Before the Tucker Corporation was shuttered, 51 Tucker ‘48s were
assembled. That includes 50 “production” cars and the prototype, dubbed
the Tin Goose. Aficionados count the population by their VINs, which
conveniently run from 1001 to 1050. All 51 are accounted for – that is,
we know where they are or what happened to them – but a couple no longer
exist. The saddest story of them all is the tale of 1023.
This
Tucker left the factory in maroon, a popular color for the ’48. A few
decades later, it found itself in Florida where its owner decided to
have it restored. In 1978, the cars were climbing in value but had not
hit the astronomical figures of late. 1023 sat in storage awaiting its
restoration when tragedy struck: On September 29, 1978, the warehouse it
was in caught fire and burned to the ground. The Tucker was a total
loss.
The fire was so severe that nothing in the warehouse was
saved and it was quite some time before any recovery efforts could even
be attempted. When the Tucker’s remains were finally pulled from the
mess, it was clear that nothing could be done to save any of it. The
warehouse had collapsed on the car during the fire and the heat had
destroyed all of it but the skeleton.
Source
: Yahoo News
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