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This article taken verbatim from Plymouth 1946-1959
by Jim Benjaminson (Used by permission of Jim Benjaminson - Copyright ©1994) Please buy this book from Amazon.com by clicking here, or from Barnes And Noble.com by clicking here. |
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The Buried Belvedere
And what, exactly, will the lucky winner get when the car is unearthed in 2007? No one is really sure. Sitting on a steel skid, the white and gold car was wrapped in a cosmoline-like substance to help preserve it and then buried within a concrete bunker (The car was lowered into the vault several times prior to June 15 for photo shoots, one such photo ad appearing on page twenty-five of Life magazine's July 7 issue.) Twenty years after the cars burial, questions were raised as officials began to wonder if the vault would maintain its integrity for fifty years. Its location (marked by a bronze plaque on the courthouse lawn places it close to modern traffic. Buck Rudd, deputy chief of building operations for the county court house, mused in 1987, "There's a lot of traffic going by only 15 or 20ft from that thing. We've been curious to know it vibrations from the heavy traffic might have caused it to crack. If moisture starts getting in there, it's going to cause things to deteriorate over fifty years time," Rudd continued. Unknown to the committee - or anyone else then - 1957 Plymouths were terribly prone to rust. Asked what type of maintenance was done on the time capsule, Rudd replied, We just cut the grass on top of it."
The car's glove compartment contains two other interesting items: a parking ticket (unpaid!) and a bottle of tranquilizers. Depending an the Belvedere's condition, the tranquilizers may be the most important part of the package. |
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