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Ford introduced a Supercharged Thunderbird concept car as a possible future addition to its Living Legends line of automobiles at the 2003 Los Angeles Auto Show. The supercharged Ford Thunderbird ...
On February 20, 1954, at the Detroit auto show, the company led by Henry Ford II turned the place upside down with the introduction of the Ford Thunderbird, a two-seat V-8 roadster that was ...
Affectionately called the T-Bird, the Ford Thunderbird may not be the fastest or the most valuable nameplate in Ford's ...
The news is out and official. Ford will kill the Thunderbird. I've been down this road before. The original little T-bird, a two-seater, came out in 1954. It wasn't really a sports car ...
For decades, the Thunderbird was a staple in Ford's lineup. All told, the vehicle lasted 11 generations before ending its run in 2005. With a history as long as the Thunderbird's, there are ...
In the mid 1950s, the manufacturer produced one of its most visually striking vehicles with the Ford Thunderbird. Created by ...
Once the premier sports car in the Ford line, the Thunderbird left production for good in 2005 after a career spanning 50 years. For Americans of a certain age, the Thunderbird brings back ...
This was the one millionth Ford Thunderbird to roll off the production line. Painted gold and sporting elegant chrome details, the car was never sold. It was just loaned to people who understood ...
The first Ford Thunderbird, a 1955 model, comes off the production line at Ford Motor Co.'s Dearborn, Mich., assembly plant on Sept. 9, 1954. It was the creation of two men: Louis D. Crusoe ...
The Thunderbird established itself by outselling its rival, the Chevrolet Corvette, by four to one in those first three heady years of 1955-57. And yet Ford never hesitated to tamper with the ...