1970 Ford Country Squire, the ultimate 70's family Truckster!

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Komentáře • 226

  • @pdrphil8159
    @pdrphil8159 Před 2 lety +25

    My parents bought a 65 Chevy Impala wagon that had few options.
    In 1969 we were all loaded (5 kids) into the wagon for a cross country vacation.
    It was July & very hot. We were headed to Arizona from Viginia .
    As we went through our small town my dad stopped at the Ford dealer & we kids were none to happy to be stuck in a hot car..
    But...when he came out, he had a set of keys to a brand new Ford station wagon...
    We transferred kids, luggage & mom into this brand ne wagon..
    It had A.C. , power windows & seats , cruise, tilt , stereo & it seated 8 ( I think).
    It had a 429 with power to spare.
    And off we went...
    Best vacay ever...
    Its was quiet, smooth , but most of all the A.C. kept us cool.
    And my dad loved the power under the hood...
    I sat between my parents up front & my dad & I talked about cars..
    I kept track of our gas mileage at each fill up..
    In the rear, the two facing jump seats were perfect for card games & such..
    I loved that big car...
    When my dad bought our next new vehicle in 1977 , he basically did the same thing..
    This time we stopped at the local chevy dealer ..
    Unloaded the old wagon of luggage, 5 kids & mom into a brand new 77 chevy suburban .
    Much older now , my mom broke protocol & set in the middle seat so my dad & I could talk shop...
    It had A.C., Power everything h a 454 big block..
    Two bucket seats in the front with a huge console , & two more bench seats .
    My father was less pleased with the gas mileage of 12 mpg , but it was beautiful...
    And we drove to the Grand Canyon, then Yosemite, then up to Yellowstone, Mt Rushmore, the Badland of S Dakota & then home yrs later I asked my dad why we went on such a long rd trip & he told me , " I knew it was the last time all 5 kids would go on vacation together".
    He was right...
    But that Ford wagon made some great memories .

    • @discerningmind
      @discerningmind Před rokem +2

      Thank you. That is a very nice loving story.

  • @69mercurymarquis
    @69mercurymarquis Před 2 lety +43

    ford hit a home run with the 69 and 70 country squires. my dad for a time was a carpenter and bought a 67 country squire for his work vehicle. after it got totaled he bought a 70 country squire, yellow with a brown interior. had the roof rack, same hubcaps and a 390. still got pics of it loaded with tools and 2 ladders on the rack with a auxillary rack over the front of the roof to level everything on top. he took out the jump seats in back to put his tools in and keep out of sight. i dont think the back seat was ever in the upright position. what a car that was until the rust set in. yours is beautiful..brought back fond memories of our work beast.

    • @67marlins
      @67marlins Před 2 lety +5

      Your family had good taste in cars.
      I still have my '70 Marquis 2 door.....a poor man's Marauder.

    • @wralford
      @wralford Před 2 lety

      Yes, those old wagons got worked hard. Those that survived ended up as taxicabs. Hence they are very rare!

    • @captainkirk4514
      @captainkirk4514 Před 2 lety +1

      My dad had a 70 Country Squire LTD that was sky blue, it too had the 390. As kid, I found the hideaway headlights to be coolest part of the that stationwagon.

    • @davidallen5776
      @davidallen5776 Před rokem

      If you happen to live anywhere near the Great Lakes, it's bound to get rusted out after a decade!

    • @bobbygarrison3122
      @bobbygarrison3122 Před 4 měsíci

      Classic, had a 72 Explorer pickup that ugly yellow, painted it black later on.

  • @mikesawyer4707
    @mikesawyer4707 Před 2 lety +21

    My dad's first wagon was a 1970 LTD country squire. The lady he bought it from was told the engine was shot. She sold it to my dad for scrap. My dad was not really a ford guy yet he towed it home checked it out and found the oil returns needed some attention. It had I think around 80,000 miles on it at the time it had the 390 ci two barrel engine. He fixed the issues and flushed the motor and put a oil and filter, he serviced reguarly with a lot of city driving. He sold it about two years later and it was still running good.

