Happy Juneteenth! Also, Look At This Gleefully Bonkers Truck Concept: Cold Start
I actually have mentioned Thompson before, on Juneteenth of 2022, when I showed you his amazing, rear-engined amphibious car called The Warrior, currently in the collection of The Henry Ford Museum. This time I want to show you a few of the drawings he did while working at Ford. McKinley was a vanguard in many ways; he was the first Black student to attend Art Center College of Design, still one of the premiere automotive design schools in the world, and he was also the first Black designer to work at Ford, which, at the time he was hired in the 1950s, also made him the first Black person to be a designer for a major American carmaker.
As someone who has a huge soft spot for cabover truck designs, I was immediately taken by that concept truck up there; I really like the proportions, and how the cab looks like a separate little pod plopped onto the long, low main body of that truck. There’s hints of the Econoline pickup that would come later in there, but this is a far more exuberant and wild expression of that idea.
Thompson was also on the team that designed the Bronco, and these early Bronco sketches are pretty remarkable, too:
You can see what would become the Bronco here even in these early sketches; tall, simple, rugged, able to be stripped down to the very basics like the top sketches, or sporting a more refined look with a hardtop below. I especially like the angled B-pillar in that hardtop, too.
Also, look how high they considered mounting that spare tire inside the body! That seems like such an odd choice, when compared to just mounting it on the rear? But I suppose lots of off-roaders, like Jeep, did it that way.

