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  • Lambrecht Chevrolet

    It has been mentioned before, but the online pre-bid auction is up and going on now.
    It goes live Saturday Sept 28th at 9:30AM central. BTW there is a 1958 Cherolet Cameo expected to his $100,000. The newest car in the auction is a 1980 Chevrolet Monza. My fist car lol



    https://www.proxibid.com/asp/Catalog.asp?aid=68561


    http://news.yahoo.com/vintage-chevy-auction-deal-low-mileage-gems-070908902.html

  • #2
    That Cameo with 1 mile on it is dented pretty-bad on the front part of the cab. There's a red 63 Impala SS 327 I'd like to have!

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    • #3
      I think alot of the cars are pretty banged up. The thing they have going for them is they are low mileage, but they need rebuilds anyways I would think.

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      • #4
        I dont get just hoarding cars like that. What was the story? The thing that gets me is that new cars, with single digit miles, were hoarded and also missing parts?
        "If I asked people what they wanted, they would have said faster horses." - Henry Ford

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        • #5
          Because he wanted to put people in new cars not used cars. I read that people would trade in their cars with low miles and he would keep them instead of resale them. Even if they just took it home for the night and decided on something different.

          He only sold new cars.

          320rwhp. 7.67 @ 90mph 1.7 60'

          DD: 2004 GMC Sierra VHO 6.0 LQ9 324whp 350wtrq

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          • #6
            Mildred Lambrecht and her son Mark. circa 1953As our esteemed colleague Mr. Baruth pointed out, it’s not every day that you can buy dealer fresh 50 year old Chevys, referring to the upcoming auction of over 500 cars owned by Ray P. Lambrecht, now 95 years old, who with his wife Mildred and a single mechanic ran Lambrecht Chevrolet, a small rural dealership in Pierce, Nebraska from 1946 to 1996. The collection includes a startling number of new old stock cars, time-capsules tha…


            The Man Behind the Legend
            The Story of Ray P. Lambrecht and Lambrecht Chevrolet Company
            by Jeannie Lambrecht Stillwell

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            • #7
              Wheres all the 70's 80's and early 90's traded in cars?

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              • #8
                The Great Depression wasn't in 1918. It began in 1929. Not sure I believe the whole write up. I'm sure the guy was nice & all, but still.
                Last edited by Kimmypie; 08-20-2013, 04:35 PM. Reason: ADHD
                sigpic

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                • #9
                  Originally posted by Kimmypie View Post
                  The Great Depression wasn't in 1918. It began in 1929. Not sure I believe the whole write up. I'm sure the guy was nice & all, but still.
                  I figured she meant "end of World War I" and just had TERRIBLE spelling.

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                  • #10
                    I thought the cars had already been auctioned off, but they are still there.
                    ============



                    Vintage Chevy auction to deal in low-mileage gems

                    Published August 20, 2013
                    Associated Press

                    In this Aug. 12, 2013 photo, Chevrolet automobiles are lined up in a field near the former Lambrecht Chevrolet car dealership in Pierce, Neb. In September, bidders from at least a dozen countries and all 50 U.S. states will converge on Pierce, a town of about 1,800 in northeast Nebraska, for a two-day auction that will feature about 500 old cars and trucks, mostly Chevrolets that went unsold during the dealerships five decades in business. About 50 have fewer than 20 miles on the odometer, and some are so rare that no one has established a price. The most valuable could fetch six-figure bids. (AP Photo/Nati Harnik)


                    Old Car Auction Nebra_Gast-3.jpg


                    In this Aug. 12, 2013 photo, Art Nordstrom holds a sign at the former Lambrecht Chevrolet car dealership in Pierce, Neb. In September, bidders from at least a dozen countries and all 50 U.S. states will converge on Pierce, a town of about 1,800 in northeast Nebraska, for a two-day auction that will feature about 500 old cars and trucks, mostly Chevrolets that went unsold during the dealerships five decades in business. About 50 have fewer than 20 miles on the odometer, and some are so rare that no one has established a price. The most valuable could fetch six-figure bids. (AP Photo/Nati Harnik)


                    Old Car Auction Nebra_Gast-2.jpg


                    In this Aug. 12, 2013 photo, a tree grows through the bumper of a 1962 Ford Falcon at a field near the former Lambrecht Chevrolet car dealership in Pierce, Neb. Next month, bidders from at least a dozen countries and all 50 U.S. states will converge on Pierce, a town of about 1,800 in northeast Nebraska, for a two-day auction that will feature about 500 old cars and trucks, mostly Chevrolets that went unsold during the dealerships five decades in business. About 50 have fewer than 20 miles on the odometer, and some are so rare that no one has established a price. The most valuable could fetch six-figure bids. (AP Photo/Nati Harnik)



                    Next Slide Previous Slide


                    Seventeen years have passed since Ray Lambrecht closed his Chevrolet dealership, a small-town operation in northeast Nebraska with a big and valuable secret.

                    For decades, the owner of the Lambrecht Chevrolet Co. in Pierce held on to new cars and trucks that didn't sell right away. He stashed them in warehouses, at his farm and in other spots around the town he worked in for 50 years.

