Junkyard Find: 1961 Rambler American Deluxe 2-Door Sedan


    1961 Rambler American in Colorado junkyard, RH front view - ©2021 Murilee Martin - The Truth About CarsWhen George Romney— yes, father of Marlin-drivin’ Mitt— took over American Motors soon after its 1954 formation in a merger between Hudson and Nash, he set about shifting the company’s focus from “traditional” big cars locked in an annual styling arms race to a line of affordable compacts built on the success of the little Nash Rambler. By 1961, Nash and Hudson were long gone and every AMC car was a Rambler; the smallest Rambler that year was the American, and the cheapest American was the Deluxe two-door sedan. That’s what we’ve got for today’s Junkyard Find, spotted a few months back in a Denver yard.

    The very cheapest 1961 Rambler was the American Deluxe Business Coupe, which lacked a back seat and was listed at a stingy $1,831 (about $16,854 in 2021 dollars). Pay an additional 14 bucks ($129 now) and you’d get behind the wheel of a new American Deluxe 2-Door Sedan, the second-cheapest Rambler that year. This was the best-selling version of the American in 1961, though the various flavors of the bigger Rambler Classic outsold the American by quite a bit that year.

    1961 Rambler American in Colorado junkyard, RH rear view - ©2021 Murilee Martin - The Truth About CarsHow cheap was that $1,845 sticker price? The 1961 Plymouth Valiant started at $2,110 (admittedly, that was for a four-door, with a genuine hardtop coupe version selling for $2,137), the 1961 Studebaker Lark two-door cost $1,935, the 1961 Ford Falcon two-door cost $1,912, and the 1961 Chevrolet Corvair Club Coupe was $1,985. The American Deluxe trounced both Detroit and South Bend compacts on price that year, though Wolfsburg undercut them all with the $1,565 Volkswagen Beetle. Yes, fans of tiny-selling oddball imports, the 1961 Renault Dauphine cost just $1,645, while the 1961 Austin Mini cost $1,295… but American sales of both those cars were so low as to barely register on Detroit’s radar.

    1961 Rambler American in Colorado junkyard, flathead engine - ©2021 Murilee Martin - The Truth About CarsA Rambler American buyer did have to accept some technological compromises in 1961, the foremost being the 196-cubic-inch flathead six-banger that came as standard equipment. Known as the “Flying Scot” and based on an engine developed by Nash for the 1941 model year, the 196 was the final flathead engine available in a new American car (though Dodge pickups could be had with flathead sixes through at least 1960) and was thoroughly and laughably obsolete by 1961. This engine made 90 quick-to-overheat horsepower in 1961; Rambler American buyers could whip out an additional $59.50 at the time of purchase (about $548 now) to get the overhead-valve version and its 125 horses, but that pushed the price tag closer to that of the Falcon.

    1961 Rambler American in Colorado junkyard, gearshift - ©2021 Murilee Martin - The Truth About CarsFor some reason, the original buyer of this American was cool with the flathead but then chose to squander an extra $164.85 (a staggering $1,517 in 2021) for the Flash-O-Matic automatic transmission. There was no standardized pattern for automatic shifters at this time (after many crashes caused by confused drivers and years of pressure from Ralph Nader and friends, the federal government required that the neutral position be located between the reverse and forward positions for 1971), so the Flash-O-Matic column shifter had reverse all the way to the right.

    1961 Rambler American in Colorado junkyard, CONELRAD radio - ©2021 Murilee Martin - The Truth About Cars1961 was a good year for nuclear-war enthusiasts, with every car radio sold in America required to have the CONELRAD nuke-strike frequencies marked on the dial. This radio added $53.95 ($497 today) to the car’s out-the-door price, by the way.

    1961 Rambler American in Colorado junkyard, Weather Eye - ©2021 Murilee Martin - The Truth About CarsNash Motors launched the “Weather Eye” heater/vent-control system in 1939 and AMC kept the name in use all the way through the 1978 Gremlin. The Weather Eye had controls that allowed the user to choose the blend between heated air and outside air, which was impressive in 1939 (when car heaters tended to be optional separate boxes bolted under the dash that offered two selections: heat or no heat) but was identical to the setup used in just about every US-market car in 1961. Still, Rambler American buyers had to fork over an extra 74 clams (681 bones now) for the Weather Eye in 1961.

    1961 Rambler American in Colorado junkyard, bumper sticker - ©2021 Murilee Martin - The Truth About CarsThe 1984 copyright date on this sticker shows that this car (probably) was on the road a mere 37 years ago.

    1961 Rambler American in Colorado junkyard, interior - ©2021 Murilee Martin - The Truth About CarsThe Tenna Bass 48 speaker on the package shelf shows that this Rambler’s owner during the 1970s felt willing to pay for a sound-quality upgrade for that original AM radio.

    1961 Rambler American in Colorado junkyard, patina - ©2021 Murilee Martin - The Truth About CarsThe rust isn’t so terrible, but the combination of any rust-through plus a tattered interior on a low-end early AMC product doomed this car to a date with The Crusher. Perhaps it might have been rescued in Kenosha, but not even the Rambler Ranch had room for this car in Colorado.

    1961 Rambler American in Colorado junkyard, LH front view - ©2021 Murilee Martin - The Truth About CarsStill, someone went to the effort to obtain and install replacements for mashed body parts after a crash (which might have happened 45 years ago).

    Room for six… if they didn’t mind getting very cozy with one another.

    For links to more than 2,100 additional Junkyard Finds, visit the Junkyard Home of the Murilee Martin Lifestyle Brand™.

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