Mystery History: Do you recognize this vintage Corvette racer?

Brandan Gillogly

Larry Carpenter has a long history with Chevrolet Corvettes, stretching back more than 40 years. The backstory of one of his more recent purchases, however, is still clouded in mystery. This ’56 was a former drag racer and certainly must have had a colorful past, but Carpenter, of Ogden, Utah, hasn’t had much luck digging into its quarter-mile exploits. Perhaps you or someone you know remembers seeing this straight-axle Corvette competing in Modified Sports Car classes in the ’60s and can help shed some light on details. Here’s a look:

Brandan Gillogly

Carpenter’s love of Corvettes goes back to his teens. “My dad was a Ford man,” said Carpenter, who let brand loyalty skip a generation. “In high school, I decided I wanted a Corvette.” His father thought that Corvettes were hard to work on. We suppose anyone who’s tried to service a big-block Corvette would have a tough time arguing. Despite his father’s protests, Carpenter bought his first Corvette just before his senior year in high school. It was a 1964 convertible with a 365-horsepower L76 327.

Brandan Gillogly

“I’ve probably had about 35 different Corvettes.” Carpenter admitted. His collection was never too large though, because his desire for a different Corvette would necessitate selling one to free up the room and the money to grab another. Today though, he’s less interested in selling any of his current fleet to acquire a new one. Over the past 40 years or so, Carpenter’s collection has included mostly second-and third-generation Corvettes. If there’s one theme tying them all together, it’s that none have remained stock. On the contrary, Carpenter seems to have a habit of buying banged-up race cars or basket cases and giving them a new life, with little reverence for concours-type restorations. “I’m not a purist,” Carpenter stated, completely at peace with the fact that his cars would be shunned by the National Corvette Restorers Society. “To me, NCRS means ‘No Components Remain Stock’.”

Indeed, his idea of a “100-point” car is one that has 100 aftermarket parts. We’re not casting aspersions on Carpenter’s taste, far from it: We’re fans of race-prepped ‘Vett`es and the godfather of Corvettes himself, Zora Arkus-Duntov, was a big proponent of giving Corvette buyers the parts needed to make them competitors on the track. Even if Carpenter’s Corvettes don’t remain stock, there is a theme, and it’s often a period-correct look from the late ‘60s to early ‘70s.

The car that’s spent the most time in Carpenter’s fleet is a ’66 coupe he’s owned since about 2014. It was a big-block drag racer that Carpenter swapped to a small-block and then back to a big-block. “It’s really a hot rod,” Carpenter explained, and it’s now equipped as a road racer, complete with Hooker side pipes. He also owns a 1972 Stingray that wears side pipes along with Torque Thrust wheels and an L88 hood.

Carpenter’s wife, Sandie, drives the 1960 Corvette that you see here. That was the first C1 Corvette in their stable. That car was purchased in the summer of 2016 as a running and driving car, but it was in the process of being stripped for paint. The fiberglass was in excellent shape, so it didn’t require any special work. The body was taken off the frame, the car was painted, and everything else was freshened up, including the engine. It had been equipped with a rather plain 350, but in keeping with Carpenter’s “day two”, or in this case, “year 10” aesthetic, the engine was treated to forged pistons, a more potent top end, and LT-1 livery, although it does use the famous Duntov 30-30 cam which offers a bit more high-rpm performance than the stock LT-1 bumpstick.

Carpenter purchased this 1956 Corvette in July 2017 from a buyer who picked it up from the previous owner’s estate. As best as Carpenter can tell, the car was based in the San Francisco Bay area and raced in its solid-axle configuration into the mid-1980s, at which point the car was driven off the end of a dragstrip. “That doesn’t surprise me. . . It didn’t have any front brakes.” Carpenter explained. According to the seller, the car hit a hay bale, although Carpenter attests that whatever it hit was far more stout than that, considering the damage to the body and the chassis.

The story goes that the damaged car was dragged back home, the engine and trans were removed, and it was parked next to a chicken coop. That part of the story tracks, as Carpenter noted that there was a definite lack of spider or spider webs when poking about the car’s interior and undercarriage during its rebuild. Score one for organic pest control.

When he bought it, the car featured hand-painted lettering on the side that read “Profile in Black” with the owners “Owen and Hankins” also mentioned. Carpenter did discover that there appears to have been a change in the partnership or perhaps a falling out as the Owens was mostly sanded off and the “and” was painted over. Despite spending years trying to track down the car’s history and posting on various vintage car and hot rod message boards, Carpenter hasn’t had any luck tracking down the family of the previous owners.

In the meantime, Carpenter decided to make it his car and got rid of most of the lettering, although he did leave plenty of the car’s patina. The track accident left the passenger side front fender hanging on by a thread, or rather several fiberglass threads. He repaired the damage as delicately as possible, keeping the “STP” sticker intact. “It was more work than if you’d done it the normal way, but it hides the damage well,” Carpenter said. Despite cleaning up the body and repairing the frame damage, plenty of the car’s original character is intact, from the cracked paint to the original lettering on the back. It’s tough to make out, but the hand-lettering reads “Function at the Junction” which Carpenter believes may reference a West Coast dragstrip.

