New Member
Posted: Sun Feb 10, 2013 11:15 pm
Hello, My name is Ron. Came across your site and thought I'd inquire and try to find a '59 Sport Fury I had built in the mid-sixties. Just wondering if it's still around or perhaps if anyone had seen one like it over the years.I was in western Pennsylvania at time just out of high school, working at an Ohio steel mill, and a Mopar fan.
I found a gold '59 Sport Fury that I got at a lien sale for $75. I had a '58 Chrysler 300 series, 392 (380hp) Hemi from a wrecked car, but in a '53 De Soto at the time. I installed the hemi engine (gave the original Golden Commando away) and had the car repainted a gold color not much different than the original champagne. It had a little rust in the front fenders, so I replaced them with fiberglass ones from J.C. Whitney, I recall. Also removed the fake spare tire from the rear deck. It had original style, narrow, whitewall tires and original hubcaps. I drove it over the fall of '65 and into spring of '66 when I entered the military for four years. I drove it down to Memphis where I was stationed, but did not bring it out to California when I was transferred out here. My brother and his friends took it to a local drag strip in western Pa or eastern Ohio and blew the transmission. When I returned home in 1970, it would start but not move.
I got married to a California native and we moved out here leaving the car for my parents to eventually sell or dispose of and that's all I know. Except that it perhaps was sold to a man in Ohio named Red Thorpe, who was my supervisor when I worked in a steel mill near Youngstown. He also was the person who had originally put that hemi engine into the De Soto to use as a family car before I picked it up.
If anyone back east has perhaps seen a '59 like this over the years, it would be comforting to know that it survived. It was a beautiful, almost luxury car to me with a great ride and comfortable to drive. Most of the time, I just ran it on a single 4 barrel manifold. I do remember the names on the dash plaque for whom the car was built - 'Ray & Ethyl Rhodes'. I tried researching this through Chrysler archives, but they said no records were kept of the dash plaque of listings. I had removed the plaque from the dash but think it was placed in the glove box.
Thanks for the forum. If nothing else, it's just another story of a car I wish I would have kept, but other aspects of life got in the way at the time. Thanks, Ron C.
I found a gold '59 Sport Fury that I got at a lien sale for $75. I had a '58 Chrysler 300 series, 392 (380hp) Hemi from a wrecked car, but in a '53 De Soto at the time. I installed the hemi engine (gave the original Golden Commando away) and had the car repainted a gold color not much different than the original champagne. It had a little rust in the front fenders, so I replaced them with fiberglass ones from J.C. Whitney, I recall. Also removed the fake spare tire from the rear deck. It had original style, narrow, whitewall tires and original hubcaps. I drove it over the fall of '65 and into spring of '66 when I entered the military for four years. I drove it down to Memphis where I was stationed, but did not bring it out to California when I was transferred out here. My brother and his friends took it to a local drag strip in western Pa or eastern Ohio and blew the transmission. When I returned home in 1970, it would start but not move.
I got married to a California native and we moved out here leaving the car for my parents to eventually sell or dispose of and that's all I know. Except that it perhaps was sold to a man in Ohio named Red Thorpe, who was my supervisor when I worked in a steel mill near Youngstown. He also was the person who had originally put that hemi engine into the De Soto to use as a family car before I picked it up.
If anyone back east has perhaps seen a '59 like this over the years, it would be comforting to know that it survived. It was a beautiful, almost luxury car to me with a great ride and comfortable to drive. Most of the time, I just ran it on a single 4 barrel manifold. I do remember the names on the dash plaque for whom the car was built - 'Ray & Ethyl Rhodes'. I tried researching this through Chrysler archives, but they said no records were kept of the dash plaque of listings. I had removed the plaque from the dash but think it was placed in the glove box.
Thanks for the forum. If nothing else, it's just another story of a car I wish I would have kept, but other aspects of life got in the way at the time. Thanks, Ron C.