Le magazine et marché mondial pour les passionnés de voitures classiques, par des passionnés.
Le magazine et marché mondial pour les passionnés de voitures classiques, par des passionnés.
Ford Motor Company found itself playing catch-up in 1949-50, when General Motors had introduced new "hardtop convertibles" for all five GM marques. The steel-roofed hardtops had convertible styling and no "B pillar" between front and rear side windows. Ford wouldn't have a comparable model before late 1951, so for 1950 they dressed up some two-door sedans with fabric roofs and distinctive side trim: the Ford Crestliner, Mercury Monterey, and Lincoln Lido and Capri. The Capri was based on the Lincoln Cosmopolitan, which, with one-piece windshield and slender chrome window frames, looked more the part. Perhaps 2,000 were sold, in 1950 and '51 only. For 1952, the Capri became a true hardtop on the redesigned Lincoln.
This 1950 Lincoln Cosmopolitan Capri was seen in the Car Corral at Hershey in 2009. In addition to the usual Capri features it had a badge from its original Missouri dealer. (text & photos Kit Foster)