My first sports car (and my second car of my own) was a 1959 MGA. I got it, used, in 1967 from a local dealer (not an MGA Dealer) in Columbia, SC.
The picture below is not "my" car but an almost exact copy/image of what it looked like.
It was a "new" thing for me. Notice the "hole" in the front bumper.... It was for a hand crank to start the engine if the batteries failed. I say batteries because, if I remember correctly, there were two batteries under the "seat" like thing just behind two front seats. They were, if I remember correctly, two six volt batteries wired in series.
Notice the "knock off hubs" on the wheels. They are what held the wheels on the car, no lug nuts. I was in the US Navy at ET School in Great Lakes when I was at my current girl friends house, getting ready to head back to the base when I noticed the left front knock "thing" was missing. I did not know what to do so, I decided to take a chance and I drove it back to the base. No issues. Don't remember where I got the 'new' to me knock off hub but I did and got it fixed.
Another event occurred in the summer of 1968 when the pulley on the generator failed. I was on a rural road somewhere in NC going to see my current girlfriend. It was late afternoon and I pulled to the side of the road and opened the hood to see what happened. The generator pulley failed. I was really worried and just stood there by my car. A gentlemen came by in his pickup truck, stopped and asked what my issue was. After our conversation, he tied something to my front fender and pulled me a few miles down the road to his house. It was a farm and he had a barn like building out front that he let me stay in for the night.
Next morning, he towed me, once more, to a local station/repair place and the fixed the issue. Not with a stock 1959 MGA generator pulley but with a pulley arrangement welded to the pulley mount. It worked until I sometime in the early 70's. I stopped using the MGA when I got married in 1969 (December ) and the wife and I purchased a new 1970 Ford Maverick. Oh, total coast for the generator pulley repair was $35.
Oh, just for the record, I drove my MGA from that date in 1967 until January of 1969. I made at least two round trips (maybe three, I forget) from GA to the Great Lakes Training Center and drove my MGA all over Illinois and Wisconsin while I was in training there.