Boing Boing Staging

1955 Chevy Nomad emerges from 40-year hibernation


Ben Marks of Collectors Weekly says: “Justin Pinchot just sent us a video of his new pride and joy, a 1955 Chevy Nomad wagon. ‘It has completely original paint, interior, and drive train,’ Pinchot says, ‘and is so clean, I thought for sure it was a restored car until I saw it in person.’ The two-door station wagon, which has been kept safe and warm in storage since 1974, has 87,000 original miles on it, and Pinchot is only its second or third owner, ‘depending on if you count the original owner’s son, who inherited the car.’”

Meet Maddie, one of the best unrestored, original paint & interior examples known of the rare & iconic 1955 Belair Nomad wagon. Out of nearly a million Chevy Belairs built in 1955, only about 8100 Nomads were ever produced; this example is in the most desirable regal turquoise with India ivory top. First year of Chevy’s small block V8, the 265, it is mated to a 2-speed cast iron powerglide automatic transmission. All mechanical components are original to the car as it left the factory. All 55 Nomad bodies were produced at the Cleveland plant then assembled & finished at various plants around the country; this one in Oakland California. Born Aug. 15, 1955, it is one of the last 55 Nomads off the assembly line before production switched over to the 56 model in September of that year. In astonishingly clean condition, Maddie will turn 60 years old this coming year. She looks pretty damn good for an old girl.

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