the Flying Saucer Car Hop
           Route 20 on the Worcester/Millbury line, MA


Art print of the Flying Saucer Car Hop from an original watercolor painting by William B. MacGregor Jr, who is known in the New England area as the Junkyard Artist.
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If you were a fan of American Graffiti or Happy Days and lived in the Worcester area of Massachusetts then you might have gone to the Flying Saucer Car Hop. This was the place for cruising during the 50s & 60s on a Saturday night in your old hot rod. You would cruise from the Flying Saucer located on the Worcester/Millbury line on Route 20 to Speedy’s, and maybe the Blue Jay, in Sutton, MA. The local teens would be checking your car’s engine and maybe even challenging you to a race. The Flying Saucer was also a great family place well known for its crinkly cut fries served in red & white striped boxes. YUM! Everyone went there! One day, a group of Millbury high school seniors decided to skip school and meet at the Flying Saucer. Unknown to them, the principal and vice principal were waiting in the parking lot taking down names of all the truants! OOPS, Busted! The Flying Saucer was a quintessential 1950s and 1960s roadside car hop which sadly closed in the late 1970s.


     Watercolor art print of the Flying Saucer in Worcester, MA.

       Free shipping (USA only)


Art Print

       Art print is printed on Canson Fine Art-Photo Rag Paper or equivalent.

       Mounted in a beveled double mat.

       Matted Art Print is ready for a standard 8”x10”, 11”x14” or 16”x20” frame.

       Mat will be signed by the artist.

       Note: Mat size is the outside dimension. The double matted print will fit into a
standard frame that can be purchased at your local craft/department store.
No need for custom framing!
The image/print size is smaller than the size of the mat.


Magnet


Original Painting




William. B. MacGregor Jr. Watercolors the Junkyard Artist

William B. MacGregor, Jr. was born in Medfield, MA, the son and grandson of Norfolk Hunt Club kennel masters. Many of his family members were self taught artists, woodcarvers, automobile mechanics and veterans of foreign wars including his father a WW1 US Army veteran. Bill is a graduate of Medfield High School, Wentworth Institute, and Northeastern University. His engineering career, from which he is now retired, included working for military and aerospace companies in industrial engineering and IR optics. His painting incorporates “old skool” mechanical and civil drafting tools and he uses a mixed medium of watercolors, acrylics and inks. Two rabbits are often in quite a few of his paintings. Look for them. He is frequently commissioned by United States Naval officers to create paintings of their ships and aircraft carriers on nautical charts. In May,2018, and for one year, four of Bill’s automotive related paintings were on display at the Larz Anderson Auto Museum in Brookline, MA