Adventures in My High-School-Cool Custom ’57 Corvette
I hadn’t had my ’57 Corvette long before it helped me accumulate a couple of tickets and a one-month license suspension. It was the kind of car that encouraged exuberance, and as a teenager in a car-crazy era, I couldn’t get enough of it.
Naturally, I used that enforced break from driving to modify my ‘Vette. I started by investing summer-job money in a Duntov cam and a set of solid lifters. Next came a manual gearbox. I couldn’t afford to swap in a four-speed, so I settled for a three-speed and paid a mechanic to install it and its clutch mechanism.
Then, once my license was restored and the ‘Vette was ready, a friend and I picked it up from the shop and test drove it out of town. We headed for a long, straight stretch of divided parkway with no houses or traffic where someone had painted 1/4-mile start and finish lines on the eastbound side. We wanted to try a fun run, so approaching that section on the westbound side, just cruising in third, I decided to punch it without downshifting to see how it pulled from low rpm. I was watching the road, not the speedometer, but we were likely up to 90 or so (in a 35-mph zone) before I backed off and braked for the stop at the next intersection.
When we got there, a pair of angry cops were waiting. “Do you know how fast you were going, kid?” one growled angrily. “No, officer,” I grinned, thinking they had merely heard the engine at high rpm and didn’t really have anything on me. I was not about to confess.
“We clocked you at 80,” he snarled. “Let me see your license.” It turned out they had radar hidden halfway down the road (unusual at the time) and were monitoring it from the corner. “Is that as fast as that car will go?” one officer sarcastically enquired while his partner was writing maybe the best ticket of his career. “Yeah … in first gear,” I snarked.
Before this ‘Vette, I had a well-used ’57 MGA, which was cool for school but slow, unreliable, and a little rusty. I lusted for something cooler and quicker and started threatening to trade it for an older Corvette. I even checked out a couple of not-so-cherry ‘54s and ‘55s.
My folks were not wealthy, but my father, a Nebraska farmer’s son, loved cars and was a skilled driver who had wheels as a kid. He believed his sons should, too. His affinity included Corvettes, and on a business trip to Detroit, he found this nice ‘57—a black base car with a detachable hardtop, a 245-horse twin-four-barrel 283-cubic inch V-8 and a Powerglide two-speed automatic. He talked the seller down to $1500 and brought it home. So, as a car-loving high-school senior, I ended up with the only Corvette around. Truly bad-ass!
Not only did the Corvette encourage my assertive driving habits, it also brought out my creativity, serving as a blank canvas that my teenage car-crazy self couldn’t help but personalize. When the inevitable big ticket that came after my 80-mph test run earned me a second license suspension, this time for three long months, I decided I would use the time off to customize my ‘Vette.
Growing up in the ‘50s and ‘60s, I had always had a thing for customized cars. I lusted over the best ones in magazines and built plastic car models with every cool modification I could manage. Why not apply that (questionable) skill to my own set of wheels? In those days, it was just a used sports car, not yet a coveted collectible.
I started by painting white racing stripes nose-to-tail. Then I removed every other tooth from the grille and blacked out its horizontal bar, leaving half as many teeth floating twice as far apart in the oval opening. I thought that was a good look for a toothy C1 Corvette (and still do). I also pulled off both front and rear license-plate brackets and the rear-fender chrome trim and added twin antennas, custom (’68 Olds wagon) taillamp lenses, and triple (’64 Pontiac Tempest) chrome strips in the coves. I also installed short lake pipes with removable caps, which tended to drag on driveway ramps and break off every week or two.
We didn’t have an abundance of aftermarket alloy wheels way back then, but we did have hubcaps. I tried chrome “moon” discs for a while, then switched to spun aluminum “racing” discs. Tire choices were limited to black- or whitewall bias-ply, and I didn’t have money for new ones anyway. The ho-hum, half-tread set of whitewalls that came on it would have to do.