    • @67marlins
      @67marlins Před 2 lety +6

      Your Dad was smart - the 390 was one of the best engines Ford ever made, which automatically makes it superior to the Chevy blue-smokers.
      I got over 250k miles out of my first 390, and the second one rests in my '58 Edsel Ranchero conversion.

    • @markreisen7038
      @markreisen7038 Před 2 lety +1

      I would love to find a 58-59 Edsel Roundup tudor wagon which I believe is the rarest wagon that Edsel made... Really cool cars those Ford wagons...

    • @67marlins
      @67marlins Před 2 lety +1

      @@markreisen7038 Join the International Edsel Club, not the Edsel Owners Club.
      The International folks were a lot friendlier, and you'll surely find a Roundup, only made in '58. They made 963 of them, I think.

  • @nigelpickering5433
    @nigelpickering5433 Před 2 lety +25

    Beautiful, the best and most definitive station wagon of the 60s / 70s era. Everything about it is perfect, the interior colour, faux wood grain, hub caps. Look after her, they won’t be making these ever again.

    • @jagsimon640
      @jagsimon640  Před 2 lety +5

      Thanks, when I first got her it was because of my wife's desire to have one but I quickly became of wagon lover!
      The 390 V8 allows her to easily keep pace with modern traffic which happily surprised me.

    • @Murtagh653
      @Murtagh653 Před 2 lety

      @@jagsimon640 man i wish more modern cars had V8s, it seems to be mostly 4 cylinders these days, sometimes with a turbo charger, occasionally a V6 or straight 6 in a sports car, but V8s seem to be on the way out, they are only in the most expensive cars.

  • @dennismccallister3994
    @dennismccallister3994 Před rokem +1

    My local florsit had a one of these in a green....it had air, they used it as a kid hauler, and smaller delivery van, boy this brings back memories, the Mom took us all over in this.....lol, When there daughter said they got a new car, I thought they said a Jaguar, not a Country Squire...Haha

  • @michaeldecker2725
    @michaeldecker2725 Před 19 dny

    This was my first car. Got a good start to my carpentry career with this car. Got 22+ mpg on the highway. I miss that car not long after I sold it.

  • @Canadasvt
    @Canadasvt Před rokem +1

    My dad had a 1970. I always loved the front grill and the instrument panel. Instruments look cool at night too.

  • @KenanTurkiye
    @KenanTurkiye Před měsícem +1

    ....oh come on! the Squire especially in this brown is just gorgeous!
    I want one......two. :)

  • @jobamasux
    @jobamasux Před 2 lety +5

    Ford was king of station wagons ,I grew up and learned to drive in a 68 LTD wagon, they were powerful and we pulled the family camper behind ours for many years! Nice to see such a pristine example still around and I miss the days when they were plentiful! I bet you would draw a lot of attention at car shows because the younger generation probably never seen one!

  • @ralphabreu5022
    @ralphabreu5022 Před 2 lety +6

    America needs to bring back body on frame station wagons.
    Instead of unibody SUV'S.
    True works of art

    • @johnde2754
      @johnde2754 Před 2 lety +1

      The body on frame will never return to passenger vehicles, quite frankly it's a bygone era. Ford did produce a reasonable facsimile wagon in the Ford FLEX model in recent years. It has since been discontinued due to anemic sales numbers. ✌

    • @ralphabreu5022
      @ralphabreu5022 Před 2 lety +2

      @@johnde2754
      Well quite frankly the car's that are built today suck
      The 2 body on frame vehicles are built today are the Toyota Tacoma and tundra and they are both way to expensive to get.
      Body on frame needs to return

    • @stevemurray710
      @stevemurray710 Před 5 měsíci

      The government makes lots of rules particularly gas milage requirements . They can't build what you want without facing fines.

