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Ford Mustang
Introduction: The date was April 17, 1964. Intermediate sized muscle
cars, with big block engines were gradually replacing the fullsized
muscle car. Lee Iacocca, Ford's General Manager, had always invisioned
a small sports car to be the next hot item in the street wars. Ford
decided that instead of improving their lackluster intermediate, they
would do the competition one better and introduce a whole new breed of
automobile, the pony car. Originally designed as a two seater in the
European tradition, Iacocca realized that true success depended on
volume sales. Therefore the Ford Mustang was introduced as a 1965 model
that was based on the compact Falcon to lower production costs. It came
with an obligatory back seat and a multitude of options that would give
the buyer an opportunity to customize their purchase, and generate extra
profits for Ford. Plymouth faithful stress that their Baracuda beat
the Ford Mustang to market by two weeks. But it was the Mustang, which
racked up over 22,000 sales its first day and one million sales in its
first two years, that turned the market and people's attention to the
pony car. The pony car class that the Ford Mustang helped create is
the only class of muscle car that still exists today.
DIRECTORY
OVERVIEW
History: First Generation 1964 1/2 - 1973
History: Second Generation 1974 - 1978
History: Third Generation 1979 - 1993
History: Fourth Generation 1994 - 2002
PICTURES
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