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An Original Warner Brother's 1969 Dodge Charger GENERAL LEE !!

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Old 06-29-2010, 07:03 AM
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Default An Original Warner Brother's 1969 Dodge Charger GENERAL LEE !!

I couldn't help posting this here when browsing the classic auto trader ads. As you can see, this is an original 1969 Dodge Charger GENERAL LEE bought by Warner Brother's. It was used during the TV series in the late 1970's and early 1980's. I remember tuning in every Friday night at 8PM when the series was originally aired. A true time capsule and ideally one of a kind car .. It has been in the private ownership market for some time now. I believe John Schneider AKA Bo Duke sold his personal GENERAL LEE for like $9 Million a few years ago on eBay. So, $100K might be a steal for this 69 Charger with 114,000 original miles-

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Quoted History:
This is documented as one of the original Dodge Chargers bought by Warner Bros. in 1978 for use during the Georgia filming of the first episodes of Dukes of Hazzard. This is documented as one of the original Dodge Chargers bought by Warner Bros. in 1978 for use during the Georgia filming of the first episodes of Dukes of Hazzard. For the first episodes there were a total of 8 Dodge Chargers bought by Warner Bros. to be used as General Lee's. The first three General's were built in California and delivered to Georgia where transportation coordinator John Marendi labeled the cars as Lee 1, 2, and 3. After filming began in GA, the General Lee's were wrecked quickly and it became apparent that more were needed. Employed by Warner Bros, Don Schisler, one of the original builders of the Georgia General Lee's and transportation coordinator for Dukes of Hazzard, bought an additional 5 Chargers for a disaster-bound transformation into General Lee's. After filming ended in Georgia, Don Schisler bought, from Warner Bros, this Dodge Charger which had been previously un-used, on film, for his personal ownership and use as a General Lee. Since Schisler bought this Charger from Warner Bros. it was not shipped to California, like the other surviving cars which were later used for the continued filming of Dukes of Hazzard. Because of this, it was able to survive it's otherwise doomed fate of being jumped or crashed and becoming one of the 249 General Lee's wrecked during the filming in the years to come.. This particular General Lee disappeared in 1980 when Don Schisler sold the car because of the amount of attention he got with it; people would see the car in his drive-way and actually stop at his home looking for the Duke boys?!! The car was sold to private hands and just resurfaced in 2008 when we purchased it. Only about 1500 miles had been put on the car since Schisler sold it in 1980. This Charger is all original as the day it was transformed into a General Lee back in 1979. It still has its original Flame Orange paint, small push-bar, CB and antenna, roll-bar, Vector wheels and is one of the few General Lee's to be wearing its original; 01, confederate flag, and GENERAL LEE accents that were hand painted by Larry West. It is a true C6T tan interior car and has a real tan interior, not painted! This General may have never made it on the screen but it's for that reason that it still exists today in its pristine, un-abused condition as when it was originally transformed by The Generals First Men. There is a 3 ring binder documenting this cars history, a complete timeline from prior to Warner Bros purchasing the car until present. Included are notarized bills of sales when Warner Bros purchased the car and when they sold it to Schilser. In addition to the pile of paperwork, we also have pictures of the car in its original condition, on set, sitting next to Lee 1 (in the pictures, it's the gold car in the background, the smashed up car is LEE 1). Because this General was never inventoried as a screen used car, it was sold without any contracts forbidding commercial use. The Road Back to Early Hazzard? by Jon Holland is an excellent book filled with a lot of early Georgia Dukes history and the obstacles that the crew had to overcome to make the show possible. If it were not for these men, who worked around the clock, often sleeping in the back seat of a car, the show would never have become a success and legend it has develop into today. The book is a great read and includes mention of this, one of the 1st General Lee's made.




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