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The Henry Ford Company was formed in 1901 from the ashes of the Detroit Automobile Company. Henry Ford left in 1902 over a dispute with his bankers, but he was able to take his name as well. Henry Leland was brought in by the investors and the company was reorganizes as the Cadillac Automobile Co. the 1903 Cadillac was based on Henry Ford’s designs except the engine was of a Leland design.  Cadillac was sold to General Motors in 1909 Leland. staid  on as an executive but resigned in 1917 after a dispute with William Durant. Leland went on to form the Lincoln Motor Co. to build Liberty aircraft engines. After WWI they retooled to build luxury automobiles and by 1922 was bankrupted. At the urging of Edsel Ford, The senior Ford purchased the Lincoln Motor Co. Leland originally ran the venture but gradually the Fords took over the operation.
Lincolns of the 1920s and early 1930s were magnificent automobiles but the depression hurt sales. In 1936 they introduced the less expensive V12 Lincoln Zephyr and their sales 9 fold Introduced in 1940 was the Zephyr Lincoln Continental
After WWII production resumed but the name Zephyr was drooped. In 1949 there were 2 brand new Lincolns, the Cosmopolitan and the smaller EL series  an all new Lincoln appeared for 1952. By then Ford was looking to expand into the uber luxury marked in 1956 Introduced the Continental Mark II at almost a $10,000 price tag, a huge amount at that time. It was gone after 2 years but reappeared 1968 with the Mark III in Ford has never been able to find the right spot for Lincoln, Often giving Cadillac serious competition and some times a footnote. With the sell off of Jaguar and Volvo, they are once again looking to put Lincoln as an equal with other luxury marques

Zephyr

1937 Lincoln Zephyr From Brooklin
A nice car, but not up the standard of a Lincoln’s premium models

37 Lincoln

1937 Lincoln model K From Brooklin
This was Lincoln’s premium model

49 Lincoln

1949 Lincoln Cosmopolitan From Brooklin
This was their first all new postwar car

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1956 Lincoln Continental From Brooklin
This was Henry Ford II’s unsuccessful entry into the ultra luxury market.
They cost $10,000, three quarters the price of the contemporary Rolls Royce

61 Lincoln

1961 Lincoln Continental From Franklin Mint
It was originally designed to be a Ford Thunderbird, but the people at Lincoln-Mercury  co-opted the design for the Lincoln. This car likely saved Lincoln from extinction.

An interesting note is, while the Lincoln Automobile is named after the 16th President  Abe Lincoln traveled in a Studebaker carriage.

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The Zephyr (flexible crankshaft) V-12 was not revered, and, before the collector car market pricing went through the roof, some of Edsel's Contintentals had Ford V-8's swapped in, as well as other, OHV, engines.  I would now guess restored low-end Lincolns with the Zephyr engine are internally reengineered for durability.   Ford (Lincoln) styling has had wild swings, with the two Continentals pictured above at the top of that curve, IMO.  Leland built Lincolns have been reported to be very staid cars, like Locomobile,  built with outdated styling appealing to a patronage that was passing.  I would like to know what the two Henrys, Ford and Leland, disagreed over?  I have read that Leland was VERY unhappy to be financially forced to sell his company, and to Ford.

The '61-'63 Lincoln was a real milestone and as mentioned above, probably made more people aware of it as a luxury brand with its classic, timeless styling that still looks great today. The clean lines and sloped in (when viewed from fore and aft) roof pillars were a real standout in the era of 'wings & fins'.  The '64 model looked similar but went to the more vertical pillars and lost some of the charm of the earlier model.

Here are a few die-cast Lincolns. 

'56 2-door by Neo, with a '57 Caddy. 

NEO 56 Lincoln, 57 Caddy

A '38 Zephyr by Durham.

38 Zephyr-1

'41 Continental by Universal Hobbies. Picked it up at a toy show, with a nice little camping trailer.

41 Continental-1

'56 Mark II Continental by Franklin Mint. This is one of their nicer pieces, and can usually be found in the $20 range. It's much better than the Brooklin model, which is one of those early Brooklin cars that you look at and wonder "Why would anybody pay Brooklin prices for THAT?

56 Mark II Franklin Mint

A pair of 1928 dual-cowl phaetons by Rio (Italy). Nicely detailed, complete with engine and removable hood. These can often be found at reasonable prices on the secondary market. 

1928x2 - Rio

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  • NEO 56 Lincoln, 57 Caddy
  • 38 Zephyr-1
  • 41 Continental-1
  • 56 Mark II Franklin Mint
  • 1928x2 - Rio

I found a good price on the Durham Zephyr coupe, but let it go, because it is available in another color, I'd rather have.  And, I found and got in a Brooklin circa 1939-41 Graham coupe in the other color.  This gives me two choices for customers at my tiny little Graham dealership.   I just need the 1937? (I think...don't see it often, also from Brooklin, and not cheap) Graham for that dealer's used car lot, along with other makes.

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