Junkyard Find: 1953 Pontiac Chieftain Sedan

Murilee Martin
by Murilee Martin

More pre-1960 vehicles than one might think show up in the big U-Wrench wrecking yards; you won’t find a ’55 Chevy coupe, but I’ve seen Nash Metropolitans, a ’55 Buick, a ’49 Dodge, a ’58 Edsel, a ’53 Willys, and a ’50 Studebaker in recent years, and that’s just a small sampling. Today’s Junkyard Treasure is a ’53 Pontiac Chieftain sedan in very solid condition, photographed in a Denver-area self-service yard last week.

There’s a temporary registration sticker from 1980 taped to the windshield, which suggests that the car spent 38 years stored in a garage somewhere before coming to this place. So few people with the time, space, skills, inclination, and money to fix up a car like this, and a non-hardtop/non-V8 sedan doesn’t score high on the Cool-O-Meter for most of them.

The door frame has several service-station oil-change stickers, two of which show 1960 dates. Check the gallery for shots of the others.

Nearly all non-luxury Detroit sedans of this era came with straight-six engines — mostly flatheads — and three-on-the-tree manual transmissions. This is the 239-cubic-inch Pontiac flathead six, rated at 115 horsepower. This would be a really cool engine to install in a fenderless 1913 Oakland Model 42 street rod and drive every day… but we all know that anyone making a ratty old Oakland into a street rod would install a small-block Chevy engine, or maybe (if feeling radical) a Pontiac 455. This engine has a 99.99 percent chance of going to The Crusher along with this car, unfortunately, because there’s a dearth of love for the flathead sixes. I didn’t try to turn it, but I’ll bet it’s not seized.

1953 was the first model year for CONELRAD-marked radios, and this car still has its original racketblaster.

I took a few shots of this car with a Kellogg’s Corn Flakes-branded cereal-prize film camera, of course.

The lesson here is clear: if you ever wanted to get a 1950s Detroit sedan and make it into a driver, there are plenty of nice ones still sitting in yards, driveways, and garages right now. Rescue yours before it meets the same fate as this Chieftain!

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Murilee Martin
Murilee Martin

Murilee Martin is the pen name of Phil Greden, a writer who has lived in Minnesota, California, Georgia and (now) Colorado. He has toiled at copywriting, technical writing, junkmail writing, fiction writing and now automotive writing. He has owned many terrible vehicles and some good ones. He spends a great deal of time in self-service junkyards. These days, he writes for publications including Autoweek, Autoblog, Hagerty, The Truth About Cars and Capital One.

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  • Dabear Dabear on Jan 18, 2019

    I would like to find this car and buy it. I have all the missing parts. my car has a lot of rust work to be done and this car would be perfect. anyone know where this car is?

  • Stereorobb Stereorobb on Feb 08, 2019

    My first car was a 1955 pontiac Starchief. got it back in 1999 when i was 16 so it was already a classic then. i chose the starchief because i wanted a classic and i wanted something different that nobody really ever heard of that was my age at the time. it was a totally original survivor car unrestored. i used it as my daily for almost a year till i wrecked it :( surprisingly fast car for what it was. had the 287ci V8 and the hydramatic transmission. it had no problem at all keeping up with what was then (circa 2000) modern traffic and could do 100 on the highway all day long. i learned to basically drive in that car. took my road test in it, made the 3 point turn and parallel parked it, w/o power steering, power brakes, or anything else really that modern cars have. i learned very quickly what it was like to live with a 1950s car as my sole mode of transportation, which is a very unique experience. by far the coolest car ive ever had, and id kill to have one today.

  • El scotto They should be supping with a very, very long spoon.
  • El scotto [list=1][*]Please make an EV that's not butt-ugly. Not Jaguar gorgeous but Buick handsome will do.[/*][*] For all the golf cart dudes: A Tesla S in Plaid mode will be the fastest ride you'll ever take.[/*][*]We have actual EV owners posting on here. Just calmly stated facts and real world experience. This always seems to bring out those who would argue math.[/*][/list=1]For some people an EV will never do, too far out in the country, taking trips where an EV will need recharged, etc. If you own a home and can charge overnight an EV makes perfect sense. You're refueling while you're sleeping.My condo association is allowing owners to install chargers. You have to pay all of the owners of the parking spaces the new electric service will cross. Suggested fee is 100$ and the one getting a charger pays all the legal and filing fees. I held out for a bottle of 30 year old single malt.Perhaps high end apartments will feature reserved parking spaces with chargers in the future. Until then non home owners are relying on public charge and one of my neighbors is in IT and he charges at work. It's call a perk.I don't see company owned delivery vehicles that are EV's. The USPS and the smiley boxes should be the 1st to do this. Nor are any of our mega car dealerships doing this and but of course advertising this fact.I think a great many of the EV haters haven't came to the self-actualization that no one really cares what you drive. I can respect and appreciate what you drive but if I was pushed to answer, no I really don't care what you drive. Before everyone goes into umbrage over my last sentence, I still like cars. Especially yours.I have heated tiles in my bathroom and my kitchen. The two places you're most likely to be barefoot. An EV may fall into to the one less thing to mess with for many people.Macallan for those who were wondering.
  • EBFlex The way things look in the next 5-10 years no. There are no breakthroughs in battery technology coming, the charging infrastructure is essentially nonexistent, and the price of entry is still way too high.As soon as an EV can meet the bar set by ICE in range, refueling times, and price it will take off.
  • Jalop1991 Way to bury the lead. "Toyota to offer two EVs in the states"!
  • Jalop1991 I'm sorry, Dave. I'm afraid I can't do that.
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