Ghia Dodge Firearrow III Coupe
Upon delivery to the Chrysler Corporation, the blue coupe was earmarked to be the center of attraction at the opening of the company’s new Chelsea Proving grounds in June 1954, at which point entered a daring young woman by the name of Betty Skelton. By the early 1950s, Miss Skelton had made quite a name for herself. While her first love was flying, (she had flown solo at age 12 and by age 20 was considered one of the best aerobatic pilots in the world) she had taken on a job as a charter pilot and in the course of transporting race drivers between events became friends with NASCAR founder Bill France.
Chrysler had made a deal with the U.S. Customs Department that in order to avoid paying some hefty import duties due to the Italian coachwork by Ghia, the car would go back to the country of its origin. In early 1955, the Firearrow III was crated up and sent back to the Turin shops of Ghia. From there Firearrow III was sold to a private individual in France where it remained in the same ownership for the next 30-plus years.