1955 Chevrolet Model 3124 Cameo
1/2 ton Pickup

Owner: Matt Togstad

I bought the Cameo in 1996 from a guy in Everett.
I was driving through town and saw it so I followed him to a auto parts store
and asked him if he would sell the truck. He said he was going to Canada to
look at a Corvette and if he bought it he would sell the truck. It was a
driver with a 6 cylinder and a hydromatic transmission.
My Dad has restored several Mercury cars and
one day said lets do your truck so we did. It took two years and it was alot
of fun. My Dad did all of the paint and body work. I had the frame done by
Wayne Due in Marysville. We used a clip from RB and then it has Monte Carlo
front end parts. The motor was built by Street and Performance in Arkansas and
the Transmission is a 700R. I used birdseye maple in the bed to have something
different and a custom leather interior. We did all of the work in my Dads
shop so that makes it even more special. I have enjoyed being in the club and
have met alot of great people. I did have the truck at the GoodGuys last year
but i made the mistake of parking inside. I will be there this year and I will
be outside. Matt

Birdseye Maple bed





1955 Chevrolet Cameo
Carrier History
The 1955 Chevrolet Cameo Carrier was a light-duty
truck designed with the flair of a passenger car. As Chuck Jordan remembers, "In
our earliest designs, the bodysides ran back flush into the pickup box. The cab
and the box were all tied in. There was no seam, no gap. But then Chevrolet came
along and said, no, you can't do it that way, because there'll be too much body
torquing, and tying the whole thing together will wrinkle the sheetmetal.
|

The 1955 Cameo Carrier, Model 3124, came painted
only in Bombay Ivory with Commercial Red accents.
|
"So we redesigned it and put in that gap between
the cab and the box. There's a kind of overlapping flange and a chrome strip
that fills in the seam. I think they told us we had to have ¾-inch of clearance.
The gap looked huge to us, but when the average person sees the truck, he
probably doesn't really notice the gap.
"Anyway, the Cameo turned out to be something
extra, something beyond the ordinary. It was the first time Chevrolet had done
anything like it. And we knew this would never be a high-volume seller. We
didn't expect to sell a lot of Cameos, and low volume meant fiberglass. That's
how they got into the fiberglass parts. Fiberglass let us afford the program. We
had the Corvette to thank for that. The Corvette blazed that trail."
The smooth-sided Cameo Carrier carried a
conventional steel stepside box hidden inside fiberglass outer skins. The
fenders, tailgate, and spare-tire carrier were all formed from fiberglass and
attached with concealed fasteners to the exterior of the pickup box. The
faired-in vertical taillamps were unique to the Cameo, and the tailgate swung
down on cables that retracted via hidden, spring-loaded pulleys.
|

The red-and-white theme was continued inside
the 1955 Cameo Carrier.
|
All fiberglass pieces were supplied by the same
company that fabricated the Corvette body: Moulded Fiberglas of Ashtabula, Ohio.
And like early Corvettes, the Cameo Carrier came in only one color scheme:
Bombay Ivory with Commercial Red window accents, and a red-and-beige vinyl
interior. The inside walls of the pickup box were also painted red.
Chevrolet continued the Cameo Carrier into early
1958. Depending on the year, prices ranged about $350 to $475 higher than those
of Chevy's basic ½-ton pickups, and total Cameo production came to 10,321,
approximately half of which was sold during the short 1955 season.
But the significance of the Cameo Carrier wasn't
its sales record; it was the halo effect it had on all Chevrolet trucks. The
Cameo Carrier was to Chevrolet trucks what the Corvette was to passenger cars --
an attention getter and brand focal point.
Observes Jordan: "Of course, the influence of the
Cameo was considerable. Shortly after we introduced it, Dodge brought out a
pickup with a fleetside box [for 1957], and from then on all trucks became
available with smooth sides. So the Cameo, which didn't sell in great numbers
because it carried a relatively high price, started the trend toward flush-sided
pickup boxes."
|