I saw both cars whilst touring America. The real car is at Terribles Casino in Nevada, and it is a hell of a lot more shot up than the movie car in Washington!
Absolutely correct! And there is no doubt as to the authenticity of the original just by looking at the Bonnie & Clyde '34 Ford. It's on display at Whiskey Pete's Casino in Primm Nevada just outside the California border on Hwy 15. It's there with lots of other memorabilia from that era and it's completely free!
contract went into default, she had the car repossessed and rented it to carnival operator Charles Stanley. After she divorced her husband Jesse, she kept the title to the car and sold it to Stanley for $3,500. The "Death Car" was then exhibited at a Cincinnati, Ohio amusement park from 1940-1952. Ted Toddy purchased the car in 1952 for $14,500. The car then sat in a warehouse for years until the popularity of the 1967 Authur Penn movie
She finally did, get her car back, and drove it to Shreveport, Louisiana. From there the car was taken by truck, back to Topeka, Kansas, where it sat in her driveway at 2107 Gabler Street for several days. She leased the car to John Castle of "United Shows" and when the
You are correct since THAT wasn't the actual Bonnie and Clyde Death Car either... The car you see in this video was the car they used to make the Bonnie and Clyde MOVIE. It's a movie car. A prop. Simply a '32 Ford V8 car they used to film the movie... A Warner Brothers production in 1967. Note the HUGE sign on the driver's door that says exactly that. This is NOT the car they died in. The car they died in is NOT painted pretty like that one either and is in a Casino in Primm, Nevada.
@@willoughby1888 I had 2 at one point. The V8 is since sold. Its still running in France. The other Simca Aronde pickup is still hanging out in my garage. However with the money from the Simca V8 i bought a 47 Ford Super deluxe. So weve come full flathead circle :). I myself and my other rides are doing wonderfully. Thanks for asking ;)
One of the most interesting facts about the night we delivered the car (it was 2:00 am on November 1, 2007) was that when they took the doors off, there was still literally only about 2 clear inches on either side to get the car through.
Seen this car back in 72 (I was 8 years old) out front of a Nichols store , it was rolled out of a tractor trailer , we could walk right up to the car and look inside , quite an experience as a young lad .
And, yes, it may just be a movie car, but you'd be amazed at the number of people who came to Ken's Bonnie and Clyde Ambush Museum in Gibsland, LA, just to see this car. When I talked to a lady at Warner Bros who assisted in the development of the special dvd edition of the movie, she said she knew that Warren Beatty would be very upset to know that he missed the opportunity to include this info on the extras dvd included in this collection.
1934 FORD FORDOR DELUXE SEDAN Death Car: 1934 Ford Model 730 Deluxe Sedan Assembly Date: February 1934 Dealership: Mosley-Mack Motor Company Engine: Large eighy-five HP V8 Transmission type: manual 3 speed Original owner: Ruth Warren Original purchase price: $835 (1934) Custom color: Cordoba Grey Date stolen: April 29, 1934 License plate: 1934 Arkansas 15-368 Original license plate: Kansas 3-17832
he then hired Arcadia attorney W.D.Goff to represent her. Goff claimed that by Jordan setting the value of the car over $3,000, the case would surely wind up in Federal Court. Because of Sheriff Jordan's refusal to comply, Federal Judge Benjamin Dawkins threatened to send the sheriff to jail, if he did not return the car to Mrs. Warren
Nice replica. The real car is on display in Primm Nevada at the casino. At least as of last weekend it was. They also have many Bonnie and Clyde artifacts inluding the shirt he was wearing at the time of death....bullet holes and all.
This is a 1934 Ford, not a 1932 model. I know this because I rode to DC with the owner, Ken Holmes, to deliver this car to the museum. If you look real close, I am the one in the jeans and denim shirt taking pictures in the background. Ken is very adamant that people know this is the movie car and not the actual death car.
This isn't the car, just one from the movie. Glass isn't bullet ridden, and the factory ford trunk from the original car isn't on this one. this is NOT the same car. Bullet patterns aren't even the same on the drivers side!
