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NewsJuly 17, 2015

WHITE, Ga. -- Nestled in a north Georgia forest, more than 4,000 classic cars decorate 32 acres that have been turned into a junkyard museum. Owner Walter Dean Lewis' parents started the business in 1931 as a general store that also sold auto parts. Lewis grew the collection, which had just 40 cars in the '70s, over time...

By DAVID GOLDMAN ~ Associated Press
Maintenance man Rockey Bryson walks past cars stacked at Old Car City, the world's largest known classic-car junkyard, on Thursday in White, Georgia. "It's kind of sad to see them. There's a lot of history here," Bryson said. "No telling how many senators or governors might have drove one of these cars." (David Goldman ~ Associated Press)
Maintenance man Rockey Bryson walks past cars stacked at Old Car City, the world's largest known classic-car junkyard, on Thursday in White, Georgia. "It's kind of sad to see them. There's a lot of history here," Bryson said. "No telling how many senators or governors might have drove one of these cars." (David Goldman ~ Associated Press)

WHITE, Ga. -- Nestled in a north Georgia forest, more than 4,000 classic cars decorate 32 acres that have been turned into a junkyard museum. Owner Walter Dean Lewis' parents started the business in 1931 as a general store that also sold auto parts. Lewis grew the collection, which had just 40 cars in the '70s, over time.

"The only thing I ever knew was cars and trucks," Lewis said. "I like to say I work for tomorrow, always thinking about the future. Someday they would be valuable."

Lewis stopped selling parts about six years ago, soon after realizing he could sustain the business more as a museum, charging $15 for visitors just looking and $25 for photographers. He estimates 95 percent of the people who come through the six miles of trails are photographers.

Visitors are greeted by various artworks and hand-painted messages. On occasion, Eddie McDaniel, who goes by "Fast Eddie," a childhood friend of Lewis, plays blues piano next to a shotgun and a bear mounted on a wall.

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In the 30 or 40 years that many of the cars have never moved, trees have grown through them and, in some cases, even lifted them off the ground. One of Lewis' more popular vehicles is a 1946 Ford truck used in "Murder in Coweta County," a 1983 film starring Johnny Cash and Andy Griffith.

Trees grow through the windshield of a 1937 Chrysler Imperial as it sits at Old Car City on Thursday in White, Georgia. (David Goldman ~ Associated Press)
Trees grow through the windshield of a 1937 Chrysler Imperial as it sits at Old Car City on Thursday in White, Georgia. (David Goldman ~ Associated Press)

"It's history. I saved them when other people were crushing them," Lewis said. "I don't know what I would do if I couldn't get up every morning and look at old cars."

Associated Press photographers and photo editors on Twitter: http://apne.ws/15Oo6jo

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