According to You: The Best AMC to Celebrate the Brand’s 70th Anniversary

AMC

In May of 1954, a new car maker emerged with the blessings of both Hudson and Nash-Kelvinator stockholders. It was called the American Motors Corporation (AMC), and it created iconic vehicles that became beloved by legions of customers and fans. While AMC’s fire was officially extinguished in 1990 via merger with Chrysler, we recently asked members of the Hagerty Community about the perfect AMC vehicle to celebrate the company’s founding, a full 70 years ago as of 2024.

The answers did not disappoint, but before we get to their suggestions, let’s dive into the responses to my suggestion, which fell shockingly flat with the community: the Jeep brand.

Jeepers Creepers

Wieck

@hyperv6: The Jeep is not really AMC. Jeep was really a Willys, not originally an AMC. Then it was a Chrysler and now Stellantis. Jeep is a brand of its own and never really represented the true AMC line. To use Jeep is like someone getting credit for a paper someone else wrote.

@J. Michael: Agree with @hyperv6 completely. The AMX is my pick, and Jeep ain’t AMC.

@Mike: Every company that has ever owned Jeep has went out of business. It will happen again—they’ve overpriced everything. Javelin and AMX represent the brand! Listen to a Wisconsin guy who repaired many a Hornet and Matador owned by the college and state in my work-study job at UW-Eau Claire in the late ’70s. Those cars were not the ideal, but they ran forever.

Jeepers Keepers?

Southland AMC Jeep dealer, 1970s.Courtesy The Last Independent Automaker/AMC

@Dave: I had 2 “AMC” Jeeps, an ’81 CJ5 and an ’86 Cherokee Pioneer. Both were awesome vehicles.

@Paul: I have an 1983 Jeep Renegade. Mechanically a great 4×4, but on a quiet night you can hear it rusting away!

@DUB6: I’m a long-time Jeep guy, but honestly, I never owned one made by AMC. However, to be fair, when AMC bought Jeep, I think they saved that brand—or at least they kept it alive until Chrysler came along with the money.

Kaiser was losing ground drastically and it quite possibly could have killed Jeep had it stayed there. Of course, it could be argued that the Jeep purchase saved AMC. Either way, it was a big deal at the time, and quite controversial. I distinctly remember the Jeep crowd I hung with being all up-in-arms. (“What? Rambler is gonna build Jeeps?”) I’m giving some credit to American Motors for Jeep, but it’s perhaps not the “best” AMC to celebrate.

AMC AMX

AMC

@DUB6: If I just sit here and think, “What AMC vehicle made a big impression on me and that I think of as being connected to the brand,” I honestly come up with the AMX—followed CLOSELY by the Pacer! I reject the suggestion that the Pacer was ugly: It was a bit weird, yes, but it had some wonderfully advanced ideas designed into it. I only put it behind the AMX because back in the day, I was a performance-car guy.

@Loving AMC: The two-seat AMX, hands down.

@Joenumeruno: The AMX and Javelin were my favorites, but the American convertible and Ambassador with seats reclinable into beds (and with “Instant Overtake”) should get votes, too.

@Stuart: For me, hands down the AMX.

@Northern Rambler: 1972–73 Javelin AMX—401-cubic-inch, four-speed Hurst factory shifter, Fresh Plum metallic paint, and the Pierre Cardin interior. This low-production model boldly just screamed the ’70s in the waning days of the muscle-car era, and was the last of a limited production series of powerful and bold designs by AMC as it tried to compete with the Big Three. It showed AMC’s design versatility, and it was perhaps the most radical of the cars that they produced as alternatives to the more conservative—and economical—production cars that they had become known for.

@hyperv6: I would choose the AMX. This was the best car they ever did, and it represents AMC.

@Billy: For me it’s a toss-up between the Javelin and the AMX. My first car was an AM (American Motors before the C) Ambassador: two-door with a 343 four-barrel. It could fly! Not the prettiest, had a few girls turn me down because of the car. 

“You’re taking me out in that?”

Their loss. I wish I had that Ambassador back!

The Last Nashes

Nash/AMC

@keeton: No one is mentioning the early-mid ’50s Nash line, where the styling was done by Pininfarina. From 1954, you could have the Weather Eye air conditioning, which was the first modern in-dash integrated system (and not one of those clunky trunk-mounted systems everyone else was using).

