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CRUISIN'

August 16, 2004 1:07 am

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Christopher Ford of Fredericksburg checks out a car's engine outside the Fredericksburg eatery. The Cruise Night event, which is open to the public, is held between 6 and 10 p.m. on Fridays. locruiseinkd1.jpg

Every Friday, Virginia Barbeque Co. hosts Cruise Night, a chance for car enthusiasts to get a close look at a wide variety
of automobiles, including vintage models like this 1926 Ford Model T owned by Tom Mabry of Spotsylvania.
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Norman White polishes his 1966 Ford Fairlane on Friday in the parking lot of the Virginia Barbeque Co. restaurant on the U.S. 1 Bypass in Fredericksburg. Cruise Night activities include games, raffles and door prizes as well as trophies for the Best in Show cars.

By KRISTIN DAVIS

On Friday nights, "Pop" Wilson parks his glittering 1968 Volkswagen Baja Beetle curbside at a local restaurant, and throws trunk, hood and doors wide open.

Chrome gleams, aqua metallic paint sparkles and the Beetle's white leather interior shines impeccably.

"When people ask me when I plan to get rid of it," Wilson says in the lot of Virginia Barbeque Co., "this is what I tell 'em."

He walks to the trunk, and points to the fancy lettering inside: "Till Death Do We Part."

Wilson, who works in the parts department of the Stafford County school system's garage, is a member of the Fredericksburg Classic and Muscle Car Club.

Each weekend, a fervent society of automobile lovers descend on the area's parking lots for cruise-ins--family-friendly events that let car owners show off their vehicles and socialize.

There are at least five car clubs in the area: Classic and Muscle Car Club, Ghost Riders, Lake Anna Cruizers, Orange County Cruisers and Virginia Classic Cruisers.

Folks drive their rare classics here, putting thousands of dollars and countless hours of work on display.

On Friday nights, cars gleam from washing and waxing.

Some come in their scuffed-up works in progress, plans folded in their hands.

Others come just to look, just to admire.

Disc jockeys play old rock 'n' roll, and kids hula hoop and dance limbo for prizes. Grown-ups win trophies and plaques for originality and best-in-show.

But there is a softer side to the metal and the chrome.

The Classic and Muscle Car Club, like its counterparts, raises money for charities.

Some hold 50-50 raffles in which the winner takes half the proceeds and the other half is socked away for the holidays. Last Christmas, the Fredericksburg club shopped for six needy families.

Ghost Riders helped two families at Thanksgiving and seven at Christmas last year.

It's part of the tradition, part of the fun.

On a recent Friday, a Beach Boys tune blares through Virginia Barbeque's parking lot. The cars come in, one by one. A 1965 Buick Skylark. A 1968 Shelby Cobra. A 1956 Chevrolet Nomad.

But Pop Wilson's sparkly turquoise Beetle stands out.

He's owned it for a quarter century. Renewal came bit by bit, when he had the money and the time.

Wilson's done most of the work in recent years, since "the kids got grown and I could afford it," he says.

He's driven the Beetle 48,000 miles in 25 years, mostly to local cruise-ins. It's gone up and down the East Coast for car shows, too.

Wilson has no idea how much money went into his masterpiece. Whatever the cost, he's won 93 trophies and a spot in a national classic car magazine.

Wilson happily points out the details to admirers who happen by. The sunroof, the red leather dashboard and steering wheel, the radio between the visors.

They cock their heads to get a better look inside.

"This thing oughta take the cake," one man says.

"She's sharp."

"Keep up the work, my man," says another.

Across the parking lot, Wesley Musselman greets a fellow car enthusiast. The carpenter from King George comes here because "it's calm, it's mellow. It's an older crowd. It's cool."

He owns the 1956 Chevrolet Nomad, "a poor man's truck" in its heyday, he says.

Long and dark, the car looks like a cross between a station wagon and hearse.

There are very few left, Musselman says.

He'll tell you the history: Five decades ago, the Nomad was popular with painters and handymen because they could haul all their supplies in the back.

While prized, the Nomad is not his first. That sacred title belongs to a 1965 Ford pickup.

Musselman was 14. His dad told him if he got the truck working, he could have it.

"I got it running, and I tore it up," he says with a nostalgic smile.

Musselman, like most folks here, overhauls the vehicles himself.

"A labor of love," he calls it.

It's a never-ending job. New paint, a new part here, a new part there, a new dashboard, a new console. There's always, always something else to do.

They do it for the love of classic cars, the ones they remember from their childhoods, the ones their dad or grandfather or aunt had. The ones they celebrate each weekend in parking lots.

To reach KRISTIN DAVIS: 540/368-5028 kdavis@freelancestar.com


Local cruise-ins

Who: Fredericksburg Classic and Muscle Car Club

Where: Parking lot of Virginia Barbeque Co., 451 Jefferson Davis Highway, Fredericksburg

When: 6 p.m. Fridays

Phone: 540/775-7108

Who: Ghost Riders Car Club

Where: Southpoint Plaza McDonald's, U.S. 1, Massaponax

When: 6-10 p.m. Fridays

Phone: 540/854-7782

Who: Lake Anna Cruizers Car Club

Where: Kenny's Central Tires, Main Street, Louisa

When: 5-9 p.m., second Saturdays of the month

Phone: 540/967-2062

Who: Orange County Cruisers

Where: Burger King, Main Street, Orange

When: Third Saturdays

Phone: 540/854-4172

Who: Virginia Classic Cruisers

Where: McDonald's, 5228 Jefferson Davis Highway, Spotsylvania

When: 7 p.m. second Saturdays

Phone: 540/848-1125





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