    • @ralphabreu5022
      @ralphabreu5022 Před 5 měsíci +1

      @@stevemurray710
      Our government
      Should stay out of the car business.

    • @stevemurray710
      @stevemurray710 Před 5 měsíci

      @@ralphabreu5022 and the kitchen. A few losers are trying to ban gas stoves.

  • @kungfucommando1642
    @kungfucommando1642 Před rokem

    Love the hidden headlamp styling of the 69/70 LTD. Beautiful car indeed.

  • @canaan5337
    @canaan5337 Před 2 lety +2

    Makes me want to go on a vacation possibly a cross country road trip to Wally World.

  • @frankzicari784
    @frankzicari784 Před rokem

    We had a 1969 in the same color. I was 10 and i loved that car, sitting in the way back with the rear window opened.

  • @scottg391
    @scottg391 Před 2 lety +6

    It's rare to find a station wagon that isn't a beat to death but with a perfect interior is a miracle! This LTD is beyond rare and probably the only one I've seen in
    30 years in this condition. What gorgeous car!
    As far as Ford wagons go, the 69-72 was the only wagon ever built by Ford that was exceptionally good looking, (actually better looking than the sedans in my mind) with your choice of every engine in the Ford stable. Not to mention every option from the prats bin if you wanted to spend upwards of 4k back in the day. This was the ultimate SUV before the word existed.
    Thanks for sharing.

  • @billy1673
    @billy1673 Před 8 měsíci

    Such memories of me and my little brother riding in the way back of this car!

  • @lego4virgo
    @lego4virgo Před 2 lety +1

    Our extended family in MA had nothing but station wagons, including this one, as well as a Mercury Colony Park. And I remember that jump seat. I threw up in those at least twice.

  • @kanehi3275
    @kanehi3275 Před rokem

    This reminds me of the good ol' days. We drove this vehicle cross-country from Maryland to Los Angeles. I also used while in college. We had the LTD edition.

  • @johnossendorf9979
    @johnossendorf9979 Před 2 lety +4

    I remember my father's 74 country squire, we went up and down most of the eastern seaboard, explored the north east and many trips to Boston and Chicago. Back then we didn't use seat belts so any space not occupied by luggage was ours for play or sleep.

  • @nygelmiller5293
    @nygelmiller5293 Před 2 lety +1

    The music is appropriate for this era !

  • @warrenlindner2980
    @warrenlindner2980 Před 2 lety +1

    My mom and dad had one identical to that. Same color. Same interior. Same engine. I remember my dad had aftermarket air conditioning installed when we moved to Texas.

  • @ericluhtanen
    @ericluhtanen Před 2 lety +12

    My first car at 16, a 1970 Ranch Wagon (hand me down from my mother) same color as this one, inside and out. Amazed you could fit a modern radio in that spot, mine only had an AM radio, and I felt special when I added an FM converter to it. Love wagons and need to bring them back, love your wagon.

    • @jagsimon640
      @jagsimon640  Před 2 lety +1

      Thanks, the only reason I could make the stereo fit was by finding one with remote volume and tuning knobs and I believe they have only been available for the past few years. You were lucky to have such a cool first car!

    • @paulne1514
      @paulne1514 Před 2 lety +4

      I still have my am-fm radio. Liked that only I could change the station. Liked ford wagons enough to have 5 of them. 1965, 1967, 2-1970’s and 1977.

    • @bradleypollack5658
      @bradleypollack5658 Před 2 lety +3

      I wish they would bring larger smother riding cars back. Instead of these modern cars that ride like log wagons. 😡

    • @bradparris99
      @bradparris99 Před 2 lety +3

      Similar story for me. Truly loved that wagon. Coming home from college one weekend a drunk driver in a Chevrolet suburban crossed the center line and hit me head on. Because of the size of the car and the fact that I was that rare teenager that buckled up both the lap and shoulder belts when I drove, I walked away with only bruises from the belts which was far better than the unbelted other driver. That was a solid car.

