Nobody wants to see anything automotive go extinct, really. Not every car will be to all tastes, but diversity and variety deserve to be celebrated. They can get rarer and rarer, sure, but there’s no way of coming back from zero. As the future barrels towards us with unabating haste, so those bits of the past that are even just a little different from the norm should be saved. It would be a dull old world of classic cars if it was just BMW saloons and air-cooled Porsches.
You don’t see many Ford Granadas of any description nowadays; it’s been quite some plummet for a car once so loved by traffic police and upwardly mobile execs with a family to cart around. As with so many cars like this, nobody really realised they were worth saving until it was almost too late. The later Scorpio probably ought to be kept from extinction, too, though the fan club for that one will surely be a tad smaller…
What makes this 1989 Mk3 significant is that it’s a V6 4×4 Ghia with the manual gearbox. It would always have been a rare sight; there was a standard rear-drive V6 that would have been cheaper, an even plusher Ghia X for those wanting top-of-the-range kudos, and the automatic option perhaps more befitting of a luxury saloon. But while there would have never been many, we’re now down to the final one of this spec taxed and on UK roads. There hasn’t been more than five showing on the DVLA records since 2009, and it’s hard to imagine those SORN’d are all an afternoon in the garage (or a barn find video) away from roadworthiness. It’s a real sole survivor.
That being said, this sort of thing is always an inexact science. This Granada shows as the last Ghia 4×4 on the road, but there are also four cars that have been recorded as Ghia injection 4x4s as well. And ‘EFI’ stamped on the top of the V6 here leaves its fuelling in no doubt. So maybe it’s not unique, this Granada, but then perhaps it is. Undoubtedly it’s very, very rare – later cars with the V6 are very seldom seen. This Ghia is a beautiful example, too, subjected to an extensive (and expensive) restoration a few years ago that tackled the rot that will have claimed so many. As the number of cars around like this dwindles, so the dedication of those that love them soars, and that’s great to see. The interior (which wasn’t restored) has endured 35 years well, and there’s said to be a ‘vast’ history file from the four previous owners. The Granada looks a real credit to them.
Furthermore, without any motorsport pedigree or prestigious badge on it, this Ghia isn’t mad money. No doubt an XR4x4 tag or similar back in the day would have made it more desirable then and more valuable now, but going without means this 86,000-mile V6 is for sale at £8,950. Given £10k seems to be the entry point now for anything vaguely old and interesting (and just about road legal), that doesn’t seem daft at all.
Presumably there are plenty of possibilities. It could be kept for best and be the rarest fast(ish) Ford at the fair; or, with a modern stereo and advisory-free MOT until November, put into more regular use as a reminder of the good old days. Obviously it’d have to come to a Sunday Service, too. And for those Granadas that are still buried away in sheds up and down the land, let’s hope 2024 is the year they’re brought back to life. One of one is a good story, but the really good news would be just a few more of them.
Laura Adams is a tech enthusiast residing in the UK. Her articles cover the latest technological innovations, from AI to consumer gadgets, providing readers with a glimpse into the future of technology.