Barn finds don’t happen every day. If they did, they
wouldn’t capture our attention and imagination as much as they do. But even in
such rare company, this one stands apart. It’s a 1963 Shelby 289 Cobra that
Ford originally used for promotional purposes until selling it in 1969 to one
Dr Bryan B. Molloy – an Indianapolis-based pharmacologist who helped develop
Prozac.
Molloy had it repainted from its original white over
red to a bronze finish, enjoyed it for a few years, then put it in a barn on
his farm. And there it sat in obscurity for decades until a delivery man
spotted it on the property and bought it from Molloy’s widow.
Despite its many years of neglect, the car started
after just 15 minutes of work, with a new battery and a splash of fuel. 30 days
later, the barn burned to the ground, and would have taken the Cobra with it
had it not been unearthed just a month earlier.
The Shelby passed through the hands of a couple of
subsequent owners until being acquired by noted expert Tom Cotter, who told its
story in his book “The Cobra in the Barn.” Restored to its original condition,
the car’s place in the history of barn finds was cemented.
Its current owner has held it for the past 13 years,
but is now putting it up for auction. RM Sotheby’s will sell it off at Amelia
Island next weekend, where it’s expected to fetch upwards of US$ 1 million.