Lifelong BMW fan gets fitting headstone at death

Discuss Anything & Everything Tucker

Moderators: Tuckerfan1053, TuckerCar, Phantomrig

Forum rules
The views expressed by users of this forum are their own and do not reflect the position of the Tucker Automobile Club of America, Inc., its members, officers or directors. Each user is responsible for the content of his/her own posts.

By utilizing these boards you are agreeing to these terms and agree to hold harmless Tucker Automobile Club of America, Inc. and its members, officers or directors from any part in the outcome of your use of these boards.

The Tucker Automobile Club of America, Inc. reserves the right to delete, edit or otherwise modify posts as it deems necessary for the organization or primary purpose of the site. Please report any activity which is libelous, inflammatory, or in violation of common decency to the forum administrator immediately.

Lifelong BMW fan gets fitting headstone at death

Postby Tucker Fan 48 » Sun May 09, 2010 4:44 pm

I saw this article and couldn't help but think about how some Tucker fans might do this. It might be hard to find a a single block of granite
big enough for a Tucker headstone.

bmw-headstone.jpg
bmw-headstone.jpg (92.59 KiB) Viewed 290 times


Here is the article:

Are you a fanboy? It's fine, you can admit it. While the term often carries a negative connotation, being a fan of one particular brand isn't really anything to be ashamed of, and we all have our built-in biases and preferences anyway. So strong was Steve Marsh's love of BMW automobiles that his family decided it would only be proper to bury him under one when he died at the young age of 51 years old.

Marsh, somewhat ironically an engineer at Ford, apparently had a particular fondness for the BMW M3 convertible. Nothing wrong with that, we say. And so wife and two children contracted a mason to help them design a headstone in the shape of that very automobile. No big deal, right? Wrong. This particular headstone happens to be life-size and was chiseled out of a single block of granite.

So large is the M3-shaped stone that it cost a whopping £50,000 (over $75,000 U.S.) and had to be shipped in from China. Total weight comes in at one ton, which meant it took a crane and 20 operators to lower the stone in position in its final resting place at the Manor Park Cemetery in East London.

A tad offbeat, for sure... though not nearly as much as the Puerto Rican who was embalmed atop his Honda CBR motorcycle. As you might expect, the massive hewn BMW headstone is raised the ire of some locals. Local resident Rene Dryden commented:

You have to admit it's totally different to everything else around it. It's definitely not my taste. I think some people will say it's tacky and it could end up as a target to be vandalised. It could open the floodgates for anything to be built in a cemetery. When I walked past it the other day, though, I have to admit it did make me smile.

Honestly, it's not really our taste either. We'd have gone with a hardtop for all those rainy London days.
User avatar
Tucker Fan 48
Tucker Fan
 
Posts: 608
Joined: Thu Mar 26, 2009 6:34 pm
Location: Maui

Re: Lifelong BMW fan gets fitting headstone at death

Postby TuckerCar » Mon May 10, 2010 3:30 pm

I saw the video of the embalmed Puerto Rican on Youtube. I still don't understand how they got him to stay in that position.
Vice President
Tucker Automobile Club of America, Inc.
User avatar
TuckerCar
Administrator
 
Posts: 691
Joined: Wed Mar 07, 2001 7:05 am
Location: Chicagoland


Return to Tucker Topics

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 1 guest

cron