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The BUICK logo history
The value of the Buick logo was noted in the
early 1990s in a study commissioned by a corporate identity firm, the
Schechter Group. A study of the impact of corporate symbols, it found
that consumers' opinions can be helped - or even hurt - by their logos.
It further observed that "among car marketers, GM's Buick gained an
astounding 53 percent in positive image with its tri-shield symbol."
Here is how the tri-shield was developed.
In the mid 1930s, a General Motors Styling researcher, Ralph Pew, found
a description of the ancestral arms of the Scottish Buick family - then
spelled Buik - in an 1851 edition of
Burke's Heraldry in the Detroit Public Library. (The reference was
apparently dropped in later editions.) The description, not accompanied
by a picture, was interpreted as a red shield with a checkered silver
and azure (light purplish blue) diagonal line running from the upper
left corner to lower right, an antlered deer head with a jagged neckline
in the upper right corner of the shield and a gold cross in the lower
left corner. The cross had a hole in the center with the red of the
shield showing through.
Buick Motor Division first used the Buick family crest as a decoration
just above the radiator grille on its 1937 models, and it was a very
close representation of the crest described in Burke's. The shield was
"modernized" (made longer top to bottom and narrower in width) in 1939.
It was modified again with classic heraldic symbols embellishing the top
and bottom of the shield for 1942. That was a short model year because
Buick stopped producing cars February 3, 1942, and then converted to
World War II military production.
There were other changes through the years, for example the crest was
widened in 1949, to blend in the emblem with hood and grille styling.
But the basic elements of the original crest were retained.
By 1960, the logo had undergone a major revision. In place of one
shield, a tri-shield appeared, representing the three Buick models then
being built, LeSabre, Invicta and Electra (all introduced as 1959
models). Again, all of the original crest symbols and colors were
retained, with the major difference being that instead of one shield,
there were now the three overlapping shields in red, white (later silver
gray) and blue.
In 1975, the Buick Hawk concept was initiated as part of the Skyhawk
line. It was so well received that the symbol of a hawk perched on block
letters of Buick was expanded to all car lines in 1976, though the
tri-shield was retained as Buick's primary mark. The hawk soared to
popularity and a red-tailed hawk named "Happy" was even trained to land
on Buick hood ornaments in television ads.
But by the late 1980s, management decided to re-emphasize the
tri-shield, and so the hawk (and, not incidentally, the Buick Skyhawk
car) was retired.
Today the tri-shield is modernized in Buick marketing and advertising,
emphasizing the outline of the original design. The buck's head and
cross are gone, the diagonal no longer checkered. With the new
see-through design, there are no longer colors in the shields. The Buick
family crest, like the Buick nameplate, keeps alive the memory of David
Dunbar Buick, who started a chain of events that gave birth to Buick
Motor Co. and led to the creation of General Motors, the world's largest
automaker. David Buick's memory was also honored in 1994 when Buick
executives and officials in Arbroath, Scotland, dedicated a plaque near
the site of his birth in Arbroath.
-- David Dunbar Buick
David Buick was born in Arbroath, a fishing village on the North Sea
north of Edinburgh, Scotland, on September 17, 1854. His family (which
used the "Buik" spelling in Scotland) moved to the United States when he
was two and he grew up in Detroit. Buick, a plumbing inventor and
businessman, began to tinker with gasoline engines around 1896, and the
first experimental Buick horseless carriage was completed between 1899
and late 1900. His first automobile-related company, Buick Auto-Vim and
Power Co., was probably formed late in 1899. That evolved into Buick
Manufacturing Co. (1901 or 1902), Buick Motor Co. of Detroit in 1903 and
Buick Motor Co. of Flint in 1904.
In the fall of 1903, Buick Motor Co. was purchased by directors of the
Flint Wagon Works in Flint, Mich., 60 miles north of Detroit. The
company (which still included David Buick) began to build engines in
Flint in December. In 1904, the first 37 production Buick automobiles
were built. That November, Flint carriage maker William C. Durant, an
energetic business promoter, took control of Buick. Four years later, in
1908, he used Buick Motor Co.'s success as the foundation for his
creation of General Motors.
That year, Buick claimed to lead the country with more than 8,000 sales.
By the end of 1908, David Buick had left the company to pursue other
business interests. He apparently prospered for a number of years, but
at the time of his death in Detroit in 1929, he was said to be in near
poverty.
-- Early Buick symbols
The first widely recognized use of the Buick name was a large brass
cursive "Buick" that appeared on the mesh radiator grille of early
models, but there is some confusion about how early. Of the 729 Model C
Buicks built in 1905, 13 still exist and most of them are restored with
that Buick script up front. But the script does not appear in most 1905
vintage photos of those cars. The only visible nameplate on early 1905
Buicks is "Buick Motor Company" in block letters on the front sill
plates. A block-letter "Buick" appeared on running boards later in the
year.
Even earlier, a design used in the only known Buick Manufacturing Co.
literature (a 1902 or '03 catalog) and in the first Buick Motor Co.
catalog (1904), depicted Uncle Sam walking astride a world globe and
pulling a Buick engine on a wheeled cart. The globe carried the slogan,
"Known all over the world," which was quite a boast at the time.