  • @jonclassical5710
    @jonclassical5710 Před 2 lety +1

    Beautiful...my best friends Dad had a 1968 LTD Wagon w/ the "green tinted windows" which told everyone "it had factory air!....black leather interior...390 4 brl. ...this 1970 is in amazing condition, thanks for sharing and bringing back those 1970's PA vibes!

  • @edwardcnnell2853
    @edwardcnnell2853 Před 2 lety +1

    My father had a 1967 Country Sedan model with the 390 ci aspirated by the 2 barrel carburetor. While this produced less horsepower than a 4 barrel it had plenty of torque and enough horsepower to move the car quickly from a start and cruised at 80 mph with ease.
    Large and comfortable with of course the vinyl seats. Freezing cold in winter and fried your skin in summer. Trips were two adults, five kids and a dog or cat. Luggage rack on the roof.
    Not producing the greater horsepower of a 4 barrel carburetor the engine was under less internal stress and ran for a very long time. There were no engine problems other than external components. It was replaced only after an accident.

  • @tobycleo
    @tobycleo Před 2 měsíci

    Rock stars ! were driven from point A to B in these fords in the 70s

  • @clintondoner1133
    @clintondoner1133 Před 10 měsíci

    Mom had a green 1970 ltd station wagon!!! Love your show!!

  • @nilsnyman6767
    @nilsnyman6767 Před 2 lety +1

    I remember facing backward in the rear seat waving at people. Good times. The days when cars served a PURPOSE.

  • @paulbroderick8438
    @paulbroderick8438 Před 2 lety +1

    Honest, strait forward, down to earth and practical. Can you imagine a designer being given those criteria to work with to-day? Everything is for just feel good people now!

  • @equalizertime188
    @equalizertime188 Před 2 lety +2

    It's AMAZING HOW NEAT THOSE CARS ARE 👌

  • @Multidoogan2
    @Multidoogan2 Před rokem +1

    What a cracking example! I'm desperately trying to find a die cast model of this exact car hence finding the video. It's the one from Harry & the Hendersons.

  • @Drew-on9cv
    @Drew-on9cv Před 2 lety

    Nobody could wipe the smile off your face: Good one

  • @franciscomontesdeoca5316

    Sir you are a fortunate Man.
    I have a 1970 car ltd for several years .

  • @dolphinbear661
    @dolphinbear661 Před 2 lety

    We had this exact vehicle. I spent many a queasy road trip in those jumpseats huffing exhaust and 2nd hand cigarette smoke! Good times

  • @mar4kl
    @mar4kl Před 2 lety +1

    Ah, yes, a classic wagon. My uncle & aunt had a 1967 Ford Country Squire LTD wagon, and my parents bought the 1975 model, so I remember those cars well. Gotta love the 3-way tailgate; I think only Ford and Mercury full-size wagons had it back then. As a kid, though, I was not in love with the tailgate seats. No matter how we sat in them, the hard edges of the tailgate floor bordering the seats was uncomfortable to lean against, and if the driver accelerated or braked hard, we got pushed against those edges. Any luggage stowed between the tailgate seats and the rear bench seat would slide right into us, because there was no way to secure it. Also, the recessed, sideways seating position made us car-sick very quickly. After a few experiments using them, my parents just left the tailgate seats folded down and let us lounge around in the tailgate on trips. Definitely not safe (heck, those tailgate seats weren't much safer, even if you used them with the seatbelts), but that's what most parents of the time did. When I turned 16, that Country Squire wagon was one of three cars I learned to drive on. Your Country Squire almost certainly has more get-up-and-go than my parents' did. In addition to the 390 engine in yours - I suspect my parents' car had the smallest engine available with air conditioning - the 1975 model was full of power-sapping pollution controls. It wallowed more than it vroomed.

  • @buddywayne1
    @buddywayne1 Před 2 lety +2

    I know of a ton of people on a '69 and '70 Ford group who would love to know about your replacement radio for the factory radio. I've never seen anything that would fit in that spot other than a factory unit. This is a remarkable example, thanks for sharing.

