What is the Plymouth Emblem called ?

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I don't know it's official name but I believe it's a depiction of a rocket. Chrysler worked on a bunch of NASA contracts in the early space program.
 
from allpar



The rocket logo, as seen on a Valiant, is shown below; it made sense given Chrysler’s building of large sections of the Moon rockets
rocket.jpg
 
I never heard dodge called fratzog . what the hell is that. All I ever heard Plymouth called was mayflower and that was because of the ship on the hood .
 
Yes, it was called the rocket. I call it the rocket in a coffin. Good luck finding a uality digital image of one. Fratzogs are everywhere. you cant find a rocket ANYWHERE
 
I never really thought about it before - I guess the red on the bottom could symbolize flames coming out of the rocket?

As for the Mayflower - Plymouth did use this, but to the best of my recollection it stopped using the ship sometime in the late 50's, probably replaced by the rocket for the space race years.
 

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http://www.historicvehicle.org/News...&utm_medium=Email&utm_campaign=HVA Newsletter

The Mayflower ship on the radiator of the first Plymouth automobiles may have suggested the car company got its name from the rock of the pilgrims. But according to The Plymouth Bulletin editor Lanny Knutson, if it weren’t for a famous brand of binder twine, there would never have been a car named Plymouth.



In 1926, Walter Chrysler was looking for the perfect name for his bold new automobile designed as a low-priced and reliable alternative in a market dominated by Ford and Chevrolet. Chrysler wanted a name people would recognize instantly. But his executives were stumped until Joe Frazer (then an up-and-coming Chrysler employee who would, in 1939, become president of Willys-Overland) suggested the name “Plymouth,” a then famous brand of twine known to every farmer in America.



The first Plymouth eventually debuted in 1928, a year before the start of The Great Depression. According to Knutson, Chrysler executives who two years prior saw the name as too “puritanical” soon saw the wisdom of giving their new car a moniker that rung so many positive bells in the minds of American’s car buying public.





Most Americans still had some connection to farming and, as Chrysler had reasoned, would find an easy and comfortable familiarity with a name they saw nearly every day. At the same time economically strapped Americans were struggling to survive an uncertain financial future, Plymouth also brought to mind positive connotations of “endurance and strength, ruggedness and freedom from limitations” that so typified the first American colonists.
 
Would you mind sending it to me so I can play with it..you have my e-mail addy...thanks..
 
I started calling it Plyzog, after I found out Dodge’s emblem was called Fratzog
Make good sense too me at least!
 
This is actually supposed to be a depiction of the Mayflower ship looking straight-on its bow. Plymouth never stopped using the ship motif.

rocket.jpg
 
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