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Thirty-two Years Ago, Toyota Made America Eat Its Words

This page is translated from the original post "Il y a 32 ans, Toyota faisait mentir l’Amérique" in French.

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Toyota Camry

On October 13, 1993, in the city of Georgetown, Kentucky, the one-millionth Toyota was dropped from the assembly line.

Thirty-two years earlier, few people would have bet on the success of a Japanese manufacturer on American soil. The major local brands – Ford, GM, Chrysler – then reigned unchallenged over a market considered almost impossible to penetrate. A car that no one really expected, however, shattered all certainties: the Toyota Camry.

Toyota managed to establish itself. Slowly, methodically, by focusing on quality, reliability, and industrial rigor unlike anything seen in Detroit. The Camry was nothing exotic: a simple, pragmatic sedan designed to run trouble-free. But that was exactly what tired Americans wanted—those fed up with breakdowns and recalls.

Toyota Camry, the American

The Georgetown plant, opened in 1988, symbolized a quiet revolution. For the first time, a major Japanese brand was mass-producing in the United States. Five years later, reaching the milestone of one million units produced caused shock: the Camry had become the car of the ordinary person, found just as much in suburban parking lots as on college campuses.

Beyond the number, this anniversary marks a cultural turning point. The Japanese car was no longer seen as a threat but as a model to emulate. The American industry, shaken, had to reconsider its methods, adopting some of the “Toyota Way” strategies.

Since then, the Camry has entered history as a symbol of global success: a car that never sought to shine but managed to conquer through its consistency.

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