This car, another of 
Lee Iacocca’s many product planning brainstorms, was one of Ford’s 
greatest successes in the late sixties and early seventies. A gaudy, 
overstuffed personal luxury car that critics aptly described as an 
overgrown Thunderbird, it was nonetheless a hugely profitable exercise 
and one of the most stylistically influential cars of its era. This 
week, we look at the origins and history of the 1969-1979 Lincoln 
Continental Mark III, Mark IV, and Mark V.
PHONY MARKS
The first Lincoln Continental
 was a customized version of the Lincoln Zephyr convertible, designed by
 Ford design chief Eugene T. (Bob) Gregorie and built in 1939 for the 
personal use of Ford president Edsel Ford, becoming a limited-production
 model in 1940. Although the Continental was mechanically 
undistinguished, its styling was widely acclaimed and is now considered a
 classic. (We remain unmoved by the Continental and consider the 
facelifted post-1942 models rather grotesque, but we recognize that 
we’re in the minority on both points.)
There were plans for an 
all-new postwar Lincoln Continental, but they fell victim to the Ford 
Motor Company’s financial predicament, so the Continental disappeared 
after 1948. However, in the early 1950's, Ford decided to try again, 
launching a new Continental division to produce a single high-end, 
ultra-luxury model. It was called simply Continental Mark II, suggesting
 a spiritual continuity with Edsel Ford’s original “Mark I” Continental.
The
 Mark II was extremely well made and quite tasteful for its era, but it 
was a commercial failure: Only about 3,000 cars were produced in two 
model years and the division lost about $1,000 on each of them. The 
Continental division was shuttered in July 1956 and the Continental 
again fell under the auspices of Lincoln-Mercury.
The Mark II 
vanished at the end of the 1957 model year, but Lincoln applied the 
Continental name to the top series of the gargantuan 1958-1960 Lincolns.
 Unlike the Mark II, the new Continentals were much the same as lesser 
Lincoln models, distinguished mostly by trim and a unique reverse-slant 
roofline with a retractable rear window (later recycled by Mercury for 
its 1960's Breezeway sedans ).
 To create a sense of continuity with the entirely unrelated Mark II, 
Lincoln called the 1958 Continentals “Mark III,” the 1959s “Mark IV,” 
and the 1960s “Mark V.”
These big Continentals sold better than 
the Mark II (mostly because they were almost 40% cheaper), but they 
still didn’t sell very well and were not particularly special. In a 1985
 interview with Dave Crippen of the Benson Ford Research Center, stylist
 L. David Ash summed up the view of many when he dubbed them “phony 
Marks.”
In 1961, Lincoln applied the Continental name — but not the “Mark” designation — to all its cars. The new Continentals‘
 crisp styling earned them great critical acclaim, if not runaway sales 
success, and helped save the venerable Lincoln marque from cancellation.
 
The basic styling of the 1961 Lincoln 
Continental lasted through 1969 with only modest changes. The final 
sixties Continentals were somewhat bigger than the ’61, but shared the 
same body shell.
MAY BE QUITE CONTINENTAL
While the post-1969 Lincoln Continentals were not the money-losers 
their predecessors were, they were still not as profitable as 
Lincoln-Mercury would have liked. Despite sharing some structural 
commonality with the Ford Thunderbird,
 which helped to reduce engineering costs, the Continental did not sell 
in large enough numbers to be a big money-maker; even in Lincoln’s best 
years, Cadillac outsold it by at least six to one.
Why? The Continental was a match for a contemporary Cadillac in most 
objective categories except trunk space and acceleration (neither a 
major priority for contemporary luxury car buyers) and the Lincoln’s 
styling was cleaner and arguably more tasteful. Cadillac had backed off 
from the excesses of 1959, but still had a space-age jukebox flair, 
where the Continental was understated and largely free of gimmicks.
If the goal of the Continental was to appeal to wealthy aesthetes, it
 succeeded, but its lack of ostentation did not necessarily appeal to 
the masses. As we noted in our article on the 1967-1970 Cadillac Eldorado,
 the success of Cadillac hinged on its popularity with working-class and
 middle-class customers, quite a few of whom would eagerly beg, borrow, 
or steal to get their hands on one. A buyer prepared to scrimp and 
scrounge for three or more years to put a symbol of prosperity and 
achievement in the driveway was not interested in understatement. The 
whole point of purchasing such a car was to win the approval and the 
envy of friends, neighbors, and coworkers — what good was it if nobody 
noticed? Chrysler had gone too far in the other direction with its early-sixties Imperials,
 which moved well past ostentatious into the realm of the grotesque, but
 we suspect that many Cadillac buyers simply found the Continental too 
bland.
