You have some interesting and probably useful elements there. One thing (and there usually twenty things) that might be a problem requiring some pondering time is that it would appear that the power amp chassis is only about an inch deep. If it's your intention to achieve a one-piece chassis that is your whole finished amp, it could be a problem mounting tone control pots within that chassis....because they might not physically fit There are small-body pots you could use.
Alternatively, it may suit your intended physical configuration to rework the preamp into your guitar-preamp and keep it in the separate chassis. That would seem like a way to go, you have 6 pots there. One goes away for the guitar input jack, which might leave you with vol-treb-bass-reverb-master......or vol-treb-middle-bass-reverb. The remote power supply plug arrangement is already there. That would give you more room to mess with the electronics and quite possibly you could leave the power amp almost unmolested.
What kind of cabinet are you envisioning placing this into? Combo? (one piece amp/speaker) Or head-and-speaker cab? A few times, I have found dead solid state amps that are all set up with tolex and speaker (which you might want to replace, but the baffle board is all set to go. Sometimes you can find a dead old Peavey amp for $25 with a handle and corners and grill cloth----all those things take time and money and skill to execute, way more than $25, believe me.
But then, such an amp carcass might not accomodate the depth of the power amp chassis you have.
In general, there are the electronic considerations and I agree with Sluckey that you want to get a schematic of the power amp and to rework the preamp into a Fender or Vox type of thing. If you can get the Motorola model number, I bet you can find the schematic somewhere on the net. Then there are the physical considerations. Unfortunately, you kind of have to think about all these things all at once and it's very common that one thing you want to do makes another thing impossible. It's also possible that the tube sockets (typically wafer-type) and not very good for something you want to move around and which will thus take some amount of physical shock now and then. Are you planning on having reverb in the amp? Got room for the reverb can?
You certainly have a good candidate and some promising 12AX7s and transformers.