Photography & Videography by The Authorxclusivity can create something very iconic. When GM’s chief designer, Harley Earle, introduced the Nomad as one of his very special Dream Cars for the 1954 General Motors Motorama in New York, it created an incredible buzz among the public with its ’53 Corvette nose artfully melded to a sleek sport wagon body capable of carrying six passengers. Its success on the show circuit led to the design being massaged for introduction into the freshly revamped ’55 Chevrolet passenger car lineup. The sleek ’56 Chevy Nomad laid out across our pages belonging to Jeff Calley of Franklin, New Hampshire, has a perfect balance of performance and handling.
With the Nomad’s style evoking that of a hardtop sedan rather than that of a standard station wagon, its two-door body featured a fold-down back seat offering an expansive cargo area as well as a split tailgate with the glass flipping up and a fold-down tailgate. Having 19 different models being produced by Chevrolet for the 1956 car lineup, there were only a little over 8,000 Nomads built that year. Considering that total production for the year was more than 1.62 million cars, the Nomad surely earned its place as a rare sight on the roads, especially with a three-year production run of around 22,000 units.
The completed car is a perfect fusion of cutting-edge handling matched with a healthy injected small-block and a perfectly restored exterior, making sure every mile is packed with performance as Jeff hits the streets; and to us, that’s as good as it gets!