Original Owner: A 12-year-old saves to buy a new MGB at 16
Welcome to Original Owner, a series showcasing—you guessed it—people who bought a classic car new and still own it. The cars don’t need to be factory-original, just still in the hands of the first owner and still getting driven. Got a tip? Email tips@hagerty.com —Ed.
At 16 years old, Peter Cosmides bought a 1975 MGB roadster brand-new with funds he’d earned working since he was 12. The purchase had fulfilled an obsession sparked when he was a very young boy. After buying the iconic British roadster, Cosmides would find it steering his life’s course in unexpected ways.
“Owning the MG shaped my life as far as my hobby, my friends, and even my vocation,” Cosmides recalls. “The friends I have today are all people that have MGs or other British cars that I’ve met over the years. In 2020, I retired from running a British car restoration business for 14 years.”
Before all that happened, the MG was just his fun daily driver. He wasn’t afraid to take it on long road trips, either: A year after buying it, Cosmides drove the green roadster cross-country from his home at the time in Valley Stream, New York on Long Island to attend Arizona State University.
“My girlfriend, Anne, lived with me there for a time,” he says. “She was my high school sweetheart. We got married in 1980 and are still married. She knew I was already well ensconced in the MG world when she came along.”
The MG would serve as the newlyweds’ only car for several years. It even took them to the laundromat.
“By around 1980, we bought something else, and the MG became the second car,” he says. “I started taking it to British car shows, and I’ve been going ever since. I made several trips to Florida in it over the years, too.”
MG family
The MGB, which now has about 100,000 miles, has acquired MG siblings over the years. When we spoke with Cosmides in July of 2023, he and his wife had just returned to his southern New Jersey home from a 1350-mile road trip in one of them, a 1996 MGF. The automaker’s final sports car, the MGF was a mid-engine roadster never imported to the United States.
Cosmides also owns one of the 2600-or-so MGB GT V8 models built from 1973 to 1976, most of which are right-hand drive models for the U.K. market. To make this captivating model, MG replaced the B’s four-banger with the former Buick 3.5-liter aluminum V-8 that British Leyland had come to own and use in a variety of Rover cars as well as in the Range Rover SUV. Not much heavier than the four-cylinder model, the MGB GT V8 could hit 60 mph from zero in 7.5 seconds. This engine would also find its way into the 1978–80 Triumph TR8 and some British boutique sports cars, including the Morgan Plus 8.
MG pilgrimage
The summer 2023 road trip in the MGF had been something of a pilgrimage for Cosmides, a trip which he and his wife took with friends driving an Austin Healey. The main stop was Petersburg, Virginia, the home of well-known British auto parts supplier Moss Motors, which was hosting a cars and coffee event to celebrate its 75th anniversary.
Cosmides’ connection to Moss went well beyond buying parts for his MGs over the years. In the ’80s, he had worked for the giant parts seller, first in California and then at its warehouse in Rockaway, New Jersey, an operation that later moved to Virginia.
“I was the first employee in their New Jersey facility,” he recalls. “I was there only a couple of years. After that, I worked for Federal Express for about 20 years.”
When the Moss Motors celebration ended, Cosmides and his wife continued southward to North Carolina to pick up a hardtop for the MGF before returning home to New York.
“The MGF was a much more modern car than the MGB, which had really become an antique toward the end of production,” Cosmides acknowledges. “They’d never really improved on it while struggling to meet any regulations that came along.”
Still, he loves his “antique” as much today as he did on the day he bought it.
A boy’s MG obsession
Working for the largest British car parts supplier had been, if only briefly, something of a dream job for a young man whose infatuation with the island nation’s sports cars had begun when he was a boy.
“When I was five, my uncle bought a 1962 Austin Healey Sprite Mk. II,” he says. “That was the twin to the MG Midget. I used to sit in that car and pretend I was driving. I became kind of a sports car enthusiast right then.”
When he turned 12, Cosmides already had his heart set on buying a new MGB in time for getting his driver’s license. He began working in earnest to achieve that goal. From 1972 through 1975, he was a mechanic at the local Schwinn bicycle store. During summers, he also worked for the local school district as a janitor.
