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Year Introduced Year Discontinued Platforms Generations Vehicle Information Eight: 1939 1951 3 Mid-range full-size car M series: 1949 1968 4 Sold in Canada, rebadged Ford F series: Monterey: 1952 1974 7 Full-size sedan served the flagship, mid-range, and entry-level offerings Custom: 1952 1956 1 Entry-level full-size car Montclair: 1955 1968 5 ...
For 1939, the Mercury was launched at a starting price of US$916 ($20,064 in 2023 dollars [10]); over 65,800 vehicles were sold in the inaugural model year. [11] In response to the popularity of the model line, Ford revised its branding structure after 1940; De Luxe Ford was discontinued as a sub-marque (returning to its previous use as a Ford trim line), and all Lincolns became derived from ...
Vehicles produced under the Mercury brand of the Ford Motor Company. Pages in category "Mercury vehicles" The following 47 pages are in this category, out of 47 total
The St. Thomas Assembly plant in Ontario, Canada, closed on September 15, 2011, ending the production of the Ford Crown Victoria and Lincoln Town Car. In continuous production for 36 years, the Grand Marquis was the longest-produced and second best-selling Mercury (behind the Cougar), with over 2.7 million produced. [1]
(No civilian vehicles were made this year) 1944. Willys-Overland CJ-1 ... Lincoln Town Car (1980-1989) Mercury Cougar (1980-1982) Plymouth Reliant (1980-1988)
1964 Mercury M700 flatbed towtruck 1964 Mercury Econoline EM-100 pickup. Alongside rebranding the F-Series pickup trucks as the M-series, Lincoln-Mercury also marketed other vehicles of the Ford truck range. The Ford medium-duty F-series (F-500 and above) was part of the M-series, including an MB-series bus chassis (Ford B-series).
For the 1979 model year, Mercury introduced the third-generation Marquis, marking the first ground-up redesign of the full-size range since 1969. Trading places with the Cougar as the longest Mercury vehicle, the Marquis shed 17 inches in length and over 1,000 pounds in curb weight (in comparison to its 1978 predecessor).
The Mercury Monterey is a series of full-size cars that were manufactured and marketed by the Mercury division of Ford from 1950 to 1974. Deriving its name from Monterey Bay, the initial Mercury Monterey served as the top-of-the-line two-door sedan model for 1950 and 1951 to compete with the hardtop models of Oldsmobile and Buick.