One-Family Owned: 1955 Ford Thunderbird
It always interests me to see or hear about an antique vehicle that was bought new, then passed down to one or two (or more) generations of family members. I’ve written about several old cars that are not highly collectable, but have been kept in the family clearly for sentimental reasons. Then there’s this 1955 Thunderbird. I’m not sure how many of these classics are still owned by the same family since new, but I can understand why they’d hang on to them. People have been drooling over the two-seater Baby Birds ever since they were new. Occasionally, one-family-owned collector cars do come up for sale, and in many cases it’s because a family member inherited it. I’m not sure if this is the case here, but after 68 years, this ’55 T-Bird could be a owned by a second family. It’s currently not running, but is in a garage in Carson City, Nevada, and is for sale here on eBay. As of this writing, five bids had been submitted with the highest being $10,800.
Not to jump to conclusions, but based on the quality of the photos and the skimpy description and history given, one could assume that the family member currently owning this T-Bird isn’t a “car person.” I’m also guessing the phone number listed in the ad is getting a lot of calls from people asking lots of questions. It’s listed as a “California and Nevada 1-Family Car,” which is a plus, and could explain the lack of visible rust on the car.
The Torch Red paint looks presentable and has a shine, the chrome looks good as well as the glass, and the trim appears to be all there. The panels look straight but the seller states, “door cars warped” but doesn’t go into detail and no photos were taken of the passenger’s side. It comes with a Tonneau cover, the optional white or black convertible top (whose fabric is described as in poor condition), and a white removable “Glass-Fibre” hardtop. It might be a 1956 hardtop since porthole windows that were not available from the factory for the ’55 model. (According to portholeauthority.com, many hardtops for ’55’s were converted to porthole tops once the ’56 T-Bird was introduced.). The fender skirts also come with the car.
There are only two photos of the T-Bird’s stylish, classic black-and-white interior, but it appears to be in good condition (except for the carpet that is described as being “very worn.”) The dash, instrument panel, and flat, two-spoke adjustable telescopic steering wheel look to be in great shape. There’s one photo of what we’re told is the original bench seat. If it is, it’s in very good condition with no rips or signs of major wear and only needing a good cleaning of the ribbed vinyl upholstery. The passenger door panel is also visible in the photo and looks very good as well.
Mechanical details are, like I said, skimpy. All I know is that the car isn’t currently running, it has a manual transmission with Overdrive (which was a $110 option), and mileage is listed at 78,086. There’s only one distant photo of the engine bay, but it looks clean and houses a 292-cubic inch Y-Block V8 that was rated at 193 horsepower. Sure, there are lots of unanswered questions about this ’55 Thunderbird, but at least you know the car’s history and there’s probably a family member who can answer those questions. And, hopefully, the second family to own this iconic classic will get it roadworthy again and enjoy driving and showing it for many years to come.
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Comments
I like the ’55s, with their through-exhausts and clean decklids. I hope this one goes to someone who wants to keep it stock. The V8-manual combination is a treasure to be appreciated in a world that caters to sloth.
Right on CJ. 3.92 set of gears ⚙️ from the Ford factory. 3200lb, be a blast to motor around.
“Does not run” is the kicker for me. Hopefully any mechanical repairs are relatively minor.
If “does not run” means it needs minor repairs, then why wouldn’t he just fix them? I believe there’s more problems here than the seller is willing to disclose. That would explain the lack of information and poor presentation of a first year T-Bird…
I wish this was close enough to me to go take a look.
These icons command what ever price the seller is willing to let it go for, running or not, the only issue might be original engine, which it looks like this one has. Good luck to the seller, hope you get lots of big bids!
I was the 2md owner of a 55 bird. It was a sweet car that always started conversations. The 292 went great. Sold it 2 years ago to a guy who appreciates it ND is restoring it. Its a worthy legend.
Engine has all optional dress up gear so a turn of the fan in the anti clockwise position will see if engine stuck and so will a jump start attempt either way car
is worth the money if rest of car ok. I live in Australia and have a last model baby bird and it is the worst car i have owned as far as working on it goes.but parts are a plenty from NPD and cheap till the USD gets converted to AUD dollar real money bucket. Mick George. Australia.
Beautiful car. I’ve always wanted one but haven’t done anything about it.
if you live in the USA then now is your chance. thats why i bought mine even knowing it had a bad smash and was badly repaired. i paid big $ for it and spent a lot more on full re built engine and Auto body and paint and if i did not do the engine ans auto myself it would have cost me more.you only live once so if you want it and can afford it get it.