The  Chevrolet Camaro is an automobile manufactured by General Motors and  Chevrolet under the Chevrolet brand, classified as a pony car and  some versions also as a muscle car. It went on sale on September  29, 1966, for the 1967 model year and was designed as a competing model  to the Ford Mustang. The car shared its platform and major components  with the Pontiac Firebird, also introduced for 1967.
Four  distinct generations of the Camaro were developed before production  ended in 2002. The nameplate was revived again on a concept car that  evolved into the fifth-generation Camaro; production started on March  16, 2009.
Before  any official announcement, reports began running during April 1965  within the automotive press that Chevrolet was preparing a competitor to  the Ford Mustang, code-named Panther.[6] On June 21, 1966, around 200  automotive journalists received a telegram from General Motors stating,  "...Please save noon of June 28 for important SEPAW meeting. Hope you  can be on hand to help scratch a cat. Details will follow...(signed)  John L. Cutter – Chevrolet Public Relations – SEPAW Secretary." The  following day, the same journalists received another General Motors  telegram stating, "Society for the Eradication of Panthers from the  Automotive World will hold first and last meeting on June 28...(signed)  John L. Cutter – Chevrolet Public Relations SEPAW Secretary." These  telegrams puzzled the automotive journalists.
On  June 28, 1966, General Motors held a live press conference in Detroit’s  Statler-Hilton Hotel. It would be the first time in history that 14  cities were hooked up in real time for a press conference via telephone  lines. Chevrolet General Manager Pete Estes started the news conference  stating that all attendees of the conference were charter members of the  Society for the Elimination of Panthers from the Automotive World and  that this would be the first and last meeting of SEPAW. Estes then  announced a new car line, project designation XP-836, with a name that  Chevrolet chose in keeping with other car names beginning with the  letter C such as the Corvair, Chevelle, Chevy II, and Corvette. He  claimed the name, "suggests the comradeship of good friends as a  personal car should be to its owner" and that "to us, the name means  just what we think the car will do.
 







