This Ultra-Rare Essex Terraplane
Hot Rod|May 2020
Stands Out in a Crowd
Richard Prince
This Ultra-Rare Essex Terraplane

With strong influence from his father, who was the service manager at their local Chevrolet dealer, Dickie Lowder began messing around with cool cars when he was only 14 years old. He started with a 1955 Chevy, and over the decades has built dozens of street rods, hot rods, and race cars. Though steered toward Chevrolet early on, he was equally attracted to Chevy’s perennial cross-town rival, in part because of his long career as service manager at a Ford dealership.

Around 40 years ago, after completing several 1955 Chevys and 1932 Fords, Dickie began looking for a car he lusted after for a long time, but never happened to cross paths with—a solid ’33 or ’34 Ford coupe.

“I got the word out that I wanted a ’33 or ’34 coupe,” he recalls, “and one day in 1980, a guy came into the dealership and told me he had a 1933 Essex Terraplane coupe at his body shop. Without knowing what an Essex Terraplane coupe was, I followed him to his shop in Pageland, South Carolina, to look at it.”

The Terraplane was completely disassembled and piled up in a corner of the shop, making it somewhat difficult to evaluate. Dickie saw enough of the body, however, to envision its potential. “I could see the car’s lines and liked its proportions and the way it flowed. It was complete except for the grill, garnish moldings, and panel between the rear fenders, and the metal was in excellent condition.”

Esta historia es de la edición May 2020 de Hot Rod.

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Esta historia es de la edición May 2020 de Hot Rod.

Comience su prueba gratuita de Magzter GOLD de 7 días para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9,000 revistas y periódicos.