Vintage variety: Car repair shop is a walk into the past
CHERYL SCHWEIZER | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 4 years, 2 months AGO
Senior Reporter Cheryl Schweizer is a journalist with more than 30 years of experience serving small communities in the Pacific Northwest. She began her post-high-school education at Treasure Valley Community College and enerned her journalism degree at Oregon State University. After working for multiple publications, she has settled down at the Columbia Basin Herald and has been a staple of the newsroom for more than a decade. Schweizer’s dedication to her communities and profession has earned her the nickname “The Baroness of Bylines.” She covers a variety of beats including health, business and various municipalities. | January 31, 2022 1:00 AM
MOSES LAKE — Walk in the door at Shade Tree Customs and there is a full-size 1920s-era gas pump straight ahead. It’s a reproduction, but there it is – 6 feet tall, glass dome and all, and a price sticker of 17.6 cents per gallon.
“There’s cool stuff everywhere you look,” owner Larry Camden said.
The place is a car repair shop at 1732 W. Broadway Ave.
“We work on everything. New, old, tractors, all kinds of stuff,” Camden said.
But what brings customers and car lovers in to hang out is – well, all the cool stuff. Any little kid in the 1960s would’ve loved all those bicycles.
“I have, like, 15 of them hanging on the ceiling or the walls, or sitting right here (in the lobby). They’re all vintage bikes. Ten just in the lobby,” Camden said.
“I’m a ham operator, too, so I’ve got microphones and radios, and vintage stereo equipment, tube radios and that sort of thing. People often hang out here while they’re waiting for their car to get done, because they like the vibe,” he said.
“The older crowd, whenever they come in, they see something that reminds them of something back in the day. It’s kind of cool,” Camden said. “You get to hear some history of the locals.”
The waiting room is full of some of those radios and microphones, old seats from a movie theater, and – are those old torches? Yeah, that’s a whole row of them, right in front of those vintage radios. That Silver Tone radio in the wood case, and that plastic (or maybe Bakelite) radio on top look old enough to have broadcast the news of the D-Day invasion.
Some of the enamel signs advertising car parts are reproductions, but the big one above the soda machine – 1970s vintage soda machine, of course – is original. It was found by Camden’s sister somewhere near Hanford, partially buried in the ground. She saw it and dug it out.
“Every piece you see, I know where it came from. There’s usually a story behind most of them,” he said.
The fiberglass car body above the counter is an advertising gimmick from the 1960s designed to increase Corvette sales.
“It was a go-kart,” Camden said. “This would’ve been offered to the man who was trying to buy that year’s Corvette. If he had a son with him, they would entice him with the go-kart to buy the car. That’s the only way he could’ve gotten one of these.”
It’s above the counter because it’s in good condition, and it probably would get broken on a go-kart, he said.
“This is history, man,” he said.
And that doesn’t count the cars – the 1950 Chevrolet Fleetline sitting near the lobby missing an engine, and the 1953 Mercury on one of the shop lifts.
Camden has been a car guy most of his life.
“I started messing with cars when I was 11, and I’m 53 now,” he said. “I’ve always been interested in cars.”
Collecting came later, when he moved into his current location. But he started learning the lessons of collecting long before that.
“My mother used to collect when I was little,” he said. “So some of that rubbed off on what it is I look for. But it started out just being bicycles and hot rods, and then it turned into blow torches and microphones and all kinds of stuff. Pretty soon my eye started wandering to different things.”
Exactly what he’s looking for is kind of a mystery.
“I don’t know,” he said, when asked what he looks for. “It grabs me. I’m usually not looking for something particular any more, you just look and go, ‘Oh, that’s a keeper.’”
The tale of Camden’s 1965 Oldsmobile F85 demonstrates how the collecting process changes. The F85 was the car he wanted in high school, the one he went looking for, and finally found after about 25 years. He restored it, and decided he didn’t want it any more.
“I’m more of a lead sled personality,” he said.
Those would be 1950s cars, sometimes modified. Like the 1953 Crown Victoria, the trunk lid from which is hanging above the popcorn machine and the coffee pot.
It was Camden’s commuter car, but it met with a tragic end. He was backing up at the shop and the brakes failed; he caught the gas pedal and accidentally floored it. The Crown Vic hit the shop wall hard.
“I totaled my Vickie,” he said.
He bought the car back from the insurance company, he said, and traded it to a friend who needed parts for the 1953 Crown Vic he was restoring. He purchased another classic, which drew interest from a classic car guy who owned a 1953 Mercury, the one currently on the lift at the back of the shop. The Merc looked just like the Vickie, and Camden traded straight across for it.
Camden isn’t going to stop collecting any time soon.
“I think I’m addicted,” he said. “Somebody comes in with a bike, and I can’t let them leave.”
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