The Standard (St. Catharines)

Fire destroys car collection worth $2.3M

Forty classic cars and pickup trucks and memorabili­a lost

- ALYN EDWARDS DRIVING.CA

Garry and Darlene Cassidy of B.C. were in Las Vegas after attending the Barrett-Jackson auction when they learned about a fire that destroyed their collection of 40 high-end muscle cars, classic cars and pickup trucks.

They had recently built their 8,500-square foot showroom in rural Langley, 45 minutes east of Vancouver, to house the collector cars they had purchased and restored over the past 30 years.

A new home they had constructe­d nearby was not touched by the blaze.

Reached by telephone shortly before boarding a flight to Vancouver from Las Vegas several hours after the fire, Garry Cassidy said he and his wife are devastated by the loss.

“Insurance is one thing but some of these cars are irreplacea­ble. They are like losing your children,” he said

The cars include vintage and rare Corvettes, Camaros, Chevy IIs, Chevrolet and GMC pickup trucks from the 1950s and a matching pair of 1955 Pontiac Chieftain models — a two-door hardtop and a Safari station wagon — both restored to the highest standard.

The Cassidys, who operate a successful tanker trucking company, are well known in collector-car circles in both Canada and the U.S. as they regularly participat­e in car shows and attend auctions south of the border. Many of their cars were purchased at the Barrett-Jackson auctions.

Hagerty Insurance Canadian representa­tive Nigel Matthews advises dealing with a specialist when insuring collector vehicles.

“You can’t replace the cars from a lifetime of collecting. And there is a difference between agreed-value insurance and regular insurance,” he says. Garry Cassidy confirmed that both the building the vehicles it houses were fully insured.

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