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Where were you in 1962?

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Old 02-25-2009, 09:12 AM
  #21  
66jack
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8 years old and no nothing of cars...other than they take me hunting with my dad...

jack
Old 02-25-2009, 09:15 AM
  #22  
mashinter
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I just got my driver's license, had a '55 Chevy with a Corvette 283 in it, and raced out in the boonies where we had a 1/4 mile marked off. I did not crash and burn.
Old 02-25-2009, 09:18 AM
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aerosworp
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I was in the Navy.Had a TR-3 ( 1959) bought for $1,000.00. Big bucks back then. Borrowed from my Dad.
Saw my first real vette up close and personal ( 1962 white on black.Would be 46 years till I got mine
Old 02-25-2009, 09:19 AM
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Grey Ghost
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Wasn't born yet. But loved the movie and have watched it an untold number of times over the years. My friend built two tribute cars:



Old 02-25-2009, 09:20 AM
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ZYALTR
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Senior in high school... Doing all I could to make my $25 1949 ford as fast as the v8 chevys. Spent every sent made mowing lawns on that car and it never quite made the grade. In 1963 I bought a 1955 Chevy 210 and solved the speed problem. Now ,of course, I'd love to have that old ford back.
Old 02-25-2009, 10:27 AM
  #26  
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I was in the Army (enlisted July 5, 61), had just finished my combat medic and surgical tech training, shipped to Nam (YES! Nam was hot in 62). Just before I left for Nam, I bought my very first car from Granddad, which is STILL (literally) my daily driver today.


In the fall of 62, an EXTREMELY radical new car was introduced to the public by GM, it was called a Stingray! The Corvette world changed overnight. The 53-62 Vettes were instantly obsolete.
I didn't care much for the radical new design then, I'm not terribly big on them today. Guess that's why I stay with this.


Tom Parsons
Old 02-25-2009, 10:55 AM
  #27  
Kensmith
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8th grade Today I turned 60 years young !!!!
Old 02-25-2009, 10:59 AM
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I recall the first time I saw the movie, it was in a walk-in theatre just outside the Balitimore beltway on route 40 (next to the drive-in). I couldn't believe it when Milner and Falfa lined up on the road to race (with Green Onions playing) and......raced!! Rubber burning, people watching on the road side, never saw anything like that in the movies that was so real. Great flick, great line from the old guy as Toad was throwing up, "I had a dog was sick like that once" or something like that. Lovely memories.
Old 02-25-2009, 11:29 AM
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66BBDriver
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Junior in HS driving a 1953 MG TD. Always ran sports type cars. the pic at the left is taken in '67. Fdreano if you were in Winter Park then, I came to McCoy AFB with that Vette in late '67
Old 02-25-2009, 11:42 AM
  #30  
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Originally Posted by Trophy Blue
I wasn't born yet.
Old 02-25-2009, 12:04 PM
  #31  
zardun
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Was a senior in high school built my first hot rod. My car club jacket is in a drive in scene in the movie. A brown jacket with gold lettering - Quick Changers Marin. [/IMG][IMG][/IMG]
Old 02-25-2009, 12:30 PM
  #32  
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Default Summer of 1962

..
.University of Miami with this pair of Vettes. The White 1961 started my life long obsession with Corvettes and was one quick SOB .Noticeably they are both equipped with Dayton Knock-offs wire wheels influenced by the popular Route 66 TY series. I ordered the Vettes and my Parents paid for them. Two Vettes 1450 miles from home presented a problem as I couldn`t drive both. Well they solved that by driving the White one back to Dearborn from Miami which took them nearly a month to accomplish that by driving all over the South and stopping everywhere along 24W. He was definitely having his own Route 66.

It must have impressed him {My Dad} as he ordered a Black 63 FI Coupe from one of my fraternity brothers uncles 'Clark Maple Chevy' in Chicago a few months later, #111202 And put HIS name on it as i`m junior. I didn`t realize that fact until I recently found the special 1963 Owners Packet and that brought out a smile and memories from out of the past.





