80645 Miles 346 V8 3 speed manual4 Door Sedan
Vehicle Description
Single family ownership since 1955 until 2011 and since then part of a private collection until now
1939 Cadillac Series 60 Special V8 Touring Sedan
Chassis no. 6291776
West Coast Classics are proud to present this very rare and beautifully restored 1939 Cadillac Series Sixty Special which had been in the same family for 56 years. Purchased new from Dickson Motors, Ltd of Winnipeg, Canada by a couple hailing from nearby Manitoba, the car was reportedly sparingly driven and stored from the beginning of WWII until the owner's uncle acquired the car in 1955. Driven only occasionally and always garaged in Toronto, the car was gifted to the Southern California based owner by his uncle. It has been carefully maintained and remained lovingly presented and unrestored, showing only 80,000 miles on the clock and has been recently fully serviced and drives very well.
Body Style: 39-6019S
Body: 1684
Paint: 54
Trim: 44
In 1939 all V8 powered Cadillacs had the new tri-corner grilles in the fender 'catwalks' flanking the regular grille. These models were completely new in appearance with a V-shaped main grille, larger glass areas, automatic adjusting rear springs and no running boards.
All Cadillac V8's including the 60 Special had the same styling motifs, but the detail dimensions differed for each car line. A new pointed center grille and functional side grilles were made of die cast metal and had fine pitch bars. A single die cast louver was positioned to the rear of each hood side panel. The headlights were once again attached to the radiator casting. The Cadillac Sixty Special, now bodied by Fleetwood, was offered with the optional Sunshine Turret Top or with a center division.
In 1939, the Cadillac Fleetwood 60 Special was introduced as a trend setting luxury 4 for sedan designed by the legendary Harley Earl & Bill Mitchell!
It was designed as an extended wheelbase derivative of the Series 60, often referred to as the Fleetwood Sixty Special. The Sixty Special designation was reserved for some of Cadillac's most luxurious vehicles.
a 346-cubic inch V8 engine and built on an extended 127-inch wheelbase, it offered a blend of formal elegance and owner-driven comfort, making it a significant success for Cadillac. The 1939 model continued the innovative design introduced in 1938, with a "coupe-like" integrated trunk that helped establish the "three-box" sedan styling. The most dramatic 1938 Cadillac was the new Series 60 Special, nestled between the entry-level 60 Series and the Fleetwood-bodied 75s.
On a double-drop, lowered frame, the 60 Special had a unique body and distinctive trim with wide-spaced grille bars. A five-window sedan with an exclusive greenhouse, it was styled to look like a convertible sedan in steel and had dual side-mounts.