The 1956 Ambassador could be had with the Packard V-8 and Ultramatic. These were quite distinctive in their day, but if you liked the Pacer, you would love these!

AMC Rebel + The Machine

AMC

@Jim: The Rebel Machine. I had one, and it was a true unicorn. And it was very rarely beaten in a street race, much to the chagrin of all the Big Three muscle-car drivers.

@Glenn: I never had one but was going to nominate it. This is a great-looking car with really clean lines and it had the performance to match. I would love to have one but these things are out of my reach.

AMC Javelin

AMC

@Cavedave: I owned a 1969 390 Javelin. I surprised a lot of GTOs, Mustangs, Cameras, and Chevelles. The car was very quick for its size and engine. I put my guardian angel through some real scares in there.

@Tom: My brother had a ’68 Javelin automatic with the 343 four-barrel. He bought a ’69 with a four-speed for $200 and put the manual tranny into the ’68 in our parent’s driveway. Man, that car flew!

@AS29: I have loved AMC since I was a little kid. Growing up and still living in Wisconsin I always felt more of a connection to the brand. I would go to car shows with my brother and dad and would always point out the AMC vehicles. My dad (a diehard Chevy guy) would always say I was crazy. He would say, “They made refrigerators!” I own a 69 AMX and it’s my one of my dream cars and I absolutely love it.

Since owning it I have converted my brother, who now owns a ’70 Javelin, and my dad, Mr. Chevy, wants a Rambler Rouge! Took them a while to come around! To answer the question the true unicorn and IMO the best AMC was the Javelin Trans Am.

AMC Rambler

AMC

Ronnie Schreiber: The 1961 Rambler, or any of the compact Ramblers, for the matter. They kept AMC alive long enough to make the Javelin, AMX, Rebel Machine, and other cars mentioned above.

AMC

@TeutonicScot: Both the Rebel Machine and the AMX would have to be at the front of this conversation, not to mention the SC/Rambler, but I think you can go back even further and mention the original 1957 Rebel and/or the 1955 Rambler as both being great examples of what AMC was capable of on an always tight budget. The Rebel was one of, if not the first, American car with a large-block V-8 in a mid-size car which would become the thing to do seven to 10 years later for everyone else, it was capable of 0–60 speeds in under 8 seconds which would be considered quick even 30 years later.

Arguments can be made that it was the first “muscle car” and included many features considered “de rigueur” for later performance cars.

AMC Pacer

AMC

@snailish: Pacer. Is this just real life? Is this just fantasy???

AMC Spirit

AMC

@Jake: I bought a brand-new AMC Spirit in 1980. I worked at Ford. For the same price I could have bought a Pinto—no thank you! The Spirit was a far better car. If AMC was still around, I would not hesitate to buy another one.

AMC Gremlin

AMC Levis Gremlin ad
Flickr/Alden Jewell

@Michael: I grew up an AMC kid in Kenosha County. MydDad worked there from 1958 to 1988. My vote is for the Gremlin, there was nothing like it. (I’d also like to add the entire 1967 line. Redesigned cars with new V-8 engines.)

AMX/2 and AMX/3

@Don: Best by far was the AMX/3, a mid-engine Italian design that puts all others to shame. I have actually drove #1 many times—it was like driving a Ferrari!

@Jim: Rather than dwell on the models that fill their failed portfolio, while acknowledging the continued success of Jeep, I agree with Don and cast my vote for the lovely AMX III of 1970. A genuinely interesting beauty that could have been oh-so-special from the little guys in Kenosha. Alas, it was not to be.

@Woodrow: Don and Jim were close, but for my money it’s the AMX/2 of 1969. 

***

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Comments

    Back in the 70s I picked up a 68 AMX for a song because it was a 290 and it was my daily driver for the next 3 years. Really had a ball with that little 290 and wish I still owend it

    Great piece.
    I was a kid when dad bought a new ’63 Classic 770 V-8 four door. He ordered it from a category when we were stationed in Japan. It was waiting for us at his new base in Missouri.
    In dash AC with huge vents. Good seats. Big enough to take all six of us on our annual drive from Kansas City to western Wisconsin.
    We kept it for 10 years, first as the family cat, then the “second” car, finally kids school/college car.
    I hated to see it go. When last seen, it was running and rust free. Aside from chalky paint, it was in very good shape, even the interior wore very well.
    In ’65, based on our luck with the ’63, dad got a another Classic 770.
    It was, sadly, a dog. Went through two or three transmissions.
    Dad traded it to his childhood friend, the Ford dealer in a small western Wisconsin town. He got a ’69 LTD 4 door hardtop, with the 390. Great car.