Old 02-25-2009, 12:34 PM
  #33  
yesfam
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Originally Posted by Woodie
In 1962 I lived in Weimar, Texas. We could get our Driver's license at 14 with Driver's Ed. so I was just starting to cruise and bought a 1950 Ford Flathead 8 - 2 door coupe - sinister black. 3 on the tree. $50 I paid. It'd do 85 in second, maybe tweek out 92 in third.
I got to trying to drag race it and balded the right rear, plus power turns had really worn the fronts. So my mother made me go with her to Western Auto ( Big In Texas at that time - sold everything from tires, to dishes, to rifles and pistols)
She wanted me to have new tires. They had a sale $11 each mounted & balanced. I only had $23 dollars so she pitched in the rest, but I had to fix fence for the next two Sunday's. I worked as a soda jerk on Saturdays.
So That first Sat. night I went to do battle against all comers at the local Dairy Queen our hangout and meet up see who was out spot. We were freshman and had to check to make sure some of the Bully JR's & Seniors weren't grouped or as freshman there's no telling what they might do. ( Like tipping your tray right in your window, steeling your order as it was delivered etc.) I really never did that BS when I became a senior.
Anyway with those new tires my first run against a kids fathers 59 -348 auto wagon I reved the **** out of the old girl slid my foot off the clutch ( I knew I had this turkey) and CLUNK!!!!
Those stinking new tires and my load of friends in the car caused the right rear axle to snap. Sheeit! So Monday after school I got a buddy and after for or five brakes in the rope ( We had to go all the way around town so Jack's father who was postmaster wouldn't see him towing my car with their good family car)
So at the Ford dealer. Mechanic took it apart. Yup Snapped axle! He bent up a coat hanger and fished out the broken end, popped a new one in and Wala Holy sheeit $ 18.72 NO . I only had $11.20 Jack only had $.70 and I could not have the car without payment in full cause they told me , me or my Mom didn't buy our cars there ( they did that to encourage customers to buy from them, major business move back then)
So back in Jacks car and all around town until I could borrow enough from everyone to get the money. Wasted time going to the drug store to try to get and advance on my Sat wages from the drug store but that wasn't going to happen as it was almost two weeks Sat pay at $.77 cents and hour for a 6 hour shift - he was angry for me even asking. I later got fired by him for ( Steeling). Of course what Really happened was - he made me dump any milk from the creamers back into the jug after I cleared a table and he caught me dumping some cause I thought it was disgusting and he chewed me a couple of times for it. Then finally one Sat. he was especially mean that day and I saw an old lady dipping her little finger in the creamer and licking her finger then I saw her flick something out of her ear and dip again with the same finger so I threw out all the creamers at the table- well he saw me from his counter - Bam he was some kinda mad wouldn't listen to anything I had to say - just get out and wasn't paying me for steeling. Steeling? Steeling what? I had been dating a sophomore girl ( she had a little yellow and white metropolitan and she used to pick me up before i had my car - can't even rememeber her name. Anyway two weeks before all this he had kept me late on a Sat to clean out a bunch of the draws in the area by the back cash register. Well one draw was full of old samples ( he never gave out samples cause he was afraid some = one might not buy the real item if they got samples - this guy was cheap. So I had everything out of the draws on the counters, draws whiped down and waited for him to say what to throw away and what to put back. The were some tiny glass vials with old perfume in that he said among other stuff was no good and to throw out. So I grabbed 6 or 7 of the perfume ones and stuck them in my pocket on the way to the trash cans out back. That night I gave them to this girl. Well I guess she told some other girls and his daughter was a senior and heard about it and told her Dad. So that day of the creamer WASTE he waited until the end of the day and worked me two hours over again and then said he was firing me for steeling. i said but you told that they were no good and to throw all that stuff away? He said It was his property even in the trash and I was a thief and no telling what else I stole and to get out and he wasn't paying me for that day! (Nice guy)
Oh well all memories aren't perfect. But I did learn about changing right rear axles. and I did become a thief. I broke rear axles reguarely after that and when hunting around the country side for old Fords sitting around farms all about. I'd offer to do some work if I could take the axle out. No way could I afford $18.72 again. I could do it pretty fast after that even got an extra one to carry for awhile. But then the supply ran out Finally a friend Rudy Estrada ( He had a bother Eric who looked exactly like the actor) said that an old German farmer he worked for an Saturdays had a whole slew of old cars out behind his barn, hadn't been used in years and he was going to fill in a big hollow with them and cover them with dirt. He had 6 - 49 to 51 old Rords and Merc.s So bright and early I went with Rudy and asked the guy if I could take out an axle. Well he said they must be worth at least $20 each. Wow I said I could get one replaced at the garage for only $18.72. So he said if I picked rocks with Rudy I could take one. So I worked 10 hours that day with Rudy following the tractor picking and throwing rocks up on the wagon. he went fast and bitched all day saying hurry up. He only stopped once for lunch and NO water breaks or jug around. Man was I hot and thirsty, my hands were all dried and cracked. Rudy had gloves, what a difference those would have made. Anyway end of day I said I had to run home and get tools unless he had some I could borrow. Hold it Boy! he said. $.50 cents an hour was all he paid so I had only earned $5.00 I'd have to come back three more Saturdays before i could have that axle! So I got mad and said the heck with that just give me my $5.00 and forget the axle. Oh no he says You made a deal and not for cash. if I wanted the axle work for it or get the hell gone.
At midnight that night Rudy and I snuck out in the dark jacked up one of the cars ( That was going to be buried) and took the axle - left my broken stub in place and sitting on a couple of wooden blocks. In the next four months I got every axle he had out there. Funny I still don't feel bad about that. Rudy said later he drug all those cars to the hollow and never even paid any attention to the fact they were missing the axles.
He really didn't mean what did you do every day that year
Old 02-25-2009, 01:02 PM
  #34  
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I was in sunny southern California serving in the USN. No money, no bills, running the crap out of a dual quad 270 hp 57 Chev convertible that I traded for a 58 Vette in 1963. I remember after just getting back from my first cruise overseas I saw a 63 Vette split window for the first time and didn't know what it was but I was awestruck. Man, that was quite a styling exercise for late 1962, still is for my money.
Old 02-25-2009, 01:34 PM
  #35  
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Originally Posted by Kensmith
8th grade Today I turned 60 years young !!!!
We share a birthday. I am 45 today, so I wasn't born yet in '62.
Old 02-25-2009, 01:55 PM
  #36  
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Originally Posted by Ironcross
I ordered the Vettes and my Parents paid for them.
Ha! I couldn't help but laugh at that Ironcross. In '62 I was still 4 years away from having my very own beat-up '55 Buick that I had to work on day and night to keep running. I paid for it by working two jobs, one at a grocery store and the other at a drug store across the street.

