This week we’ve covered the announcement news on the 1967 domestic products. So now it’s time to pick favorites! Motor Trend had grouped the vehicles by category, showing details on Specialty Cars (Personal Luxury, Pony Cars and Corvette), Intermediates, Luxury and Full Size Cars, Compacts and Specialty (Off-road and Vans). So to mix things up for this week’s QOTD, please share which vehicle you would have bought from each category in 1967.
Starting off with the Specialty Category, I’d take home the car that offered personal luxury style in a smaller, sportier package: the one and only Mercury Cougar. Make mine Caspian Blue with a blue interior. I’d load my cat up with lots of goodies: 289 CID “Super Cougar” 4V V8, Merc-O-Matic, positraction, power steering and power disc brakes, tinted glass, A/C, AM radio with Stereo-Sonic tape system (it’s a personal car, I’d want my own tunes on 8-track!), Tilt-away steering wheel, Comfort-weave vinyl buckets, Sports console, styled steel wheels and whitewalls.
For the Intermediate Category, I’d go for a “Goat” in Regimental Red with a black top and black stripe, just like this picture. My “Little GTO” would have the 400 CID Ram Air V8 and the 4-speed manual with the center console and bucket seats, power steering and power disc brakes, Rally I wheels, red stripe tires, AM/FM stereo, A/C, Sport steering wheel and Rally Gauges.
For the Luxury and Full Size categories, I’d split the difference between the two and get a Buick Electra. I do have to admit a bias on this one: my arrival in the fall of 1966 coincided with my parent’s purchase of a 1967 Buick Electra 225 4-door hardtop, in Mist Green with a black top–essentially a 4-door version of the car pictured above. Our Electra was a base trim model with a black vinyl interior, crank windows and few options other than A/C, AM radio and the vinyl top. My Pop liked the biggest body with the lowest trim, finding it suitable as the roomiest family car for his three kids outside of a wagon (a body style my mother refused to drive).
I know for a fact that our 1967 Buick was one tough car. For four years, it was a heavy-duty family workhorse, on the go constantly and filled with rambunctious kids, until my parents traded the ’67 Electra in during 1971 for an Oldsmobile Ninety-Eight. End of story, right? Wrong! In late 1980, my brother and I stumbled across it once again in a mall parking lot. The paint was oxidized, the top was peeling and a few wheel covers were missing, but it was clearly still serving its owner some 14 years after it was built. We knew the car was “our” Electra for two reasons: 1) it still had our school stickers on the back window, faded but intact, and 2) it had the unmistakable dent on the left rear fender where my sister had hit the house when she was learning to drive.
Funny family story with that second point: in 1971 my Pop was teaching my sister the basics of backing up, using the Buick, before she got her driver’s license (she was 14-years-old then, the license came at age 15 in Louisiana at the time). Our driveway ran alongside the house, and it was a tight and narrow space. She was practicing going back and forth, and on a trek backwards, she began to veer left. Pop was frantically telling her to “Stop! Stop!” but she kept right on going until…crunch! Pop tried to be calm, but demanded to know why she didn’t stop when he told her too. She said that “she didn’t see anything in the way” to which he replied “you didn’t see the house!?!?!?!” We still joke about the “back-up episode” and tease my sister with Pop’s infamous line to this day.
But I digress, back to the ’67 Electra…
My pick would be fancier than the one my parents bought. I’m a sucker for cars loaded with goodies, so I’d want an Electra 225 Custom 4-door hardtop with the new-for-1967 Limited trim option. Mine would be Shadow Turquoise with a black top and black interior, and I would have it equipped with every convenience and power option available. Basically a Cadillac, without the Cadillac price-tag–exactly what a top-of-the-line Buick was all about back then.
At the other end of the automotive spectrum, I’d have gone very simple when buying in the Compact category. I admire the functional, honest lines of the ’67 Valiant (when the design was new, not 10 years later when Plymouth was still making basically the same car). I’d want the bigger 225 CID Slant-6 with Torqueflite, an AM radio, white walls and wheel covers. Power steering and brakes would be good too, and I rather like the Bright Red with black interior as shown in this catalog photo, since I think it adds a bit of pizazz to a basic car.
Now on to the Specialty Category. Bias alert: I am a huge Jeep fan! I currently drive a Jeep Grand Cherokee (the 3rd one I’ve had), and I use it daily for rigorous activities like fording rivers (of traffic on the Edens and Kennedy Expressways) and navigating wild terrain (the parking lot at Northbrook Court shopping center, filled with rude and distracted drivers). But like all Jeeps, the magic isn’t simply in what it actually does; rather, the important thing is what it could do. The dream was the same in 1967: for going to the lake, or the mountains, or towing a trailer, what could be more useful and versatile than a Jeep Wagoneer? Give me the Prairie Gold Wagoneer with Custom trim as shown in the upper right picture. Naturally I’d want the 230 hp “Dauntless” V8 with Turbo-hydramatic, power steering and brakes, plus an AM radio to keep me company in the wild.
