What a find,the man that owned the Ford station wagon had a vision. Wanting a hot rod but loved his family,so he gave them comfort while he enjoyed sitting in a bucket seat and being able to slam gears and feel power behind the wheel. One of one,man if we could order our own options today like they did then,what has happened to us? Thanks Tom and Hagerty for another great video.
Now, folks. THAT'S how you keep a yard full of cars. The grass is still cut/weed-eat, and everything. Just because one has a little bit of "inventory" out back, doesn't mean there has to be weeds up to your ass, and snakes around your ankles. Amazingly organized. Alex, is a guy that's after my own heart, AND trying to outdo my ADHD. Good man. Bravo!!!
Did I say anything about WHEN he might've cleaned it up? It's clean. That's what I was talking about. Not WHEN he cleaned it up. Gee whiz, man. Besides, they ask these people in these towns with these cars maybe 24 hours in advance, with the VERY rare exception of calling a tip ahead of time. Man, some people...... Nice try though, smarty pants.
He had no idea we were coming. That is the way his yard looks all the time. He has a Western Town, and invites school groups to come and tour the place. Alex is a class act.
Love your channel ! I am not I buyer and never was but I think it is a shame that so many people have old classic automobiles that are sitting and rusting away but have convinced themselves their vehicle is worth 2 to 10 times more than it actually is. My mom was willed a 1950 Hudson/Nash with 28,000 miles on it ! She too had convinced herself that it was worth much more than it was. So it sat in a yard and rusted away and made a good home for all sorts of critters. I enjoy seeing a guy like you that saves these beautiful automobiles and brings them back to life !
Our Country Squire had a 390 V8 & I thought it might be rare.. great family car back in 1966. Beige & the wood sides. Thanks for posting. from Texas ~ Richard & Barbara
Wow, what memories. I too had a 1967 Ford Country Squire wagon with the 428 cid but auto trans, front bench seat, and manual roll-down windows. When you fired that baby up and backed it out, I had instant recall of what mine sounded like.
Seeing the 67 wagon was definitely a treat. I remember as a kid sitting in the very back of our 68 wagon which had all the same features minus the 4 speed and 428. It had a 352 auto. Many miles pulling a fold down camper through the Rocky and Teton mountains.
my old man bought a 69 country squire...sky blue...wood trim....just for our vacation that year.. we went from Va out to Texas and back without a hitch....was a memory that has lasted a lifetime....I was 13 then...im 61 now.... id love to find me a wagon like that thanx for sharing...brings back gr8 childhood memories
That 67 Ford Country Squire was awesome. My grandfather had a 67 Ford Fairlane with that shade of green. So I have a fondness for this era of Fords. Never would have guessed that baby was packing a 428 w/ a 4-speed stick. That is such an amazing piece of automotive history.
In 1966, Plymouth built 2 Satellite wagons with Hemi 4 speeds on special order. One guy ordered his because he pulled a big fishing boat. One car still exists, one is gone...
This is the best of the series. In this case, lucky 13 ! I just love the cars from 1930's and older. Rolling up on Alex must of been a real treat. I am also discovering that your books are a pleasure to read. Thank you Tom and thank you Haggerty. Great job !!!!
Just seeing that Ford wagon reminded me of the day my old man came home in '70 with a new Plymouth Sport Suburban wagon. Gold with the "wood trim" on the sides, roof rack, hideaway headlights, fender mounted turn signal lights, twin fake hood vents with "383 Magnum " markers, rear facing jump seats for us kids in the rear, all powered. For the ungodly price of $5,500. Man, the trips we took with that bomb!
Thanks, ** that 383 Engine is outstanding I. 1979!!:& this is a great** 67 FORD Wagon: interestingly, I had a **1966 Ford GALAXIE 500 XL/ **4 Speed/ **deluxe Int/352 ( boo),. Anyways lots of miles and years on that Ford for me….. *****What I meant to mention, was my first new Car was A 1970 DODge Coronet 500/383/ 4 BBL/315 HP, SUPPOSEDLY., loaded:: as My 4 Speed/1966 was getting high miles * tired … l loved that 383 / Dual Snorkel: engine & big duel exhausts, etc. I did have to GO TO HEI IGNITION,, better tires, *& MONROE SHOCKS( SUPERMATIC 500s, I forgotten), etc. When I bough it new, had some ideas of SUOER BEE, & more RT / MOPAR connectionUpgrades would fit::: I should have waited , & got a SUPER BEE, or loaded RT…
MassacMongo99 that’s awesome. I remember a kid that would put the groceries in the car for my grandmother and he would always tell her if she sold it he wanted it. Yeah, good old days. That was early 80s and a not so rare but mint 75 trans am... still have it and a 428 lives in it now from 1969 yk 390hp way better
Wow that's unreal a 427 and a little Caprice that's a death trap that thing would probably take off and literally fly like a jet it's got to be very few of them made
@@Viper81766 Teutons really I know that engine wait about six hundred and something pounds we raced those 427 NASCAR in are dirt and asphalt cars you're talking about the Little Caprice they must have added a lot of weight what you would need to like we did to our race cars to keep them on the track LOL
Re the 428 4 speed country squire, I worked for a suburban NYC Ford dealer, in the service department in 1969 and 1970. I saw many luxurious Ford wagons, and a couple with bucket seats. They probably had a 390, but possibly a 428. I never saw one with a 4 speed....it is a real treat to see this one. The parts manager at a different dealership had a ‘64 Ford wagon with the light 427, I think it was a 390 hp hydraulic lifter motor. This car was for his wife, so for her driving pleasure it had a cruiseomatic, but a very cool car even so. I like this mans videos....great to see a fellow with such excellent Ford knowledge. By the way the red and white car in the garage is a 55, not a 56....look at the round parking lights.
My family owned a 1967 Ford Country Squire Wagon exactly like this one with the wood paneling, roof rack, A/C, power everything, except it was blue and automatic! I still have pictures of it. It was a beautiful car! I wish we still had it.