Ther not they do this stuff because its history that people are interested in and the criminals aren't being made famous ther being looked at as infamous
Sometimes, there were two dueling B&C "death cars" on display at opposite ends of the same rural county at the same time! Complete with harrowing narration by one or more (fake) B&C "survivors", civilian "witnesses" to the tragedy, or "officer of the Law who pulled the trigger." Sometimes they were shut down and run out of town, other times took the receipts and fled on their own. And sorry, by THIS CAR I meant not the movie prop shown here, but the "real death car" SS421982 referred to.
Not to go on and on, but you can tell this is a prop. IIRC, the real Laws that day let fly at B&C with everything they had, to include Thompson SMGs (fires .45 cal. pistol ammo), a 12-ga. shotgun(s), police .38s, and a Browning Automatic Rifle (BAR -- .45 long ammo). I don't see any shotgun patterns on the side of this car, unless maybe they were using slug. The existing holes don't show the "walking" (up and to right) pattern typical of a Thomson; finally, BARs would SHRED the car body metal.
Also, be very careful of the claims made for the various '60s TV series Batmobiles that are shown around the country. TV lends a hand: typically for TV there is made one working vehicle, plus a detailed-cockpit model for close-ups, a silhouette-only car for the long shots, and a couple of cars to wreck. In addition the orig. designer, George Barris, cranked out several more complete vehicles after he discovered rubes would bay $10 each to gape at THE Batmobile." But: was it EVER ON FILM?
@50zcarsman I guess I don't know it's the actual car. They CLAIM it is and whoever owns the casinos (Terrible's I believe) have had the car for years and years. They also have Clyde's death shirt, one of Bonnie's hats and many artifacts made while in prison that his deceased sister had been storing. They must have made a deal and she willed the items to the casino. It's all under glass...there is no blood in the car anywhere. I think it's real, but you'd have to decide that yourself.
This is just a prop car. The original is online under the Bonnie & Clyde Findagrave.com OR look up on Google Blanche Barrow. Cant get over how stupid it was to just shoot them to pieces like they did, all because that idiot detective wanted revenge. Sad indeed
The real Car When Mrs.Ruth Warren arrived in Bienville Parish to claim her car (after the ambush). Sheriff Henderson Jordan refused to release it to her, claiming that she would have to pay $15,000 to get it back.
Ya know,the real car sure makes it around the place,in Nevada! I saw it at Buffalo Bills place,just outside of Vegas. I dont get why they are putting the movie car into that place. They should be putting the real one there instead.And,yes,the real car was just toast! ALLL shot up! Blood all over in it,etc.
I saw both cars whilst touring America. The real car is at Terribles Casino in Nevada, and it is a hell of a lot more shot up than the movie car in Washington!
Absolutely correct! And there is no doubt as to the authenticity of the original just by looking at the Bonnie & Clyde '34 Ford. It's on display at Whiskey Pete's Casino in Primm Nevada just outside the California border on Hwy 15. It's there with lots of other memorabilia from that era and it's completely free!
contract went into default, she had the car repossessed and rented it to carnival operator
Charles Stanley. After she divorced her husband Jesse, she kept the title to the car and
sold it to Stanley for $3,500. The "Death Car" was then exhibited at a Cincinnati, Ohio
amusement park from 1940-1952. Ted Toddy purchased the car in 1952 for $14,500. The car
then sat in a warehouse for years until the popularity of the 1967 Authur Penn movie
She finally did, get her car back, and drove it to Shreveport, Louisiana. From there the car was taken by truck, back to Topeka, Kansas, where it sat in her driveway at 2107 Gabler Street for several days. She leased the car to John Castle of "United Shows" and when the
You are correct since THAT wasn't the actual Bonnie and Clyde Death Car either... The car you see in this video was the car they used to make the Bonnie and Clyde MOVIE. It's a movie car. A prop. Simply a '32 Ford V8 car they used to film the movie... A Warner Brothers production in 1967. Note the HUGE sign on the driver's door that says exactly that. This is NOT the car they died in. The car they died in is NOT painted pretty like that one either and is in a Casino in Primm, Nevada.
