Two Krazy Kustoms Inducted into National Historic Vehicle Register for 2024

Preston Rose/Hagerty Drivers Foundation

Even if we don’t recognize the Cannonball Run Countach on sight, most of us recognize a 1979 Countach. Same goes for the Tucker 48—die-hard car fans will recognize the rare American sedan, but fewer can spot the Tin Goose prototype without a museum placard. And What do the Cannonball Countach and the Tin Goose have in common? They’re both documented in the Library of Congress as part of the National Historic Vehicle Register thanks to the efforts of the Hagerty Drivers Foundation, a 501 (c)(3) nonprofit.

The Register currently holds 34 vehicles—they’re added, two by two, each year. Today, we meet the next two inductees. Unlike the 1969 Corvette, the 1966 VW Transporter, or the 1984 Plymouth Voyager, there is absolutely no confusing either of these vehicles with another example of their kind because the Beatnik Bandit and the Deora are unique. They’re also two of the first 16 Hot Wheels ever made … but more on that shortly.

Beatnik Bandit and the Deora are both custom cars built in the 1960s, when independent shops and individuals alike vied to bring their wildest automotive visions to life. Who cared if the cars were street-legal? The wildest “kustoms” of the day were pure art, as we’ve written elsewhere, “caricatures of what a hot rod could be.” A true kustom didn’t need to crack off the quarter-mile in such and such a time; it needed to snap necks, pop eyes, and drop jaws.

Few were better at achieving such a reaction than Ed “Big Daddy” Roth. Based in Southern California, Roth was a talented fabricator with a wild imagination and deep connections in the hot rodding world. He’s best known for “Orbitron,” “Surfite,” “Mysterion,” and “Beatnik Bandit,” now the 35th inductee to the National Vehicle Historic Register.

Debuting in 1961, this root-beer-float of a kustom drapes a custom body on the shortened chassis of an Oldsmobile from the 1950s. Like many of Roth’s creations, as you can see above, Beatnik Bandit wears a bubble top. According to Kustomrama.com, it was made in a pizza oven: Ed baked a sheet of plastic until it was malleable, then blew it up to size. A single chrome tiller in the cabin turns the wheels, shifts the transmission, and opens the throttle … perhaps unsurprisingly, the kustom was only ever transported on a trailer. However, if you either built the Revell model of this car, or owned the Hot Wheels version, we’re willing to guess you put the kustom through its paces. Restored in 1985, Beatnik Bandit now enjoys a comfortable retirement in the care of the National Automobile Museum in Reno, Nevada.

If you thought Beatnik Bandit looks like a Hot Wheels come to life, you’re right on the mark: Roth’s creation was one of the first 16 Hot Wheels models ever cast. Among that exclusive group was also the Deora, the other 2024 inductee, the product of the other custom-car nexus in America: Detroit.

Alexander Brothers Building Dodge Deora 1965
October 6, 1965. Larry and Mike Alexander work exhaustively to produce a Harry Bentley Bradley design adapted to the new Dodge A100 pickup. Though Bradley worked for GM when he started designing the Deora, many of the integral parts of the vehicle would come from Ford vehicles.The Enthusiast Network via Getty

The actual Deora was built for the 1967 Detroit Autorama, one of the country’s most prestigious indoor shows for hot rods. The Deora was the handiwork of the “A Brothers,” Larry and Mike Alexander, now regarded as one of the “most technically capable builders during the golden age of custom cars.” The Deora began life as a humble Dodge A100 pickup truck. It showed up at Autorama looking nothing like its former self: You got into the cabin from the front of the vehicle, pushing up the top-hinged windshield (the rear hatch of a Ford station wagon, in fact) and swinging open the front horizontal panel, which hinged in the middle of the car. The slant-six engine was moved back 15 inches to accommodate everything.

