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Category: Car Culture
Model: Tr6
Year: 1976


(Un)Triumphant Return

Todd Bohon of Jonesborough, Tennessee, sent us a letter about an old car that turned up out of nowhere, more than a decade after parting with it. Todd and his wife eyed a 1976 Triumph TR-6 convertible at a used car lot in the early 1980s and it just so happened they were in the market for a car. They took it for a test ride and his wife gave the nod while vigorously zipping around area backroads. It became her car and served them well; it managed 500-mile trips to Atlanta and back.

The family would soon grow by one though, and it was time to acquire something larger and more suitable for a little one. They traded in the Mimosa yellow TR-6 at the local Volvo dealership for a DL and a baby seat, thinking they’d never see the Triumph again. However, fate brought it back to Todd and his family, albeit just for a moment, as he recalls.

“Our yellow TR-6 became a distant memory as life, job moves, relocation, and family growth took root. Ten years passed and with a career change, we moved back to our previous town and purchased a new home. Then one day, completely out of the blue, I received a phone call from a man asking me if I ever owned a yellow TR-6. The gentleman was calling from a nearby town and told me he was restoring a ’76 TR-6 that had been slightly wrecked and stored for the past 10 years. Ironically, I was the last registered owner and my name had been found on an old insurance card that was discovered under the passenger seat.

“The story goes that, upon purchasing the car from the Volvo dealer, the Triumph’s owner promptly ran the car up a phone pole guide wire (wrecking it), parked it at a repair shop, and never registered the car. The gentleman who called me completed the repairs and needed my signature to get the car properly titled. Our family has shared many a laugh over the cute TR-6 that left us, but in a mystic way found us, and rolls on for others.”

Have you ever had a lost car randomly boomerang back into your life? If so, let us know about it.

Bellingham's Hudson

Photo provided by David Zimmerman

There’s still no word on the bizarre mystery car in Bellingham, Massachusetts, that we covered a couple months ago; in addition to the Corvair-powered custom and other cars was a two-headed Hudson that was a part of Bellingham Auto Sales for many decades. Recall that David Zimmerman, from nearby Mansfield, sent us these photos. In 2009, he and his son were running errands in their 1940 Dodge D14 four-door sedan on Route 140 when they saw the Hudson and stopped for a closer look. It was severely deteriorating at the dealership for many years, but he also sent us a picture of the Hudson from earlier and happier times, wondering what year and make it might have been. As for the dealership, David recalls there was a perpendicular “Hudson” dealer sign mounted to the front of the building and it was always worth a stop to see what kind of cars were in the building.

Recently discovered a unique or noteworthy classic car or vehicle?

Let us know. Photographs, commentary, questions, and answers should be submitted to Lost & Found, c/o Hemmings Classic Car, P.O. Box 196, Bennington, Vermont 05201, or emailed to tcomerro@hemmings.com.

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