The Citizen (KZN)

The lost barn find collection

AUTOMOTIVE: AMAZING DISCOVERY MARKS FINAL CHAPTER OF OOM LOUIS COETZER’S JOURNEY

- Citizen reporter

Auction features 200 cars that include Mercs, Chevrolets, Holdens, Fords, Cadillacs, Alfas, De Sotos, Porsches and BMWs.

The sale of a nondescrip­t tract of land near a settlement between nothing and nowhere was the unlikely catalyst for a series of events that led to the chance discovery of South Africa’s largest ever automotive “barn find” treasure trove going under the hammer in a 10-day long online-only Creative Rides auction starting at 8am on Monday, 25 March.

And with this discovery bringing the total to more than 600 vehicles, it also cements the late Oom Louis Coetzer’s place in history as amassing the biggest individual car collection ever chronicled in South Africa.

Creative Rides Classic & Collectibl­es Auctions CEO Kevin Derrick says the astonishin­g 334-lot Lost Barn Find Collection auction features about 200 cars that include never-before-seen Mercedes Benzes, Chevrolets, Holdens, Fords, Cadillacs, Alfas, De Sotos, Porsches and BMWs.

“The remaining lots comprise hundreds of items of automobili­a, scores of engines across makes and models from 4 and 6 cylinders to monster V8s, enough classic car spares, car books and original manuals to stock a retail store, and original body parts from bumpers to tail lights,” says Derrick.

He says in December 2020, internatio­nal collectors were introduced to the unassuming Oom Louis’ 50-year automotive affair when Creative Rides held the first of two Coetzer estate sales that together saw 286 remarkable vehicles pass into the hands of a new generation of classic car lovers.

At the time, the Coetzer estate was known to comprise more than 450 vehicles and among the auctioned classics were numerous rare models from one of the world’s largest private collection­s of Mercs.

But that was before the find last year.

Joff van Reenen, lead auctioneer of Creative Rides Classic & Collectibl­es Auctions, says it’s been an eight-month labour of wonder and love to document and catalogue into 334 lots the immense automotive cache that lay undisturbe­d for decades.

Van Reenen says like all the best books, this final chapter in the story of Oom Louis’ five decades of quiet but consistent classic car collecting, delivers an astonishin­g twist.

“The opening lines of the chapter were written in May last year with a call from one of Oom Louis’ three children, Lida van der Merwe, who explained that a routine estate disposal of a remote parcel of Eastern Cape land had suddenly become a lot more complicate­d,” he says.

“Lida said when the decision was made to sell the property, the Coetzer siblings knew an inspection of its rambling barn was warranted.

“To the Coetzer children raised by a passionate collector who was renowned for turning even mundane routines like afternoon school runs into surprises with a constant parade of exciting and different vehicles parked at the pick-up point, the word ‘barn’ raised suspicions of another cache of cars.”

Van Reenen describes the moment he first stepped into the barn as “both surreal and staggering”.

Derrick says the true scale and global significan­ce of Oom Louis’ Lost Barn Collection became evident soon after the mammoth cataloguin­g process began.

“I’d struggle to name a single undiscover­ed, completely unknown barn collection of this size ever found outside of the United States. It’s crazy; more than 200 cars,” he says. “Collectors don’t know about any of them; they’ve never been on public display.

“And in the auction preparatio­ns, we have intentiona­lly left the vehicles in as close to discovery condition as possible so that collectors across the country and the world can appreciate for themselves the historic magnitude of this incredible find.”

Van Reenen says the Louis Coetzer lost barn find collection auction will close at 8pm on Wednesday, 3 April, and successful buyers – those with the highest bids – will be notified the following day.

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