In Bowling Green Kentucky, near the assembly plant for the Corvette,
a group of dedicated enthusiasts had a dream - - Dan Gale was President of The
National Corvette Museum Foundation, established in 1987 after a small group of the
National Corvette Restorers Society talked about a need for a library and archives for the
Corvette. The idea expanded into plans for a full-blown museum. Gale headed the volunteer
group that planned, financed and built the museum from the beginning, until it's opening
in 1994. The land for the museum was contributed by four Bowling Green-area residents. The money needed to build the museum came from sponsors and a
consortium of public and private funding sources, including nearly $4 million from
Corvette club members, Chevrolet dealers, Corvette suppliers and Corvette owners
worldwide. Also, UAW-represented and salaried employees at the Bowling Green Corvette
plant pledged $170,000 through payroll deduction. The architectural firm for the
project was Neumann - Smith Associates of Southfield, Michigan, (Corvette C5 designer John Cafaro worked with Neumann - Smith on
the NCM project), exhibit design was by Exhibit Works
of Livonia, Missouri; and construction management was by Turner Construction of
Cincinnati, Ohio, in a joint venture with Alliance Corp., a Bowling Green-Glasgow,
Kentucky firm.  After seven years of effort, and
commitment of fifteen million dollars, on Labor Day weekend 1994 the dream came true. The
National Corvette Museum is the largest and most comprehensive nonprofit museum ever
dedicated to a single automobile.
The now world famous 68,000 square foot museum, toped by
the illuminated 11-story Mobile 1 Spire, was dedicated to the history and preservation of
America's best loved sports car. Corvette people and enthusiasts from all over the
country came together in Bowling Green to celebrate the opening. On hand were GM people
like Jim Perkins, Larry Shinoda, and Zora Arkus Duntov, and entertainers like the Beach
Boys and George Jones. The dedication celebration started with more than
4,000 Corvette owners converging on Bowling Green after traveling a combined total
of 250,000 miles across the country. The line of Corvettes coming in to Bowling Green
stretched as far as the eye could see.
The idea for the caravans came as a fluke, Dan Gale was
speaking at the opening of a remodeled hotel in Bowling Green, When the committee's Press
Relations person pointed out there was a problem. Loads of television and press people,
and nothing new to give them. Dan, good on public relations, came up with an idea..
" We'll have Corvettes
leaving from every major city, from the South, North, East, and West. The Goodyear blimp
will be on hand for the major networks to shoot from etc,etc. Well,as luck would have it
we had 4310 Corvettes from all over. It was a real blast. I can only imagine 1999, I'll
bet it will be 10,000. I hope the Kentucky police are as receptive now as they
were then. .I started a year before the caravan with the Governor, State and Local police.
We had meetings once a month to let them be part of it. It was also a great fund raising
event, t-shirts, jackets etc. I get misty thinking of it. The National Corvette Museum is
the largest single marquee lovers undertaking ever." - Dan Gale
I remember the last actual day of caravaning.....it
rained all day. For that matter it rained some through the night before we staged
for the final leg at the Opryland Hotel. There must have been about two thousand of
us out there hand washing our cars and waiting in the endless line to start the trek to
the Museum. I'm really looking forward to '99. - John Rupp "The Arkansas Flash"
National Corvette Museum Trivia..
Ever wonder about where the now famous NCM logo came from ?
It was originally designed by Larry Shinoda as the gas cap cover for the Stingray.
The National Corvette Museum
is privately owned 501(c)(3) not for profit organization.
Visit
the Natioanl Corvette Museum Online
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