- Rootes
The Rootes Group was a British
automobile manufacturer, which was based in the Midlands and south ofEngland . Rootes was the parent company of many well-known British marques, includingHillman , Humber, Singer, Sunbeam,Talbot ,Commer andKarrier . At its height Rootes had plants in the midlands atCoventry andBirmingham , in the south at Acton,Luton ,Dunstable andMaidstone , and in Scotland atLinwood . The company no longer exists, having been taken over in stages byChrysler , and subsequently sold toPeugeot and, in part,Renault .History and corporate development
Early history
s with the Karrier badge appearing on heavy vans and light duty trucks (mainly for municipal use).
Business strategy
Rootes was best known for manufacturing solid, dependable, well engineered middle-market vehicles. Famous Rootes models include the
Hillman Minx , Hillman Hunter,Humber Super Snipe and theSunbeam Alpine .William Rootes built the Rootes Group using specific brands for each market niche.
World War II
. Rootes also manufactured military vehicles, based on the Humber and Commer.
Rootes had a rare lapse of business judgement shortly after the end of War II: when he visited the
Volkswagen factory inWolfsburg to consider its value for war reparations, he considered it – and the Beetle – had no value.Post-war development
, Kent.
Rootes successfully sold a range of cars which were priced at a slight premium to their major home market competitors, justified on the basis that they offered a level of superiority in design and finish.
Studebaker stylistRaymond Loewy was a design consultant to Rootes; evidence of his influence is most readily seen in the 1956 Audax range of cars, which included the contemporaryHillman Minx , a model also produced under license byIsuzu of Japan.Engineering innovation
In 1954, Rootes introduced a novel supercharged
diesel engine , based on a Sulzer Brothers concept. This was the TS3 2-stroke 3-cylinder engine, with 2 opposed inward facing pistons per cylinder, which drove the crankshaft through rockers. The 3.25 litre engine developed convert|90|hp|abbr=on, equivalent to contemporary 4-stroke diesel engines of more than twice the capacity.The engine was used in Commer trucks as well as an industrial engine. Production ceased in 1968 after the Chrysler takeover.
Rootes in competition
was the most significant victory.
In 1968, Rootes entered a factory team in the
London-Sydney Marathon , driving aHillman Hunter . Andrew Cowan gained what was regarded as a surprise victory against stiff competition from factory teams with bigger budgets.unbeam Tiger
During the 1960s, Sunbeam's Alpine convertible was moderately successful in the United States market. Rootes considered that the Alpine's sales would be improved with a more powerful model. As a result, in 1964 they introduced the Tiger — a V8 derivative of the Alpine, powered by a 4.2 litre Ford V8 engine.
Carroll Shelby was involved in the development of the Tiger prototype.A 4.7 litre model followed in 1967, but few were built as it was considered inappropriate for a Chrysler vehicle to be powered by Ford. Consideration was given to installing a Chrysler V8 in the Tiger, but their engines were larger and heavier than the compact Ford power plants.
Hillman Imp and the move to Linwood
workforce who had no experience in motor vehicle assembly, and the build quality and reliability of the cars inevitably suffered. Another problem was that the component suppliers were still based in the Midlands, and the company incurred further costs in transporting half-finished engine castings from Linwood to be machined at Ryton and returned to Linwood once they had been assembled — at the same time as completed Imps returned south again, resulting in a convert|600|mi|km|sing=on round trip!
The Imp itself was underdeveloped, and the aforementioned build quality and unreliability problems, coupled with buyer apathy towards the quirky design was reflected in poor sales. After a reasonably successful start in 1963-65, the Imp's fortunes in the marketplace went into terminal decline. Lost production caused by constant strike action by the Linwood workforce only added to the problems, and the mess was further exacerbated by crippling warranty claims.Fact|date=February 2007 Rootes had no money left to develop its other models, which soon left the company in an uncompetitive position.
Chrysler (1967-78)
nameplate by 1976.