That shifter on the 428 wagon brought back a lot of memories. My very first car was purchased from the original owner in Flint, Michigan. It was a 1965 Comet 404 4 door sedan with a 289 4V and a factory four speed. Red. Wish I could find that car again. Had to sell it when I went away to college.
I graduated high school in 67. I have ridden in my share of Country Squires. It looks common, but to me two things stand out, the power windows and the vent windows. All the wagons that I rode in had crank windows, until 73. All these features are wonderful and especially that rear door.
Brings back strong memories of a 1965 Olds Vista Cruiser that my father ordered. We were returning from dad's assignment in Germany and the car was waiting for us at an Olds dealership in New Jersey. Black exterior over red interior, the 3rd seat in the back, 330 2-bbl with a Muncie wide ratio 4 speed. Have no idea how many they built -- I never saw another one, that's for sure. Draggin' wagons rule!
Well, it depends. It's not the same to find a 1of 1 car because of the options list than to find, say, a 1 out of a 100 car where the hundred were all that were ever made. I guess it depends on the definition. I'm drooling over that ford nonetheless.
Yup, 1 of a million. I was working at a Ford Garage in 67, I saw a few 428 Squires, but never saw a 4spd. Model. That's awesome. It deserves a total restoration with all Ford parts and same color.
I love this series of videos. I am five years older than Tom but I binge on these programs like they are gifts. But I wish he would slow down. My revived passion is to find a late 60’s Ford 428 cobra jet in one of the long Torino type cars. I drove one in 1972 when my daily driver was a 66 GTO. That 428 would have blown my car away. But I am such a fan of this series. So Tom please slow down and make the videos longer. Marc
My sister had one of thoss Ford country station wagons with the 429 engine in it and she drove it across the U.S. several times and never had a single problem with it; built like tanks and featured in Chevy Chase movies. A blast from the past with sitting in those rear seats with the window rolled down watching other cars behind you.
Errm... About those 1914 princess pressure release valves... I think they are actually fuel priming cups for getting the engine started especially when it's really cold. You just pour a drop of gas on each one. Used widely in the time before the choke got common.
Wow, a real one of a kind. Being born and raised in the rust belt I believe that the odometer hasn’t turned over. This car was made before rust prevention was done at the factory. If this wagon did have over 100k miles on it the rust would be so bad that you would follow behind this wagon with a dust pan. My uncle bought new a 1968 Ford F-100 pickup. A few months after the truck was bought he severely injured his left knee. The F-100 had a 6 cylinder engine with a 3 on the tree manual transmission. With his injured knee he couldn’t operate the clutch. He kept the truck hoping his knee would get better but it didn’t. When he passed away in 1980 my aunt sold the truck for 3 times it’s sticker price. Even though the truck had 3000 miles on it and was never driven in the snow and salt it had minor rust (fixable) along the outside seams of the truck box. My first car was a 1967 Mercury Monterey bought 1973. It had 80k on it. The rear quarter panels had large rusts holes. The trunk was no longer weather tight. The bottom of all four doors was rusted away. I drove this car for about a year before it started to dog track. The unibody had rusted out so badly that the car couldn’t go straight down the road. Even with minor rust along the bottom of the doors this wagon odometer hasn’t turned over.
Thanks, interesting 1967;FORD , 4 SPD and it’s story.. Rumor has it that there were a few more super Car Station Wagons in Northern INDIANA in the 1960’s: with the 427’s: ??etc
damn, thats back when car makers would do stuff off the norm, with the wagon. yea there were plenty of 428 wagons in the 70s , but none had the 4 speed. that crown vic was awsome too.👍
WE HAD THAT WAGON!!!...minus the 4 speed...same avocado color, green interior...Sometime in the late 70's my parents called from LAX and said they had left their tickets (to Hawaii) on their dresser. I grabbed the tickets, took the Country Squire and went screaming up the 405 'averaging' 90mph. Made it from OC to LAX with time to spare. What a BEAST!
A friend's father ordered brand new in 1965 a black Ford Galaxie 4dr sedan, 390/4bbl with a 4speed. The car had a red leather interior with a bench seat and a factory tach. My friend's dad has past away but my friend still has the car. It was a real sleeper even with the duals. He drove it to high school in the mid 70's.
When I was a kid we had a 1964 Ford Country Squire with the 390 four barrel automatic transmission. It got around really well. I can’t imagine the power from the 428 four speed manual. What a great car it must have been. My dad bought a new 1968 Ford LTD brougham with a 428 police interceptor in it. That car’s dual exhaust had a mean sound when you floored it. Even with the automatic and all the weight it would easily smoke the tires.
WOW...,an original 4 speed 428 wagon. No manufacturers, today, will actually build a car the way...YOU....want it, but back in those years cars were so much more interesting. An example was a performance slant 6, 4 barrel carb Valiant that performed like a small V8, I know, because I drove one and instantly loved it. Pay for an inexperienced teenager in the mid 60's put anything new out of my reach though, plus I was due to be drafted. The car that I tried desperately to buy, though, was a brand new, fire engine red, 383 4 speed, '66 Plymouth Satellite, hard top. The car was absolutely stunning. Sadly, it never happened. Thanks for the memories! 😊.
Now THAT is really cool. A completely original 428/4 speed Country Squire wagon. Definitely something that you don't see every day. I love barn finds. One of my dream barn finds would be a 1st generation Mustang, or a 1st generation Camaro, or even something as different as a Desoto. I found a 52 Ford Galaxie with a 352 2 barrel and an auto fully optioned that was absolutely pristine and at first the lady said that she would sell it, but then she got nostalgic and told me no when I showed up with her asking price. I would love to find something else cool like that. I put a new battery in that car, put 2.5 gallons of fresh fuel in it, and after a few turns of the engine it fired right up after sitting for YEARS since her husband had passed.