Lincoln-Mercury did not help their case by offering a limited 
selection of models and body styles. The four-door Continental 
convertible was a novelty in which few buyers were interested. While 
Cadillac offered an assortment of pillared or pillarless coupes and 
sedans, sometimes with a choice of different roof styles, Lincoln had 
only the four-door pillared sedan. It took Lincoln until 1966 to even 
add a two-door hardtop, consistently the era’s most popular body style. 
Lincoln seemed out of touch with the tastes of the actual luxury car 
market.
THE STRAWBERRY STUDIO
In the mid-sixties, Ford, like GM, maintained styling studios for 
each division, including both production studios and “preproduction” 
studios developing concepts for future models and a separate Advanced 
studio.
For some projects, Ford would stage competitions between 
multiple studios, commissioning several alternative designs from which 
senior management could select — the Ford Mustang
 was designed in this way in the summer of 1962. Lee Iacocca described 
this strategy as the chocolate and vanilla approach; it gave management 
more options and encouraged a healthy sense of competition among the 
stylists.
In 1965, styling vice president Eugene Bordinat put stylist Dave Ash 
in charge of a new Special Development Studio, with Ken Spencer and Don 
Kopka as his executive stylists. If the regular and advanced studios 
were chocolate and vanilla, Ash’s group was what Lee Iacocca dubbed the 
“strawberry studio,” offering a third alternative that would compete 
with the existing groups.
By that time Iacocca, riding high on the success of the Ford Mustang,
 had been promoted from vice president and general manager of Ford 
Division to group vice president in charge of the Car and Truck Group, 
responsible for all of Ford’s automotive divisions, including 
Lincoln-Mercury. Iacocca had an excellent sense of his buyers’ tastes 
and priorities and his insights in this era were usually astute. He also
 had a strong grasp of the bottom line.
One of Iacocca’s early ideas was to give Lincoln-Mercury its own 
Thunderbird-style personal luxury model. There were several compelling 
rationales for doing so: For one, the four-seat Ford Thunderbird was 
already positioned firmly in Lincoln-Mercury territory in price and 
image, about halfway between the most expensive Mercury and the cheapest
 Continental. For another, Ford wanted to utilize more of the capacity 
of the Wixom, Michigan factory where the Thunderbird was built.
The task of designing such a model was assigned to Ash’s team in the 
summer of 1965, although Iacocca took a keen personal interest in the 
car’s development. Initially, the new car, which reached the full-size 
clay model stage by December 1965, was a cautious agglomeration of 
Lincoln and Mercury design cues applied to the Thunderbird ‘package.’ 
That was appropriate, given its intended market position, but the 
general consensus was that the design lacked the sort of pizzazz that 
had made the four-seat Thunderbird such a success.
While Iacocca was on a business trip to Canada later that year, he 
found himself unable to sleep, which sparked a late-night brainstorm. He
 picked up the phone and tried calling Gene Bordinat back in Dearborn, 
but Bordinat was traveling in Europe, so Iacocca finally ended up on the
 phone with Dave Ash. Iacocca suggested that Ash add the spare tire 
bulge theme of the Continental Mark II and an upright, formal grille 
reminscent of Rolls-Royce’s. Ash told him they would try it.
Iacocca’s idea ran contrary to the conventional wisdom of stylists of
 the time. Stand-up radiator shells were considered archaic, an 
antiquated throwback to the days of hand cranks and wooden artillery 
wheels. Ash said later that if he had suggested such a thing without 
Iacocca’s imprimatur, Bordinat would have flatly refused. Nonetheless, 
Ash liked the concept and he and his team got to work on it. Bordinat 
was not fond of the project, but recognized that Iacocca was and 
reluctantly acquiesced.
 
Naturally,
 Lincoln-Mercury could not and did not simply copy the famous 
Rolls-Royce grille, but the Lincoln Continental Mark III’s mammoth 
grille, an elaborate and complex die-casting plated with copper, zinc, 
and chrome, is imposing in its own right. Note that there is no hood 
ornament; Dave Ash says one was designed, but concerns about safety 
legislation kept it from the production model. Lincoln dealers sold the 
ornament as a paperweight, and some owners probably had it installed on 
their cars.
