Showing posts with label antiques cars. Show all posts
Showing posts with label antiques cars. Show all posts

Monday, May 17, 2010

Since When Is A 1972 Impala "Antique?"

Another example of the disconnect people have when it comes to old things is this story, which appeared in a Chicago area newspaper recently:

"A man driving an antique Chevrolet with custom rims crashed it into a parked car when he was shot at a Gresham neighborhood intersection Sunday night on the South Side.

"At 8:55 p.m. the 29-year-old man was driving his 1972 Chevrolet Impala with 22-inch rims south on South Justine Avenue when the incident occurred, according to Gresham District police
."

Antique? Anyone actually on the copy desk these days?

Thursday, July 2, 2009

Antique Cars - And Their Owners - Not Doing Well On Modern Roadways


In the past, a convoy of antique cars whirring down the Interstate with their occupants waving to any and all who gave them the universal "thumbs up," was a quaint sight - a vestige of a long-gone period in our automotive history.

These days, however, as more people flood our highways in overpowered and overbuilt cars with power plants that would have left Henry Ford agape - an older car is merely an obstruction. Several have been hit in recent weeks, and their occupants killed.

A 62-year-old Bowie man and his 10-year-old daughter were killed Tuesday night in Howard County, Maryland when the antique car they were riding in was struck from behind and overturned on Interstate 70 near the Route 97 exit in Lisbon.

Witnesses told police that the man's Model A was travelling at about 50 mph when it was hit from behind and overturned. The car was in the slow lane and carried appropriate signage advising other motorists that it couldn't go as fast as they could.

It was the second fatal accident involving a vintage automobile in the area in less than a week. A week earlier, a 73-year-old Gambrills man was killed when his 1936 Ford was hit head-on on Defense Highway, police said.

It seems modern motorists may have higher expectations of older cars, expecting them to react as swiftly as their modern cousins. The disconnect is frightening. But it seems that modern society has somewhere to go and likes to get there at Warp speed.

Our condolences to the owners of these old treasures and to their families.