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FABLED FORDS

1957 was the epitome of the ‘50s car era, and a turning point for car lovers of the nation.   It was indeed a FORDified nation, because the Ford Motor Company was king of the hill when it came to horsepower.  Ford came out with the V-8 engine as far back as the mid-thirties, and if you wanted speed and power, you bought a Ford.  There was no argument, no question, and no alternative.  It was a fact of life so true that it rivaled the truth of the sun coming up in the east every morning.  Any knowledgeable person, any true lover of thoroughbred cars, knew there was nothing American-made that could out run a Ford, especially those Fords with multiple carburetors and overdrive standard shift transmissions, and high performance camshafts.  No other carmaker even came to mind to the lovers of speed and racing of cars.

Except for a few.  In 1955, Chevrolet unceremoniously introduced a new V-8.  Little did Ford lovers know that the engine in this car was a new concept in V-8’s.  It had a higher compression and shorter piston stroke.  It was a little devil that wrapped up the RPMs much faster than the long-stroke Ford engine, and the difference was that the Chevy could make it through the new popular quarter mile race a little faster than the stalwart Ford engines.  But the truth of the matter is that there were fewer Chevys sold because of the two previous decades of Ford dominance, so when the quick little Chevys came out, it was still almost a secret, because the public just believed nothing could outrun the venerable Ford.

In 1957, automakers dazzled the world with the souped-up and finned models.  It was the star wars of cars.  That year, my car-loving parents gifted my older brother with a red four-door hardtop Bellaire Chevy.  It was bought in Abilene, and if big brother can be believed, he drove it wide open all the way back to Odessa. 

Something must have told the soul of that car that it was in the hands of a speed demon, someone who “could spin the wheels of a wheel-barrow,” as the father of a friend of mine once described him.  The beautiful little car was indeed a willing participant in the control of the speed demon, and for some reason, be it the driving ability of the new owner, or a freak of automobile nature, nothing in its class could beat it.  It left a legacy as an amazingly fast car that was never modified while my brother owned it.  It ran many races, and had there been a hall of fame for stock cars of that year in that area, that car would have been the first inductee.

I think the beginning of its notoriety began when my brother and I took it to Stanley’s Muffler Shop, just off East Eighth Street.  The little concrete block building is still there, and back then it was brand new.  Even today, when I find myself going back to Odessa, I will inevitably drive down East Eighth Street, and my eyes will automatically track to that little building.  My mind will drift back to that day when I accompanied the speed demon and his machine to that muffler shop to buy a twin exhaust system and dual glass-pack mufflers for his new thoroughbred ‘57 Chevy.

We had not been there long, and the car was up on the rack, when a turquoise and white, two door hardtop 1956 Ford Crown Victoria rumbled up to the shop. It was a thing of beauty.  It was lowered in the rear.  A beautiful sound came from the chromed tipped twin exhausts.  It had custom hubcaps and fender skirts.  We had seen it roaming the streets of town before, and we always gazed jealously at it.  It was a car to be coveted, because there was no doubt it was a racing car as it emitted the sound of a high lift camshaft when idling at stoplights.  It was a true attention getter.

Now here it was, right before us, at Stanley’s Muffler Shop.  Out stepped a guy, the owner, and a former classmate of my brother’s.  Furthermore, he had a sister I was once sweet on for a few days in elementary school.  So we knew him, and so did Stanley, the owner of the shop.  In fact, it was Stanley who had installed some of its speed equipment, and he was overtly proud of the fact and said so in so many words.  In fact, Stanley began talking about how fast he could make cars go, just by doing minor things to it.

Speed-demon Butch’s ears perked, as did mine.  Something was said about a different set of spark plugs, and a carburetor adjustment, and possibly other things.  I was a rapt eighth grade listener, fascinated with Stanley’s secrets of making cars go faster.  Then the confident shop owner, master car tuner, made the speed demon an offer, an offer he could not refuse.  He, Stanley, guaranteed my brother that he could tune up the Chevy to the point that it could stay within two car lengths of the souped-up Ford in a quarter mile race.  Now that was something to consider. 

