Bayliff Packard

James Shao

PCS Life Member
Saw post over on the Packard Automobile Classics Facebook page and received permission from the original poster to repost here:

Courtesy: Peter Crisitello

Bayliff Coach Corporation, 1979-1992; Lima, Ohio _________ C. Budd Bayliff, was a huge Packard enthusiast who purchased the rights to the Packard name and trademarks in 1978 and soon introduced a line of Packard Custom Sedan and Coupe replicars based on late-model GM passenger cars at his 2100 Harding Highway shop in Lima, Ohio. His replicars ranged from simple cosmetic changes to elaborate body modifications such as new front and rear body structures with early-1930s style clamshell front fenders with side-mounts and a separate trunk. The front ends of some of Bayliff's modern Packard look remarkably like those found on the 1970 Stutzes and are often mistaken for them at car shows. A long-wheelbase Bayliff Packard was built for professional boxer Ernie Holmes in the early 1980s.

Bayliff is known to have built 4 hearses, and had a hand in another one, which was the prototype 1983 front-wheel-drive Miller-Meteor Eldorado built by Jack Hardesty. Another one of the hearses was a service car conversion of a Suburban for a funeral home in Lima while the third was a short wheelbase Cadillac hearse built for his brother in Spencerville, Ohio using a "theft recovery" purchased from an insurance company.

In the mid 1980s, the Long & Folk funeral homes of Wapakoneta and St. Marys, Ohio, had worn out a pair of 1981 Superior combination coaches they had been using for non-emergency medical transfers and funeral service. The 1981 Superiors were among the last combination coaches offered by any professional car manufacturer and John Long of Long & Folk visited just about every coachbuilder in North America trying to find new ones.

Coming from a family of funeral directors, Bud Bayliff was a natural choice to handle the commission, and his shop's close proximity to the Long & Folk funeral homes allowed for close collaboration between Long and Bayliff.

Bayliff had recently helped finished Jack Hardesty's fwd Miller-Meteor prototype and offered to build a similar vehicle for the Longs. After consulting with his clients, Bayliff chose the Buick Riviera as a donor-vehicle because of its size, strong V8 engine and automatic leveling rear suspension.

Because of the expense involved in building these cars and the fact that going from Cadillac to Buick chassis would have meant a step down in prestige, it was decided to convert the coaches to Bayliff Packard. In the conversion process, the cars would have lost their Buick Riviera identity at the rear anyway, and Bayliff was already building Packard from Rivieras, so the conversion was a natural.

Construction began in 1986 and the first one was completed in 1987, the second in 1988. Even though they were complete a few years after their titles indicate, both cars are registered as 1985 Rivieras.

The two Rivieras were cut, stretched 46 inches and converted into five-door pillared hardtop landaus. The rear side doors are Riviera coupe doors, while the front doors are re-skinned Cadillac Seville units. Roof construction is all steel. A pair of 1973 Superior Cadillac combination coaches were cannibalized for components such as rear loading doors, attendant jump seats and miscellaneous hardware.

Long & Folk's distinctive Bayliff Packard funeral coaches were finished in black with black vinyl tops and gray vinyl interiors. Rear compartments feature dual attendant seats and individually reversible rollers. The division partition houses the rear air conditioner, spare tire and storage compartments.

One of the many problems encountered in the project was the taillights. Originally outfitted with large, round taillights in the rear doors and auxiliary taillights mounted beneath the rear bumper, Long and Folkes eventually replaced them with units from a 1985 Cadillac Eldorado.
Only two Bayliff Packard funeral coaches were constructed, however production of Bayliff's other Packard continued into the late 1980s. In 1992 C. Bud Bayliff sold the Packard name and trademark to Canadian millionaire Roy Gullickson for an estimated $50,000. By 1996 Gullickson had developed his own full-size model for a modern Packard, inspired by the 1941 Packard Clipper sedan. Over the next two years he and five engineers and technicians (plus a stylist from the original company) pounded out a handcrafted working prototype at a cost of $800,000.

Gullickson's all-aluminum Packard is equipped with all-wheel drive, disk brakes and a massive V-12 from Ryan Falconer Industries that heaves out 440hp. With dimensions similar to those of a Cadillac DeVille, the new Packard looks enormous but weighs only 3,748 pounds. Gullickson claims it can get from 0-60 in 4.8 seconds and will be priced at $160,000.

Although he claims to have orders for 70 cars, Gullickson has yet to raise the $10 million needed to build his first batch of 10 to 12 cars, priced at $160,000 apiece. And he's managed to alienate himself from a major portion of his potential customers by sending cease-and-desist letters to anyone using the Packard logo on their website or parts business.
 
The two Bayliff Packard funeral coaches are owned by PCS Member Patrick Martin, and are well known to our membership. They are unique to say the least.

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Patrick does own two Bayliff coaches, but only one of them is a Packard. My other one is the short-wheelbase Cadillac built for his funeral director brother. The former Jim Tighe car was sold by Jim to a Detroit funeral home, and it took me a couple years of searching for it before I found in Detroit. The funeral director and I even got together one time so I have photos of the two Packards together. He and I stayed in contact for awhile after that, but then I stopped hearing from him. I have since learned that he fell into legal troubles that resulted in his assets being sold off and him pretty much going into hiding, so the former Tighe car has once again gone missing.

Here is a photo of the other Bayliff in my collection, built from a 1981 Cadillac Sedan de Ville in 1984, so it was trimmed out as being a 1984 model, and then it was updated in 1991.
 

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I've been trying to figure out what was in Patrick's profile pic and when I saw another picture in the Facebook thread, my question was answered. I wasn't sure how much of the history was known so I thought it might be of some interest.
 
To me, often these types of small number or one-off specialty conversions look cheap to me. The fact it basically looks like a regular passenger car with the same window lines cut and made into a half a** pro car. The sloping roof lines of the regular windows (and not commercial glass lines) often make for hideous conversations, even on the Rolls Royce conversion, but this is one exception to that rule.

I don't know what it is but this car although normally the rear passenger windows sloping downwards would look cheap, they were able to pull it off and this car looks classy. It has refined lines and moldings and does look first class.

Very nice car and the first time I have seen it. I'm impressed! :thumbsup:

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this one is a standard wheel base. but it could have been stretched also. it is standard glass to. so tell me why if he could do it and pull it off why can't accubuilt? this car is done the same way comet did there's in the 50. center section and roof removed and a new one put in it's place with lines that follow the car. what more do you need?
 
this one is a standard wheel base. but it could have been stretched also. it is standard glass to. so tell me why if he could do it and pull it off why can't accubuilt? this car is done the same way comet did there's in the 50. center section and roof removed and a new one put in it's place with lines that follow the car. what more do you need?



I think in this particular case it is the car they had to work with to start off with. The lines of the early 80's Cadillac helped a great deal in this particular conversion. It's not perfect but it does look classy.

I cannot speak for Accubuilt but as I mentioned even the Rolls Royce looked bastardized to a point it will hurt sales rather than help them. I guess what I'm trying to say is it all boils down to styling and class and not everyone can deliver that regardless of how hard they try.
 
I don't know the TPC ssue offhand, but the Bayliff Packard build is featured. Here is one of the Eldorados mentioned. And another coach Bayliff had a hand in.
1984 Miller-Meteor Eldorado ad.jpg

2007 Superior  carved panel 1.jpg
 
Are the rear quarters stretched on these conversions?

For this particular car, the wheelbase is unaltered, but it did receive a minor tail stretch. The car does not have an interior partition, so a short 12" tail extension is all that was required to fit a casket in the car.
 
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