The Old Man caught one of those 1950's hot rod movies on TV the other night. It sent the memory wheels spinning and I dredged up thoughts of The Roadmasters. During the '50s, the Hollywood flick de jour was heavily weighted toward low-budget productions that pandered to teen interests; girls, hot cars, girls in hot cars, hot girls in cars, monsters being fought by boys while protecting girls in hot cars, and girls in poodle skirts dancing with boys in leather jackets and ducktail haircuts while their hot cars lined up around the drive-in restaurant. Bedford was about as far removed from that Hollywood characterization as Idi Amin is from Mother Teresa. None of my friends had what could be termed a true "Hot Rod". Most of us drove the family car and spent more time in denial than someone with a Donald Trump comb-over.
Kenny and I were a couple of good examples. I drove the really 'screaming' 53 Dodge that served as our family car. This monster would only "get a wheel" before the chains were put on in a snow storm. The "super powerful" 6-cylinder engine was coupled to some monstrosity of a transmission called "Fluid Drive". To get it to change gears, you had to take your foot off the gas and allow a momentary hesitation during which you would hear a "clunk" indicating the gear had changed. Speed-shifting in it meant you could get from the front seat to the back seat quickly. I'd usually get customarily quiet when the guys would talk about going out to The Lake stretch for a 'run'. That Dodge would have fared poorly on the stretch against even a 3-legged mule.
Kenny occasionally had access to a sweet little old lady's Pontiac. Still following some inner urge to hear tires screech, he developed a technique that amazes me to this day. Kenny would put the car in reverse, back it up, and then quickly jerk it into Drive. As we were scraping ourselves off the ceiling of the car, we could count on the rear tires spinning a bit with that satisfying squeal. His technique failed us only once that I can recall. While making one overly ambitious move, the rear end sounded as if it were disassembling itself, and Kenny drove the car home accompanied by whangs and bangs mixed with clicks and clucks.
Tucker and a couple of other guys came up with the idea of forming a car club. They called it The Roadmasters and we met in a room over Tucker's family's garage. It was a worthy club. We even had jackets.....white jackets with "The Roadmasters, Bedford, Va" printed on the back in bright red. We looked at ways to do community service; parked cars at events, that sort of thing. At our meetings, we discussed cars, projects, automotive dreams, girls in hot cars, and who'd been out to The Lake stretch lately.
Kenny and I usually rode together to the meetings. We'd be in either the green bomb (Dodge) or that wild-ass Pontiac. Every time we'd leave, Kenny would pick up a line from the hot rod movie trailers and say, "And they come roaring out". It just seemed to cap off the evening.
I don't know how many of The Roadmasters are still around these days. Kenny is gone, and with him, a boatload of talking about good times. Tucker is gone, his existence stolen in a Southeast Asian cess pool. Others I just don't know about. But whenever I run across one of those movies on late-night TV, I usually manage to raise a glass to the "back then" in all of us.
Busy Getting Ready
8 years ago
2 comments:
So good to see another Bedford story. I've missed your blog posts. We grew up in such a wonderful time to be a kid. I miss those days when "walking on the wild side" meant drinking a 3.2 beer....
Love it, Dad!! Great post and I too have missed your blogs!!! Love ya!
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