Mandy Holder's 1951 Mercury

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1951 Mercury convertible owned by Knucklebusters of Springfield member Mandy Holder of Springfield, Illinois. Mandy's Mercury was restyled by Bob Maisenbacher and Barris Kustoms.
Mandy's Mercury at the Barris shop. The photo is taken around 1956 as you can see the Rod & Custom Magazine’s Dream Truck as it first appeared in 1956.
Mandy's Merc at the 1957 Long Beach Renegades Car Club Renecade. The show was held Thursday, July 4 on the grounds of Bellflower High School. Photo from the George Contaoi Photo Collection.
Mandy's Mercury during a Car Craft and Custom Cars photo shoot July 8, 1957. Photo by Eric Rickman, courtesy of Hot Rod Magazine.
Photo by Eric Rickman, courtesy of Hot Rod Magazine.
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Mandy's Merc as it appeared in September 1959. Photo provided by Richard Fuerholze.
Photo provided by Richard Fuerholze.
Photo provided by Richard Fuerholze.
Photo provided by Richard Fuerholze.


1951 Mercury convertible owned by Knucklebusters of Springfield member Mandy Holder of Springfield, Illinois. Mandy's Mercury was restyled by Bob Maisenbacher and Barris Kustoms. According to Car Craft March 1958 the Merc was the 13th car that Mandy had restyled. Bob Maisenbacher ran a traditional body shop called Park Avenue Body Shop in Springfield. He used to do custom body work in his own garage at night.[1] When the Merc was featured in Car Craft March 1958, Bob's garage was listed as Mize Custom Shop.


The Merc was worked on by Bob Maisenbacher before it arrived at Barris Kustoms. Up front Mandy's Mercury featured a split 1955 Pontiac bumper and a multi-bar grille made from 3/4 inch round rods and 3 inch tubing. Expanded metal was installed behind the bars. The hood, deck lid and door corners were rounded. The headlights were frenched and tunneled using 1953 Mercury headlight rims. The taillights featured 1954 Packard lenses frenched into the 7 inch extended rear fenders. 1955 Pontiac side trim followed the body lines and covered the quarter panel seams. Functional airscoops were cut in the side skirts. The fender skirts were made by 1953 Ford quarter panels fit with 1954 Mercury teeth. The edges were finished with round rods. Exhaust tips were integrated into the bumpers. Mize Custom Shop did a major share of the metal work. The grille and paint job was done by Barris Kustoms. The 3 inch chopped and padded top was done by Gaylord. The Dukes & Duchess Trim Shop of Compton, California did the piped interior in Orchid and White Naugahyde. The car was painted in dark and light shades of purple, and featured pinstriping applied by Dean Jeffries. Dual Appleton spotlights, lakes pipes and hubcaps that Mandy made himself were installed. The hubcaps were made by by mounting accessory blades and gold spinners on 1953 Cadillac hubcaps. Mandy won four trophies in five shows before driving the car home to Illinois. The worn out Mercury flathead was replaced by an Oldsmobile OHV engine. In 1958 Mandy's Mercury was nominated as one of 28 "Top Customs of the Year" by Motor Life magazine.[2]


Sold & Stolen

In March of 2016 Bud DeLay told Kustomrama that Mandy sold the car to a fellow from Indiana. Bud was a friend of Mandy, and Mandy told him that he almost cried as the Merc drove away; "It was in the winter, and he said the guy banged it up pretty bad getting it home."[3] Ernie Ball, who worked for Mandy, has been looking for the Merc for years. According to Ernie, Mandy sold the car sometime during 1963-1964, while he was still at his Spruce street shop. After Mandy sold it, it made the show circuit, and it was stolen off the street where it was parked, waiting to be taken into the show.[4]


Where is it Now?

All traces of Mandy's custom disappears after he sold it. If you know what happened to it, we would love to hear from you: mail@kustomrama.com.


The Rumors

According to Dick Brogdon, shop manager at Hot Rod by Boyd, soon after Mandy returned home, he suffered an aneurysm and died. His father sold the car whereupon it was stolen and has not been seen or heard of since.[5] Another rumor claims that the car was stolen after Mandy's father sold it.[6] According to Mandy's old friend Bud DeLay, these rumors aren't true; "First of all, Mandy sold the car himself, and his dad was killed before Mandy died."[3]


Magazine Features

Custom Cars September 1957
Rod & Custom November 1957
Custom Cars December 1957
Car Craft March 1958
Motor Life July 1958
Custom Cars September 1959


References

Sources

Rik Hoving's Custom Car Photo Archive




 

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