A MAN had discovered property with hundreds of cars from the time of his childhood and walks the rows of cars weekly to reminisce.He visits the site weekly with his wife to walk the rows of cars and feel like he's being transported back to his childhoodAmerican vehicle design language in the 1950s was a truly unique time for automotive history, as the country had just come out of the shadows of WWII and the economy was at an all-time high.
Fast forward to now, and it shows that mass production of cars had a side effect that no one saw coming - surplus.with vehicles from the 1950s crop up all over the United States, with troves of them that were once brightly colored and leather-clad becoming rusted shells of their former glory. The mass production of these cars meant that Phil saw them everywhere, and seeing them once again brought sweet memories rushing back.
Phil wrote that he'd offered to buy the property from the original owner, saying that he'd live among the rows of American Iron."I told him that I would build a house right in the middle of these cars. Every morning I would get up and walk around outside and pretend I was back in the good old days.""Fantastic place, as always, but when cars are this rusted, it's a little sad," a user wrote.Junkyards filled to the brim with American Iron are all over the U.S.