BUMPER
TO BUMPER
Classic Cars
Grace Commemorative Stamps
On October 3, the US Postal Service will roll
out its latest set of commemorative stamps, the
’50s Fins and Chrome. The second issuance
to the America on the Move commemorative
stamp series, the five-stamp set features classic
post-war vehicles — all of which are still on the
road today — rendered by renowned automobile illustrator,
Art Fitzpatrick.
"It’s extremely rare to have something you own
immortalized on a stamp like this,” says Mark Saunders
of USPS. “Just to put it into context, we see over
50,000 stamp ideas every year and only use 20.”
Among those to receive the honor is George McKovich
— a retired stockbroker/inn keeper from Twin Falls,
Idaho, — who learned nearly three years ago that
his classic 1957 Chrysler 300C would be featured
in the set.
Q: How did the folks at the Postal Service find
you?
A: Art Fitzpatrick contacted the Chrysler 300 Club
International in late 2005, looking for someone
that might have a suitable 1957 Chrysler 300 for
his new stamp project that he had proposed to the
US Postal Service. The Club e-mailed its members
and asked who might want to submit their car. I
contacted Art Fitzpatrick and e-mailed him a photo.
He got back to me right away and said, “that is
the car.” I was extremely excited about it, but
had to keep it a secret until the official announcement
this past April.
Q: How did you come to own the car?
A: The ’57 300C was always a dream of mine, as
my father purchased a new one in 1957. It was
white and I took my first driver license test
in it in 1958. I remember seeing one or two Gauguin
Red ones back around that time and always thought
that would be the color I would like to have
someday. I saw the car advertised on the Internet
from a seller in Gloversville, N.Y. My wife and
I flew to Albany to drive it home in November
1999. We had a great trip across the country
and got lots of thumbs up along the way.
Q: What kind of condition was it in?
A: It looked very good in the pictures I received
from the seller, but they didn’t tell the entire
story. It had a lot of rust that had been patched
with Bondo and it had an incorrect engine in
it at the time. The upholstery was a beige vinyl
that had turned kind of yellowish. We found a
correct engine near Salt Lake City that was only
eight numbers away from the original engine that
came in the car from the factory. The car needed
a complete ground up restoration.
Q: Did you restore it yourself?
A: My son Christopher and I did all the mechanical
work and assembly on the car. We had most all
of the bodywork done by a local skilled bodyman.
The paint was done by a local painter and the
upholstery came from Gary Goers in Kalispell,
Mont., (a longtime supplier of Chrysler 300 interiors).
I also had help from several local friends with
many aspects of the restoration and relied heavily
on a book on Chrysler 300C restorations published
by Wayne Graefen of Kerrville, Texas.
Q: The folks at USPS hinted at some impressive
engine work that increased the gas mileage.
A: When we first got the car on the road in 2004,
we were getting about 14.3 mpg on the highway.
A fellow member of the Chrysler 300 Club International
gave me a copy of a Technical Service Bulletin
published in July 1957. It pertained to the ’57
300’s idling rough and running overly rich, stalling
and being sluggish from a standing start. It called
for several modifications to the carburetors by
drilling some holes for more air intake and changes
in the jets and metering rods. I made the modifications
and it certainly solved the rough idling and overly
rich running of the engine. I then discovered that
my highway mileage had increased to 17.5 mpg. Not
bad for such a big car with dual four barrel carburetors.
Q: What is your favorite Chrysler 300 moment?
A: I guess the biggest surprise we had was when
we won best of show in Winnemucca, Nev., at the
Fifties Fever car show in 2005 — it just absolutely
surprised me. They put us on a t-shirt and on
the poster for the next year. But the stamp is
the biggest of all honors — there’s never going
be a way to top this. After all, there are new
car show winners every year, but something like
this only happens once.
Photo© 2007 USPS. Used with permission. All rights reserved.