    The ’65 was sold to a local rural mail carrier. It did not work out well…

    So, that’s my AMC history.
    Aside from having a really “square” Family car when they were singing about GTOs on the radio, I remember them fondly.

    Peak: AMX/3. I had the Redline Hot Wheels version as a kid-until my cousin stole it.
    Peak production: 68-70 AMX
    What I want in my garage: Hornet X hatchback, 360/4 speed; Gremlin 304/4 speed. Or a Concord with a hot 401/4 speed transplant…complete with Malaise-era velour and opera windows!
    Dick Teague may be gone but his artistry lives on.

    The Hornet platform was the jumping off point for AMC’s most popular cars of the 70s and 80s: Hornet, Gremlin/Spirit hatch and “sedan”, Sportabout wagon, hatchback, Eagle/SX4, Concord.

    It was a versatile, cost-effective, efficiently packaged, long-lived platform. Very symbolic of AMC’s original purpose.

    That could never be said about the Pacer or Matador 2 door dead ends they blew money on.

    How does it not even get a mention?

    Gremlin with the 304 V8.

    Need something older? The “weird fish” Marlin, in either body style.

    My first real car that I bought with my own money was a 70 javelin with a 304 pistol grip automatic. I love that car. It ran rough at first, but New fresh set of plugs cured the problem. As I was driving home from working on it at my buddies farm, a 1974 Fleetwood Brougham pulled out in front of me and the car hit it right in the business end of the 500 cubic inch engine. Needless to say it was totaled. I was totally bummed. I loved that car. However, the insurance settlement paid for college, But nothing will ever replace that car.

    We were a two Rambler family in the 70’s. My brother had a ’63 sedan and I had a ’64 station wagon which was handed down from my mother. As a high school kid in the 70’s I hated that car. It smoked like crazy until I realized that if I just stopped filling up the oil it would stop smoking. That was the end of that car. I replaced it with a 1968 Camaro (bought for $600 in 1977) that much better suited my sensibilities. Today I have a clock on the wall that is made from the hubcap of a ’64 Rambler to remind me of my first car which I appreciate much more now than I ever did back then.

    My pick for best “pure” AMC is easy. AMX, then Javelin. I actually like the lines of the later Javelin a bit better, but the pure 2-seater AMX is their best ever.

    That said, the best thing AMC really did IMO was elevate and refine the Jeep line without sacrificing off-readability. The XJ Cherokee was a fully AMC design, and it created the compact SUV niche (and if you ask me and a lot of other people, is still to this day the best one ever made). Plus they kept and updated the full-size Jeep line (the original Cherokee, Wagoneer, and Gladiator/J-series pickups). The later Wagoneers created the luxury SUV, of which the Escalade is a sad, pale imitation. Plus they evolved the CJ5 into the CJ7, then the YJ Wrangler. And a whole lot of that DNA still lives on in the Chrysler/ Stellantis Jeeps today.

    I disagree that Jeep isn’t a solid representation of AMC. Almost All the Jeeps had AMC engines from 71′ on. Additionally, AMC introduced the Cherokee XJ/MJ. A bazillion were sold and even after Chrysler bought AMC, they had Jeep based engines all the way until 2001. I’ve had many Cherokees and still have 3 Gremlins, which is my personal favorite AMC .

    I bought a 68 AMX from a drag racer here in Ontario, Canada. With him doing whatever to the engine changing the rear ratio, removing some items as the bumpers windshield washer system etc, it’s best time was a 10.11 quarter mile @134.77. I never raced it at the track but went through three left axles over a three year period until I welded the outside of the hub nut and spindle. I was in the process of using a Camaro rear end setup until I had to sell it because of moving out west, which I regretted doing since I came back less than two years later due to lack of jobs in my field because of the 1981 oil crisis. The two guys I sold it to trashed it. I always wished that I had put in strorage instead.

    My dad was a Nash/Rambler man. He had a 1951 Ambassador (barely remember that one), 1953 Nash Statesman, and a 1957 Cross Country station wagon. I learned to drive in a 1962 Classic 400 with push button automatic. I think the perfect AMC to celebrate is the 1967 Rebel SST – beautiful car.

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