From the prologue of Duke Ellington’s wonderful and whimsical sort of memoir, “Music is my Mistress.”
“The first thing I did was to run out into the front yard, and then through the front gate, where I found someone who said, ‘Go ahead, Edward! Right over there.’ Once on the other side of the street, I ran into someone else who gave me the Go sign for a left-handed turn to the corner. When I got there, a voice said, ‘Turn right, and straight ahead! You can’t miss it!’ And that’s the way it always has been. Every time I reached a point where I need direction, I ran into a friendly advisor who told me what and which way to go to get what or where I wanted to get or go or do.”
And so it has been for me, in many areas of my life, including my obsession with automobiles. Well really, with almost all types of transportation. As the Packard slogan used to say, “Ask the man who owns one.” I’ve never been shy about asking for advice, and I’ve found most people are pleased to give it. The trick is to be able to evaluate the value of the advice, or more to the point, the knowledge and/or motives of the source.
The first people of many who encouraged me were my parents. My mom thought that model building was a constructive (and safe) hobby and as this was the early sixties and likely the “golden age” of styrene plastic car models I was an eager customer. My dad, in his way, was a car guy. But as a young man with a family of four, he would have thought it way too extravagant to have anything but a practical family car, but his choices reflected someone with more than a passing interest. But excepting the following, we’ll save them for a future article.
My dad was a Chevy man. When he married my mom they drove to their honeymoon in Lake Taneycomo in their brand new two-tone (beige over green) 1954 Bel-Air two-door sedan. He remained loyal until our 1966 Impala developed engine problems and for the first time in his life, my dad actually purchased a new car off of the lot. This is where Cliff comes in.
The subdivision we lived in consisted of around 300 houses, built in 1956-57 (not coincidentally also the peak of the second surge of the baby boom). My youngest sister and Cliff’s youngest daughter were best friends and we knew Cliff’s family socially, so it made sense that he was the person we went to. He was a born salesman, in the best sense of that image. A jovial person who seemed to always be smiling or laughing, exuberant without being overbearing. His physique and demeanor was similar to that of Stubby Kaye. So on a November afternoon in 1970 our family acquired a new Plymouth Sport Fury four-door hardtop from O’Leary-McClintock Chrysler-Plymouth.
As the dealership was adjacent to the relatively new Northwest Plaza (the largest shopping center in the world when it opened in 1965) we often dropped by on a Saturday for a visit. The building was the usual cinder block and glass box that was the standard for late mid-century Chrysler-Plymouth and Dodge dealers, and of course a curious car kid it was much more fun than a trip to a mall.
To this day, peering into an early 1970s Chrysler product sends me back 50 years. In retrospect, the interiors were kind of cheap looking. A lot of plastic that didn’t fit well, and many components that were used across the board, from Valiant to Imperial.
Also during this period there was a lot of promotional material heavily influenced by the pop-art movement, as were the graphics applied to some of the flashier cars.
There was always one car, tucked away in the back of the showroom, which had a few long, leather “wallets” with transparent plastic envelopes that held three by five cards listing the new car inventory. Each card had the price, color, VIN etc. and a long number that almost could have been the VIN except buried in the numbers was the cost to the dealer. At the time, these figures were as closely guarded as the nuclear codes. The things you can learn by just hanging out.
Another double bonus for us was, if our car needed service, Cliff would stop by our house in the morning and pick it up, and leave his demonstrator for us to use. They were almost always Chryslers, which by this time had grown to gargantuan proportions. Once it was a two-door 300. Even to my young eyes it seemed awfully tail heavy, but man it was fast, and inside it had bucket seats and a floor shifter for the Torqueflite (but still a lot of tacky plastic).
This was also the zenith of the muscle car era, just before emission controls and low and no lead (as well as low octane) fuel became the norm, and Chrysler was arguably the biggest and most successful player.
From the entry level Duster 340 through the budget Satellite based Roadrunner (with its standard bench front seat and rubber floor mats) to the Hemi-Cuda Barracuda (also available with the 440 “Six Pack,” three two barrel carburetors) there wasn’t much that the competition could beat, at least in a straight line.
The dealership did its share to bring in the younger, more performance oriented crowd, and Chrysler’s reputation in this market was very strong. Especially if you were in the market for the most “bang for the buck.” Among my street racing friends the Mopars also had a good reputation for being the last to break when pushed (and pushed they were). But Cliff never had any of those models as a demo. And just as I seemed to have avoided getting the “sports gene,” I was never been a huge fan of muscle cars so I didn’t really mind. I’d take mid-seventies BMW 2002 or Porsche 911 over any of them.
Cliff was such a successful salesperson the owners of the dealership realized it might cost them less to bring him in as a partner, and not long after our first purchase, this is what happened, but it didn’t end well. Apparently some of the numbers were “cooked,” and within a year the dealership closed.
I know this sounds very strange in today’s world, but Cliff was the first adult (he and my father were both in their fifties by this point) I knew who lost his job. Some of the Saturdays when we would have been hanging out at the store were spent helping him organize supplies and equipment for eventual sales. I wish I had asked for the vintage print of the Chrysler Turbine Cart that was still being displayed more than ten years after that experiment.
