The early history of the MG Rover Group reflects the way the
British motor industry in developed in the early 1900’s. As many people tried
their hands at manufacturing vehicles at this time, a wide range of independent
vehicle manufacturers emerged. The majority of these lasted only a few years or
were quickly taken over by other companies.
The Rover company developed through the grouping, regrouping,
merger and take-over of many famous names in British motoring. These changes
started almost from the moment the first British-built vehicle appeared on the
roads (credited to Dr Frederick Lanchester who built a four-wheeled petrol
driven car in 1895).
In 1968, the Leyland Motor Corporation and British Motor
Holdings merged to form one large car and commercial vehicle organisation,
British Leyland Motor Corporation. And in 1975, the company became British
Leyland and in 1978 it was known as BL .
In the same year that the Rover 800 was introduced to the
market, 1986, Sir Graham Day was appointed as chairman of British Leyland. He
quickly named the company Rover Group and began a programme of moving the
company and its products upmarket and away from mass-produced cars. In his role,
Sir Graham set about completing a privatisation programme which saw many of
British Leyland’s subsidiaries being sold. In 1988 the Rover Group was sold to
British Aerospace.
In early 1994, the Rover Group was taken over by the German
car maker, BMW. Following six years with BMW, on March 16, 2000, BMW announced
fundamental ‘reorganisation plans’ that split the company apart and resulted
in the sale of the key constituent parts of the group.
The new company, MG Rover Group Limited, is now an
independent, medium sized, British company that produces cars under the Rover
and MG brands from the Longbridge Birmingham plant. The company started life
with a debt free balance sheet and a strong revenue stream, which included car
sales, parts, accessories and vehicle financing. It also benefited from over £3
billion of investment by the previous owners.
Facts and Figures on the MG Rover Group Ltd, Year 2000:
| Annual turnover:
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£1.47 billion
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Current export markets:
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UK and Western Europe. The MG Rover Group
operates in 70 markets world-wide. In 2000, new markets were opened in
Australia, Norway and Sweden. |
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Approximately 50 per cent of the annual
production of cars are exported, the remainder distributed to the UK
dealer network. |
The chart below illustrates the mergers and regrouping of the
famous names within the British motor industry which became, first, the British
Leyland Motor Corporation and later the MG Rover Group.

Brief History of Rover:
When John Starley and William Sutton went into partnership in
1877 to manufacture penny farthing cycles and tricycles at Coventry, they laid
the foundations of the Rover company. The name Rover was first used for one of
their tricycles which was produced in 1884. After a succession of motorcycles,
the first car, an 8 hp model, was introduced in 1904. In 1906, the company
became the Rover Company Ltd.
In 1907, a Rover 20 hp car won the International Tourist
Trophy race on the Isle of Man. Production of cycles, motorcycles and cars
continued up to the First World War when Rover turned to Government contracts
for military vehicles, mortars, gas shells and other munitions work.
In 1920, the Rover 8 hp was produced and more than 17,000 were
manufactured up to 1925. The 14/15 hp model of 1924 was awarded the Dewar Trophy
by the RAC. The company gained more prestige in 1930 when a Light Six car raced
the Continental Express, 750 miles across France for 20 hours and reached Calais
20 minutes ahead of the train.
During the Second World War, more than 21,000 people were
employed producing aero engines, tank engines and aircraft wings. Behind the
scenes, the company was working on the secret development of a small gas turbine
engine. On March 8, 1959, the world’s first gas turbine propelled car was
launched, culminating in the T4, an advanced car with four-wheel drive, disc
brakes and independent suspension. In 1963, Rover raced at Le Mans, covering
2,588 miles at an average speed of almost 108 miles per hour.
In 1967 the Rover company merged with the Leyland Motor
Corporation and the following year became part of Britain’s largest motor
manufacturing organisation, with the merger of the Leyland Group and British
Motor Holdings to form the British Leyland Motor Corporation.
