1979 Dodge Diplomat: Last of the Boattails?

Thomas Klockau

Some of you may think I have strict, scheduled plans for my weekly column fodder. But I assure you nothing could be further from the truth. Sometimes I mean to write up a car I really love—like a friend’s gorgeous 1976 Continental Mark IV Givenchy Designer edition, seen last summer at the Geneva Concours d’Elegance. I still haven’t even gotten started! Even though Humberto was nice enough to let me sit in it and take my picture behind the wheel. Car people are some of the best people.

Now where was I? Oh yes. Well, I still haven’t written up that car yet, but I have found my ’76 Mark IV brochure and have made up some notes with original MSRPs and production figures. It’s been sitting on my kitchen table for at least a month.

1979 Dodge Diplomat headlight grille
Thomas Klockau

And then there are cars I see, and somehow, by some miracle, I manage to write up immediately. Today’s subject is a case in point. I spotted this pale yellow ’79 Diplomat coupe last Sunday as I was driving home after having dinner with my parents.

1979 Dodge Diplomat front three quarter
Thomas Klockau

I do so frequently because since my dad retired, he has gotten into cooking—and is really good at it. After cars, my favorite thing is food, so you can easily connect the dots. Anyway, I passed this little car lot in Moline and immediately zeroed in on a pastel yellow relic, in apparent showroom condition, out of the corner of my eye. Holy cow, a Diplomat! And now, the following Thursday evening, gin and tonic in hand, I’m writing it up!

1979 Dodge Diplomat badge
Thomas Klockau

As a child of the ’80s, I remember Diplomats well. In probably first grade, Officer Friendly visited my school and was driving a black and white circa 1985-86 Diplomat patrol car. And they were so common in 1980s movies as police cars and taxis. But the coupes are a different breed.

1979 Dodge Diplomat rear three quarter
Thomas Klockau

First of all, the coupe was only made through the 1981 model year, as was the wagon. Yes, there was a Diplomat wagon, but I never saw one as a kid, and even now, I’ve only seen one or two online. But the coupes like you see here were only made in this body for 1977-79.

1979 Dodge Diplomat interior
Thomas Klockau

The Diplomat essentially came about thanks to Chrysler Corporation wanting to get in on the “compact luxury” trend that started with the Cadillac Seville in 1976. And the result, the Chrysler LeBaron, introduced as a “1977 1/2”, was a clean, attractive design, “upside-down” headlamps notwithstanding.

1979 Dodge Diplomat interior rear seat
Thomas Klockau

So as you’d expect, a Dodge version was also offered, but with a different nose with “right side up” headlights. Coupe, sedan, and station wagon variants were all offered, just like the LeBaron.

1979 Dodge Diplomat grille emblem
Thomas Klockau

While I’m sure Chrysler wanted prospective buyers to think this was a brand-new car, their F-body was the basis for the new car—the same chassis that underpinned the Aspen and Volaré. But all the sheetmetal was new, and the cars were positioned much further up on the price/prestige scale.

1979 Dodge Diplomat rear
Thomas Klockau

And both the LeBaron and Diplomat coupes had a nifty neoclassical boattail look out back. While not as prominent as the over-the-top (and much loved!) 1971-73 Buick Riviera, they still caught one’s notice. And looked great!

1979 Dodge Diplomat taillight
Thomas Klockau

The initial 1977 1/2 Diplomats came only as a coupe and a sedan, in base trim or upscale Medallion versions. Riding a 112.7″ wheelbase, prices ranged from $4,943 for a base coupe to $5,471 for a Medallion sedan.

1979 Dodge Diplomat interior rear seat
Thomas Klockau

But in 1978 the station wagon was added as well, and now there were three trim levels: base ‘S’, the midlevel Diplomat (simply labeled ‘Diplomat’), and the upscale Medallions.

1979 Dodge Diplomat headlight deatil
Thomas Klockau

The wagon, at $5,538 was technically the midlevel model but leather and all sorts of other goodies could be ordered on them. Only 11,226 wagons were built that year, explaining why I’ve never seen one.

1979 Dodge Diplomat interior front seat
Thomas Klockau

Of course, all of this was going on while Chrysler was on the rocks, so to speak. A lot of new car buyers were worried about Chrysler going the way of Studebaker and Hudson, and sales suffered accordingly.

1979 Dodge Diplomat front
Thomas Klockau

1979 Diplomats returned with revised grille and taillamps as the most noticeable changes. The trim levels were shuffled again, with base, mid-level Salon, and the Medallion remaining top Diplomat.

1979 Dodge Diplomat rear three quarter
Thomas Klockau

Per the brochure I found online (I have the ’78 catalog, but sadly no ’79 in “The Vault” at home), it appears today’s subject is a Salon coupe. Salon two-doors based at $5,482; 6,849 were built. In addition, 8,733 base ’79 Diplomat coupes and 6,637 Medallion coupes were built.

1979 Dodge Diplomat ad
1979 Diplomat Station Wagon. Cushy leather!Chrysler

Which explains why this is the first one I’ve seen in thirty years or more, other than a black over red LeBaron coupe at a show in Geneseo circa 2012.

1979 Dodge Diplomat front three quarter
Thomas Klockau

And this car was in remarkable condition. As I mentioned, I saw this car on a Sunday. On Monday afternoon, I was driving home from work and suddenly thought, “The Diplomat! I must get pictures of it! I need to go right now in case I forget and it’s gone the next time I drive by!”

