Spokane Hot Rodding
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About this ebook
John Gunsaulis
John Gunsaulis is a second-generation Spokane hot rodder and show car devotee. His passion for traditional cars was heavily influenced by local Spokane hot rodders and his father, Richard "Speedy" Gunsaulis. Theses images were collected from the scrapbooks and garage walls that spawned his dedication to early hot rods.
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Spokane Hot Rodding - John Gunsaulis
author.
INTRODUCTION
Spokane, located just 20 miles from the Idaho border, is the largest city in Eastern Washington. During the 1940s, it became a center of an evolving postwar hot-rod community. Automotive sports were expanding at this time, from stock-car and midget racing to street cars and drag racing. Local car enthusiasts joined with an influx of military personnel and college students who were just as passionate for hot rodding, and it was during this time that the Spokane hot rodding culture began to flourish. Together, they pushed the boundaries of hot rodding, creating lifelong bonds in the process. This book explores that evolution of Inland Northwest hot rodding from the mid-1940s to the mid-1960s, starting with jalopy-style hot rods that began popping up on local streets, to the formation of new clubs and organized racing.
One
STREET
In 1946, Harry Prouty was 15 years old and the proud owner of this 1931 Model A, which he built out of parts from wrecking yards. This was just the beginning of his fascination with hot rods. The A is still banger-powered, but it now features a ’33-’34 Ford truck grille, ’28-’29 front fenders, Hollywood hubcaps, and custom fender skirts. The fins added to the top of the hood and markers on later 1930s headlights are visible. The running boards were removed to give it a more modern look. This photograph was taken in front of Harry’s parents’ house. (Harry Prouty.)
Bob Butch
Miller and his father, Everett Miller, stand in front of Butch’s 1939 Ford four-door; with a lot of junk hung on them, that was the thing to do at the time.
This photograph was taken in front of the Miller house at 1900 North Napa Street around 1949. Butch later traded the four-door for a 1947 Harley 84 Springer. (Butch Miller.)
Butch Miller (right) and his brother Bill pose with Bill’s 1940 Ford on Napa Street. Both brothers served at the naval air station at Geiger, Washington. The ’40 had the gingerbread treatment and was painted powder blue. (Butch Miller.)
Steve Pick poses with his 1932 Ford three-window coupe, which he bought from an older couple in the Corbin Park area in 1950. He removed the hood and running boards and shaved the grille shell. (Gary Hustad.)
Steve Pick poses with the same ’32 coupe in front of Custom Auto Body, where he worked at the time. The car has been heavily modified, chopped, and channeled over the frame. The front suspension has also been modified, and the windshield has been plated. When Steve and his wife, Connie, left Spokane, he was stationed at Fort Ord near San Luis Obispo, California. Some friends drove the car down in the middle of winter so he could have it in California. When the base was decommissioned, Pick was moved to the Midwest, and the ’32 came back to Spokane. (Gary Hustad.)
Butch Miller’s 1932 Ford five-window is parked in front of his parents’ house in the winter of 1950–1951. The top was chopped by Joe Kostelecky on Nora Avenue, just past Division Street in the Gonzaga area. Joe would chop cars for $50 at his place, and performed other body modifications. In the background is Miller’s Ford convertible covered in snow. The front of the ’32 featured an undropped headlight bar with small aftermarket lights and a filled grille shell. The back of Miller’s deuce coupe was basically stock, with late-model bumper guards and an early clear-plastic Dukes Auto Club plaque. (Butch Miller.)
At this point, Butch Miller’s coupe is running the 1932 21-stud flathead and bone stock running gear. The paint is factory black, mixed with primer spots from the chop and nose job. Later, the car was also channeled by Joe Kostelecky and received a built flathead to go along with the new look. (Butch Miller.)
John Mehl bought this 1932 Ford Victoria from its original owners for $150 around 1952. The Vic was a bone stock V-8 car, except for the headlight conversion, and was painted Washington blue with black fenders. Mehl (back to camera) and some friends are looking at the newly installed 59A motor, which included an Offy tri-power and Edelbrock heads. Mehl did not convert it over to juice brakes at this time; he said he left the old push and pray
rod brakes in the deuce. The wheels on the back of the car are from a Chrysler Airflow. The front wheels are 1940-Ford style. Mehl sold the Vic to Len Sutton, and then it went to Bill Bongers, Don Wilbur, and Richard Speedy
Gunsaulis before it headed to Oregon in 1970. The deuce would end up being pictured in Hot Rod magazine when Wilbur owned it, and in Rod & Custom when it belonged to Gunsaulis. By the 1960s, the Vic was a full show car, appearing all over the Northwest, including as far north as Calgary, Alberta. (Both, John Mehl.)
This is the first car of Jack Hordemann, 17, shown behind his parents’ store at 1624 North Ash Street. This nearly stock 1932 Ford four-door is running a rebuilt 21-stud flathead out of a ’36 Ford and is starting to get the gingerbread treatment with full wheel hubcaps, smaller headlights, and a later bumper. Hordemann found the car at the Silverloaf Bakery, where an industrial fan had fallen out of a window and went through the car’s top. He covered the seats in Army surplus blankets before the deuce met