4 Canadian-Built Classics That Are Unusual and Attainable

Jay Leno's Garage

Canada Day, aka Fête du Canada, celebrates the anniversary of Canadian Confederation that occurred on July 1, 1867. It’s a day to “reflect on what it means to be Canadian, to share what makes us proud,” and it “highlights the richness of our land, our diversity, our culture, our contributions, but above all, our people,” according to the government’s official website. It’s a glorious day for Canada, and to celebrate, we’re looking at some of the popular classic vehicles to come from the Great White North, and how much they’re worth in today’s market.

Starting in the early twentieth century, the big Detroit automakers south of the border built factories in Canada to sell to Canadians, rather than ship U.S.-built vehicles north. This was because of tariffs between the two countries, and while many Canadian-built Ford, GM and Chrysler products were similar to the ones driven by Americans, others were rather uniquely Canadian. There were Meteors (Ford), McLaughlin Buicks, Fargo (Dodge) trucks, and Plymouths trimmed out as Dodges, and Acadians and Beaumonts (both GM). After the Canada-United States Automotive Products Agreement in 1965, though, cross-border trade loosened up. The specifically Canadian models and marques gradually disappeared, although promising independents like the Bricklin SV-1 or Manic GT continued to pop up. Today they’re all interesting, somewhat obscure classics. Below are the Canadian vehicles we most often see on the market.

1960 Frontenac

Canadian Frontenac Car ad
Flickr/Michael

When Ford introduced its compact Falcon in 1960, Ford Canada brought out an all-new marque to bring the compact party up north. They called it the Frontenac, short for a 17th-century Governor General of New France (I guess Louis de Buade, Comte de Frontenac et de Palluau was too long to fit on a badge) and built it in Oakville, Ontario. Frontenacs were essentially a mildly restyled Falcon, and were available in two- and four-door sedan body styles as well as two- and four-door wagons. All were powered by the 144-cubic inch Thriftpower straight-six. Ford Canada sold over 9500 Frontenacs for 1960 but discontinued the brand after only one year, replacing it with the Comet for 1961.

Frontenac prices differ by body style, ranging from $13,100 (CAD 17,900) for a four-door wagon at the bottom to $23,000 (CAD 31,400) for a two-door wagon at the top.

1948–52 Mercury M-Series Pickups

1951 Mercury Pickup front
Mecum

To American eyes, pickup trucks with a Mercury badge seem a little Twilight Zone, like a budget city car sporting a Rolls-Royce grille or Kia making a mid-engine exotic. But from the postwar years up until the late 1960s, Mercury M-Series pickups were a very real thing for Canadian buyers.

At the time, many parts of the country didn’t have a Lincoln/Mercury dealership and a Ford dealership, so the Mercury M-Series gave truck-buying customers an option even if there was no Ford store around. The first-generation 1948-52 M-Series followed the same format as the first-generation Ford F-Series. Mercury M-Series trucks came in most of the configurations available on the Ford versions down south, but with fewer engine options. Currently, we only have the 1/2-ton, 239-cid eight-cylinder M-Series in the Hagerty Price Guide, and their #2 values range from $44,600 (CAD 60,900) for the earlier 1948-50 M-47 to $40,800 (CAD 55,700) for the 1951-52 M-1 model. Condition #3 values currently sit in the mid-$20K (CAD 27,300) range.

1968–69 Beaumont

1969 Beaumont front
Mecum

Of all the special Canadian market versions of Big Three vehicles, General Motors’ Acadian and Beaumont lines were arguably the most distinctive. In 1962 GM launched Acadian, referring to the 17th- and 18th-century French settlers of eastern Canada, as its own brand. Its first model was based on the Chevy II/Nova compact but with different grille and trim, and different models included the mid-tier Acadian Invader and the range-topping Acadian Beaumont. In 1964 when the mid-size Chevelle came out, then Acadian added a Chevelle-based model to the lineup, recycling the Beaumont name. Then, in 1966, Beaumont became its own brand. When the second-generation Chevelle arrived for 1968, Beaumont followed suit. This was short-lived, however, as GM Canada axed the Beaumont brand after 1969 in favor of the Americanized Chevelle and Pontiac LeMans.