Back in High School I bought a 65 mustang with blown engine... after years of $20 falcon rebuilds, I was in teens so paid $300 but was not working... no problem... until neighbor 'boy' lost control of his "STEPdaddies camaro and just missed a girl on a bike, swerved up/over street 'center island', then with me out from under from screeching tires up the street, he barrelled back over the island again and headed straight for me, with me waiting which direction to RUN! took me over 3 years to get paid because insuranCe 'UNT' put value at $50... and I wasn't yet smart enough to know **you have to have some/any 'muscular/whiplash-like' injury or the INSURANCE COMPANIES, THEIRS AND YOURS, TEAM UP TO SCREW YOU! YOUR'S/THEIR'S ARE REALLY COLLUDING TO F'CK YOU, THEIR CLIENT TO SAVE THEIR COMPANIES MONEY! NEXT WEEK THE 'OTHER' AGENT'S SCREWING HIS CLIENT IN ANOTHER CASE! THEN THE ONE TIME i ENDED UP USING MY 'EXTRA COST 'UNINSURED MOTORIST' CLAIM AGAINST A PERSON THAT EVEN SAID TO ME "GO AHEAD SUE, I'VE GOT NOTHING TO LOSE-IE 'AWARD PROOF'... IF YOU DECLARE NO ASSETS THE COURT ESSENTIALLY LETS YOU OFF... I SAW IT HAPPEN WHEN I WENT TO SMALL CLAIMS AND ASKED THE JUDGE IF I COULD JUST NOT PAY WHAT WOULD HAPPEN? HE SAID I'D GET SENT TO JAIL! FUNNY BECAUSE HISTORY HAS "PAUPER'S PRISONS" FOR POOR PEOPLE WHO CAN'T PAY, BUT TODAY THEY ARE NOT HELD RESPONSIBLE (SOMETIMES AS PART OF SCAM!) BUT HONEST PEOPLE THAT REALLY SHOULDN'T HAVE TO PAY SCAMMERS ARE THREATENED WITH JAIL! UPSHOT: BE LEGAL, BEING ETHICAL HAS NOTHING TO DO WITH IT!
fyi...those arnt for compression relief..they are fuel cups..pour some into the cups..open then close the valve..crank the engine..wa-la engine fires off..mostly found on up draft carburetor equipped engines..carbs back then were crude and would leak fuel down into the engine when not running..so they would hang em out to the side and have the engine intake from the top of the carb
My very first car was a 1966 Ford Country Squire Station Wagon , 352 4 bbl had to buy it from my dad for $100 , it was the family car , Had great memories in that car , wish I had it today .
That country squire is one heck of a car! Fights have been fought over less!!! Oh how I would love to be the proud owner or custodian of that beautiful wagon! I love wagons and that back door is so cool!!! And to have a power window at that! Wow!
We had a 65 country sqcure just like that growing up....390 4br 300re it wold do over 120 with the whole fam. in the car..great fun,had a blow out at 110 raceing a corvett. My dad was an IDEOT
Back in 1983 my 13 year old friend showed me a ticket his dad got with him in 1975. It was for doing 135 with a 3 year old and a 5 year old in the car. It said that on the ticket. It was in a 1967 2 door Mustang.
...and then, misspells "idiot". (Can't make this stuff up). Note: That sound you hear, just after this guy's comment, was the fruit falling, not too far from the tree.
I learned years ago not to correct spelling... lost a very beautiful girlfriend who was very sweet to write to me while I was off studying at UCLA. Later, wife who really couldn't spell but uses her companies computers to do that for her, that's what IBM does, now she just has 'the little people' do that for her. and her bonuses exceed my EE/CS yearly$ (which my manager complained was a lot more than his salary so after getting screwed on raises because he was a tripple-dipper (Aerospace+AirForce+reserves+CoPayw/reservePay) was still making less than me! ...and this is my fault!? Best manager I ever had was a woman who admitted I made less than her but had more skills (though SHE REALLY WAS A SKILLED PROGRAMMER AS WELL!). DIFFERENCE WAS SHE KNEW WHAT IT TOOK TO OBTAIN THOSE SKILLS IN ONE PERSON AND COMPENSATED ME FOR IT! P.O.S. EX-MIL COULDN'T DO IT, DIDN'T WANT TO LEARN TO DO IT, ETC. ...AND DIDN'T HAVE TO BECAUSE HIS AWARDING MULTI-YEAR CONTRACT TO US GOT HIM A MGR JOB!
My grandfather had a Ford station wagon to drive to the restaurant in Long Island back in the 70s which had the back seats and dual tailgate mechanism was brilliant. Except i got car sick alot and sat in the back.
I love that wagon.....THAT IS THE PERFECT SET-UP FOR TODAY'S AEROBIC TAKING, SHUTTLE-BUS DRIVING, GROCERY GETTING SOCCER MOMS ; THIS REMINDS ME OF THAT FIRESTONE COMMERCIAL WHICH HAS THE ONE SOCCER-MOM IN HER 4X4 SUV WHICH IS HEADS & SHOULDERS ABOVE EVERYONE ELSE......PUMPIN N PUSHIN THE 'DESTINATION LE' BRAND FIRESTONE TIRES......YYAAAAAHHHHHHH!!.....she would definitely need a set of the destinations for that Country Squire wagon!!!! GOD, THATS AN AWESOME WAGON!!!! PERFECT SET-UP/ 428 4BBL& 4SPEED ON THE FLOOR.....She could actually win @ Indy and Daytona with this!!
My dad bought a new 67 country squire wagon with a 390 cid. His first new car, he gave it to me in 74. Drove it to school everyday for 2 yrs. Called it the dragon wagon. Used take it to the drive-in on $8.00 car load nite, would load 10-12 people in that beast. Oh the memories!!
Cars when I was coming up were works of art . Even when I was a kid I could look down a road and name a car from a distance . These days it's hard to recognize a car 20 feet away . Now cars are still nice but not so unique . The one car he showed with the aluminum body and the air cooled engine (1920) is a masterpiece . I hope someone preserves that car for the future generations . Nice video Hagerty !!😎
I remember the plate number from 30 years ago on my truck, KMM-244 and my bike, ZN-7606 but cant remember my own phone number now. I think subconsciously I know I won't have the phone that long or it's all the drugs. What were we talking about?
Excellent video! I have to say, this guy Tom is REALLY good at what he does. His narration is head and shoulders above other UA-camrs. What a pleasure to watch stuff like this :)
My first car was a 1965 Ford Country sedan wagon with a 352 4V, sadly the engine blew and living in NY the frame ended up rusting out but even today 45 years or so after buying it I still miss it.
