Vintage Snapshots: Me and My Corvair – The Ultimate Corvair Album

(first posted 7/10/2017)   The Corvair may have been outsold by the dishwater-dull Falcon, but good luck finding so many vintage snapshots of Falcons with their doting owners. Americans loved the Corvair, and with good reason: It was the first American car that was compact, stylish and fun to drive. There was nothing quite like it on the market, and folks snapped them up, especially the bucket-seat Monza.

I picked this for the lede because this could be me and my beloved first car, a ’63 Monza sedan with the 110 hp engine 4-speed stick. Just two minor details are different: Mine was white and I had long dirty-blond hair. But we’re both Corvair lovers.

 

The Corvair played a very special role in America during its heyday (1960-1964), as it was the first genuinely sporty compact car, never mind that it was rear engine and air cooled. As such, it developed a unique following and image. The Corvair was actually by far the most successful of the Big Three compacts in conquest sales of import owners; import sales did take a big dive in 1960. And contrary to what some claim, the Corvair actually sold very well, right through 1965.

 

The Corvair’s image was unique, because it appealed to a wide range of buyers, and not just the tweedy, professory import set. It was all-American, and as such, it crossed all kinds of lines. The range of buyers that were attracted was very wide, and it was by far the only thing remotely of its kind at the time.  Americans were really ready for something different, and the Corvair gave it to them, without it having to be exotic or foreign.

 

The Corvair also developed a following in Europe, although not as wide-spread as one might perhaps imagine, as American cars were expensive, and the Corvair, with its relatively large six cylinder engine, was anything but an economy car there.

 

A racing stripe gave even the stripper 500 coupe a sporty flair.

A twin Corvair household.

 

The one Corvair household.

There were plenty of women Corvair buyers, given that they constituted a vocal backlash against the ever larger American cars of the time. The voice of reason found its car. And big cars continued their terminal decline, in no small part because of the Corvair and its kind.

A plain 1960 500 coupe gets a bit of pizazz on the hood.

The Monza was a brilliant concept, in that it allowed even frugal buyers to enjoy a nicely-trimmed, sporty personal car. The Monza was of course what inspired the Mustang, which took that formula to new heights.

Corvairs were cool from the get-go, and only got more so with time.

 

This base sedan represents the Corvair in its original intended role: as an economy car, but a different one.

 

Needless to say, the Corvair was the ultimate snow mobile. Nothing like having 62% of your weight right over the drive wheels.

 

Yes, the Corvair appealed to folks who appreciated engineering and sporty handling.

 

First wheels, undoubtedly.

 

A Monza coupe was something to be proud of.

 

Now here’s something different: A Corvair flat towing a ’64 Le Mans or GTO.

 

No owner in this shot, but a quite rare Baldwin shark-nose locomotive makes for a good substitute.

 

She deserves a Monza coupe; this lady is not stripper material.

 

Air cooled engine; air-dried laundry.

 

Smile!

 

The Cowsills and their Corvair touring van.

 

Quite likely a German immigrant with his kids and his “Poor Man’s Porsche”.

 

We can’t be sure it’s their Corvair, but it’s possible. The 1961 Plymouth, with its Corvair-inspired rear end, might be a better guess.

 

The well dressed Corvair owner. A Corvair was always considered to reflect well on the taste of its owner, especially so a convertible.

 

I’m not going to speculate how this happened.

 

How many kids can fit in a Corvair?

 

Peace, baby!

 

The two most stylish things on wheels in 1963.

 

How did this gen2 Corvair slip in here?

 

Corvair aficionado. How many Corvairs ended up.

 

A high school graduation gift from Elvis to Priscilla. Elvis loved a wide range of cars, and he had good taste.

 

I’m guessing grandpa drives the big Mercury.

 

Rear weight bias taken to an extreme.

 

Prom night and the Corvair.

 

Don’t try that in a VW.

 

It’ll fit, one way or another.

 

Did these folks just win a new Corvair? Of course it’s a stripper coupe.

 

This is the proud owner of a Fitch Sprint. John Fitch was the primary tuner of Corvairs, and sold performance parts as well as complete cars.

 

More Vintage Photos Here