Richard Petty is selling some stuff. LOL
http://www.foxnews.com/auto/2018/02...s-and-memorabilia-from-his-racing-career.html
http://www.foxnews.com/auto/2018/02...s-and-memorabilia-from-his-racing-career.html
It's an auction --- only money is required.I'm in as long as it doesn't involve a handshake.
It's an auction --- only money is required.
Germophobe?...But I don't have to shake his hand to promise I'll pay him?
...But I don't have to shake his hand to promise I'll pay him?
I can understand it. I'm not a sentimental guy at all. I kept almost nothing after 21 years in the National Guard.There is NO WAY I could part with this stuff if I were King Richard. I am much too sentimental. I also can't imagine why his family members wouldn't be interested. Heck, I still have the helmet, shoes, gloves and spare lug nuts from my last ever pit stop, all displayed on a shelf.
You, sir, are a true packrat. LOLI'm just the opposite. I not only have my own stuff, I have select items from other friends and relatives too. . I have the license plate from the first vehicle that was mine, I have the program and the ticket stub from every Cup race I ever attended, a chunk of the Berlin Wall, a piece of bodywork from Jason Leffler's very first Busch race, the tags from my deceased dogs, a set of roof flaps out of a late 90's Hendrick Monte Carlo, the baseball glove I used all through my teen years.
Okay, I do have all the tickets from the races I've attended, but those only take up a couple of linear inches in a desk drawer. I also have five dog and cat tags on a collar in the truck; they don't take up much space either.I'm just the opposite. I not only have my own stuff, I have select items from other friends and relatives too. . I have the license plate from the first vehicle that was mine, I have the program and the ticket stub from every Cup race I ever attended, a chunk of the Berlin Wall, a piece of bodywork from Jason Leffler's very first Busch race, the tags from my deceased dogs, a set of roof flaps out of a late 90's Hendrick Monte Carlo, the baseball glove I used all through my teen years.
Maybe they'd rather have the money?There is NO WAY I could part with this stuff if I were King Richard. I am much too sentimental. I also can't imagine why his family members wouldn't be interested. Heck, I still have the helmet, shoes, gloves and spare lug nuts from my last ever pit stop, all displayed on a shelf.
He cant take it with him.There is NO WAY I could part with this stuff if I were King Richard. I am much too sentimental. I also can't imagine why his family members wouldn't be interested. Heck, I still have the helmet, shoes, gloves and spare lug nuts from my last ever pit stop, all displayed on a shelf.
The last time I was there, I could hardly move around to see all the "stuff" --- every available flat surface was filled --- floor to ceiling.Perhaps there’s an over-abundance of “stuff”.
According to Mr. Petty the museum is full.
The stuff has to be stored somewhere. Rotating the displays requires a someplace to store the stuff that's off line, and labor to swap the stuff around.The last time I was at level Cross there was quite a few buildings there. I'm also curious why the museum would be any more full than it was three and a half decades ago, the last time Petty Enterprises did something relevant. Nobody ever said they had to display everything at the same time....
Just curious is there a story how you got a piece of the Berlin Wall?I'm just the opposite. I not only have my own stuff, I have select items from other friends and relatives too. . I have the license plate from the first vehicle that was mine, I have the program and the ticket stub from every Cup race I ever attended, a chunk of the Berlin Wall, a piece of bodywork from Jason Leffler's very first Busch race, the tags from my deceased dogs, a set of roof flaps out of a late 90's Hendrick Monte Carlo, the baseball glove I used all through my teen years.
Just curious is there a story how you got a piece of the Berlin Wall?
Fascinating, thank you for sharing.My wife is first generation American, her entire family is from what was East Germany. My mother-in-law's sister and her children live not too far from Berlin. When the wall came down, my wife's cousin went to Berlin and gathered up souvenirs, as many others did. It's just a chunk a little bigger than your fist. My father-in-law fought in the German army as a teenager in WWII, and spent six years as slave labor in a Russian prison camp in the Ukraine. His brother spent two years in a British prison camp. Their grandparents were native Prussians that owned a small brewery in Russia. When the revolution of 1917 took place, they were killed, and my father-in-law's father escaped to Germany proper. My mother-in-law was just a girl when the Russians invaded Germany, and they had to flee their home with only what they could carry. They spent a couple of years living in barns and fields, begging and laboring for food. A sizable chunk of my father-in-law's family migrated to the US in 1956, making the crossing on a cargo ship.
I can understand it. I'm not a sentimental guy at all. I kept almost nothing after 21 years in the National Guard.
My thoughts exactly.And that in itself is sad to me. If I was Richard's son, grandson, great grandson, nephew, whatever, you couldn't keep me from that stuff.