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Tuesday, June 6, 2023

PA Cars Have Muscle

Imagine having your own personal collection of high performance cars and building a barn-like museum to house them. 
Barry's Car Barn in Intercourse, PA
It's not something, most folks could do, but that's what Barry Baldwin, a 70+ year old Lancaster County native, businessman and entrepreneur did that. InApril 2021, he opened a classic car museum in the small town of Intercourse, PA, featuring American muscle and sports cars from the 1950s to 1970s plus vintage autos, motorcycles, and car-related items. 

While Grenville is more the car aficionado than myself, I've always enjoyed seeing vintage autos. The expression they don't build them like they used to really applies to all these cars.
This museum was a stop on our PA road trip in May
This museum was a planned stop on our May anniversary road trip to PA. We bypassed it at first as although it's far from a small building, it's set back from Old Philadelphia Pike with no signage at a short driveway leading to it. There is a $13/person admission for this private museum. That expense balanced out as the same day we visited a larger and free auto collection, just 15 miles away (more in a future post).
Panoramic of car barn interior
There's more to see in this car museum than unique vintage autos. Walls are covered in gas company signs and other memorabilia with a number of free-standing vintage gas pumps too.
Gas company logos cover the museum walls
The red Pegasus flying horse logo above was used by Mobil starting in 1934 with ads boasting: A new sign rises to guide America's car owners to the gasoline and service they want. It remains among the most recognized corporate symbols in American petroleum history.
Vintage motorcycles include Harley Davidson, Indian and Triumph models
We didn't do a count, but there's over 50 cars in the barn, all visible down two main aisles, this includes 15 Chevrolet Corvettes, a row of Ford Shelbys, street rods, vintage 1930s autos and rare motorcycles like these Indians, Harley Davidsons, and Triumph.
Baldwin, who has owned cars from when he could legally drive, bought his first collectible car in the 1960s.  His interest in cars dates from working at his father's car repair and gas station in Gap, PA. That station was started in 1922 and is still in the Baldwin family. 
Lineup of Chevrolets, including many Camaro models
Of course, collecting vintage cars is not an inexpensive venture, so it helps if you own a large company. Baldwin heads an electrical and mechanical contracting business with six PA locations and several hundred employees. 
A good looking vintage sports car in the collection
Reportedly, Baldwin doesn't look for specific vehicles and instead buys unrestored, partially and fully restored cars that he likes. While he's also sold cars, his goal is to showcase the collection in this museum.In addition to the ones displayed here, there's more stored elsewhere in various states of restoration. Future plans are to rotate vehicles as they're ready to be shown here.
Two convertibles: Vintage Mercury coupe and Jaguar sports car
Admittedly, my knowledge of muscle cars is very limited, but I learned that most were known for having powerful engines and a broad, boxy shape. 
Chevrolet Impala and Pontiac GTO models
The muscle car term is often used for mid-1960s and early 1970s special editions of mass-production cars designed for drag racing. The term usually applies to a two-door, rear-wheel-drive, small to midsize car with a large, powerful eight-valve (V8) engine. It entered the general vocabulary through car magazines and automobile marketing and came into general use for performance-oriented street cars.
Grenville and 1958 Chevy Bel Air
Grenville was excited to find a 1958 Chevrolet Bel Air. He once owned a 1956 model in the same Nassau Blue color. This GM model debuted in 1950 and was produced by General Motors from 1950 to 1975. The car was named after a wealthy Bel Air neighborhood in Los Angeles, CA. Models were distinguished by the Bel Air name script in gold lettering.

The popular Bel Air was part of an entire series of top of the line Chevy hardtops, sedans and convertibles along with the Nomad, 210, and 150 models. Consumers had made Chevrolet the top auto maker and Bel Air was at the core of Chevrolet's popularity. 

Ad for Olds 88 Rocket engine
It was interesting to learn that the first U.S. muscle car was introduced in our birth year, 1949 when General Motors introduced the Oldsmobile Rocket 88 car in January, named after its engine design.

The powerful new V8 rocket engine in the Olds 88 was designed by American inventor and engineer Charles Kettering. His design was aimed at putting a big engine in a smaller car at an affordable price, and it succeeded. It hit the highways in 1949 with a starting price of under $4,000.