LANCELOT
Since the new model was originally intended to fill the price gap 
between Mercury and Lincoln, Dave Ash suggested calling the car Merlin, a
 contraction of Mercury and Lincoln that would refer to both the figure 
of Arthurian legend and the highly successful Rolls-Royce aircraft 
engine of World War 2. Lincoln-Mercury executives didn’t like that name,
 so by the time the first clay model was ready in mid-October, it was 
dubbed Lancelot instead.
By January, the Continental hump and stand-up grille had been added 
to the clay model. Iacocca loved the results, but Gene Bordinat remained
 lukewarm, as did Lincoln-Mercury general manager Paul Lorenz, 
particularly after a marketing clinic found that prospective buyers 
preferred the original design.
Any reluctance Lincoln-Mercury management may have had was overridden
 by the enthusiastic endorsement of company chairman Henry Ford II. Ash 
told Dave Crippen that when Henry saw the clay model on March 24, 1966, 
he declared that he wished he could take it home with him. The car was 
approved for production.
 
The Lincoln Continental Mark III and its Mark
 IV and Mark V successors had concealed headlamps with “Continental” 
lettering on the left cover. As with other cars of this era, the covers 
were not very reliable, and were often disabled by owners. (The covers 
also snap open if the mechanism fails.) Note the bladed fenders of the 
Mark III, which gave a sense of styling continuity with the Continental 
sedans.
THE THUNDER WITHOUT THE ‘BIRD
The engineering budget for the Lancelot was set at about $30 million,
 a very modest figure; the Mustang had cost around $65 million. For cost
 reasons, the Lancelot would be mechanically based on the Ford
Thunderbird, which was all-new for 1967. The two cars shared cowls, 
windshields, roof panels, and door glass. The Lancelot was originally 
intended to use the Thunderbird’s doors, as well, but Ash and Bordinat 
eventually convinced Iacocca to authorize the cost of new exterior door 
shells.
Although the Lancelot was conceived only as a two-door coupe, product
 planner Hal Siegel suggested basing it on the longer wheelbase of the 
new Thunderbird four-door, which allowed both more interior space and a 
heroically long hood. (Regular readers might recall that Pontiac later 
used the same strategy to create the long-nosed 1969 Grand Prix.)
 
The Lincoln Continental Mark III’s mammoth 
460 cu. in. (7,536 cc) engine was powerful, but it had to contend with 
4,900 lb (2,226 kg) of curb weight. It was a little slow off the line, 
but had strong mid-range power; 0-60 mph (0-97 km/h) took around 9 
seconds, but top speed was at least 125 mph (200 km/h). Fuel economy was
 predictably dire, averaging around 10 mpg (23.5 L/100 km).
From 1958 to 1966, both the Thunderbird and the big Lincoln 
Continental used unitary construction, but for 1967, the Thunderbird 
reverted to body-on-frame. As with contemporary big GM cars, the body 
shell was a stiff, welded semi-unitized structure, but it was mounted on
 a separate perimeter frame, isolated from the body with thick rubber 
mounts. The Lancelot shared the four-door Thunderbird’s frame; the only 
substantive chassis differences were in suspension tuning.
The use of the long-wheelbase frame allowed the designers to give the
 Lancelot exaggerated long-hood, short-deck proportions, in the mode of 
the old Continental Mark II. Passenger room was unimpressive for the 
huge exterior dimensions, but its appointments — supervised by Damon 
Wood and Hermann Brunn, son of the famous coachbuilder — were suitably 
lavish. Occupants were insulated from the outside world by over 150 lb 
(68 kg) of sound deadener. The standard upholstery was a very slick 
tricot knit that Ford designers called “panty cloth” (also used by the Ford LTD)
 with real leather optional. To create a posh English men’s club feel, 
the cabin made heavy use of wood trim, although in typical American 
fashion, it was plastic. (For a truly baroque touch, customers had the 
choice of two different fake wood grains: “English Oak” or “East Indian 
Rosewood.”) Shortly after introduction, there was also an ostentatious 
Cartier dashboard clock, marked with Roman numerals.
 
While the 1969 Lincoln Continental Mark III 
offered an array of fake woodgrain, 1970 and 1971 models like this one 
substituted genuine walnut veneer. Hermann Brunn specified the wrinkles 
in the leather to give the upholstery a plusher look, which nearly gave 
Ford’s quality control teams — more accustomed to flat, seamless vinyl —
 a fit of apoplexy. The Mark III’s interior does look notably richer 
than that of the contemporary Eldorado, which feels comparatively 
Spartan.
