Tag Archives: Gaydon

Coleman’s Drive – Austin Seven Chummy

A. F. Tschiffely was a Swiss born teacher, professional footballer, boxer and adventurer who in 1925 set off on a journey from Buenos Aires in Argentina to Washington DC in the USA…. by horse !

Austin Seven Chummy, Heritage Motor Centre, Gaydon,

Tales from this epic journey, described as impossible, absurd and mad in contemporary press reports, recounted in Tschiffely book “Tschiffely’s Ride” published in 1933 inspired British teacher John Coleman to retrace Tschiffely’s steps in 1959 driving today’s featured 10hp, 45 mph, 1925 Austin Seven Chummy.

Austin Seven Chummy, Heritage Motor Centre, Gaydon,

With the aid of Austin agents across the America’s and a little backing from the Montagu Motor Museum at Beaulieu John, who spoke no Spanish and refused to carry a gun, set off from Buenos Aires on the 10th of November 1959 11 months after his hero Tschiffely had died.

Austin Seven Chummy, Heritage Motor Centre, Gaydon,

Along the way John was involved in a collision soon after leaving Beunos Aires, he traversed the Andes with the door of the Austin left open in case he had to jump out, so narrow were the steep sided roads he feared he might go over the edge. when he got to Peru his route was blocked after an earthquake.

Austin Seven Chummy, Heritage Motor Centre, Gaydon,

When he got to Peru his route was blocked after an earthquake and so he continued by train, in Ecuador in the middle of the rainy season the little Austin was rescued from the mud by a passing bus. John then followed the Panamanian Highway with 40 rivers to cross at a time when only 10 of them had bridges.

Austin Seven Chummy, Heritage Motor Centre, Gaydon,

11 month’s after setting out on his 11,000 mile journey John arrived in New York City where shortly afterwards he appeared on the television quiz show ‘To Tell the Truth’ in which he won sufficient funds to take time out and write his recollections of the adventure that were published in Coleman’s Drive in 1962.

As late as 2005 John drove a lap of honour at Silverstone at the wheel of this car which still belongs to the Coleman Family.

John died at the wheel of his Morris Minor, in which he had recently completed and written about a journey around Scotland, on the way back from his printers on January 5th, 2010 coincidentally 51 years to the day after his hero A. F. Tschiffely died.

Thanks for joining me on this Coleman’s Drive edition of “Gettin’ a li’l psycho on tyres” I hope you will join me again tomorrow. Don’t forget to come back now !

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Pape’s Progress – Austin A90

Richard “Ginger” Pape, born 1916 in Yorkshire, was a decorated war hero who had survived being shot down in a bomber and subsequent prisoner of war experiences that culminated in a daring compassionate prisoner exchange that involved identity theft and faked kidney disease with the aid of a prosthetic penis.

Immediately after the war Richard went to South Africa where he wrote “Boldness Be My Friend” about his wartime adventures.

Austin A90, Heritage Motor Centre, Gaydon,

After returning to the UK in 1953 to promote the book, Richard took on a new adventure to drive from North Cape, Norway in the Arctic Circle to Cape Town South Africa.

Richard drove an Austin A90 Six Westminster model which had been launched in 1954 powered by an 85hp 2.6 litre / 161 cui motor that gave a top speed of 86 mph.

Austin A90, Heritage Motor Centre, Gaydon,

Austin’s agent in Oslo supplied Richard with today’s featured car after Richards original A90 was lost down a ravine in a 60 mph incident which left his intended co driver sufficiently disinclined to start the adventure.

Starting on July 28th Norwegian Johan Brun joined Richard and they crossed Europe in eleven days, on reaching Gibraltar Johan fell ill and so Royal Air Force Sergeant Johnny Johnson was persuaded to go absent without leave and accompany Richard to Africa using Brun’s travel documents.

Austin A90, Heritage Motor Centre, Gaydon,

Richard and Johnny were perhaps unsurprisingly detained by the authorities in Morrocco and upon his release Richard attempted to cross the Sahara solo without official permission.

After damaging the Austin’s suspension in the middle of the Sahara Richard fell sick but managed to set out on foot to find help.

Austin A90, Heritage Motor Centre, Gaydon,

After being rescued by nomads Richard continued alone to Nigeria where he was rejoined by the recovered Johan Brun.

Mid rainy season the pair continued across Central Africa through swollen rivers, along washed out roads, among hostile natives and survived a crash in Congo.

Austin A90, Heritage Motor Centre, Gaydon,

On the 22nd of October Richard drove the Austin into Cape Town to finish his 17,500 mile adventure.

In 1956 Richard published an account of the journey called Cape Cold to Cape Hot in which he referred to the Austin as Pape’s Prigress.

Austin A90, Heritage Motor Centre, Gaydon,

After undertaking similar endurance drives in North America for the Rootes Group, more adventures in Antartica, where he fell in the sea at McMurdo Sound, Richard eventually settled down in Papua New Guinea on the advice of Group Captain Leonard Cheshire, V.C., D.S.O., D.F.C. who advised Richard do something useful with his life instead of trying to repeatedly kill himself.

Nine years after establishing a Leonard Cheshire Home for sick children and marrying for a second time Richard and his wife, a Lawyer with whom he fell on love when she arranged bail for him for dangerous driving, left Papua for Australia where he continued to write until he died in 1995.

