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The (not so) Hidden G1187 Page
UPDATED 9/10/2007
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| As it appears
on my Miata today. |
Me at 9 years
old. |
Me at 43 years
old. |
Ahh, so you found it! The hidden G1187 page.
So many people at Miata events and even just driving around, stop me to ask what
the significance behind this G1187 plate is.So here's
the story:Back in 1964 my father Herb worked for the City
of Boston. At that time, some city employees were granted "reserved" license plates
that allowed them to park on city streets and exempted them from being ticketed
by the cops and meter maids. Having a reserved plate, meant that it stays with you
forever. When you get a new car, the plate get transferred. When the state
issues new plates in a different color, everybody else got a different number, they
sent a shiny new G1187.
The original '64 plate was a brown with white numbers on steel.
This is the same plate pictured above.
It was replaced in '66 by a green and white, also on steel.
Also, the first year they split the letter from the numbers.
The state went high tech in 1967 with it's first reflectorized plate
that had an ivory white background and blue numbers with MASSACHUSETTS embossed
on aluminum so they wouldn't rust. They got new registration stickers every year
which I always looked forward to sticking on.
The next change came in '73 when they switched to red, thick looking numbers on
a creamy white reflectorized background with MASSACHUSETTS under the numbers.
In '83 came green on white, followed in '91 by the current "Spirit
of Massachusetts" Red, White and Blues.
Then the inevitable happened. I moved to California my parents decided to move
to Florida. Since I had already moved, the plate was given to a family friend with
the understanding that, if I ever decided to move back to Mass, G1187 would be returned
to me.Since I had been so used to seeing that number on
a car since I was a kid, I decided to have the California DMV make it for me as
a "vanity plate". It's a comfort thing for me.Paying special
attention to spacing, the California version looks very much like the original,
and very different then a normal current issue California plate. It has a very "official"
look that causes people to question what it all means.
My parents applied for G1187 as a Florida vanity plate but were rejected because
"G" series plates were reserved for government issue. However, EC-G1187 (my mothers
initials) was acceptable so it lives on my mothers 2000 Accord.

This is my mother Ethel with her Florida G1187
So there you have it in a nutshell...Three
states, three G1187's, spanning almost fourty years.

Well now the story gets even better!
Back
in 1996, we went to Key West for vacation. While we were there we went sailing
on this catamaran.

We
had a nice day out on the ocean.

And
Roberta even got friendly with the crew!
After
a day of sailing we went to this restaurant called the Half Shell Raw Bar. I was
taken with the place because the walls are literally covered with license plates.
Being a license plate geek, I thought to myself, "Gee, it would be really cool to
have one of the old G1187's hanging in here." But I never sent one because... who
knows? I didn't know if they'd actually hang it up. I'd never have any proof!

Me
in 1996
Fast
forward to April 2002. I was talking to this guy about stuff for his Miata and somewhere
during the conversation he tells me he lives in Key West. I tell him that I've been
to Key West and proceed to tell him the story of the catamaran ride and the bar
with the license plates. He then tells me that the boat we were on was probably
his. And he knows the people at the bar! The very next day a vintage G1187 plate
wings it's way to Key West.

About
a week later, "Captain" Sean (pictured above) hangs the now famous G1187 plate in
the bar fulfilling a six year dream.

The
Day Manager gets in on the Plate Hanging ceremony.
I don't
know her name yet but something tells me before too long I will.

Now,
remember that picture of Roberta with the crew back in 1996? That was indeed "Captain"
Sean (in the tank top)!
The
moral of the story: "What goes around comes around".
Updated
September 10, 2007
On
a recent trip to Florida, I made the pilgrimage to the Half Shell Raw Bar to visit
the G1187 shrine.
It's
been moved from it's original spot to a lower area of the same wall. After locating
it, I sat down at the bar and ordered up a dozen fresh oysters and a beer. I began
chatting with the bartender who looked vaguely familiar. I asked how long she'd
worked there. "14 years", she groaned. Her name is Judy, the unnamed Day Manager
from 2002.

Judy
and Larry, 8/24/07


Sean
and Larry, 8/24/07
Just
by chance I wandered into another bar
(there
are lots of them in Key West)
called
the Hog's Breath Cafe
and
there on the wall was another 1187 plate!
Someone
from New Hampshire who was awarded The Purple Heart.
If
anyone knows this person, I'd love to hear from them.


The
G1187 saga continues to captivate and amaze us...
Got
your own 1187 story? Let's hear about it!
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