In 1905, the Buick catalog displayed a circular design with "Buick" in
the middle and "The Car of Quality" in the border. (Buick continued that
quality theme through the years, most recently when it began using the
phrase, "The New Symbol for Quality in America," after LeSabre and other
models won high ratings in independent customer surveys in the late
1980s and early '90s.)
In 1911, an odd-looking Buick logo appeared with a giant "B" with the "uick"
inside it. About that time, the famous Buick slogan, "When better
automobiles are built, Buick will build them," also was introduced. The
slogan lasted for decades but the awkward logo was soon gone.
The Buick script framed inside (and overlapping) a rectangle dates to
around 1913 and appeared on the faceplate of the standard Boyce
motometer fitted to the top of the radiators of various Buicks prior to
1927.
That popular logo showed up in grille designs well into the O30s. The
script was also used inside a circle with "Authorized Service" in the
border for dealerships and other service providers.
Other Buick icons included hood ornaments. Some collectors say the Buick
hood ornaments of the late 1920s were among the finest produced by the
Ternstedt company of Detroit. They ranged from a goddess in 1927 to a
figure 8 with wings (representing eight-cylinder power) in the early
1930s.
--Detailed shield description
For those with particular interest in heraldry, this is how the coat of
arms of the ancient Scottish family of Buik (note spelling) was
described in Burke's Heraldry published in 1851 (which did not offer a
picture): "Gu. A bend chequy, ar. and az. betw. a Buck's head erazed in
chief, and a cross couped and pierced, or, in base."
In 1937, this is how Buick interpreted the above: "Gu" means gule (red),
which is the color of the field. "A bend" refers to the diagonal bend
from the upper left corner to the lower right. "Chequy" means checkered,
referring to the design on the bend. "Ar." means argent (silver) and "az."
means azure (blue), giving the colors of the checks on the bend. "Betw.
a Buck's head erazed in chief, and a cross couped and pierced, or, in
base" indicates the course of the bend between the buck's head in the
upper right corner of the shield ("chief") and the cross in the lower
left corner of the shield. The term "erazed" refers to the jagged,
broken edge of the buck's neck. "Couped" refers to the smooth edges of
the cross; and "pierced" to the round perforation of it, through which
the red color of the field is shown.
Note:
In the 1929-1930 model year, Buick introduced an economy range under the
Marquette brand. This marketing experiment only lasted for one model
range.
Buick Communications - media release to commemorate 100 years of Buick
(1903-2003) by Lawrence R Gustin
1899 thru 1909 - William Durant creates General
Motors on September 16, 1908 and quickly places Buick under the GM
umbrella. Buick claims U.S car leadership with a 1908 production of
8,820 vehicles.
1910 thru 1919 - Long-term advertising slogan reads: "When Better
Automobiles Are Built, Buick Will Build Them" (1911). During World War
I, Buick builds Liberty aircraft engines, mortar shells, ambulances and
experimental tanks (1917-18).
1920 thru 1929 - Buick builds its one-millionth car (1923). The Buick
brand is now prominent internationally.
1930 thru 1939 - Buick has strong car lineup: Special, Century,
Roadmaster and Limited (1936). Production rises from 47,000 cars in 1933
to 220,000 in 1937. An industry first: standard turn signals are added
to Buick cars (1939).
1940 thru 1949 - The years after the war are great for Buick styling,
technical innovation and sales. Examples are the famous vertical
bar-grille, the dynaflow automatic transmission, and the 1949 hard
top-convertible styling.
1950 thru 1959 - Buick builds a classic, the limited-edition '53
Skylark, for its 50th anniversary (1953). Buick begins it long-term
commitment to golf by sponsoring the Buick Open at Warwick Hills near
Flint (1958). Buick introduces LeSabre, Invicta and Electra. In honor of
the three new names, the "tri-shield" logo evolves from an emblem based
on the Buick family's Scottish coat of arms (1959).
1960 thru 1969 - The Buick Special is introduced with the first U.S.
mass-produced engine. The "modern classic" Riviera debuts as a sporty,
stylish coupe (1963).
1970 thru 1979 - Buick introduces the fuel-efficient V-6. Eventually the
3.8-liter "3800" V-6 would be Buick's premier engine in naturally
aspirated, turbocharged and then supercharged versions (1974-75).
1980 thru 1989 - Buick worldwide sales top one million for the first
time (1984). Academy Award-winning film "Rain Man" prominently features
a '49 Roadmaster convertible (1988). Flint-built LeSabre is ranked No. 1
in North America and No. 2 in the world in a major independent quality
study by J.D. Power and Associates, in Power's Initial Quality Study
(1989).
1990 thru 1999 - Buick Roadmaster was a hit with 40,000 sales in its
first full year on the market. (1991-1992)
The '99 LeSabre is the last of nearly 16 million Buicks built in Flint.
The final is completed at Buick City (June, 1999).
2000 - More than 35 million Buicks have been built since 1904. Buick
heads into the the redesigned LeSabre (best-selling U.S. full-size car
for eight straight years based on Polk Large Sedan segment
registrations) and an increased horse power (to 165 HP) and torque in
the Century.
Source: Buick
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