America’s first muscle car had a streamlined design and body style, termed FuturamicThe “Rocket” name which some GM executives disliked was so popular that the Olds 88 was produced until 1999. Collectors have bid up to $100,000 for a 1949 model at some auctions.
Vintage car ads for 1949 Oldsmobile Rocket 88
The Olds Rocket 88 could be purchased with a deluxe trim package that added chrome and a clock, but cost up to $100 more for a radio. The 1949 model had a top speed of 97 mph and coupled sports car performance with the usability of a family car. It featured modern post-war styling and soon became the brand’s best-selling model. (Some Olds 88 facts: The Rocket-powered Olds inspired a popular slogan, Make a Date with a Rocket 88. The song, Rocket 88, recorded by Jackie Brenston and the Delta Cat, reached #1 on the Billboard R&B chart and is often cited as the first rock & roll record.)
Chevrolet Corvette line-up
On one side of the museum is a pristine row of Chevrolet Corvettes, which are not muscle cars, despite some misconceptions. Corvettes are sports cars, super lightweight with an aerodynamic design and fiberglass construction. Unlike muscle cars which focus more on power, they bank on speed and a more refined design. The Corvette line of two-door, two-seater luxury sports cars has been manufactured and marketed by GM, under the Chevrolet marque, since 1953.
1954 and 1955 Chevrolet Corvette models
The top photo shows a 1954 Corvette with a hand-molded fiberglass white body. If you look close at its fender, you can see the weave of the fiberglass material under the paint. Below it is an almost identical 1955 model, but with a machine-pressed fiberglass body and a V8 engine. 
1956 Chevrolet Corvette
This nearby 1956 aquamarine Corvette is as great-looking as when its first owner drove it off a showroom floor.
Line-up of mostly Ford Mustang Shelby cars
One side of the museum features an entire line ↑ of iconic Ford cars, most are Mustang Shelby muscle cars with a couple of Ford Thunderbirds too. The Shelby Mustang is a high-performance variant of the Ford Mustang and has a large engine as modified by the late Carroll Hall Shelby, an automotive designer, race driver and entrepreneur who established Shelby American. (The most expensive car here is reportedly a 1967 Shelby 500 which Baldwin has estimated to be valued between $175,000 to $275,000. Sorry, there's no photo.)
Chevrolet Chevelle SS
The 1970 Chevrolet Chevelle LS6 is only one of 4500 that were produced. It includes a 450HP V8 which was the most powerful engine produced that year. Its owner paid an added $263 for the bigger motor, and it makes the car worth $80-$90,000 today.
1931 Ford Model A and 1947 Mercury Woodies
There are two woodies in Baldwin's collection: the 1931 Ford Model A (top) is only one of 851 produced. This model was the Ford company's second big success after the Model T. Below, the 1947 Mercury station wagon was an eight-passenger station wagon which at the time was the most expensive model in the Mercury lineup, selling for $2,207 (imagine that). (A woodie is the term applied to a wood-bodied automobile either made of wood or styled to resemble wood elements, that was a popular station wagon type in the 1930s-40s) 
Two restored street rods
The automobiles on display span numerous makes and models like these two street rods. Some retain original parts; others have been fitted with updated conveniences like backup cameras and remote locks.
Grenville and Packard similar to one his grandfather owned in NJ
While I didn't find any cars that were owned by members of my family, Grenville found a second one. This beautiful Packard was similar to one that his grandfather owned and drove for his limo service in South Orange, NJ.

Eventually, the car barn will house a second-floor brew pub and restaurant that will overlook the display floor. Now, it's the museum that attracts tourists and residents. Many have either owned a car like one in the collection or know someone who did, like Grenville. Others, like myself, enjoy seeing these vintage motorcars which someone else had the funds to assemble.

If you're traveling in the Lancaster area, Barry’s Car Barn is at 3504 Old Philadelphia Pike, Intercourse, PA (PA Route 340) opposite the popular Kitchen Kettle Village, which will make it easier to find for anyone else. 

21 comments:

David M. Gascoigne, said...

I am the kind of guy who buy the cheapest car that will suit my needs and then drives it until it is about to fall apart, so I don't think this kind of exhibit would draw me in.

