- Wolseley Motor Company
The Wolseley Motor Company was a British
automobile manufacturer founded in 1901. After 1935 it was incorporated into larger companies but the Wolseley name remained as an upmarketmarque until 1975.History
The origins of the company as an automobile brand was in about 1895-96 when 30 year old
Herbert Austin , then employed as a works manager at the Wolseley Sheep Shearing Company, became interested in engines and automobiles. During the winter of 1895-96 he made his own version of a design by Léon Bollée that he had seen inParis . Later he found that another British group had bought the rights so Austin had to come up with a design of his own. In 1897, the second Wolseley car, the "Wolseley Autocar No. 1" was revealed. It was a three wheeled design (one front, two rear) featuring independent rear suspension, mid engine and back to back seating for two adults. It was not successful and although advertised for sale, none were sold. The third Wolseley car, the four wheeled Wolseley "Voiturette" followed in 1899. A further four wheeled car was made in 1900, this time with a steering wheel instead of a tiller. The first Wolseley cars sold to the public were based on the "Voiturette", but production did not get under way until 1901, by which time the company had changed hands. In that year the automobile division was spun off (with financing fromVickers ) as an independent concern inAdderley Park ,Birmingham . Austin managed the new Wolseley company for a short time before resigning to form his own concern, theAustin Motor Company , in 1905.Wolseley purchased the
Siddeley Autocar Company , with founder John Davenport Siddeley in charge. Siddeley (laterBaron Kenilworth ) took control of the merged concern, renaming themarque Wolseley-Siddeley until his resignation in 1910. He went on to manage theDeasy Motor Company , which becameSiddeley-Deasy . This later merged withArmstrong-Whitworth to becomeArmstrong Siddeley . In 1912 they were commissioned by the Russian Count Peter P Schilovski, a lawyer and member of the Russian royal family, to build the SchilovskiGyrocar .Wolseley Motor Company
The company officially became the Wolseley Motor Company in 1914. It also began operations in
Montreal andToronto ,Canada as Wolseley Motors Limited. This became British and American Motors afterWorld War I .In 1918, Wolseley began a joint venture in
Tokyo ,Japan withIshikawajiama Ship Building and Engineering . The first Japanese-built Wolseley car rolled off the line in 1922. AfterWorld War II , the Japan venture reorganized, renaming itselfIsuzu Motors in 1949. Isuzu was part of General Motors for a time, but has recently returned to independence and a focus on the commercial truck market.In 1919 Wolseley also took over the Ward End, Birmingham munitions factory from Vickers.
Wolseley grew quickly selling upmarket cars, and even opened a lavish showroom, Wolseley House, in
Piccadilly (next door to thethe Ritz Hotel , now housing a restaurant called The Wolseley). Finances were strained, however, and the company facedreceivership in October, 1926 with debts of £2 million.Nuffield
Wolseley was purchased personally by
William Morris, 1st Viscount Nuffield for £730,000 in February 1927 using his own money.cite book |last=Georgano |first=N. |title=Beaulieu Encyclopedia of the Automobile |year=2000 |publisher=HMSO |location=London |id=ISBN 1-57958-293-1] Other bidders included General Motors and theAustin Motor Company . Morris renamed the company Wolseley Motors (1927) Ltd and consolidated its production at the sprawlingWard End Works inBirmingham . In 1935, Wolseley became a subsidiary of Morris' ownMorris Motor Company and the Wolseley models soon became based on Morris designs. It became part of theNuffield Organisation along with Morris and Riley/Autovia in 1938.After the war, Morris and Wolseley production was consolidated at Cowley, and
badge engineering took hold. The first post-war Wolseleys, the similar 4/50 and 6/80 models, were based on the Morris Oxford MO.BMC
Following the merger between Austin and Nuffield that created the
British Motor Corporation (BMC), Wolseleys shared with MG and Riley common bodies and chassis, namely the 4/44 (later 15/50) and 6/90, which were closely related to the MG Magnette ZA/ZB and theRiley Pathfinder /Two-point-Six respectively.Other badge engineering exploits followed at BMC. In 1957 the
Wolseley 1500 was based on the planned successor to theMorris Minor . The next year, theWolseley 15/60 debuted the new mid-sized BMC saloon design penned byPinin Farina . It was followed by similar vehicles from five marques within the year.The