I wonder if, in 50 years, there will be a UA-cam channel of a guy finding an "Ecoboost" in a barn? "This was put into the barn just after the warranty period"
I think Alex is a real Gnome or a Leprechaun. He has collected a real treasure. Imagine the drive and the energy that you must have to do this over the years. Just when you think most people are all the same and boring, you see someone that stands out. So he looks magical.
@@dehoedisc7247 Different engine family entirely. Longer stroke, smaller bore. Kind of the same idea as the 305 vs the 350. Slow revving, more low end torque theoretically but probably not.
Right on. I love the grocery getters. To bad most fell into the crusher. I have a 69 buick sport wagon that I intalled a 5 speed tremec in. 462 with hemi killer cam, 12 bolt posi. Best part 33000 miles and not a bit of rust.
Hi Tom, really like this series! Have you ever run across a 1956 Country Squire? My late Dad bought one new, and drove it until 1964, when he replaced it with a '63 Country Sedan.
That 1967 Ford Country Squire with a 428 cubic inch engine and a 4 speed manual transmission is very unique one of a kind. Most of these Ford Station Wagons came with a 3 speed automatic transmission, and some came with a 3 speed column shift, but a 4 speed manual floor shift in a Ford Station Wagon is unique.
He is not dead so it not YET is actually correct and he can have any intention he wants. If he didn't buy that car and restored it to the way it is, it would have gone to the crushers as back in the day these cars were not loved, much like the iconic Mustangs, VW Beetles and popular cars of today once they are slightly old but still common and not special. Also, did you want him to say "It never will"? Please if you have nothing good to say, keep it to yourself.
Reminds me of my first Ford I bought from a salvage yard in Yukon, Oklahoma. It was also a red and white 55 Crown Victoria. They only made the Crown Victoria for 2 years,1955 and 56. I scrounged around salvage yards and found power seats and windows from a Mercury. So of the Crown Vics had a plexiglass roof in the front half of the roof. I could have bought one if I had $100 cash in 1967 but I was broke at the time.
Thanks for putting these on youtube for us guys who cant afford to watch it anywhere else.
What a find,the man that owned the Ford station wagon had a vision. Wanting a hot rod but loved his family,so he gave them comfort while he enjoyed sitting in a bucket seat and being able to slam gears and feel power behind the wheel. One of one,man if we could order our own options today like they did then,what has happened to us? Thanks Tom and Hagerty for another great video.
that country squire is one of the most awsomest cars ive seen in a long time,,then again ive always had a thing for old wagons! love this show!
Now, folks. THAT'S how you keep a yard full of cars. The grass is still cut/weed-eat, and everything. Just because one has a little bit of "inventory" out back, doesn't mean there has to be weeds up to your ass, and snakes around your ankles. Amazingly organized. Alex, is a guy that's after my own heart, AND trying to outdo my ADHD. Good man. Bravo!!!
whos to say the guy didn't clean up for filming?
Did I say anything about WHEN he might've cleaned it up? It's clean. That's what I was talking about. Not WHEN he cleaned it up. Gee whiz, man. Besides, they ask these people in these towns with these cars maybe 24 hours in advance, with the VERY rare exception of calling a tip ahead of time. Man, some people...... Nice try though, smarty pants.
He had no idea we were coming. That is the way his yard looks all the time. He has a Western Town, and invites school groups to come and tour the place. Alex is a class act.
Yeah, that's the way to keep 'em. Outside, rusting into the ground.
Constructive Critique I love your screen name!
I've watched this video 3 times tonight...can't get over the Country Squire...great find, great story!!!! Unreal!!!
Love your channel ! I am not I buyer and never was but I think it is a shame that so many people have old classic automobiles that are sitting and rusting away but have convinced themselves their vehicle is worth 2 to 10 times more than it actually is. My mom was willed a 1950 Hudson/Nash with 28,000 miles on it ! She too had convinced herself that it was worth much more than it was. So it sat in a yard and rusted away and made a good home for all sorts of critters. I enjoy seeing a guy like you that saves these beautiful automobiles and brings them back to life !
Our Country Squire had a 390 V8 & I thought it might be rare.. great family car back in 1966. Beige & the wood sides. Thanks for posting. from Texas ~ Richard & Barbara
Wow, what memories. I too had a 1967 Ford Country Squire wagon with the 428 cid but auto trans, front bench seat, and manual roll-down windows. When you fired that baby up and backed it out, I had instant recall of what mine sounded like.
Seeing the 67 wagon was definitely a treat. I remember as a kid sitting in the very back of our 68 wagon which had all the same features minus the 4 speed and 428. It had a 352 auto. Many miles pulling a fold down camper through the Rocky and Teton mountains.
my old man bought a 69 country squire...sky blue...wood trim....just for our vacation that year..
we went from Va out to Texas and back without a hitch....was a memory that has lasted a lifetime....I was 13 then...im 61 now.... id love to find me a wagon like that
thanx for sharing...brings back gr8 childhood memories
That 67 Ford Country Squire was awesome. My grandfather had a 67 Ford Fairlane with that shade of green. So I have a fondness for this era of Fords. Never would have guessed that baby was packing a 428 w/ a 4-speed stick. That is such an amazing piece of automotive history.
Geez...more special and rare than most cars...that story and the Marty report will bring $$$$ someday...I recently got a hankering for wagons myself
Robert Karma If that isn't a SLEEPER I don't know what is
A 4 speed 428 wagon, fully loaded !! This guy who ordered it was way ahead of his time. The ultimate car !! Awesome video, thank you.
In 1966, Plymouth built 2 Satellite wagons with Hemi 4 speeds on special order. One guy ordered his because he pulled a big fishing boat. One car still exists, one is gone...
This is the best of the series. In this case, lucky 13 ! I just love the cars from 1930's and older. Rolling up on Alex must of been a real treat. I am also discovering that your books are a pleasure to read. Thank you Tom and thank you Haggerty. Great job !!!!
