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The ad for today's Nice Price or No Dice Country Squire notes it being the same model of Ford that James Dean used as the chase car for his racing exploits. We all know how that ended for Dean.
We're trying to figure out what Ford peeps had going through their minds when they came up with the idea for this ad. We imagine the board meeting must have sounded something like this: “What ...
What's your take on this bagged boat for that much scratch? Based on the ad, does that seem like a deal? Or, is this Country Squire priced like a city slicker?
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The LTD Country Squire wasn't the only full-sized station wagon Ford sold during the 1970s (there were cheaper Country Sedans as well), but its name is the one we remember nearly a half-century later.
How else to explain this 1978 Ford Country Squire ringing the bell for $45,000 in its auction on Bring a Trailer. Granted, we don’t know the age of the high bidder, SerigD, but given that these ...
It was the aspirational vehicle of the period, as evidenced by the Country Squire’s status at the top of Ford’s lineup. And Ford was wagon master. Following the lead of a popular cottage ...
15 – 1981 Ford LTD Country Squire in Nevada junkyard – photo by Murilee Martin 04 – 1981 Ford LTD Country Squire in Nevada junkyard – photo by Murilee Martin 26 – 1981 Ford LTD Country ...
See All 8 Photos Of all the Kingswoods, Crestwoods, and the many other faux-wood wagons, the Ford Country Squire was the most ubiquitous. Despite Ford's perennial second-banana sales status ...