Join The World's Best Iconic & Vintage Car Community >>

Cowboy Cars Featured at 2015 Amelia Island Concours

1948 Chrysler Town and Country Steer Car
1948 Chrysler Town and Country Steer Car

The Amelia Island Concours d’Elegance 2015 will be staged March 12-15 at the Golf Club of Amelia Island at Summer Beach in Amelia Island, Florida. The 20th annual Amelia Island Concours will display the eclectic and eccentric cars customized and modified to promote America’s movie and TV cowboys with the “Cars of the Cowboys” class.

The first gathering of cowboy vehicles at a major international Concours will feature vehicles like Leo Carillo’s (Pancho, from The Cisco Kid TV series) 1948 Chrysler Town and Country “Steer Car,” and cowboy movie star Tom Mix’s death car, a 1938 Supercharged Cord convertible. Roy Rogers’ Pontiac by Nudie Cohn will also be in attendance and will take center stage alongside Dale Robertson’s 1958 “Tales of Wells Fargo” Buick Limited convertible built by Buick.

“This is the first gathering of Cowboy Cars at a major international Concours,” said Bill Warner, Founder and Chairman of the Amelia Island Concours d’Elegance. “We hope to retrieve a few happy memories for the grown up kids of the 1950s who can bring their children and grandchildren to Amelia to see something that was such a fun part of our lives. Besides, without classes like ‘Cars of the Cowboys,’ it just wouldn’t be Amelia.”

The American western movie served as the financial backbone of the American Depression-era film industry. After World War II, the 1950s saw the rise of television and the western, which became a cultural phenomenon and a staple of all three American television networks. The car business, especially its aftermarket, was quick to exploit the social parallels of the cowboy’s quarter horse and the automobile.

“This new car class is entirely my fault,” said Warner. “When I was a kid I met Lash LaRue. He was driving his Muntz Jet, which was a very rare car. While all the other kids who had seen his cowboy movies were getting his autograph, I was ogling his car. He asked me if I knew what kind of car it was, and when I told him ‘Muntz Jet,’ he rewarded me with a ride! That’s something you never forget.” LaRue’s Muntz Jet now sits in pieces in the basement of the Petersen Museum in Los Angeles.

In addition to a unique class of vehicles that will bring out the kid in many, the Amelia Island Concours d’Elegance Foundation will be donating to Community Hospice of Northeast Florida, Inc. and other charities on Florida’s First Coast; a feat that has already raised $2.5 million for charity since The Amelia’s inception in 1996.

For additional information, visit AmeliaConcours.org or call 904-636-0027.

[Source: Amelia Island Concours]