  • @tonylashmit2613
    @tonylashmit2613 Před 2 lety

    Cool car. That instrument panel layout is so neat!

  • @briansearles4473
    @briansearles4473 Před 2 lety +2

    What a beautiful 1970 Country squire. My first car was a 1969 Country Squire, white color with the 390 engine. The 69 had a different grill and the ignition was on the dash not the steering column. I noticed the vinal wood trim along the sides and tail gate is not original, but still looks very nice. I miss my 69 and wish this lovely 1970 was in my garage.

  • @chriswright2250
    @chriswright2250 Před 2 lety +1

    We had a 72 Country Squire LTD. Dark green with the 2 jump seats that me and my little brother used. My older brother and sister got use the adult seats. Lol. Great car!

  • @francescogatto3727
    @francescogatto3727 Před 2 lety +1

    Fantastica!!! ....la vera station vagon americana!!!👍👍👍👏👏👏👏

  • @ricardoflot2787
    @ricardoflot2787 Před 2 lety +1

    When it came to wagons, Ford wasn't playing around, this was pretty much a stretched LTD; it was powerful, roomy, comfortable and handled well for a vehicle that size! If I could find a nice one, you BETTER beleive I'd own it!😁👍

  • @gillesbueno1153
    @gillesbueno1153 Před 2 lety +1

    Musak chosen wisely.
    It remind us the cops stories on tv chasing the bad guys in those days👍🏻👍🏻🥳🥳
    Writing from across the pond…
    In France in those days people were dreaming about purchasing a Renault 12 or 16…🙄🙄🙄

  • @FirstnameLamename
    @FirstnameLamename Před rokem

    Loved my avocado green with faux wood panels, 1975 Country Squire LTD. I think it was a 351 that burnt oil and got 8 MPG. Love the memories

  • @WSNO
    @WSNO Před 2 lety +1

    These 1970s station wagons are such gems, so much better suited for road trips than anything from the 21st century. The color combo on this ol gal is hilarious! Love love love the woodgrain and gosh ya just don't see enough yellow cars anymore! Great music too LOL thanks for sharing!!!

  • @pmd467
    @pmd467 Před 2 lety +2

    Just ONE more thing 🤔 I am totally digging the background music. I'm waiting for an announcer to say "this is the 1970 Ford LTD Country Squire! Hurry down to your Local Ford dealer where you will see why, (Ding!) Ford, has a better idea!"😆

    • @leedaniels7196
      @leedaniels7196 Před 2 lety +1

      Ford has a better idea.Ah the nostalgia 🤗

    • @pmd467
      @pmd467 Před 2 lety +1

      Yes.. nostalgia sorely missed 😞

  • @trudygreer2491
    @trudygreer2491 Před 2 lety +2

    Beautiful car, great walk-around, fascinating accent, and best of all, marvelously appropriate 1970s game show theme music! Thanks, much enjoyed!
    My folks bought a new 1969 Mercury Colony Park, light blue over dark blue, so yes, these are my favorite wagons~

  • @crankychris2
    @crankychris2 Před 2 lety +1

    These really were the SUV's of the day. The super soft rear springs made for a soft with the taigate down. The 390V FE engine allowed a tow weight of 6,000 lbs. Your lo compression 390 probanly produced about 280 SAE gross hp, Every block had a few of these.

  • @mercoid
    @mercoid Před 2 lety

    The family car when I was a tike was a ‘69 Mercury Colony Park, basically the same car as this. It was the car I learned to drive on. I loved that wagon. It tools us on lots of family trips… comfortably! And my dad hauled everything in it, everything from all the materials to build a 10’ x 10’ shed, to loads of bricks. We sold it in ‘79 to a guy starting an airport limousine service. He was delighted to have found it as we kept it well maintained.

  • @enkifernand2927
    @enkifernand2927 Před 2 lety

    I was born in 1970, like this incredible car .

