Elite Dealer

1959 Chevrolet Apache

$14,695

1959 Chevrolet Apache

Vehicle Details

Make

Chevrolet

Model

Apache

Year

1959

Mileage

123,456 miles

VIN

AMS35038

Body Type

Pickup Truck

Transmission

Automatic

Fuel Type

Gasoline

Engine

454 Big Block

Description

1959 Chevrolet Apache. A nice example of an original sheet metal truck…No bondo here… Truck has had mini tubs installed with a Ford 9” rear and Hoosier slicks. It has the Pro Street appearance. Currently has a 454 with a Turbo 350 trans installed.

Motor was built by a local guy and could put you in touch with him if needed. Frame is rust free with only very few spots on the body. Truck is pretty rare in this condition and being a fleetside vs the step side.

Truck will be sold with a bill of sale. Please Note The Following **Vehicle Location is at our clients home and Not In Cadillac, Michigan. **We do have a showroom with about 25 cars that is by appointment only **Please Call First and talk to one of our reps at 231-468-2809 EXT 1 **

Chevrolet Apache Buyer's Guide

Full guide
R
Robert Halloran
Classic Trucks
1958–1961
~3 min read
Updated Apr 2026
The Chevrolet Apache was the marketing name for the light-duty Chevy pickup from 1958 to 1961 — four short years that produced some of the most beautiful American truck designs ever made, with clean styling that has only appreciated with time.
This guide covers
8-point inspection checklist
Common issues & what to avoid
In-person inspection guide
Market pricing by year & condition
4 FAQs answered
History & fun facts

Chevrolet Apache Market Overview

Based on 25 Chevrolet Apache listings currently on ClassicCarsArena.com

25
Listed Now
$40,751
Avg. Asking Price
1955–1961
Year Range
Price Position on Our Site — Below Average
This car: $14,695
Low: $8,495 High: $105,995
Transmission Distribution
Automatic 52% ◄
Manual 36%
Condition Distribution
Excellent 4%
Good 4%
Fair 4%
Data from ClassicCarsArena.com listings Browse all 25 listings →
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Chevrolet Apache Buyer's Guide

Robert Halloran here. The Apache gets overshadowed by the 1967–1972 trucks in the classic Chevy truck conversation, but that's a market misjudgment rather than an aesthetic one. The 1958–1961 Apache — the light-duty designation in Chevy's "Task Force" naming scheme — is among the best-proportioned American trucks ever built. The dual headlights, the clean hood, the balanced cab and bed relationship: these are trucks that look right from every angle.

The Apache name specifically covered the half-ton and three-quarter-ton Task Force trucks in 1958–1961. Before 1958, Chevy used a different naming system; after 1961, they dropped the Apache/Viking/Spartan marketing names and went back to the standard C/K designation. That four-year window produced a unique truck with its own devoted following.

What to Check Before Buying

Cab Corner Rust — Probe cab corners thoroughly — nearly universal on untreated trucks, expensive to repair correctly.
Floor Pan Condition — Inspect from underneath and inside for perforation.
Running Boards (Stepside) — On Stepside trucks, check running board support brackets for rust-through.
Fleetside Bed Panels — On Fleetside trucks, inspect smooth bed sides for dents — flat panel repair is expensive.
Engine Condition — Test 283ci V8 for oil consumption and smooth idle — a cold-start blue smoke test covers both.
Drivetrain Verification — Confirm engine type and transmission match via build tag for accurate valuation.
Cameo Bed (if applicable) — On claimed Cameo trucks, verify fiberglass bed authenticity and inspect for cracks at mounting points.
4WD Engagement — On 4WD trucks, test both 4-high and 4-low engagement — smooth operation with no grinding.

Common Issues

Cab corner rust is universal on untreated examples — budget for repair or accept patched corners. Floor pan perforation. Stepside running board bracket corrosion. 235ci inline-six oil consumption from worn valve seals on unrestored examples. Hydra-Matic fluid leaks. Fleetside bed panel dents from working use. Cameo fiberglass bed cracks at mounting points.

What to Look For

Rust inspection is the top priority: cab corners (extremely common), floor pans, and the lower rear cab area where the cab meets the bed. On Stepside trucks, inspect the running board support brackets for rust perforation. On Fleetside trucks, check the smooth bed sides carefully — dents in the flat panels are expensive to repair. Verify the small-block 283 runs cleanly without excessive oil consumption. On claimed Cameo variants, verify the fiberglass bed is original and complete.

Price Guide

1958–1961 Apache Stepside six-cylinder: $14,000–$28,000. Apache Stepside V8: $22,000–$45,000. Apache Fleetside: $12,000–$24,000 (slight discount to Stepside). 4WD Apache variants: $22,000–$50,000+. 1958 Cameo Carrier: $35,000–$75,000 for genuine documented examples. Rust-free Sun Belt trucks command a 20–35% premium.

Did You Know?

The Apache name was part of Chevrolet's 1958 marketing scheme using Native American names for different truck classes: Apache (light duty), Viking (medium duty), and Spartan (heavy duty). The naming was dropped after 1961 but the Apache name has outlasted the others in collector memory. The 1955–1959 Chevrolet trucks are often called "Advance Design" or "Task Force" trucks interchangeably — "Task Force" was Chevy's marketing name; "Apache" was the subdesignation applied in 1958–1961.

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