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HomeMediaInfluential 1951 Hirohata Mercury custom headed to Mecum auction

Influential 1951 Hirohata Mercury custom headed to Mecum auction

Iconic ‘lead sled’ was built by the Barris brothers in Southern California

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An icon of the custom car era, Bob Hirohata’s 1951 Mercury customized by the Barris shop, will go up for grabs at the Mecum Kissimmee, Florida, auction to be held January 6-16, 2022.

The rise of custom car culture paralleled hot rod culture in the post-World War II period. Many shops in Southern California began customizing 1949-’51 Mercs, using the slab-sided bodies as blank canvases for their vision of what cars could be. Chopping the tops, channeling the bodies, and shaving the trim for a smoother look transformed what was otherwise deemed a frumpy design.

mercury

The Hirohata Mercury is viewed as the pinnacle of Merc “lead-sled” design, and is recognized as the most famous custom of all time. Built by the Barris brothers, George and Sam, at Barris Kustom, it received all the right changes to make it look sleek and elegant, but not over styled.

The main changes reworked the profile. The shop chopped the Mercury’s top four inches in the front and seven inches in the rear, leaned the rear window forward, and replaced the B-pillars with channel stock to give the coupe a hardtop look. To give the car its low stance, the Barris brothers cut the front coil springs, C-sectioned the rear frame, de-arched the rear leaf springs, and set the rear on two 1.5-inch lowering blocks.

Along the sides, the Barris brothers replaced the straight fender trim with rounded trim from a 1952 Buick Riviera that provides a delineation for a two-tone Ice Green and Organic Dark Green paint scheme. The bright color was a departure from the many dark colors on customs of the day. Large fender bulges were added to the Mercury’s rear, fronted by functional handmade scoops decorated with teeth from a 1952 Chevy grille.

At the front, the grille was shortened and a new handmade grille bar inserted. The bumper was modified, the headlights frenched (the trim rings molded into the fenders for a cleaner look), and wraparound parking light moldings were made using 1950 Ford parts. The Mercury hood lost its chrome and was extended and reshaped to fit with the new grille opening. The rear was given frenched 1952 Lincoln taillights.

mercury

Inside, the Mercury received a rolled and pleated upholstery. Noted pinstriper Von Dutch applied his art to the dash, and Hirohata himself made his own teardrop dash knobs from plastic.

Once the customization was complete, Hirohata had the engine swapped with the engine with that from a 1953 Cadillac, earning the car the nickname “Mercillac.”

The custom Mercury won several awards, was featured in numerous magazines, and appeared in the 1955 movie Runnin’ Wild. Hirohata drove it for a few years, then sold it in 1955. In 1959, a high school student named Jim McNeil found it on a used car lot. He drove it until 1964, and then put it away. It resurfaced in 1989, when Rod & Custom editor Pat Ganahl coaxed McNeil into restoring the car with the magazine’s help.

The revived Hirohata Mercury appeared at the Pebble Beach Concours d’Elegance in 2015, and was then added to the National Historic Vehicle Register.

For more information about the Kissimmee auction, visit the Mecum website.

This article was originally published by Motor Authority, an editorial partner of ClassicCars.com.

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