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As
told by owner/builder/restorer Sonny Messner, “This
car was the first of a series of Gassers and Funny Cars campaigned by
JR. Thompson over many years. This car won “Little Eliminator”
in the first U.S. Nationals in Oklahoma City (in) 1958. It ran every
weekend at Lions Drag Strip, Pomona, Santa Ana and many other drag
strips. This car was raced and beat the best of the gassers during
the ‘Golden Age of Drag Racing’, including Doug Cook, Tim Woods,
Pitman & Edwards, Ed Weddle, Dick Harryman, Howard Johansen and
many others.”
“Gasser
Wars”─How
it started!
It has long been debated about how the “Gasser Wars” began. Let’s
provide evidence for important piece of racing history. You
may remember in late 1950’s Ed Iskenderian and all the other cam
grinders like Engle
and Howard
were running competitive ads in Drag
News. Quoting
Ed Iskenderian
taken from an ad in Drag
News
July 1958 page 7 entitled, “The
First Race that started the Gasser Wars between Isky & Howard
Cams─July 6, 1958.”
In the ad it stated, “The
‘King’ Gets Dethroned. Sunday, July 6, was a rough day for
self-proclaimed royalty at the 6th
Annual So. California Championship held at Pomona, as the heralded
‘King of the Blowers’ ended a brief one week reign and blew a 2
car-length decision to Junior Thompson of Speed Engineering, Long
Beach. In racking up his decisive win Thompson registered a Top time
of 108.50 mph and an E.T. of 12.50 sec. Thompson really goes on gas
with his supercharged Chevy V8, powered by Isky Cam and Engineering
Kit.”
And there you have it.—See actual historic ad photograph below.
There
are the facts. Junior was running an Isky 505 in a ’41 Studebaker
so the Iskenderian ad showed Junior triumphing over Doug Cook who was
running a Howard
cam in his ‘37 Chevy coupe with the newly popular Chevy 265 c.i.
overhead engine against Junior’s B/Gas black Studebaker which was
also running the new Chevrolet overhead V-8. The rest is history
right on down to the battles that involved Big John Mazmanian,
Stone-Woods-Cook and K.S. Pittman, and many more. Once the Gasser
Wars began
Junior states, “Several of us would travel together throughout the
country and challenge the locals. We went everywhere.”
How
did Sonny Messner recreate this important celebrated race car?
As told by Junior Thompson the original owner/driver, “Sonny had
me busy for months asking questions, getting details and old photos
to do a full-restoration.” What a tribute for Junior to have an
old friend, Sonny Messner, who actually ‘wrenched’ on this car in
the old days do this flawless recreation. To this day they are good
friends and talk regularly. In fact Junior and his son Tommy
Thompson did all the engine work on the blown-injected small block
Chevy to install in this 1941 Studebaker 4-door sedan.
Sonny
is a fanatical purist when it comes to details on vintage race cars.
If you know him you know what I mean. He will take an old photograph
of a decal, such as a “Pennzoil” decal and have a computer whiz
recreate the exact design and shape. Then he finds a professional to
replicate it and paint it on the car as it was “in the day!” Now
that is commitment to a hobby, wouldn’t you say?
Hole
in hood:
Here is a detail you’ll enjoy. Those of us old enough to remember
this car remember the tear-hole in the hood. Do you know how that
happened? Do you want the truth? The Drag papers reported that a
blower piece had gone through the hood. In fact it became an
important trademark of the car as the story spread. Junior even had
a painter do some flames, on the hood, around the tear-whole. What a
story! HOWEVER,
here is the truth, and nothing but the truth from the mouths of
Sonny, Junior and Eddie’s, “It wasn’t a blower part that made
the hole. The truth is Eddie Thompson (Junior’s older brother) was
coming back from a run in the ’41 Studebaker, in the return lane. At
the same time Junior was making an actual run down the strip in a
’55 Chevy B/Gasser and blew a clutch. To everyone’s amazement
some of the debris flew in the air and into the return lane where it
went into the hood of the ’41 Studebaker Eddie was driving. Wow! That’s
the truth. As Eddie stated a few months ago, “All the
Drag papers got it wrong.” Junior said, “We just decided to go
with the story over time, why fight it.”
A
point of interest:
We all remember the days of picking up Mexican blankets in TJ and
then throwing them over our unfinished car seats. Well this car has
those blankets on them and boy do they look authentic. I reached
over at the 17th
Annual CHRR
and touched them, and guess what “they’re covered with car
grease, you remember the feel right!” Wow that’s authentic. And
look at all the period perfect decals all over the car.
Wheels
and tires:
Now we have original ‘Studie’ steelies and caps with bias plys
up-front and M
& H Racemasters
on are those period perfect Halibrands
or what?
Historic
decals:
Lion
Drag Strip
(original lion with car), Orange
County Airport,
Santa Ana “Every
Sunday Drag Races”, Joe
Hunt
Magnetos, Santa
Anna Drags
“Class Winner”, Champion
Spark Plugs
(woman on globe) and my personal favorite “Alfred E Newman”
hisself with the caption, “What me worry?” painted on a tonneau
cover over the rear seat area—what a face, do you remember that
guy? (Mad Magazine) And the car wouldn’t be complete without those
Mooneyes
peeking out behind the rear slicks.
Custom
fabrication?—for sure!
For the younger generation who has the best engineered parts
available and high tech fabrication shops available, well ingenuity
is a thing of the past they just shop around and buy what they need!
Talk about creativity in the old days, look at the tranny-tunnel
cover, wow now there is some tuff bullet-proof installation, or is
it??? As we looking closer we see that the cover is hand cut sheet
metal (thin gauge) with Philips screws and paw prints from those
greasy hands all over? Now people that’s real-racing!
Wouldn’t you agree?
How
about the blower-hole in the hood, custom by George Barris you ask?
Maybe not, how about custom by metal-shears held by Eddie, Sonny,
Junior or whoever else might have been standing around and offered a
helping hand.
And
what about that chassis, is that one of Dragmaster’s
latest? How about those headers, are those professionally engineered
Doug’s
Headers?
And that steering wheel must be one of those Titanium specialty
wheels? Wrong,
wrong, wrong!
Chassis by Studebaker, steering wheel by Studebaker and headers by a
bunch of guys welding muffler pipe pieces together. Ingenuity was
the name of the game!
Current
owner:
Sonny Messner is now moving onto other projects and has asked me to
sell this beautiful piece of Gasser
War’s
history. Sonny wrenched with Junior and Eddie in there early heyday
and then moved over to wrench with Big Daddy. Today Sonny after 40
years of bugging Don, now owns the original “Swamp Rat III”
Garlit’s first custom tubular frame car.
Sonny
says, “If
you want to see the ’41 Studebaker B/G in person I have plans to be
at the March Meet and 18th
Annual California Hot Rod Reunion. Look for the ’41 Studebaker
parked by “Swamp Rat III”, the GMC Garlit’s tow vehicle and my
silver-blue Lincoln Zepher─I
take them everywhere I go.”
To quote Sonny, “I
like to live and not waste precious time.”
We agree with you, let’s “drive-em”, “race-em” and
“show-em!”
He
is offering the Studebaker Gasser for $42,500.00 on
www.HistoricRaceCarForum.com
for the first time! Contact
Don at 619.804.8033
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