The work paid off. By spring 1975, when he was still 16, Cosmides had saved $3800 (about $21,500 today). “But the MG was $4800,” he remembers. “My father was kind enough to throw in that other thousand dollars. And so, I bought myself a brand-new MGB.”
Accompanied by his father, he ordered the MG from Road-Track Imports on Burnside Avenue in Inwood, New York, in May 1975. Today, the same corner building houses several businesses, including a smoke shop. The old service area is today a tire business.
The car arrived at the dealership in August, in time for Cosmides’ 17th birthday—but it was the wrong color.
“We had placed an order for a blue one, but a green one came in instead. I took it anyway, and I’m glad I did. It’s a great color.”
Factory basics: MGB
Years before the British pop music invasion, there was the sports car invasion, with MG as one of the leaders. In 1955, the company replaced the TF, the last of its 1930s-styled “T” models, with the sleek MGA. The new car became an instant hit. Through 1962, MG made about 101,000 of them, with most exported to the U.S., the largest market for other British sports cars, as well.
The A’s successor would do even better and, like certain British rock bands, it would stick around much longer than seven years. Introduced at the Earls Court Motor Show on September 20, 1962, the MGB ushered in a wave of modernity over the MGA, including a unitized body structure replacing the A’s body-on-frame setup.
The MGB’s handsome in-house design showed more than a passing resemblance to the Pininfarina-designed 1960 Ferrari 250 GT Cabriolet Series II, which certainly added to the cheaper roadster’s appeal. The B boasted a roomier, more comfortable cockpit than the A, including roll-up windows instead of the A’s side curtains.
Under the hood, the B-series OHV inline four-cylinder engine birthed by Austin in 1947 grew from the MGA’s 1.6-liter to 1.8 liters (1798 cc, to be precise), with 92 horsepower at 5400 rpm and 106 lb-ft of torque at 3000 rpm (SAE gross). These were good numbers for a 2200-pound car. The ’65 gained a stronger, five main-bearing crankshaft, and MG boosted output slightly to 95 hp and 110 lb-ft.
The four-speed manual transmission (non-synchro first gear) and suspension carried over from the MGA, using A-arms with coil springs and lever shocks up front and a solid axle on multi-leaf springs with lever shocks in back. An optional front antiroll bar later became standard. Steering was unassisted rack-and-pinion. Wheels measured 14 x 4.5 inches.
The early MGB could do 0 to 60 mph in about 12 seconds and crest 100 mph. Laycock de Normanville overdrive was a $175 option that could lower revs in highway driving. A pretty and practical MGB GT hatchback coupe, with a roofline shaped by Pininfarina, joined the roadster in 1965 (1966 in the U.S.) and proved popular.
The MGB got a fully synchronized transmission for 1968, and the air injection pump emission-control system continued to be available, as well. In that year’s road test of an MGB, Road & Track praised its sports car reflexes and pure driving joy but noted an “outdated character.” The MGB roadster’s price was about $2900 that year.
To offer a higher-performance choice, MG created the 1968–69 MGC by dropping in a 3.0-liter Austin inline six. The 145-hp six chopped the 0-to-60 time down to 10 seconds, but the engine was more than 200 pounds heavier than the four-cylinder. The added weight dampened handling agility and made the MGC’s steering very heavy. Just around 9000 MGC roadsters and GT coupes were made, including for the U.S. The later MGB GT V8 was a far better package.
Malaise MG
The MGB roadster became a popular club racer, winning numerous SCCA D- and E-Production championships in the mid- and late-’70s with the Huffaker Engineering team sponsored by British Leyland. The ’70s were not kind to the production MGB, though. Stiffening U.S. emissions regulations took a bite out of power for all cars, and the MG’s pushrod four was hit especially hard.
Output for the 1975 MGB was down to 65 hp (SAE net) and 92 lb-ft of torque at 2500 rpm. The engine traded its dual SU carburetors for a single Zenith, and the car gained a catalytic converter. To meet U.S. bumper and lighting regulations, the MGB added ride height and sprouted big, black polyurethane bumpers in mid-1974. The changes pushed weight about 200 pounds higher than the earlier cars. The MG’s 0-to-60 time crept up to about 14 seconds, though a Porsche 914 with the standard 1.8-liter VW air-cooled flat-four did no better.
