I saw these pics posted in a different forum and I'm kinda fascinated by them because I can't figure out what this thing was. The pics are terrible and I can't take more because I have no idea where this is, I'm just reposting them in the hopes someone can ID this car. The body lines in the fenders and the incredibly long bustle below the rear window of what appears to have been a large sedan really make me curious.
The Nash does not appear to be a match to me, not even close, really. The car in question clearly does not have a trunk lid, just an extended tail panel.
there are pictures of a 35 Nash La Fayetteville with a spare tire on the back which eliminated the trunk lid. You might be right…..I guess time will tell
That one looks a lot more like it, the body lines match up really well but the fenders seem different.
Bet that was a cool taillight that fitted in that scallop in the fender. Even the bumper brackets flow into a scallop. I'll have a stab at about 1934 to 1936 Pierce-Arrow. Wonder if the V12 is somewhere down there.
I am always amazed at the HAMB detectives once they get to work on a case. The definitive answer was delivered in less than an hour from Sweden! Posted at 10:56 AM MST Solved at 11:45 AM MST 49 minutes!
If I stumbled onto that thing , I’d have my buddy and his backhoe there in short order! (providing I had permission to exhume the body)…lol. I’m thinking what you can see is probably the best part.
Hey, Anybody else notice the taillights on the Lafayette??? Look the same as those used on the '37-''40 ish Willys!! Not surprising, really. Smaller volume manufacturers have often employed 'supplier' parts for economic reasons. Ray
I'd be willing to bet that all that is there of the car is the back half of the body. Most likely the from the door post forward and the chassis ended up as a pickup during WWII.
Maybe not, depends on the soil-type, & how much air got to the buried portion. Might find a lot below the earth-line. W/your luck, probably has the staight-8 w/the 16-lead dist, intact... Either way, be an interesting dig. & much easier than using a green-hippo to retrieve the carcass. Well, what're you waiting for? Most of that'll buff out, you know... , probably have it running & driving in a week... . Marcus...
Here's a rare Coupe with an AMC 401! More info here, https://car-from-uk.com/sale.php?id=520036&country=us
They may also have pulled the whole body off to build a wagon out of the chassis which was also fairly common at least around here.