One particular '55 Sedan that I saw in a clip on T.V. no longer had any of its front ornamentation, except the remains of both broken grille halves. There were two wooden planks for a front and rear bumper. The Hemi was gone in favor of some unrecognizable six cylinder job. The seats had apparently fallen apart and were replaced with parts of old church pews. The original fenders were gone from the side chrome molding (amazingly still there!) down, with sheet metal crudely riveted and cut out at the wheels with mud flaps to replace what had apparently rotted away years before. This pathetic remnant was STILL on the road.
Cuba is a poor country that was left with a bunch of American automobiles to maintain with no resources or parts to do so. Nothing could be thrown away since it couldn't be replaced. Consequently, odd combinations of everything exist down there. I think the last time you would have found any worthwhile Imperials in Cuba would have been about 45 years ago.
Paul W. -----Original Message----- From: stephen844@xxxxxxxx To: mailing-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx Sent: Sun, 18 Feb 2007 10:55 AM Subject: Re: IML: Car Find--What about Cuba?Cuba is filled with antique American cars too. One has to wonder how many Imperials are over there hidden away? This will be a treasure trove that will open up after the death of Castro.
Steve Restelli Webmaster, HistoryTV.net, BarreCity.net http://historytv.net http://barrecity.net ________________________________________________________________________Check out the new AOL. Most comprehensive set of free safety and security tools, free access to millions of high-quality videos from across the web, free AOL Mail and more.
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