Photo Feature: 1949 Anglia Two-Door Sedan

1949 Anglia Two-Door Sedan

1949 Anglia Two-Door Sedan

Note: The following story was excerpted from the December 2016 issue of Collectible Automobile magazine

Collector cars can turn up in odd places. A 1925 Bugatti was found at the bottom of a Swiss lake. A 1957 Plymouth was buried in a time capsule in Oklahoma. The elements took their toll on both.

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Ford’s history in Great Britain dates to 1903 when a small batch of cars was imported from America. By 1911, Ford’s British operations were assembling the Model T locally, but the first cars specifically designed for the English market did not arrive until the Thirties. 

1949 Anglia Two-Door Sedan

1949 Anglia Two-Door Sedan

After World War II, Ford of Britain was able to restart civilian production by June 1945. Within a few years, some dealers in the United States were peddling a selection of British-built Ford products including Anglia and Prefect sedans and Thames light-duty trucks. 

The Anglia was based on the 7Y Eight model that went on sale in September 1937. The four-passenger car was 148.5 inches long end to end and rode a 90-inch wheelbase. Available only as a two-door saloon (a sedan to Americans), the 7Y had fender-mounted headlamps, a center-hinged hood, and a rear-mounted spare tire. The engine was a 933cc/56.9-cubic-inch L-head four-cylinder rated at 23.4 horsepower. The chassis and driveline followed typical Ford design practices of the time with transverse-leaf springs front and rear, a three-speed manual transmission, torque-tube drive, and mechanical brakes. 

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1949 Anglia Two-Door Sedan

1949 Anglia Two-Door Sedan

In 1940, the car was renamed Anglia. At the same time, it received a nearly upright grille, a longer hood, and a built-in trunk. After the war, the car benefited from an upgraded electrical system, improved rust resistance, and larger brakes. A slightly revised grille appeared for 1948.

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1949 Anglia Turn Signal

1949 Anglia Two-Door Sedan

The Anglia received another facelift for 1949. The “new” look was heavily based on the front sheetmetal from the original 7Y Eight, but a body-color divider followed the centerline of the car and split the grille into two sections. Each narrow opening was filled with an insert. The minor restyling proved to be attractive and the car carried on virtually unchanged until a modern new Anglia appeared in fall 1953. At that point, the old Anglia was rechristened the Popular and remained in production for six more years. The low-price Popular was powered by an 1172cc/71.6-inch four, a 30.1-horse engine that had previously been fitted to the slightly larger Prefect and the export-model Anglia. 

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1949 Anglia Two-Door Sedan

1949 Anglia Two-Door Sedan

The pictured car is an export-version 1949 Anglia that has been owned since 1981 by Douglas and Marlene Munro of Kinmount, Ontario, Canada. The car was originally sold by the Ford dealership in Banff, Alberta, Canada, and remained in that town until 1979. When found, the Anglia had been sitting in the yard where it was parked in the early Fifties. It had only 13,164 miles on its odometer, and the Munros say the car required only minimal restoration to make it roadworthy. 

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1949 Anglia

1949 Anglia Two-Door Sedan

1949 Anglia Two-Door Sedan Gallery

1949 Anglia

Photo Feature: 1964 Ford Galaxie 500 Four-Door Sedan

1964 Ford Galaxie 500

1964 Ford Galaxie 500 Four-Door Sedan

Note: The following story was excerpted from the June 2011 issue of Collectible Automobile magazine

By John Biel

When Gary Spracklin answered the classified ad in a hobby publication, he thought he was buying a whistle-clean daily driver. What he wound up with was an unlikely “trailer queen,” a 1964 Ford Galaxie 500 four-door sedan that gets the royal treatment because he decided he wants to keep the odometer reading below 1000.

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That’s right: Spracklin’s 47-year-old Wimbledon White-over-Rangoon Red Galaxie has just 920 miles on it and he’d like to keep it that way. With a few minor exceptions, it’s an homage to originality and preservation.

1964 Ford Galaxie 500 Four-Door Sedan

1964 Ford Galaxie 500 Four-Door Sedan

Faced with a loss of storage space, the Galaxie’s previous owners in New York State put the car up for sale in 1997. A fan and collector of full-sized ’64 Fords (a convertible was his first car at age 16), Spracklin thought the demure four-door sedan would make ideal transportation for someone with his interests. But once he got the Galaxie home to Omaha, Nebraska, he realized that his anticipated “driver” was really a virtual time capsule of how Fords were made in 1964.

At the time Spracklin purchased the car, it had a mere 905 miles on the odometer. Only the original battery and fanbelt had been replaced by earlier owners. Almost immediately he opted to maintain the car as a showpiece of originality. The 15 miles the Galaxie has accumulated since Spracklin obtained it were mostly added in increments necessary to move it around his shop or show fields. In his care, only the engine pulleys and a leaking heater core have been replaced—and Spracklin still has the original pulleys. Though they’re showing signs of age, the bias-ply tires are the same ones that have been on the car since it left the factory.

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1964 Galaxie

1964 Ford Galaxie 500 Four-Door Sedan

Full-sized 1964 Fords were at the end of a four-year styling cycle. However, that didn’t prevent two- and four-door sedans from receiving a new roof design that had a bit more of a forward slope than the Thunderbird-inspired unit of recent years.

Wheelbase stayed pat at 119 inches. Leaf springs supported the rear of big Fords for the last time.

With five body styles, the Galaxie 500 series offered the broadest availability of models and was the volume leader among “standard” Fords. The Galaxie 500 Town Sedan—company nomenclature for a four-door sedan—accounted for 198,805 orders, making it second only to the Galaxie 500 two-door hardtop for the affections of Ford customers that year.

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1964 Ford Galaxie 500 Four-Door Sedan

1964 Ford Galaxie 500 Four-Door Sedan

Gary Spracklin’s age-defying car comes pretty close to depicting a Galaxie 500 four-door sedan in its $2667 base state. Blackwall tires, hubcaps, and a three-speed column-shift manual transmission were all standard-equipment items.

The handful of extra-cost options found on Spracklin’s Galaxie starts with its 289-cid V-8 engine. With a two-barrel carburetor and 9.0:1 compression, it develops 195 horsepower at 4400 rpm. As a replacement for the standard 223-cube inline six, it added $109 to the sticker price and was just the first of several available V8s that ran all the way to a 425-horse 427-cube job. Other add-ons to the featured car include its two-tone paint, AM radio, and seat belts.

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1964 Ford Galaxie 500 Four-Door Sedan

1964 Ford Galaxie 500 Four-Door Sedan

1964 Ford Galaxie 500 Four-Door Sedan Gallery

1964 Ford Galaxie 500

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