Frank
Old 02-25-2009, 02:20 PM
  #37  
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I was born the following year...Man we have some "old-timers" on this forum ..we need more youngsters to get into this fun hobby.

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Old 02-25-2009, 02:36 PM
  #38  
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I wasn't even a thought in my parent's mind.........
Old 02-25-2009, 02:39 PM
  #39  
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Getting potty trained.
Old 02-25-2009, 02:43 PM
  #40  
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I graduated high school in '62. Even though being on the east coast and in a town (Greenwich, CT) not associated with the car culture, there were many who were into cars. I had a '46 Merc coupe with a '56 Buick engine, 3/2's etc. A friend had a '55 Chev with a Pontiac engine, etc.

George Lucas captured everything in American Graffiti. Much what he depicted was what I experienced. Of course, not quite the same, but the characters were very similar. I could easily replace one of those characters with a friend. I even had a friend who wore glasses that we called "Frog" !

Even after HS, the same group of people, parties, cars, etc continued through college years. Towards the late 60s I went to boot camp in the Navy. After I got out of Boot Camp (about 7 weeks) and came home it was like someone had turned the lights out. A couple of the hangouts (bars) had closed. The others had a new group of people, familiar faces were gone. It was the end of one segment of growing up and the beginning of the next phase.

45+ years later many of those familiar faces of '62 are still around. Out of a class of nearly 500, we have addresses and e-mail addresses for nearly 350. Besides the ususal reunions we occassionally have other get togethers and often get 75 to 100 show up. What goes around comes around as these friends are the very same, down-to-earth people that they were in '62 - a welcome relief to all the other crap that's going on today. Three or four other friends of the times (and some even from many years before) get together every month or so for lunch to ramble over the good old days and to discuss today's happenings.


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