So those are my picks, by category, for 1967. What are yours?
Cougar, all day long, 😉
Full size: 67 Impala SS w 327, fastback
Middie: 442 hardtop
Compact: Nova SS
The male holding the ice cream cone in the Plymouth Valiant ad reminds me of the character Benjamin Braddock in The Graduate!! So that must be Elaine Robinson in the car.
Wonder where Mrs Robinson is????
And the Alfa as well!!
Mrs. Robinson is undoubtedly laying down in the back seat, absentmindedly caressing the plastic door trim.
Benjamin to Elaine: “You did it in a Ford?!?”
(After she answered his question about the “first encounter” with her husband)
I tried it in a Toyota, and it worked 🙂
Mitsubishi Sigma sedan – a tad cramped
Volvo 145 Wagon – much better; safe sex – hehehe
The bed of an el Camino was wonderfully roomy 🙂
plastics
+1
Since you said car, I would take a 390, 4 speed Cougar XR7. Next would be a 390 Fairlane GT. Truck? F-250 4X4, that I probably would have swapped a then almost new 428 into. Yes, I’m a Ford guy.
The Eldorado of course. It’s an engineering feat and shockingly good looking (unlike its one year older Oldsmobile sibling). The only thing it’s missing is …
… the 1968 version’s glowing Cadillac crest for the rear side markers. Cadillac managed to nail the task of making mandated safety equipment look cool in its very first year, very much unlike a while later when the entirety of Detroit struggled to incorporate 5 mph bumpers into their designs.
GM had customized side markers across much of (if not all) the lineup, didn’t they?
I remember the rocket-logo side markers being one of the few upscale touches on our otherwise stripper ’69 Cutlass sedan.
I’m not that well versed on GM side markers, but it would be an interesting thing to know if it turns out true.
I remember the ones on Pontiacs that were the shape of Pontiac’s triangular shield.
Pontiac used the logo as the rear side marker in ’68 too (our ’68 LeMans had them), and yes I think Buick had a round side marker with the tri-shield logo embossed into it for a few years as well. Chevy didn’t use the bowtie though, instead opting for various rectangular or louvered markers.
Clicking around in here (http://www.classiccarcatalogue.com/1968.html) it looks like MTN is correct. All of the divisions except Chevrolet got side custom side markers that incorporated the brand’s logo.
This is just one of the many wonderful excesses GM design had the luxury of indulging in during the Bill Mitchell era. I wonder how many man-hours went into making each of them look just right.
Even my 68 F-85 had them.
I’d take one of every model in the General Motors lineup…I think this is a high-water year for the corporation!
Ok, ok…either a ’67 Chevelle SS396 convertible or a ’67 Cadillac convertible. Hey, I narrowed it down to 2!
I would go with the Tbird, two door with the no vinyl roof. Not as well loved a body style as some earlier versions. The clean first year style without the beak nose is really speaking to me. Just enough maturity added to the earlier flashier versions, but not so much as to chase the optimism away.
Hot Wheels made a ‘Custom T-Bird’ which was similar, 🙂
Oh man, I have been dreading this question all week. Unlike with 1957, there is not a bad answer here. OK, then.
Specialty – It would have been a hard choice between the Charger and the Cougar. In the end, make it a Cougar XR-7. Vintage Burgundy, no vinyl roof and that off-white interior Ford offered that year.
Intermediate – This one is easy, either a Satellite GTX or a Coronet 500 or R/T 2 door hardtop, whichever gives the best terms on the deal. It must, however, be Turbine Bronze with a black vinyl top and interior.
Full size – As tempting is it might be to recreate my first car (1967 Galaxie 500 convertible) I could never live with myself if I passed up the chance for a brand spanking new Chrysler 300 Convertible. Twilight Turquoise, please, with a white top and white leather.
Compact – It is shaping up to be a Mopar year, because I just can’t pass on a Dart GT hardtop. I will work with the dealer on color. V8, Torqueflite and buckets.
Specialty is another hard one. As tempted as I would be by the Travelall and the Checker, I have to go with the Wagoneer. Might as well go with the Super Wagoneer, since it is available.
I have owned two ’67 Cougars and loved them both. The latter one, which I purchased from the original owner in 1998, has 21 options! It is Jamaican Yellow (her favorite color) with a black vinyl top and parchment interior.
In 1967, you could still buy a King Midget. Somehow this fine car was overlooked in the 1967 New Car issue!
Thanks GN. Your work on this series has been excellent. I deeply appreciate your efforts. Well Done!
Agreed! Love this series.
