1956 Continental Mark II
Ford deliberately accepted a loss of roughly $1,000 on every Continental Mark II sold, prioritizing craftsmanship over profit in their quest to build America’s finest automobile.
With a base price of $9,695 (over $10,000 with air conditioning), it cost as much as a Rolls-Royce, attracting wealthy buyers including Elvis Presley, Frank Sinatra, and President Dwight D. Eisenhower.
Styling represented a dramatic departure from typical 1950s luxury cars heavy with chrome and two-tone paint schemes. Instead, the Mark II featured elegant, understated proportions reminiscent of an enlarged Thunderbird, paying homage to the 1940-48 Lincoln Continental with its trunk lid molded to match the concealed spare tire shape.
Exceptional handcrafted construction included wet-sanded, multiple-coat lacquer paint polished to a deep gloss that mass production techniques couldn’t match. Premium materials throughout and precision instrumentation reflected watchmaking-level attention to detail.
A 368-cubic-inch Lincoln Y-block V-8 produced 285 horsepower in 1956 (300 horsepower for 1957), paired with a three-speed Turbo-Drive automatic transmission. The Continental Division built approximately 3,005 examples between 1956 and 1957, with far fewer surviving today.
This deliberate exclusivity helped establish the Mark II as a timeless American classic that successfully challenged luxury leaders Packard and Cadillac.
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