60 Years Behind the Wheel. Bill Sherk

60 Years Behind the Wheel - Bill Sherk


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1954 Meteor “Niagara” Convertible

       Canada’s Answer to James Dean, circa 1954

       Norm Lightfoot and Friends

       Three Fellows in a Nash Metropolitan

       1952 Pontiac Hardtop, 1955

       1949 Pontiac in 1956

       1949 DeSoto from Alberta

       1957 DeSoto Convertible, 1958

       White Rose Gas Station, Blytheswood

       B-A Service Station, Toronto Area, late 1950s

       Bringing Home the Groceries, 1958

       Hungry for Horsepower, 1959

       New Brunswick Memories

       Ten-year Drop in Price to 1960

       1931 Chrysler for $30

       Ron Fawcett with Two Model T Fords

       Customized 1960 Meteor Convertible at Autorama, Toronto, 1960

       Mike McGill and the Etobi-Cams

       Unusual Engine Swap

       Rust in Peace …

       Photo from Bob Kirk’s Family Album

       Calling all Cars

       Special Thanks

       Notes

       by Mike Filey

      WHEN I WAS JUST A young teenager attending North Toronto Collegiate Institute (the finest high school in North America and coincidentally the school at which the author of this book taught, long after I was there), I was never tempted by such mundane propositions as beer, cigarettes, or skipping class. Not me. However, I was often tempted by another, the desire to own a car. In fact, my friend John Ross, who was employed in the family contracting business and really didn’t need an education to make his way through life, would just happen to drive by in his new red 1958 Pontiac convertible as I made my way to school along Broadway Avenue. This guy would drive me crazy. He had a nice car, I wanted a nice car. Several times I came close to giving it all up. I’d simply quit school, go out and buy myself something new and flashy, and worry about paying for “my” car in the next life.

      Well, that just wasn’t to be. First off, I didn’t even have my driver’s licence. In fact, my parents were adamant that my schooling would come first and if I stuck with it, my dad would teach me to drive and let me use his new, but rather commonplace, 1959 Ford two-door sedan when it came time to take the test. The big day came and I passed. Now it was my turn to get a car. Actually it was a stretch to call what I was able to afford a car at all. It was a 1949 Morris Minor with one option, a heater, the fan of which was under the passenger’s seat. Turn the device on and the person sitting beside me would rise two or three inches. The car also had mechanical brakes, a set of flipper directional signals, and was constantly infused with a not totally objectionable (at least not to me) aroma of burning oil. Well, I couldn’t do anything about the heater, the brakes, the signals, or that smell, but I could certainly make the vehicle look flashier. I’d give it a do-it-yourself paint job. (Actually, I’d have to do it myself, the fifty bucks I paid for this thing left me flat broke.) So off to the Yonge and Church streets Canadian Tire store I went and bought several tins of paint that when mixed together would give me that turquoise colour I wanted. At least I was pretty sure they would.

      As it happened the colour turned out okay, but the amount I had to work with wasn’t quite enough. When I reached the trunk area I realized I could never reproduce the colour I had created. What to do? Simple. I went back to the front of the car and pushed the paint towards the back of the car, hoping to move enough along to cover what was left of the original maroon colour.

      The old Morris may have been my first car, but it certainly wasn’t my last. Far from it. I went through cars like some of my friends went through packs of cigarettes. After the Morris came a 1954 Nash Metropolitan that really wasn’t mine. It belonged to Joan Lewis, the wife of druggist Phil Lewis, and as a kind of perk for working in his store at Eglinton and Redpath for an outrageously high number of hours, at an outrageously low hourly rate, I was allowed to use this tiny “babe magnet” on weekends. Next came a 1958 Hillman (never started when it looked like rain) Minx. On this one I spray-painted the hubcaps gold. One day while driving down a country road north of the city one of the caps shot off the car into a farm field. I could only imagine someone finding it years later and believing they had come across remnants of one of those abandoned gold mines out near Markham.

      Finally, I graduated (Ryerson, Chemistry, class of 1965 … actually I took that subject ’cause one of the guys I chummed with had a car and since he was going to Ryerson I decided to join him so I wouldn’t have to wait for the bus), got a job, and, of course, bought a brand new car, my first. It was a lovely turquoise and green 1965 Ford Fairlane Sports Coupe. Wow!! One problem, though: I hadn’t been working long enough to accumulate a “down payment.” Heck, I didn’t even know what a “down payment” was. Yarmila, my girlfriend and later my wife, came to the rescue. Hope she doesn’t read this, don’t think I ever repaid her.

      Now a working stiff, the new cars came fast and furious: 1967 Mustang fastback (should have kept that one), 1967 Dodge Monaco (should never have bothered with that boat), 1968 Mercury Montego (that one almost prevented a wedding — mine), where am I? … 1970 Ford Torino followed by a 1972 version. Now the cars start to blur, but I remember visions of a Plymouth Arrow (a what?), a 1980 Pontiac Grand Prix, a couple of Toyota Celicas, a Honda Prelude (did I have two of them?), and a couple of Saturns. Oh, I hear you ask, what was the best car I ever owned? The one my wife of many, many years bought for me when I turned fifty-five, my classic 1955 Pontiac Laurentian, just like the one I coveted all those years ago.

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      FOR OVER ONE HUNDRED YEARS, Canadian motorists have travelled the streets and highways of this vast Dominion in many different makes and shapes of automobiles, many of which are no longer built. Remember the bullet-nose Studebaker? The step-down Hudson? The Nash Metropolitan? How about Hupmobile, LaSalle, Durant, Graham-Paige, Packard, Pierce-Arrow, and DeSoto?

      And even with cars still being built, we have names that have passed into history, including Lincoln-Zephyr, McLaughlin-Buick, the “490” Chev, the Model T Ford, the Chrysler Airflow, the Mercury 114, and the Curved Dash Oldsmobile.

      All these vehicles at one time were brand new and sparkling clean, fresh from the factory and showroom floor. And nearly all of them were mass-produced on an assembly line, with each one looking much like the one ahead and the one behind.

      But every time a new car leaves the factory, it becomes unique and unlike any other car in the world. Each new owner takes it where he or she wants to go, often picking up scratches and dings along the way. The second owner does the same, and the third, and fourth, and so on until the car often reaches its final resting place in a scrapyard.

      Each owner gives the car a unique experience, adding another chapter to its “auto-biography.” And during the life of that car, someone with a camera is often there to capture the moment. This book contains almost 150 such moments, giving us a glimpse into the past and the way we drove.

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