Automotive pioneer Gerald C. Meyers, former CEO of American Motors, dies at 94

Gerald C. Meyers, who went from top product engineer to CEO at American Motors Corp. during an era that produced the AMC Pacer and Gremlin vehicles, died on June 19.

Meyers, 94, died of natural causes at his home in West Bloomfield, according to his family.

The son of a successful immigrant tailor from Poland, Meyers worked hard to get to the top of the automotive industry and his career included stints at Ford Motor Co. and Chrysler Corp., his daughter Susan Meyers told the Detroit Free Press.

He graduated from Bennett High School in Buffalo, New York, in 1945 and initially attended Canisius College in his hometown. He went on to Carnegie Tech, now Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh, to captain the football team and earn a bachelor of science degree in engineering. He dug ditches on road crews during the summer to earn money and stay in shape for football. He worked briefly at Ford and served in the U.S. Air Force in Greenland during the Korean conflict.

Meyers would return to earn a master’s degree in business, magna cum laude, at Carnegie Tech, before heading to Detroit to work at Chrysler. Early roles included running a stamping factory in Cleveland. He married Barbara Jacob in Detroit in 1958. Shortly after, Chrysler sent the couple to Geneva, Switzerland. That’s where their daughter Susan was born. The family would later make a home in Huntington Woods.

The finale of Gerald Meyers’ career trajectory would happen at AMC:

  • Director of purchasing
  • Director of manufacturing
  • Vice president of product engineering
  • Executive vice president
  • Chief operating officer
  • President and chief executive officer in 1977

At age 49, he was the youngest CEO in the industry, according to “Storied independent automakers: Nash, Hudson and American Motors,” by Charles Hyde.

Meyers was also Jewish, a fact noted and celebrated by fellow Jews in Detroit, his daughter noted.