Built in Ontario and sold at Pontiac/Buick dealers, the 1968-69 Beaumont looks like a Chevelle with a few scoops of Pontiac mixed in, and generally followed the Chevelle in terms of trim and powertrains, which included 283, 307, 327, 350 and 396 cid engines as well as three- and four-speed manuals or Powerglide and Turbo Hydramatic automatics. Equivalent to Chevrolet’s Super Sport (SS) trim on the Chevelle was Beaumont’s Sport Deluxe (SD).

The average condition #2 value for a 1968-69 Beaumont is $24,200 (CAD 33,000) but, like their Chevrolet-badged cross-border cousins, prices vary widely depending on drivetrain and body style. The cheapest V-8 model in the Hagerty Price Guide is the 1968 307/200 hp sedan with a #2 value of $9600, while the most expensive is the extremely rare 396/350 hp L34-powered convertible with a #2 value of $81,800 (CAD 111,700).

1974–75 Bricklin SV-1

bricklin front three-quarter doors raised
Joe Ligo

Seven years before John DeLorean came out with his own ambitious but under-powered, ill-fated gullwing sports car, Malcolm Bricklin built one in New Brunswick, Canada. Bricklin, the serial automotive entrepreneur who brought Subaru to North America, imported Fiat sports cars under the Bertone and Pininfarina brands and was the man behind the Yugo, envisioned a small and reasonably priced sports car with gullwing doors when planning his next business venture in the early 1970s. As the concept developed, Bricklin snagged a few million dollars in funding from the government of New Brunswick and set up two facilities in Saint John and Minto. The company officially unveiled the production version of the Bricklin SV-1 at the Four Seasons in New York in 1974.

By its looks, one might think that SV-1 stands for “Sports Velocity-1” or something wild like that, but it actually stands for “Safety Vehicle”. The frame of the Bricklin includes an integrated roll cage, and each bumper is designed to absorb 5-mph impacts, both forward-thinking steps at the time. The bodywork is color-impregnated (five shades available) acrylic resin bonded to fiberglass, and the famous doors raise via hydraulic cylinders in about 12 seconds.

When Bricklin went looking for a parts bin to raid, it settled on AMC, so the SV-1 borrows its suspension from the Hornet, and early SV-1s have AMC’s 360-cubic inch four-barrel V-8. Later ones got Ford’s two-barrel 351 Windsor. Most SV-1s got a three-speed automatic, but a few buyers selected a Borg-Warner four-speed manual. In the end, Bricklin suffered the same fate as a lot of upstart carmakers, including the later DeLorean, minus the sting operation and tired Back to the Future redemption arc. There were quality control problems and supplier hold-ups, while a ballooning price and Malaise Era V-8 performance in a nearly 3500-pound car made the SV-1 difficult to sell. Only about 3000 were built.

Canada’s sports car has never been particularly expensive, but some strong sales for clean cars have seen prices surge surprisingly to a current median condition #2 value of $38,000 (CAD 51,900). The current #3 value sits at $23,000 (CAD 31,400) and the #4 value at $9,000 (CAD 12,300). The later Ford-powered cars would theoretically be easier to service, but the 351 was rated with lower grunt than the AMC 360 (175 hp vs. 220), so the two carry similar values. Add a few grand for the four-speed.

***

Hagerty maintains a Canadian version of our popular online valuation tool, complete with prices shown in Canadian dollars. It can be accessed here.

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Comments

    My college friend had access to his mother’s Meteor sedan. We borrowed it to drive from Toronto to Miami and back in September of 1962 just before starting third year of college. On our return, just as we approached Folkston Georgia a deer jumped the median and crashed into the front of our car. We were not injured but the dear was killed. The Sherriff investigating the accident was primarily interested in getting the deer up to the schoolhouse so they could cut it up! We got to spend a week in Folkston while our car was being repaired. There were no Meteor parts available so the car became a Ford at the front and remained a Meteor in the back!

    Love the Beaumont grille. One way to dress up a late ’60s Chevelle, which for some reason I have never liked (probably the badly done wrap around grille pieces outboard of the headlights. Same for Nova and full size Chevy too).

