When Keith Richard Litavsky returned home from fighting on the front
line in the Vietnam War, he did so with two Purple Hearts and one more
mission to accomplish.
That mission took him to an Illinois car
dealership where he purchased the car he had been dreaming about while
serving overseas: a marina blue 1967 Chevrolet Corvette.
Paid for with money he'd sent home from the war for that very purpose, Keith Litavsky took meticulous care of the car.
INDIANAPOLIS — A marina blue 1967 Chevrolet Corvette Coupe bought by a Vietnam War hero and maintained by his son sold for $675,000 at an Indianapolis auction Saturday.
The
unrestored sports car, with 8,553 miles on it, was bought by Carmel,
Ind., resident Gary Runyon at Dana Mecum’s 30th Spring Classic at the State Fairgrounds.
"It was very exciting but also very, very
difficult," to part with the car, said its owner, Matt Litavsky. "It was
all kind of a haze."
Litavsky's
father, Keith Richard Litavsky, bought the car after returning from the
Vietnam War with two Purple Hearts in the 1960s. He cared for it
meticulously and seldom drove it before dying of cancer in 1993 from
exposure to Agent Orange. Matt Litavsky kept up the same level of care,
driving it a total of 15 miles over the past 15 years.
Keith Richard Litavsky, the original owner of the Corvette, served
fearlessly on the front line in Vietnam, carrying his wounded commanding
officer out of a firefight, who would later die in a helicopter crash
and leave Litavsky as the only surviving soldier in his unit. After
returning from Vietnam decorated with two purple hearts, he went right
to Jack Douglass Chevrolet in Hinsdale, Illinois, and purchased his
dream car—this 1967 Corvette—with money he’d sent home for that purpose.
Sadly, Litavsky died before his time of cancer from exposure to Agent
Orange on his last mission in Vietnam. But his legacy lives on in the
Corvette being offered in Indianapolis by his son Matt, who was given
the car just before Litavsky’s untimely death in 1993.
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