In the spring of 1966 my mother, Faye Coley, was overjoyed with the
prospect of finally buying her very
first new car. She loved the new
styling on the ‘66 Fairlanes, and on April 29th, 1966, went new car
shopping
in her old Amythest purple ‘57 Chevy station wagon...alone.
I remember her telling my Dad before leaving that she wanted a ‘66
Fairlane 500 with a 289/automatic.
Eventually she arrived on the lot of
Julian Harrison Ford in Rome, Georgia. After explaining exactly what she
had in mind, the car salesman tricked my Mother into buying a Fairlane
with just a few more options.
The salesman diverted her attention from
the Fairlane 500’s she had driven to a gleaming Springtime Yellow
GT/A
sitting right in the middle of the showroom floor. After all, this was
the most expensive Fairlane they had
at the dealership...why not sell it
to some unsuspecting woman.
As she tells it, it was love at first sight... the sound of that big 390...those black racing stripes...she had to have it! And so, for $3229.04 minus the $478.44 they allowed her for the old ‘57, she owned the car.
As a testosterone-happy 15 year old, my pants legs rolled up and
down about three times when she came idling
into the driveway that
Saturday afternoon. I remember her tooting the horn and punchin’ the
engine with a big
grin on her face from ear to ear. I had never seen a
GT Fairlane before, and never knew they existed! At
the time, I was
“restoring” an old hand-me-down 1949 Ford, and the Fairlane made the
Indian Red rims
and fender skirts on my old ‘49 look totally outdated. I
still remember the smell of that warm engine paint
and the little metal
tinks that the engine made as it cooled.
The first thing she did was to order some of those Fingerhut clear
plastic seat covers...you know the ones with
the bubbles in them...and
had them installed over those beautiful seats. I hated those covers!
They were hot in
the summer and cold in the winter...and looked awful.
But they sure protected those seats.
The following year my high school sweetheart Janie (now my wife of
34 years) and I went to our High School
Junior/Senior Prom in Mom’s
Fairlane. I’ll never forget cruising from the A&W to Jim’s Burgers in
Summerville,
Georgia, with the sound of that 390 warning those pesky
Chevelles and GTOs to keep their distance.
Mom used the Fairlane as a daily driver until 1976, and like many
other big cube cars of the ‘70’s the gas crisis
forced her to retire the
old Fairlane to the occasional trip to the grocery store. She stored it
under a carport for
many years, always keeping the registration current
and starting it at least once a week to keep everything
working. Not
many people wanted the old Fairlane in the late ‘70’s. Muscle cars were
being sold for scrap
and nobody wanted those old gas-guzzling big
blocks...but she did.
My Mother is not a rich woman, and after going through a divorce in
1978 things only got worse. She earned a
living in a hosiery mill, and
in the late ‘80’s and early ‘90’s people started to express an interest
in “that old yellow
Fairlane” under her carport. I know she needed the
money, but absolutely refused to sell her first new car (she did
buy her
second new car in 1979 - and still owns it).
In 1995, Mom had a series of strokes and has since had heart by-pass
surgery. She was concerned that the
Fairlane might waste away if someone
didn’t give it the TLC that she had for 30 years. I had restored several
cars
over the years, and that winter she made me an offer I couldn’t
refuse. She told me that she would give me the
Fairlane (me being the
oldest son) if I would promise to restore it to exactly the way it
looked in the Spring of 1966.
The only restriction...make it as close to
original as possible. No problem... I can do that! After all, I remember
exactly what it looked like that first day! How could I forget.
I transported the Fairlane to my home in Soddy-Daisy, TN, and
started the disassembly and cataloging process the winter of 1995. It
didn’t really seem like work to me because all that dirt and grease was
kind of personal dirt and
grease. I took hundreds of pictures to help me
put everything back together. On a limited budget I knew it would be
years before a lot of this stuff would go back on the car, and at my
age, I tend to forget. As I pulled nuts and bolts
off the car I put them
into Ziplock Baggies and identified where they came from on the car. The
390 still ran
surprising well with 92,000 miles on it, but since I
needed to pull it for restoration, I went ahead and rebuilt
everything
as close to factory specifications as possible. The C-6 was freshened
and I replaced the converter just
to be on the safe side. This was to be
an occasional driver, so I wanted the drivetrain completely rebuilt. The
3:25
posi 9-inch rear (Tag ID WFB-C) was detailed and new seals,
bearings, lube, etc. replaced. The manual brakes are
all rebuilt using
NOS wheel cylinders and semi-metallic brake pads. The exhaust manifolds
were cracked, leaking
and definitely in need of replacement. At one
point I had considered headers, but really wanted the original look
under the hood. I found a great used set of manifolds through
AutoKrafters and pitched the old ones.
The car had been repainted once in 1984 by my brother Donnie to its
original color. My Mom couldn’t afford to
replace the GT stripes on the
car, so Donnie masked them off and saved them. I took lots of photos of
these
stripes to help me get the new ones on when it returned from the
body shop. The body was super straight and the
paint still looked pretty
good, but was showing its age. I knew a repaint was the only way to make
it new again.
After completely stripping the trim, windows and interior
from the car, I transported the shell to Goob’s Body Shop
in Dunlap,
TN, for a fresh coat of PPG Springtime Yellow. Goob Johnson paints
street rods and muscle cars as a
primary business, and I knew he would
give the Fairlane a first rate paint job. And he really came through!
My own health problems in 1996 caused the Fairlane to be put on hold
for awhile. I started the re-assembly in
ernest in the Spring of 1997,
working on the car every chance I could. I used Firestone F-70x14
Redline tires
from Coker Tire in Chattanooga on the original steel rims.
I did change out the exhaust to a Flowmaster
system (she had replaced the exhaust with
Midas mufflers in the 80’s).
The Flowmasters sound more like I remember the car sounding back in 1966
than
any other mufflers I’ve heard. I kept the H-pipe and routed the
exhaust exactly the way it looked the first time
I saw the car... turned
down, just barely showing beneath the rear bumper.
The bumpers were re-chromed and all the stainless was polished. I
did replace the plastic part of the GT emblem
in the grill because it
was cracking. The interior is all original except for new carpet,
headliner, bucket seat
bottoms and the front door arm pads. Everything
else was just cleaned and detailed.
I finished the car last year and invited my Mom to go with me to its
very first car show in Dayton, TN. She met me
at the show, and saw the
completed car for the first time that day. I’ll never forget that little
tear in the corner
of her eye. I think the ‘60’s music they were playing
in the background made it even more special. For that
moment in time it
really was April 29th, 1966.
We won an award at the car show that day, and my Mom displays it on
a shelf at her house. The two of us cruised
home in her old Fairlane
with the wind rushing through the vent windows. We pulled into the
drive, and a familiar
smell of fresh, warm engine paint filled the air.
And I could hear those little metal tinks as the engine cooled.
I feel pretty good about helping to save the Fairlane, but I feel
even better about making my Mother’s
memories of 1966...and her first
new car...last for many years to come.