Anxiety in Detroit Over a Prized Car Trove
Anxiety in Detroit Over a Prized Car Trove
Detroit could be forced to sell a collection of classic cars. The Detroit Historical Society manages the collection.
By JACLYN TROP and BILL VLASIC
Published: June 19, 2013
DETROIT As this debt-ridden city lurches toward a possible bankruptcy filing, residents and workers have been locked in a grim faceoff with creditors over how to preserve what remains of their services and benefits. ... Contributing to the municipal anxiety is the possibility that some of the citys cultural treasures could be sold off, including masterpieces in the Detroit Institute of Arts and the Belle Isle park in the Detroit River.
But there is another Detroit family jewel in question that is largely unknown outside the automobile world and to some people even more treasured a collection of 62 lovingly maintained classic cars donated to the city since the 1950s by civic-minded families seeking to preserve the Motor in Motor City.
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Just as art patrons are resisting selling van Goghs and Matisses to satisfy Detroits debt, car lovers are pushing back at the possibility of losing what they regard as the citys historic industrial heart and soul including a Cadillac Osceola that dates to 1905, and a vintage Ford Mustang worth an estimated $2 million.
The cars stand for us, the expression of the thousands of people working hard to produce the birthright of America, said Jerry Herron, a Detroit historian and dean of the Irvin D. Reid Honors College at Wayne State University. It would be a sad day for Detroit and for America.
$2 million for a Mustang? Only if the rocker panels are full of heroin.