Make: | Mercury |
Model: | Turnpike Cruiser |
Type: | 2 Door Hardtop |
Trim: | -- |
Year: | 1957 |
Mileage: | 92100 |
VIN: | 365AK57563559 |
Color: | White |
Engine: | 368/290HP V8 |
Fuel: | Gasoline |
Transmission: | Automatic |
Drive type: | -- |
Interior color: | Other Color |
Vehicle Title: | Clear |
Item location: | Torrance, California, United States |
West Coast Classics are proud to present an absolutely exceptional and great daily driving and completely rust free and mostly all original example of this 1957 Mercury Turnpike Cruiser 2 Door Hardtop with its original 368/290HP V8 engine in beautiful and striking 'Classic White' color paint with original full length bodyside stainless trim with rear quarter panel gold anodized trim on tailfin and with a gorgeous condition and mostly all original and unrestored 'Black & White' interior. The car is... a rare Canadian built 'Monarch' namesake model with reportedly 91K original miles and which is fully loaded with factory options including the:368/290HP V8 engine,Power windows including the legendary 'Breeze Way' power retractable rear window,Factory 'Dream Car' spare tire Continental kit carrier,Town & Country push button AM radio option,Dual exhausts,Dual mirrors,Oval Deep Dish steering wheel,Push button transmission,Combination electric clock and trip odometer,'Monitor Control Panel' instrument panel,Seat-O-Matic Power Memory seat,Chrome window surround moldings,Power steering,Power brakes,Horn ring,Rear fender skirts,Heater & defroster,Tinted glass,Padded instrument panel,'Multi-Luber' automastic lubrication system,Full wheel covers and whitewall tires!The Mercury Turnpike Cruiser would be both the top-of-the-line Mercury as well as one of the most gadget laden cars ever produced in the 1950's whilst also boasting the larger and huge new 368 CID 290HP V8 engine which was first seen in the 1956 Lincoln line. Mercury's automatic transmission known as the 'Merc-O-Matic' now featured a 'Keyboard Control' pushbutton feature similar to what Chrysler was using at the time but which also featured a pushbutton to start the engine and a push/pull control to set the parking brake and for locking the transmission in gear. This was definitiely unlike any Mercury ever produced to date.The Turnpike Cruiser Hardtop used a unique windshield that wrapped upward to give better vision with the upper area capped at each end with supplementary roof-level air intakes with faux antennas projecting from the center and each operated by it's own interior control. It had a unique oval steering wheel flattened at the top for an even better view of the road! The twin roof level air intakes were part of the 'Breeze Way' ventilation system that included a power operated rear window section which lowered into the rear deck compartment and which some considered better than actual air conditioning! The Seat-O-Matic power system allowed an almost infinite combination of some 49 different seating positions and the Turnpike Cruiser's clock was actually a combination clock and 'Average Speed Computer' that reported the average speed at any point on a trip. The padded dash with rubber housings for the tachometer and clock surrounds was a safety feature and the first of its kind. In addition to all the other power options as standard, it is clear to see why the '57 Mercury Turnpike Cruiser was dubbed the 'King of Gadgets' and Mercury was to market the car as "The most advanced car you can buy at any price!"A Mercury Turnpike Cruiser Convertible was selected as the official pace car for the 1957 running of the Indianaplois 500 mile race which marked only the second time in Mercury's short history to be selected for this honor. These Mercury Turnpike Cruisers were the top-of-the-line offerings for 1957-58 and in 1957 were widely promoted as a seperate series only to be reduced to a Montclair sub-series for 1958 before the high cost of buying one, and maybe some aversion to it's flamboyant looks and gadgets galore, but more importantly the unfortunate recession of the late fifties which took its toll on many mid-market models of the era such as the Turnpike Cruiser and Edsel, which led to the model being dropped from the Mercury line up after only two years of production. In later years, the high performance of the Turnpike Crusier would help popularize the cars use in demolition derbys, one of the reasons along with it's limited production numbers why you wont see many of them out there today. It wasnt even considered a true collectors car until recently, when people started to appreciate its uniqueness (and rarity)! The four-door model with the Continental kit measures an astonishing 18-1/3 feet in length. The Mercury Turnpike Cruiser is a now revered as a true American classic and treasure of automotive history.It is of note to collectors that only 1,265 were built with the factory Continental tire kit as of which this particular car is one of them. Introduced by Lincoln some years earlier was the striking image of a visible rear spare wheel resting on the trunk lid and extended bumpers, otherwise known as the optional "Continental kit". This option was welcome since it refined the look of the Mercury without overbearing its classic lines which until 1956 deliberately ignored the fifties fashion for fins, making it a very unique looking car for its era.