You keep watching and keep reading, and I'll keep producing! Thank you so much.
Just seeing that Ford wagon reminded me of the day my old man came home in '70 with a new Plymouth Sport Suburban wagon. Gold with the "wood trim" on the sides, roof rack, hideaway headlights, fender mounted turn signal lights, twin fake hood vents with "383 Magnum " markers, rear facing jump seats for us kids in the rear, all powered. For the ungodly price of $5,500. Man, the trips we took with that bomb!
Sounds like a wagon straight from The Brady Bunch as I believe they always used Chrysler wagons.
Michael Wojciechowski man the girls i layed in thatbomb
Thanks, ** that 383 Engine is outstanding I. 1979!!:& this is a great** 67 FORD Wagon: interestingly, I had a **1966 Ford GALAXIE 500 XL/ **4 Speed/ **deluxe Int/352 ( boo),. Anyways lots of miles and years on that Ford for me….. *****What I meant to mention, was my first new Car was A 1970 DODge Coronet 500/383/ 4 BBL/315 HP, SUPPOSEDLY., loaded:: as My 4 Speed/1966 was getting high miles * tired … l loved that 383 / Dual Snorkel: engine & big duel exhausts, etc. I did have to GO TO HEI IGNITION,, better tires, *& MONROE SHOCKS( SUPERMATIC 500s, I forgotten), etc. When I bough it new, had some ideas of SUOER BEE, & more RT / MOPAR connectionUpgrades would fit::: I should have waited , & got a SUPER BEE, or loaded RT…
I wish these came out more often.....love the series!
Someone could make big bucks following this guy around and buying up what He doesn't.
That Ford Wagon at the end of the video is a Gem. I would daily drive that car well into my 60's even road trip it with the squad. Love this show!
Worked at a Grocery Store in the early 70s and we had a customer with a 67 Caprice Wagon with a FACTORY 427 with a 4 speed. The good old days .
MassacMongo99 that’s awesome. I remember a kid that would put the groceries in the car for my grandmother and he would always tell her if she sold it he wanted it. Yeah, good old days. That was early 80s and a not so rare but mint 75 trans am... still have it and a 428 lives in it now from 1969 yk 390hp way better
@Literally Shaking we still have some pretty sick wagons my neighbor has a 392 srt8 magnum. And let's not forget the ctsv wagon
Wow that's unreal a 427 and a little Caprice that's a death trap that thing would probably take off and literally fly like a jet it's got to be very few of them made
@@patrickmcwilliams9030 it was a two ton car .
@@Viper81766 Teutons really I know that engine wait about six hundred and something pounds we raced those 427 NASCAR in are dirt and asphalt cars you're talking about the Little Caprice they must have added a lot of weight what you would need to like we did to our race cars to keep them on the track LOL
I seen this car live at a show here in Michigan about 10 years ago when I had my 66 Galaxie XL
These episodes need to be TEN TIMES LONGER!!!! Just great, Tom !!!
Whew, it takes so long just to make them now!
Re the 428 4 speed country squire, I worked for a suburban NYC Ford dealer, in the service department in 1969 and 1970. I saw many luxurious Ford wagons, and a couple with bucket seats. They probably had a 390, but possibly a 428. I never saw one with a 4 speed....it is a real treat to see this one. The parts manager at a different dealership had a ‘64 Ford wagon with the light 427, I think it was a 390 hp hydraulic lifter motor. This car was for his wife, so for her driving pleasure it had a cruiseomatic, but a very cool car even so. I like this mans videos....great to see a fellow with such excellent Ford knowledge. By the way the red and white car in the garage is a 55, not a 56....look at the round parking lights.
when you absolutely, positively need to get the groceries home before the ice cream melts
Love wagons too bro
Literally One of the best replies I've ever read!!!!!
For someone who likes his ice cream rock hard, I can relate.
My family owned a 1967 Ford Country Squire Wagon exactly like this one with the wood paneling, roof rack, A/C, power everything, except it was blue and automatic! I still have pictures of it. It was a beautiful car! I wish we still had it.
It's amazing how much classic cars are still there to be found/restored in the US alone
Love the sound when you are backing out of the storage unit
That shifter on the 428 wagon brought back a lot of memories. My very first car was purchased from the original owner in Flint, Michigan. It was a 1965 Comet 404 4 door sedan with a 289 4V and a factory four speed. Red. Wish I could find that car again. Had to sell it when I went away to college.
I graduated high school in 67. I have ridden in my share of Country Squires. It looks common, but to me two things stand out, the power windows and the vent windows. All the wagons that I rode in had crank windows, until 73. All these features are wonderful and especially that rear door.
Hear the passion in Mr Cotter's voice. Genuine man.
Brings back strong memories of a 1965 Olds Vista Cruiser that my father ordered. We were returning from dad's assignment in Germany and the car was waiting for us at an Olds dealership in New Jersey. Black exterior over red interior, the 3rd seat in the back, 330 2-bbl with a Muncie wide ratio 4 speed. Have no idea how many they built -- I never saw another one, that's for sure. Draggin' wagons rule!
So technically this station wagon is actually the rarest car he has ever found. Amazing
Well, it depends. It's not the same to find a 1of 1 car because of the options list than to find, say, a 1 out of a 100 car where the hundred were all that were ever made. I guess it depends on the definition. I'm drooling over that ford nonetheless.
Exactly.
+James Palmer yup... he exaggerates much
Yup, 1 of a million. I was working at a Ford Garage in 67, I saw a few 428 Squires, but never saw a 4spd. Model. That's awesome. It deserves a total restoration with all Ford parts and same color.
And it wasn't in a barn.
I love this series of videos. I am five years older than Tom but I binge on these programs like they are gifts. But I wish he would slow down. My revived passion is to find a late 60’s Ford 428 cobra jet in one of the long Torino type cars. I drove one in 1972 when my daily driver was a 66 GTO. That 428 would have blown my car away. But I am such a fan of this series. So Tom please slow down and make the videos longer. Marc
oh I want that wagon... could you imagine the look on some dude's face when that old wagon eats up his camaro or mustang? What fun.
you would have to buy it from Tom.
