If a Plymouth rots in the forest and no one sees it does that mean its not there? I think there could be some percentage that are owned by people by people not active in the hobby enough to report their existance. There could be some be out there sitting in a desert behind a barn or silently rotting here in the North East. It is a shame to think that they may be junked/crushed for a variety of reasons without anyone ever knowing. To the average person none of these cars (well maybe the Fury's) will ever be worth restoring from a financial standpoint. Heck, until I stumbled on this list I thought that I probably owned one of the LAST 56 Plymouth's in New York. A LOT of people remembered the car and a few said they even owned one at one time but I at that time I had never seen another one either driving or parked. (Never saw a 56 Dodge either). That is the very reason I held on to them. Anyone can do a Chevy it takes real dedication (frustration?) to restore a 50's MOPAR. I don't have to tell anyone in this group about wandering around swap meets for hours and coming up empty handed on 50's MOPAR parts. I guess it comes back around to Dave for starting this board, maintaining it and keeping it running. I suspect a lot of cars owe their continued existence to Dave and the information that is shared by this group.
----Original Message Follows---- From: "Bill K." <pontiac@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> Reply-To: "Bill K." <pontiac@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> To: L-FORWARDLOOK@xxxxxxxxxxxxx Subject: Re: [FWDLK] 1959 New Yorker convertibles - How Many Left? Date: Tue, 18 May 2004 03:09:06 -0400 Doesn't matter. Cars migrate, people migrate. What's more, for "more sold" I can go to one yard in particular and GM or Ford stuff far outnumbers MoPar - although a good number of decklids all carry dealer markings, and virtually all of them are local to the region. With exception of the '61 Chrysler 4dr with a 1969 Florida inspection sticker and even the plate still on it; there could be others as well I'm not yet aware of. There are a lot of variables out there. But the point is that if you assume there are 114 '59 New Yorker convertibles in existance (40%), that is a very small number of cars with a very. very large area for them to be hidden away in. It is IMPOSSIBLE to say with certainty that every example has been located and is known of. Until 6 months ago, I didn't pay much attention at all to the MoPar stuff - I knew where some of it was, I even knew about the 60 New Yorker wagons having seen them once before about 4 years ago. But no one else did until now. Sure, the number as an overall percentage for each year goes down all the time. People still scrap them, and some are so bad they're not good for much else. I know of a huge collection of decent cars and unless someone has about 2 million they don't need, to buy the place out, probably 90% of them will be crushed this fall or next. You folks on this list are in luck, because as soon as I can get in there I'll be documenting stuff and anything Forward Look will be posted here. The people who own this are just too damn lazy to bother to do the same thing... their loss is my gain. How many more of those exist still? I'm sure they're not everywhere, but I am sure there are others. Bill K. ----- Original Message ----- From: "Dave Casey" <dcasey@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> To: <L-FORWARDLOOK@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> Sent: Tuesday, May 18, 2004 1:16 AM Subject: Re: [FWDLK] 1959 New Yorker convertibles - How Many Left?
_________________________________________________________________ Express yourself with the new version of MSN Messenger! Download today - it's FREE! http://messenger.msn.click-url.com/go/onm00200471ave/direct/01/ |