+2, well done GN — keep those ‘7s rolling 🙂
Much appreciated – a fun week!
Agreed on the Cougar. But an XR7 in Vintage Burgundy with matching interior and a white Oxford grain vinyl top. Thin line wide oval whitewalls and mercury Spec Wire Wheel covers. 380 w/4 spd on the floor with console Ac. AM * track or AM/FM sound system. Fullsize would be a Grand Prix. Reef Turquoise with White interior (seats and doorpanels) and a Black Vinyl top and fully optioned.. Maybe opt for the convertible tailored the same way. Mid size. A GTO, of course. A convertible in Medium Bluse Metallic (The Pontiac version of Chevys “Marina Blue” again with White/Blue interior. 389 4bbl. Auto. and AC with AM/FM stereo. Compact…..(for the day) A firebird base coupe with the OHC inline 6. Yeah, As I have stated I grew up with Pontiacs. 67 was the year I got my license (age 16 in Missouri) So with the exception of the Cougar, it would be the Tin Indian, all the way.
One of each.
An OHC-6 Tempest (base model) with automatic and a 2:56 rear end.
oh wait, I actually did buy one new.
An easy driving and relatively trouble-free car.
(I would have added A/C… black vinyl under dark aqua-green gets warm).
What kind of mileage did you get with the OHC-6?
As much as I love 1960s Pontiacs (we had a ’64 Catalina 4-door hardtop back in the day), when picking my own vehicle I like driving something different if not bordering on the bizarre so would probably go with a nicely-equipped Marlin. (Or if I wanted a convertible maybe an Ambassador, those are pretty sharp.)
Then again, a relative had a ’67 LeMans convertible with OHC six back then and it was really nice! Decisions, decisions…
I think the 67 Marlin is a handsome car. It’s much more attractive than a 66-67 Charger.
It’s the last chance to buy a Panhard 24, possibly the most beautiful car ever made.
So sorry, I’m not shopping in Detroit for ’67…
Reality check, rather than what I might have liked to have the actual choices presented here were rather slim Australianised Dodge Darts and Ford Falcons plus Canadian Pontiacs and Chevrolets, the odd Plodge snuck in and a few big Fords Ramblers were locally assembled and a friend has a SST hardtop.
I’d take an Impala thanks.
Ive just realised Ive never owned a 67 model car not one and out of over 100 cars thats unusual Ive had 66s that were also offered in 67 but not a car actually built that year.
Born in ’67, I’ve occasionally pondered the idea of finding a car of my own vintage to grow old with. My go-to pick is almost always the Imperial Crown Hardtop, but to keep with the birth year theme I’d probably have to have something that actually debuted in 1967. In that case the choices are simple: Either an Eldorado in Navy Blue, Black bucket seat interior, no vinyl top, please…OR a Firebird convertible in Verdoro Green Poly, white top and interior, rally wheels. For practical and investment purposes with 20/20 hindsight I suppose if I had to pick one it’d be the Firebird. I do really love the first generation.
Cougar for Specialty category (what a shock), I’d hold out for the midyear XR-7 with the sweet wood dash, 289 and 4-speed, white with black interior
Impala SS 427 for full size, black/white or red interior No vinyl top
Rambler Rogue 343 4-speed for compact, I’m a shill for targeted advertizing it seems because I want that exact car from the ad!
Tempest Sprint for intermediate, red/white stripes and black interior. I’d pick the Goat if it were 66 but no Tri-Power and (IMO) the Tempest looks better available for 67 and that OHC 6/sprint package is just too tantalizing!
Specialty leaves me cold in general, but I’ll pick the Bronco. They made it in a butterscotch yellow color so I want that.
In the specialty category, I’m conflicted. The styling of the original Camaro is, to my eyes, just so good. However, my sister in law had a sweet Cougar XR7 in dark green that I loved. So maybe I should just go to full size cars, and wish I could have my fathers ’67 Galaxie 500 sedan in dark red with black upholstery. He let me sample it on the drive home from the dealership, and it was mighty fine. And for a compact car? Falcon two door sedan, again in dark red, loaded with the 289, automatic and all the goodies on the option sheet.
Compact. Nova 327 275 HP 4 speed.
Intermediate. GTO 4 speed.
Full size. A tough decision, but why not a Galaxie 427 4 speed convertible?
Specialty car. Cougar XR7 390 4 speed.
Luxury. 67Conti 2 door hardtop.
Specialty. Jeep Wagoneer. Don’t want to leave Chrysler out. Sorry, American Motors, I’ll pass this year.
All fully optioned out and in color combination of my choice. I’m also assuming I have a great job with good pay, great job security and full generous retirement benefits.
Ah, bliss.