Bijoux said...

It looks like a well kept Museum, but I guess one has to be fastidious to own old cars like that. It must have been fun to see cars you’ve owned or remember from your childhood.

Pamela M. Steiner said...

I LOVED this so much!! I grew up with 2 big brothers who loved cars, especially my 2nd oldest, who also has restored a few cars in his lifetime. This is quite an extensive and expensive collection! Amazing! I hope that barn is well insured and has lots of fire protection! Thank you for sharing this, with all of the good information. You are quite a good tour guide, you know? I would enjoy this display, and I wonder if my brother Clifford knows about this place. I may have to send him this info for the next time he's passing through PA. LOL. Have a blessed and wonderful day.

Anvilcloud said...

it’s pretty impressive what some people get up to. I think, from the photos anyway, that I am most impressed by the surrounding signage and mockups.

MadSnapper said...

most of these are familair to me, and Bob has had one of a lot of these, he changed cars like clothing and was a drag racer. great idea to put a resturant up there. amazing old cars and a museum we would enjoy visiting and not far from Perkasie Pa where bob was born and lived from 1936 to 1970 when he moved here with his wife and kids

baili said...

wow never saw car museum specially owned by just one person :)

sounds amazing indeed dear Dorothy .thank you for making me part of your exciting visit it must be thrilling to see so many gorgeous and stunning cars before your eyes wow

the father of the owner was mechanic or cars and son has museum now this is really an improvement of family business rarest one probably :)

hugs and blessings!

gigi-hawaii said...

My favorite car of all is the Chevrolet Corvette -- definitely a chick magnet. All you need is a handsome dude behind the wheel.

Sandra said...

I grew up in a neighborhood of guys with muscle cars! I've been in a few. These are beauties.

John "By Stargoose And Hanglands" said...

Where did all the beautiful cars go? Modern cars just seem to be ugly boxes of various sizes to my eye. I'd enjoy looking around a place like this, but since that's unlikely I'd like to thank you for your excellent clear photos that make me feel as if I were there.

Rita said...

I was never into cars at all but growing up in the 50s even I used to be able to tell different cars apart by the shapes of them. So even I recognized quite a few of these cars before I read below to see if I was right. Cars mostly have all looked alike for many decades. I do miss the variety...and I'm not sure why. Nostalgia? :)

photowannabe said...

What an amazing private collection. I really love seeing all of them.
Makes me feel like I am watching American Pickers on TV, especially those old Harley and Indian motorcycles.
Terrific photos that show so many from my era.
Sue

Billy Blue Eyes said...

Nice to see all those cars and even better with the British cars and bikes, a Triumph and BSA along with a Jaguar E type and Austin Healy 3000, one thing they had missing was a Classic Mini

Barbara Rogers said...

Great collection, well tended! And I lovved the photos showing us how very many there were! I just liked the men driving them, usually, so would learn to talk about them a bit. I confess to having two boyfriends just because they drove Corvettes. Well, I dated them some, maybe not real boyfriends. I cut my hair in a pixie just so I could ride with the top down!

William Kendall said...

The motorbikes speak to me.

Michelle said...

Wow, that is quite a collection! I like those old gas station signs, too.

Red said...

This could keep you occupied for a few days. Great museum.

Emma Springfield said...

Muscle cars are great to look at. I got old now and love my SUV.

DUTA said...

A car museum needs lots of space and lots of money. However, where there's passion for cars, car collecting, car restoring - space and money will ulimately be overcome. That's the beauty of it.

Rob Lenihan said...

My goodness, what an incredible collection of cars.

I don't know much about cars either, but I love looking at the old models.

I seem to recall that the Woody was popular with surfers--if the old Beach Boy songs are to be believed.

David said...

Hi Beatrice, Since you know that we like to visit auto museums/collections based on the posts I've published, it should be no surprise that I've added this "Car Barn" to our list of destinations for future a future road trip. Great looking collection! Take Care, Big Daddy Dave

My name is Erika. said...

I read through your posts Dorothy and I'm going to combine comments. It looks like your trip to PA was a lot of fun. I also loved reading about the sculpture symposium. And seeing all those cool cars. I know a couple of car guys who would really like that car barn. hugs-Erika