I got the same engine in my Simca. Super engine. Lots of torque and great to maintain. Still does around 2000km every year after being 60 years old.
Did it get to turn 70? I hope so... and that you're doing just as well yourself too.
@@willoughby1888 I had 2 at one point. The V8 is since sold. Its still running in France. The other Simca Aronde pickup is still hanging out in my garage. However with the money from the Simca V8 i bought a 47 Ford Super deluxe. So weve come full flathead circle :). I myself and my other rides are doing wonderfully. Thanks for asking ;)
the real car is in WHISKEY PETE'S CASINO which is on Vegas Nevada.....thumb's up is u saw it in there?
One of the most interesting facts about the night we delivered the car (it was 2:00 am on November 1, 2007) was that when they took the doors off, there was still literally only about 2 clear inches on either side to get the car through.
I saw the car in primm Nevada in 2011 at a Casio there
Pelas fotos da época este não é o mesmo carro só olhar a traseira do carro da época e este carro.
Seen this car back in 72 (I was 8 years old) out front of a Nichols store , it was rolled out of a tractor trailer , we could walk right up to the car and look inside , quite an experience as a young lad .
And, yes, it may just be a movie car, but you'd be amazed at the number of people who came to Ken's Bonnie and Clyde Ambush Museum in Gibsland, LA, just to see this car. When I talked to a lady at Warner Bros who assisted in the development of the special dvd edition of the movie, she said she knew that Warren Beatty would be very upset to know that he missed the opportunity to include this info on the extras dvd included in this collection.
Эта машина не из кино
1934 FORD FORDOR DELUXE SEDAN
Death Car: 1934 Ford Model 730 Deluxe Sedan
Assembly Date: February 1934
Dealership: Mosley-Mack Motor Company
Engine: Large eighy-five HP V8
Transmission type: manual 3 speed
Original owner: Ruth Warren
Original purchase price: $835 (1934)
Custom color: Cordoba Grey
Date stolen: April 29, 1934
License plate: 1934 Arkansas 15-368
Original license plate: Kansas 3-17832
"Bonnie & Clyde" brought it out of retirement. In 1988, the death car was used in the
Great American Road Rally in the old Arlington Stadium.
he then hired Arcadia attorney W.D.Goff to represent her.
Goff claimed that by Jordan setting the value of the car over $3,000, the case would
surely wind up in Federal Court. Because of Sheriff Jordan's refusal to comply, Federal
Judge Benjamin Dawkins threatened to send the sheriff to jail, if he did not return the
car to Mrs. Warren
Nice replica. The real car is on display in Primm Nevada at the casino. At least as of last weekend it was. They also have many Bonnie and Clyde artifacts inluding the shirt he was wearing at the time of death....bullet holes and all.
Right, this isn't the same type of car. Trunk looks totally different
This is a 1934 Ford, not a 1932 model. I know this because I rode to DC with the owner, Ken Holmes, to deliver this car to the museum. If you look real close, I am the one in the jeans and denim shirt taking pictures in the background. Ken is very adamant that people know this is the movie car and not the actual death car.
Oh, and the car at the casino looks NOTHING like this car.
This is not the real car, where they died Bonnie & clyde.
rest in peace uncle
This isn't the car, just one from the movie. Glass isn't bullet ridden, and the factory ford trunk from the original car isn't on this one. this is NOT the same car. Bullet patterns aren't even the same on the drivers side!
I'm the person that sold him the car. The funny thing is I said to him, don't scratch it up too much, because I need to resell it.
............ BONNIE & CLYDE .............
Financial Services
" We'll look after You "
That’s not the car, where is the back storage on the car?
The Warren Beatty movie car!
bullet holes on driver side hood dosnt match the original photo.
Saw elvis driving the real one
Muzeum of crime? Punishment? That unit belongs bronzed at Arlington.
