Polynesian (custom car)

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The Polynesian in 2023 Polynesian Custom Car.jpg
The Polynesian in 2023

Polynesian is a customized 1950 Oldsmobile Holiday 88 built by Neil Emory and Clayton Jensen at Valley Custom Shop. It was built at the request of original owner Jack Stewart in 1952. [1]

Contents

Construction

Unlike most owners at the time, Stewart wanted the car built all at once. [2]

The car was inspired by Ron Dunn's sectioned '50 Ford, also built by Valley Custom, essentially to Stewart's original design; [3] only his desire to have the top chop was changed, under persuasion from Emory. [4]

The car was built over a period of nine months. It was sectioned 4 in (10 cm), wheelwells re-radiused, and the rear fenders bulges fitted with brake vents. [5] It was nosed and decked, and the doors converted to electrically-operated solenoids. [6] 1947 Studebaker taillights were tunnelled into the rear fenders. [7] The exhaust pipes exited through a modified rear bumper. [8]

The engine was a 303 cu in (4,970 cc) Olds from an Oldsmobile 88, with 1952 heads and 4-barrel (4-choke) Rochester carburetor. [9]

The interior was done by Wayne Tipton of Burbank at a cost of US$450, [10] It was finished in lemon yellow and eggshell white tuck-and-rolled Naugahyde. [11]

The car was finished in a shade of purple dubbed Orchid Flame, which lent the car its name. [12] The total cost was US$1800. [13]

Shortly after taking delivery, Stewart showed Polynesian at the Detroit Auto Show. [14]

Polynesian was featured in the August 1953 issues of Hot Rod [15] and Rod and Custom in September,[ citation needed ] and also saw 54 pages of construction details in Motor Trend Custom Car Annual in 1954. [16]

History

Stewart bought the car in 1950. After customizing was complete, he used it as a daily driver for several years before selling it to John Zagray. [17] Zagray made some modifications of his own. [18] Some time later, the car disappeared.

It resurfaced in 1971, when the owner of the Red Lacquer Room body and restoration shop, Gene Blackford, found the car in a barn near Robertsville, Ohio, where sixth owner Warren Wise had stored it. [19] Blackford, who had first seen the car in its original custom form at age 12, paid Wise $1000 for what was left and put it in storage for thirty-three more years. [20] In 2004, he and six friends began a complete restoration to the Valley Custom standard, a process which took nine months. [21]

The newly-restored Polynesian won the Preservation Award at the 2006 Detroit Autorama. [22]

Blackford gave the engine a rebuild in 2006, and rebuilt the transmission in 2007. [23]

Polynesian went on display at the Peterson Car Museum from 2006 to 2010. [24]

Polynesian is currently owned by Ohio car collector Myron Vernis. [25]

Copies

The car inspired John Ballard's 1950 Oldsmobile, Polynesian II .

Magazine appearances

Notes

  1. Custom Rodder online [ permanent dead link ] (retrieved 28 July 2018)
  2. Custom Rodder online [ permanent dead link ] (retrieved 28 July 2018)
  3. Custom Rodder online [ permanent dead link ] (retrieved 28 July 2018)
  4. Hot Rod, September 1953.[ page needed ]
  5. (retrieved 28 July 2018)
  6. Hot Rod, September 1953.[ page needed ]
  7. Hot Rod, September 1953.[ page needed ]
  8. Hot Rod, September 1953.[ page needed ]
  9. Hot Rod, September 1953.[ page needed ]
  10. Hot Rod, September 1953.[ page needed ]
  11. Hot Rod, September 1953.[ page needed ]; Ohio.com (retrieved 28 July 2018)
  12. Hot Rod, September 1953.[ page needed ]
  13. Hot Rod, September 1953.[ page needed ]
  14. Hot Rod, September 1953.[ page needed ]
  15. Rod & Custom, 8/89, p.68.
  16. Rod & Custom, 8/89, p.68.
  17. Custom Cars, December 1958.[ page needed ]
  18. Custom Cars, December 1958.[ page needed ]
  19. Custom Rodder online [ permanent dead link ] (retrieved 28 July 2018)
  20. Custom Rodder online [ permanent dead link ] (retrieved 28 July 2018)
  21. Custom Rodder online [ permanent dead link ] (retrieved 28 July 2018)
  22. Ohio.com (retrieved 28 July 2018)
  23. Ohio.com (retrieved 28 July 2018)
  24. Ohio.com (retrieved 28 July 2018)
  25. "Jack Stewart's 1950 Oldsmobile - Kustomrama". kustomrama.com. Retrieved 2024-02-11.

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