With the value of these classic muscle Mopars going up, you hear all the time of the importance of "documentation" - it makes a huge difference in the market value of similarly equipped cars. All too often you hear how rare certain cars are promoted as being by using phrases like "1 of 1 with this combination," or "1 of 2 with this option" - but how are we to really know? Sadly it seems that we can't. We can only go with the sometimes vague and always open to interpretation "known to exist" criteria. We don't have empirical data from Chrysler as to as to how many of this or that they actually made. Why? A great number of Chrysler historical records are said to have been destroyed in a big fire that swept thru the records department sometime during the 1970's.
Exactly when the big fire happened I don't know, but you can find references to it on just every Mopar website. How it happened I don't know either. But what intrigues me is what is the real story behind the great Chrysler historical records fire of the late 1970's? Was it really an accident that destroyed those records? Or, was it somehow associated to the company's bankruptcy in the late 1970's and a deliberate act to destroy records which may have had some kind of an influence on the company's bankruptcy bailout?
In 2009 with the company in bankruptcy ... again, and under control of Cerberus, records disappeared ... again, but in a different way. To cut costs Cerberus closed the company's historical records department and shuttered the Chrysler Technical Center archives library. In fact, they didn't just "shuttered" the CTC's archives library they literally gave away historical records and documents to just about anybody who came to haul it off for them!
Seems kind of coincidental that while struggling thru bankruptcies in the 1970's and in 2009 historical records just disappeared - by fire in the 1970's, and by a virtual give away in 2009. There are still a lot of articles around pertaining to the 2009 bankruptcy and the historical documents elimination by Cerberus. However, it is a lot harder to find factual information on the notorious historical records fire that destroyed all those records back in the 1970's. So, who here can shed some truth on what really happened with those records and the "fire?" Does anybody have any real info on the big fire? Old news stories, pictures, anything factual? Was it really accidental ... or part of a bankruptcy cover up??