Sweet Ride: 1950 Chevy Pickup

We’re rolling along (pun intended) with our Sweet Ride series, and this week we’re chatting with Gary and Joy McCoola about their beautiful 1950 pickup truck. Read on for the scoop on how they came to own it, a little about it’s previous owners (the sweetest story - grab your tissues!), and hear about their favorite road trips.

 
1950 Chevrolet Pickup Truck
 

Before we get into the details on your gorgeous truck, let’s chat a bit about the two of you!

I grew up in Edison, New Jersey and Joy grew up in Long Beach on Long Island. We met on the dance floor of a country-western bar in NYC when I was in college in 1981. I was attending NJIT in Newark - studying architecture. Joy was living in Manhattan and teaching. Between academic years at NJIT, I was working summer jobs in Colorado. It was there that I spent time sketching old vehicles and I came to appreciate the style of the 1947-55 Chevrolet trucks, what I consider to be "the classic American pickup truck". While finishing college, I worked in NYC and soon after moved to Durango, Colorado, where I also interned as an architect. Joy joined me there for a few years and after we married we moved to Glens Falls in 1985.

 
Gary and Joy McCoola
 

THE SPECS

Year, make, and model: 1950 Chevrolet 3800 Series, one-ton pickup truck with a 9-foot bed.

Mileage: 74,000 miles

Size engine: 216.5 ci "Thriftmaster" inline 6-cylinder rated at 29.4 SAE HP or 90 HP at 3400 RPM.

Automatic or stick: Four speed on the floor, though speed is a relative term. 1st is granny gear with top speed of about 3 MPH; in 4th gear it tops out at about 50 MPH so a comfortable highway cruising speed is about 47 MPH.

Approximate gas mileage: Maybe 12-15 MPG.

Years owned: 36 years.

Driven through all seasons or stored: I store it through the winter.

Favorite features: There is an opening in the front grill so that you can hand-crank the engine. The cab is ventilated by popping the cowl vent and driver's side vent. Manual choke and throttle on the dashboard;  pedal starter on the floor. Nine-foot bed so that you can load it with plywood and still have space for other stuff. Hard steering and slow driving, especially in granny gear. My truck is the antithesis of the current rage in hot rod trucks.

 
 

THE HISTORY

How did you come to own it?

While living in Durango in 1983, I attended numerous estate auctions looking for cool antiques. I missed the opportunity (had no money) to bid on an original, low-mileage 1949 1/2-ton Chevy pickup with a custom cab - visor, chrome grille, rear corner windows and radio.

At a subsequent ranch auction, another Chevy pickup was available - 68,000 miles and in original condition, though a bit weathered. I set my limit and was bidding against one other person. At the hammer, the other bidder had won and I spent the next hour or so kicking myself for not bidding higher. Later, the auctioneer came to me and said that the successful bidder had to withdraw his bid, and instead of going back to a public bid, he would accept an additional $50 offer.  No problem, I was the new owner of the truck with a price of $1,550.

Do you know much about its history or previous owners?  

The truck is from Bayfield, Colorado and I am the second owner. The estate auction where I purchased the truck was a working ranch for about 100 years. Every tool, appliance, piece of furniture, vehicle, etc. ever used there was retired to a barn instead of being discarded. Everything was being auctioned so that the owners could sell the ranch and move to a nursing home. This particular truck performed many ranch chores and was used by the family's son and wife to travel through New Mexico on their honeymoon. It had been fitted with Oak slat hoops over the bed and covered with a canvas top - much like a Conestoga wagon. I had the hoops in the truck and was told that the canvas top was in a barn somewhere, but I never found it. Weeks later, when I finally got the title, registration and insurance, I went to claim the truck. By that time everything at the ranch was gone, except for the pickup truck. The owner, an elderly woman, gave me the key. I climbed into the truck, turned the key, pulled the choke, hit the gas pedal few times, stepped on the starter pedal and it fired right up. As the truck warmed up, she walked over and gently kissed the left front fender - saying good-bye to the last of her family's belongings. Needless to say, I had tears in my eyes and that was the saddest drive I have ever taken despite my joy in having the truck.

 
 

THE REPAIRS

How about the repairs? Do you work on the truck yourself?

I do minor repairs and maintenance myself. After owning it for about 20 years, the northeast humidity had taken its toll on the worn paint and the surface of the truck was an even coat of rust. I decided to have it repainted so that it would last another 50 years. The truck is about 98% original metal with no bondo.  I replaced the tailgate and bed front and the floor of the bed only. The bed is Southern Yellow Pine with black paint finish as original. The truck has been restored as close as possible to original condition, except for the addition of a second rear tail light, rear directional lights, rear view mirror and an oil filter. The restoration was performed by Bob Adler of Stephentown, NY. He works almost exclusively on the Chevy "Advance-Design Era" trucks from 1947-55. He is a highly skilled painter, mechanic and engineer, and it was great to correspond with him throughout the restoration process. For instance, he hadn't worked on a truck manufactured in the Kansas plant before, so he was able to dissect how the painting sequence of the two-tone front grill in that factory differed from those painted in the east-coast factory.