Talk ensued as the new muffler installation was being wrapped up on the Chevy.  It was decided that the best way to see how much work was to be done to the Chevy depended upon how badly the Ford beat it in a drag race.  After all, there had to be a starting point.  By this time noon was approaching, and the muffler man confidently announced that he would shut down the shop for the lunch hour and ride in the Ford with its owner out to a stretch of infamous pavement south and east of town, past the new oil refineries, where males of like ilk had painted lines on the highway to mark a quarter of a mile, the distance of a drag race.  I rode in the Chevy with my brother.

Upon arrival at the improvised drag strip, the passengers got out.   Stanley The Muffler Man confidently stood by while the two drivers maneuvered their machines up to the starting line, where Stanley took his place as the race starter.  He stood between the two cars, out in front of them, while the drivers finished the questionable clearing of their exhaust systems by racing their engines.

 In a way, it reminded me of horses snorting and pawing at the ground, waiting in their chutes at a race, knowing the game.  Next, Stanley pointed with his right hand at the Ford, and with his left at the Chevy.  There was a dramatic pause as the drivers tensed.  Suddenly the muffler man quickly raised both hands and arms skyward.  The race began.

There was smoke and squealing from the tires.  Four exhaust pipes roared in response to the drivers’ demands on the mighty V-8s.  The race was on, and something was obvious right away: Either the Ford was sick, or the red Chevy was a scalded jackrabbit, because it jumped out in front, leaving a shocked muffler man and an excited eighth grader in the dust and smoke and noise.  In just a few seconds it was all over, and it was not very close. 

An unbelieving muffler man was shaken and muttered about something being really wrong.  As the two thoroughbreds braked and slowed and stopped and turned around to begin their slow trip back to the starting line, I wondered what would happen next.

Stanley wanted another try.  In fact, he insisted on driving the souped-up Ford himself, implying that its owner just did not know how to coax the maximum effort from it. This time the Ford’s owner became the starter, and the worried muffler man was at the wheel of the Ford.

Yours truly gaped at the scene, scared that the muffler man was indeed right, and this race would reverse the outcome of the first one, showing us kids what the truth really was.  The starter pointed right, then he pointed left, and then he jerked his arms upward to start the race.  Smoke, noise, roar, it all started over, but again the scalded jackrabbit Chevy left the Ford in the dust.  Race over.

I have never forgotten what happened next.  The two cars returned to the area where the spectators were waiting and pulled over on the side of the road.  The Ford’s hood was raised, and two baffled males stared unbelievingly at the workings under the hood, questioning, blaming, wondering, and speculating about what was really wrong.  Such was the belief in the fabled Fords. 

The possibility of a Chevy, a stock-from-the-factory Chevy, no less, waxing the butt of a souped-up Ford was not even thinkable.  

Finally, we all loaded up to get the muffler man back to his business, since the lunch hour was fading fast.  Back at the shop, we paid the bill and made some small talk, and I am not sure if anything was said about future tune-ups or not.  Finally, my speed demon brother and I left, full of the knowledge that the little red Chevrolet was something special, and the future held some real possibilities when it came to the subject of racing.   

It was exciting to own such a car.  I now wish it had never been sold at all.  I wish it was stabled in my garage, restored and rebuilt and held in high esteem forever.  But alas, 1958 came, and the little racehorse was transferred to another owner in lieu of a brand new white 1958 Chevy Impala convertible.

 And it too could be made to go fast.

FROM THE ODESSA AMERICAN

Posted: Sunday, March 29, 2009 12:00 am

BY KEN BRODNAX

They mostly were good ol' boys from Odessa and the surrounding area. And they had the need for speed. They found their fix behind the wheel of their hot rods.

It was a simpler time when "souping up" a passenger car didn't cost an arm and a leg.

Most of those who lived through the experience agree that the hot rod era really began in 1955 when Detroit manufacturers started producing what eventually would be known as muscle cars.