The MGB ended in October 1980, when the Abingdon, England, plant that built it closed. By the end, MG had built some 390,000 MGB roadsters and about 125,000 GT coupes. The last roadsters cost $8000 in the U.S., and a Limited Edition model with special paint and features was $8600. Henry Ford II bought the last one imported here. The MGB would remain the world’s biggest-selling small sports car until the Mazda MX5 Miata surpassed it in 2000, as noted by Guinness World Records.
Peter’s MG
Cosmides says his MG held up well, but by 1999 he knew he’d have to address rust in the rocker panels.
“I took it apart and fixed the rust myself and then stripped the car down completely. I then trailered it to a friend in Buffalo, New York, who paints cars. He understands the car and the hobby. I didn’t want to just go to a local body shop to have them paint a classic car.”
One small modification was adding the factory ‘Special Tuning,’ or ST, spoiler. The engine did not need a full rebuild, just the cylinder head and carburetors, plus attention to other components. Cosmides would later replace the MG’s four-speed transmission with a five-speed from the Datsun 280ZX.
“The five-speed is a popular conversion,” he says. “There’s a kit available, and you source the gearbox. It’s a straightforward installation. That was the smartest thing I ever did to the car. The five-speed made a huge difference on the highway. I was able to cruise more comfortably.” [Fifth gear in this transmission is a 0.745:1 overdrive, which significantly reduced the little four-cylinder engine’s revs at highway speeds.]
“A bonus is that the gearbox will come out by itself from underneath the car, which is not something you could do with an MGB four-speed,” Cosmides explains. “If you needed a clutch or any kind of transmission work, you had to pull both the engine and transmission.”
MG memories
Hagerty: When you were saving money for the MG, did you have any thoughts about buying a used model? There were plenty around at that time.
PC: It never occurred to me. I just had my sights set on a new one.
Hagerty: Did any other sports cars catch your eye as a teen?
PC: I had pictures of other cars on my bedroom wall. I knew the Alfa Romeo and Fiat 124 Spiders, of course, and the Fiat X1/9 was on the market by then. Of all things, I liked the Saab Sonnet III, but it was way too quirky. My father would never have gone for that. It was bad enough that I wanted an MG! He’d say, ‘Just buy a Chevy Vega and save a third of the price of an MG.’
Hagerty: When did you install the five-speed?
PC: Not until 2011. I was preparing to take a cross-country trip. A bunch of MG owners were going from the East Coast out to Reno, Nevada, to attend a big MG meet, doing the drive on U.S. Route 50. The trip was 6000 miles round-trip, including going on from Reno to San Francisco.
Hagerty: How did the MG do over that distance?
PC: It was trouble-free on that trip. My son, who was in his late 20s at the time, flew out to meet me in Reno. He rode with me until I got to Phoenix and then flew back home. Then I was on my own. Some of the other MG owners in the group had arranged for a car carrier to return their cars to various places along the way back East, but I drove mine. I went down the Pacific Coast Highway to Los Angeles and then across US-40.
Hagerty: What made you decide to open a British car shop?
I’d been working for Federal Express around 20 years, and I had an epiphany that I really didn’t want to do that anymore. I decided to open a repair facility to work on MGs, starting slowly in my garage, working on cars of people I knew. For the next 14 years, I had a shop that specialized in British cars. We did repairs and restorations. A good percentage were MGs.
Hagerty: Where did you pick up your skills to work on these cars?
PC: From working on my own. I had no formal training. It was like that bumper sticker you see on old Land Rovers that says something like, ‘Land Rover: turning owners into mechanics for 60 years.’
If you had an MG, you pretty much had to learn how to work on it. You didn’t use it without eventually having to give it some help. I think that’s what attracts a lot of people to British cars, and many classic cars in general. You get a sense that the car needs you, that you’re in a partnership.
For Peter Cosmides, that partnership endures.
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Car: 1975 MGB roadster
Owner: Peter Cosmides
Home: Moorestown, NJ
Delivery date: August, 1975
Miles on car: ~100,000
Are you the original owner of a classic car or do you know someone who is? Send us a photo and a bit of background at editor@hagerty.com — you might get featured in our next installment!