  • @jeffring1222
    @jeffring1222 Před 2 lety

    What a beautiful wagon.

  • @robertmcwhinney4596
    @robertmcwhinney4596 Před rokem

    Looks like the one in the movie"Harry and the Hendersons"! I love that movie lol! Love the car also lol!🙏🤠👍🙏

  • @stuartb9323
    @stuartb9323 Před 2 lety +3

    Awesome wagon!
    I noticed you wrapped the dash and steering wheel. I'm sure the sun 🌞 got the best of the original. Looks great 👍
    My best friends family had a 71 Ford wagon that led a hard life. It went on many road trips, and towed a boat too. The back end was always in the salt water launching the boat into the Jersey waters. It didn't take long for the rust to take over!
    The wagons life came to an end when a boyfriend of my buddies Sister wrecked her. We were so mad at that jerk. We loved that car.

  • @jhbuilders
    @jhbuilders Před 3 měsíci

    I have memories of my parents praying to the lord this thing would start.

  • @EmmyPierz-ek7hi
    @EmmyPierz-ek7hi Před 11 měsíci

    Love the radio location on the 69/70
    Full Size Fords.
    Quite unique.
    Just like the 1961/62 Full size Chevy
    Center glove box location. CB

  • @MeDicen_Rocha
    @MeDicen_Rocha Před 2 lety +1

    Now thats a tasty looking wagon.

  • @Bentley.777
    @Bentley.777 Před 2 lety

    🏆Such a beautiful thing to preserves such luxurious family automobile of a simpler times,an that sewing machine sound in the engine is priceless 👑of the road 🛣️

  • @Ka9radio_Mobile9
    @Ka9radio_Mobile9 Před 2 lety +1

    Very nice! we had a 1969 green new. That large badge on the front grill looks bad, takes away the beauty of that nice front end. :-)

  • @MatHelm
    @MatHelm Před 9 měsíci

    That would have been sweet back on our 2 week 1976 trip across the country (NC to OH to Grand Canyon, Tomestone, Mexico, Las Vegas, CA Pacific Ocean, and back) half the time sleeping in our 1970 LTD 390 coupe... I was 12 and with 5 of us, I got the front passenger floorboard.

  • @gsnfan
    @gsnfan Před rokem +1

    0:10 Love the "eyelids"

  • @toddbonin6926
    @toddbonin6926 Před 2 lety

    Dream car ... best station wagon ever!!!!

  • @jacobleroy8454
    @jacobleroy8454 Před měsícem

    Great video, great tunes

  • @Al-thecarhistorian
    @Al-thecarhistorian Před 2 lety +1

    My dad had a '70 Squire he bought new. The most reliable, comfortable car he ever owned.
    Station wagons don't have trunks. Only sedans have trunks.

  • @paulpalmtree9295
    @paulpalmtree9295 Před 2 lety +2

    Beautiful station wagon 👍🇬🇧.

  • @franciscoruiz-delgado9811

    Beautiful 😍

  • @bigbadtoyman
    @bigbadtoyman Před 2 lety

    That's a cool ass old school station wagon!

  • @67marlins
    @67marlins Před 2 lety

    A beautiful car! Thank you for posting.

  • @m.pietro9087
    @m.pietro9087 Před 2 lety

    What a nice cruiser. Congratulations, it’s a beautiful car and it’s super clean.

  • @armedinbama
    @armedinbama Před 2 lety

    That's a ridiculously cool old wagon! Along with the hidden headlights, the thin side markers are a very sweet styling cue. 👍

  • @jeffreycoffey4204
    @jeffreycoffey4204 Před 2 lety +1

    if they made these now..families would buy them!!

  • @ocalakid55
    @ocalakid55 Před 2 lety

    While I was working and living in the Chicago area I lived at Town & Country Apartments in Shiller Park, Ill. They had two 69’ ford LTD’s wagons as courtesy cars to transport airline employees to and from O’Hare airport every 15 minutes. Several times because they didn’t have a driver we guys would take a car load to the airport and there was always someone coming back to return the car to the apartment office.

