Owner saw to it his 1951 Ford sedan got a meticulous restoration
MOTOR MATTERS
CLASSIC CLASSICS
BY VERN PARKER
RELEASE: APRIL 18, 2009
Chris Wolff had not been out of high school in Eureka, S.D. very long when he received "greetings" from his local draft board. In 1952 the U.S. Army sent him to Fort Jackson, S.C. for training. Afterward he was assigned to Fort Hood in Texas.
Wolff soon decided that he needed personal transportation, so he rode a bus about 175 miles to Dallas on a Sunday morning for the express purpose of buying a car. On that Sunday morning in October 1954 he stopped by the John M. Clark dealership where he purchased a slightly used 1951 Ford two-door sedan. The three-year-old car had been driven only 11,000 miles.
Beneath the hood of the Ford was a trusty 239.4-cubic-inch flathead V-8 engine rated at 100 horsepower. Wolff fired up the V-8 and in those no-speed-limit days drove his 1951 Ford back to Fort Hood with the engine not even breathing hard thanks to the overdrive unit. The 100-mph speedometer has a unique needle with a ring at the end that encircles, rather than points to, the indicated speed.
Wolff received his discharge papers at the end of 1954 and drove his Ford back to South Dakota. After study at the National School of Business in Rapid City, Wolff packed his belongings in his Ford and drove to Denver in 1956. He stayed there for 34 years until he retired in 1990.
All this time, at each location, Wolff always kept his Ford, not only garaged but also under a protective car cover. Additionally, whenever the weather was threatening the car remained in its cocoon.
In retirement Wolff returned to Eureka driving his trusty Ford. After four years there Wolff determined that despite almost a half century of care, the Ford was in need of a general renovation. From his days in Denver he remembered the Applewood Body Shop and arranged to have the restoration work done there.
"It's about a 12-hour drive to Denver," Wolff says. In November 2000 he set off at 1 a.m. to Denver so that his arrival time would be during the shop's business hours.
Thanks to five decades of meticulous care, no rust was uncovered when the worn paint was stripped from the body. Both bumpers were sent off to be replated with chrome while the stainless steel trim was removed and burnished to a like-new sheen.
Some minor fixes were required, such as replacing one of the parking light lenses and one of the taillights. The interior was reupholstered with the exception of the original headliner. Even the carpet was replaced.