MORRIS (England) 1913 to date
Oxford cycle and motor agent William Morris sold his first car,
the two-seater Morris-Oxford, in 1913. Costing £180, it was powered
by a 1017cc engine by White and Poppe, with the gearbox in unit.
Rear axle was by E. G. Wrigley, wheels by Sankey and bodywork by
Raworth of Oxford.
It was, in effect, an assembled job, but a good one. The Oxford
was joined in 1915 by the 1496cc engined Cowley with engine/gearbox
by the Continental Motors Company of Detroit, USA. Production began
again in earnest after World War One with copies of the US engine
being manufactured by Hotchkiss of Coventry. One major difference
between the two engines was that the Coventry-built model had a
cork clutch that ran in oil, one of the few contributions Morris
made to detailed engine design!
The "Bullnose" Oxfords and the more austere Cowleys were destined
to become the best-selling British cars of the decade. In 1921 Morris
made a sensational series of price cuts and never looked back. In
1923 an 1802cc engine was offered as an option in the Oxford, this
being standardized from 1924. Both models remained in production
until 1926, though the peak production year was 1925 when 54,151
cars were built, representing 41 per cent of new car production
in Britain. The 1927 season saw the appearance of the less inspiring
"Flatnose" models, though the 2 1/2-litre Empire model failed to
woo the export market for which it had been designed.
Although a few sixes had been made earlier, it was not until 1928
that Morris adopted this engine configuration in a big way with
an ohc 2 1/2-litre car, a reminder that Wolseley, who were firm
adherents to this engine layout, had been purchased the previous
year. Morris's entry into the small-car market came in 1929 with
the ohc 847cc Minor (also of Wolseley parentage). The ohc engine
was dropped from the Minor in 1931 (though it had been successfully
used in the MG Midget), being replaced by a simple side-valve unit
the two-seater version selling for £100. Lockheed hydraulic brakes
first appeared on the six-cylinder Morrises of 1930 and during the
following four years the whole range was converted.
The early 1930s were poor years for Morris, and 1933 witnessed the
appearance of the 1.3-litre 10/4: Morris hit the production jackpot
again with his 918cc Series 1 Eight of 1935, a season in which,
incidentally, he offered no less than 32 different models! The Eight
continued in production until 1938, by which time 250,000 had been
built, making it the best-selling car of the decade. It was replaced
for the 1939 season by the Series E Eight with completely new bodywork
and faired-in headlamps. Although the Eight was Cowley's best-seller,
the Morris range at this time boasted four other models, ranging
from the 10/4 to the 3 1/2-litre 25. All, with the exception of
the Eight, were fitted with ohv engines:1939 was also a significant
year for Morris in that the Series M 1140cc Ten marked the company's
first foray into integral construction.
The immediate post-war years saw the reappearance of the pre-war
Eight and Ten, though a major landmark came in 1948, with the announcement
of the Issigonis-designed Minor, initially powered by the 916cc
Series E engine, and featuring torsion bar ifs, rack-and-pinion
steering and 14-inch road wheels. It remained in production until
1971 and was the first British car to sell over a million examples.
The ohv Austin 803cc engine from the A30 was fitted from 1953 and
the capacity progressively increased to 1098cc.
The sv 1476cc Oxford and series MS Six, powered by an ohc 2.2-litre
engine, also appeared at the same time as the Minor, and shared
similarly styled bodywork. The creation of the British Motor Corporation
in 1952 by the merging of the Austin and Morris companies inevitably
resulted in rationalization, with the Cowley and more powerful Oxford
receiving ohv Longbridge engines in 1954, the former 1200cc model
appearing the same year. By 1959, the appearance of the Farina-bodied
l 1/2-litre saloon meant that the differences between the Cowley
and Longbridge products were less marked.
The sensational Issigonis-designed front-wheel-drive 848cc Mini
of the same year was sold under the Mini Minor name tag, while a
logical progression was the best-selling 1100 of 1963, both those
models later being available under the Austin banner. The year 1968
saw the engulfment of BMC by Leyland Motors to form British Leyland.
A result of this new corporation was the Marina model of 1971, with
a conventional engine and gearbox layout and rear-wheel drive,1.3-
and 1.8-litre engine options being available. The following year
came the front-wheel-drive 2200 model. For 1979 the range consisted
of 14 variations on the Marina theme.
1964 Morris Traveller
1967 Morris Minor 1000 ©VEA
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