At my high school job, several employees had new cars from that year, among them a 67 Grand Prix coupe, black vinyl top over burgundy, a 67 Impala SS 327 coupe, black vinyl top over bright red, a 67 Oldsmobile two-door hardtop (not sure of the 88 model designation), black vinyl top over bright red. I used to wash everyone’s cars for extra money so drove all of these GM examples. The Grand Prix was a great car, my second favorite GP to the 63. Beautiful styling, gorgeous interior, strong performance, my favorite of the three. The Olds was a good design and tightly built. I loved the Impala SS though the quality of assembly was pretty dismal and it was the one car of the three that went back to the dealer several times in the first few months. I remember an engine that pinged badly no matter the gas used, a body full of rattles, and misaligned panels inside and out. Not sure why – several friends and family had the 65 and 66 Impalas and they were good quality cars. Perhaps this was the proverbial lemon built on Monday.
We were a Ford family and loved our newly purchased, lightly used 65 Thunderbird but I was not happy with the restyling for the big Fords and the Thunderbird for 67 – much preferred the crisper lines of the previous year and lost T-Bird love until the 83 Aerobird came out. The Lincoln Continental was still a favorite.
Other than Imperial, I thought Mopar styling was overblown compared to 65-66. I liked the Dodge Dart.
In the final analysis, as a teenager a muscle or pony car would have been my choice if I’d had the $$ at the time. A GTO, 442, Cougar, or Mustang, in that order. Instead I was driving a 63 Beetle and had some envy for a friend’s new 67 Beetle with the 53 HP engine and metal sunroof. All in all, a good year for the industry.
Having had a lunch break to think about it a bit more, here’s my picks (for the moment):
Full size: Top of the line Imperial Crown coupe. All black.
Intermediate: Plymouth GTX with 426 hemi and 4 speed.
Compact: Chevy II station wagon with 327 and four speed. Need one practical car.
Specialty: Some mixed feelings here, but it would be hard to not want a Camaro with the limited production Z-28 package. Or a Firebird Sprint OHC 6. Or a Barracuda with the 275 hp D-Prod 273 package. Or a Mustang 2+2 with 271 hp 289 and 4 speed. This one is hard. If a 180 hp Corsa were still being made, that would be it.
Utility: Checker Aerobus. To convert into an RV with an aftermarket pop-top. Or just build a high roof for it.
This is a tough one, given what a great year it was for car styling and there weren’t really any truly bad choices. A better question might be which 1967 car would you not buy. In that regard, I’d probably give the 4-door Thunderbird and intermediate Mercurys a miss. Not really too keen on anything in the Oldsmobile or AMC lineup, either.
But everything else really seems ‘groovy’ and a high point of the era, with mostly good mechanicals underneath the sheetmetal. A choice would largely depend on one’s economic/family situation and brand preference more than anything else.
Those 4-door T-Birds with their ungainly proportions, fake Landau irons, and door cutline through the vinyl top really were a head-scratcher. But I disagree about ruling out an Oldmobile or AMC. The full-size Olds models were pretty ungainly in ’67, but the Cutlass looked pretty sharp. And I wouldn’t kick a Javelin out of my garage.
You’re right that there aren’t many bad choices from that year. But I’d probably scratch the full-sized Pontiacs off my list. They weren’t ugly enough to scare the children, but they were a huge letdown compared to their voluptuous ’65 and ’66 predecessors, which are among my very favorite cars of the ’60s.
The Javelin didn’t appear until 1968.
It’s not that the Cutlass was that bad; it’s just that the other division’s intermediates were so much better. And, yeah, the full-size Pontiacs should probably be discounted, as well, although the ’67 Grand Prix was okay (especially the convertible).
Other divisions better then Olds, that’s a laugh. Olds A bodies had the latest engines with forged internals, more optional gears, suspensions, & other packages then any other division’s offerings.
Hmmmm…
Specialty? ’67 Cougar
Intermediate? ’67 Coronet R/T 440
Full size? ’67 Checker Marathon six/stick (seriously, my dad had a maroon one when I was a kid and I LOVED that car!)
Luxury? ’67 Eldorado
Compact? ’67 Dart
Many good choices in 1967—-
Compact—Dodge Dart 2 Dr sedan, 225 w/ Torqueflite.
Intermediate—Dodge Coronet 500 2 Dr w/ 318 & Torqueflite
Full Size—Imperial Convertible
1/2 Ton Truck—Chevy C10 long bed, 283 with any trans.
All of the above should have factory A/C.
Three of my favorite cars of all time happen to be from the 1967 model year
Pontiac GTO
Buick Wildcat
Corvette
easy peasy
I actually spent a fair amount of time pondering this vital question during the summer, and the answer came out, for me, as Valiant V-200 with 225 Slant Six, Torqueflite and all the HD stuff. No a/c for me as it is not necessary for where I live.
