NieKamp Roadster: Profile of a Hot Road
The NieKamp Roadster
was conceived in 1949, when Bill NieKamp was a middle-aged man playing a young man's game. Forty-three years old at the time, he set out to build a hot rod he could enter in car shows and race at Southern California's dry lakes.
A body assembler and painter at the Plymouth factory in Long Beach, California, NieKamp bought a 1929 Model A roadster body for $15 and channeled it over 1927 Essex frame rails. NieKamp performed most of the work himself, using very basic techniques.
![]() The NieKamp roadster was an El Mirage racer and winner of the very first America's Most Beautiful Roadster award. See more hot rod pictures. |
Whitey Clayton fabricated the bellypan, hood, and track nose, while NieKamp made the floorboard and nerf bars. Under the hood, NieKamp installed a 1942 Mercury flathead V-8 with Evans heads, a Weiand intake manifold, a Winfield cam, and a pair of Stromberg 97 carburetors.
NieKamp kept close records along the way, and the sum cost of the project came to $1,888.72.
Before NieKamp raced the car, he showed it at the inaugural National Roadster Show in Oakland, California, in lakes trim with a passenger-side tonneau and no windshield. The meticulously built rod won the first America's Most Beautiful Roadster award.
NieKamp raced the roadster at El Mirage for three seasons, culminating with a run of 142.40 mph in July 1952. Soon thereafter, he turned down a $2,800 offer for the car, opting instead to raffle it off to benefit a racer who had been seriously injured at Bonneville.
The winner of the raffle, a young soldier named Dick Russell, drove it as his daily driver and raced it at the Santa Ana Drags before selling it to Delmer Brink in 1958.
![]() The NieKamp Roadster was the first historic hot rod to be restored. The effort was undertaken by Rod & Custom editor Jim "Jake" Jacobs. |
Brink decided to swap in a Buick nailhead engine, but never completed the work, and sold the car to then Rod & Custom associate editor Jim "Jake" Jacobs in 1969 for $1,300. Jake, who had recognized the car as the very first AMBR winner, restored it in a 1971 series of articles in the magazine.
Jacobs' efforts made the NieKamp roadster the first historic hot rod to be restored, a practice that would come into vogue 20 years later.
After the flathead Jake installed died in 1975, he replaced it with a 265-cid Chevy V-8. The small block remained in the car until 1997, when the roadster was invited to compete in the first Hot Rod class at the 1997 Pebble Beach Concours d'Elegance.
![]() Under the hood, the original NieKamp Roadster had a 1942 Mercury flathead V-8. |
With respect to the car's storied past, Jacobs restored it to its 1950 configuration, installing another flathead, removing the windshield, and adding a tonneau. Now displayed at the Petersen Automotive Museum in Los Angeles, this hot rodding icon is preserved for posterity.
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