February/March 1967, Chicago, Illinois continued Like he did the previous year, Pete Estes spoke about Chevrolet’s new models at a press breakfast on the opening day of the Chicago Auto Show, Saturday, February 25, 1967. According to pages 41 & 42 of Gary L. Witzenburg’s book entitled,
Camaro! From Challenger to Champion: The Complete History, Pete Estes said, “in its first five months the Camaro has scored an impressive impact on the market. It is solidly in second place in sales of all domestic small cars and it has been cutting into the volume of the leader—which had a two-and-a-half-year head start. Total sales since introduction day have passed 70,000. On a model-year basis, Camaro is selling about forty percent of Mustang, and in January this figure was forty-five percent. Addition of Camaro has increased Chevrolet’s overall penetration of small-car domestic sales from twenty-one to twenty-seven percent since last October 1st. Besides helping Chevrolet, it has contributed to the overall growth of the small sports-type market, which has gone up each month since October 1st and now stands at eleven percent of all domestic sales. Camaro is succeeding in two objectives: first, it is keeping Chevrolet owners who might otherwise leave us to buy a small sports-type car. Secondly, it is drawing new owners to Chevrolet and away from competition.”
Author Gary L. Witzenburg goes on to say that, “Estes reported high owner ratings of Camaro’s styling, performance and handling. He also reported the high percentage of options being ordered: eighty percent V-8 engines, nearly forty percent Rally Sports, eighty-two percent optional automatic or four-speed manual transmission, forty-four percent power steering, seventy percent whitewalls and wheel covers, twenty-three percent vinyl roofs (the highest of any Chevrolet), and thirteen percent equipped with air conditioning. He mentioned the recent addition of the 396 V-8 and Turbo Hydra-matic transmission to the option list and added that a collapsible spare tire to increase luggage space and a floor shifter, without console, for the three-speed manual would become available in March. The SS’s nose stripe also would be offered as a separate option, effective immediately.”
Just like for previous Auto Shows, a special ad was run by Chevrolet in the Sunday, February 26, 1967 edition of
The Chicago Tribune. Again the headline proclaims, “We won’t be hard to find at the Auto Show….Just follow the crowd.” This must have been a standard ad that Chevrolet ran in local newspapers at Auto Show time. The only difference is in the copy at the bottom of the ads where the information on the local Auto Show is presented.
1st picture: Color picture:
The Chicago Tribune Feb 26, 1967 “We won’t be hard to find at the Auto Show” (
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