Home Lifestyle When did Americans fall out of love with station wagons?

When did Americans fall out of love with station wagons?

by The 100 Companies

Back in the 1910s, someone bolted extra compartments onto a Ford Model T so they could ferry more people and luggage from the train station. Thus, the “station wagon” was born.

By the 1970s, station wagons had become a staple of American life. Relatively affordable and immensely practical, “carryalls” like the legendary Buick Roadmaster Estate could transport a large family and even tow a trailer – despite the weight of all that wood paneling.

But in 1984, Chrysler introduced a taller, safer alternative called the “Magic Wagon,” aka minivan. When Toyota gave us the “crossover” in 1996, wagon demand virtually vanished.

– Chris Butsch, The Arizona 100

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