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OT - Great Story (long)

To: <triumphs@autox.team.net>
Subject: OT - Great Story (long)
From: "Kurt" <koblinger@linkline.com>
Date: Wed, 7 Mar 2001 08:59:29 -0800
This is just one of those stories that you have to pass on. If you are a car 
enthusiast and have a pulse you have heard of the legendary Cobra Daytona 
Coupe. Pete Brock designed an aerodynamic coupe body for Carroll Shelby's 289 
Cobra to make it more competitive in international sports car racing. Only six 
cars were built and they won the 1965 Manufacturers Championship beating arch 
rival Ferrari. 

Well, back in the old days there was nothing less valuable than an old race car 
and the Daytonas were sold off after Shelby stopped racing. These cars were 
sold for anywhere from $4500 to $6500 between 1965 and 1967. Don't you wish you 
were smart enough to pick up one of those puppies back then?

The cars were mostly used as street cars by their new owners and changed hands 
several times over the years eventually ending up in the hands of collectors as 
the interest in vintage race cars rose in the '70s and '80s. That is except for 
one car that kind of disappeared. 

CSX2287 was the first, or prototype Daytona Coupe. Its last racing stint was at 
Bonneville where Shelby American used the car to set 23 international class 
records. At the end of the run the car was pretty beat. It was cleaned up and 
sold in 1965 to Jim Russell who owned a company that manufactured slot cars 
called Russkit. He used the car as a pattern for one of his slot cars and drove 
it occasionally. Russell sold it in 1968 to record producer Phil Spector who 
used it as a street car. Brings new meaning to "the wall of sound". Spector 
sold it in 1971 to a guy named John O'Hara. He used the car little and the 
stored it away somewhere in Santa Ana, Ca. As interest in these car rose, 
buyers would seek out O'Hara and offer to buy the car but he always wanted to 
much or just wouldn't listen. Somewhere along the way he lost the car in a 
divorce. Mrs. O'Hara wasn't any easier to try and deal with. One Cobra 
enthusiast who tracked her down described having a 30 minute conversation 
through a screen door that went no where. One person who got to see the car 
described it as being in pretty sad shape and deteriorating. 

Flash forward to last night when an automotive writer friend calls and tells me 
that the mysterious Mrs. O'Hara had died and that the owner of the building 
where the car was stored claimed to have a letter from Mrs. O'Hara giving him 
the car in lieu of storage fees. Well it's all in the courts now as to who owns 
the car. I Don't know if Mrs. O'Hara has any heirs so the car may end up 
auctioned off by the state. Some of the details may be a little off but the 
gist of it is true. This may be the last great "barn find".

Cheers,
Kurt Oblinger (wishing my name was O'Hara)

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