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Unlike the New England town of Boston, New York City is not widely known for Chowder (or salsa for that matter…get a rope!), the Big Apple IS definitely known by some as the home of the monthly meeting of the Madison Avenue Sports Car Driving and Chowder Society. Almost fifty years ago this illustrious group came together and foundered… um…. I mean founded in Midtown Manhattan to gather, “chowder down”, and discuss their love of sports cars and all things four-wheeled. Their first meeting was during an extreme cold wave in New York City so the food of choice during their early meetings was Chowder. They’ve held races across NY between Ferraris and Taxi cabs. They are really car guys in the Big City. Now 49 years later these “chowderheads” are prominent automotive afficiandos and automotive journalists as well as still being passionate sports car drivers. Their speakers are often “heads of automotive states”…that’s corkyspeak for the big boys at the OEM’s (car company’s). They have heard from the likes of Jon Moss of GM Performance, John Coletti of Ford SVO, the President of Rolls Royce, Bobby Rahal and Phil Hill, both famous race car drivers, and racing tire guru, Al Speyer of Bridgestone Firestone Tire.

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One of MASCDCS founders is a legend in the world of Collector Cars, Henry Austin Clark. “Austie Clark” discovered and/or once owned many wonderful collector cars and automotive literature in the early days of collector cars (1940’s, 50’s and 60’s) The Group has been shepherded by Bruce and Ginia Wennerstrom now for a number of years.

I like New York, but I like it as a nice place to visit(not live)… to see the wonderful and important sites and experience fantastic restaurants. My wife and I flew in to LaGuardia on Sunday September 10th, checked into a hotel close to the world renowned SARDI’s Restaurant (near 42nd Street) where the Chowderheads meet.

I was the primary speaker for the September meeting of the Madison Avenue Sports Car Driving and Chowder Society, however I was told that later that famed racing announcer and author, Chris Economacki would be in attendance as well to sign his recent book, “LET EM GO!”. Sharing the podium with Chris Economacki…wow!!! What a deal! Chris is full of racing stories and can remember who won what and where in 1967 or 57 or 1935! I can’t even remember where I was a week ago, yet this “eighty somethin” automotive legend remembers and recants it all! I felt priviledged to be his “warm up act”. The members were engaging and interested… hanging on every word I spit out. With such a southern drawl they really could have used a translater though…but nevertheless we communicated about the passions of collector cars, sports cars and all things cars and racing we had in common.

9-19_1.jpgAlthough it would take years for me to obtain some culture (I am sure) my wife planned an intensive day and a half of culture dunking for this cowboy from Tennessee. So off we went exploring the New York City subway system popping up above ground occasionally to see museums, stuff ourselves at the wonderful restaurants and experience the live singing, dancing and production of several Broadway Shows.

We took a food tour in Greenwich. How come Greenwich is “Grin ich” but Sandwich is not “Sand ich”. The tour was fun and filling. Later we toured the Chelsea Market, which is an old eight story retail and office building developed in the old National Biscuit Company (Nabisco) warehouse. It is also the new home to the Food Network and the “Emeril Show”. Bam!! In addition to old cars, bikes and trucks, I really love old buildings especially converted warehouse buildings. The visit to this wonderful restoration gave me loads of ideas for my current building restoration project in the historic Southside of Chattanooga.

Have you ever been in a restaurant, bar or pub and heard the waiter holler “86 the potatoes” to the cook? Know what it means? It means to close it down, take them off, they don’t exist any more! Well, we visited the actual place where that phrase supposedly originated. Plumley’s is a bar on Bedford Street with a tremendous reputation so strong it has no sign, only the street number (yep you guessed it) 86 prominently displayed. Since the bar, now tended in the evenings by NY’s finest off duty firemen, has its birthday in the Prohibition Days as a “speak easy” one can almost hear the message come down the line “86 Bedford Street” meaning that the cops were coming to bust the “speak easy”. Close it down, shut it off, whatever. Hence.. The phrase 86 this or that.

We popped up from the “green line” around 23rd street to visit the boyhood home of one of my hero’s, the 26th President of the United States, Theodore Roosevelt. It was almost closing time so we did not get to tour the whole house. We did get the opportunity to see TR’s glasses case, coat and speech book each with a single bullet hole right thru the middle of them. They were pierced when the former President was shot by a would be assassin just before delivering a campaign speech in October 1912. With the bullet lodged in his chest near his left lung and bleeding rather profusely, he insisted on delivering the over one hour speech despite his condition. What a man! Bully!

What a wonderful time to be in Manhattan. The skies were clear blue and the air was crisp just like it was exactly five years ago on September 11th, 2001. There were people everywhere near the void in the ground where the two towers of the World Trade Center once stood. People were placing flowers or notes and pictures and poems on the fence surrounding this important place where many lost their lives five years earlier. There were TV cameras everywhere. The President of the United States visited the site earlier in the day and laid a wreath in a pool to honor those who perished. It was a solumn place where everyone was courteous regardless of political persuasion. We all seemed to be either hurting, mourning, praying, or mentally recognizing that the United States of America and its citizens changed forever that fateful day five years earlier. I could not help but thinking and stating later how thankful I felt for those that have gone before me, even died so I can have the freedoms we all enjoy. I feel thankful still for those young men and women even now serving our country around the world protecting us and continuing to guarantee those same freedoms. Also I cannot help but think about the first responders around our country such as those who were on the ground selflessly and in the buildings of the WTC on 9-11 five years ago. God Bless em all.

From the road,

Corky Coker