  • @gregmckinney7178
    @gregmckinney7178 Před 2 lety

    You have an absolute Gem !!!!

  • @thebestisyettocome4114
    @thebestisyettocome4114 Před 2 lety +2

    Very cool car. Thumbs 👍

  • @user-iq6wz4wv4u
    @user-iq6wz4wv4u Před 6 měsíci +1

    The background music killed this video. It overpowers the narration!

  • @Stephen_A.
    @Stephen_A. Před 2 lety

    Beautiful car. Love the classic key ring holder too. 😃

  • @petervitti9
    @petervitti9 Před 2 lety

    Excellent episode. Our family couldn't afford a 1970 country squire. My dad had a bronze 1962 ford ranch wagon. It was pretty rusty and beat up 10 years later. Great car with little long horn steer heads on the seats.

  • @ronkemperful
    @ronkemperful Před 2 lety

    In remarkably good condition. We too had a Country Squire that was given to us by our grandparents. Identical to yours with a few upgrades including power windows. However, the California emissions that were included on the car, vexed the local mechanics who never could get the 390 to fire on more than 5 or 6 cylinders; all the power windows died one by one; the hoses for the cooling blew prematurely; the fuel mileage was about 9 to 11 mph; the engine was very cold-blooded blowing out James Bondian clouds of black smoke; the horn in the steering column stuck; the heater core leaked fogging up the windows that being broken, could not be lowered; and the rear seats were a penalty box for bad little kids who didn’t mind throwing up as the car bounced up and down on its floppy suspension. We called the car ‘The Beast’ for nobody liked it but because it was a car it was the only way we could get to school or to activities.

  • @ThePrissy11
    @ThePrissy11 Před 2 lety

    Beautiful CS. My neighbor had a ‘68 in candyapple red with a 390. It had several mechanical problems though from when it was new.

  • @mzaccagnini7179
    @mzaccagnini7179 Před 2 lety

    I am a GM guy. But I Still love wagons .and that one is beautiful. KEEP IT RUNNING. AWESOME.

  • @pray4mojo35
    @pray4mojo35 Před 2 lety

    Perfect for a family road trip to Walley World.

  • @alanhumphrey4198
    @alanhumphrey4198 Před 2 lety +1

    I always loved bench seats!!

  • @mikekokomomike
    @mikekokomomike Před 2 lety

    We had a 69 LTD Country Squire wagon with the 390. Before that a 1965 Country Squire wagon with 352. Those were the days.

  • @debian_i3
    @debian_i3 Před 3 měsíci

    so a nice car, thanks for share

  • @briq4409
    @briq4409 Před 2 lety

    The music. Lol it’s like the beginning of every 1980’s sitcom.

  • @thomasschreiber9559
    @thomasschreiber9559 Před 2 lety

    This was THE station wagon when I was growing up in suburban Detroit,

  • @bigmeandog849
    @bigmeandog849 Před 2 lety

    My girl friend in high school loved the back seat. We would go to the drive-in and lay down the second seat so it would be open to the rear hatch. You can imagine the rest of the story; we didn't see much of the movie.

  • @rogerkreil3314
    @rogerkreil3314 Před rokem

    They are good for transporting people with stuff! 😀

  • @God-has-entered-into-my-body

    this car is so beautiful. when I was growing up, they were all over, and I didnt like them, now, love

  • @KIILew
    @KIILew Před rokem

    Your Country Squire is beautiful! Nice mods you made too!
    I grew up in a family that bought many new examples of the '69 -'78 full size Fords and Mercurys back in the day. I've got a nice '69 LTD Country Squire sitting in my garage which I have not driven in years; it's a lifetime-garaged car with original champagne gold paint and nugget gold interior. It was a wonderful driving car with a stunning interior, although I have let it sit so long now that it is covered with dust, and the carb has dried out. The car still has its original 429 4V engine. Your video inspires me to pull it out of storage and replace the A/C compressor with a unit like yours.