                    Now, his automotive nest egg — about 500 vintage cars and trucks — will go on the auction block. Next month, visitors from at least a dozen countries and throughout the U.S. will converge on the 1,800-resident town, or bid online.

                    The two-day auction will feature mostly unsold Chevrolets that have sat untouched for decades. They'll go on the block in as-is condition. About 50 have fewer than 20 miles on the odometer, and some are so rare that no one has established a price. The most valuable, including a rare Chevy Cameo pickup, could fetch six-figure bids from collectors who view them as works of art to display or as restoration projects.

                    "To find this many new, old vehicles is unheard of," said Yvette VanDerBrink, the auctioneer coordinating the event. "It's like a white buffalo."

                    Preparations for the auction began in June, and VanDerBrink has taken calls from as far as Iceland, Singapore and Brazil. The two least-driven cars, a 1959 Bel Air and a 1960 Corvair Monza, each have one mile on their odometer. The oldest vehicle with fewer than 20 miles dates to 1958; the newest is a 1980 Monza with nine miles.

                    On a recent afternoon, VanDerBrink stepped over hubcaps and engine parts in the cramped, dust-caked dealership that closed in 1996. In the corner sat the sky-blue 1958 Cameo with 1.3 miles, a cracked windshield and a dented roof — but its interior is unblemished.

                    Nearby, a red-and-white 1963 Impala waits with 11.4 miles logged. Manufacturer's plastic covers the seats. The car was never titled. A yellowed, typewritten window sticker touts its original price: $3,254.70.

                    Ray Lambrecht opened the downtown dealership with his uncle in 1946, on the corner of Main Street and Nebraska Highway 13. Live elephants meandered out front that day, with Chevrolet banners across their backs.

                    The U.S. Army veteran quickly established himself as an unusual salesman: He gave his lowest price up-front, without negotiation, and encouraged hagglers to try to find a better deal elsewhere. He rarely advertised, but was one of the first dealers in Nebraska to lease vehicles.

                    His low-price, high-volume approach helped secure regular government contracts, and he often sold cars to the state. In 1954, Lambrecht drove then-Gov. Robert Crosby down Main Street in a parade celebrating the 100-year anniversary of Nebraska as a territory.

                    Lambrecht rarely sold cars or pickups that were more than a year old, and he used holdover models as a kind of rainy-day fund. Unlike most dealers who lowered prices to move out-of-date inventory, he assumed the older cars would appreciate over time.

                    "I believe that Dad's sales approach reflected his personal style," said his daughter, Jeannie Stillwell. "He is a very honest, straightforward man who was focused on giving his customers the best price right from the start. Negotiating over price was a waste of time, and so that element of the sale was eliminated."

                    The most valuable vehicles were stored for decades at a nearby warehouse, until a heavy snow collapsed the roof. Some were damaged, but many were saved and moved elsewhere. And the models at the dealership are among the best preserved, even as the building gave way to bats and holes in the roof.

                    The rest of the cars sat under trees at a nearby farm the Lambrechts owned, in the company of trade-in vehicles he didn't want to resell. Years passed, and trees started to poke through fenders and rusted pickup beds. The dealership's longtime mechanic lived on the farm, but when he died, his family moved away. Vandals and thieves pounced.

                    Ray and his wife, Mildred, retired in 1996. Ray, 95, and Mildred, 92, live in town, but the couple's health has declined. They decided to sell the collection so others could enjoy the cars and pickups, Stillwell said.

                    News of the auction enthralled the vintage car community, where rumors have swirled for years about a quirky Nebraska dealer who held on to his old vehicles. Nowadays, most classic cars have new paint jobs, interiors and engines. A true "survivor" has most, if not all, of its original material.

                    "This kind of stuff is absolutely the rarest of the rare," said Mark Gessler, president of the Historic Vehicle Association in Gaithersburg, Md. "You can see plenty of cars that have been restored. We want to ensure that we're celebrating the original craftsmanship, the original technique. It's a touchstone of our past."

                    The low-mileage cars and pickups will likely generate the greatest interest from collectors, who view them as works of art to be displayed, said Jay Quail, executive director of the Chicago-based Classic Car Club of America. Quail said he often sees old cars on eBay billed as classics, even though they're refurbished.

                    "I'd look at it and think, 'My God, it would have been worth way more if you just hadn't touched it,'" Quail said. "It's like having a Picasso in your garage. Collectors will pay for a car that's totally unmolested."

                    At the same time, Quail said it's difficult to savor a barely-driven beauty.

                    "As a collector, do I just want to have the car sit?" he said. "If I bought a '63 Corvette with only one mile on it, I don't think I'd enjoy it very much. You couldn't drive it."

                    __

                    Auction Details:

                    Preview Day: 8:30 a.m. to 8 p.m. Sept. 27 in Pierce, Neb.

                    Auction Days: Sept. 28-29, starting at 9:30 a.m.


                    Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/leisure/2013/...#ixzz2cfFWfZWA

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