Wolseley Hornet was based on the Austin andMorris Mini with a booted body style which was shared with Riley as the Elf. The 1500 was replaced with the Wolseley 1100 (BMC ADO16 ) in 1965, which became the Wolseley 1300 two years later. Finally, a version of theAustin 1800 was launched in 1967 as theWolseley 18/85 .British Leyland
After the merger of BMC and Leyland to form
British Leyland in 1969 the Riley marque, long overlapping with Wolseley, was retired. Wolseley continued in diminished form with theWolseley Six of 1972, a variant of the Austin 2200, a six-cylinder version of the Austin 1800. It was finally killed off just three years later in favour of the Wolseley variant of the wedge-shaped 18-22 series saloon, which was never even given an individual model name, being badged just "Wolseley", and sold only for seven months until that range was renamed as the Princess.Today, the Wolseley
marque is owned byNanjing Automobile Group bought as part of the assets of theMG Rover Group . Note that the Wolseley Sheep Shearing Company continued trading, and continues today asWolseley plc .List of Wolseley vehicles
List of 1920s and 1930s Wolseley vehicles
* Four-cylinder
** 1920-1924Wolseley 10
** 1920-1927 Wolseley 15
** 1934-1935Wolseley Nine
** 1935-1936Wolseley Wasp
** 1936-1937 Wolseley 10/40
** 1936-1939 Wolseley 12/48
** 1939-1939Wolseley Ten
* Six-cylinder
** 1920-1924 Wolseley 20
** 1930-1936 Wolseley Hornet
** 1927-1932Wolseley Viper
** 1930-1935 Wolseley 21/60
** 1933-1935Wolseley Sixteen
** 1935-1936Wolseley Fourteen
** 1935-1935Wolseley Eighteen
** 1936-1938 Wolseley 14/56
** 1937-1938 Wolseley 18/80
** 1935-1937 Wolseley Super Six 16HP, 21HP, 25HP
** 1938-1939 Wolseley 14/60
** 1938-1939 Wolseley 16/65
** 1938-1939 Wolseley 18/85
** 1937-1939 Wolseley 16HP, 21HP, 25HP
* Eight-cylinder
** 1928-1931 Wolseley 21/60 Straight EightList of post World War II Wolseley vehicles
Wolseley long used a two-number system of model names. Until 1948, the numbers reflected the vehicle's engine size in units of taxable horsepower as defined by the
Royal Automobile Club . Thus, the 14/60 was rated at 14 hp (RAC) for tax purposes but actually produced 60 hp (45 kW). Later, the first number equaled the number of cylinders. After 1956, this number was changed to reflect the engine's displacement for four-cylinder cars. Therefore, the seminal 15/60 was a 1.5 l engine capable of producing 60 hp (45 kW). Eventually, the entire naming system was abandoned.* Four-cylinder
** 1939-1948Wolseley Ten (Morris Ten )
** 1937-1948Wolseley 12/48 (Post war version was the Series III)
** 1946-1948Wolseley Eight (similar to Morris Eight Series E)
** 1947-1955Wolseley Oxford Taxi (Morris Commercial design)
** 1948-1953Wolseley 4/50 (similar to Morris Oxford MO)
** 1952-1956Wolseley 4/44
** 1956-1958Wolseley 15/50 (MG Magnette ZB)
** 1957-1965Wolseley 1500 (similar toRiley One-Point-Five , based onMorris Minor )
** 1958-1961Wolseley 15/60 (Austin A55 "(Mark 2)" Cambridge)
** 1961-1969 Wolseley Hornet (similar toRiley Elf , based onMini )
** 1961-1971Wolseley 16/60 (Austin A60 Cambridge)
** 1965-1974Wolseley 1100 /1300 (BMC ADO16 )
** 1967-1971Wolseley 18/85 (BMC ADO17)* Six-cylinder
** 1938-1948Wolseley 14/60 (Post war version was the Series III)
** 1938-1948Wolseley 18/85 (Post war version was the Series III)
** 1938-1948Wolseley 25 (Post war version was the Series III)
** 1948-1954Wolseley 6/80 (Morris Six)
** 1954-1959Wolseley 6/90 (Riley Pathfinder /Riley Two-Point-Six )
** 1959-1961Wolseley 6/99 (Austin A99 Westminster)
** 1961-1968Wolseley 6/110 (Austin A110 Westminster)
** 1962-1965Wolseley 24/80 (Australia n version of 15/60 and 16/60, but six-cylinder; similar toAustin Freeway )
** 1972-1975Wolseley Six (BMC ADO17)
** March-October 1975 Wolseley 18–22 series saloon* Also produced (dates to be confirmed):
**Wolseley 4/60 (Dutch version of 16/60)
**Wolseley 300 (Danish version of 6/99 and 6/110)Aero engines
Wolseley also produced a number of
aviation engine designs, although there were no major design wins.*
Wolseley Aries
*Wolseley Aquarius
*Wolseley Scorpio
*Wolseley Python
*Wolseley Viper References
* Lambert, Z.E. and Wyatt, R.J, (1968). "Lord Austin - The Man". Altrincham: Sidgwick and Jackson.
* Nixon, St John C, (1949). "Wolseley - A Saga of the Motor Industry". London: G T Foulis & Co Ltd.
* Bird, Anthony, (undated but probably 1966) "The Horizontal Engined Wolseleys, 1900-1905". London: Profile Publications Ltd.External links
* [http://www.austin-rover.co.uk/index.htm Austin-Rover resource site] with "family" history for many Wolseley models
* [http://www.wolseleyworld.com The Wolseley Register] The car club for all Wolseley owners and enthusiasts.
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