1979 Dodge Diplomat front three quarter
Thomas Klockau

Fortunately, it was still there. The lot was still open, judging from the brightly lit sign in the window, and the door to the office was ajar, but the whole time I was taking pictures and gawking at it, no one came out.

1979 Dodge Diplomat rear end side high angle
Thomas Klockau

So I can’t tell you anything about the car’s history, or even the asking price. But it was remarkably nice, with only a couple of minor dings to detract. It even still had the original pinstripes and “Unleaded Fuel Only” sticker above the gas door!

1979 Dodge Diplomat pillar window
Thomas Klockau

It was really sharp, and the beige plush seats looked so comfy. Hope it goes to a good home!

1979 Dodge Diplomat front three quarter low angle
Thomas Klockau

As for the Diplomat itself, it was redesigned for 1980 with a more boxy theme. The wagon and coupe continued, but the coupe lost the nifty subtle boattail rear deck treatment for a squared-off trunk lid with long, rectangular taillamps, just like the sedan.

1979 Dodge Diplomat headlight side detail
Thomas Klockau

Both wagon and coupe were gone starting in ’82, but the boxy four-door sedan would endure as a popular choice for local constabularies and taxi companies all the way through the 1989 model year—when final-year models even got a driver’s side airbag! Its flossier sibling, the Chrysler Fifth Avenue, lasted through ’89 as well.

1979 Dodge Diplomat rear three quarter
Thomas Klockau

And nothing really replaced it until the Charger and 300 came out in 2005. A case could be made for the LH front-wheel drive cars of 1993 but they didn’t take hold as police cars, unlike the ’05-23 Chargers.

1968 Dodge Diplomat SE ad
1988 Dodge Diplomat SEChrysler

A plush SE sedan was also available, complete with LeBaron/Fifth Avenue “upside down” headlights, all the way to the end. It was a good run, by all accounts.

1979 Dodge Diplomat grille detail
Thomas Klockau
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Comments

    Great find! What a unicorn! Rare does not equal valuable though.

    Back when I was 16 and was looking for a cheap car, a friend who worked for a small police department told me they were auctioning off old patrol cars. I test drove a Diplomat – amazingly slow – WITH the police package! I lost the bid but it was probably a blessing in disguise.

    I had a ’78 in the 80’s, the lean-burn 318 was so slow it felt like a diesel. But the interior was very comfy, and the handling was great.
    By the way, lean-burn did not translate into good MPG.

    The Akron Police used the Diplomate. The traffic cars were found unable to catch anyone. People would run and leave them.

    So they took the older Nova Traffic cars with the F41 suspensions and 350 engines and rebuilt them with new engines and suspension. They made it last till they got new Caprice patrol cars.

    As for the boat tail here is I squint my eyes hard enough and use some imagination I can almost make out the outline.

    Wife grandmother had one of these. They pretty much gave it away as no one would buy it.

    I had a 79 Lebaron medallion. Loved that thing. Only thing missing was the 360 and t top. But did have a moon roof

    We had a 79 Lebaron donated to our auto shop class. It fell off a train in a derailment. It had no miles. It still ran. We had one car like it come in that got horrible MPG and so we swapped computers. It got better MPG. We then tried to get the same computer for the teachers car and found 15 different computers.

    I think the school let the good computer go to the teachers car.

    The coupes are excellent candidates for restomodding: easy parts exchange and availability, and improving the stance works well with the design. Once all the Darts, Dusters, and Valiants are gone, perhaps these will be next.

    I still would have had to find out what they were asking for it. Could have made it irresistible! Or maybe that’s what you were afraid of, lol

    Growing up, my parents had one of the 78 (which I thought was 77) Diplomat wagons! Nice looking, but was garbage. More in the shop than out of the shop. As others said, it was slow, really slow. My parents kept it until 82 when it was traded off on an 82 LaSabre Wagon. And that was the last Chrysler product my parents ever owned.

    I haven’t seen one in the wild since I was a kid. They did not last long in Chicagoland. Looks slightly like generic GM styling of the day at the front.

    We had a 78 LeBaron. 318 lean burn was a dog, should have bought the 360. Well a new cam, some head work, edelbrock and a 4 barrel woke it up, swapped the 904 for a 727. Did run a lot better. It was fun working on it, but with 20/20 hindsight going on 50 years later, should have just swapped the whole thing for a 360 from a junky. We did love that car, dark gray metallic with a landau top, classy gray interior and the best AC and heat I’ve every had in any car I’ve ever owned. Wish I would have kept it.

    Had a ’79 Diplomat coupe many years ago. LeanBurn 318 4bbl, lockup converter, and really tall 2.45 gear…which made for a really nice highway/interstate car, but the 0-60 took forever. IIRC, 18 MPG at about 70. In spite of the battering-ram bumpers, they look pretty good with bigger wheels & tires. Sometimes people would ask if it was a Monte Carlo.

    I had a 78 Diplomat in dove gray with a silver gray vinyl top. To date, I think it is the most luxurious looking and feeling vehicle I have owned. Unfortunately, Minnesota road salt did the body in after 8 or 9 years.

    Great article Thomas, you appreciate the same era cars as I do,

    I have a totally original ” survivor” 1976 Chev Monte Carlo with 34,000 miles, unmarked, no rust, pretty much like new

    A very rare find in Sydney Australia and still in left hand drive – we can import and drive left hand drive vehicles here as long as they’re 30 years old or more,

    anyhow, looking forward to your next article, Greg S, Sydney Australia

    I never found these to be all that attractive; the Dodge Magnum, for example, was better-looking. I think it takes a good imagination to see a boattail here!

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