🔥💥🔥 FAKE, REAL CAR IS AT WHISKEY PETES LAS VAGAS NV,
Not the real car: where is the potters trunk?
That's not the death car i can tell by the bullets holes from the actual ambush footage. The actual death car sits inside whisky pete in vegas.
So where is the car on display today........
Why glorify criminals?
Ther not they do this stuff because its history that people are interested in and the criminals aren't being made famous ther being looked at as infamous
ps,...Mrs.Ruth Warren DID get her car back,but with a bill of $80.00..
no, its the movie car...says so on the side of it
Did Bonnie and Clyde ever go to disneyland?
Original?
Sometimes, there were two dueling B&C "death cars" on display at opposite ends of the same rural county at the same time! Complete with harrowing narration by one or more (fake) B&C "survivors", civilian "witnesses" to the tragedy, or "officer of the Law who pulled the trigger." Sometimes they were shut down and run out of town, other times took the receipts and fled on their own.
And sorry, by THIS CAR I meant not the movie prop shown here, but the "real death car" SS421982 referred to.
Not to go on and on, but you can tell this is a prop. IIRC, the real Laws that day let fly at B&C with everything they had, to include Thompson SMGs (fires .45 cal. pistol ammo), a 12-ga. shotgun(s), police .38s, and a Browning Automatic Rifle (BAR -- .45 long ammo). I don't see any shotgun patterns on the side of this car, unless maybe they were using slug. The existing holes don't show the "walking" (up and to right) pattern typical of a Thomson; finally, BARs would SHRED the car body metal.
Also, be very careful of the claims made for the various '60s TV series Batmobiles that are shown around the country. TV lends a hand: typically for TV there is made one working vehicle, plus a detailed-cockpit model for close-ups, a silhouette-only car for the long shots, and a couple of cars to wreck. In addition the orig. designer, George Barris, cranked out several more complete vehicles after he discovered rubes would bay $10 each to gape at THE Batmobile." But: was it EVER ON FILM?
Actully in whiskey petes nevada lasvegas
That's definitely not the same car B&C were ambushed in. Not going into details. Don't know if it actually exists . Probably. But that ain't it
@50zcarsman I guess I don't know it's the actual car. They CLAIM it is and whoever owns the casinos (Terrible's I believe) have had the car for years and years. They also have Clyde's death shirt, one of Bonnie's hats and many artifacts made while in prison that his deceased sister had been storing. They must have made a deal and she willed the items to the casino. It's all under glass...there is no blood in the car anywhere. I think it's real, but you'd have to decide that yourself.
Alot of these gangsters were heroe's to alot of people back in the 1930's.. Read or watch the full history behind this..
This is just a prop car. The original is online under the Bonnie & Clyde Findagrave.com OR look up on Google Blanche Barrow. Cant get over how stupid it was to just shoot them to pieces like they did, all because that idiot detective wanted revenge. Sad indeed
Contemporâneos de Lampião e Maria bonita . A " grota do angico" deles tinha motor e também morreram de emboscada mas, suas cabeças não foram cortadas.
That car is a fake model of the car the real car is in a different museum
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
It’s not the real one. It’s a Fake.
Not real car. The real car is in Nevada casino
The real Car
When Mrs.Ruth Warren arrived in Bienville Parish to claim her car (after the ambush).
Sheriff Henderson Jordan refused to release it to her, claiming that she would have to
pay $15,000 to get it back.
the real car was black . there was no other couleurs at that time ...
green. The model T was only available in black.
This is fake Real one is in Las Vegas
So many videos of the real car..any idiot knows the bullethole locations in this car are not same as the real car
Bullcrap,not the real car
FAKE
Ya know,the real car sure makes it around the place,in Nevada! I saw it at Buffalo Bills place,just outside of Vegas. I dont get why they are putting the movie car into that place. They should be putting the real one there instead.And,yes,the real car was just toast! ALLL shot up! Blood all over in it,etc.