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Gary:
Thanks for telling me -- I'll find a better place to host it. Some of these sites seem to require logging in, or at the very least, take you to their website to download. I want to find one from which I can hotlink painlessly. Bill |
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Gary -- try it now; I changed the permissions. Hopefully that was all it was.
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The papers sent to me by the Coventry Transport Museum mention:
Quote:
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Thanks, David -- that's very interesting. I'd be interested to see the Thrupp and Maberly records, esp. with regard to Humbers, even though there is data in my document. I couldn't research those when I was at CTM, because the place was being renovated at that time (2008) and everything was in disarray. The good thing that came out of that was the fact that the War History (from which I culled the data in the document) was found, after having been misplaced for so long.
One thing I find curious is that the Humber Snipe saloon and tourer for the military/government seem to not have been produced during the 12/1942-11/1944 period. All the orders had been delivered by then. Only one chassis appears to have been built, in 1944. In summer 1944, an order was placed for 550 staff saloons, and in autumn, 50 tourers were ordered. None appear to have been delivered by the time the period the document covers ended (November 1944). My assumption is that production and deliveries must have commenced by December, because serial-number ranges (according to Tony Freeman's book) show Snipes with 1944 year codes. Incidentally, the 350 tourers shown as delivered in the last 1944 period must be a blunder (on the part of the data compiler, not my part, as I copied everything verbatim), since only 300 had been shown as delivered prior to that, and the additional 50 ordered were still shown as balance orders for that period. They also forgot to put the 50 in the "ordered in period" column. As for other Rootes passenger cars, the Humber Pullman and Hillman Minx saloon for the government/military were in production throughout the entire period, which means they were produced throughout the war. Even the civilian Minx saloon was being delivered as late as 1943, and I've read elsewhere that the military version was occasionally delivered to essential civilian users as late as 1944. I presume the military Minx saloon differed from the civilian one in finish and perhaps headlight diameter. Some of the wartime Pullmans (but not all) were fitted with a wire-mesh grille, but headlights still seem to be the same diameter on these. There does not appear to be any distinction made in the Humber portion of that register between civilian and military/government Pullmans, though in the Thrupp section there are listed for some of the earlier periods a "FWD Pullman" (whatever THAT is!) and a "Civil and Export Pullman." Oh, and a single, solitary Sunbeam-Talbot 4-Litre was delivered in the period (in late-1942 or early-1943), to Jamsaheb of Nawanager (!). |
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Sunbeam-Talbot's Barlby Road, Acton, plant was used to build Karrier Bantams for the Ministry of Supply.
I assume that the museum have the Thrupp & Maberley records? If not are they at the new Rootes Archive Centre? |
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David:
I believe the CTM does have the Thrupp records, but the place was in such a mess when I was there that they couldn't be found. I had checked with the Rootes Archive Centre first, and they directed me to CTM for all my queries. |
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When I can get to my parents' garage I'll look up the Xeroxes of wartime records that the CTM sent me. I was more interested at the time in the emergency use by GM Ltd of Barlby Road to assemble CMPs in late 1940/ear;y 1931 and the apparnt sub-contract with Rootes agreed with GM Ltd in May 1941. This as we know probably related to truck bodies.
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