There has been a storm brewing for a while. I could
not put my finger on it; earlier this year we were busy with a kitchen remodel
and spring festivals. By the end of May Lonnie was still not in the
workshop. I did not understand or question why. Maybe a mid life
crisis, maybe he needed a break from basses, maybe there was something going on
in that complex brain of his. The first weekend in June it all came
pouring out. Just like a light switch flipping on he declared…after 17
years…it was time to make his first love a priority again. NO! Not
another woman, his first love is his 1967 Mustang car.
This car is his first car bought for him at age 16 by his
Mom and Dad. He began to drive it a few days after he turned 16. The car was
his daily driver in high school with the original dark green metallic paint and
a black vinyl top. By his late teens he took it off the street to drag
race every weekend at the local US
30 drag strip. Lonnie was interested in cars morning, noon and
night. When he was not working in the garage on his car, he was working
overtime at his job to buy parts to make the car go faster.
1974-1975 as a daily driver |
After some success at the drag strip he cranked it up a notch with modification to the engine and frame, a new paint job of blue and silver, custom graphics and a new custom matching car trailer. His car was the bomb! It was smooth, fast and looked good going down the drag strip. This car was a reflection of his craftsmanship, persistence and endless hours of labor. And then the drag strip closed. Just like that, no place to race. With the paint barely dry from the second incarnation he tore it all down, AGAIN, right to the bare frame.
1979-1980 drag strip ready with tow bar installed |
This time (the third time) it was to full fill a dream from
6th grade when the teacher asked the class to write a short story
about what they dreamed at night. Lonnie’s Mom still has the hand written
essay saved in a scrapbook. In brief it tells the story that some day
Lonnie wanted a fast car, with big tires, big hood scoop and a crazy bright
green paint job with pink and blue pin stripes. That is pretty exact for
a 12 year old boy, but he made his dream come true.
The begining of the dream car |
New wheels, tires and roll cage installed |
The first coats of color; 1979 Fiat Kent green |
At the time we met in late 1984 the car was a bare
frame hanging from the garage rafters with new big tires and hours of blood,
sweat and agony to go. Meeting and dating Lonnie slowed the pace of the
project but he kept at it for seven years…seven LONG years of thousand of hours
spent lying on his back fussing over every small detail. Fabricating NOS
rear quarter panels for the new big tires, cutting the floor board to lower the
suspension, welding in a roll cage plus all that custom body and paint work.
He did everything himself. He has never paid a dime to have anything done
to the car, it is 100% his dream car, his efforts and his 38 year love/hate
relationship.
All Ford car show the Saturday BEFORE we got married, May 9th 1992. Note the missing Mustang emblem in the grill. The car was not really finished. |
May 16th, 1992 |
Lonnie did not want to marry until his dream car was
finished. He put the final window trim on the rear glass the day of our
wedding…that was cutting it a bit close. His car along with many other
cars from family and friends played an important part on our wedding day…which
was actually a wedding/car show. I come from a long line of car enthusiast
in my family so this was perfectly fine by me.
Lonnie's Mustang, My Father's Ford, Butch's Dodge truck, Mark's Mach I, Glenn's Buick GSX, Ricky's Mustang |
The now Pro-Street Mustang named “Green Horsey” was lightly
used for car shows, trips around town and cruising for enjoyment. Until
that dark day in May, Memorial Day weekend 1995. We took a break from a
house project (36’x38’ brick driveway that we installed ourselves) and drove
the Mustang to attend a picnic at my oldest brother’s house in Virginia , 70 miles from
home. It was a good day, evening was upon us and we were getting ready to
drive home. As we were leaving in the Mustang my brother comes running
out into the quiet neighborhood street giving Lonnie the signal to light up the
tires, do a smoky burn out. Now my brother is a nerdy “Road and Track
magazine” type of gear head having never worked on, or raced a car in his
life. He was begging to see some smoke and rubber. Lonnie obliged
by smoking the tires and leaving rubber on the road. He stabbed second
gear and then it happen…CLUNK…for the third time since having this car on the
road he had broken the rear end.
The 351 Cleveland
engine is strong and hooks up big time to the tall, wide Mickey Thompson tires.
Lonnie knows how to shift the manual
five speed Doug Nash transmission…maybe a little too well. As we raced
off in a cloud of smoke we knew something was wrong. The panic began to
set in. We were 70 miles from home on a holiday weekend and this was
before we owned a cell phone. Lonnie with his stubborn persistence’s
tried to limp the car towards home. The clunk, clunk, clunk got
louder. Then the Mustang gave in, totally broke down, leaving us sitting
along the side of the road with day light fading fast. Neither Lonnie nor
I have ever been broken down sitting on the side of the road 50 miles from
home. What do we do now? We walked to an old fashion minimart and
called a close friend from a pay phone. Mark was generous to drive and
meet us with his truck and car trailer in tow. We are still thankful to
this day for his help…but that dark day got even darker.
The rear tires on the car are huge and the lock down straps
in the trailer would not go around the rear tires. Mark and Lonnie did
the best they could to secure the car and we headed for home. About half
way home we heard a bumping sound coming from the car trailer. We kept
going (male pride and testosterone at work again). We got closer to home
and the bumping turned into a banging noise. We pulled off the road to
see what has happened and…here it is, the darkest of night before the dawn…the car
was loose in the trailer and has suffered body damage on all four
corners. At that moment I don’t remember what they did but we got the car
home, drug it into the garage and there it has been for 17 years and four
weeks. Lonnie was deeply distraught. His dream car, his pride and
joy, his thousands of hours of effort were mechanically broken and the body
damage was done.
For years the car was covered sitting in the garage,
occasionally Lonnie started the engine to keep the gas fresh and the internal
parts moving. For 17 years we put every other priority in front of that
car. We finished house projects, bicycled across the south while putting
12,000 miles on our tandem bicycle in 5 years, traveled to festivals, played
bluegrass music and began to collect and restore upright basses. Until
now, when the light switched flipped on Sunday, 6/3/12 and Lonnie said “What
the hell am I waiting for!” The last four weeks he has dedicated himself
to getting his childhood dream car back on the road. I support his
efforts 100%. He has the body work finished. The fenders and
bumpers are re-painted. The new rear end is installed and the car is
sitting on all four wheels once again. There is more work to be completed
with a new drive shaft, air filters and other minor items. Now when
Lonnie goes out to the garage, you can find him leaning against the workbench
just staring at the car. A vision he has never grown tire of, after 38
years he still loves that car.
The rear end work begins |
The body work and new touch up paint. Lonnie still had the original paint from 25 years ago |
This is more information then you probably wanted to know about
a boyhood dream. I wanted to document these memories in our life while I
can still remember the details and the emotion is fresh. I admire Lonnie
for his persistence, never ending patience and the passion to not lose focus on
what makes us happy. Very few of us still have our first car, mine was a
1969 Buick and not worth remembering. Getting Lonnie’s Mustang back on the road
will complete a missing part of him. A part that was there before I came
into his life, before music and basses inspired a different passion for us to
explore.
Life is too short…dream
big.
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