First generation (1963–1965)
The Mercury Marauder nameplate made its debut in 1963 1/2 as a model of each of the three Mercury full-size series, including the Monterey, Monterey Custom, and S-55. For the first time for a mid-year introduction, the Marauder was introduced as a "19631/2" model (as was an entire line of new "sports" models from Ford in many of the existing series). All 19631/2 Marauders were offered only in two-door pillarless hardtop body styles. The two-door notchback hardtop coupe was listed at US$3,650 ($0 in dollars ) and 3,863 were manufactured.[3] For the 1964 model year, the Marauder was available in the base Monterey trim, next-level Montclair, or top-of-the-line Parklane. Marauders were now available as four-door cars.
In contrast to the distinctive reverse-slant "Breezeway" roofline option on Mercury's full-size models, the Marauder hardtop coupe was styled with a conventional sloping notchback rear roofline.[3] It was the same roofline introduced at the same time on the contemporary Ford Galaxies. This roofline was optimized to make the large sedan more competitive for stock car racing.[4] Along with the "sportier" roofline, the Marauder S-55 trim package included bucket seats and a center console, similar to its Ford counterpart. However, the base model Marauder came with a front bench seat and a column shift, unlike the S-55 package.
For 1964, the availability of Marauder expanded to include the two-door hardtop and two four-door hardtop versions, a notchback roofline, and the "Breezeway" roofline design available across full-size Mercury models.
Shared with the rest of the Mercury sedan line, the Mercury Marauder was powered by Ford "FE-Series" V8 engines, shared with the big Fords and the Thunderbird. A 390 cuin Marauder V8 was standard, with an optional 427 cuin V8 with a four-barrel or in a "Super Marauder" version featuring two four-barrel carburetors. A three-speed manual transmission was standard, with the three-speed "Merc-O-Matic" automatic transmission optional, as well as a four-speed manual that was mandatory with the 427 engines.
Marketing for the 1965 Mercurys shifted to emphasize luxury and a closer relationship with Ford's premium line of Lincolns. With this positioning, the Marauder became a trim option available on the Park Lane, Montclair, and Monterey series in two- or four-door hardtop body styles.
The Marauder versions were not promoted or mentioned in dealer sales brochures. The trim option featured a small emblem (with a flag) on the "C" pillar to distinguish them from other versions. Moreover, all full-size Mercury hardtop coupes featured the same "slant back" roofline as the full-sized Ford versions. This was a more sharply angled version of the original 1964 Marauder roofline. All four-door hardtops now had a new formal "limousine" styled notchback roofline shared with Ford's Galaxie hardtop sedans. Mercury continued to advertise the big-block FE-series V8s as "Marauder" engines.
For the 1966 model year, Mercury shifted further away from full-size performance vehicles. A repackaged S-55 model replaced the Marauder option. The move also consolidated the options available on three Mercury model lines into a more distinct nameplate.