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- 1968 Mercury Cougar Coupe - Ford Motor Company's Mustang, introduced in 1964, was such a success that other car makers soon copied it, including Ford itself. Mercury's Cougar was based on the Mustang, but with more upscale styling and interior appointments that made it something of a "poor man's Jaguar." This Cougar has the rare XR7-G package with a hood scoop, sun roof, and other special trim features.

- 1968
- Collections - Artifact
1968 Mercury Cougar Coupe
Ford Motor Company's Mustang, introduced in 1964, was such a success that other car makers soon copied it, including Ford itself. Mercury's Cougar was based on the Mustang, but with more upscale styling and interior appointments that made it something of a "poor man's Jaguar." This Cougar has the rare XR7-G package with a hood scoop, sun roof, and other special trim features.
- Sunroof on a Station Wagon at the New York International Auto Show, 1959 - Station wagons were low-production specialty vehicles until the 1950s, when parents embraced them as ideal vehicles for transporting growing families. This highly stylized station wagon at a 1959 auto show illustrates their rise from utility vehicles to fashion-forward, family-friendly haulers. Until the 1980s (with the introduction of minivans) packed station wagons were the very symbol of the family car.

- 1959
- Collections - Artifact
Sunroof on a Station Wagon at the New York International Auto Show, 1959
Station wagons were low-production specialty vehicles until the 1950s, when parents embraced them as ideal vehicles for transporting growing families. This highly stylized station wagon at a 1959 auto show illustrates their rise from utility vehicles to fashion-forward, family-friendly haulers. Until the 1980s (with the introduction of minivans) packed station wagons were the very symbol of the family car.
- Sunroof and Interior of a Station Wagon, New York International Auto Show, 1959 - Station wagons were low-production specialty vehicles until the 1950s, when parents embraced them as ideal vehicles for transporting growing families. This highly stylized station wagon at a 1959 auto show illustrates their rise from utility vehicles to fashion-forward, family-friendly haulers. Until the 1980s (with the introduction of minivans) packed station wagons were the very symbol of the family car.

- 1959
- Collections - Artifact
Sunroof and Interior of a Station Wagon, New York International Auto Show, 1959
Station wagons were low-production specialty vehicles until the 1950s, when parents embraced them as ideal vehicles for transporting growing families. This highly stylized station wagon at a 1959 auto show illustrates their rise from utility vehicles to fashion-forward, family-friendly haulers. Until the 1980s (with the introduction of minivans) packed station wagons were the very symbol of the family car.