model 609 [it cost $10785 new]
Illustrations in the preceding two rows, again, are from a Superior Coach Corporation product catalog

59flcsup.jpg (10038 bytes)    


This survivor (2 rows) is registered with the Professional Car Society (PCS),
Northland Chapter, who own copyright to the photo


Superior (?) flower cars stacked 4 x 8 deep; it's a wonder so few survived!

 

[Unknown, USA] Possibly a modified Superior combination coach, used for people-hauling.

59hrs.jpg (10867 bytes)     59hrs2.jpg (7726 bytes)

 

[Unknown, USA]

59amb_load.jpg (8819 bytes)
Loading a patient into a '59 ambulance

    
Not recognized, but a fine survivor nevertheless

 

[Unknown, USA] stretched, Series 62 with rumble seat (see photos, below):

Dr59lon3.jpg (6511 bytes)     Dr59lon4.jpg (9734 bytes)

Dr59lon2.jpg (13103 bytes)
[ Above three photos © 1999,  Y. Saunders ]

    59strtch.jpg (12742 bytes)     59lngs2.jpg (5892 bytes)
[Above two photos:  © 2001, John Coyle, aka "Caddy Daddy" ]

 

[Unknown, USA] stretched, Sixty Special sedan

Dr59str.jpg (5671 bytes)
This image was picked up off the Internet.  The car is
called The Great White.  The owner, Justin Gibes of
Cincinnati, OH, operates the car as a rental limousine

 

[Unknown, USA] stretched, Series 62 sedan

59str2.jpg (8390 bytes)

 

[Unknown, USA] stretched, Series 75 limousine

59strtch.jpg (13047 bytes)

[Unknown, USA] another "Stretch"... of the imagination, without a doubt!

 

[Unknown, USA] a dragster Hearse!!!

 

[Unknown, USA] ... Why not, indeed!

 

[Unknown, USA] Alleged movie car from Ghostbusters

59GHOST.JPG (7739 bytes)
This car was offered for sale by the Kruse auctioneers in April, 2003; according to Sarah, a young enthusiast from Cleveland, OH,
it is actually a BAD replica of the movie car; indeed , there was a bit of a scandal when the auction company found out it was NOT the movie car


The "real McCoy?

 

[Unknown] From the Velasquez funeral home in Trujillo, third largest city in Peru (located about 600km from Lima), comes this unbelievable hearse conversion of a 1959 Cadillac Eldorado Seville coupe. Photos show the car was fitted with  a/c and Cruise-Control [although the body tag does not include code "C" for the latter item].  Thanks to my Peruvian lawyer friend, Fernando Murga, for checking this one out for me. Late Extra [July, 2008]: The car was acquired by a collector in Houston, TX; unfortunately, he decided he had too many other projects taking up his time, that he put the hearse up for sale on Ebay.

59hrsea.jpg (6439 bytes)     El59hrsf.jpg (6684 bytes)     59hrsed.jpg (6503 bytes)

   El59hrsd.jpg (7518 bytes)     59hrsec.jpg (5398 bytes)
The original color of this car was Persian Sand (the most desirable color on the 1959 palette);
it featured also a white vinyl roof; interior trim was originally matching leather and cloth in the same

bronze-pink hue as seen on the photo of the instrument panel; accessories included air-conditioning and
Cruise-Control, visible in the photo; car suffers from a broken horn ring (a typical flaw in older '59 models)

59Svlhrs1.jpg (13943 bytes)
Note gold-anodized "sabre" wheels; these were no longer current in 1959

59svlhrs2.jpg (11577 bytes)     59svlhrs6.jpg (11304 bytes)

59svlhrs3.jpg (7678 bytes)     59svlhrs4.jpg (5414 bytes)     59svlhrs7.jpg (8271 bytes)    
[ Photos in above 3 rows are from the vendor's ad on Ebay ]

 

[Unknown, USA] Sorry, but I couldn't resist including this one.


[ Photo:  Internet, 2013 ]

 

Visser [meaning "Fisher", in Dutch] (Holland) Various commercial vehicles (hearses and ambulances on regular or stretched Cadillac chassis, like this one from 1959. My friend Dirk-Jan de Jong of Holland wrote:
This is a very ugly example on a 1959 Cadillac commercial chassis. As you can see, the rear of the car has been totally altered and the fins have been shaved off. The non-whitewall tires (and the guys in front of the car) do the rest to spoil the picture. This car has a non-standard windshield. At the start of the seventies it was all over for the Cadillac ambulance as regulations (and money supply) were tightened and a switch was made to the (Chevy)van-based ambulances.

visser59.jpg (7558 bytes)     59AMBPC.JPG (6490 bytes)
Like Köng in Switzerland [see above], Visser shaved off the '59 fins
and built an entire new upper body, including the windshield

[ Photo (left): Ambulances in beeld (1945 - 1975), courtesy Dirk-Jan de Jong, Holland ]
[ Photo (right): the same or a similar ambulance in front of a Dutch hospital - Internet, 2003 ]

 

Yann S. (Switzerland and USA) And here is my very own proposal for an Eldorado Estate Wagon on the commercial chassis for 1959. It is based on a technical drawing found on p. 9 of the 1959 Miller-Meteor product brochure entitled Outshining Them All. The pickiest among you will note that all I did was to add "Eldorado" side trim and tail-lights to a Miller-Meteor funeral coach design.

Dr59wgys.jpg (31661 bytes)

 

 

 

 

Return to The (New) Cadillac Database© Index Page
or go to the "Dream cars" section for 1959
or select "Professional Cars" years from the table below

 

Pick one   >

1902 1903 1904 1905 1906 1907 1908 1909
1910 1911 1912 1913 1914 1915 1916 1917 1918 1919
1920 1921 1922 1923 1924 1925 1926 1927 1928 1929
1930 1931 1932 1933 1934 1935 1936 1937 1938 1939
1940 1941 1942

WW2 years

1946 1947 1948 1949
1950 1951 1952 1953 1954 1955 1956 1957 1958 1959
1960 1961 1962 1963 1964 1965 1966 1967 1968 1969
1970 1971 1972 1973 1974 1975 1976 1977 1978 1979
1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989
1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999-up

 

© 1998, Yann Saunders [aka Mr. Cadillac] and the Cadillac-LaSalle Club, Inc.
[ Background image:  1961 Crown Sovereign funeral car by Superior Coach Corporation ]