    • @manFromPeterborough
      @manFromPeterborough Před 8 dny

      I left an 81 Toyota Crown sitting for years, the pickup screen melted with the stale fuel and won't start, I thought the electric fuel pump might be clagged with the stale fuel. I since binned the Crown due to issues proceeding the layup, blown head, rusted trunk channels, tired trans

  • @willydear4906
    @willydear4906 Před 2 lety

    I did my drivers test in an 1972 Country Squire. I failed because I wasn't used to driving the beast. It had a 400 engine if I remember correctly. Definitely the family truckster.

  • @steve20118
    @steve20118 Před 2 lety

    Have to admit, gorgeous wagon!

  • @jamesdennis2058
    @jamesdennis2058 Před 2 lety

    My parents had a red ‘70 Country Squire. Dad loved it, Mom hated it. She said it was too big and bulky. She preferred to drive her “smaller” ‘66 Olds 98.

  • @rlgman
    @rlgman Před 11 měsíci

    Spent many a trip trapped in one of these inhaling second hand smoke while dropping fries and pebbles thru the hole in the back floor between the two seats. Used to fold seats back down when we went to the drive-in.

  • @rdeanhanson
    @rdeanhanson Před 2 lety

    I remember my Dad buying a ‘69 Country Squire and showing off the dual opening of the tailgate. We had a factory 429 in ours and if I remember right… first year for front disc brakes. That wagon could haul a**! Leaving a one legger rubber line a 1/4 mile long…lol

  • @VolkswagenNut1969
    @VolkswagenNut1969 Před rokem

    So that car belonged to Donfeld? Nice, the man had an impressive resume. Many of the films he worked on are among my favorite movies of all time!
    One of the greatest cars ever made too! I remember when they were commonplace on the roads, I miss that. Now the roads are littered with generic Crossovers. 🙁

  • @knitterscheidt
    @knitterscheidt Před 2 lety

    Amazing condition! You know a one income blue collar family man could afford this beauty back in 1970 and a camper for it to pull, which it would do quite handily. Now, you get home from a drive, pull the crushed up kia or hyundai from under the wheel wells and navigate her in the garage, great feeling!

  • @Architect172
    @Architect172 Před rokem +1

    pretty cool car

  • @iwebman1
    @iwebman1 Před 2 lety

    My parents had this exact model. I drove it occasionally. Unreliable and slow, the 390 frequently overheated. Very comfortable, but ours was dark blue so it got scorching hot in the summer and the single AC wasn't up to the job of cooling such a behemoth. 9MPG downhill with a tailwind. It's massive weight made it ride like a Cadillac, but it steered like a cement mixer, and braked like an aircraft carrier. It was completely worn out by the time it reached 80 thousand miles. That's why they are so rare now. Good times!

    • @discerningmind
      @discerningmind Před rokem

      It reads like your folks got theirs when it had about 300,000 miles on it. No one has ever had that experience with these cars. Maybe you're confusing it with another brand of car, but I can't think of any cars in 1970 being that bad.

  • @Stevessphoto
    @Stevessphoto Před 2 lety

    We had a 70 base model Merc Monterey with a lot of the same features. Behemoth!

  • @dermotthompson2115
    @dermotthompson2115 Před 2 lety

    Absolutely remarkable

  • @michals547
    @michals547 Před 2 lety +1

    Amazing car!! Piękny samochód, w Polsce w tych latach mieliśmy podobne, ale mniejsze kombi, FIAT 125 i Lada 2102 .

  • @bertram46
    @bertram46 Před 2 lety +2

    That was such a beautiful front end.
    I was a car kid then. The 70 models were much more rare. Seems like everyone had a '69.
    71 more common than 72
    73 more than 74.
    67-68 not real common.
    64 and 66 yes.

  • @phyllisperezbatista695
    @phyllisperezbatista695 Před 2 lety +1

    Wish I still had one