yesterday i went roaming around in the antique mall and found a pretty good sized batch or decent unrestored license plates... most of the plates were from m***echusettes.. there were several pairs and singles.. they started at 1922 and went up to the 60s..some colorado plates some connecticut plates and a nice batch of 50s texas plates.. they were all reasonably priced so if any of you out there need some plates of those years from those states ket me know... maybe i can see if they have what your looking for and get a hold of them for you...
Check to see if you have M***. plate from 1928. It should have a cod-fish stamped near the bottom facing away from the word M***. It was apparently the first time any sort of graphic was used on a plate. Story goes that fishermen in the state complained that it shouldn't depict fish swimming "away" from M***. so next year (1929) had the fish facing the other way, swimming "toward" M***. I've got a pretty decent set that my neighbor found at a landfill.
i know there were some 1928 plates but i cant say i remember a fish..i will go back and take a look and get a price for you if your interested...
How 'bout: '54 TX p*** car '49 TX truck or farm truck ....lemme know, thnx. g * pics plz if ya got 'em sir........... lastg-man@hotmail.com
I already have a set and some other years of M***. plates. If you find them, pick 'em up and hold onto them. I think the 1928 plates with the fish are fairly hard to find.......Don.
i have a pair of matched 23 m*** plates no fishes on them though , just black with white numbers very plain
The story about the fish is mostly true. The fish faces the same direction on both years However, "M***" is moved to the opposite side for '29, so the fish is swimming towards "M***." I have a set of 1931 M*** plates that have never been on a car. They were in a brown envelope with tissue paper between them when I bought the pair for $15. Absolutely mint.
actually, it was the supers***ious nature of fisherman that started this. 1928 was a horrible year for cod fishing and the fisherman blamed it on the license plate.