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1968 Ford Mustang Hardtop - Young Boy's Dream

When Eric English Was Growing Up, This Was His Teenage Fantasy

writer: Jim Smart
photographer: Tom Rounds

 1968 Ford Mustang Hardtop Side View

Eric English smiles when he speaks of his first Mustang: "It was 1967 when my parents gave me a Mustang pedal car for Christmas. It was my first Mustang, so to speak." In addition to the pedal car variety, the Mustang Eric remembers being fond of as a youth was the Wimbledon White '6811/42 Cobra Jet hardtop. "My history with this particular Mustang dates back to the early '70s when, as a grade-school boy, I would frequently see it parked at a local grocery store..." says Eric. He liked the hoodscoop, the masculine profile, and the power.

When Eric was cruising around in his first car, a well-worn '68 Mustang hardtop, he read all the Mustang literature he could get his hands on, including Mustang Monthly. At the time, he read that the 428 Cobra Jet engine was available only in fastbacks. Based on what we know today, this simply isn't true. During the early '80s, Eric wondered about the white hardtop with the hoodscoop. He would soon learn that the experts who wrote the books were wrong.

Eric took a closer look at the white hardtop shown here, with its hoodscoop, '69 Mustang wheel covers, and the VIN-8F01R173082. He struck up a conversation with its owner, a woman who lived nearby. She mentioned its racing history with a Walnut Creek, California, Ford dealer where she and her husband bought the car in 1969. Shortly after purchasing the car, she and her husband moved to the Seattle area where Eric lives today. When Eric discovered the Mustang, it was powered by a 289 engine-not the original and certainly correct 428 Cobra Jet. The 428 was ditched for the 289 in the pursuit of fuel economy. And one other thing-the car was not for sale. Despite the absence of the original CJ mill, Eric watched over the R-Code hardtop for the next eight years.

You can imagine Eric's shock when he discovered the car was for sale after the couple learned it needed a lot of expensive suspension work. Eric nearly lost out on the opportunity to buy the car when the local Ford dealer's service department was working up the estimate. The service manager knew what the car was and was determined to buy it. Through a generous twist of fate, the service manager was busy when the woman arrived to pick up the Mustang. A preoccupied service manager missed out on the opportunity of a lifetime; Eric was there with the cash and enthusiasm.

Eric understood the significance of the Cobra Jet hardtop. Based on conversations he had with the Walnut Creek, California, Ford dealer service technician who remembered the Mustang from 1968, Eric learned the race driver was Wayne Torkelson, a Ford service technician and well-known drag racer. Rett-White Ford, as it was known in 1968, was well connected with Ford Motor Company-thank goodness. The connection enabled the dealership to acquire the groovy iron to race and win with, which bolstered Ford's reputation regionally. All it took was a phone call to acquire a '6811/42 Cobra Jet hardtop for drag racing. Campaigning a CJ hardtop would certainly get the dealership needed attention.

When the car was delivered to Rett-White, it had the mandated GT Equipment Group, but was void of GT C-stripes-a stripe delete, if you will. The radio also was deleted. The car was originally a dollar car-sold to Wayne for just $1 to campaign and use as he so desired. Rett-White pulled the factory CJ engine and installed a race-prepared Cobra Jet, C6, ladder bars, manual front drum brakes for reduced rolling resistance, a racy paint scheme, and more. The result was a nasty hardtop capable of quarter-mile times in the 11s-not bad.


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