They thought he was crazy.
In 1975, when furniture store owner Harold Davisson told people he was burying a brand new car in his front yard, neighbors whispered behind his back. Who in their right mind seals a perfectly good Chevy Vega—the cheapest car he could find—inside a 45-ton concrete vault?
But Harold wasn’t crazy. He was a grandfather with a vision that would span generations.
THE BURIED TREASURE
On July 4, 1975, Harold sealed more than just a car underground in Seward, Nebraska. He sealed a time capsule—a snapshot of everyday American life in the mid-70s. Inside the vault, he carefully placed over 5,000 items: personal letters, pet rocks, a Kawasaki motorcycle, and even an aquamarine leisure suit with yellow flowers stitched into the fabric.
The centerpiece? A bright yellow 1975 Chevy Vega with a license plate reading “2025” bolted to the bumper.
His instructions were crystal clear: Do not open until July 4, 2025.
WHY?
Harold wanted his grandchildren to remember. He wanted them to see what life was like in his era—to touch the fabrics, read the letters, and yes, even drive the car that represented freedom and possibility in 1975.
To protect his vision, he added a concrete pyramid on top of the underground vault in 1983, safeguarding it from water damage. Inside, he placed a beat-up Toyota Corolla to demonstrate what 10 years does to a car.
The 1977 Guinness Book of World Records certified it as the largest time capsule in the world.
THE HEARTBREAK
Harold Davisson passed away in 1999, never seeing his creation opened. His dream remained buried with him—until his daughter Trish finally got the chance he never had.
THE MOMENT TRUTH WAS REVEALED
On June 26, 2025—exactly 50 years later—workers began the painstaking process of cracking the seal. It took six hours to cut through the concrete.
When the dust finally cleared, gasps echoed across the crowd.
The Chevy Vega emerged with its original bright yellow paint still visible. Zero miles on the odometer. A perfectly preserved relic from 1975, as if time had stopped the moment Harold sealed it away.
Hundreds of people traveled from across the country to witness the capsule reveal secrets that had been buried for half a century.
THE LEGACY
Harold Davisson wasn’t just preserving objects. He was preserving memory, emotion, and a grandfather’s love for generations he would never meet.
Today, that yellow Chevy Vega stands as a testament to one man’s extraordinary vision—and a reminder that the most powerful gifts we leave behind aren’t material things, but the stories that make people remember who we were.
What would YOU put in a time capsule for your grandchildren? 💭