The Deora captured Autorama’s top prize, the Ridler Award, and Dodge was so impressed that it asked and received permission to take the Deora on tour. Like Beatnik Bandit, it was also made into a model kit, offered by AMT. The man who designed the car for the A Brothers, a fellow by the name of Harry Bentley Bradley, also led the design of the first sixteen Hot Wheels the year after the Deora debuted. Given that he chose not only the Deora but Beatnik Bandit, we’d say he had great taste in customs. Today, the Deora is owned by Tom Abrams, the CEO of Reliable Carriers.

“These two custom cars captured the national imagination when they were first introduced, epitomizing a period of customization from the great independent car designers and craftsmen,” said McKeel Hagerty, CEO of Hagerty. “The cars memorialized by Mattel’s™ Hot Wheels™ models set the toy market on fire in 1968 and continue to capture the hearts of enthusiasts and help expand car culture.”

HVA Hirohata Mercury side profile capitol hill night
Deora and Beatnik Bandit aren’t the only customs in the NHVR.Hagerty Drivers Foundation

Want to get up close and personal with two legendary customs, the real-life versions of two of the original Hot Wheels? If you’re in the D.C. area, you can see each car on the National Mall between the Smithsonian National Museum of American History and the United States Department of Agriculture—for free! The cars will take turns inside of HDF’s illuminated glass display case leading up to September 22, Cars at the Capital Family Festival Day, when both will be on display. If you’d like to know more about Cars at the Capital, check out this link.

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Comments

    While still known hot rods the Hot Wheels aspect have made these not just cars but icons of an era that we all own a part of.

    I have miles on my Bandit and my Deora was the first Hot Wheel I was given. I have both yet.

    I was never a Hot Wheels guy, but my Junior High self definitely built the Beatnik Bandit model. I’ve always been a Roth lover, and the Bandit was the “ultimate” cool car to me at the time. Deora was a show car that I admired for its engineering at a later date. Both certainly belong in the NHVR, in my opinion. Wish I was going to be in D.C. to see them on display!

    Thanks for your review and photos. I recall assembling the ‘Custom Cabana’ version of the Deora plastic model back in the day. Much fun! Was a camper addition ever incorporated onto the actual Deora?

    I’m a crazy that likes the Dodge A series, the Jeep FC models, and the Ford Econoline trucks. I think the Deora is the coolest hot rod made. Speaking of the A and FC series and Econoline trucks, would kill for some company to make such a vehicle today for the mass market. So far, the closest contender is the Canoo EV truck, and that is a no go for me, I like the looks but wouldn’t touch it unless it were at minimum a hybrid, no pure EV for me.

    You’re not a crazy for liking those models – or else we both are. I’ve dreamed of a cool FC for decades, and The Little Red Wagon A-100 is one of my favorites of all time. An Econoline van would look great in my driveway. And now, thanks to you, I’m also rooting for a hybrid Canoo!

    Me too! When I was in the USMC, ’65-’70, we still had a lot of FCs in use. Most of them had the diesel,but were still cool to drive. The diesels had a unique sound.

    I uncover when I see those classic ‘Kustoms’, man! Reverence! Why I began building modified car kits (Duco Cement, Duro Plastic Aluminum, and sometimes AMT body putty!) in the late ‘fiftes; po’ boy couldn’t afford much customizing, beyond shaving the extra chrome doo-dads, and some black primer! Sufficient unto the day…
    What beautiful (or just bizarre) packages they were, and finished packages, at that; they sweat the details! I always preferred the A Bros, Big Daddy, Valley Custom, an Id the others to ‘King’ Barris. His taste was too baroque, and his personality to self-serving. And, his ‘Kustom’ hints in AMT kit instructions were just tacky 100%! I M Humble O.

    Glad to see the Beatnik Bandit selected as it seemed to have nice proportions and a interesting look when I put it together as one of the many models of my youth. Reckon models were probably the foundation of many of us being interested in automotive and aircraft as we were exposed to many memorable cars and planes. Thanks for the link to the Cars at the Capital.

    I’m sorry this kind of emphasizes how bogus this whole HVA thing is. There are so many cars that should have been included in this list before these customs were added. I’m not saying they shouldn’t have been added, still have my Deora hot wheels car I bought when I was 12, but this list is way too short given the 120 plus years of auto history covered so far.

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