Posted on 04/15/2021 4:43:31 PM PDT by Impala64ssa
And they hanged her for it?
Oh....wait....wrong thread.
“Gail, now 78 years old, owns the car to this day.”
Good for her.
Many buyers now envy her.
I thought that $$$ amount sounded really high. But, it was the hot new thing and a convertible. Very sweet car.
In the early 1970s, you could still buy a brand new Volkswagon Bug for under $2,000. That was quite the deal.
That is quite a bit of dough.
I bought a new 67 Chevy II with a 327 and 4 speed for $2300.
kinda wise on her part...
Ah, the good old days, when cars were $1 per pound
Spendin’ Daddy’s money is always easy.
[“Gail, now 78 years old, owns the car to this day.”
Good for her.]
Wow. That car could be worth several million dollars (IMHO).
True, but I was making about $2.75 an hour (which was considered good money at the time IIRC)
If I recall, the Mustang was targeted to the young and newly “liberated” women such as secretaries and stewardesses.
She fit the bill, as a teacher.
I’ll give her double what she paid for it!
According to the interwebs on my computin’ machine, $3,447 in 1964 would be about $29,000 today.
A local man, 85, maintains every car he owned. He takes each for a drive monthly. Only one rough is a 31 A, but it runs with the interior from when he bought it. They are in the barn.
Nice!
Not sure but I think it was Crain’s Detroit Business that had a story a few years ago about the first and second Mustang. some engine evidence showed the VIN for the first one did not match the actual first one, and they believed it was the one in the Henry Ford Museum (which I’ve gone to dozens of times).
I noticed that exhibit was removed a few weeks later.
It may have been the genuine first off the assembly line but not first registered or sold and so on. Wish I had that old article.
Maybe a true car history buff here knows all about it.
I drove my sister’s 1965 model and didn’t like the handling. She should have saved that and thrown out all the junk she did save.
My dream car....
$13K in today’s money. I’m not sure if anyone sells a new car for $13K any more. Went shopping for cars with my daughter and the cheapest Kia on the lot was more than $16K...Kia.
In April of 1963 I purchased an original Mustang in the form of a Falcon Futura 2 dr. HT with a v/8 & all synchro 3 speed stick. It cost $2,250. I went on to drag race that car in various classes for 10 years. It was loads of fun.
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