Adventures in My High-School-Cool Custom ’57 Corvette

Gary Witzenburg

I hadn’t had my ’57 Corvette long before it helped me accumulate a couple of tickets and a one-month license suspension. It was the kind of car that encouraged exuberance, and as a teenager in a car-crazy era, I couldn’t get enough of it.

Naturally, I used that enforced break from driving to modify my ‘Vette. I started by investing summer-job money in a Duntov cam and a set of solid lifters. Next came a manual gearbox. I couldn’t afford to swap in a four-speed, so I settled for a three-speed and paid a mechanic to install it and its clutch mechanism.

Then, once my license was restored and the ‘Vette was ready, a friend and I picked it up from the shop and test drove it out of town. We headed for a long, straight stretch of divided parkway with no houses or traffic where someone had painted 1/4-mile start and finish lines on the eastbound side. We wanted to try a fun run, so approaching that section on the westbound side, just cruising in third, I decided to punch it without downshifting to see how it pulled from low rpm. I was watching the road, not the speedometer, but we were likely up to 90 or so (in a 35-mph zone) before I backed off and braked for the stop at the next intersection.

1957 Corvette original condition side view
Gary Witzenburg

When we got there, a pair of angry cops were waiting. “Do you know how fast you were going, kid?” one growled angrily. “No, officer,” I grinned, thinking they had merely heard the engine at high rpm and didn’t really have anything on me. I was not about to confess.

“We clocked you at 80,” he snarled. “Let me see your license.” It turned out they had radar hidden halfway down the road (unusual at the time) and were monitoring it from the corner. “Is that as fast as that car will go?” one officer sarcastically enquired while his partner was writing maybe the best ticket of his career. “Yeah … in first gear,” I snarked.

Before this ‘Vette, I had a well-used ’57 MGA, which was cool for school but slow, unreliable, and a little rusty. I lusted for something cooler and quicker and started threatening to trade it for an older Corvette. I even checked out a couple of not-so-cherry ‘54s and ‘55s.

My folks were not wealthy, but my father, a Nebraska farmer’s son, loved cars and was a skilled driver who had wheels as a kid. He believed his sons should, too. His affinity included Corvettes, and on a business trip to Detroit, he found this nice ‘57—a black base car with a detachable hardtop, a 245-horse twin-four-barrel 283-cubic inch V-8 and a Powerglide two-speed automatic. He talked the seller down to $1500 and brought it home. So, as a car-loving high-school senior, I ended up with the only Corvette around. Truly bad-ass!

Witzenburg garage
Gary Witzenburg

Not only did the Corvette encourage my assertive driving habits, it also brought out my creativity, serving as a blank canvas that my teenage car-crazy self couldn’t help but personalize. When the inevitable big ticket that came after my 80-mph test run earned me a second license suspension, this time for three long months, I decided I would use the time off to customize my ‘Vette.

Growing up in the ‘50s and ‘60s, I had always had a thing for customized cars. I lusted over the best ones in magazines and built plastic car models with every cool modification I could manage. Why not apply that (questionable) skill to my own set of wheels? In those days, it was just a used sports car, not yet a coveted collectible.

1957 Corvette finished custom front three quarter
Gary Witzenburg

I started by painting white racing stripes nose-to-tail. Then I removed every other tooth from the grille and blacked out its horizontal bar, leaving half as many teeth floating twice as far apart in the oval opening. I thought that was a good look for a toothy C1 Corvette (and still do). I also pulled off both front and rear license-plate brackets and the rear-fender chrome trim and added twin antennas, custom (’68 Olds wagon) taillamp lenses, and triple (’64 Pontiac Tempest) chrome strips in the coves. I also installed short lake pipes with removable caps, which tended to drag on driveway ramps and break off every week or two.

1957 Corvette finished custom rear
Gary Witzenburg

We didn’t have an abundance of aftermarket alloy wheels way back then, but we did have hubcaps. I tried chrome “moon” discs for a while, then switched to spun aluminum “racing” discs. Tire choices were limited to black- or whitewall bias-ply, and I didn’t have money for new ones anyway. The ho-hum, half-tread set of whitewalls that came on it would have to do.

