The cars detectives drove on TV get all the attention, like Thomas Magnum’s Ferrari, Rick Simon’s Dodge Power Wagon or even Enos Strate’s beat-up Chevelle on the spinoff from The Dukes of Hazzard.

But what about the stalwart police cruisers from the TV shows of the 1970s and 1980s? Where’s the love for the black-and-white? Here’s some of the most memorable, in somewhat chronological order

Hill Street Blues (1981-87)



For a cop show that was shot mostly on sets indoors, if I asked you about the theme song, you’d immediately recall this 1976 Dodge Monaco exiting the station house and rolling out into the street.

RELATED: Find a Dodge Monaco for Sale at BestRide.com

Yet, for a show mostly filmed on indoor sets, a lot of cop cars made their way into the production:

1981 Chevrolet Impala:

1974 Dodge Coronet:

1974 Plymouth Satellite:

1975 Plymouth Fury:

ADAM-12 (1968-75)

Part of the cop car appeal of ADAM-12 is that it ran right through the point when auto design really changed. Styling went from full-on shoebox to fuselage bodystyles in a matter of years, and Pete Malloy and Jim Reed drove right on through all of it.



For the beat cops on ADAM-12, it was a steady diet of Plymouth products, beginning with the 1967 Plymouth Belvedere.

From that season forward, every year the patrol would update to the current year Plymouth. Plymouth never received credit in the closing credits, but it was supplying cars left and right.

RELATED: Find a Plymouth Belvedere for Sale at BestRide.com

1968 Plymouth Belvedere



1969 Plymouth Belvedere



I have no idea why, but I took a tremendous amount of pleasure in catching a glimpse of the Plymouth Belvedere Wagon showing up from time to time, showing the 1970 grille redesign:



In 1971, Plymouth revised its intermediate Satellite lineup to a “fuselage” body, which was a lot more modern. The coupes looked pretty good, but the sedans always looked weird to me. Reed and Malloy switched to these cars in ’71:



And again, a wagon showed up too:



…even in the 1972 configuration.



Kojak (1973-78)

Kojak rolled around in a brown Buick Skylark Century (as BestRide’s Philip Ruth wisely pointed out from the bottom of his Corgi miniature), but we’re really focused on uniformed police vehicles here. We can’t let Kojak slip by without mentioning this NYPD-liveried Boyertown Merchandiser, the exact same step van you could see lettered up with Mister Softee graphics.

RELATED: Find a Buick Century for Sale at BestRide.com

This one was featured chasing Griffin Dunne down in the bizarre Martin Scorcese movie After Hours.



S.W.A.T. (1975-76)

It’s funny, I remember S.W.A.T. being a big deal, seeing that its theme song — from the Rhythm Heritage — made its way to a K-Tel album I had in 1976.

But the show’s run only stretched from February of 1975 to April of 1976.



Along with a bunch of cruisers, the main vehicle everybody was interested in from S.W.A.T. was the van, specifically an International Harvester Metro II, which was the ubiquitous delivery van throughout the 1970s.

The Dukes of Hazzard (1979-85)

Yeah, The Dukes of Hazzard wasn’t a cop show, but there were plenty of cop cars in it.



In Season 1, Hazzard County Sheriffs drove around in an AMC Ambassador, complete with the rebel flag that’s become controversial.

RELATED: Find an AMC Ambassador at BestRide.com

Quickly, though, Plymouth slotted itself into The Dukes of Hazzard’s production, pushing little AMC right out the door. By the end of the first season, it was all Plymouth Fury for Enos and Rosco:



CHiPs (1977 to 1983)

CHiPs was another show that owed a tremendous debt to the Dodge Coronet (essentially the same car as the Plymouth Fury from Dukes of Hazzard). But early in the run of CHiPs, AMC must’ve executed one of the last bigtime promotional contracts in its history, because the first few seasons were completely littered with AMC products, including the familiar black-and-white cruisers.

AMC quickly got priced out of the promotional game, though, and MOPAR came along to fill the void.



The elder Dodge Polaras typically got the short end of the stick…

…and a few oddball cruisers showed up from time to time.



In front, that’s a 9C1 Police Prep Chevrolet Nova, which was reportedly a favorite amongst the police because of its light weight. That Nova is driving in front of a Dodge D200 utility body, which was also odd to see in service on the show.



Then there’s this police-equipped Plymouth Volare Wagon. I wonder what happened to this car. There couldn’t have been more than a handful lettered up like this.



Of course, the star of the show was the Kawasaki KZ900 Police Special. California used Moto Guzzis just prior to CHiPs going on the air, but the show never used anything but the KZ900s and the later KZ1000C and KZ1000P models.

T.J. Hooker (1982-86)

T.J. Hooker — the Shatner-fronted police drama — suffered the most ignominious comedown of any TV cop.

He started out like everyone else, patrolling the streets in a Dodge Monaco:

Then, things started looking up a bit in Season 2, when he was issued a swank Dodge St. Regis:



Then the recession hit in full force, and the cops in T.J. Hooker started running around in the Fairmont-era Ford LTD, like a bunch of chumps.



What did we leave out? What was your favorite cop car of the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s?

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