The Valiant was the best car for handling Canadian winters, and seemed to resist rust better than most. However, the availability of front disk brakes would be the most important issue for me. Chrysler stuff also handled a lot better than its rivals, and the unit body was much less prone to rattles and squeaks. One could expect a Valiant to last at least a decade here on the Wet Coast.
I find the above choices interesting, since like 99% of the cars of the era I ever saw lacked big blocks and 4 on the floor
Well, this is a fantasy exercise, no? It’s not like we’re making people spend their actual dollars. But you go ahead and enjoy your fantasy garage Valiant six. 🙂
Big blocks were a lot more common down here in the land of the rich and filthy Americans. All of the luxury brands only came with them, and they were quite common on the mid-price big cars too. If you call a 390 a big block, then they were very common indeed. LTDs and Country Squires sported a 390 badge probably 35-40% of the time.
383s were fairly common in Furys and Polaras. 396s were not uncommon in Caprices and Impalas. Then of course, SS396 Malibus, GTOs, 442s, and all the rest of the muscle cars were fairly common too. Just look at the sales stats for the GTO during these years. Well, there is again the argument as to whether the larger Pontiac V8s were technically big blocks. Big displacement, anyway.
Big engines got even much more common in the mid-late 70s. It was not uncommon to see 455s in garden-variety Colonnades. Of course these were low-compression smoggers, but 7.4 liters is big.
So only 1% of the cars up in Canuckistan had big blocks? What did Caddys, Lincolns, Chryslers, Electras, 98s, etc. have in them? Canadian-spec sixes?
I only can remember seeing two big blocks as a kid. Canadians, especially in in 1967, were modest shoppers, especially since the climate was so hard on cars. Many of your fantasy choices weren’t even available.
So, Paul, when are you going to buy your Hellcat? Everyone must have one in America. ?
Yeah; I’m on a waiting list.
Wow, we get to pick 5 cars, and it just isn’t enough! 1967 is like the closing days of the candy store that was the 1965-66 American auto market.
Honestly, I could take home our host, GN’s, choices and call it a day. Without help, I’m just torn.
Luxury: Imperial Crown four door hardtop.
Full Size: Buick Wildcat Coupe – loaded, bucket and console if available.
Mid Size: Pontiac LeMans convertible – loaded, buckets and console, and with a strong V-8.
Compact: A Dodge Dart sedan, loaded up, just because it would be so strange in the real world.
Specialty: Corvette. The Eldorado is hard to pass up, but I’ve already got a big Buick and Imperial in the garage.
ehh, I don’t know about each category really but here goes:
Chevrolet Corvair Corsa Coupe (with the 4 carbs and factory air)
Toyota Landcruiser with the rear heater. They don’t really have any other options at this point.
That should just about take care of any needs I have. Maybe an R series BMW motorcycle also.
Cadillac Coup de Ville
Pontiac Bonneville 4 Door Hardtop
Ford LTD 390 4V
Ford Galaxie 500 XL 390 4V
Mercury Park Lane
Ford Thunderbird
Lincoln Continental 4 Door Sedan or Coupe
Ford Mustang Fastback 390 4V
Dodge Coronet 500 Hemi
Chrysler New Yorker 4 Door Hardtop
Chrysler Imperial LeBaron
A/C on all except the Hemi as was not available
Any or all would be a dream come true.
In order of preference:
Lincoln Continental convertible sedan
Cadillac Eldorado coupe
Imperial Crown convertible
Ambassador DPL convertible
Oldsmobile Toronado Deluxe coupe
Buick Riviera Gran Sport coupe
Chrysler 300 convertible
Cadillac Fleetwood Brougham
Lincoln Continental hardtop sedan
Imperial LeBaron four door hardtop
Buick Electra 225 convertible
Thunderbird four door Landau
Oldsmobile Delmont 88 convertible
Some great choices for ’67. Im torn between the Dart D/stock or a GTX with the 440 4bbl and 4spd. A 300 as either the regular 2dr hardtop or even a convertible is tempting. The GTX would probably win out…best fit overall.
If we’re talking investment purposes, a GTX convertible Hemi would be tough to beat.
In order of priority
1. Cadillac four door
2. Chev fullsize wagon
3. Pontiac fullsize wagon
4. Chrysler fullsize wagon
5. Dodge fullsize wagon
6. Plymouth fullsize wagon
7. Cougar no vinyl roof
8. Riv
9. Fastback stang
Gotta be American? I’ll take an SS396 Chevelle hardtop, 4 speed please and don’t forget the disc brakes. If you’ll bend the rules a bit for us Canucks, make that a Beaumont SD396 equipped the same way.
I’ll bet there were some good deals on “in stock” Corvairs at the Chevy dealer back in ’67 though.
