According To You: The One That Got Away
Hagerty loves stories about cars almost as much as they love the actual cars and trucks themselves. From a member story of a vehicle passed down from generation to generation, to the famous Ford-powered race car that beat Ferrari, there are fantastic stories in every corner of our hobby.
Recently, though, we wondered about the tales that could have been, particularly in the form of cars that got away. We asked members of the Hagerty Community for their thoughts on the matter. And yet again, you folks did not disappoint.
Hertz, don’t it?
@JJC: Early 1967, local Ford dealer had five Hertz GT350’s for sale $3500.00 each. I was in the process of buying a new Camaro L30/M21 at the time for a few hundred bucks less. I couldn’t see the logic in paying more money for a “used” car. Bad investment decision, but I did love the Camaro, wish I still had it. Ah well…
@Squier: In the late 60’s one of my salesmen was driving a Hertz Shelby 350H, black with gold stripes, stick (one of about 90 sticks—before they switched to automatics) as his daily driver. He grew tired of the stick and decided to sell it. I had driven it several times so he offered it to me for $2,500. I had a young family and no place to park it so I reluctantly decided to pass. I kick myself regularly and have a picture of that car as my screen saver on my phone.
No Slacking at Swap Meets?
@Mike: A 1972 Karmann Ghia Convertible at the opening of the Iola Old Car weekend in WI about six years ago. Just entered the swap area and this very nice car was up for $6500. I had the cash on me. I walked past after inspecting it and went to the loo telling the owner I would return. When I came back he just took a fat stack from the lucky buyer. Car was worth at least double…
Take Action at the Impound Auction
@David: Had a tip on a ’69 Camaro Z/28 at a city impound auction back around 1985. It was a mess; heads and intake were missing too. It was winter; cold and muddy but I brought a stack of bills. When the auction came to the car the auctioneer passed on to the next vehicle. I interrupted to ask about the Z and the auctioneer said it was already sold. Guess I never really had a chance!
Passed On Perfection?
@Wade: While renting a house and already having too many non-essential vehicles almost 11 years ago, I picked up my still-going commuter car (2005 Civic EX) for $5300. Approximately one week after that purchase, I found in my town a solid blue 1976 Chevy K5 Blazer, on the front lawn of the original owner.
Asking price was $6500 OBO and it checked every box of desirability for me: original condition (zero visible modifications), single ownership, “never seen snow, always garaged” (this was in Maine), 4×4, 350, 4-speed, white removable top, etc. Everything I could lay eyes on was legitimately near-perfect (…or perfect), down to the USA-1 plate on the front bumper. For many reasons, this truck was not an option for me at the time. Yes, I took pictures and yes, I review them occasionally and of course, I hate myself a little more every time. Still the most ridiculously clean K5 Blazer I’ve seen, for sale or otherwise.
I called the land line number scrawled on the cardboard in the window a little over a year later while in a better position but ignoring the impossibility of this thing not having sold in 2013. It was gone, naturally, and I’ve never seen it around.
Appreciate Before It Appreciated
@MtnCamantalope: During my first year of community college, strolling across the parking lot at the end of the day I saw a beautiful red NSX parked crooked all by itself in the back of the lot. I’d never seen one in person before and man, that thing was awesome. I went home and started searching for one of my own. Decent shape they were running $10-12k, $15k for a really nice one. I could have made it work, but it would have been my daily driver. I decided it would be irresponsible and I’d probably crash it anyway (definitely true). I said to myself “wait a few years so you can more comfortably afford one.” Yeah…
Intercepted By Your Bank Account
@TG: A Jensen Interceptor III. My local fairgrounds holds an annual swap meet, and I saw it there—running but not perfect—for 10K. I had never seen one or heard of them before, but I loved it… the ultimate sleeper car. Unfortunately I did not have 10K in discretionary capital at the time and had to pass. I have seen very few since, and none in running condition anywhere close to that price.
Don’t Judge Me
@MeJ: I guess mine was a ’69 GTO Judge. It was the 1990s and I owned an ’80 Corvette. I saw the Judge and inquired about a trade. The guy said the car had been there for a while and said it was doable. I thought, “Okay, I’ll be smart and think it through the weekend.” Sure enough, I decided it was a good deal, and a much more collectable car. I drove out ready to make the deal and—drum roll please—of course, it was sold.
@James: While traveling as an auditor in the late 90’s for a major bank that financed car dealerships, I would always drive by this body shop that had a 1971 Pontiac GTO convertible for sale in their lot for a few thousand dollars. I said, one day I’ll stop in and buy that vehicle. Then the department was sold and so went my job. I never saw that vehicle again. I also never knew that GM only made 17 of that model. Dohhhhh!
