Showing posts with label neglected. Show all posts
Showing posts with label neglected. Show all posts
Great photo of a neglected passenger car from the Pennsylvania line
Found on http://www.jalopyjournal.com/forum/showthread.php?t=428585&page=1041
Just hanging out in backyards and fields
Above 1928 Fiat Above 1929 PackardFound on http://www.jalopyjournal.com/forum/showthread.php?t=428585&page=1041
Somebody got bored with their Rolls Centurion (half million dollars), kicked it to the gutter. Like I've said before, rich people are stupid
Notice that this is the same car below, same licence plates. from http://autozine.com.br/fotos/rolls-royce-abandonado#more-4460
discovery of a forgotten junkyard... on the Nature Conservatory property
read about it http://www.junkyardlife.com/2010/08/junkyard-crawling-in-wisconsin.html
In the woods of Maine are the neglected remains of two locomotives
The Eagle Lake and West Branch (ELWB) Railroad Locomotive #1, was built in June 1897 at Schenectady Locomotive Works (4-6-0 stamped #4552), it was originally a steam locomotive but later converted to burn crude oil to eliminate the forest fire threat caused by cinders. Number 1 was purchased by Great Northern in 1926 and used to haul pulpwood in the Allagash area from 1927-1933.ELWB Locomotive
Update on the Portugese barn find collection that shocked everyone a couple years ago, full story and list of cars
Feb 2007 was when 58 photos and a description of a barn with steel doors welded shut was opened for the first time in decades and this collection was found. Well, the story was all made up... but a journalist finally went to get to the truth of the matter in 2009, and new photos as well as a complete inventory are after the linkhttp://www.hagerty.com/Hagerty-Online/News/Features/All-articles/
Hear that screaming? Hear the cry of outrage? Yup, they just looked at this GT500 Shelby Mustang Cobra on a junkyard heap of junk cars. The point is
that this should get us fired up, like when Car Craft once had a photo of a Camaro that was being eaten by the jungle slowly... and the submission was accompanied by the phrase "we lost one, but let it be remembered by saving others" (Adam Rosenbaum, Portland Maine) from http://www.jalopyjournal.com/forum/showthread.php?t=428585&page=561it reminded me ofthat I posted a couple years ago http://
Cars make great fertilizer, who says you can't love jalopies and be a tree hugger? Your jalopy is a tree hugger! Here's picture proof
My cool meter pegged when I saw this old late 20's early 30's bus. A dodge from http://66.154.44.164/forum/showthread.php?t=330573&page=66
Less than 2 dozen Davis cars were made, one ended up neglected in a side yard
read about them: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Davis_Motor_Car from http://www.jalopyjournal.com/forum/showthread.php?t=428585&page=477
What happened to bury this 1950 VW 213 van will always be a mystery, but someone with a shovel and determination is restoring it!
I think the word BURIED describes it accurately full gallery and story : http://www.ssvc.org.uk/phpbb/viewtopic.php?t=35155 thanks to Chris who read all the 61 pages of thread, and summarized the story for us how the bus got buried: In a nutshell, a guy had his kid bury it in the late ’50s or early ’60s so they could have a hunting shack in the woods. The guy who found it also found the ‘kid’
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