There are people out there who would argue that a car is nothing
more than an outdoor appliance.
An oven with wheels.
A former college professor of mine was one of those people. Your
vacuum cleans things, your refrigerator cools things, and your car,
well it simply moves things. That’s what people like that old
professor say.
I — who will readily admit to not being as big a car buff as most
of the spectators who show up on Fort Street Saturday — argue the
point by saying this.
It’s what our cars "move" that matters. They move memories.
From that family wagon we remember as little kids to that first
pile of junk we owned after high school, they represent periods in
our life, their images loaded with the stories our lives tell.
Hey, getting from here to there is important, I’ll grant my old
prof that much. But sometimes, getting from here to there is half
the story, the part that we don’t see in scrapbooks but that lives
only in the memories of the people on board.
An appliance?
Try telling that to Tom and Diane Spiker of Riverview, who
emailed to tell me about a 1968 Camaro Rally Sport that Tom
purchased in 1968.
He nabbed it from Fred Hall Chevrolet in Flat Rock for $2,970.
Still has the sticker.
The Spikers would eventually take that car to Niagara Falls in
1971 on their honeymoon, and to Cedar Point later that year.
Tom raced it at the Detroit and Milan dragways, and by the late
1970s, decided to strip it down and restore it completely.
You might see the Spikers this weekend at the Cruise, and if you
do, know that riding in that car represents more to them than an
easy way to snag groceries. It rekindles memories of cruising places
like Trenton Big Boys and Southgate McDonald’s in the 1960s.
An appliance?
Try telling that to Suzanne Lees of Lincoln Park, who just in
February bought the 1982 Limited Edition Corvette for which she had
long hungered.
How many memories can she have built in just a few months? Truth
is, Lees’ boyfriend back in the early ‘80s owned the same car.
"I was really irritated that he owned one and I didn’t," Lees
remembers with a laugh. "I’ve wanted one of these since the day it
was manufactured. There’s not a thing on this car I don’t like."
Owning it is a dream fulfilled, hardly something you can say
about a steam cleaner. Because loaded in the trunk, under the hood,
inside the fabric of the seats and beneath the layer of newly
applied paint are stories that maybe only the owner knows.
Don’t tell Alice Bash of Lincoln Park otherwise.
In the 1960s while living in Pennsylvania, she and her husband
visited a family friend who had a brand new 1963 Studebaker Avanti.
They fell in love with it, even though it wasn’t theirs.
The owner had it stored away in a garage later in the decade, and
it sat there until he passed away more than 20 years later. The
garage once fell, landing on the car.
Upon the owner’s death, his estate was left to Bash’s family, and
the car was offered to the Lincoln Park-residents. They almost
declined it was in such rough shape.
But they accepted, had it tailored to Downriver, and spent the
next five years having it restored.
It’s become a life’s pride, a road-worthy relic that draws wide
eyes because of its rarity.
Have you ever said that about a toaster?
I could go on forever with stories like these after readers sent
numerous tales in response to Heritage’s classic car series
previewing the third annual Cruisin’ Downriver.
I could tell about Debbie Jenkins of Gibraltar and her 1969 427
Corvette, all original. Or Mark Prince’s restored 1972 Oldsmobile
442 W30, or Grace Nabazney’s 1971 Plymouth Satellite, or A.J.
Grebinski’s 1988 Mustang GT.
I could go on for hours.
Every vehicle has stories to tell, stories of high school kids
loading in and going to the drive-in theater (remember Fort
George?), college kids piling in and "road-tripping".
And whether you’re 60 years old and a car ignites memories of
cruising Fort Street, or you’re 20 years old a car reminds you of
that trip to Daytona, the thing carrying the memory is the same.
It’s the car you were in.
Let me put it this way: I remember the station wagon my parents
owned when I was five, my friend’s IROC we drove to Daytona Beach
when I was in high school, the Granada that became my first car
after college, and the Jeep my wife and I took camping with our
one-year-old son a few years ago.
I can tell you all kinds of details about all of those cars.
But for the life of me I can’t remember the brand of can opener I
have at home right now.