Working on those cars, and finding ways to squeeze more speed of them by improving on the engineering of the automakers, was considered a challenge.

"Here was a bunch of guys who were sort of ahead of Detroit," Mike Moore said. He's retired from the insurance business and living in Round Rock these days. But he has such affinity for the bygone era that he commissioned a painting of Tommy's Drive-In, a popular hangout of the car crowd. The painting includes Moore's 1955 Chevy and those of his friends parked around the hangout. The original is on loan to the Parker House Museum, but Moore has a website devoted to Tommy's and the social scene that surrounded it (www.michaellewismoore.com). One of the other cars in the painting is a Corvette that was owned by Roger Rankin. He bought the vehicle from one of the mechanical wizards of the day, Buddy Bradshaw.

"These guys were brilliant," Moore said. "Buddy Bradshaw was so smart." He relates how the 1959 Impala equipped with two four-barrel carburetors "had a dead spot in it when you stepped on it." But Bradshaw discovered a way to remove some of the linkage connections to alleviate the problem. And he was protective of his little secret.

And speaking of Bradshaw, the guy is still very much of a car guy. He's still drag racing at age 73 and has passed along the bug to his son, Alan Bradshaw, an Odessa chiropractor who has raced at the highest level of NHRA in the top fuel division.

The elder Bradshaw has a stock answer when somebody asks him when he's going to quit: "I tell them I'm going to keep going as long as there's one guy out there I can outrun."

He also says those old days produced "stories on top of stories on top of stories." A lot of them are racy, but not necessarily from a vehicle standpoint.

And then there was Bob Glast, who saw his love of cars as an entrepreneurial opportunity. The racers needed speed equipment, and he made it his business to find the parts they wanted. "It was my first business at the ripe old age of 15. The nice part of business back then was that it was cash on delivery."

Bradshaw vouches for Glast's business acumen. "He sold more stuff out from under his bed than some of the auto parts stores."

Glast eventually took over the family business, City Pipe and Supply. But he still has fondness for his car tinkering days. "The difference between my '56 Chevrolet and today's cars is I don't know whether I could get the hood open now. Back then if you had a half-inch-9/16 wrench and big screwdriver, you could do just about everything to a car."

Moore recalls that the hot rod crowd "was consumed emotionally and mentally with making those things go fast."

Glast said, "Everybody knew each other. It was a very social group of people. We had a club called the Odessa Quarter Masters and for a while we met at the Ector County Courthouse, but we had to move it because there were a couple of guys who weren't very comfortable being there."

Another name that keeps coming up in discussion of that era is Carl Goetz, who started out as a Ford man but was converted to Chevrolets. Glast recalls riding to Sioux City, Iowa, with Goetz for a match race. It was a long ride home towing the Odessa super stock entry because the Iowa racer swept the two-out-of-three match. Goetz ended up selling vehicles for Broncho Chevrolet. He died in 2002.

They did their share of street racing, usually on quarter-mile stretches of fairly isolated flat straight roads on the outskirts of town. But the serious competition came at the relatively few dragstrips in the area. Glast said the closest strip was in Hobbs, N.M. And there was one at Wall, east of San Angelo and another in Amarillo, making up a triangular circuit where natural rivalries developed.

Bradshaw remembers that his first race was on a road at the airport near where KMID-TV is located. And he still has his first trophy that he won with his '55 Chevy at Kermit.

He said, "I built a lot of engines and I'm pretty proud of them." He's also proud that "my son has taken my knowledge and brought it into the 21st century" with his drag racing exploits.

Bradshaw started a car club as well. It was called the Odessa Quarter Horses. When people would ask what horses had to do with cars, he'd reply, "We run a quarter of a mile at a time, and we are the hosses."

Every car nut from the 1950s had his or her reasons for their obsession. But the common denominators seem to be pride, competitive nature, potential profit motive and the accumulation of a lot of fond memories.

And, as Moore points out, "The old street rod thing is still alive." Must be, since Bradshaw is still bringing home trophies.