As Iacocca had directed, the Lancelot had a Mark II-style fake spare 
tire bulge in its decklid, a styling feature Chrysler design chief 
Elwood Engel (a former Lincoln designer) had recently cribbed for the 
1964 Imperial. The 
pièce de résistance, however, was the 
upright grille, a daunting piece of automotive architecture that cost 
Lincoln-Mercury around $200 per car, 10 times the cost of an ordinary 
grille.
Behind that grille and beneath the prodigious hood was Ford’s largest
 engine, the “385-series” V8 introduced on the Thunderbird in 1968, 
expanded from the T-Bird’s 429 cubic inches (7,027 cc) to 460 (7,536 
cc). This was actually fractionally smaller than the 462 cu. in. (7,565 
cc) M-E-L engine used by the big Lincoln Continental, but the 460 was a 
much more modern design better suited to the emissions controls that 
U.S. law would shortly require. It was rated at 365 gross horsepower 
(272 kW).
The sheer size of the car caused considerable strife with 
Lincoln-Mercury engineers. Lincoln-Mercury chief engineer Burt Andren 
was particularly unhappy about its pronounced front overhang, which had 
unpleasant effects on weight distribution. Andren went to Ash and 
demanded he reduce the front overhang by four inches (102 mm), which Ash
 steadfastly refused to do. Eventually, Gene Bordinat went over Andren’s
 head and had him overruled, allowing the design to go forward 
unmolested.
 
Like the old Mark II, the Lincoln Continental
 Mark III featured a simulated Continental spare wheel, intended to 
evoke the “Continental kit” of the original 1939-1948 cars. Also like 
the Mark II, the Mark III’s spare-wheel bulge is purely cosmetic; the 
spare is laid flat toward the back of the trunk.
THIRD TIME’S THE CHARM
As the new car’s development proceeded, its name became a pressing 
issue. Everyone accepted that “Lancelot” was a placeholder, but no one 
had yet offered an acceptable alternative. Since the car showed a clear 
design kinship with the Mark II, someone — most probably Iacocca, 
although some sources say Henry Ford II — suggested reviving the 
Continental Mark designation. Logically, this would have made the new 
car the Mark VI, but no one had been especially fond of the 1958-60 
Marks, which had had little connection with their glamorous 
predecessors. The new model was therefore dubbed Lincoln Continental 
Mark III.
Resuscitating the Mark name was an interesting decision. It’s a sign 
of the Mark II’s commercial failure that barely a decade after its 
demise, it was apparently acceptable for Ford executives to publicly 
criticize it. On the other hand, the commercial failure of the 
contemporary Cadillac Eldorado Brougham had not moved Cadillac to 
abandon the Eldorado name or dissuaded them from applying it to their 
new personal luxury coupe, launched in late 1966 as a 1967 model.
News of the new Cadillac Eldorado had a definite impact on 
Lincoln-Mercury’s plans for the Continental Mark III. Late in its 
development, the division (possibly prompted by Iacocca) decided that 
instead of being a Thunderbird rival positioned between Mercury and 
Lincoln, the new Mark would be a top-of-the-line model, Lincoln’s most 
expensive and prestigious offering and a direct rival to the 
front-wheel-drive Eldorado.
The battle between the Eldorado Brougham and Mark II 10 years earlier
 had been inconclusive, so the imminent clash between the Mark III and 
the new FWD Eldo represented something of a rematch — a new front in the
 ongoing war of corporate egos.
 
The Lincoln Continental Mark III is 216.1 
inches (5,489 mm) long on a 117.2-inch (2,977mm) wheelbase, about 9 
inches (229 mm) longer overall than a Thunderbird four-door, but some 5 
inches (127 mm) shorter than a regular Lincoln Continental sedan. The 
prominent flares around the wheelhouses help to stiffen the body, which 
was more rigid than the Thunderbird’s, despite the larger dimensions. 
Note the rear quarter windows; as with the contemporary Thunderbird, the
 rear panes side backward into the sail panels, rather than retracting 
downward or swinging out.
LINCOLN CONTINENTAL MARK III VS. CADILLAC ELDORADO
Iacocca was fond of mid-year introductions, which, as the Mustang’s 
launch demonstrated, were an effective way for new models to stand out 
from the herd. Therefore, the Lincoln Continental Mark III bowed on 
April 5, 1968 as an early 1969 model. It arrived about 18 months after 
the Eldorado, which had already found an eager market.
