Rare Rides Icons: The Jeep Wagoneer, The First Luxury SUV Ever (Part XII)

rare rides icons the jeep wagoneer the first luxury suv ever part xii

We return to the Jeep Wagoneer in 1987 and its 25th anniversary. As the Wagoneer remained on sale in its dated but popular guise, parent company AMC was at death’s door. Under ownership by Renault, AMC was in massive debt as the Renault-AMC lineup of cars proved unsuccessful. Chrysler stepped in during March to purchase AMC-Jeep for a huge sum, assuming all of AMC’s debt from Renault. On June 20, 1987 the American Motors Corp. ceased to exist, and was renamed to Jeep Eagle Corp.

rare rides icons the jeep wagoneer the first luxury suv ever part xii

Jeep was the reason Chrysler was interested in the AMC acquisition (it cared very little about Eagle), and the automaker immediately redirected Jeep product development. Relevant to our subject, there was an important project underway at Jeep since 1983. It was an exciting new unibody SUV!

The project began shortly before the XJ Cherokee entered production, and was planned as the second generation Cherokee. It was supposed to be in production by the late Eighties, and would have kept the Cherokee lineup fresh. That was important as the XJ proved immensely popular from its inception.


rare rides icons the jeep wagoneer the first luxury suv ever part xii

Under Chrysler ownership the Wagoneer saw some select improvements. Despite the changing market around it, Wagoneer sales remained steady each year. The 1987 and 1988 models were largely carrovers, as the final AMC iteration of the model. From 1989 there were several Chrysler-funded updates.

The exterior of the Grand Wagoneer received higher quality and better looking wood paneling in 1989. There were also revisions to the turbine alloy wheels, which swapped their previous gold tone within the wheel spokes for gray. The body was improved with a more advanced primer to prevent rust. Paint finishes were also upgraded to two-stage to include a clearcoat. 


rare rides icons the jeep wagoneer the first luxury suv ever part xii

Chrysler also replaced the junky AMC AC compressor with one of their own. They added a feature AMC skipped: an optional rear wiper. Inside, there was better fit and finish via tighter controls at the factory, and an overhead console from the Dodge Caravan. Familiar to anyone who rode in a Chrysler product at the time, the console had some map lights, sunglasses storage, and a temperature indicator and compass. 

Chrysler also integrated their keyless entry system into the Grand Wagoneer in 1989, a feature that was ever-closer to a requirement in a luxury vehicle of the time. Up front, the same carbureted AMC V8 powered the Grand Wagoneer through to the end, part of the quickly shrinking group of passenger vehicles with carburetors.


rare rides icons the jeep wagoneer the first luxury suv ever part xii

For the final three years of production there were new paint colors on offer, as Chrysler added in paint options from its existing other models. The darker tan interior color called “honey” that AMC introduced in 1987 was replaced in 1989 by a color called sand. The most exclusive paint color was hunter green metallic, a shade that was about to take over the United States for several years.


rare rides icons the jeep wagoneer the first luxury suv ever part xii

Available in 1991 only, the metallic green was the color that saw the Grand Wagoneer out of production. Sales took a tumble in 1990 when there was an 11 percent increase in fuel prices (in 2026 we’re at 30 percent from a year ago). Still, over 6,000 buyers purchased the 28-year-old model that managed 11 mpg. But it was regulation that ultimately killed the Grand Wagoneer.

rare rides icons the jeep wagoneer the first luxury suv ever part xii

There were updates to federal auto safety standards (FMVSS) on the way, like airbags, three-point belts on outboard seats, and side-impact crash testing. The Grand Wagoneer was not in compliance with any of it. The platform was so old it would have required a complete reengineering, and it simply wasn’t worth the investment required.


rare rides icons the jeep wagoneer the first luxury suv ever part xii

And so on June 21, 1991 when your author was probably coloring, the last SJ Grand Wagoneer was produced. It was metallic green, and lived in the Walter P. Chrysler Museum until its 2024 closure. All purchasers of the final run of the Grand Wagoneer could option a gold badge on the dash that said “Final Edition Jeep Grand Wagoneer.”


rare rides icons the jeep wagoneer the first luxury suv ever part xii

Though the XJ Cherokee’s unsuccessful Wagoneer trim (Wagoneer Limited) was cancelled after 1990, Jeep would try and rekindle the Wagoneer flame just a couple years after the Grand Wagoneer’s demise. In our next installment we’ll review the next time wood paneling was applied to a Jeep, along with pillow tufted Nineties glory.


[Images: seller, The Last Independent Automaker]


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