1961 Ford Galaxie 6 Cylinder With Manual Transmission: El Cheapo Luxury

Photo source: beverlyhillscarclub.com

 

Here’s another classic example of a car that once was seen everywhere, but is now virtually extinct.  Oh, you might find a convertible or high-performance version of a ’61 Ford at a car show, but how about a Galaxie 4-door Town Sedan in slightly patinated condition?  Just the way you may remember seeing them on the street back then.  And who in 1961 would buy a top-of-the-line Galaxie new, but with so few options that the car basically becomes a stripper?  Quite a few people–more than you may think.

Based on research by CC’s own Aaron Severson, during this period hundreds of thousands of low-priced, full-sized cars were produced each year with six cylinder engines, manual transmissions, blackwall tires, small hubcaps, and even no radio.  If you look at our collections of vintage photos of parking lots and street scenes, you’re going to see a lot of cars like our featured Galaxie.

I’ve always thought the ’61 Ford was a good-looking car.  The front end is a definite improvement over the ’60.  The minimalist tailfins are sharp and clean, cleverly emerging from the door handles.  And the jet-like round taillights are great.

I have fond memories of the ’61 Ford.  When I was around age 5-8, I had a friend (Greg) who lived a few houses up from me.  His grandparents would often visit, and they drove what appeared to be a mint condition Galaxie sedan just like this one, except theirs was finished in the most beautiful blue color Ford offered that year, Garden Turquoise Poly.

1961 Ford Galaxie hardtop in Garden Turquoise and Corinthian White–super sharp! (Photo from GR Auto Gallery)

 

And to make things even more interesting, Greg had a Matchbox car of a blue ’61 Ford that looked just like Grammy’s, except it was a police car!

Our subject Ford may be plain white on the outside (as many of them were), but inside is where the real beauty is–a vivid turquoise interior in very good condition!

I really like the dash and steering wheel design on these.

Power steering and manual transmission–an interesting combination.

Wide with plenty of room, but you sit low!

Under the hood:  the base 223 cubic inch six with mechanical valve lifters, rated at 135 horsepower.  I have lots of experience with this engine.

I have the same engine in my 1958 Ford Custom 300, also with power steering (but with Fordomatic transmission).

An interesting thing is, this six-cylinder engine (curiously rated at 145 HP in ’58) provides decent performance in a car weighing about 3200 lbs.  But the ’61 Galaxie weighs about 400 lbs. more than the 1958 Custom 300!  That’s a lot of extra weight for this relatively small engine to haul around.  And this same 223 six was put into the even heavier 1961 Mercury Meteor 600 and 800 and Commuter station wagon models!  This is not really the best way to build an “economy” car.

I will say that this is a very “mannerly” engine, with a sewing machine kind of smoothness.  With Fordomatic, it’s a nice cruising powertrain.  It’s also the most reliable old car engine I’ve ever had, with very few problems over ten years of ownership.  And if a problem does occur, there’s lots of room under the hood which makes servicing much easier.  Always starts easily, idles consistently, and runs smoothly at all speeds.  I like the manual choke which allows you to “fine-tune” idle speed and mixture from the driver’s seat.  This provides smoother, better running during warm-up.  But it’s not idiot-proof, so Detroit came up with the automatic choke, which I don’t think is the optimum solution for carbureted auto engines of the pre-electronic period.

However, if the 390 cubic inch, 300 HP V-8 (which I had in my former 1962 Mercury Monterey) were under the hood of our subject Galaxie, the car would become a whole different animal!  Deep, throbbing V-8 rumble and lots and lots of torque!

So why would someone buy a new Galaxie so basically equipped?  For one thing, it would keep the original purchase price low.  And maybe someone wanted the nicer Galaxie interior and trim but with six cylinder simplicity and economy.  Such a person may have preferred manual transmission but with the ease of power steering, and wanted the small hubcaps which didn’t fly off like the big wheel covers.  There weren’t “option packages” like today–buyers could “custom build” their new cars just the way they wanted them.

Given the choice between a ’61 Ford Galaxie and the Ford-based Mercury Meteor 800, I would actually choose the Mercury.  The Mercury’s design is not as “pure” as the Ford’s, but it’s more interesting.  And I would want the 352 or 390 V-8, with power steering and brakes, automatic transmission, full wheelcovers and whitewall tires.  For a new car buyer in 1961, this would raise the cost about $400 over the stripper Galaxie, but as the old saying goes, “Quality is remembered long after price is forgotten.”

Yes, I miss seeing old cars like this ’61 Ford, especially an example like this–not over-restored, showing some “honest wear”.  To me, these are the authentic and true “nostalgia cars” which are becoming harder to find all the time.

 

Further CC Reading:

Craigslist Find:  1961 Ford Fairlane 500–Last of the Big Fairlanes by Jim Grey

COAL:  1961 Ford Fairlane–My First Car by Just Plain Joe

CC Capsule:  1961 Ford Starliner–Evens, Odds, and the “Classic Ford Look” by Aaron65

Auto-Biography:  1961 Ford Starliner 390/375–Yes, Pop, You Can Get A V8 Four-Speed 1961 Ford If You Really Must Have One by Paul Niedermeyer