Don’t Check Facebook on Vacation?
@Bernard: This one wasn’t too long ago, on FB marketplace a few hundred miles from me, a pristine 2002 Miata with the LSD and the bigger of the available bodykits, unfortunately I only saw it due to being on vacation. By the time I could talk to my bank about getting the money it was in the wind.
The $5,100 AC Cobra
@Danny: It was 1987 I was coming home from a golf tournament through Pine Hurst N.C. I saw a sign for 1966 Cobra for sale for $5000. I stopped, looked, and it was an AC Cobra. The man would not take a deposit. I was an hour away from home had to get a trailer and come back to get it, and he said that would be ok.
When I pulled back into his driveway another person was loading it up on another trailer. He had offered him $100 more. I was mad and disappointed but what can you do? He showed me another car he had beside his garage he said he would take $500 for it. It had a rusty floor board and I had no desire for that rust bucket. Would love to have it now because it was a 1955 Porsche 356. Live and learn.
But They’d Rather Crush It
@BMD4800: Mid-1996, I was a poor college kid in Phoenix. Desert Valley Auto Parts was clearing out their less popular inventory and had them in line for the crusher. I spotted a ’63 Wildcat coupe with right quarter damage behind the door. I asked about it, the counter guy said it ran and drove, but no one wanted it so they were going to crush it. I asked the price, $2,200. All the cash I had to my name was $1,900. I offered $1,800. They said no. I offered $1,900 cash, they said no. I said I’ll go apply for a credit card and pay $2,200. Nope. Cash, or it was crushed. I watched them crush that car and swore I would tell everyone I could about that day: Desert Valley Auto Parts in Phoenix.
A “Minor” Problem With A Unimog
@Jeff: Around 20 years ago I had a handshake deal on a 1961 Unimog 404 Swiss Troop Carrier with only 14,000 KM. It was in excellent condition, including all the canvas. It even had the original tool kit with it (tools as in shovel, axe, etc). I was soon to purchase a 40 acre parcel of land where it would have been very handy. The seller had it priced at $7500. I told him I wanted it, but needed to arrange financing. We shook on it and a deposit was not needed (my mistake).
A few days later when I had the money and I contacted the seller, he told me that he had someone come by with cash and due to the urging of his wife, he sold it to that guy instead of waiting for me. I saw the same Unimog listed at a dealership a few weeks later for $17,500. So what did I do with the cash earmarked for the Unimog, I bought another vehicle of the same vintage but of the opposite variety, a 1961 Morris Minor.
“No Way”
@Brett: I know most will say “no way”, but when I was 12-13 and visiting my uncle outside Cleveland, my dad and uncle would go golfing. My cousin and I would go along and search for lost golf balls to sell later. On the ride to the golf course, I saw a car in a field on a trailer and I told my dad that it was Ferrari. My dad and uncle blew me off but on the drive back I made them stop.
I waded back through the weeds and there was a ratty looking faded red car on trailer with a roll cage an grooves cut in the hood that you could see the velocity stacks sticking up from the V-12. I was now convinced it was a Ferrari. My cousin and I knocked on the door to the house closest to it, and a lady came to the door with a couple small kids around her, we asked if the car was for sale. She said her husband generally never sells anything, and that was it.
About 10 years ago I saw an article about Innes Ireland being reunited with the Ferrari 250 GTO he raced back in the day with pictures of a faded red car, in a field, on a trailer, in a field of weeds, in a rural area outside Cleveland. Needless to say, the memories all rushed back, as there was the car. The one that got away. Go Google the article for Innes Ireland 250 GTO, it is a great read and some of the ones that come up have old pictures of the car.
@Gary: In 1984, I was offered a very nice Ferrari 250 convertible (I don’t recall which version) for $25,000. I had just started working full time and had just bought a house and it didn’t seem to be a prudent decision to buy a Ferrari. The seller was even willing to take monthly payments over three or four years with no interest added. By 1989, that car was worth more than $500,000 (to my recollection). Clearly I didn’t make the right decision. Nowadays it would probably cost nearly $25,000 to rent one of these for a day!
@Harry: Early ’70s, needed a car to drive 35 miles to work and back. Wound up in a Renault agency in West Chester PA, looking at R5 Le Cars. The manager had a car on consignment for $10K—a Ferrari Fantuzzi Special, V-12 red, beautiful, but it had no top—built as a spyder. I couldn’t see parking it in the street at work every day, rain or shine, so wound up with new Le Car. It was a bunch of fun to drive, but it certainly wasn’t a Ferrari.
Come Back, ‘Cuda!
