Find or Sell Used Cars, Trucks, and SUVs in USA

1 Family Owned Original 440 4bbl V8 Automatic Great Driver Solid Oregon Sedan on 2040-cars

US $7,500.00
Year:1966 Mileage:93346
Location:

Glenmont, New York, United States

Glenmont, New York, United States
Advertising:

 1966 CHRYSLER NEW YORKER

96,346 Miles!

This is supposed to be a one family owned all original 1966 Chrysler New Yorker 4dr Hardtop. It still wears its original paint and has a very nice original interior. It is missing one fender skirt and a piece of moulding.

It is equipped with a J code 440 4bbl from the factory which runs very smooth and transmission shifts well as it should.

It has some nice options and a very unique period correct on board computer with cruise control.

It has always been on the west coast and is amazingly rust free!  I  purchased the car in Oregon and it has not seen winter! At least not an east coast winter.

This is a wonderful weekend car, everyday cool commuter or a candidate for a rat rod or low rider!

I will let the new owner decide its new fate !

Any questions please call Frank direct at 518-526-3728. This unit is for sale locally. Legal and binding contract when bidding. Feel free to inspect this classic during the auction or have it inspected by an independent company.

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Auto blog

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Fri, Jul 19 2019

America's industrial might — automakers included — determined the outcome of the 20th centuryÂ’s biggest events. The “Arsenal of Democracy” won World War II, and then the Cold War. And our factories flew us to the moon. Apollo was a Cold War program. You can draw a direct line from Nazi V-2 rockets to ICBMs to the Saturn V. The space race was a proxy war — which beats a real war. It was a healthy outlet for technology and testosterone that would otherwise be used for darker purposes. (People protested, and still do, that money for space should go to problems here on Earth, but more likely the military-industrial complex would've just bought more bombs with it.) As long as we and the Soviet Union were launching rockets into space, we were not lobbing them at each other. JFKÂ’s challenge to “go to the moon in this decade and do the other things, not because they are easy, but because they are hard,” put American industry back on a war footing. We were galvanized to beat the Russians, to demonstrate technological dominance. (A lack of similar unifying purpose is why we havenÂ’t been to the moon since, or Mars.) NASA says more than 400,000 Americans, from scientists to seamstresses, toiled on the moon program, working for government or for 20,000 contractors. Antagonism was diverted into something inspirational. The Big Three automakers were some of the biggest companies in the moon program, which might surprise a lot of people today. Note to a new generation who marveled when SpaceX launched a Tesla Roadster out into the solar system: Sure, that was neat, but just know that Detroit beat Elon Musk to space by more than half a century. This high point in human history was brought to you by Ford ItÂ’s hard to imagine in this era of Sony-LG-Samsung, but Ford used to make TVs. And other consumer appliances. Or rather Philco, the radio, TV and transistor pioneer that Ford bought in 1961 — the year Gagarin and Alan Shepard flew in space. Ted Ryan, FordÂ’s archives and heritage brand manager, just wrote a Medium article on the central role Philco-Ford played in manned spaceflight. And nothingÂ’s more central than Mission Control in Houston, the famous console-filled room we all know from TV and movies. What we didn't know was, that was Ford. Ford built that. In 1953, Ryan notes, Philco invented a transistor that was key to the development of (what were then regarded as) high-speed computers, so naturally Philco became a contractor for NASA and the military.

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