The Continental Mark III’s starting price was $6,585, $20 less than 
the Eldorado. That price tag included many standard amenities, including
 power steering, power brakes, and automatic transmission, but not air 
conditioning or a radio. With a full load of options — as most Marks 
were equipped — the price rose to around $9,500, enough to buy two 
well-equipped Mercury Cougars. The Mark III was still somewhat cheaper than the old Mark II and on an inflation-adjusted basis was about 30% less expensive.
With its extravagant styling and unexceptional engineering, the 
Continental Mark III was not the sort of car to appeal to enthusiasts. 
No one at Ford was concerned. In March 1968, Gene Bordinat told 
Motor Trend‘s
 Robert Irvin, “The buffs may not like it, but people with money will.” 
Even before the car’s release, Dave Ash and designer Art Querfeld noted 
that Ford assembly workers loved the Mark III and were very taken with 
its styling. The Mark had the same sort of appeal as the Eldorado: it 
was in no way subtle, but it looked like money.
Buyers responded enthusiastically, despite the high prices. The late 
introduction limited first-season sales to 7,770 (compared to 24,528 
1968 Eldorados), but for the Mark’s first full-year, the tally rose to 
23,088.
 
The Lincoln Continental Mark III is low, but 
with an overall height of 52.9 inches (1,344 mm), it’s not as low as it 
looks. Dave Ash’s team raised the rear deck — the “upper back panel,” in
 Ford parlance (sometimes called the “Dutchman”) — by about 2 inches (51
 mm) compared to the Thunderbird, giving the top the cut-down look of a 
fifties Carson padded top. The vinyl top was a $136.85 option on 1969 
models, but fewer than 100 cars were built without it, and it became 
standard in 1970.
While the Eldorado had done little to increase Cadillac’s total 
sales, the Continental Mark III boosted Lincoln’s business 
significantly. Lincoln sold only 39,134 Continentals in 1968 and 38,290 
in 1969, so the Mark III accounted for more than half of Lincoln’s total
 volume. More importantly, it was an exceedingly profitable car. The 
Mark III’s 1968-69 sales grossed around $275 million, which enabled 
Lincoln to recoup the modest tooling and development costs very quickly.
 The Mark III was also far less costly to build than the Eldorado; 
Lincoln’s profit margin on each car was reportedly around $2,000.
 
Unlike the 1961-1969 Continental sedans, 
which used leaf springs in back, the Lincoln Continental Mark III (and 
the Thunderbird on which it was based) had a three-link rear suspension 
with coil springs and a Panhard rod for lateral location. The 
Continental adopted this system in 1970, along with body-on-frame 
construction similar to that of the Mark. All Mark IIIs had front 
disc/rear drum brakes, even with the optional Sure-Track system. 
Four-wheel discs became standard on the Continental Mark IV in 1976.
SIDEBAR: Sure-Track
While the Lincoln Continental Mark III would never have anything to 
rival the Cadillac Eldorado’s then-novel front-wheel drive, the Mark III
 did introduce a significant mechanical innovation of its own: anti-lock
 brakes.
A vehicle’s ability to stop quickly is limited by the traction of its
 tires. If the forces the brakes apply to the wheel exceed the tire’s 
available traction, the brakes will continue to act on the wheel without slowing the rest of the vehicle at all. Eventually, the wheel will stop rotating entirely — or lock —
 while the vehicle continues to move. Wheel lockup may do considerable 
damage to the tire, aside from the more immediate problem of bringing 
the vehicle to a halt. Skilled drivers can avoid this problem by pumping
 the brakes (alternately releasing and applying pressure) when they feel
 the wheels beginning to lock; this is called threshold braking.
 However, this is a skill that is not widely taught in 
driver’s-education classes and without considerable practice, the driver
 may not remember to apply it in a panic stop. Street cars also 
complicate matters with the use of a brake booster, which make it 
difficult to modulate the brakes correctly.
The aircraft industry faced this problem in the forties and fifties, 
when heavier aircraft and higher landing speeds made safe braking a 
problem. The solution was anti-lock (or “anti-skid”) braking systems, 
which could detect imminent wheel lockup and automatically modulate the 
brakes. One of the first commercial systems was the Dunlop Maxaret 
system, which appeared in 1952 and later became part of Ferguson’s 
“Formula Ferguson” four-wheel-drive system. Maxaret’s first use on a 
production automobile was the 1966 Jensen FF.
 Maxaret was a crude mechanical system and not particularly reliable for
 automotive use, but it was reasonably effective when it was working.
