1967 Ford Mustang Group II For Sale - #24 Of 26 Cars By Shelby
American, Monterey Historics 2023
LMC is very proud to offer for sale this 1967 Ford Mustang
Notchback Group II Sedan
The Trans-Am series, officially called the Trans-American Sedan
Championship, in 1966 consisted of seven professionally recognized
races at road courses throughout the United States. The
accumulation of points, based on finishing position would determine
the season manufacturer's champion. Ford was keen to take part in
the 1967 Trans-Am series and sell many additional cars with such
positive publicity. The SCCA quickly realized they were on to
something and they expanded the Trans-Am to twelve races. They saw
manufacturer support as the key to the series' success and did
everything they could to entice marques like Ford, Chevrolet and
Mercury. The manufacturers, in turn, saw the Trans-Am as the
perfect vehicle to market their new "Pony" cars.
Group II rules specified that cars had to maintain their basic
stock appearance, including all window glass. The job of coming up
with specifications for the 1967 Group II cars landed on the desk
of Shelby American GT 350 Project Engineer Chuck Cantwell. His
experience with the GT 350 competition model and 1966 Group II cars
made him the obvious choice. Fabricator Jerry Schwarz, who also had
participated in the prior projects, did most of the hands-on work.
They built a prototype and from it came the team and customer
cars.
Factory documents show that Shelby American built a total of 26
1967 Mustang Group II racers. One was a prototype which was never
actually raced by the team. It was used for evaluation of
components and then sold during the race season. Four were actual
team cars and the remaining 21 cars were sold to independent racers
who used them in Trans-Am and/or SCCA A/Sedan competition.
The Group II Shelby Mustang that is being offered is Car #24 of the
reported 26 prepared by Carroll Shelby for the SCCA Trans-Am Series
and was originally sold to and raced by Fred Sutherland. After many
years apart, the Shelby and Mr. Sutherland reunited and the car has
been restored as closely to the original specifications that
memories, documentation and vintage photos allowed, and to be able
to run current historic racing events.
Like the GT 350 Shelby built for the SCCA B/Production class, this
version has all the Shelby details. These cars came heavily
equipped. Among the many features are a race-prepped Hi-Po 289-cid
engine mated to a Top-Loader four-speed transmission, relocated
upper A-arm mounts, bigger disc brakes on the front, driveshaft
retainer strap to keep it from falling if a U-joint should fail,
nine-inch rear axle housing with the customer's choice of gear
ratios, racing oversize wheel studs and nuts, an SCCA-approved
rollbar, "Over-Rider" traction bars from the top of the axle into
the interior, stripped interior with a single fiberglass racing
bucket seat and competition harness, special racing gas tank with
dual electric fuel pumps with the battery in the trunk, rear
firewall, no heater or fan, American Racing magnesium Torque Thrust
D Wheels, Goodyear racing tires, racing headers and straight dump
pipes ending in front of the rear tires, front license plate recess
cut out for an oil cooler, window retainer straps, hood pins, brake
cooling ducts, racing springs, Koni double-adjustable racing
shocks, fire extinguisher, aluminum plates where the headlights go,
racing wire harness, tachometer and oil pressure gauges set in an
aluminum dash insert, no speedometer, aluminum switch box on the
center tunnel behind the shifter and more. The cars left Shelby's
Culver City, California factory truly ready to race except for
numbers and fuel. The engine was rebuilt by Dave Dralle, who
successfully raced Cobras in the 1960s and is considered to still
be one of the best in relation to Cobra and Mustang expertise.
The car was originally ordered by Fred Sutherland who relates that
he had bought it new from Shelby for approximately $4,000 and due
to its delivery being tardy; he was offered a free paint job of his
choice by Mr. Shelby. He conveys that he won some races and set
some lap records with it. It is related that a race program from an
SCCA race at Willow Springs in 1969 lists the lap records for the
track. For the A/Sedan Class, which is the over two-liter class for
Trans-Am cars, Fred held the lap record with this car at that time.
Very impressive considering the Shelby team and many others used
this track for practice. Just before ordering this car, Mr.
Sutherland had won the regional Championship for A/Production with
his 289 Cobra.
Among the other track achievements for this well-documented car and
Fred Sutherland are winning overall first time out at the 1967
Times Riverside Grand Prix for production sports cars. Following
this success was second overall for A/Sedan at the 1967 Daytona
American Road Race of Champions and first in A/Sedan at the 1968
Stardust International Raceway in Las Vegas. From here the car had
numerous owners, as racecars are well-known for. Prior research by
the SAAC shows that the Shelby was purchased by Jim Whelan of
Minnesota and raced in the 1969 Brainerd Trans-Am race. Sam Miller
purchased the car in late 1969 and it was raced in Midwest regional
and national events. Norman Frame acquired the Shelby in early 1974
and the car was the 1976 Southeast Division regional champion and
raced at Road Atlanta, Charlotte Motor Speedway and in the Camel GT
series. In 1979 the car was purchased by Gordon Stennes in 1979,
before changing hands three additional times without mention of the
car being raced with this succession of owners. Mr. Sutherland
reacquired the Shelby in 2009 and put into the capable hands of
John Ryals for the restoration. Mr. Ryals worked for the
aforementioned Jerry Schwarz (original Shelby American crew
member/fabricator) when they were both on the Roy Woods Racing Team
when they campaigned the ex-Penske Javelins in 1972.
Also included in the sale are the correct and original dual carbs
and manifold setup (the car races much better with the current
setup), documentation tracking the ownership history, a Deluxe
Marti Report, original data plate, historical photos and
restoration records that total over $200,000 invested in bringing
this magnificent racer to this level. This is a very unique
opportunity to purchase a true piece of Shelby American history and
is a perfect addition to any collection or eligible to race at some
of the most prestigious events.
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