That car is owned by Jerry Brewster of Bastrop, Louisiana. He has owned that car, literally, forever. He bought it, I believe, in the mid-1960's and it was non-running then. He was an avid Corvette collector from then on. He was a member of the Classic Corvette Club and the Vintage Corvette Club or America. He was active in selling and parting out cars for years. He advertised in Motor Trend (when they actually had ads), Hot Rod, and Hemmings (when Corvettes were only in the Chevrolet section), among other places. He advertised three 1953's for years...maybe decades! He had this one, #117, and one other (whose # escapes me). #117 was a title with an early 1954 body and frame and an old Louisiana tag (of course now it's a top flight car.....LOL). The unknown number car had a really good body, but was missing the drive train, and a host of other valuable parts. #148, was just the opposite, highly original in terms of drivetrain and parts, but its body was beat to death and then customized. I remember his ads well in the early 1980's for all three of these cars...he advertised them for sale or trade or whatever. I mean trade for whatever....he offered to trade for gold, stocks, other cars, I remember his list of what he would trade for was borderline hillarious. Later, he advertised that the three were going to be in some kind of movie...and that their value would go up accordingly.....these ads appeared for years. I knew several people who tried to buy the two better cars as a pair with the intention of making one good car out of them, but no one could ever manage to buy them up. Finally, the title/body car went to Bill Beard in Alabany, Georgia and the unknown number car sold quietly. Jerry kept #148, thinking it was the best of all of them, which he probably was right.
The body on #148 is a complete dog!!! Every corner of it has been hit and poorly repaired. The damage is quite extensive. To make matters worse, every bonding seam hidden under the chrome has been ground off. The grill surround has also been altered, and well as the bumper supports in the center rear. I don't think that anyone could ever restore this body to true original form. They may build areas up with cloth and resin, but the body will never be a top quality, original body.
Now for the sale....I don't think that this car will ever sell. He has always been above the market value for this car and will probably continue to do so. Jerry has always owned it and he probably always will.....it is an interesting combination of conditions...highly original in one way, but terribly poor in others. I don't think I have ever seen a 1953 equal to it.....so much damage to such an original car.
Many 1953's are coming out of the closet now or have done so in the past few years. Most of these are incomplete cars, poor bodies, missing drivetrains, ex-racers, etc. Many of these have been restored with reproduction parts and fake drivetrain and body parts. These are the ones selling for top dollar now, mostly to unsuspecting buyers (#'s103 and 285 are the first to come to mind). Many, and I mean many, more have been resurrected by very knowledgeable restorers who know the tricks in building up a 1953 from fake and non-original parts. I see a need for older people who have been around and know the truth about these cars to try to make their knowledge and database known...both to help future buyers, and to help preserve the truth about these cars. There are many 1953's that have been preserved through the years, yet many more that are complete rebuilt, fake dogs!!! For preservation of these cars, I wish this information could be made public so everyone could know the truth about each car and its true history and condition.