Either the Cougar or Mustang Fastback, with the 289 4V and 4 Speed. I’d need to see both up close and check the colors available before buying because both were beautifully shaped and detailed cars.
Our family bought a ’67 Dodge Monaco wagon to replace our ’59 Coronet. I was going to school in Pa. and my sister was at college in Washington, DC, so we needed a hauler. I got to choose options – dual a/c, 440 Magnum, cruise – and we really enjoyed our trips. It was a dependable car, but the tailgate rusted out after about 5 years. Dad replaced it with a Ford Fairmont fordor.
compact: 1967 Ford Falcon 4 door with a 289ci V8
immediate: 1967 Pontiac GTO w/400ci V8/4 speed
full size: 1967 Buick Wildcat 2 door hardtop
luxury: a tie between 1967 Buick Electra or 1967 Oldsmobile Ninety Eight, preferably a 2 or 4 door hardtop
specialty: 1967 Corvette Stingray w/427ci V8/4 speed
pony car: 1967 Chevrolet Camaro SS 350 w/4 speed or 1967 Mercury Cougar w/390ci V8/4 speed
station wagon: 1967 Ford LTD Country Squire with a 390ci V8 or 428ci V8.
convertible: 1967 Cadillac Deville
I’ve always wanted a Checker Marathon wagon, year not important but a 67 is as good as any. For 1967 specific cars I’d chose,
Chrysler 300
Chrysler New Yorker
Imperial
Dodge Monaco
Plymouth Fury
Buick Electra
Pontiac GTO
Buick Riviera
Olds Toronado
Mercury Cougar
Ford LTD
Sporty: Cougar XR7 or Barracuda fastback
Compact: Dart GTS
Mid-size: Olds 442
Full-size: Fury or Galaxie hardtop sedans
Wagon: Colony Park or Vista Cruiser
Specialty: black Eldorado
Pickup: Ford 4X4
My “assuming current needs and means” pick would be a Dart V8 hardtop, and I’d want to at least test drive a 4 speed before popping for the Torqueflite. That’s also assuming I’m not the same alternate version of myself who burned out on Mopar after that ’57 Plymouth I picked for last week’s QOTD.
Sentimental pick would be a VW Beetle, I owned a ’67 bug sold to me as a kid for $1 to save it from the crusher. If I were buying new I’d go for a sunroof and the basically-special-order-only cloth upholstery.
I don’t have a pick per category (but I do have at least one pick each lined up for 1977, 1987, 1997, 2007 – that one was easy- and a 2017 shortlist); runner-up to the Dart would be a Camaro, I always liked the looks of the early ones.
Sporty: Firebird 400
Compact: Falcon
Mid-size: Fairlane or Cutlass
Full-size: Ford Custom or Chevrolet Biscayne
Wagon: Vista Cruiser or Ford Ranch Wagon
Specialty: Thunderbird sedan
This is an interesting subject to ponder over. I have several choices:
Mercury Cougar – REALLY cool, but not a Chevy.
Chevy Impala fastback, SS396. Red w/black interior but prefer saddle tan.
Chevy Camaro RS, red w/black interior, but prefer saddle tan if available.
I’d probably take the Camaro.
Even though it’s a fantasy garage, I can’t help but desire lower spec cars from 1967 just as I do now. With two exceptions.
Luxury: Lincoln Continental coupe
Full sized: Buick LeSabre with manual transmission
Intermediate: Pontiac Tempest with OHC-6 and manual transmission
Compact: Plymouth Valiant. With manual transmission
Specialty: Buick Rivera!! Just plain stunningly beautiful!
Utility: International Travelall with manual transmission
For some strange reason, I have always thought stacked headlight cars were curious.
I like the Fairlaine or Mercury, but I prefer Pontiacs. I really like the GTO or Tempest.
I only have one requirement…can I have a Hurst?
Specialty; Mercury Cougar 289-4V, 4 speed
Mid: Pontiac GTO Vert 400HO, 4 speed
Full: either Chrysler 300 fast top 440 or Mercury Marquis 428 both automatics
Compact; Dodge Dart with 225, 4 speed
Utility; Ford F-100 300 six, 4 speed
Plymouth Belvedere RO23 super stock special
Lincoln convertible, triple black.
C10 shorty Fleetside Custom Sport Truck, red/white roof
Dart 270 sedan, 273/Torqueflite with AC, Dark Turquoise
Dodge window van. 318 Auto.
actually all my 67 picks really existed as that was the year I turned 4 and started to really notice cars. a few were new, a few were used. they were owned by people in my young life who like the cars are all gone but they still travel the highways of my mind.
67 dart coupe. red, black interior, black vinyl top. 225 slant six and automatic. I don’t think it was a gt but I do remember it was very fancy compared to the other darts and valiants I knew.