I wish I knew more of Cliff’s background, but he had arrived at this point having spent his life in the car business. And as I was about to come to find out, he knew everyone. He managed to get by buying and selling cars, and after not very long he became a new car salesman at a local Ford dealer. After the purchase of my VW Beetle, he recommended a mechanic with his own “shop” nearby. Northwest Motors was a run down former gas station with a scattering of the same used cars in front that remained fixtures just as much as the Volkswagen carcasses in the back. But the proprietor, Chuck Adams, had a reputation in the area. Apparently when automatic transmissions became popular, local dealers would often bring him in to repair what their own mechanics could not. He later became a top-notch VW mechanic. I did not need much help with the Beetle, but he came in handy later.
The auto body shop where my first Karmann-Ghia was repaired had been across the street from O’Leary-McClintock. Chuck rebuilt the engine on my second. And Cliff sold me my first new car; the then all-new Fox bodied Mustang.
Throughout this entire time, he remained a good family friend. He and his wife were at my parents’ house often for the sporadic holiday parties and the more frequent barbecues. (I now know this is an inaccurate term, what we called “barbecue” or “Bar-B-Q” was more accurately just grilling, but even the shallowest steel grill was called a “barbecue pit.” I wonder if this was a common mid-west nomenclature?) One of my high school friends lived across the street from Cliff and his family and on summer nights we’d hang out outside. My friend was a motorcyclist in high school and once when we were outside Cliff mentioned to him that when it came time to buy new tires he had a friend in the business and he could get a good deal because they were highly marked up. I asked why no one had the idea to enter the market with lower prices and he turned to me and said, “Discounting is not going to make you the big man in any business. Everyone else will eventually match your price and you’ll all make less.” A marketing lesson I’ve never forgotten.
Cliff eventually retired, but remained in our family’s circle until his death about two decades ago. Were he here today, when dealers can no longer depend on mark-up (see above for how that worked out) and now have a strategy of taking good long-term care of their customers, I think he’d be thriving. A car guy through and more than that, a nice man.
Nice article, bringing back memories when my father was in the car business, and the 10-15 years after when he wasn’t, but car dealers were his main customers. (Insurance and investments.)
Up until he finally retired, dad never really left the car business.
Oh, how I wish there had been a Cliff among my family’s circle of friends. I came across some longtime car salesmen that my mother bought cars from. One of them, even lived not far away and would do like Cliff in dropping off a demonstrator and driving her 74 LeMans into the dealership for service. I could tell that those guys were different from the typical “car salesman” everyone hated and made fun of.
I really enjoyed these memories you shared here.
You know, the process of writing these vignettes brings back a flood of memories. Our house was perhaps 200 – 300 yards from the main four-lane thoroughfare, West Florissant Avenue. After the age ten or twelve, we used to be on our bicycles all day and it was not unusual (for me anyway) to drop into car dealerships. To the south, on the east side of the street was Costello-Kunze Ford. For a long time the west side of the street was completely empty. In the mid sixties construction began on Barton Pontiac (which starting about 1968 also carried these strange cars called Toyotas) and McKelvey-Kessler Oldsmobile. I remember being able to go inside these showrooms and not be hassled by anyone. Of course, we were respectful of the cars and property, but it was not unusual to walk out with a brochure or two, and it was obvious we were not potential customers. (I still remember those fantastic Pontiac brochures with illustrations by by Art Fitzpatrick & Van Kaufman from my early years.)
Heading north to the intersection of West Florissant & Kappel Drive, there was the generic “foreign car” dealership that was and agency for Fiat and Renault among others. I think they carried MGs for a while, and later on these really strange Japanese cars (made the Toyotas seem normal) called Suburus: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Subaru_360
Further north, at the intersection of West Florissant and Chambers on the southeast corner, was Al Weiss Lincoln-Mercury. I think their first year of operation was 1964 or ’65. Across West Florissant was a Schnuck’s Grocery store (which later became a Peaches Record Store) and behind that was a vacant lot which on the other side backed up to a residential street. Weiss used to store new inventory on that unpaved lot. We could ride our bikes through what seemed to be a forest clearing filled with new Mercurys. (I can’t imagine that happening today.) I’m always reminded of this every time I watch the film “Harper” and see Betty Fraley’s (Julie Harris) white Park Lane convertible with it’s distinctive trim on the front fender. (If only Harper would have kept that Speedster. He could have retired in style.)
I guess “car people” recognize those in their tribe regardless of age. Not far from me is a splendid dealership, Fast Lane Classic Cars, worth a visit if you’re in the St. Louis/St. Charles area.
https://www.fastlanecars.com/
Below from the “About” section of their website. Who knows where car obsession may lead?
“Josh Krechel
Lot Manager
When Fast Lane first opened in 1994, Josh would ride his bike to Fast Lane and dream about driving the classic cars on display. Now he’s David’s right hand man for every project. His favorite part of working at Fast Lane is the great staff and meeting interesting people… and the cars, of course!”
I drove through the FastLane parking lot this past Thursday. JP, Jim Klein, and I crashed a party there during the St. Louis meetup a few years ago.