Thanks for joining me on this “Pape’s Progress” edition of “Gettin’ a li’l psycho on tyres” I hope you will join me again tomorrow. Don’t forget to come back now !

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Best Of British – Heritage Motor Center

On my way home the other day I took a wrong turning off the M42 and decided to continue along the M40 to the Heritage Motor Center at Gaydon.

MG ADO 70, Heritage Motor Centre, Gaydon.

I arrived just in time for a tour with a guide being a mid week afternoon it was a one to one tour. Among the exhibits are many prototypes from the British Motor Corporation / British Leyland / Austin Rover / MG Rover conglomoration prior to it’s collapse in 2005, above is a Prototype MG built on the 1970 Mini 1275 platform by Michelloti.

March 701, Heritage Motor Centre, Gaydon.

There are a smattering of cool racing cars going right back to Austin’s earliest day’s, above the 1970 March 701 chassis #701/4 which Jackie Stewart drove to 2nd place finishes in the Dutch and Italian Grand Prix.

Austin Seven Swallow, Heritage Motor Centre, Gaydon.

In 1922 Austin launched the Seven as an economy working mans model, in 1927 William Lyons founder of the Swallow Side Car company decided to build an upmarket convertible version and the following year followed that with a saloon, the one above was built in 1933, Swallow Side Car eventually became Jagaur, some other brands that the Austin Seven unwittingly helped to establish are BMW, Bristol and Lotus.

Austin A90, Heritage Motor Centre, Gaydon.

Among my favorite categories of vehicles at the Heritage Motor Centre are the adventurers the 1955 Austin A90 above was driven 17,500 miles by Richard Pape from North Cape in Norway to Cape Town in South Africa between July and October 1955. The White 1922 Austin twenty in the background was bought by a Mr Filby for £33 in 1932 and then driven 37,000 miles to Cape Town and back.

Land Rover City Cab, Heritage Motor Centre, Gaydon.

There are several vehicles which have appeared in films in the Heritage Motor Centre collection, above a Land Rover City Cab that appeared in the 1995 movie Judge Dredd.

Rover T4, Heritage Motor Centre, Gaydon.

Rover was thrust into the white heat of technology in during 1939 – 45 was when it was asked to turn Sir Frank Whittle’s prototype gas turbine jet engine into a production unit, a project Rolls Royce had to turn down because it was too busy building the Merlin V12’s. After hostilities Rover built 5 road vehicles powered by gas turbines including the 1961 T4 above. The car eventually went into production in 1963 as the P6 marketed as the Rover 2000 regrettably with a 2 litre / 122 cui 4 cylinder motor replacing the gas turbine.

My thanks to Dave my tour guide for a highly entertaining 45 min tour.

Thanks for joining me on this “Best of British Edition of “Gettin’ a li’l psycho on tyres”, I hope you will join me again tomorrow. Don’t forget to come back now !

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The Real McCoy – Mini Cooper S

Mini Cooper S, Prodrive

The 1964 Monte Carlo Rally boasted a superb entry including factory backed vehicles from Citroen, Ford, Mercedes, Saab, Volvo, Volkswagen and a fleet of 6 works Mini Coopers.

Starting from Athens, Frankfurt, Glasgow, Lisbon, Minsk, Monte Carlo, Oslo, Paris and Warsaw, the field converged on Rheims in France and from there on to 5 competitive stages and a couple of laps of the Monaco Grand Prix track.

The Ford Falcon Sprint of Bo Ljungfeldt won every stage of the rally including the laps around Monaco but in those days the overall results were determined by a handicapping system which translated stage times and engine size into points which meant Ljungfelds 305 hp 4.7 litre 289 cui Falcon did not have a sufficient time margin over the 70hp 1071cc / 65 cui Mini Cooper S seen here crewed by Paddy Hopkirk and Henry Liddon which was declared the winner of the 1964 Monte Carlo Rally.

33 EJB is thought to have been built in 1963 and crewed by Hopkirk and Liddon to 3rd overall and 3rd in class in the 1963 Tour de France prior to winning the 1964 Monte Carlo Rally.

The car belongs to the Heritage Motor Centre at Gaydon and is seen here at the Prodrive workshops because the engine was not running properly.

Like the Revenge Mini Replica I blogged about some months ago 33 EJB also has it’s Replica’s like this one built in the USA.

Finally I’d like to correct an oft repeated error reference the registrations of the works Mini’s on the 1964 Monte Carlo Rally seen in the 5th paragraph of this link.

What ever BMW or anyone else may say the registrations of the works Minis on the Monte Carlo Rally in 1964 were as follows :-

33 EJB #37, Hopkirk/Liddon, Cooper S, 1st overall/1st in class.
570 FMO #182 Makinen/Vanson, Cooper S 4th overall/2nd in class
569 FMO #105 Aaltonen/Ambrose, Cooper S 7th overall/3rd in class
477 BBL #39 Baxter/McMillan, Cooper 43rd overall/2nd in class.
18 CRX #187 Thompson/Heys, Cooper S crashed
277 EBL#189 Mayman/Domleo, Cooper S crashed

My thanks to Alan, Tim, Stephen, Darren, Fred at The Nostalgia Forum who helped me out with the registration numbers.

Hope you have enjoyed to days Handicap edition of ‘Gettin’ a lil’ psycho on tyres’ and that you will join me again tomorrow. Don’t forget to come back now !

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