On July 30, 2003, the last of 21,529,464 Volkswagen Beetles built since World War II rolls off the production line at Volkswagen’s plant in Puebla, Mexico. One of a 3,000-unit final edition, the baby-blue vehicle was sent to the Volkswagen Museum in Wolfsburg, Germany, where Volkswagen is headquartered.
The car produced in Puebla that day was the last so-called “classic” VW Beetle, which is not to be confused with the redesigned new Beetle that Volkswagen introduced in 1998. (The new Beetle resembles the classic version but is based on the VW Golf.) The roots of the classic Beetle stretch back to the mid-1930s, when the famed Austrian automotive engineer Dr. Ferdinand Porsche met German leader Adolf Hitler’s request for a small, affordable passenger car to satisfy the transportation needs of the German people Hitler called the result the KdF (Kraft-durch-Freude)-Wagen(or “Strength-Through-Joy” car) after a Nazi-led movement ostensibly aimed at helping the working people of Germany; it would later be known by the name Porsche preferred: Volkswagen, or “people’s car.”
The first production-ready Kdf-Wagen debuted at the Berlin Motor Show in 1939; the international press soon dubbed it the “Beetle” for its distinctive rounded shape. During World War II, the factory in Kdf-stat (later renamed Wolfsburg) continued to make Beetles, though it was largely dedicated to production of war vehicles. Production was halted under threat of Allied bombing in August 1944 and did not resume until after the war, under British control. Though VW sales were initially slower in the United States compared with the rest of the world, by 1960 the Beetle was the top-selling import in America, thanks to an iconic ad campaign by the firm Doyle Dane Bernbach. In 1972, the Beetle surpassed the longstanding worldwide production record of 15 million vehicles, set by Ford Motor Company’s legendary Model T between 1908 and 1927.
In 1977, however, the Beetle, with its rear-mounted, air-cooled-engine, was banned in America for failing to meet safety and emission standards. Worldwide sales of the car shrank by the late 1970s and by 1988, the classic Beetle was sold only in Mexico. Due to increased competition from other manufacturers of inexpensive compact cars, and a Mexican decision to phase out two-door taxis, Volkswagen decided to discontinue production of the classic bug in 2003. The final count of 21,529,464, incidentally, did not include the original 600 cars built by the Nazis prior to World War II.
Wednesday, July 30, 2025
Volkswagen Ends Production Of The Nostalgic "Beetle"
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LIFE magazine ran two great ads for the Bug. One featuring different color body panels all from different model years, and the "They Said it couldn't be done" where they just could not fit 7-foot/1-inch Wilt Chambelain into a Beetle.
ReplyDeleteI have a copy of the multi-colored VW ad. I had to search for a while to find a decent copy. I want to have a VW post one day with quite a few unusual VW's I've found over the years. I'll put the ad in with the post when it happens. I never saw the Chamberlain ad.
DeleteBack in the early 80's (high school for me) my buddy had several old 60's model beetles from German production. They were all trashed and he had several just to keep one running. It was an unrealized dream of ours to sneak across to Mexico, buy two new ones straight off the line, sneak them back across and switch VIN tags with his junkers. Would have been great, but not to be.
ReplyDeleteThat would have been great ... a savvy VW car guy would know what you had done quickly ... but probably not very many cops.
DeleteI still have an original non recalled copy of National Lampoon with the Ted Kennedy ad. This was the only positive thing going for the beetle. I never tried to see if mine would float. After 9 months of keeping that pos running I could see how the Germans lost WWII. The most satan inspired engineering I ever had to contend with. It is likely British engineering is worse having rode Triumphs and Nortons
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