a friend sent this picture to us
(http://i1175.photobucket.com/albums/r626/SEFLSAACRegion/Mobile%20Uploads/20180606_165501_1528337941898_zpspgxwb8ab.jpg) (http://s1175.photobucket.com/user/SEFLSAACRegion/media/Mobile%20Uploads/20180606_165501_1528337941898_zpspgxwb8ab.jpg.html)
I have that picture in my files. Has anyone connected the VIN to the picture? The plate is correct for a San Francisco rental, but I do not have the VIN.
Thank,
Dennis
Great pic Thanks for sharing
Steel hood car Dennis.
Get off of the hood! You're blocking my view!
Wonder what she would say if she knew this picture was being discussed on the internet 50+ years later?
I assume that everyone noticed that the car in the foreground is also most likely a GT350H!
I would sure like to know which car was assigned this plate.
Appears both are missing their hood pins.
All very good observations ^^^^ about this photo!
Dennis - why is there no month/year sticker on that plate?
Thanks,
Kieth
Rear plate only in Cali.(to this day)
Allegedly this image came from a negative purchased at an estate sale in 2013. It was the only car related negative, a 1966 Shelby Hertz GT350 taken in July 1966 the negative was dated. The furniture store in the back was Frank Newman in the city of Stonestown in Central California.
Tony, Thanks for the additional information. I think that I had that somewhere but lost it along the way.
The only Stownstown I could find on the Internet indicates that is about a 15 minutes drive north from the Air Port.
Frank Newman Furniture Co. was located at 2441-53 Mission Street near 18th Street in San Francisco.
We know that you had to be 25 years old to rent these cars so the two drivers were at least that age. The lady in the picture could be 25, but I am guessing younger.
There are a number of military bases in the general area.... Could this be a couple of guys in the military picking up two good looking young girls for what would be a memorable road trip before shipping out to Viet Nam?
OK deathsled there is your opening for the story to be told.
Dennis
Quote from: gt350cs on June 18, 2018, 10:20:16 AM
Tony, Thanks for the additional information. I think that I had that somewhere but lost it along the way.
The only Stownstown I could find on the Internet indicates that is about a 15 minutes drive north from the Air Port.
Frank Newman Furniture Co. was located at 2441-53 Mission Street near 18th Street in San Francisco.
We know that you had to be 25 years old to rent these cars so the two drivers were at least that age. The lady in the picture could be 25, but I am guessing younger.
There are a number of military bases in the general area.... Could this be a couple of guys in the military picking up two good looking young girls for what would be a memorable road trip before shipping out to Viet Nam?
OK deathsled there is your opening for the story to be told.
Dennis
+ 1 all this added to a very memorable experience and they lived happily ever after....
D thanks for the additional info
Love those "Happy Ending" stories!
It would be cool to chase down this now grandmother and hoist her up on the same car 52 years later. LOL
Sadly many are no longer with us... :'( She is probably in the 75 years young category. If both survived time that would be an instant classic pic!
I totally agree. Maybe she will somehow find this Site and contact someone with some interesting information. Wow what a story that would be....
Quote from: gt350cs on June 18, 2018, 10:20:16 AM
Tony, Thanks for the additional information. I think that I had that somewhere but lost it along the way.
The only Stownstown I could find on the Internet indicates that is about a 15 minutes drive north from the Air Port.
Frank Newman Furniture Co. was located at 2441-53 Mission Street near 18th Street in San Francisco.
We know that you had to be 25 years old to rent these cars so the two drivers were at least that age. The lady in the picture could be 25, but I am guessing younger.
There are a number of military bases in the general area.... Could this be a couple of guys in the military picking up two good looking young girls for what would be a memorable road trip before shipping out to Viet Nam?
OK deathsled there is your opening for the story to be told.
Dennis
Lol okay I'll get on it. She gets pregnant by the military guy before he ships off and then he becomes MIA. Her only memory of him is locked up in that rental one passionate and steamy night. She goes on a quest with her son to find that car many years later with the hope of getting back that spark she had with him that night.
Quote from: deathsled on June 18, 2018, 12:28:12 PM
Quote from: gt350cs on June 18, 2018, 10:20:16 AM
Tony, Thanks for the additional information. I think that I had that somewhere but lost it along the way.
The only Stownstown I could find on the Internet indicates that is about a 15 minutes drive north from the Air Port.