In June 1984 the Rover range was extended to include a highly
specified range of smaller cars; the Rover 200 series. The latest version of the
Rover 200 series was launched in 1989, followed by the Rover 400 range of
mid-sized executive cars in March 1990.
In July 1986, the Rover 800 series was introduced, a luxurious
range of executive cars with advanced styling and technology in design and
manufacture.
In 1998, the Rover Group was sold to British Aerospace and six years later to
the German car maker BMW.
The 1999 London Motor Show represented a historic milestone in
the evolution of the Rover manqué beneath BMW ownership, with the world-debut
of the new Rover 25 and 45 ranges. Positioned alongside the successful Rover 75,
the new 25 and 45 ranges provided a clearer indication of the future role and
direction of the Rover manqué.
In 2000, MG Rover Group Ltd took responsibility for the Longbridge car
facilities producing the Rover 25, 45 and 75 models plus MGF the top
selling roadster.
In 2001, the plants will additionally build the Rover 75 Tourer model and a
range of three MG sports saloons.
For more detailed information on the history of the
Rover Manqué, take this link
.
Brief History of Austin
Herbert Austin built his first car, a three-wheeler, in
1895/1896 while working for the Wolseley Company. In 1899 he built a
four-wheeler which won its class in the Automobile Club of Great Britain’s
1,000 mile trial.
Austin founded the Austin Motor Company at Longbridge
Birmingham in 1905 and in 1906 unveiled the first "Austin" - a 25-30
hp estate with four speed gear-box and chain drive rear axle.
The business grew and by 1910 nearly 1,000 workers were making
a wide range of car models from 6.8 hp to 60 hp.
After the First World War Austin decided to concentrate on
just one model, a 20 hp car styled on American lines. The decision brought the
company close to disaster but the introduction in 1922 of the Austin Seven
completely transformed Austin’s fortunes.
Weighing only 9 cwt and only 8’ 9 " in length, it
provided seats for four people. The Seven brought motoring to the family and
became the most popular light car in the world.
The Seven laid the foundations for growth in inter-war years
and by 1934 there was a choice of over 40 Austin models.
In 1936, Austin, who had already been made a Knight, became
Lord Austin of Longbridge.
The war years meant production was turned over to military
needs. But at the end of the war, Austin quickly moved to peace-time activities.
The first post-war model was the Austin Sixteen.
In 1951 there were two significant events; a new assembly
building was opened at Longbridge, modernising the production and, and after 30
years of intense rivalry, it was announced that the Austin and Nuffield (Morris)
organisations were to merge the following year, forming the British Motor
Corporation.
Brief History of Morris
:
It was in 1910 that 33-year old William Richard Morris started
to plan his first car, to be known as the Morris Oxford. The first production
model left the converted military academy at Cowley on the outskirts of Oxford
on March 28, 1913. By the time production of the 13.9 hp Bullnose Oxford and its
sister 11.9 hp Cowley ceased in 1926, 154,244 had been made.
Morris launched a series of ruthless cuts in answer to the
challenge of the post-war slump of 1920 and cut the price of the Cowley estate
from £525 to £425 and then from £425 to £341, saving his company from
bankruptcy. The 8 hp Morris Minor was launched in August 1928. The new model was
from the newly acquired Wolseley company’s drawing office.
Always an admirer of American production methods, Morris
returned from the US in the early 1920’s enthusiastic about the pressed steel
method of body construction displayed by Budd, leaders in the field. William
Morris and Edward G Budd together set up the Pressed Steel Company in 1926. They
built the first British all-steel body in 1927 and the Morris Isis Six, a medium
sized saloon, an early example of pressed steel expertise.
During 1933 and 1934, ‘specialisation’ became a slogan for
Morris, a term coined to describe the company’s process of ‘taking over’
its suppliers. SU Carburettors, the Hotchkiss factory, Wolseley Motors Ltd and
the ailing Riley company were all acquired in the period. Morris Motors in fact
became the Nuffield Organisation after Lord Nuffield sold the company together
with Wolseley and his other interests to Morris Motors Ltd.