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Nice story and I really love the reprinted advertisements. I remember them like they were yesterday. Thank you!
All fun cars. I have a TD that I don’t drive much anymore, only cause I don’t seem to go anywhere , but also because I’ve got a 61 mga I restored and a 67 mgbgt and 79 MGB. I think it’s something in your blood!
I fell in love early on also. After many years of Porsche loving, I opened a hobby shop after retiring. At present I just finished a MG powered Devin, A TVR is in the paint shop, and a Berkeley in on the way. If it has a motor, gear box and 4 wheels, I’m in love. …………Jim.
My first car was also British – not new – and not an MG – but it definitely served as my “training wheels” as a mechanic. I bought it at 15 for $60 Canadian with 196000 MILES on it – no lights and no brakes. I got it roadworthy shortly after my 16th birthday by which time I was working at the service station evenings and weekends. It got to the point it was pumping almost as much 50 weight Nugold through it as it was gasoline so I rebuilt it and ended up selling it at about 214000 miles. Quite a few years later I ended up driving several more British cars including a Sunbeam Alpine Mk2(babysat for a friend in Zambia), A TR7 and a ’75? MGB (company cars) before purchasing a 1972 Vauxhall (Pontiac) Firenza SL2300 notchback (with SL90 twin carb manifold conversion) (“Any Fi-ren-z-a yours ain’t no Friends of mine”) which my wife and I drove for a few years before selling it to a friend of hers in about 1984 and maintaining on the road for her well into the nineties when the difficulty in getting steering rack parts put it in the boneyard. In recent years I helped a friend “restore” a butchered ’53 TD (had been modified to put a Ford flathead V8 in it) and installed a B powertrain. I “babysat” it for 2 summers. Driving British cars DOIS tend to make drivers into mechanics.
What a great story. Pete had a dream and he made it come true. We’re about the same age and I remember thinking back then that I would by the first British car I could afford. That never happened.
The headline reminded me that when I was 12, I was saving all my money in a little metal bank. After seeing a 1959 Cadillac Eldorado Biarritz convertible at Hershey, I found one on the back row of a car lot. The floor was rotting into the ground. I don’t think any of the derelict Cadillacs on that lot were actually for sale.
The first car I actually did buy was a 1962 Lark wagon, for $180.00, as soon as I got to college.
Wow! I remember my good friend (and Best Man) Craig Cody, who worked for Moss in Goleta and at their short lived “Start Your Engines” shop in Beltsville, Maryland, mentioning Peter and his love of MG’s. I think I may have even met him once on a trip to the Goleta shop in the late 80’s. Reading this makes me miss the days of cruising to the beach in Craig’s gorgeous Racing Green B-GT, acquiring and wrenching with Craig on my own ’77 B and cruising up the Coast Highway to the Monterey Historics in Craig’s beloved MGTD, affectionately name Mehitabel. Sadly, Craig passed last year but this story brought back some wonderful memories, a smile to my face and honestly, a few tears.
Worked at a MG/Austin dealer from 1966 to 1972. Went from car washer to lead mechanic in 3 months. Thanks for the memories brings back so many to me. Currently own a 2006 Jaguar xkr and love it. Hope you have many more years to enjoy your MGB.
Great story! That was one determined (and lucky) kid. And a very faithful owner. One quibble: why “saves” in the title? That makes it sound like this happened recently. Kinda sounds hopeful, like someone is or could be doing it now… But 1976 was nearly 50 years ago. And there’s the rub: there is simply no way that any 12-year-old anywhere could now save enough money to buy a brand-new car, not even the cheapest one on the market and not even with grandpa kicking in the last quarter of the price. That is a measure of how little pay has increased and how much car prices have shot up in the last half century. He *saved* that money — in the distant past.
I have a 1970 Triumph GT6+ that I imported myself after my service in Viet Nam. Still looks good and I drive it a few times a week.
I am also from Valley Stream and now in Northern NJ. I’m a few years older than Pete. I had a 74 MGB with the big pads for about 12 years. I changed the bumpers to make it look like a 69 and added the overdrive, electronic ignition and minilite wheels. It was convenient to have Moss Motors in Rockaway close by! MGT’s rebuilt the motor and installed the overdrive. Loved the car but sold it and got an S2000 that I now have for 17 years.
