Billy Joe "Red" McCombs, who built his Texas dealership empire from a pair of used-car stores in Corpus Christi, died Sunday. He was 95.
McCombs' business enterprises spanned from real estate to ranching, professional sports to energy. But it was his start in automotive retail that launched what would become McCombs Enterprises, the umbrella company serving all of his businesses.
"I built a business empire working out of an office at a car dealership," he told Automotive News in a 2011 profile.
McCombs was born Oct. 19, 1927, in Spur, Texas. He played football as a student at Southwestern University in Texas — where he later would serve on the board of trustees — and entered the military before dropping out of law school at the University of Texas in 1950.
McCombs then got his automotive start at a Ford dealership in Corpus Christi. He excelled as a new-car salesman but moved into used-car sales when, as he told Automotive News, he saw a salary chart showing he earned less than the store's lowest-paid used-vehicle sales employee. He would go on to open two used-vehicle lots in Corpus Christi, later adding a dealership selling the ill-fated Ford Edsel, before moving to San Antonio to help turn around a struggling Ford dealership there.