It’s every time-capsule enthusiast’s worst nightmare: you bury something beautiful for future generations, only to open the vault decades later and find nothing but rust and disappointment. But in the small American town of Seward, the opposite happened. When a massive concrete vault finally opened after half a century, residents witnessed a small miracle — a perfectly preserved piece of automotive history.
The vault was the life’s work of eccentric local entrepreneur Harold Davisson. In 1975, determined to show his grandchildren “what life was like back then,” he decided a shoebox in the backyard wouldn’t cut it. Instead, he constructed an enormous underground chamber made of 45 tons of reinforced concrete—proudly claiming the title of the world’s largest time capsule. Last Friday, exactly on schedule, his daughter Trish opened the vault using heavy machinery as hundreds of spectators held their breath. Had groundwater quietly destroyed Harold’s dream, or had his engineering brilliance stood the test of time?