I owned a '67 Belvedere I six-passenger wagon that was converted to a funeral car in Antwerp, Belgium in 1967. It was one of two that were ordered by brothers that owned a funeral home in Brussels, and a third that was sent to a mortuary in Sweden. All were 225/3-speed manuals. All were ordered with HEMI torsion bars, XHD rear springs, 3.55:1 8-3/4 rears, 11" drums, manual steering and brakes, clock, heater, carpeting, and all had the radio delete plate. All were black with blue interiors. I still have the build sheet off my car. I bought the car in Belgium in 1990, and got the car pretty much done while I was there. I was quite fortunate to have a large garage in Germany, which is unheard of! The guy I bought the car from in Belgium had converted the interior to that out of a 1985 Diplomat, so it had the "whorehouse red" velour seats and the steering column from that car, as well as the later engine and automatic transmission, plus the fronts were converted over to discs. I drove the car in Germany as my sorta-daily driver for nearly two years before shipping the car to Houston upon my return to the US. I then drove the car back to OKC on a leap of faith...it ran and drove great!
Before I shipped the car back, I returned the interior back to the stock seats (the seller kept those intact, thankfully!), and got the door panels, steering column, and other bits off a '66 Coronet 500 four-door in Oklahoma shipped to Germany so I could finish the interior off before shipment.
I kept the car until 1998, when I traded the car off to a guy for a complete paint job on a '67 GMC Suburban I was restoring. By this time, I had installed a 360 auto out of a '73 Fury III and had started on the minor body work the car needed. It had a whopping 41K kilometers on it when I sold it - about 25,500 real miles. The 200 km/h factory speedometer would throw people for a loop at shows, for certain!
I have photos of it that I'll have to scan in order to post, but I'll get to that later.