My sister had one of thoss Ford country station wagons with the 429 engine in it and she drove it across the U.S. several times and never had a single problem with it; built like tanks and featured in Chevy Chase movies. A blast from the past with sitting in those rear seats with the window rolled down watching other cars behind you.
Errm... About those 1914 princess pressure release valves... I think they are actually fuel priming cups for getting the engine started especially when it's really cold. You just pour a drop of gas on each one. Used widely in the time before the choke got common.
You would be correct
Got it. I learned something.
suomenpresidentti Those are priming cups, the pressure relief valve is the actual valve in the block 😂
suomenpresidentti i
Agree there
I grew up about 25 miles west of Detroit in the 60's 'til 77. This stuff is f ing COOL. Brings back great memories.
Brilliant show, frothing over that wagon
I want that wagon haha
That wagon is pure gold....1 of 1 just fricken love it
I love that wagon!.... Always loved wagons, even took my drivers license test in a Vista Cruiser wagon. Someday I'm gonna buy a station wagon.
I'm with you Kenny, i owned 5 viste cruisers all were 1970 and 1971 that 70 had a rocket in it top speed was 135 lol
You might want to pick one up sooner than later if you want a 71-76 G.M. Full-Sized one, people smash them left and right in derbies...
@@101Volts yes, people are idiots, smashing up cars for fun. Morons....
Wow, a real one of a kind. Being born and raised in the rust belt I believe that the odometer hasn’t turned over. This car was made before rust prevention was done at the factory. If this wagon did have over 100k miles on it the rust would be so bad that you would follow behind this wagon with a dust pan. My uncle bought new a 1968 Ford F-100 pickup. A few months after the truck was bought he severely injured his left knee. The F-100 had a 6 cylinder engine with a 3 on the tree manual transmission. With his injured knee he couldn’t operate the clutch. He kept the truck hoping his knee would get better but it didn’t. When he passed away in 1980 my aunt sold the truck for 3 times it’s sticker price. Even though the truck had 3000 miles on it and was never driven in the snow and salt it had minor rust (fixable) along the outside seams of the truck box. My first car was a 1967 Mercury Monterey bought 1973. It had 80k on it. The rear quarter panels had large rusts holes. The trunk was no longer weather tight. The bottom of all four doors was rusted away. I drove this car for about a year before it started to dog track. The unibody had rusted out so badly that the car couldn’t go straight down the road. Even with minor rust along the bottom of the doors this wagon odometer hasn’t turned over.
The Country Squire is so sweet
A true piece of American hot rod history...WOW!!
FORD Guy with his Heart in the right place!!!
WOW......YOU ARE SO RIGHT ABOUT AL'S PLACE, A TRUE WONDER LAND OF THE BEGINNING OF THE MOTOR WORLD!!!
I've always said Country Squires ruled and this video finally proves it.
Thanks, interesting 1967;FORD , 4 SPD and it’s story.. Rumor has it that there were a few more super Car Station Wagons in Northern INDIANA in the 1960’s: with the 427’s: ??etc
damn, thats back when car makers would do stuff off the norm, with the wagon. yea there were plenty of 428 wagons in the 70s , but none had the 4 speed.
that crown vic was awsome too.👍
I knew you were not going to leave that place without buying that station wagon 11:21! What a GREAT find Tom!
I have always loved station wagons. This one is my favorite. Great video. Thanks for sharing.
WE HAD THAT WAGON!!!...minus the 4 speed...same avocado color, green interior...Sometime in the late 70's my parents called from LAX and said they had left their tickets (to Hawaii) on their dresser. I grabbed the tickets, took the Country Squire and went screaming up the 405 'averaging' 90mph. Made it from OC to LAX with time to spare. What a BEAST!
I'll like that 428 wagon with 4 speed. I'm not a ford guy, but rare thing like that with big V8,4 speed gears. hell yeaaaahhh!
A friend's father ordered brand new in 1965 a black Ford Galaxie 4dr sedan, 390/4bbl with a 4speed. The car had a red leather interior with a bench seat and a factory tach. My friend's dad has past away but my friend still has the car. It was a real sleeper even with the duals. He drove it to high school in the mid 70's.
Imagine going on a vacation in that car today. Crank that Holiday Road song.
When I was a kid we had a 1964 Ford Country Squire with the 390 four barrel automatic transmission. It got around really well. I can’t imagine the power from the 428 four speed manual. What a great car it must have been. My dad bought a new 1968 Ford LTD brougham with a 428 police interceptor in it. That car’s dual exhaust had a mean sound when you floored it. Even with the automatic and all the weight it would easily smoke the tires.
Love this series! Tom you and your crew do a spot on job, and like often tell people, its all about preserving the oldies!
Thank you.
retroolschool
P
WOW...,an original 4 speed 428 wagon. No manufacturers, today, will actually build a car the way...YOU....want it, but back in those years cars were so much more interesting. An example was a performance slant 6, 4 barrel carb Valiant that performed like a small V8, I know, because I drove one and instantly loved it. Pay for an inexperienced teenager in the mid 60's put anything new out of my reach though, plus I was due to be drafted. The car that I tried desperately to buy, though, was a brand new, fire engine red, 383 4 speed, '66 Plymouth Satellite, hard top. The car was absolutely stunning. Sadly, it never happened.
Thanks for the memories! 😊.
That is an amazing collection. Great video and tv show. Jay Leno may be calling this guy.
I wouldn't sell it Leno !
Wow!!! I'm not even a Ford guy, but that is the ultimate sleeper/ grocery getter!!! I love it!!!
That wagon is awesome! Great series.
Now THAT is really cool. A completely original 428/4 speed Country Squire wagon. Definitely something that you don't see every day. I love barn finds. One of my dream barn finds would be a 1st generation Mustang, or a 1st generation Camaro, or even something as different as a Desoto. I found a 52 Ford Galaxie with a 352 2 barrel and an auto fully optioned that was absolutely pristine and at first the lady said that she would sell it, but then she got nostalgic and told me no when I showed up with her asking price. I would love to find something else cool like that. I put a new battery in that car, put 2.5 gallons of fresh fuel in it, and after a few turns of the engine it fired right up after sitting for YEARS since her husband had passed.
