Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

At 83, Indiana man still fixing foreign vehicles after 51 years

- By Carson Gerber

KOKOMO, Ind. — Dick Bougher remembers when the local Chrysler plants had large signs in the parking lots banning foreign cars from entering. He remembers when people would sometimes flip over a Volkswagen if they saw it parked downtown.

And that’s right at the time when he decided to open a foreign-car repair shop in Kokomo.

Bougher opened the shop June 2, 1970, with his partner, Walter Balg, a native of Germany who once was held in a prisoner of war camp in the U.S. during World War II.

Fast forward to today, and the Indiana man is still fixing vehicles at Dick and Walt’s Foreign Car Repair, located in a former filling station.

And after 51 years in business, he has no plans to stop.

“The ambulance will have to pull up in front here and pick me up,” Bougher, 83, said.

These days, it’s more likely to see a Toyota or Honda driving in Kokomo than a Chrysler.

The small, two-bay garage still has the old tire racks attached to the wall from when it was a gas station. Bougher still uses one of the same lifts he had installed 51 years ago, along with the machine he uses to clean and test spark plugs.

An old vending machine in the waiting area sells Coke in a glass bottle for 50 cents, but his longtime customers know where he hides the key and can get a free one anytime they want.

“Most of the people now aren’t just customers,” Bougher said. “They’re friends. I know their kids and their background­s and if a daughter in-law had a baby.”

Over the last half-century, Bougher has become a fixture in the local auto repair community known for his top-notch work, laidback philosophy and nevermet-a-stranger personalit­y.

But when he opened the shop in 1970, foreigncar repair was still in its infancy and a potentiall­y risky venture.

Bougher figured if anyone could pull it off, it was him and Balg.

After all, Balg was German and had experience working on Volkswagen­s, and Bougher learned how to fix the engines when he was stationed in Germany on an Air Force base that used Volkswagen trucks.

After that, they both ended up working at Kokomotors, the Volkswagen­s dealership in town that was the only foreign car company in Kokomo at the time. That’s were the two met and became friends.

When workers there went on strike for weeks in an effort to unionize, Bougher and Balg decided to leave and start their own shop.

The two saw that a filling station was up for sale, so they moved in and opened up the shop.

Bougher said during the early days of the business, they serviced almost exclusivel­y Volkswagen­s, since those were the only foreign cars in town.

It didn’t take long for Hondas and Toyotas to start appearing on the roadways, and soon they were fixing those too.

Then came Nissans, BMWs, Mercedes and every other major foreign car brand.

Before long, the shop was humming with business.

In 1990, Balg retired from the shop, but Bougher wasn’t ready to quit. He bought out his partner’s share and kept the business going.

“I never did change the name,” he said. “That just confuses people when you do stuff like that.”

In all that time, Bougher never had any aspiration­s to expand or grow the business.

It made enough money to pay the bills, support his family and he liked it just the way it was.

“If you got twice the bays, you’ve got twice the headaches,” he said. “It’s about KISS: Keep it simple, stupid. The bigger you are, the more money you make. But how much money do you need? I gave up trying to be a millionair­e years ago.”

 ?? KELLY LAFFERTY GERBER/THE KOKOMO TRIBUNE ?? Dick Bougher has spent over 51 years at his auto repair shop in Indiana.
KELLY LAFFERTY GERBER/THE KOKOMO TRIBUNE Dick Bougher has spent over 51 years at his auto repair shop in Indiana.

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