In "Iacocca — an Autobiography", former Chrysler chairman
Lee Iacocca was disparaging of the Rootes operation, saying Chrysler should never have bought it. Chrysler UK soldiered on with a range of worthy but increasingly outmoded rear-wheel drive family cars like theHillman Avenger (introduced in 1970) andHillman Hunter (introduced in 1966), while the Imp – which by now had most of its teething problems ironed out – was largely ignored by the new management.In the late 1960s, Chrysler endeavoured to market the Rootes cars in the US. These efforts proved unsuccessful. Marketing in the US was impeded by an inability to offer cars for sale during part of 1968, as the Rootes cars could not comply with exhaust emission requirements. In the early 1970s, with the rise of interest in sub-compact cars, Chrysler offered the Hillman Avenger in
North America as thePlymouth Cricket . This attempt was aborted after only two years. At the same time, Chrysler's Dodge Division offered theDodge Colt as its "subcompact" — sourced from Mitsubishi in Japan. The Colt proved a popular and reliable car, hastening the Cricket's demise.However, Chrysler of
Argentina commenced manufacturing the Hillman Avenger based Dodge 1800, and this car continued in production until 1990. In its last 10 years of production it was badged as a Volkswagen after that firm acquired Chrysler's Argentine business. There was also aBrazil ian variant until 1980.Chrysler UK introduced several new models in the 1970s: a British-assembled
Chrysler Alpine (sold in France as the Simca 1307/1308) was introduced in 1976, and the Avenger-basedChrysler Sunbeam 2-door hatchback was introduced in 1977. Also, Chrysler UK made a significant contribution to the design of Chrysler's European range. As well as the Alpine and Sunbeam, there was the saloon derivative of the Alpine – the Talbot Solara – andChrysler/Simca Horizon . Both of these cars were awarded "European Car of the Year awards, and the Horizon was the basis for the USPlymouth Horizon andDodge Omni , which were very successful for Chrysler.The Imp was finally laid to rest in 1976, and the Hunter followed it three years later (although it continued to be produced in Iran). Indeed, componentry for the Iranian version of the car was a successful UK export during the 1980s.Only the Avenger-based
Chrysler Sunbeam hatchback, launched in 1977 kept the Rootes lineage alive, although the Alpine name was still in use and later Alpine and Solara special edition models were given the old Rootes model names, Minx and Rapier. The rights to the Rapier name remained with the successors of the company, and were eventually resurrected again on a few "limited edition"Peugeot models.Chrysler had spent much of the 1970s unsuccessfully trying to integrate its Rootes and
Simca ranges into one, coherent whole. The traditionally-engineered, rear wheel drive cars of the British division had limited appeal outside the UK, although the Avenger and Hunter - the first locally-assembled car to reach a total of 30,000 units sold in its 12-year lifespan - were both relatively successful in New Zealand. Hunter production continued there and in Ireland until 1979, and it was built in Iran for many years more.Unfortunately, with its problems in the US, Chrysler did not have the capital to invest in refreshing their entire product range, and sales of the older designs stagnated in the face of more modern competition. Also, the production facilities were outmoded, industrial relations problems were persistent, and the products had a poor reputation for quality.
In the face of massive losses, and the risk of significant unemployment if the factories closed, the Ryton and Linwood factories were the subject of frequent government bail-outs.
Despite the government assistance, the weight of problems bearing on Chrysler Europe resulted in its collapse in 1977, leading to the company's 1978 takeover by PSA Peugeot-Citroen. PSA soon wielded the axe over the troubled Linwood factory in Scotland, and exhumed the
Talbot marque from the pages of Rootes's history to re-badge the former Chrysler models. Whilst Ryton was saved, PSA took little interest in the heavy commercial vehicles and the former Commer/Dodge/Karrier truck and van factory was run in conjunction with the trucks division ofRenault . After the withdrawal of the last Dodge-derived trucks (latterly badged as Renaults) it became a production plant for engines for Renault Véhicules Industriels.Peugeot (1978-2007)
Ryton began assembling its last Peugeot, the 206, in 1998. At the height of the car's success, the plant was working at capacity to satisfy demand. Despite this however, Ryton's importance in PSA's overall strategy was always marginal at best — merely being an assembly operation with limited production capacity compared to PSA's main factories in France and Spain. The writing was on the wall for Ryton when Peugeot announced that the new 207 would not be assembled at the former Rootes plant, and in April 2006, after years of speculation surrounding Ryton's future, the PSA Group announced that residual 206 production would move to Eastern Europe.
Production at the plant ceased in December 2006. It marked the end of nearly 60 years of car manufacturing at Ryton, and severed the motor industry's final remaining link with the Rootes Group. The plant closed on
8 January ,2007 with the loss of some 2,300 jobs.End of the name
The last appearance of the name Rootes was at a garage, still extant in
Maidstone , which bore the name. On1 January ,2007 , in line with the other 40 dealerships within its business group, the name was changed from "Rootes Maidstone", to become "Robins & Day Maidstone". "Robins & Day" is wholly owned and operated by Peugeot UK as opposed to other Peugeot dealers that are operated like many car dealerships, on a franchise basis.Rootes' contribution to
Coventry 's history is commemorated by theUniversity of Warwick in the naming of Rootes Hall, one of its largest Halls of Residence, on the main campus site on the outskirts of Coventry.References
External links
* [http://www.team.net/www/rootes/history.html A short history of the Rootes group]
* [http://www.dcs.napier.ac.uk/~dave/rootes/rootes.htm Gallery and timeline]
* [http://www.rootes-chrysler.co.uk/ Rootes-Chrysler resource site]
* [http://www.rootesarchivecentre.com/ Rootes Archive Centre]
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