The Nash Metropolitan is a car that was sold, initially, only in the United States and Canada, from 1954–1962.
It conforms to two classes of vehicle: economy car and subcompact car. In today’s terminology the Metropolitan is a “subcompact”, but this category had not yet come into use when the car was made. At that time, it was variously categorized, for example as a "small automobile" as well as an "economy car".
The Metropolitan was also sold as a Hudson when Nash and Hudson merged in 1954 to form the American Motors Corporation (AMC), and later as a standalone marque during the Rambler years, as well as in the United Kingdom and other markets.
Read more about Nash Metropolitan: Design, First Reviews, Production For Non-US Markets, Epilogue, Police Market, Astra-Gnome, Metropolitan Club (AMC), Collectibility, Notable Owners
Famous quotes containing the words nash and/or metropolitan:
“Indoors or out, no one relaxes
In March, that month of wind and taxes,
The wind will presently disappear,
The taxes last us all the year.”
—Ogden Nash (19021971)
“In metropolitan cases, the love of the most single-eyed lover, almost invariably, is nothing more than the ultimate settling of innumerable wandering glances upon some one specific object.”
—Herman Melville (18191891)