Frank Newman Furniture Co. was located at 2441-53 Mission Street near 18th Street in San Francisco.
We know that you had to be 25 years old to rent these cars so the two drivers were at least that age. The lady in the picture could be 25, but I am guessing younger.
There are a number of military bases in the general area.... Could this be a couple of guys in the military picking up two good looking young girls for what would be a memorable road trip before shipping out to Viet Nam?
OK deathsled there is your opening for the story to be told.
Dennis
Lol okay I'll get on it. She gets pregnant by the military guy before he ships off and then he becomes MIA. Her only memory of him is locked up in that rental one passionate and steamy night. She goes on a quest with her son to find that car many years later with the hope of getting back that spark she had with him that night.
ive read that novel, it hertz me a lot...
Knowing that she has no tech knowledge, he begins the search for her. While doing a series of Google searches he stumbles on to the SAAC Forums where he finds this picture that someone had posted and he realizes that this was his mother and was taken in June 1966, about 9 months before he was born.
Then suddenly he realized that the man he had been calling dad all these years was actually a deserter from the US Army.
Now what to do? Bury the information or turn in his father to the authorities......
OK, that's enough. All I really want to know is the VIN of the car she is sitting on. Can anyone read the license plate number of the other car in the reflection on the lower valance? Now back on track!
Looks like she has a Ring on.
Not that it would help finding her. Post it up on Reddit or something, maybe someone would recognize her.
Quote from: gt350hr on June 18, 2018, 11:24:54 AM
It would be cool to chase down this now grandmother and hoist her up on the same car 52 years later. LOL
Or put her on a hoist and check for leaks. That was bad. But I couldn't resist.
Quote from: gt350cs on June 18, 2018, 01:11:55 PM
Knowing that she has no tech knowledge, he begins the search for her. While doing a series of Google searches he stumbles on to the SAAC Forums where he finds this picture that someone had posted and he realizes that this was his mother and was taken in June 1966, about 9 months before he was born.
Then suddenly he realized that the man he had been calling dad all these years was actually a deserter from the US Army.
Now what to do? Bury the information or turn in his father to the authorities......
OK, that's enough. All I really want to know is the VIN of the car she is sitting on. Can anyone read the license plate number of the other car in the reflection on the lower valance? Now back on track!
That's quite good and creative. I like it!
I had forgotten all about this thread and recently found it again. I thought that I might have already identified to car and checking my 1966 GT350 Hertz files I came across a new recent picture of a car with this same plate number and identified the car as 6S1984. It looked to be an original CA plate, so I have listed it as such in my records. Does anyone know who owns 6S1984 to confirm?
George Orwell?
Quote from: gt350cs on April 30, 2023, 10:44:44 PM
I had forgotten all about this thread and recently found it again. I thought that I might have already identified to car and checking my 1966 GT350 Hertz files I came across a new recent picture of a car with this same plate number and identified the car as 6S1984. It looked to be an original CA plate, so I have listed it as such in my records. Does anyone know who owns 6S1984 to confirm?
Hey,
could you post the other Car from your file, with the same License Plate ?
i have a loose document from May 17 1966 from some Hertz shipped to San Francisco,
maybe it could help a little bit with some vins...
(https://abload.de/img/6s21172wkcpi.jpg) (https://abload.de/image.php?img=6s21172wkcpi.jpg)
Szabo,
Not sure where I found it, but here is teh picture from my files. It's hard to distinguish the Hertz cars just by a picture. After all they were supposed to look alike. I was very lucky to have observed to plate and make the link. Only the owner or someone who personally knows the car in this picture could confrim the VIN as authentic to the attached plate.
License plate number nor the car that is was guessed to belong to are listed one the May-June inventory list that includes plate number with the same prefix but greater and lower sequential numbers. But guess others have already checked that document and others
Jeff,
1966 Hertz 6S1984 was shipped to San Francisco along with 26 other Hertz cars on May 10,1966. Most cars in that group received licence plates with the dame SEU letters and numbers in the same range. Of the total shipment of 26 cars I am currently missing 5 license plate numbers in that group; and we may never be able to identify them without additional owners coming forward. Fortunately the California cars that were returned were documented and recorded. Some of those that were not documented have been confirmed by owners and are consistent with numbers of those previously recorded and filling the gaps in sequence.