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Bexhill 100 Motoring Club

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Triumph Mayflower : May 1953

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Manufacturer Standard Motor Company: Production 1949–53

35,000 were made: Assembly Coventry, England: Port Melbourne, Australia

Body and chassis

Body style 2-door saloon

2-door drophead coupé

2-door coupé utility

Powertrain

Engine 1,247 cc straight-4 side-valve[2]

YEAR OF MANUFACTURE : 1953 ( first registered 27th May).

Launched at the Motor Show in late 1949, the Mayflower was unique in being the first Standard/Triumph car of unitary pressed steel construction. Only 34,000 of this particular model were produced by Standard/Triumph between 1950, and 1953, of which only 350(c) survivors worldwide, are known to have survived. (source : The Triumph Mayflower Club). Mechanically, the model is something of a hybrid, its engine was derived from that used in the pre-war Standard Flying 10, Gear Box and rear Axle, were similar to those used in the Standard Vanguard, and its front Suspension was later used in the TR2/TR3 sports cars. This particular car, has recently had a fairly extensive external and internal restoration, by its previous owner.

It is said that Sir John Black insisted on razoredge styling because he had been advised by Louis Antweiller, Managing Director of Mulliners, that Americans loved Rolls Royces. With this seed implanted in Sir Johns' mind it is open to interpretation that he presumed the Americans would be stirred by, and purchase, a miniature version of the Rolls Royce, to wit the Mayflower - later to be dubbed by many 'the watch-charm Rolls'. It is further said that Sir John chose the Mayflower name with the intention of appealing to the many Americans who were descendants of the Pilgrim Fathers who had landed in Massachusetts in 1620. There is no evidence to suggest that Sir John, or anyone under his instruction, had visited America or studied the market there. If the foregoing is correct then the inception of the Mayflower must go down as one of the most arrogant, presumptuous and disastrous commercial decisions made by any person during the twentieth century intending to enter the volume American motor market. Indeed, more Mayflowers were shipped to the then Ceylon (Sri Lanka).

Transmission 3-speed manual, column change

Dimensions

Wheelbase 84 inches (2134 mm)

Length 156 in (4,000 mm)

Width 62 in (1,600 mm)

Height 60 in (1,500 mm)

Chronology

Successor Standard 8/Triumph Herald  

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