Despite the tunnel ram and twin carbs, Carpenter says that the 327 is, “actually pretty docile” but rest assured that its Crane Fireball camshaft still provides the small-block with plenty of airflow and attitude. He must be really good at carb tuning. Brandan Gillogly

With no engine or trans in the car, Carpenter chose a combination that he thought was appropriate. He found a used 327 with a worn-out block and salvaged its rotating assembly and fuelie heads. He also scored a seasoned 327 block and brought it to a machine shop, giving the machinist instructions to bore it to match his vintage .040-over pistons, but not to hot tank it, as he planned to run the engine without painting it to keep it looking vintage.

“I tried to keep this car as period correct as I could” — Larry Carpenter

The engine was outfitted with late-‘60s-appropriate speed parts, including the Edelbrock TR-1 “shoebox” tunnel ram and matching 660CFM Holley center-squirter carbs. Since the car still had a Joe Hunt decal, it seemed fitting to equip the 327 with a Joe Hunt magneto. Carpenter also found an appropriate exhaust, a used pair of Hooker fender-well headers meant for an early Nova. They were an almost perfect fit, and just as important, they look the part.

Aside from the lettering, the rear push bar on the Corvette seems rather unique and may prove helpful in tracking down its history. Brandan Gillogly

Because the car’s real racing days were over, Carpenter worked on making the car more streetable without losing its racy edge. “I had to rebuild the front end, the frame, and suspension. It was antiquated and sketchy. I don’t know how that guy dared to drive down the track,” said Carpenter. The straight axle, still of unknown origin, was rebuilt and it also got some much-needed front brakes, as Sandie’s 1960 Corvette donated its stock drums when it was upgraded to discs. The 327 is linked to an M-21 four-speed by way of an Ansen NHRA blowproof bellhousing with a Hurst shifter. It sends power to a Pontiac/Olds 9.3-inch rear axle fitted with a spool and 5.38:1 gears. Like we said, it still has plenty of race car manners.

Carpenter told us, “I tried to get old junk to put on it as much as I could.” That included the fiberglass flex fan and a vintage radiator from a ’57 Corvette. Brandan Gillogly

Carpenter has done quite a job in making this car look as a survivor race car should, despite having to make plenty of repairs. As much as we love its current look, both Carpenter and all of us here at Hagerty Media would love to see how it presented in its heyday. If you remember seeing this car on the dragstrip when it was a quarter-mile contender, please share your story and we’ll help you get in touch with Carpenter so that he can be a caretaker of not only the current car, but also its racing legacy.

 

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Comments

    NICE!! Reminds me of the Vette my friend had, “Wheels of Fortune” he ran on the LI Drag Strips. I wonder where it is today?

    That car is awesome. It brings me back to my childhood, I would see cars like that as a nine year old and thought they were just the coolest things in existence. And STP was everywhere,lol. Best of luck in finding the history and if you do please publish it on Hagerty so we’ll know 🙂 Congrats on your restoration it looks great!

    I own a 1962 corvette, bought it in the Cleveland, Ohio area around 1980. It was painted Honduras maroon, but as I started restoring it found that it had been painted orange, frame and body at one time! Judging from damage to the suspension, it looks like it might have been raced on circuit tracks (not drag raced)! I always wondered if anybody knew of this car?

    This car may have some connection to an annual event that occurs in Junction City, Oregon that is called “Function at the Junction”.

    In the late 60’s and early 70’s at New England Dragway, Epping NH there was a corvette very similar from MA called Hayseed. Just a thought. 89 GTA owner.

    Great thought… Hayseed is an awesome car. To my understanding the owner restored it back to stock and is now building a tribute car to look like Hayseed in it’s Hayday. I’m not positive on the details but my car is not Hayseed

    This would coincide with the fact that there is a company registered in Oregon called Owens and Hawkins. It seems to be a transport company. Perhaps the removal of Owens was a disagreement about this car but not the whole busieness.

    I remember a corvette that looked like this model. I had a boyfriend who had a 1957 corvette. He had a close friend who lived at Clyde or Baird, Texas who had a Corvette that I believe was a 1956 model. It was yellow and white. It would outrun anything around any of those little towns around there plus anything in Taylor county(Abilene,Texas). He finally met his Waterloo when he flipped it while being chased by the DPS, Sheriff’s department and every other law enforcement personnel in three counties one night. He was forced to sell the car in order to get himself out of jail, pay his bond and fines etc. Neither he nor his girl friend who later became his wife were injured; however, in a failed suicide attempt several years later, he became a quadraplegic and wound up in a nursing home for the remainder of his life. I don’t know what happened to the Corvette.

    This looks like ‘Tar Baby’ a black ‘56 vette that used to frequent Cecil County & Englishtown Dragstrips back in the ‘60s. There also was a red ‘Vette called ‘Tomato
    Can’. This was during the ‘Ramchargers’
    heydays. One of the major competitors of Mopar Ramchargers was Dave Strickler in his 409c.i. Chevy SS Impala.

    No production car looks quite as racy as a C1 Vette set up for drag racing with a straight axle and wide slicks. And I’m a Ford guy.

    I agree with jeepcj5t. This ‘Vette works for me – a Ford guy. To me it is a hot rod – that just happens to be a ‘Vette.

    I’m thinking I have seen this Corvette in a garage in Napa, Ca. Probably in the late 70’s. If I ask a few of the car guys I know that are still around, they may also recognize it. Seems to me there was no one that had any history of it and that it was just sitting in this garage and was “maybe for sale”

    That would be awesome Rod if you could check on that. Maybe the previous owner to me was not the guys that last painted it with the lettering “Owens and Hankins” – “Profile in Black” and “Function at the Junction” ?

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