I two-toned the orangey-red dash and seats, the latter with white upholstery paint, then paid a body shop to Bondo chrome exhaust tips into the rear fenders. Finally, I painted the inside of the trunk white and sweet-talked my visiting artist cousin into painting a cartoon skunk in there because we had christened my newly striped and customized ‘Vette “Li’l Stinkie.”

1957 Corvette finished custom rear trunk detail
Gary Witzenburg

The doors and dash did look better painted white, but it wasn’t long before the paint on the seats began to crack and look awful, so I bought a set of seat covers to hide them. And the tightly restrained exhausts soon vibrated through the Bondo. Otherwise, I thought it looked pretty good. And it got a new white convertible top, which our family cat walked all over leaving indelible paw prints on it the first night it was home. I love animals but never liked that cat.

1957 Corvette customized interior
Gary Witzenburg

Because it still had the numerically low axle ratio that came with the Powerglide automatic, it was incredibly long-legged, good for 65 mph in first, over 100 in second and I don’t know what in third. I pushed it to 100 a couple times where I thought it was safe but had the good sense never to exceed that speed.

I even took it to the local drags one Sunday and won a trophy. It was a bit of a dog off the line, but while the other cars with their numerically high gear ratios were already in fourth halfway down the strip, Li’l Stinkie and I were cruising by in second gear just before the finish. Hilarious!

It also nearly killed me more than once. It suddenly slid sideways on a wet curvy four-lane during Friday rush-hour traffic on my way home from my summer construction job. I caught the slide and avoided getting battered, but that was a scary lesson for a teenager.

Scarier still was a near disaster on the night of my senior prom. After dropping girlfriend Marty home, I stupidly decided to try a late-night run on that makeshift drag strip. Well into second gear, a large dog suddenly appeared in my headlamps trotting down the middle of the road. I jammed on the brakes and swerved to miss it, which sent me into a series of left-right-left tank slappers.

1957 Corvette customized interior 2
Gary Witzenburg

Very fortunately, I knew enough even at 17 to understand that getting off the brakes would help me regain control, so I did and somehow avoided both the dog and the high curbs that likely would have flipped me into the puckerbrush on either side of the road. Whew!!! I was probably wearing the Sears seatbelt I had bought and installed but had no roll bar to keep the car off my head if it went belly up. Another very scary lesson—one I wouldn’t forget.

When it came time for college, my ‘Vette had to go because my dad needed the money. But my customization had badly damaged its value. “Your son pretty much ruined that car,” one dealer told him. Another who specialized in used Corvettes finally bought it for $1,200, as I recall. Years later, I encountered that guy working as a salesman at a different dealership and asked whether he remembered Li’l Stinkie. “Hell, boy,” he said, “I lost my ass on that car!”

Looking back, modifying that future classic was a major collector Corvette sacrilege, but this was an era before phrases like “matching numbers” and “period-correct” had much significance. In the moment, Li’l Stinkie embodied my car-crazy tastes, and I don’t think I’d change a thing.

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Comments

    “I don’t think I’d change a thing”
    Good for you, Gary! We each had our own personal tastes back in the day (and I hope that’s still true of youngsters today), and those often showed in what we did (or didn’t do) with our rides. Sure, we didn’t know what they might be worth someday, but my opinion is that we SHOULDN’T have cared, even if we did know. As an “investor” or “collector”, I suppose one is vitally interested in monetary value. But to me, the value is in the fun I get while wrenching, modding, driving and acknowledging the thumbs-up I get. I bet I’ve “ruined” close to a million bucks’ worth of vehicles in the last 65 years, and like you, “I don’t think I’d change a thing”.

    Your ‘Vette was cool, and your telling of its’ story is entertaining!

    This is a good example of how the cost of being in the hobby is tough today. While $1500 was not cheap back int he day it was still affordable for an average family or a kid working at a gas station to buy a good used Corvette. Today not so much. Even the cheap ones are expensive and need $$$ of work most can’t afford.

