Crawling From The Wreckage
Saturday, June 27, 2026
1980 Plymouth Arrow - Youth is Wasted on the Young
Sunday, June 21, 2026
1979 Lincoln Continental Town Car - Mo Money Mo Problems
In 1975, The Ford Motor Company's Lincoln division updated the Continental's they introduced in 1970 with these even more so slab-sided monsters. The 1970 Continentals replaced Elwood Engle's legendary 1961 to 1969 models with their famed rear-hinged, "suicide doors". I found this 1979 Continental Town Car "Collector's Series" while at an open house with my wife recently just west of downtown Cleveland, Ohio.
Seems the only thing longer than the car itself is its name; "Lincoln Continental Town Car Collectors Series". Sheesh. That's a mouthful. That's saying something too given at 233-inches long, this was not only the longest car you could buy in this country in 1979, but it was also the longest car Lincoln ever sold.
Lincoln charged about twice the sticker price for these "Collector's Series" that commemorated the last year for this version of the Continental before the old shrink-ray got 'em. These cars couldn't hit federally mandated fuel economy standards for 1980, so Lincoln had no choice but to significantly downsize the Continental Town Car, Town Coupe and Continental Mark. With just 3,900 "Collectors" sold out of roughly 77,000 Town Cars sold in 1979 though, seems we're rubbing bumpers here with some pretty rare company.
Buyers who ponied up the extra cabbage for one of these got exclusive paint schemes with a color-keyed vinyl roof, gold-colored trim (note the subtle gold hue of the front grille), turbine-style cast-aluminum wheels, and every optional piece of doo-daddery available, including a CB radio and an electronic AM/FM four-speaker stereo system with a Quad-8 tape player. Breaker-breaker, who's got a Tony Bennett 8-track they can loan me?
Underneath, the Collector Series was the same softly sprung, impossible to maneuver, underpowered bomb "lesser" models were. There was no engine or suspension upgrade available; just as well as nobody bought these for their ability to pull Gs or their quarter-mile prowess. Nor did they care these were little more than tarted up Ford LTD's.
This car definitely has a "prescence" about it, though, plebian LTD's, which had been already downsized for 1979, don't. Whatever that means in this context is anyone's guess and whether that's a good thing or not a matter of opinion. When I was a kid growing up on Long Island's "South Shaw", I was impressed by people who drove cars like this because they meant, "money".
Up on the tonier, haughtier "North Shaw", and you say that with your jaw clenched tight, by the end of the 1970's, a Mercedes-Benz denoted money although there's no guarantee that someone up there had any more money in the bank than us poor slobs down on the South Shaw did. Although, their "money" could go around corners with at least some degree of aplomb.
As a kid who grew up wanting for everything, still comes as surprise to me that many people I know that appear to have money have significant money problems. Additionally, having money, doesn't mean you don't have problems. As they say, "Mo money, Mo problems".
While I'm not a fan of these big Lincolns, most big old Ford's too, it is nice to see one in this kind of shape outside of some car show. No doubt there's some story here as to how this big old "Townie" has 47 years; I think it had temp tags I'd guess it's a southern car. The current owner taking advantage of the two, maybe three weeks up here we call summer.
Tuesday, June 16, 2026
1976 Chrysler Cordoba - Absence Makes the Heart Grow Fonder? That's Not Always the Case
Whether it’s my advancing age, what I like to think of as continued maturation (or self-refinement), or simply the fact that I don’t like green cars, I no longer see what I once saw in a 1975 or 1976 Chrysler Cordoba. Even this très jolie 61,000-mile ’76 green machine can’t sway me from seeing it for what it really is—or was: Chrysler’s derivatively designed, “me too” entry into the booming personal luxury car market of the 1970s.
Wait… isn’t absence supposed to make the heart grow fonder? Apparently, that’s not always the case.
Funny how nostalgia can fade. There was a time when I would have loved to find another 1975, or a very similar 1976 Cordoba, to replace the ’75 I wrecked on an icy stretch of Sunrise Highway on Long Island one December morning in 1987.
This one popped up on Marketplace recently, and my reaction was… meh, whatever. The asking price is $9,800, which might sound high, but a comparable 1976 Chevrolet Monte Carlo or Pontiac Grand Prix—the cars I really, really wanted back in the day—would command at least a third more, if not double, in this condition.
Back then, I really wanted a Monte Carlo, Grand Prix, or even an Oldsmobile Cutlass coupe, but they were out of reach financially. So I bought my ’75 Cordoba on the cheap and convinced myself it was close enough. It was a good deal, and I could do the mental gymnastics required to make it work, even if it wasn’t exactly what I wanted. Besides, it was a seismic upgrade over the dreadful 1974 Mercury Comet it replaced—a car so embarrassingly awful that I joke the Cordoba was really my “second first car.”
I’m all about value, but only to a point. These days, I’ll pay a premium for something I truly want. At the same time, I’m perfectly willing to walk away if it isn’t exactly right, knowing I won’t be satisfied with anything less. There is an upside to getting older: wisdom.
As I slide further along this slippery slope of self-analysis, I’ve come to realize it wasn’t so much the car itself that I longed for, but what it represented—a clean, definitive bookend between the end of my challenging childhood and the beginning of what I hoped would be a wonderful adulthood. If I had truly loved the car for its own sake, that combination of personal meaning and appreciation would have driven me to track down another and keep it for life.
Instead, I’ve arrived at clarity rather than idealization: my Cordoba, sadly, just wasn’t that special to me.
But I’ll tell you this—what I would give to be 19 again, beaming with the same pride of ownership I felt the day I got it.