1982 Checker Taxicab
Gilmore Car Museum Display Vehicle
An American Icon. The 1982 Checker is the VERY last car off the assembly line.
The distinctive Checker Cabs - recognized around the world - were produced in Kalamazoo from 1923 to 1982 when the firm ceased car production and began supplying parts to the auto industry. Today the Checker name and its trademark checker board pattern seen on its cabs are universally identified with taxis.
The Checker Cab became an American icon and was hailed in every large city in the nation and beyond. "Billions and Billions Served," the famed McDonald's slogan, could have easily been applied to Checker Motors and the cabs it built. Checker Cabs moved millions of people each day in cities such as New York, Chicago, Pittsburg and Baltimore. In fact, the Tri-State Transportation Agency tracked an average of 223 million taxi fares annually - in New York City alone - between 1963 and 1977.
Checker Motors had a long, proud history and outlasted many other notable automotive makes. The company survived the Great Depression, WWII, and a change from auto production to parts manufacturing. It was the poor state of the auto industry and recent bankruptcy of General Motors, Checker's largest customer that forced the firm to close its doors for good in early July of last year.
In September of last year the Gilmore Car Museum established the Checker Archives and has already preserved several thousand blueprints, documents, and photos that tell the rich history of this American Icon.