In the late sixties, Ford Motor Company and brake manufacturer 
Kelsey-Hayes developed a more sophisticated system using magnetic 
wheel-speed sensors connected to an analog computer. If the sensors 
detected that the wheels were beginning to lock, the computer would 
automatically pump the brakes up to four times per second to prevent it.
 The system, called “Sure-Track,” worked only on the rear wheels, which 
are the most vulnerable to lockup: As a vehicle decelerates, its weight 
shifts forward, which reduces the traction of the rear tires.
Sure-Track became optional on both the Thunderbird and Continental 
Mark III in 1969. On the Mark, it cost an extra $195.80 and included a 
heavier ring gear for the rear differential (which might otherwise be 
damaged by the judder of the system’s operation). It worked reasonably 
well, although it was not a dramatic improvement over Lincoln’s standard
 brakes, which already incorporated a proportioning valve to limit 
pressure to the rear drums in hard stops. Front lockup could still be a 
problem in panic situations, however, and of course Sure-Track did 
nothing to reduce brake fade, which was a problem for these very heavy 
cars.
The Sure-Track system became standard equipment on the Mark III in 
1970, and it was also standard on the later Continental Mark IV through 
1975. It reverted to option status in 1976, but it remained available on
 the Mark series until the downsized Fox-platform Continental Mark VI of
 1980. It was also offered for several years on the Continental.
Around the same time that Sure-Track was introduced, the Bendix 
Corporation developed an electronically controlled four-wheel system, 
which was offered on the Imperial from 1971 to 1973. Although it was 
more effective than Sure-Track, the Bendix system was more expensive 
(priced at $344) and was soon dropped due to lack of interest.
By the mid-seventies, however, Bosch and Teves developed similar 
electronic systems, which began to appear on high-end European cars in 
1978. Lincoln was the first American manufacturer to reintroduce 
anti-lock brakes, introducing Teves ABS on the Continental Mark VII in 
1984.
 
The 1969 Lincoln Continental Mark III used 
the same wheelcovers as the Continental sedan for cost reasons, but 
Bunkie Knudsen demanded that they be more distinctive. Later Marks got 
revised wheelcovers with a distinct hexagonal center, like the one seen 
here, designed by Dave Ash and Art Querfeld. They derived the hexagon 
shape from the classic Packards of the twenties and thirties; red 
hexagon wheel centers were a Packard trademark for many years. This 
car’s tires are authentic; in 1970, all Marks got standard Michelin X 
radial tires, still rare on American cars of this period.
BUNKIE’S MARK
In early 1968, Henry Ford II promoted Ford Motor Company president 
Arjay Miller to vice chairman, which left Ford in need of a new 
president. This was a particularly challenging decision for Henry Ford, 
who was reputedly angling for President Lyndon Johnson to give him an 
ambassadorship if he was reelected that fall. Although Lee Iacocca 
clearly desired the presidency of Ford Motor Company, Henry thought 
Iacocca was too young and was somewhat wary of Iacocca’s ambition (a 
conflict that would eventually lead to Iacocca’s firing in 1978). Instead, Henry decided to look outside the company, setting his sights on GM executive Semon E. “Bunkie” Knudsen.
Bunkie Knudsen was a second-generation GM man. His father, William 
“Big Bill” Knudsen had worked for Henry Ford’s grandfather in the teens 
and early twenties and went on to become the president of General 
Motors. Bunkie, who joined GM in 1939, became a rising star in the 
fifties with a very successful career at Pontiac,
 followed by a stint as general manager of Chevrolet. Knudsen had looked
 like a strong candidate for the presidency of the corporation, but in 
the fall of 1967, he was passed over in favor of Ed Cole. Knudsen had 
not planned on leaving General Motors, but when Ford called to offer him
 the presidency, Knudsen was not inclined to turn him down.
Like Lee Iacocca, Bunkie Knudsen was an ambitious, energetic 
executive with considerable chutzpah and very strong ideas about product
 development. He and Iacocca clashed almost immediately and their battle
 of wills raged throughout Knudsen’s tenure, forcing other executives — 
and sometimes designers and engineers — to choose sides. Many chose 
Iacocca, sensing that Bunkie would not be with Ford for long.
