David, are you sure that Bruce Naimy is the original owner. From that title, it indicates that he took possession in February 1990, but I can't read the fine print in the ownership block. Seems that Bruce would be the second, or the third. Doesn't matter, because YOU own it now!
On a similar note about ancient documentation, when Professor Hill posted his Broadcast Sheet back on page one a few weeks ago, I took a very close look as I tend to do with Hurst stuff. I immediately noticed that while David's car
has a clock, the Sheet did not. Hmmm...... I then saw that the Sheet did not match David's dash or tag VIN, nor did it show "Auto Speed Control" (cruise) that David's car has. What? How in the hell did THAT happen during the past 53 years? Who would know to switch Sheets for some nefarious reason? Where is that erroneous sheet come from? And how?
David and I puzzled about this on the phone a few weeks ago, but with no answers. However, this past weekend at Kissimmee my Mecum Mopar cronies (whom David met at Indy two years ago) speculated that when a batch of eight or so Hursts came down the line, the workers knew that they all got the same tan Imperial interiors stacked up behind them, so they didn't worry about matching the "correct" rear seat cushion broadcast sheet with any particular Hurst car. They likely just tossed them in, and that was okay, no harm done. But my cronies Chris and Ivan told me that they've had a collector Mopars with two different sheets with one correct VIN), and another with THREE sheets with one correct VIN. After all, a black dash is a black dash, right? Blue carpet is blue carpet, so who cares about some damn Broadcast Sheet in 1970. The workers didn't care, and the inspectors didn't care, as long as that interior matched the Broadcast Sheet in the inspector's hands that also matched the dash VIN. Done!
I suppose lots of zany things happened on the line in those days, but my car came with a correct Sheet in the back seat, and a nice remnant in the passenger bucket, so no zaniness there. This is why we're all "zany" here in the Mopar world about Sheets, Tags, and the those little unexplainable things from the assembly lines so long ago.