Junkyard Find: 1977 Chrysler New Yorker Brougham Hardtop Sedan

Murilee Martin
by Murilee Martin
The New Yorker name goes way back for Chrysler, running from the 1940 model year all the way through a series of K-car- and Eagle Premier-based front-drivers in the 1980s and 1990s. To me, though, the greatest of the Chrysler New Yorkers were the ones built on the majestic C-Body unibody platform for the 1965 through 1978 model years, and I have the most affection for the “we don’t care about oil prices” cars of the Middle Malaise Era.Here’s a (nearly) two-and-a-half-ton ’77 Brougham hardtop sedan, which met its doom in a Denver self-service yard last fall.
All 1977 New Yorkers were Broughams, because 1977 was the most Broughamic of times. The standard New Yorker interior included crushed-velour bench seats, but the original purchaser of this fine machine paid extra for the pillow-top leather split bench option.
My impossible-listening band of the late 1980s, Murilee Arraiac (yes, there’s a connection between the band name and my pen name) recorded several songs as homages to full-sized Chryslers. The best-known of those was Chrysler Imperial (a Mighty Pleasant Sound), which got some airplay on Japanese college radio in 1989, but we also recorded one entitled Chrysler Town & Country and one called Chrysler New Yorker. In honor of today’s Junkyard Find, I digitized the latter song from its cassette master and put it up on YouTube just yesterday. Enjoy.
Strangely, while this car came from the factory with a generous helping of luxury options, the audio “system” here is the cheap AM-only two-speaker radio. That still cost you $99 back then (about $437 in 2020 dollars), because this car didn’t come with any sort of radio as standard equipment. If you wanted the top-end AM/FM radio with 8-track — just the thing for listening to New Yorker-appropriate tunes — you’d have had to shell out a staggering $349 ($1,540 today) for it.
It does, however, have the Auto-Temp II HVAC option.
Because I’m a real gone cat, I had to buy this lovely chronometer for my car-clock collection. It makes some noise but still tells reasonably accurate time.
Power numbers from 1977 seem depressing today, and the 440-cubic-inch (7.2-liter) V8 in this car had a rating of just 195 horsepower to haul all 4,739 pounds of New Yorker steel. The torque figure for this engine was a respectable 320 lb-ft, however, so off-the-line acceleration was acceptable.
Jack Jones sang it best:Gleaming luxury.All a car can be.And what’s also niceis that soft New Yorker price.
Of course, the ’73 New Yorker was more or less the same thing as the Apollo Command Module, but expectations had diminished by 1977.You’ll find links to nearly 1,900 additional Junkyard Finds (including 55 Chryslers) at the Junkyard Home of the Murilee Martin Lifestyle Brand™.
Murilee Martin
Murilee Martin

Murilee Martin is the pen name of Phil Greden, a writer who has lived in Minnesota, California, Georgia and (now) Colorado. He has toiled at copywriting, technical writing, junkmail writing, fiction writing and now automotive writing. He has owned many terrible vehicles and some good ones. He spends a great deal of time in self-service junkyards. These days, he writes for publications including Autoweek, Autoblog, Hagerty, The Truth About Cars and Capital One.

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  • SCE to AUX All that lift makes for an easy rollover of your $70k truck.
  • SCE to AUX My son cross-shopped the RAV4 and Model Y, then bought the Y. To their surprise, they hated the RAV4.
  • SCE to AUX I'm already driving the cheap EV (19 Ioniq EV).$30k MSRP in late 2018, $23k after subsidy at lease (no tax hassle)$549/year insurance$40 in electricity to drive 1000 miles/month66k miles, no range lossAffordable 16" tiresVirtually no maintenance expensesHyundai (for example) has dramatically cut prices on their EVs, so you can get a 361-mile Ioniq 6 in the high 30s right now.But ask me if I'd go to the Subaru brand if one was affordable, and the answer is no.
  • David Murilee Martin, These Toyota Vans were absolute garbage. As the labor even basic service cost 400% as much as servicing a VW Vanagon or American minivan. A skilled Toyota tech would take about 2.5 hours just to change the air cleaner. Also they also broke often, as they overheated and warped the engine and boiled the automatic transmission...
  • Marcr My wife and I mostly work from home (or use public transit), the kid is grown, and we no longer do road trips of more than 150 miles or so. Our one car mostly gets used for local errands and the occasional airport pickup. The first non-Tesla, non-Mini, non-Fiat, non-Kia/Hyundai, non-GM (I do have my biases) small fun-to-drive hatchback EV with 200+ mile range, instrument display behind the wheel where it belongs and actual knobs for oft-used functions for under $35K will get our money. What we really want is a proper 21st century equivalent of the original Honda Civic. The Volvo EX30 is close and may end up being the compromise choice.
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