When Knudsen arrived, Styling was considering proposals for a 
successor to the Lincoln Continental Mark III, to be called Continental 
Mark IV. During an unannounced visit to the styling studios in mid-1968,
 Knudsen took a fancy to a design developed by Wes Dahlberg of the 
Advanced Styling studio (actually the work of Jim Arnold and Dean Beck),
 announcing that it would be the next Mark. Gene Bordinat, who hadn’t 
liked Dahlberg’s car to begin with, tried to talk Knudsen out of it, but
 Knudsen remained adamant, blocking all of Bordinat’s subsequent 
attempts to alter the design and reminding Bordinat that Knudsen was 
still the president. That may have been Knudsen’s prerogative, but it 
hardly endeared him to either Bordinat or Iacocca, who took a paternal 
interest in the Mark series. It was also a bold move considering Henry 
Ford’s well-known fondness for the Mark III; few executives would have 
had the brass to revamp the chairman’s favorite car without consulting 
him.
Bordinat continued lobbying for changes, so Knudsen grudgingly 
allowed him to create an alternative design. Stylist Ron Perry and Steve
 Sherer of Don DeLaRossa’s Corporate Projects Studio subsequently 
developed a new Mark IV clay, which both DeLaRossa and Bordinat liked 
much better than the Dahlberg car.
Although Knudsen showed no sign of 
changing his mind, Bordinat took the daring step of ordering DeLaRossa 
to continue work on Perry and Sherer’s design even after Dahlberg’s 
version had been approved for production, apparently hoping that Knudsen
 would be gone in time to substitute their concept for Dahlberg’s. It 
didn’t happen and Dahlberg’s car became the 1972 Lincoln Continental 
Mark IV.
As Bordinat had predicted, Knudsen’s presidency was short. Any dreams
 Henry Ford may have had of an ambassadorial post disappeared after 
Lyndon Johnson announced he would not run for reelection in 1968. Henry 
soon decided that Knudsen was not right for Ford after all and Bunkie 
was fired in early September 1969, only 19 months after his arrival. 
After a brief interregnum, Lee Iacocca assumed the presidency in late 
1970.
Knudsen’s Continental Mark IV debuted in the fall of 1971 as a 1972 
model. It maintained many of the styling cues of the Mark III, although 
the Mark IV was noticeably bigger. It continued the Continental Mark 
III’s fake spare-tire hump and upright grille while adding a new 
neo-classical element: round “opera windows” in the sail panels. (They 
were initially an $81.84 option, although few Marks went without them; 
they became standard in 1973.)
 
The 1972 Lincoln Continental Mark IV still 
used the same 460 cu. in. (7,536 cc) engine as the Continental Mark III,
 although the big V8’s compression ratio was reduced to allow it to burn
 regular-grade gasoline, costing it between 15 and 20 horsepower (11-15 
kW). Thanks to the adoption of more realistic SAE net ratings, the drop 
looked far more drastic than it was: the 460 was now rated at only 212 
net horsepower (158 kW). The Mark IV was a bit slower than the 1971 Mark
 III, but the difference was not vast.
One now-ubiquitous item introduced on the Continental Mark IV was the
 moonroof, a sunroof with a glass panel that allowed it to do double 
duty as a skylight. The idea of Heinz Prechter of American Sunroof 
Corporation (ASC), the moonroof became a very expensive option on the 
Mark IV in 1973. The Mark and Thunderbird had also offered a steel 
sunroof since 1969, which remained available as an alternative.
The Mark IV was even more popular than the Mark III, selling nearly 
50,000 units in 1972 and nearly 70,000 in 1973. Even in 1975, its worst 
year, the Mark IV sold 47,145 units, better than the Mark III in its 
best year. The Mark usually accounted for nearly half of Lincoln’s total
 sales and most of its profits.
 
Even the 1972 Lincoln Continental Mark IV was
 bigger than its predecessor: 220.1 inches (5,591 mm) long on a 
120.4-inch (3,058 mm) wheelbase. Curb weight was similar, still around 
5,000 pounds (2,268 kg). As with the contemporary Cadillac Eldorado, the
 effort to retain the styling cues of the Mark’s predecessor with more 
curvaceous lines made it look rather bloated, although buyers were 
evidently not dissuaded. By 1974, its base price had soared to over 
$10,000, thanks mostly to increases in standard equipment.
After Knudsen’s departure, Gene Bordinat ordered Don DeLaRossa to 
supervise the design of the Mark IV’s replacement, the Lincoln 
Continental Mark V, which would be closely based on the 1969 
Perry/Sherer proposal. Introduced in 1977, the Mark V’s dimensions were 
much the same as its predecessor’s, but it was about 300 lb (136 kg) 
lighter, thanks in part to a smaller standard engine. The Continental 
Mark V proved to be the most successful Mark of all, selling around 
75,000 units a year during its three-year run — remarkable considering 
its eye-opening prices.