    To read these stories are fun to think what some were able to do.

    As for mods. I had them in my past. Some were ok and I am still proud but there are some I have to say what was I thinking. Also some I skiped that today I do not regett.

    “Because it still had the numerically low axle ratio that came with the Powerglide automatic, it was incredibly long-legged, good for 65 mph in first, over 100 in second and I don’t know what in third.” Aren’t all Powerglides two-speed automatics?

    Yes they are. But – as related in the article – when you have someone change out the Powerglide for a three-speed manual, you are able to measure your mph in THREE gears instead of two!

    I bought a new 390 Mustang GT in 1967…….had it only a few months when I appeared in court on 6 separate speeding tickets……believe it or not, I managed to walk out with my license intact, on the condition that I get no further tickets for a year. Learned my lesson……sort of……and managed to hold the line! lol

    It must have been that crime was much lower then, and the police had more time to concentrate on speeding. I continue to be amazed at how fast people drive, and you seldom see anyone pulled over (TN and AL). I have similar, although less cool, stories from the late 70s involving a 72 Chevelle with a self-installed nitrous kit, which took two people to operate, and the Belle Meade police department. Maybe at 2:00 am on a straight section of highway, the car exceeded 120 mph. Maybe a ticket was issued for speeding unspecified. Maybe we told him the truth after the ticket was written, when asked. Maybe he said, “You know I should take both of you to jail.” He didn’t and we didn’t push the nitrous system to that limit again (for a long while).

    Great story and what an awesome car you had.

    The aluminum “moon” wheel discs looked great on your ‘vette Cool and affordable. Saw a set at a local auto flea market last summer – a tempting alternative to the oversized, overdesigned and crazy expensive wheels that you see running around today. BUT couldn’t convince my wife that they would look way cool on her 2013 Volkswagen Jetta. Maybe this summer.

    As a 16 & 17 year old high school kid I had similar not so smart activities, not in a 57 Corvette but in a 55 V8 3 speed overdrive Chevrolet. Made changes as finances allowed, some “performance” related, some changing the looks. Had a few encounters with the local law enforcement, some expensive. I had several high speed close calls that I escaped by shear luck, not skill. Hill country crooked roads, driving fast over a hill to confront a car driving slow meeting another car. Deep bar ditches on both sides. I made it between the two cars and I don’t know how. Didn’t do that again.

    My 57 Corvette came along a few decades later. I have changed the car but it is all bolt on so it can be reversed. I love the car and drive it on long road tours.

    1963, recent HS grad. headed to college. When home the cops went all out to ticket me. Well Chevy SS, 409, 4 spd., 4.11 posi. in town cops no match. But back then they played fair and didn’t shoot me. Smallish town, they knew my parents and of course me. I’d make the turn on a one way street toward home and they would turn behind me, when I saw the front of their car come up I hit it and it was bye bye. I was home, parked in garage and sometimes sitting on front steps drinking a beer when they cruised bye. No grudges. Only time that car got a ticket was when a friend went across the river to buy beer, I was ah otherwise occupied, and the cops got him coming down the bridge. They were disappointed. Btw, that friend is a judge today. That car was legend in SE TX/Louisiana. Ran way above it’s B/S class. I’ll try to write a bit about our adventures together sometime. The car that got away, so to speak.

    Great story, Gary. I guarantee you had more fun with your Corvette than any ‘57 owner dies today. No regrets!

    I love stories like this that remind me of my youth. Very interesting and well written story, Gary! Speaking of car prices, my first hot rod was a 1940 Ford Deluxe coupe with a 283 Corvette motor with two WCFB Carter four barrel carbs. I paid a whopping $325 for it in 1969 and, after installing a new battery, I sold the car for $285 in1971. Now, I see old beat up dual quad manifolds with those old Carter WCFB carbs at swap meets for sale for like $1,500 without linkage and I just shake my head and laugh. Those were different times, but were sure full of great memories.

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