I two-toned the orangey-red dash and seats, the latter with white upholstery paint, then paid a body shop to Bondo chrome exhaust tips into the rear fenders. Finally, I painted the inside of the trunk white and sweet-talked my visiting artist cousin into painting a cartoon skunk in there because we had christened my newly striped and customized ‘Vette “Li’l Stinkie.”
The doors and dash did look better painted white, but it wasn’t long before the paint on the seats began to crack and look awful, so I bought a set of seat covers to hide them. And the tightly restrained exhausts soon vibrated through the Bondo. Otherwise, I thought it looked pretty good. And it got a new white convertible top, which our family cat walked all over leaving indelible paw prints on it the first night it was home. I love animals but never liked that cat.
Because it still had the numerically low axle ratio that came with the Powerglide automatic, it was incredibly long-legged, good for 65 mph in first, over 100 in second and I don’t know what in third. I pushed it to 100 a couple times where I thought it was safe but had the good sense never to exceed that speed.
I even took it to the local drags one Sunday and won a trophy. It was a bit of a dog off the line, but while the other cars with their numerically high gear ratios were already in fourth halfway down the strip, Li’l Stinkie and I were cruising by in second gear just before the finish. Hilarious!
It also nearly killed me more than once. It suddenly slid sideways on a wet curvy four-lane during Friday rush-hour traffic on my way home from my summer construction job. I caught the slide and avoided getting battered, but that was a scary lesson for a teenager.
Scarier still was a near disaster on the night of my senior prom. After dropping girlfriend Marty home, I stupidly decided to try a late-night run on that makeshift drag strip. Well into second gear, a large dog suddenly appeared in my headlamps trotting down the middle of the road. I jammed on the brakes and swerved to miss it, which sent me into a series of left-right-left tank slappers.
Very fortunately, I knew enough even at 17 to understand that getting off the brakes would help me regain control, so I did and somehow avoided both the dog and the high curbs that likely would have flipped me into the puckerbrush on either side of the road. Whew!!! I was probably wearing the Sears seatbelt I had bought and installed but had no roll bar to keep the car off my head if it went belly up. Another very scary lesson—one I wouldn’t forget.
When it came time for college, my ‘Vette had to go because my dad needed the money. But my customization had badly damaged its value. “Your son pretty much ruined that car,” one dealer told him. Another who specialized in used Corvettes finally bought it for $1,200, as I recall. Years later, I encountered that guy working as a salesman at a different dealership and asked whether he remembered Li’l Stinkie. “Hell, boy,” he said, “I lost my ass on that car!”
Looking back, modifying that future classic was a major collector Corvette sacrilege, but this was an era before phrases like “matching numbers” and “period-correct” had much significance. In the moment, Li’l Stinkie embodied my car-crazy tastes, and I don’t think I’d change a thing.
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In 1955 a friend (who lived with his brother & was having trouble) & I (who had a falling out with my Father) left Ohio to drive to Phoenix, AZ in his 1950 Ford flathead V8 after our junior year of HS. – His Mother had been widowed for years and had just remarried so his Stepfather became my Guardian so we could finish HS in Phx.
The flathead V8 developed a bearing knock just outside of Phx and blew a hole in the block the very next day.
We went down to East Van Buren where auto machine jobs were located to get estimates or replacing the block, etc.,. – At one shop a Mercury flathead V8 was on an engine stand and we inquired about it. – The owner said he built it up (bored, stoked, Eldelblock (sp) heads, twin carbs, & a 3/4 Cam, Mallory ignition & electric fuel pump. – The guy left down still owing the mechanic $400. – We asked if that engine would fit in our 1950 Ford & the mechanic said that was a lot of engine for the Ford, but it would fit.
I had saved exactly $400 that summer working in a Clay factory in Ohio. – My friend said if I bought the engine I would own half of the car. – The mechanic said it would be an additional $100 to change out the engines. – I said all I had was $400. – He looked at us, said a few swear words and said bring your D—-n car down. – We picked it up a week later and went out to East 48th street and Indian School Rd for the midnight drags. – Phoenix was built for the future and development had not yet reached that far east toward Scottsdale. – We got paired up with a 55 Chevy V8 which was beating everyone and beat him by two car lengths! – We two guys from Ohio were instant celebrities at school. – A couple of times we goaded the Phx police (who were driving Plymouths automatic transmissions) and got our old blue Ford into my friend’s garage before they even got into our neighborhood. – Kind of like the movie American Graffiti. – Great memories for an 85 year old who is still a “Car Guy”.