Back in High School I bought a 65 mustang with blown engine... after years of $20 falcon rebuilds, I was in teens so paid $300 but was not working... no problem... until neighbor 'boy' lost control of his "STEPdaddies camaro and just missed a girl on a bike, swerved up/over street 'center island', then with me out from under from screeching tires up the street, he barrelled back over the island again and headed straight for me, with me waiting which direction to RUN! took me over 3 years to get paid because insuranCe 'UNT' put value at $50... and I wasn't yet smart enough to know **you have to have some/any 'muscular/whiplash-like' injury or the INSURANCE COMPANIES, THEIRS AND YOURS, TEAM UP TO SCREW YOU! YOUR'S/THEIR'S ARE REALLY COLLUDING TO F'CK YOU, THEIR CLIENT TO SAVE THEIR COMPANIES MONEY! NEXT WEEK THE 'OTHER' AGENT'S SCREWING HIS CLIENT IN ANOTHER CASE! THEN THE ONE TIME i ENDED UP USING MY 'EXTRA COST 'UNINSURED MOTORIST' CLAIM AGAINST A PERSON THAT EVEN SAID TO ME "GO AHEAD SUE, I'VE GOT NOTHING TO LOSE-IE 'AWARD PROOF'... IF YOU DECLARE NO ASSETS THE COURT ESSENTIALLY LETS YOU OFF... I SAW IT HAPPEN WHEN I WENT TO SMALL CLAIMS AND ASKED THE JUDGE IF I COULD JUST NOT PAY WHAT WOULD HAPPEN? HE SAID I'D GET SENT TO JAIL! FUNNY BECAUSE HISTORY HAS "PAUPER'S PRISONS" FOR POOR PEOPLE WHO CAN'T PAY, BUT TODAY THEY ARE NOT HELD RESPONSIBLE (SOMETIMES AS PART OF SCAM!) BUT HONEST PEOPLE THAT REALLY SHOULDN'T HAVE TO PAY SCAMMERS ARE THREATENED WITH JAIL! UPSHOT: BE LEGAL, BEING ETHICAL HAS NOTHING TO DO WITH IT!
Alex preserved his car and his accent for all those years.
That Galaxie. Just wow!
That wagon is amazing. I'd drive it all the time
He bought it. As would we all.
Great to see a fellow Maltese on the show, keep living the dream Alex!
fyi...those arnt for compression relief..they are fuel cups..pour some into the cups..open then close the valve..crank the engine..wa-la engine fires off..mostly found on up draft carburetor equipped engines..carbs back then were crude and would leak fuel down into the engine when not running..so they would hang em out to the side and have the engine intake from the top of the carb
Thanks. I learned something new.
your welcome buddy :) great channel btw keep it up !!
1967 ford country squire station wagon 428..what a masterpiece!!!
Beautiful!
I'm sure Jay would take the time to feature this car.
Amazing!
My very first car was a 1966 Ford Country Squire Station Wagon , 352 4 bbl had to buy it from my dad for $100 , it was the family car , Had great memories in that car , wish I had it today .
Thanks, again, Hagerty!!
That country squire is one heck of a car! Fights have been fought over less!!! Oh how I would love to be the proud owner or custodian of that beautiful wagon! I love wagons and that back door is so cool!!! And to have a power window at that! Wow!
We had a 65 country sqcure just like that growing up....390 4br 300re it wold do over 120 with the whole fam. in the car..great fun,had a blow out at 110 raceing a corvett. My dad was an IDEOT
Back in 1983 my 13 year old friend showed me a ticket his dad got with him in 1975. It was for doing 135 with a 3 year old and a 5 year old in the car. It said that on the ticket. It was in a 1967 2 door Mustang.
Mike ,, lmfao,
...and then, misspells "idiot". (Can't make this stuff up).
Note: That sound you hear, just after this guy's comment, was the fruit falling, not too far from the tree.
I learned years ago not to correct spelling... lost a very beautiful girlfriend who was very sweet to write to me while I was off studying at UCLA. Later, wife who really couldn't spell but uses her companies computers to do that for her, that's what IBM does, now she just has 'the little people' do that for her. and her bonuses exceed my EE/CS yearly$ (which my manager complained was a lot more than his salary so after getting screwed on raises because he was a tripple-dipper (Aerospace+AirForce+reserves+CoPayw/reservePay)
was still making less than me! ...and this is my fault!? Best manager I ever had was a woman who admitted I made less than her but had more skills (though SHE REALLY WAS A SKILLED PROGRAMMER AS WELL!). DIFFERENCE WAS SHE KNEW WHAT IT TOOK TO OBTAIN THOSE SKILLS IN ONE PERSON AND COMPENSATED ME FOR IT! P.O.S. EX-MIL COULDN'T DO IT, DIDN'T WANT TO LEARN TO DO IT, ETC.
...AND DIDN'T HAVE TO BECAUSE HIS AWARDING MULTI-YEAR CONTRACT TO US GOT HIM A MGR JOB!
Cool story, bro?
My grandfather had a Ford station wagon to drive to the restaurant in Long Island back in the 70s which had the back seats and dual tailgate mechanism was brilliant. Except i got car sick alot and sat in the back.
I hope we see many more of these episodes, love that wagon! Thank You from NZ
I love that wagon.....THAT IS THE PERFECT SET-UP FOR TODAY'S AEROBIC TAKING, SHUTTLE-BUS DRIVING, GROCERY GETTING SOCCER MOMS ; THIS REMINDS ME OF THAT FIRESTONE COMMERCIAL WHICH HAS THE ONE SOCCER-MOM IN HER 4X4 SUV WHICH IS HEADS & SHOULDERS ABOVE EVERYONE ELSE......PUMPIN N PUSHIN THE 'DESTINATION LE' BRAND FIRESTONE TIRES......YYAAAAAHHHHHHH!!.....she would definitely need a set of the destinations for that Country Squire wagon!!!! GOD, THATS AN AWESOME WAGON!!!! PERFECT SET-UP/ 428 4BBL& 4SPEED ON THE FLOOR.....She could actually win @ Indy and Daytona with this!!