Congratulations to you Pete, for having the ability to commit to one single car for essentially your entire driving life! It was obviously a great pick! I hope you continue enjoying it for years to come.
I also want to say thanks to Jim Koscs for writing this article in a way that makes the passion you have for your MGB a subject we all can understand and share. There are people out there who think people who love cars are just plain crazy. But I share the car passion with both of you….and thank you both for sharing!
Lovely story, Peter. My wife had a 1965 or ’67 (can’t remember) Primrose Yellow B when I met her. I had a worthless and quite a headache inducing Triumph TR-6 and three Norton 850 Commando motorcycles. Having lived in Great Britain for three years at RAF Chicksands with the USAFSS from ’69-’71, I of course fell in love with some of the motor cars. I purchased a 1953 Daimler that I brought home with me. Her MG-B had all leather interior, chrome bumpers, gutsy sounding engine….and I loved it and eventually her, marrying in 1976. Been through several B’s since then. Finally got an 1979 B for her and restored it and painted it her beloved Primrose Yellow. It was the last “Queen B” featured in the MGB Association of America’s last issue December 2022 magazine “Octagon”. We’ve had it for 35 years and it’s a joyous motor car to drive and always gets stares and thumbs up. Insured by Hagerty, of course. Thanks for publishing Peter Cosmides touching story, indeed!
I first met Pete around Sept of 2009 at a Brits on the Beach car show in Ocean Grove NJ. I had bought a 1964 MGB a few years earlier and I was at a point where I needed a number one mechanic to continue restoration work. I talked with numerous people about who they would recommend to do work that I needed done. The majority of those that I talked with gave Pete / Motorcar Garage rave recommendations. I contacted Pete and visited his garage shop in south Jersey. I lived in north Jersey. We talked over many things that needed to be done and the cost involved. Work lasted until June of 2010. His work was most excellent and I think very well priced…it was a pay as you go procedure. I would see Pete at the several area British car shows over the years. I moved out of the area to NC and was sorry to hear that Pete had retired. He was tops in the business.
I remember well the feeling I had upon the delivery of my new MGB in 1972. I was 20 years old at the time and it was my first new car. Just sitting in it on the dealers lot was an experience I’ll never forget, just sitting there soaking in the newness and the coolness! Unfortunatley the MG and I parted ways in 1979 as my family started to come along, but not before I used it to drive across Canada from Vancouver, BC to Montreal, Quebec. I did get back into the hobby after my retirement in 2017 by buying a 1974 MGB, a last of the chrome bumpers model. The fun continues!
Wow, amazing reading Pete’s story and all the other MGB owner comments. Couldn’t help my self, here is my MGB story! I went into the Navy out of high school in 1961 and was saving up for a GTO when I got orders to Edzell, Scotland. Local dealers brought cars out to the base for the sailors to try out. After trying out a Triumph TR 4 A and Alpine the new ’65 MBG was, to me, the best looking and fun to drive. I had saved up just enough, $2,200 to order a Tartan Red B with all the options (accept the overdrive). I realized when I started to drive in the States how much I could have saved with the overdrive! My B had black leather seats with red piping with the red soft top, tonneau cover and newly offered hard top. The dealer said the hardtop would be delivered later as they were still working on getting the paint to work well with the new fibreglass process they were using for the hard top! The knock offs for the wire wheels and the amber rear turn singles were illegal in Pennsylvania, according to the dealer, where the car was to be shipped to upon my return to the States.
I had great fun rallying and autocrossing my B through my undergrad and Masters at Penn State and sold my B after 78,000 miles in order to finish college. That was the beginning of my love of sports car driving, next with a ’73 2.0 Porsche 914 and now I have an original 2004, factory turbo-charged, MADZASPEED Miata, Velocity Red, with only 33,000+ miles on the clock. I enjoying showing the Miata as it is rare with just over 5,000 built in ’04 and ’05. Also enjoy cruising the Blue Ridge Parkway here in Roanoke, Virginia with fellow Miata club members. And to think it all started with my first car, like Pete, a new MGB!