In February 1967, Elvis purchased the Circle G Ranch in Horn Lake, Mississippi, a secluded property about 18 miles south of Graceland. It became something of a personal retreat (and later a honeymoon cottage after Elvis and Priscilla married in May 1967). To work the ranch and care for the 25 horses that eventually lived there, Elvis needed real working trucks.
Among the vehicles at the ranch was a 1966 Dodge D200 Sweptline, notable for being a four-door “Crew Cab” configuration. At the time, four-door pickups were quite rare and primarily used by utility crews or construction teams, rather than as personal vehicles.
Elvis didn’t just buy one; he reportedly went on a spending spree, buying a fleet of Dodge and Chevrolet trucks for himself, his “Memphis Mafia” buddies, and the ranch staff so they could all work the land together. Many of these trucks featured the “Circle G” logo on the doors, identifying them as part of the ranch's operations.
For a short window in 1967, Elvis traded his flashy Cadillacs for these Dodge trucks. He was frequently spotted by local fans and neighbors driving the D200 around Horn Lake, wearing a cowboy hat and boots. He used the D200 specifically to haul horse trailers and move supplies.
Friends recalled this era as one of the happiest for Elvis, as the truck and the ranch offered him a sense of normalcy and a physical outlet away from the pressures of Hollywood.
While many of Elvis’s vehicles ended up in the Presley Motors Automobile Museum at Graceland, his ranch trucks were often sold or given away after he sold the Circle G Ranch in the late 1960s. However, the 1966 Dodge D200 has surfaced at various high-end auctions over the years, often recognized by its rare crew cab body and documented history with the King.





























