Debut of the Shelby GT 350
On January 27, 1965, the
Shelby GT 350, a version of a Ford Mustang sports car
developed by the American auto racer and car designer Carroll Shelby, is
launched. The Shelby GT 350, which featured a 306 horsepower V-8 engine,
remained in production through the end of the 1960s and today is a
valuable collector’s item.
Carroll Shelby was born in Texas in 1923 and gained fame in the racing
world in the 1950s. Among his accomplishments was a victory at the 24
Hours of Le Mans in 1959, making him just the second American ever to
win the iconic endurance race. By the early 1960s, Shelby had retired
from racing for health reasons and was designing high-performance cars.
He became known for his race cars, including the Cobra and the Ford
GT40, as well as such muscle cars as the Shelby GT 350. According to the
New York Times: “In the 60’s, at the apex of the Southern California car
efflorescence, his name was synonymous with muscle cars, relatively
small vehicles with big, beefy engines. It was an era that many car
buffs consider Detroit’s golden age, and Mr. Shelby was arguably its
prime mover.”
The Shelby GT 350 was an iteration of the first Ford Mustang, which was
officially unveiled by Henry Ford II at the World’s Fair in Flushing
Meadows, New York, on April 17, 1964. That same day, the new car also
debuted in Ford showrooms across America and almost 22,000 Mustangs were
immediately snapped up by buyers. Named for a World War II fighter
plane, the Ford Mustang had a long hood and short rear deck. More than
400,000 Mustangs sold within its first year of production, far exceeding
sales expectations. Over the ensuing decades, the Mustang has undergone
numerous evolutions and remains in production today, with more than 9
million sold.
In addition to collaborating with Ford, Shelby partnered with other
automakers, including Chrysler, for whom he designed the Dodge Viper
sports car, which launched in 1992.
The Times in 2003 quoted
comedian Jay Leno, an avid car collector who has owned several Shelby
cars, as saying: “Carroll is sort of like the car world’s Mickey Mantle
or Willie Mays… Unlike so many racers, he didn’t come from a rich
family, so he signifies that everyman, common-sense ideal. When I was
kid, American cars were big, clunky things, until Carroll used his
ingenuity to make them compete with European cars. He was a populist,
the kind of guy that other car buffs could emulate.”
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