With well over 500 classic cars and trucks , A-1 Auto Salvage of Roswell, New Mexico was one of the best yards we had ever had the pleasure of exploring.
But sadly we’ll never be going back. Within a few years of our visit the place closed down, after the owner decided he wanted to do something else with the land. However, rather than simply cube everything (which is so often the case in these instances) he held a no-reserve auction, with anything not finding a buyer being fed to the crusher. Unfortunately we have no way of knowing whether the vehicles featured here survived. Let's take a look:
Diamond T 1940s
This is the tantalising sight that greeted us when we arrived at Roswell’s A-1 Auto Salvage. They’re both Diamond Ts, and the yard employee who accompanied us throughout the visit, reckoned the late 1940s one on the left belonged to Peter Hurd, a famous local artist.
Hurd whose work concentrated on the people and landscapes of New Mexico, was born in Roswell in 1904, and died in the town 80 years later. Chicago-based Diamond operated between 1905 and 1967.
The Lineup
The view inside the 20-acre yard was just as enticing. The stock dated from the 1930s to the 1990s, but the vast majority hailed from the 1950s and 1960s. See anything you like in this line-up? Check out the rare Crosley, perched on the top of the pile. The company sold 84,000 of its subcompact cars between 1939 and 1952.
Chevrolet 1941
A-1 Salvage of Roswell, New Mexico was founded in 1941, which coincidentally is the same year that this Chevrolet rolled off the production line. That’s six years before an unidentified flying object allegedly crash-landed on a nearby ranch, sparking 75 years of conspiracy theories, and catapulting Roswell onto the tourist map and its name globally famous.
Ford 1947
Our guide reckoned this 1947 Ford glows in the dark. He was referring to the car’s former owner – The Atomic Energy Commission. You can just make out the words painted on the door. It was a government agency formed after World War II to control the peacetime development of atomic science and technology. Note the chrome overrider embedded into the tree trunk.
Desotos 1950s
A-1 Auto Salvage once specialised in DeSoto and Studebaker, and both marques were still well represented when we visited. From left to right these DeSotos, all in reasonably good condition for their age, are dated 1950, 1953, 1955 and 1953 respectively. We hope some of them survived the auction.
Ford Mustang 1970s
This mid-1970s Ford Mustang II hadn’t turned a wheel since 1986, which was the year it arrived in A-1 Auto Salvage. Although most of the yard’s stock ranged in age from the 1930s to the late 1970s, as you can see from the newer Mustang in the background, there were a few exceptions. And check out those Volkswagens behind it.
Ford 1963
Presumably this 1963 Ford ended up in the yard after colliding with a tree. You've got to be travelling at quite some speed to do that much damage to a solid car like this; let's hope the occupants fared better than the metalwork.