Any must haves in the truck during road trips?

An adjustable wrench and a screwdriver are always in the glove box. They can fix just about anything that might come loose or need adjustment. The truck has never broken down or not started in 36 years!

 
 

THE RIDE

Your favorite local cruise? 

About every weekend, I make it a point to drive the truck. Most trips are to the trash transfer station, farmer's market, Lowes, Ace Hardware and Curtis Lumber. I feel obligated to use it as a work truck, so I have hauled beds full of stone, cow manure, fire wood, slate tiles, newspaper, trash and lumber. I look forward to any load that will dampen the stiff two-stage rear leaf springs.

And your favorite long distance road trip?

When Joy and I moved from Colorado to New York in 1985, we used the truck. It was still in original condition and had 4-foot high Oak stock racks around the bed. After a thorough inspection by a local mechanic we were road worthy. We loaded everything we owned at the time into the back of the truck and were ready for our 2,200 mile journey. Within the first two hours was our greatest obstacle: Wolf Creek Pass - a 7-percent grade for 10 miles topping out at about 11,000 foot elevation. With the truck in third gear, about 25 MPH, we crawled up the pass. The truck was spewing a bit a blue smoke, but was running well. Once at the top, I thought that we would stop for a break, but I knew that it was all downhill from there to New York and we motored on. We generally followed the old Lincoln Highway, US Route 30, which was one of the earliest transcontinental highways. With a cruising speed of 47 MPH, a single taillight, hand signaling for turns, and headlights equivalent to an old flashlight, we drove only during the day. We stopped frequently in the many small towns and enjoyed the slow ride. Over the course of the trip, an old Volkswagen bus passed us and they were clearly excited to have passed a vehicle other than a farm tractor. Our trip lasted six days and on the seventh day we rested.

 
 

The Advice

What advice would you give to someone who wants to take the leap and buy their dream ride?

Look for a clean, running vehicle with no rust. Vehicles from the southwest are preserved by the dry climate and are not subjected to salted roads. I always look forward to western vacations so I can drive the back roads through small towns searching backyards and alleys for those vehicles waiting to be rescued.

 
Glens Falls Living NY

Thanks Gary and Joy!

P.S. See more from our Sweet Ride series here.

 


Sweet Ride: '55 Chevy

We’re excited to kick off a new series here on GFL (and one that Tom is pretty excited about!). Sweet Ride will share the stories of the vintage automobiles that grace our hometown streets and beyond, and their cool owners, too. We’re thrilled to start off with Carl and Judy Luhrmann and their gorgeous ‘55 Chevy. Read on for the details on how they came to own it, hear about its claim to fame, and find out a few of their tips if you’re thinking about buying that classic.

 
55 Chevy
 

Beautiful ride! We can’t wait to hear more about it, but let’s start with a little bit about you!

Judy and I met in 1978 at college in Ohio, married a few years later, and just celebrated our 38th wedding anniversary. Judy moved to Glens Falls where I was working as a Field Service engineer for Kamyr. Kamyr transferred us to the Portland OR area in 1986, where our two sons were born, and where we bought this Chevy. We came back to Glens Falls in 1989. I still work for the same company, now called ANDRITZ. Our offices are on Pruyn’s Island. Judy taught elementary school and Art for 35 years and is now retired. We still live in Glens Falls, in the same neighborhood we moved to in 1989.

 
Carl and Judy Luhrmann
 

THE SPECS

Year, make and model?  

1955 Chevy 210, Ivory over Navajo Tan paint colors, Body by Fisher interior and original one piece California factory bumpers.

Size engine? 

Straight 6, 235 cubic inches.

Automatic or stick? 

3 on the tree, manual transmission.

Gas mileage?

Not a clue! Google says 15-20 mpg?

How many years have you had it? 

30 years! Purchased in spring 1989.

Do you drive it year round? 

No, we store it from November to May.

 
 

THE HISTORY

How did you you come to own it? 

While living on the West Coast we constantly saw great looking vintage cars used as daily drivers. When we were being transferred back to NY in 1989, Judy said she was not leaving without a Chevy. In 1989 you could buy a 55-57 Chevy for as little as $2000 at a used car lot. She started searching for a 55-57 Chevy that we could bring back home. Judy found this one on consignment at the Memory Lane Motors classic car dealership in downtown Portland. Because it wasn't a Bel Air model but did have low mileage, we paid somewhere around $3000 for it. 

