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This third volume continues James Stringer's popular series with
another highly entertaining collection of Austin-related stories.
This time you can read all about: 'Mugwump' and its journey from
Bristol to Cape Town; how Spike Milligan and fellow Goon Peter
Sellers nearly fell out over an Austin 12/4; the company's
promotional film about the Austin 7 - "The Mighty Atom", and many
other colourful and delightfully entertaining stories, which
provide the reader with an alternative and untold history of the
Austin Motor Car Company.
An entertaining collection of true stories that feature just a few
of the products manufactured by the Austin Motor Company from 1906
until the outbreak of the Second World War, including the people
who helped to make them, those who drove them, and even those who
flew them. Although the history of the Austin Seven and Taxicabs
have been covered before in much greater detail elsewhere, you will
find within these pages the stories of many other Austin creations:
the Austin 12/6 which could be won by smoking Kensitas cigarettes;
the Austin 20 which competed in the 1914 Austrian Alpine Trial; the
remarkable racing car named `Pobble' which went on to serve as an
ambulance during the First World War, and the Australian couple
who, in 1926, decided to drive their Austin Twelve right around
Australia. The Music Hall artist, George Clarke, who performed on
stage with his Austin Seven, and the `Austin Unity Song,' a
recording of which was presented to guests at the Company's Annual
dinner, are just two more fascinating stories which go to make up
this Austin Anthology.
Following on from Jim Stringer's first book `An Austin Anthology,'
this second volume features 20 more stories relating to the Austin
Motor Company, its products and the people who purchased them. The
author takes a look at the very first Austin to be built, and
discovers why it was able to be offered to the public so quickly
after the Company's formation only a few month's earlier. He also
uncovers how the single-cylinder Austin Seven, whilst designed at
Longbridge, was actually built at the Swift Motor Car factory in
Coventry, and offered as a Swift or an Austin. In 1908 Herbert
Austin produced four 100hp racing cars to compete at the French
Grand Prix in Dieppe. But what happened to them afterwards? And is
the only survivor, now on display at the British Heritage Museum,
Gaydon as genuine as it would appear? And then there is the story
of Daisy Fearon, whose only means of transport was a 1928 Austin
which she'd owned since 1931. As Daisy aged, her driving became
less and less predictable, causing those who knew her to run for
cover when she was seen at the wheel. An amusing and nostalgic
collection of stories, illustrated with original period
photographs, An Austin Anthology II is bound to entertain and
delight all Austin enthusiasts.
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On the mat
Paul George
Paperback
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