When I was 16 I wanted a 67 Chevelle SS396 that was on a used car lot for $895. My Dad said no and of course he saved my life.
I had a ’56 Corvette in 1972. Looked 100% stock but, had a 327 under the hood. I was 21 years old, had paid $3,200 for it at a dealer’s used car lot in Norman, Oklahoma. I pushed it up to over 130 mph, on an FM (farm to market) road in SW Oklahoma. Encountered a State Trooper – what was he doing out in the boonies? – and floored it. What an idiot I was. He must have been on his way home because while I saw his brake lights come on and his back end rise, he didn’t turn around or come after me. It was a real beauty.
Great idea for a future feature….”Sacrilegious Kustom ‘vettes”.
As a kid in the ’69s, I recall seeing plenty of C2s with dubious improvements.
Likewise in the 70s-80s there were plenty of terrible C3s (see “Corvette Summer” for an example) once they hit the used car market.
The fiberglass body encouraged a lit of guy to try and find their inner Barris/Winfield/Jeffries.
Not really interested in hearing about the exploits of some rich douche bag kid with a corvette in high school…
well quit talking to yourself them…
Very cool story. We all have one or two in our automotive-driven memory banks. As for customizing Corvettes, I really dig what you did to yours. My dad always wanted a 50s ‘Vette to customize. Although he had many other custom cars, he never owned a Corvette. As for value, the resto-mod custom Vettes are bringing the big bucks now.
Thanks for the great story and pictures. Your story brought back good ( and some not so good) memories for most , if not all of us. One big thing you did absolutely right is that you took and kept many pictures. Something that I, unfortunately never did and still don’t.
Love the personalization. I have a 66 Vette that I have owned for 45 years with over 300,000 miles on it. Great driver. My motto for NCRS is No Car Remains Stock. Make it your own!!
Great article. So aren’t you going to tell us who is the beauty sitting on the fender of the first Vette? 😉
This truly was one of the best stories I’ve read on hagerty email. Please keep them coming.
Well written, great story. Sure takes this old timer back. Thanks!
Too bad people don’t learn modifications ruin collectible cars.
Great story, do you know what happened to your car? Also, is that you gf sitting on the car and what happened to her? I had a chance to buy a 56 vette in 67 my first year at a real job. The guy wanted $800 and the car looked in good shape but it had been sitting outside and grass had grown up around it. I talked to the owner who was a young guy that bought it new and he agreed to sell it. I came back the next day with the cash which was probably my savings. The guy changed his mind. He said he just couldn’t sell it even though he was married with a couple of young kids. He needed the money but just couldn’t bring himself to part with it. I told him that I thoughly understood and wished him well. I often wondered what happened to that car. If it was taken care of it would be worth a small fortune today.
regretfully I have no idea what happened to that ’57 Corvette after my dad sold it. It could be in a landfill somewhere, parted out to keep other old Corvettes on the road, or beautifully restored in someone’s collection. I also, very regretfully, lost touch long ago with the lovely young lady on its fender. Her name was Marty, and she was my girlfriend during my senior year in high school and my first year in college. Then we both moved on. Thanks for asking. And in response to sourpuss Mark above, I may have been a “douche bag” back then, but I don’t think so, and (as I wrote) definitely not rich. Just very lucky.
Not noticing Gary’s name to the article, I read it as ‘her’ car and quite the female trendsetter for the times.
Gotta say, it read more fun that way.
My brother’s name is Doug Higbee, who lives in the east bay of CA. Is that you, or just his twin from a different mother?
It’s hard to convince people who weren’t there that they weren’t collectibles then, they were just used, usually abused cars. I honestly have no recollection of what I did with the original motor and gearbox from my 1st generation Camaro.