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       Ford’s little-known Mercury GT40s
 Courtesy: Hagerty
 
 When is a Ford GT40 not a Ford GT40? When it’s a Mercury. That’s right, a 
      Mercury.
 
       
 In the midst of Ford’s “Total Performance” racing dominance in the 
      1960s—highlighted by the legendary GT40’s 1-2-3 finish at the 24 Hours of 
      Le Mans in 1966—Ford Motor Company’s Lincoln-Mercury Division wanted a 
      share of the spotlight to help promote its new Mercury Cougar. Since the 
      primary goal of Total Performance was to draw customers to showrooms, 
      FoMoCo obliged.
 
 By Halloween 1966, a GT40 was masquerading as a Mercury. Three more would 
      follow.
 
 According to the Shelby American World Registry, the four GT40s—so named 
      because their roof height was 40 inches—included three rebranded Ford Mk 
      IIs and an Mk I.
 
       
 The four not-Fords
 The first Mercury GT40, a Mk II (described in a little white lie as a 
      “prototype sports race car”), was actually the same Ford GT40 (chassis 
      P/1015) that placed second at Le Mans only months prior. The car, still 
      painted light blue but wearing the fictitious #10, was revealed to race 
      fans at the U.S. Grand Prix at Watkins Glen in early October. The car 
      looked much different on October 31 for the unveiling of the Mercury 
      Cougar in Carmel, California. According to the Registry, P/1015 “had been 
      repainted red with silver sill and top stripes, a large #3 on the sides, 
      and ‘Mercury’ in script lettering on the sill stripes.”
 
       
 A second Mercury GT40—P/1053—showed up at the 1967 Chicago Auto Show 
      February 25–March 5. This one, the Mk I, was initially intended for singer 
      Vic Damone, an avid sports car enthusiast. Originally painted Swan White, 
      P/1053 wore #1 and was adorned in Mercury’s red-with-silver racing colors 
      for the Chicago show. Oddly, a sign next to the car incorrectly referred 
      it a “Mercury Mark II GT40,” and described it as “big brother to the GT40 
      Mk I which first ran at LeMans in 1964.”
 
       
 The third and fourth Mercury GT40 race cars—P/1016 and P/1047—were more 
      than just showpieces. Given Mk IIB upgrades that included roll cage, 
      aluminum instrument panel, lighter body sections, and fire suppression, 
      they competed in the 24 Hours of Daytona in May 1967, with some big-name 
      drivers at the wheel. (Ford also entered four GT40s, including P/1015, 
      repainted dark blue.) Neither Mercury GT40 managed to finish, however. 
      According to the Shelby American World Registry, the Mk IIs were doomed 
      “by a batch of improperly heat-treated transaxle input shafts,” and only 
      one, a Ford, completed the race.
 
       
 Mercury runs out of runway
 P/1016, the car that placed third in Ford’s historic 1966 Le Mans victory 
      over Ferrari, wore gold paint, black stripes, and #4. Driven by Mark 
      Donohue and Peter Revson, it completed 236 laps before being forced to 
      quit. A.J. Foyt and Dan Gurney, driving P/1047 for Shelby American, 
      managed to nearly double that distance by completing 464 laps, but their 
      red-with-white #3 also faltered.
 
 Just like that, the Mercury GT40 marketing ploy was over. A GT40 never 
      again competed with Mercury on its sills.
 
 Just a month after Foyt and Gurney’s disappointing finish at Daytona, the 
      pair—driving Ford’s new 427-cubic-inch V-8 powered GT40 Mk IV—dominated 
      the ’67 Le Mans race, never trailing after the second hour. The duo set 
      overall Le Mans records for going the fastest and farthest, as well as 
      several class records. Donohue and Bruce McLaren, also driving an Mk IV, 
      finished fourth.
 
 And what about the Ford GT40s that had donned Mercury costumes in the 
      months leading up to Le Mans? They were hit with more bad luck in France. 
      Joe Schlesser and Guy Ligier, driving P/1015—the original Mercury GT40 
      shown at Watkins Glen and Carmel, and by then wearing #5—crashed 11 hours 
      into the race after completing 179 laps. Ronnie Bucknum and Paul Hawkins, 
      driving P/1047 (wearing #57), competed 18 hours and finished 271 laps 
      before succumbing to a valve problem.
 
 Where are they now?
 P/1015: According to the World Registry of Cobras and GT40s, P/1015 has 
      changed hands a number of times in the private sector. It has appeared at 
      GT40 Anniversary Reunion events at Watkins Glen, commemorations of the 
      GT40s’ 1966 sweep at Le Mans (along with P/1016 and P/1047), and has 
      participated in the Monterey Historics at Laguna Seca.
 
 P/1047: According to the World Registry of Cobras and GT40s, P/1047 was 
      one of three GT40s “taken out of competition in a late-night all-Ford 
      stunt” at Le Mans in 1967. “At some time around that of the race, the ID 
      plate was switched with that of P/1031. The reason for the switch is not 
      completely clear, nor is the exact time of the switch, but it is likely to 
      have occurred during or after the race as pre-race documentation refers to 
      the car by its proper serial number. Whatever the time of the reason, one 
      thing is for certain: the switch has confused historians to this day.”
 
 Around 1972, the car was purchased by Tauto Satori, who later sold it to 
      his mechanic. That’s when, according to the book, its history becomes 
      cloudy. Muddying the situation further, “A Bryan Wingfield/Tennant Panels 
      chassis with a P/1047 ID plate (uncertain if it is 1047’s original ID 
      plate) was purchased by George Stauffer (Blue Mounds, Wisconsin) in ’95. 
      It was finished as an Mk II and painted in the ’66 Le Mans colors of red 
      with white stripes and carry #3.”
 
 P/1047 has been replicated as a die-cast miniature, wearing the same 
      Mercury color scheme.
 
 The actual P/1031-P/1047 GT40 can be found at the Revs Institute in 
      Naples, Florida. Part of the Collier Collection, the car looks as it did 
      while winning the 1967 12 Hours of Reims, wearing powder blue paint, FORD 
      lettering on the sills, and #1.
 
 P/1053: According to the World Registry of Cobras and GT40s, after P/1053 
      made its first Mercury appearance at the 1967 Chicago Auto Show, it was 
      taken on tour and used in a Ford/Hathaway Shirt promotion that included 
      stops in Philadelphia (with Mario Andretti) and Syracuse (with Cale 
      Yarborough). It went into private ownership on January 15, 1971, when it 
      was purchased by David Schultz of Elmwood Park, Illinois, for $9000 (the 
      equivalent of $55,750 today). The car has changed hands—and paint jobs—a 
      number of times since.
 
 P/1016: Resplendent in gold with pink highlights and the #5—exactly as it 
      looked at Le Mans in 1966—P/1016 was back in the headlines recently when 
      it sold for $9,795,000 at RM Sotheby’s 2018 Monterey Auction. RM played up 
      its Ford history—let’s face it, that Le Mans sweep has some serious 
      sizzle—but it did not mention the car’s ties to Mercury. Not that anyone 
      noticed. Perhaps you didn’t either.
 
 Regardless, now you know the rest of the story from five decades ago, when 
      maybe the coolest Mercurys ever had a brief moment in the spotlight.
 
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