@Ed: It hurts just to think about this car even today, though I lost it back in the mid 80s. It was a crushing blow that just gets deeper each year I see prices for just a rolling chassis of this car continue to climb.
I bought mine from the original owner for about $600. It was dark blue in and out, a 318 2 bbl auto, bucket seats with console, and only 1 dent under the driver’s side rear frame channel. It drove fine for about 3 yrs, then wouldn’t start and I couldn’t get inspection to renew plates. Then my apartment complex made me move it, I so moved it to my dad’s house. Then a neighbor called local city on it for not being currently licensed. There was no place found to store it, it was almost impounded, so I had to let it go to a junk yard for $50!
Now the kicker: it was a base example of my dream car…. a ’71 Barracuda with a perfect grille & straight sheet metal. Still got the production code sheet from the back seat. I need a stiff drink and tissue paper now.
***
Check out the Hagerty Media homepage so you don’t miss a single story, or better yet, bookmark it. To get our best stories delivered right to your inbox, subscribe to our newsletters.
My list is long. Back in the early 80’s most cars that we love today were just used cars. Saw a ’70 El Camino SS on a used car lot in 1980. They wanted somewhere between $2500 and $3500. Kind of pricey for ten years old but it looked good. Couldn’t afford. Missed out on a ’69 Firebird Sprint with 4bbl OHC 6 and 4 speed for pretty cheap. Unfortunately a winter storm came in that January weekend and the car was too far away so I passed.
Mine was in 1973; a 1966 XKE coupe for $2,400. Red with black leather interior. I had to wait a week for another offer to expire. I bought a 69 Riviera instead of waiting to see if the other guy came up with the money. He didn’t but I couldn’t afford it then because I had already spent my money.
There was the time I could have bought a Buick GNX at $45k, 22+ years ago but I could only afford one car at the time. I’m not sad as I did get one car I wanted.
Stopped to see yellow ’69 De Tomaso Mangusta sitting in a used car lot back in the early 80’s in a border town on the U.S. side. $20K but I’d have to drive it back to Chicago and find a place to keep it. Sadly had to pass.
Then a couple years later there was the nicely aged silver Mercedes 300SL Gullwing at a Shelby Meet. Guy said he wouldn’t let it go for under $60K. Again where to keep it…
I live in Michigan and in 1962 as a family we drove cross country to visit friends in laguna beach California in a 1960 Chevy station wagon. I fell in love with surfing and the whole surfer culture. While there we visited a distant cousin and their son had a blue 1940 ford “woodie” that he was working on. Instant love for that woodie. I was already into cars and that one really blew me away. Fast forward to 1963 and I’m riding my bike in a neighborhood that I’d never been before. I passed a house and saw a garage with French doors with windows at the top. What?…..looked like the top to a woodie! I don’t know how I even saw it. I rode up the short driveway and knocked on the back door. A man answered and I asked about the car. It was for sale and he was only asking $200!! I rode home and later brought my dad back to see the car. It was maroon and in really good condition. The only funny or strange problem with the car was the fact that the right rear corner of the wood was split near the roof line and there was a flat mushroom, fungus growing out of it!! Maybe 4 or 5 inches wide and flat like you’d see growing out of a dead log. It didn’t matter to me I wanted THAT woodie! I’m not sure exactly but I believe it was a 1946 mercury or ford. I was 15 and was getting close to driving. Well, dad wasn’t going to go for that and that was the end of that dream. In hindsight I realize that it wasn’t practical, I wasn’t driving we had no place to store it it need restoration etc. But DAMN even then as a kid I knew it was a steal! Still hurts to this day. Later owned 2 ‘57 chevys, ‘62 Chevy Impala and another dumb mistake sold my ‘67 corvette in ‘72 for $2,500! Ok money for then but now ooooh crap! But ooooh that woodie!!
Wish I would have seen your request for stories earlier because I have one that will make Corvette owners faint. Back in 1973 when I was just married I was looking for a cheap second car to drive back and forth to work, I saw an ad in the paper for a 1954 Chevy for $500. Thought that would be cool as that is the year I was born so I went to look it over. A very gentile old lady came to the door and I asked her about the car. She said her husband bought it brand new but passed away from a heart attack about 7 or 8 months later that year. Since she didn’t have any kids she just paid some one to store it as it had sentimental value and she didn’t drive. We went to the garage it was stored in and uncovered a 1954 Corvette with 2600 miles on it under cover and stored very well. I couldn’t believe my eyes. Not having the cash at the moment I offered her $150 to not sell sell it for a couple of days. No deal so I went to try to find the money QUICKLY! Family wouldn’t loan it to me, My wife worked with a fellow named Gene Marquez. He was the owner of of the two 55 Corvette SR2’s. (a very interesting story in it’s self and can be found by searching the article in Super Chevy magazine) He found and resurrected it from a junk yard in our home town Terre Haute IN. I told him what I found and asked him if he would spot me the $500. The first thing he asked was where is it at? I said if he loaned me the money I would take him there. He wouldn’t do it and I had to give up on the car. Never did find out who bought it and needless to say I never saw the car again.
