An article by Dale Johnson,
"Esso gave out four Oldsmobile Toronados customized by George Barris in 1967; now, one will be on display in Victoria." in "Driving,"http://driving.ca/auto-news/news/celebrating-the-sesquicentennial-with-a-rare-67-x-centennial-car.
One of the rarest cars in Canada — created for the Centennial in 1967 — is being put on a rare public showing at the Royal British Columbia Museum in Victoria this week to help celebrate Canada’s 150th birthday.
The car is an Esso 67-X — one of four that were
created by legendary Hollywood car customizer George Barris, who also built the
Batmobile and dozens of other cars for TV shows and movies.
This is one of only three 67-Xs that are known to
still exist. Trevor Weflen of Victoria bought this car on eBay in 2011 from a
car dealership in St. Louis, Missouri.
“I think the 67-X is an important part of Canadian
history,” Weflen says. “They were built just for Canada and caused quite a
sensation when they came out.”
This particular 67-X was won by Walter Scales of
Okanagan Landing, B.C. It was later owned by Frank Baker of Vancouver, who put
it on display in front of his Attic restaurant for most of the 1970s. It’s
believed it then had a few owners in the U.S., until appearing on eBay.
Imperial Oil in Canada hired Barris to create what
would be considered the ultimate family travel vehicle. During the Centennial
year, Canada hosted the world’s fair, Expo 67 in Montreal, and many Canadians
took to the roads to travel there. Esso stations gave away instant prize cards
for colour TVs and cameras, and by collecting five different safety tips on
contest cards, customers could enter their name in a draw for one of the four
67-X cars.
“This vehicle is a flashback memory of Canada’s
100th birthday, half a century ago,” explains Lorne Hammond, Curator of Human
History at the Royal BC Museum.
“We are a provincial museum but we are also proudly
part of Canada’s story. This is just one of several tributes connecting our
province with events across Canada in 1967 and today in 2017,” Hammond adds.
The 67-X will be on display at the Royal BC Museum
from Feb. 14 to March 13.
To create the 67-X, George Barris took a new
Oldsmobile Toronado — Motor Trend magazine’s Car of the Year in 1966 —
cut it in half, and added in a new section that stretched the wheelbase from
3,022 millimetres to 3,403 mm. The overall length was increased from 5,816 mm
to 6,121 mm.
The original sheet metal was removed from the front
and back, and fibreglass panels were added to give the 67-X its distinctive
style. Interior features included a front passenger seat that could be
swiveled around to face the back seat, a built-in cooler, two radios with
headphones and a pop-up table in the rear passenger compartment.
Barris built these four cars for Esso dealers to
give away as prizes during the Centennial summer of 1967. The prize also
included free gas, oil, repairs and insurance for one year.
Weflen remembers when the 67-X came out. “I was in
the Air Force in Winnipeg. I remember seeing the brochures and the ads, and
thought: ‘Man, that would be nice.’ ”
After eight years in the military, he returned to
his home in Saskatoon and opened a custom car shop. He later got into the
discount gas business, and then launched the Great Canadian Oil Change, which
now has more than 70 locations.
But he couldn’t forget about the 67-X.
“I always thought they were a neat car. I had never
seen a real one, but always in the back of my mind I thought it would be a nice
car to have. I always wondered: ‘where did those cars go?’ and ‘why don’t we
ever hear anything about them?’ Then I found this car.”
Weflen was looking for something to add to his car
collection, which includes a 1934 Dodge, a 1956 Ford half-ton truck, a 1958
Edsel Bermuda station wagon, a 1967 Jaguar Mark II and a 1960 Dodge Polara
D-500.
Weflen says his 67-X gets more attention than any
of his other vehicles because it’s so rare.
“People always want to know what it is. There have
been more than a few times when I’ve been driving and somebody will roll their
window down and shout ‘What kind of car is it?’ ”
Very often car collectors want their treasures
hidden away from public view — but Weflen is pleased to show off his 67-X at
the Royal BC Museum.
“This way people get to see it. I think people will
find the 67-X very interesting — and its role in Canadian history. It was built
to celebrate Canada’s 100th birthday and now that we’re at the 150th, here’s
something to show that was done just for Canada,” he says.
And the Royal British Columbia Museum in Victoria is very pleased to
display the 67-X in its main foyer during the early part of Canada’s
Sesquicentennial year. As Hammond says, “The idea of ‘win this car and explore
Canada’ is an idea I love. It’s a wild, innovative machine if you love
automobile design, and it is also the intangible idea that four Canadians hoped
to win and did win one of these cars. It’s simply a fun way to enjoy our
Canadian story looking back to 1967, to today and to the idea of what will the
future bring.”
I worked At Dueck On Broadway When That 67 Toro Arrived At The Dealership From Barris. I Was In Charge Of Detailing The Car For Pick Up By The Prize Winner Mr. Scales. I Drove It, Sat In It, Even Had A Coffee In It. Al Morrison. 40 Years At Dueck G.M.
ReplyDeleteThanks for sharing this information with us. Goood job.
ReplyDeleteCar Loans Approved Here
Car Loans in Oshawa
Car Loans in Whitby