67 barracuda. I always called them sedans rather than coupes to differentiate with the fastback. kindergarten teachers. gold with a brown vinyl top. traded in on a green 70’s barracuda with a mod top!
67 cougar. a cousin of my dad’s got the very first one in the area. it was white, just like the ads, and I have faint memory flashes (fall of 66, I was like 3) of going to the dealership and seeing it delivered on the truck. replaced due to terminal rot with a 78 ltd.
67 chev pickup. dad’s best friend. very basic model, that slimey green colour that was popular around then, no options BUT a honking v-8 under the hood (327, 396?) that made it a real sleeper.
67 Monaco sedan. very classy black, 383 v-8, and one of the first cars I remember with air. owned by a local trucking company as a “company” car and as of a few years ago still in existence with the same family.
67 Eldorado. very unusual colour, a bright blue with black top and black interior. replaced by a 79 Newport and scrapped due to terminal electrical problems. it still hurts to remember the wrecker towing that one away!
thx for the trip! I enjoyed the ride!
Tuff call. The only ones I could say I want are the same ones I would want now.
Mercury cougar in dark blue with a six cylinder and auto No vinyl top.
And a ford falcon sedan in yellow with a black interior and vinyl top.
My grandmother had a falcon like that. They called it the lemon with a bad spot, because she was the only one who could start it in the drive way. And my mother couldn’t get it in reverse….. Ever. And mom didn’t get her license until 1974 so it was kinda old then. But I always liked the way it looked in the pictures I saw
Corvette Convertible with the L89 427 and 4 speed
Z-28 Camaro Rally Sport
Those two go in the garage for investment purposes. I’d drive these:
Imperial Crown 440
Firebird with OHC 6 & 4 speed
Olds Cutlass Supreme 2 door Turnpike Cruiser 🙂
Well to make this realistic, my choice would depend on where I lived and assuming my personal situation would have been back in 67 as it is now (55 years old bachelor, no debts, reasonably – as opposed to extremely -well paid).
So if it were Israel, common sense prevailing, none. Cars – any cars – were atrociously expensive back then (not merely very expensive) in relation to the average wage and even the 67 me would have had to reject buying a brand spanking US-made car. But, like my father did back then, I would have been able to go for a 3 year old one, and if I could find such a thing, a 64 289/3 sp + o/d manual Ford Fairlane would have been more than enough to deal with Israeli road conditions.
If I were living in Austria, I might just have been able to stretch to the then nearest equivalent of the current Chrysler 300 – a fully loaded, European spec Plymouth Valiant with the high power 273 and a 4 sp manual g/box. I would have added aftermarket Koni shock absorbers and Pirelli Cinturato tires replacing the original asphalt cutters to ensure it does not get embarrassed by the proverbial S-Klasse MB once the bendy stuff started (and there’s lots of that in Austria).
Now if it were the US, for me there’s really only one option, that being the Olds Cutlass 442 which offered power, handling and luxury in one package.
Lastly if money were no object, something nondescript for the weekly chores (say a fully opted Malibu wagon if I were living in a city, an I-H Travelall if out in the sticks) and.. a Shelby Cobra for the weekend
Oooh, couldn’t you still get a new Israeli-built Studebaker in 1967? Last call! ?
Plymouth GTX with 440 & Torqueflite in red, no vinyl roof and Magnum 500s is all I would ever need.
As its a dream garage I may as well have a Dodge truck as well, with V8.
I like having a lot of cars, but if I needed one to get to work and back in 1967:
Slightly richer me: GT350 Mustang, dark blue
Actual me: Firebird 326 HO coupe with a 4-speed
I’d like the Rivs, Eldos, and Toros, but I probably wouldn’t have bought one for my only car. I’d have shopped Mustangs and Cougars, but I’d decide a regular Mustang was too common and the Cougar was just a little behind the Firebird aesthetically (for me, and not by much). I’d have liked the Corvair but would be unwilling to put up with its oil leaks from the pushrod tubes (well-known by then) and resultant smelly, weakish heater. I don’t have to worry about heat today because I don’t generally drive my cars in the winter.
Oooh…I also would have drooled over a Barracuda Fastback with a Commando 273 and a 4-speed, but I still would have gone with the Firebird.
International Travelall.
A little late to the party due to being too busy at work, but here goes sticking to the requested rules for the choices as best I can. There are so many good choices for 1967.
Specialty/Luxury: Even though the Mustang would naturally tug at my heartstrings (as the 67 was most of the inspiration for my 2007 ‘stang), and I’ve always like T-Birds, I have to say the Mercury Cougar is my favorite of this group. A friend in high school had a dark green one that was simply gorgeous.
Intermediate Size: Gotta go with the Goat here, or its lesser LeMans sibling. These cars had beautiful styling. Convertible or 2-Door Hardtop, either will do.