    Odd grille on the Falcon….which reminds me there was a story somewhere, about a similar Falcon built in South America through the :70s…it had a very nice, more modern grille, if I owned a first generation Falcon, I’d try to get one.

    Eh…let’s take the Fargo to Tim Hortons.

    not much info out their about canadian built cars i have 1963 dodge 440/ polara convertible with a plymouth dash its tough locating parts

    “…Americanized Chevelle…” Silly me. I thought the Chevelle was born in America.

    The Bricklin was never a good car when new with all the problems they had with the body panels delaminating .

    A beautifully restored 1965 Beaumont SD convertible will make a 20,000 km round trip from British Columbia across Canada to compete in Targa Newfoundland this September. There it will cover 2000 km racing across the island in the rally. Owners Kurt and Lu Penner have put a lot of miles on their baby because they believe classics are made for driving.

    This nearly 60-year-old classic is no trailer queen as it has already logged 290,000 km (180,000 miles) since they bought the car in 1994 and completed a cosmetic restoration.

    The Beaumont is a Canadian built car, one of approximately 400 built as SD convertibles. While it appears mostly stock, Jellybean Autocrafters did a number of upgrades like disc brakes, quicker ratio steering and suspension mods to improve drivability and handling. 

    https://targanfld.com/team-jellybean/

    https://jellybeanautocrafters.com/

    While i avoid the now devalued term “classic,” like Paul Murray’s Windsor-built Torino, Tom’s Fury VIP, Revv’s ’63 Polara conv (above posts), my ’70 Polara conv., last full-sized Chrysler Corp. drophead, only 842 built, was produced across the Detroit River in the Windsor plant. But we never noticed any oddities like Revv’s Plymouth dash.

    GM’s marketing department together with a couple of the largest GM dealers in Toronto and Montreal had some meetings to determine how they might differentiate made-in/assembled-in Canada cars and light to medium duty trucks. (Ford and Chrysler followed the same path). McLaughlin-Buick and Mapleleaf (re-badged Chevs) trucks date back to pre WWII years and are stories in themselves.
    I believe this differentiation was silly and speaks to some misguided concern about catering to the Canadian public’s supposed desire to be unique. (Not so to our French-Canadian friends who were and are unique.) Many of the ‘marques’ mentioned here simply exhibited minor trim changes vis a vis their US counterpart while some went in a marginally different direction; i.e., Pontiac’s Parisienne, Laurentian and Stratochief sat on Chevy chassies, engines and drivetrains. Anyone owning a sixties era Parisienne wouldn’t”t believe the difference between their ride and a similarly equipped Bonneville with its widetrack chassis, standard 389 cu. in. V8 and four speed automatic. It would also be disapointed to find the Parisienne was about 20% more expensive in Canadian currency. In college I had a ’64 Plymouth Valiant Signet convertible which had a Dodge Dart rear end.
    Sometimes it seems the most unique thing about us Canadians has been our penchant for trying to differentiate ourselves from our American friends. Kinda sad actually.

    I had the opportunity to inspect and climb into a new Bricklin on a Houston dealer’s showroom floor when searching for a second car. To say that if was of poor quality would be an undeserved compliment. The gullwing doors were flimsy and waffled as they went from a closed position to full open. I had really planned on buying one if it was worth the money. Needless to say, I passed on it with no regrets.

    Used to own a 1970 Pontiac Lemans 2dr 350.That car moved like a scared cat. Also omitted was the 122S Volvo Canadian. Owned one of them as well –very sporty and fun to drive–except in the winter when temps were in the 0c range) twin carbs would have condensation and freeze. Carried a thermos of hot water to thaw them out before starting.

    I remember looking at a Mercury pickup. Engine (383?) was different cu in. from Ford plus the dubious distinction of driving the power steering pump from within the block

    I have a 57 Pontiac Laurentian sitting in my garage for the last 43 years, Hard to find any decent body parts. Got a 1/4 panel from Manitoba, needs a little work, and I am still looking to find a good replacement hood. They are different from the US cars.

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