Mercury Marmon-Herrington Station Wagon 1948, Estados Unidos
Fotografia
Long before
Jeep arrived on the scene with their first four-wheel-drive utility vehicle,
Marmon-Herrington Incorporated was formed in 1931 in Indianapolis, Indiana, by
Walter C. Marmon and Colonel Arthur W. Herrington. Taking over the old
Duesenberg assembly plant, the pair started building 4×4 and 6×6 trucks for the
army. In 1937, they began converting light-duty Ford cars and trucks to
four-wheel drive before halting production when World War II arrived to focus
again on military trucks and tanks.
Marmon-Herrington
resumed all-wheel-drive production for Ford and Mercury customers in 1946,
ending Mercury wagon production with the 89M series by June 1948. Full wood-bodied
wagon production halted at Ford’s Iron Mountain plant in March 1948, with the
facility slated to build the all-new 1949 Ford and Mercury hybrid steel-wood
bodies. As a result, 1948 Mercury wagon production was slashed to just 1,889
cars in total. When adding limited production together with the exclusivity of
a four-wheel-drive conversion, the 1948 Mercury Marmon-Herrington instantly
became one of the rarest American woodies ever produced.
The exact
number of Marmon-Herrington all-wheel-drive woodie-wagon conversions is
presently unknown, with no factory production records having survived from this
period. However, Marmon-Herrington aficionados report that only a dozen or so
total Ford examples of all body styles of each year are known, with far fewer
Mercury versions in existence due to their premium price and lower production
numbers. As a result, only three such Mercury Marmon-Herrington wagons are
presently known to have survived—one example from 1946, another from 1947, and
this one being the only known 1948 version, making it the last surviving
example of a very rare breed indeed.
Essentially
hand-built, the assembly rate of all Marmon-Herrington conversions was
necessarily slow and the output small. When this premium four-wheel-drive
conversion was ordered from the Lincoln-Mercury dealer, a complete Mercury was
delivered to Marmon-Herrington’s plant, where the factory body and power train
were removed. A four-speed truck transmission was installed with an 11-inch
clutch, and a heavy-duty transfer case was mounted behind it that from 1939
allowed on-demand engagement of the front axle. The chassis was reinforced with
new cross members, and the original body was mounted on the new chassis, with
the finished Marmon-Herrington wagon delivered to the customer at a cost of
well over $4,000—nearly double the factory price of a standard Mercury wagon.
The Mercury
Station Wagon presented here has been in a prominent private collection for the
past decade. Prior to current ownership, a Midwest family owned it for a number
of years after discovery on the East Coast and performed a detailed
nut-and-bolt restoration. The woodie specialists at Nickels Woodworking in
Traverse City, Michigan, chose bird’s-eye maple and African mahogany to rebuild
the body.
Highly sought
after for its exotic fine swirling grain that resembles the eye of a bird,
bird’s-eye maple trees were prevalent in Ford’s Iron Mountain forests. When
combined with African mahogany inserts and a correct factory finish of Monsoon
Maroon over the Tan LeBaron Bonney three-seat leather interior, the resulting
effect is stunning. Every element of the restoration is reported to be factory
correct, from preserving the unique Marmon-Herrington upgrades and badging to
replacing any hardware or sheet metal as needed with new old stock. Since
completion, the car has been driven less than 200 miles, including display at
shows in Kansas City and the Chicago area, where it has won Best of Show honors
on several occasions.
Marmon-Herrington
all-wheel-drive wagon conversions are some of the most desirable woodies due to
their engineering, rarity, and impressive visual stance. However, the
significance of this particular Mercury station wagon cannot be overstated,
offering woodie collectors an unrepeatable opportunity to acquire that unique
crown jewel for their collection.











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