Compact: Here’s of the rare times I would have to go with the Mopar. That Dodge Dart is just a cool car! I’d go convertible here.
Full Size: I’ve always been a 60’s Impala fan, and my Dad had a 66 fastback, and a 68 Custom, both of which I really like. But the 67, other than its awesome looking taillights and exaggerated Coke bottle curves, the front just doesn’t do it for me. While I wasn’t a Ford fan (yet) at 7 years old, I like the LTD as a 2-door hard top or a Galaxie 500 convertible… but my pick of the litter… The POLARA. And in this case, this is one RARE time I would pick the 4-door (hard top, of course). People may’ve not liked the ‘delta tail lights’ as they were described, but they look great to me.
Full Size Luxury Car: It’s hard to pick a favorite between the Cadillac Deville Convertible or the Lincoln 4-door Convertible… both are FINE choices.
As to the Speacilty Segment – None really do it for me as I am not an SUV or Van guy, but the Jeep Wagoneer impressed me the one time I rode in one as a Cub Scout on a camping trip. It was in Western Maryland and we woke up to 2 feet of snow on the ground at the lodge in which we were camping. The scoutmaster forgot some key ingredients to feed us, so off to the store we went. 5 miles away. On mountainous roads. No problems for this vehicle, even with us excited kids in the way-back!
can’t go wrong with any GM car in ’67…really was their pinnacle. I’d go with a Corvair, in its peak of styling and engineering…and it still had a/c.
specialty -Eldo
fullsize – Impala
midsize – 442
compact – Corvair
My brother had a ’67 Cougar just like above: blue, 3 speed on the floor, small V8. I learned to drive a stick shift early Sunday mornings in the park with no one around. Very nice car!!
Once he got married, he traded for a used ’70 Ford Galaxie 4 door.
I think he still regrets the transaction!!
1967 Barracuda or Mustang. My Uncle had a ’67 Barracuda 383 4 on the floor and it was quick.
Yep…those looked great!
I’d buy a Pontiac LeMans Sprint with a four-speed!
Compact: Rambler American or Plymouth Valiant
Intermediate: AMC Rebel or Mercury Comet
Standard: Ambassador or Mercury [2 doors]
Personal: AMC Marlin or Mercury Cougar
Specialty: Checker
Luxury: Olds 98
Impala SS 427, 4-speed. midnight blue w/white interior.
I’ll take just two, a Toronado and a fordor Thunderbird.
Specialty: So many to choose. I’ll take a four speed 427 ‘Vette coupe, mean beast in black, I think.
Intermediate: Easy. GTO Coupe, IMO the best looking car in that class the whole decade. More of a daily driver than the ‘Vette, milder tune 4bbl 400 and TH400, medium metallic blue.
Luxury and Full size. Nothing I really liked that year, but the Ford is the best looking of the bunch, and a loaded Country Sedan Wagon wlth the trick tailgate and rear seats, but minus the fake wood would have been my perfect family car in white.
Compact: Corvair convertible, four speed, in yellow. The others are too boring.
Specialty: Tempted to go with the Dodge A-series, like I actually had, but a 4×4 Jeep CJ-7 with the V-6 would provide more adventure.
As always, late to the party.
My first automotive love was the 1967 Mercury Cougar. I too would like to go with the midyear XR-7, Lime Frost in color with a black vinyl roof and a nice black interior. 289-4V with autobox, with period correct American Racing SS200 wheels and Firestone red line tires.
I feel like I’ve been driving Darts and Valiants since 1963, and American Cars are perhaps well made, but non-innovative this year. So I think I need to move to a different level of car, but one that still gives me that great high-gas-mileage feeling. Do I want a 404 Peugeot or a Citroen DS-21 Familiale? Fred’s Foreign Cars in Philadelphia has both in stock!
I have to hand it to you guys at CC, if this isn’t the best series yet!
Full size would be a Mercury montclaire 4 door hard top with 410 engine. Fully loaded, maroon with black roof and black interior.
Intermediate, late 67 I believe had the 340 four spd combo. Medium blue with black top and interior. Buckets but no consul.
Sport utility. Bronco 289 and a 3 spd standard. Loaded with Good year polygrips. Dark green and full wheel discs.
Mustang GT Fastback, but I would have taken a used ’66 over that. Maybe a 4-door Thunderbird though honestly I’d rather have a used ’66 one of those too, with the 428.
Scratch all that I forgot about the Corvair. Make mine a 2-door hardtop with the 140HP engine, 4-speed.
I’d choose a brace of Pontiacs, knowing what we know now about the fate of this storied brand: LeMans Sprint 2-door, LeMans wagon (with the OHC 6 also), GTO, 2+2 hardtop, and GP convertible.