Do you know much about its history or previous owners?

We are the second owners, the car was purchased on August 25, 1955 (Carl’s Dad’s birthday). It was supposedly the “company car” for the wife of a lumber company and sawmill owner in Springfield, OR. Fast forward 34 years and she had gone into the hospital and asked her minister to look after it. After the woman went into a nursing home it was taken to Memory Motors to sell. So it’s a real cliché – literally owned by a little old lady who only drove it to church. Had only 55,000 miles on it when we bought it. Looked like the back seat had never been sat in. Still had the plastic wrapping from the factory around the trim on the bottom of the front seat. The only body damage was front bumper dents from her hitting her trash cans when she parked it in the garage.

In the mid 1990’s we took the Chevy down to Guptill’s Ice Cream for their annual summer car show.  This guy came over and started taking pictures of the Chevy and asking questions. He had noticed our custom plates “OREGON55” and was wondering what the car’s history was. Told him that we were the second owners and that the car was originally bought in Springfield, Oregon. He starts to tell us he thinks the car was the Chevy parked in front of the Delta Tau Chi frat house in the 1978 Animal House movie with John Belushi! The movie was shot at the University of Oregon in Eugene which is less than 4 miles away from Springfield. His logic is that our 210 is rare and how many Ivory over Navajo Tan 55 Chevys could have been in the Springfield/Eugene area in 1977 when the movie was shot?!  A few months later we get an email from this guy telling us that he runs a website that deals with cars from famous movies and that he has posted ours on his website under Animal House movie cars (acmewebpages.com). The site is now defunct but if it was on the internet it must be true?!

 
 

THE REPAIRS

How about the inevitable repairs and maintenance - do you tackle those on your own?

We do little projects, but we have great guys that do the mechanics. For 30 years we have used Duell’s Garage, in Fort Edward to work on it. Gregg Duell owns multiple vintage cars and trucks. He is semi-retired, but he and his son, Fred, are great mechanics, the best in the area for working on classic cars and reasonably priced. Our Chevy has yearly tune ups, a new exhaust system, but needs no major work. With no power steering and three on a tree, it’s a true tank with only 67,000 miles on it now. 

We also recommend Evia Motors in Glens Falls.  They work on vintage Volvos, Jeeps, European imports, and the two vintage DeLoreans in town.  They have worked on Judy’s old Volvos for years. Billy Anthis of Evia is currently restoring his two vintage ’65 Mustangs.

What's next for the '55? 

We had the Chevy repainted and the chrome redone for its 40th birthday in 1995, so it is time for a paint touch up. The original upholstery fabric is disintegrating after 64 years, so that’s the next big project.

 
 

THE RIDE

Where's your favorite local cruise? Long distance road trip? How far have you taken it? 

We stay local, driving up to Martha’s Ice Cream and Lake George and around town. It’s the perfect car for going to the Glen Drive-In Theatre, because the seats are so big and comfy. We’ve travelled to Manchester, VT and the Catskills in it. It’s been to the Glens Falls HS prom plus it’s been in a wedding or two……...

 
 

THE ADVICE

What advice would you give to someone who wants to take the leap and buy their dream ride?  

In our opinion, when buying a vintage vehicle research, research, then search! Be patient and get friends involved in your effort, network online, have a independent pre-purchase professional inspection done, get the vehicle with the lowest mileage possible and the most paper history. Show the undercarriage and engine compartment photos to all of the mechanics you know and try to drive it before you buy it. Don’t buy for investment. If you are not a mechanic, don’t buy a “Trailer Queen” that you only drive 50 miles a year and needs constant maintenance, and expensive parts. Buy it because you love it and want to drive it. Judy loves driving old cars. She owns this car, plus a 1978 International Harvester Scout, and her current daily driver, a 1988 Volvo 245 wagon. Our enjoyment is actually driving these great old vehicles!

Anything you wish someone had told you before buying your first classic? 

Make sure you have storage space. With winters in the North Country so challenging, the Chevy is professionally garaged November to May. But having 5 cars takes up a bunch of room. If your classic car is not garaged, make sure you invest in a good all weather car cover and use it. If it is a daily driver, wash the undercarriage every week in the winter. The magnesium chloride they use here for road salt will eat through almost any metal.

 
55 Chevy
 
 
Glens Falls Living
 

Thanks Carl and Judy - enjoy the ride!

Have a vintage car you’d like to see featured, or know someone who does? Shoot Tom an email at tom@glensfallsliving.com, or contact us here.