Interesting you mention the Mercurys in storage. At 370 and Earth City expressway is a very large lot (also seen Thursday) full of new Colorados. Every variety imaginable can be found on this 10 or so acre plot.
Hmmm. Wonder if it was my party. My wife organized a surprise birthday party near this day in 2017.
I think I may have helped put the event idea in David’s head. I was on the board of St. Charles Riverfront Arts for about a decade and we hosted two Art of the Motorcycle events at the Foundry Art Centre two years in a row. It was a lot of work to not only locate these rare and valuable bikes, but to secure permission and safely transport them to and from the venue. Not long afterwards I was at Fast Lane and it hit me that it would be a lot easier to bring the event to the vehicles rather than the vehicles to the event. Also there was a short-lived auto “museum” in the Chesterfield Valley (it’s now a Tesla dealership) that was basically an auto themed event venue.
Maybe it was your party, if so, your wife pulled out all the stops! We wandered around the various buildings with all of the cars and got a very close look at everything, they have a very wide variety to appeal to all interests. Happy belated Birthday! 🙂
Great post, about a man of honor and dignity.
The heart-and-arrow in the Plymouth ad was part of their “Win You Over” ad campaign.
I always liked the cockpit-styled instrument panel in those fuselage Plymouths and Dodges of the early 1970s. Still do! I had one in my 1972 Dodge Polara.
Wow, this is great! What a fantastic feast of Mopar treats!
As a teen, I worked after school as a porter at a Buick dealer in the late 70’s. We had a “Cliff” too, whose name was Sal. Dennis Farina would be the easiest way to describe his physical appearance and presence. Impeccably dressed, without a smudge nor hair out of place, whether up front on the floor, or back in a wash rack or grimy service bay.
He liked people, and everyone was a friend he cared about. Everyone owed him a favor, and he felt he owed everyone too. If your car was in for service, he always babysat it through the garage, and often handled calls to the customer and expedited things through the service manager and parts department.
If you were a mechanic or in the body shop, you knew Sal would be by to check up on his customer’s car.
If you worked there, or had been a customer, you could be confident in referring potential customers to him, knowing they would be treated very well and with great respect. Because every day, you saw how he treated everyone front of house and in back.
His repeat and referred business was impressive.
And you’ve just explained why my father was so successful in the car business. His customers weren’t “ups” or “marks”, they were customers who were critical to his making a living and supporting one wife, two children, and one sister-in-law. And he appreciated them for being just that, and treated them accordingly. No, maybe you could have saved thirty bucks by buying from a competing dealer, but did you have ‘your’ salesman backing you if things went wrong?
His sales attitude paid back in spades when he carried it over to running the dealership.
I see Cliff knew people just like my Dad. My Dad was a natural born salesman, born in Manhattan, apparently from a young age. Even Gen. Eichelbeger knew it when he had an impromptu conversation with my father at the water bowl, yes bowl, at Eichelberger’s HQ in Japan where Eichelberger said to him I know how you got your stripes. He ended up serving with Carnation, Westgate-California, and California Canners always in marketing and sales. When I got my Cougar from him and wanted white letter tires and mags he told me he knew a guy where I could get a good deal and he did. Because of his outgoing manner he knew a lot of guys to even a Mafia chief somehow and my Dad was Irish.
Gotta love those generic “Carname” posters in that Mopar showroom…
That green Plymouth interior is sad. Less than a decade earlier, Chrysler had some of the most stylish dashboards and interiors ever.
Not sure I agree with Cliff’s philosophy regarding discounting (“Discounting is not going to make you the big man in any business. Everyone else will eventually match your price and you’ll all make less.”) Sam Walton made a fortune selling at deep discounts, as did the Albrecht brothers who founded Aldi, or the McDonald brothers and Ray Kroc with McDonald’s. The trick was to find innovative ways to cut costs without hurting quality or a good customer experience; thus preventing their competition from simply following suit by lowering their prices too.
For whatever reason, I can’t think of any car salespeople, or really anyone who worked at a dealership who stuck around as long as Cliff. There were several I met who I thought were terrific at selling as well as making customers feel valued, but they nonetheless moved onto elsewhere within a few years.
Great story – sounds like Cliff was an superb person to know.
For a profession that is widely disrespected, there sure seem to be a lot of outstanding people who make their careers in auto sales. The father of a good friend of mine comes to mind… he got into auto sales when he was young, and stayed in the career for several decades, eventually becoming the general manager of his dealership. He was also one of the nicest, most generous, and happiest person I’ve ever known.
Glad your family was able to benefit from Cliff’s friendship and advice – and thanks for writing the unique outtake on your COAL experiences.
I like this tale, particularly because we can all be prone to being a bit lazy with cliches.
A mate of mine I’ve known since childhood has survived in the industry for 34 years now, and he too is one of life’s good people. For years now, he’s owned a dealership selling rather dull Mitsubishis, but by being decent to buyers, he gets plenty of repeat business.
To keep up any level of propriety in that field is a bit of a miracle, as it’s a brutal one (and perhaps one of the last all-male dinosaur industries) and these days, margins are very skinny indeed.