Thanks for the show. Really enjoyed it.
My dad bought a new 67 country squire wagon with a 390 cid. His first new car, he gave it to me in 74. Drove it to school everyday for 2 yrs. Called it the dragon wagon. Used take it to the drive-in on $8.00 car load nite, would load 10-12 people in that beast. Oh the memories!!
love your videos you come across some nice cars wish we had some of these down under
Cars when I was coming up were works of art . Even when I was a kid I could look down a road and name a car from a distance . These days it's hard to recognize a car 20 feet away . Now cars are still nice but not so unique .
The one car he showed with the aluminum body and the air cooled engine (1920) is a masterpiece . I hope someone preserves that car for the future generations . Nice video Hagerty !!😎
Alex is very reasonable on his prices. a lot of times guys like him ask astronomical prices or they won't part with anything
I grew up with a 1967 Country Squire with a 390,4 bbl and 3 on the tree. Friend had a 428 with 3 on the tree. 3 on the tree,how we miss thee
As a child, my mom had a 67 country squire, pretty sure it was a 390. VCZ924 was the plate, don't ask how I remember that.
6The6Devil6 he made it up
I remember the plate number from 30 years ago on my truck, KMM-244 and my bike, ZN-7606 but cant remember my own phone number now. I think subconsciously I know I won't have the phone that long or it's all the drugs. What were we talking about?
We had a 1967 Mercury station wagon, beautiful car light blue with wood paneling,had a 410-4v
I wonder why they stopped using wooden firewalls...
Caddy Guy Gaming You suppose they realized the oxymoron of it?
The same reason why they quit using wooden frames. Because horses are not pulling these things LOL.
Caddy Guy Gaming
At least make them out of cedar so they dont rot....i used a cedar firewall in my 57 chevy. I put a fire resistant coating on it....
Aluminum is cheaper and lighter.
G. H. No metal shaping? How do you suppose they formed all the body panels hahahahahahha come on now
Excellent video! I have to say, this guy Tom is REALLY good at what he does. His narration is head and shoulders above other UA-camrs. What a pleasure to watch stuff like this :)
Alex is the most organized hoarder I've ever seen.
My first car was a 1965 Ford Country sedan wagon with a 352 4V, sadly the engine blew and living in NY the frame ended up rusting out but even today 45 years or so after buying it I still miss it.
What great finds. I like the Ford wagon :)
Gene Wiley you fell for that 1 of 13,000 bullshit story?
so you think this is not true then.
No, not at all, haggerty invented this garbage story BUNCH OF BS
Hey, this show is true! I live and breathe it everyday. I wouldn't do it if it wasn't honest.
well, i still liked the car. Just a nice old wagon. thanks jim
Its so amazing that some of these cars are at least 100 years old
awesome. what a great program.
please keep it up
These barn find episodes are great!! The cars you find are unheard of treasures...Love it! 👍👍
I wonder if, in 50 years, there will be a UA-cam channel of a guy finding an "Ecoboost" in a barn?
"This was put into the barn just after the warranty period"
Will the Ford turnover? Nope...it's an EcoBoost Ford...pure💩.
No way in Hell ,it was not put in that barn after the warranty period ! You can tell by the faded paint ! It's gotta be 116.000 miles on it !
@@ricketyrick3686 As if there wouldn't be people willing to work on it. Maybe not *you.*
I think Alex is a real Gnome or a Leprechaun. He has collected a real treasure. Imagine the drive and the energy that you must have to do this over the years.
Just when you think most people are all the same and boring, you see someone that stands out. So he looks magical.
I imagine Lee smiled when the paperwork for that wagon came across his desk.
Oh, really? Ever hear of the Boss 429? The tugboat 428 has nowhere near the power of the Boss 429.
@@dehoedisc7247 Different engine family entirely. Longer stroke, smaller bore. Kind of the same idea as the 305 vs the 350. Slow revving, more low end torque theoretically but probably not.
The 428 was geared more towards the road. The boss 429 was more race oriented.
@@dehoedisc7247 Yes, I've heard of it. It didn't EXIST when this car was built....
@@mfree80286 No, you didn't exist.......
Right on. I love the grocery getters. To bad most fell into the crusher. I have a 69 buick sport wagon that I intalled a 5 speed tremec in. 462 with hemi killer cam, 12 bolt posi. Best part 33000 miles and not a bit of rust.
Verry nice video , i love this series!!
My Mom drove us around in a 1969 Torino wagon with a 351. Fun days.
Hi Tom, really like this series! Have you ever run across a 1956 Country Squire? My late Dad bought one new, and drove it until 1964, when he replaced it with a '63 Country Sedan.
Not yet, but keep watching. Hopefully soon.
Yeah
That 1967 Ford Country Squire with a 428 cubic inch engine and a 4 speed manual transmission is very unique one of a kind. Most of these Ford Station Wagons came with a 3 speed automatic transmission, and some came with a 3 speed column shift, but a 4 speed manual floor shift in a Ford Station Wagon is unique.
Great series
love all episodes
The sweet sound of that 428 throwing down some big horses is music. It would be crazy to think of a solid lifter cam thumping even more horses!
" Have you ever had it running?"
"Not yet."
The Hoarder's Fantasy.
Yes it does run
He is not dead so it not YET is actually correct and he can have any intention he wants.
If he didn't buy that car and restored it to the way it is, it would have gone to the crushers as back in the day these cars were not loved, much like the iconic Mustangs, VW Beetles and popular cars of today once they are slightly old but still common and not special.
Also, did you want him to say "It never will"?
Please if you have nothing good to say, keep it to yourself.
Reminds me of my first Ford I bought from a salvage yard in Yukon, Oklahoma. It was also a red and white 55 Crown Victoria. They only made the Crown Victoria for 2 years,1955 and 56. I scrounged around salvage yards and found power seats and windows from a Mercury. So of the Crown Vics had a plexiglass roof in the front half of the roof. I could have bought one if I had $100 cash in 1967 but I was broke at the time.