
Photographer: Jim Graham/Redux
Many
vintage American cars survived, as if in a time warp, in Cuba. Barred
from importing newer models, Cubans have repaired the vehicles, which
are now considered a national treasure.
When
Fidel Castro came to power in 1959, he made it illegal for anyone to
import cars without government permission. The mandate arrested
automotive history on the island, and curvaceous mid-century Chevys,
Studebakers, and Buicks still rumble down Havana's Malecón, much as they
did half a century ago. Now, with the easing of relations between the
U.S. and Cuba, some of the nearly 60,000 vintage cars in Cuba could
eventually make their way into collectors’ hands stateside.
Cuba
loosened some trade restrictions on automobiles earlier this year,
allowing new cars to be bought and sold on the island. Lifting the U.S.
trade embargo on the island—a decision that must be made by Congress,
not President Barack Obama—would let Cuba's classic automobiles
return to the U.S. after so long. If that does happen, the buyers won’t
be traditional car collectors, who prize low mileage and automobiles in
pristine condition. For one thing, Castro’s restriction on autoimports stopped the flow of replacement parts, so while a Cadillac convertible in Cuba may look authentic at first blush, a closer look reveals both hundreds of thousands of miles on the odometer and a bevy of makeshift fixes, perhaps even (gasp!) a Peugeot diesel engine under the hood. That said, experts anticipate a niche market of buyers willing to pay a premium to own a piece of Cuban history.

While some Cuban car owners will undoubtedly jump at the chance to make quick cash by offloading their American behemoths, Hagerty doesn’t expect a flood of cars to leave the island. “These cars are part of their culture,” he says. “They are integral to the image of who they are, so it would be hard to imagine [the cars] all going away.”

Those mythical diamonds in the rough won't be old Fords—or any other U.S.-made car—but the Mercedes, Ferraris, and Maseratis that raced in the Cuban Grand Prix. A photographer touring the island recently uncovered a gull-wing Mercedes-Benz 300 SL—examples of which fetch over $1 million at auction—rusting under a banana tree. Hagerty dismisses that discovery as a one-off. “Trust me,” he says, “that is going to be the search. But best I can tell, most of the cars that raced there exited the country around the time of the revolution.”
No comments:
Post a Comment