In May 0f 1971 I bought a white 1968 AMX 390 with a 4 speed and the “Go Package”.
In October of 1971 I found a white 1964 Vette with a red interior for $2,500.00. I did not get it but
wish I had it. (No place to keep it)
Back in the day , I was looking to buy a car. Travels took me to an AMC dealer who was going out of business. His inventory was low but he said he wanted to show me sometime. He took me to a building that was mostly empty except for a car sitting in a corner. It was dark and I couldn’t make the car out until I got very close to it. It was a brand new AMX ! It was painted in flag colors, red, white and blue.
In 1977 I bought a mint 18,000 mile 1969 Porsche 911E Targa for $5000. It even had the rare factory air. The car was great fun, but a couple of years later (and much maintenance) I decided to go for a new Datsun 280ZX. I was thrilled when I sold the 911E for what I paid for it.
I acquired several rare high performance Fords in my life (and still have most of them). But there were TWO that I let get away, much to my dismay. On the same day in the early seventies I was offered both a GT-40 and a Daytona Coupe. I was young and screwed up. I looked at both and said that there was no way I could drive a GT-40 on the street because of poor visibility. And regarding the Daytona Coupe, I said “that doesn’t look like a real Cobra” so I turned it down also. Really bad mistake.
I put a down payment on a 69 nicky camaro at a car show in Seattle, 4000 bucks was the price. it ran a 10.36 in the quarter. I was supposed to pick it up the next week. I was giving a picture of it with the phone number to call, it was in Kirkland somewhere. my girlfriend left me that week and took the picture. I had no way of getting ahold of the guy. that’s big time regret. at the time I had no idea what a nicky camaro was so I figured it’s got that aftermarket all aluminum engine and probably won’t be worth anything in the long run so gave up trying to find it. lost my $200.00 deposit. have had hundreds of cars,buick gs also shouldn’t of sold that one would fry the tires forever.
I’ll start with the time when I had just signed up to go in the NAVY. It was a delayed enlistment so I had to get a short term job, driving my dad’s T-Bird to work one day and saw a 61 Corvette roadster, white with red cove and red interior, on a lawn. He wanted $1000.00 for it and I had almost made up my mind to grab it, but my dad wouldn’t co-sign for a “Convertible”. I ended up with a 1956 Mercury, which my Mom blew up while I was away serving my country.
The next one was in a used car dealer’s lot, a Shelby GT350H with the motorless front end raised up. The rest of the car looked perfect, and I figured I could get a 289 and swap it in. I went to the bank to get the $4000.00 he put on the window. but it was gone by the time I got back.
Next one was the 1973 TransAm SD I saw in a dealership that I lusted after but couldn’t afford yet. By the time my finances had improved in 1976, I bought a 1976 400 automatic which turned out to be a lump. My new wife had a hard time staying away from the garage door opening and stone walled driveways, and snowbanks in the winter. I was out of town for an extended business trip and while I was gone, she drove it around with the choke shut. Gasoline is not a good lubricant so by the time I got home, all the bearings were converted to little pieces of metal in the bottom of the pan. It still ran, but it made so much clanking I thought it would come apart.
I made up my mind that I would not buy a good car until I could get a collector car she couldn’t drive…mainly a stick shift.
Frank Sinatra Miura. Listed on eBay by a dealer in Nyack. NY. Custom built for Frank. He brought the Wild Boar skin to the factory for the seats. Unfortunately didn’t have funds back then. Googled it and I see it sold for 150k at Christie’s auction in NY in 2003. That is even less than the dealer in Nyack wanted from what I can remember. Today that’s 1-2 million…. Ugh.
When I just graduated high school, the local Mercedes Benz dealership (the owner was a friend of my parents) had two 300SL coupes for sale. One had a badly crushed tail and the other had a blown engine. He said I could have both for $3,500 to put together one good car. What high school kid in 1965 had $3,500? Wish I had borrowed the money somehow.
Not a big money mistake but I had a 1965 Lotus Cortina that I bought from Kirk White Ferrari in Philadelphia when I got out of college (It was the only thing on his lot I could afford). Great car but you couldn’t find parts for it as you would expect with something that had only 252 units imported. A couple of years later, It needed some work and I had an entry level job with corresponding pay and needed reliable transportation so I traded it in for $200.00 and have been kicking myself in he butt ever since.