Popular as they were, the two-and-a-half-ton Marks were not compatible with the demands of Corporate Average Fuel Economy
 requirements, nor were their massive engines suitable for 
ever-increasing emissions standards. In 1980, Lincoln replaced the 
Continental Mark V with the downsized, Panther-platform Mark VI. Sales 
immediately dropped by half and never really recovered. The 1984 Mark 
VII was a decided improvement over the Mark VI (and its LSC version was 
the first Continental that could be called sporty with a straight face),
 but sold no better. By the time the sleek Continental Mark VIII arrived
 in 1993, the market for all personal luxury cars was evaporating; the 
Mark finally died in 1998. While Ford showed Mk 9 and Mark X concept 
cars in the early 2000s, there has been no move to revive the series.
VULGUS
The styling and concept of the Lincoln Continental Mark III were 
hugely influential both at Ford and elsewhere. By the early seventies, 
the Thunderbird, whose sales had slumped badly, became increasingly 
Mark-like. So did the Mercury Cougar and later the Ford Torino. Soon, 
Ford had a host of pseudo-Marks at various price points, as did most of 
its rivals. It’s fair to say that we have the Continental Mark III and 
Mark IV to thank for the upright grilles, opera windows, and other 
neoclassical gimmicks that blighted American automotive styling well 
into the 1980s. Don DeLaRossa, who followed Lee Iacocca to Chrysler in 
1981, made no apologies for recycling Mark styling cues as late as the 
1990-93 Y-body Chrysler Imperial.
 
The Lincoln Continental Mark V was even 
bigger — a whopping 230.3 inches (5,850 mm) overall — and more expensive
 than ever, but had rather anemic performance; its standard 400 cu. in. 
(6,590 cc) engine had only 179 hp (134 kW) to move its nearly 4,800 
pounds (2,175 kg) of heft. Nonetheless, it was by far the most popular 
Mark ever, selling 228,862 units in three model years.
We may even hold the Mark III responsible for the later obsession 
with retro styling. As Dave Ash remarked to Dave Crippen in 1985, prior 
to the Mark, stylists would have considered such backward-looking 
designs embarrassingly old-fashioned. The Mark demonstrated that there 
was a lucrative market for looking backward; it was eerily prescient of 
the sometimes mawkish nostalgia that gripped American culture a few 
years later.
At the risk of sounding snobbish, we consider the Continental Mark 
III and its successors to be supremely vulgar. We mean that both in the 
sense of being tasteless — frankly, their heavy-handed and 
self-conscious ostentation makes us want to avert our eyes — and in the 
most literal sense. “Vulgus,” the word’s Latin root, means “common 
people,” and the Mark III definitely had a strong appeal to the man on 
the street.
 
This 1978 Lincoln Continental Mark V is a 
Cartier Edition. Lincoln began offering these “Designer Edition” models 
in 1976, bearing famous names like Pucci, Givenchy, and Bill Blass. Each
 had specific paint and trim combinations; the Cartier Edition had this 
“Light Champagne” scheme, with matching landau top. These packages were 
quite expensive, costing between $1,800 and $2,000, but were very 
successful. The Cartier Edition was the most popular, accounting for 
about 8,500 units in 1978 and nearly 9,500 in 1979.
The Continental Mark was perhaps the perfect car for the seventies. 
The giddy futurism of the fifties and the naive idealism of the sixties 
had collapsed by then, giving way to a queasy hangover of economic 
malaise, environmental anxiety, and political scandal. It’s little 
wonder that overstuffed personal luxury cars were so popular in that 
era. Americans often value symbols of success more than success itself 
and tend to see expressions of wealth as the highest of virtues — a 
tendency that becomes more pronounced when actual prosperity is hard to 
come by. The self-indulgent affectation of the Mark and its imitators 
was a palliative for the disillusionment and disaffection of Watergate, 
the energy crisis, Vietnam, and inflation.
It’s not difficult to see the connection between the Continental Mark
 and the SUV craze of 25 years later. The specific signifiers are 
different — brush bars and skid plates rather than opera windows, big 
rims instead of Continental decklid bulges — but the overwrought 
grilles, the needless bulk, the fuel-sucking engines, and the sheer 
look-at-me grandiosity are much the same. As they say, 
le plus ça change, plus c’est la même chose.
Source: ateupwithmotor.com