Upon my Father's death in 2004, his beloved 1967 250SL factory show car was sold as part of his estate. Despite him telling me all of my life that the SL would be mine after he left this Earth, he changed his mind at the very end, saying "You never seemed very interested in Classic Mercedes".
I could go on about this subject, but in the end, the only point that mattered was that this was how he felt, and there's no changing Mallory Sr's mind about things he's already decided.
There were NO issues of any kind between us.
2 months before he passed, my younger sister Jenny had taken Dad out for a drive in the car.
Not really being a "car person", and certainly not understanding the Celsius-graduated temp gauge in his Euro-spec SL, she ran it until it severely overheated on Rockville Pike.
The head was warped, and this was the very last ride Dad would ever take in his car.
A couple of days after Frank Sr. left us, one of his very best friends, Michael Egan, stopped by the house with a one thousand dollar check for Dad's wife Joan. "I'm buying this stuff, and here's what it's worth" he told her as he stuffed the check in her hand. He loaded up the factory 113 fitted luggage set and the ski rack into his car, and he took off.
What are friends for, if not to rip off your widow ehen you're gone?
Both of these items came with my father's 250SL from new, as shown on his data card.
The 250SL got repaired and sold, and despite me telling Joan, and Michael, and Tom Shepard to "keep me in the loop" on this sale, it was gone. It sold for $22k... and I would have happily paid much more for it if only I had known.
"Shep", as I had known him since 1968 or so when I was 11 years old, had, at Joan's request, taken a lot of my fathers books and MB reference materials to be saved as an archive. Tom... God bless him... stored all of this stuff in the leaky trunk of one of his many old Mercedes, and it all got ruined. Tom WAS old, and maybe not thinking clearly. Many vintage photos were lost
The question of "Where did Frank's car go? was asked on this site, other places on the Internet, and in MY mind. Given all that had taken place, plus the fact that my Dad had never spent one dollar or any effort at all to get me into the vintage Mercedes thing, you might understand the mixed emotions I had... and still have... over locating his car.
My legacy? Not so much...
It was sold to a man in Escondido California. "Jeremy" was excited about getting this silver 250SL, and he knew absolutely nothing at all about it's storied past. He probably just looked at those Talbots mounted up there on the fenders, and scratched his head.
What he did find out rather quickly is that it had too many problems for him to deal with.
Among other things, that darned 5-speed trans needed repair, parts for it were impossible to find, so... that unit got swapped out for a 4-speed.
This, and other issues led Jeremy to sell the car. It reportedly lives in Switzerland now, and I'm sure the current owner has no idea of why the engine looks "funny", or how many (30? 40?) trophies and awards it received for all of the Rallies and Gymkhanas its original owner -my father- participated in with it.
As for me, Frank Jr, I put about a thousand miles on it behind the wheel as a young man, and at least 10 thousand miles as a boy sitting in the rear well (no seat!) as Dad, Mom, or Dad's second wife "Dottie" were occupying the front seats, cruising the Maryland countryside.
The VIN is 113043 10 003757 should you ever run across it
As for me, Frank Jr; I do currently own a 1968 280SL Euro-spec 4-speed. Why? Well... I ask myself that question most every day when I go out to my shop, and I see that beautiful white car sitting there. That's about all it does: just sit.
See.. (there's a pun here!) I have my fathers genetic trait... which means that I am too blind to safely drive, thanks to retinitis pigmentosa. I do have a 10 degree field of view, and I DO enjoy wrenching on... Mopars :0
The 113 sitting next to my GTX, my Demon, and my SuperBee was maybe nothing more than an emotional present to myself for not getting that silver 250SL. See (there it is again!), back in the 1970's, Dad reluctantly co-signed a loan for me to buy a 1973 340 4-speed Duster for $1,200. Get a vintage Mercedes? Forgetaboutit! Too much money, and Frank was'nt going to pitch in at all.
"Adversity will make you stronger" he always used to tell me.
"When does adversity end?" I asked him just before his death. He just smiled at me... he did'nt have an answer.
You will see my 280SL in our "For Sale" ads here next week... I am finally moving on, and this very nice 113 belongs to someone who can actually drive it and use it, and not just for repairing a hole thier heart