After the Second World War, Morris launched the Minor,
designed by Alec Issigonis to new road holding standards. The Minor had a roomy
four-seater body and when fitted with the celebrated BMC A-series engine, it was
unexpectedly fast.
Supporting the Minor was a range of larger saloons; the Morris
Six and Isis – the last six cylinder Morris – and successive generations of
Oxfords. With the design of the 1959 version being created by Pininfarina, the
British public were introduced to the Italian favoured car style - squared-up
lines and tail fins.
In 1952, the rivalry between the Nuffield organisation and the
Austin ended with their amalgamation into the British Motor Corporation (BMC).
BMC then merged with Jaguar and then the Leyland Motor Corporation to form in
1968 the British Leyland Motor Corporation.
William Morris died in 1963, having amassed a vast personal
fortune through his business. Throughout his life, he gave £30 million to
medical and educational institutions. Nuffield College, Oxford, was founded by
him in 1929.
Morris Cowley became part of Rover Group’s major
manufacturing facilities and benefited from a large-scale investment in design
and manufacturing technology, placing it at the forefront of automobile
technology.
Brief History of MG:
In 1922, 33-year-old Cecil Kimber joined Morris Garages as
sales manager, to be appointed as general manager in the following year. Kimber
had a great interest in body styling and coach building and was also an
enthusiastic sports car driver. At the time, the Bullnosed Morris Cowleys and
Oxfords were the best-selling cars in Britain, but were undeniably staid. So, it
became natural for Kimber to turn his skills to fitting Morris chassis with a
special bodywork of a more sporting nature.
In 1923, the first special-bodied Morris cars were marketed by Morris Garages,
and in March 1924 the first MG car - a four-door saloon body on a Morris Oxford
chassis - was advertised. It was followed immediately by the first examples of
the MG four-seater Special Sports, also on the Oxford chassis
For 1925 a range of MG Super Sports models were offered, with
two or four seater bodywork, or in 'salonette' form. In the same year the first
entirely special purpose built MG sports, 'Old No. 1' was made for Cecil
Kimber's own use. Kimber entered the car in the 1925 Land's End Trial and won a
gold medal.
The period 1930 to 1935 saw the classic MG years, with a great variety of four
and six cylinder models being manufactured. Most were sports cars, although a
number of pure racing models were also developed and won countless successes on
race tracks and road circuits in Britain and abroad. The name MG became
synonymous with sports cars and it was in this period that the foundations were
made for the lasting fame of the marquee.
Until 1935, the MG company had been the sole property of Lord Nuffield.
However, in that year he sold the company together with Wolseley and his other
interests to Morris Motors Ltd as part of a general rationalisation of the
Morris companies, forming the Nuffield Organisation. It was simultaneously
announced that MG would withdraw from racing. However, although there were no
more MG racing cars, the company entered a new field of achievement with a
series of record cars. The first was the EW120, the 'Magic Midget' which George
Eyston drove at over 100 mph. This was followed by the EX135, the 'Magic
Magnette' which was rebuilt with streamlined bodywork and in the course of its
15 year career, broke numerous records in different capacity classes, using five
different engines.
In 1952 Nuffield and Austin merged to form British Motor Corporation (BMC).
This gave MG a family rival in the form of the Austin Healey sports car. In 1957
Austin-Healey production was transferred to Abingdon.
The post 1960 period saw only six different MG models. The two
saloon cars, the Magnette Mark III/IV and the 1100/1300, were relatively tame
badge-engineered versions of the mainstream BMC products and were both made in
the Cowley factory rather than in Abingdon. The 1100/1300 became the most
popular saloon model, with 175,000 made between 1962 and 1971.
During the 1980’s, the MG versions of the Metro, Maestro and
the Montego were produced. These models were very successful, but were
progressively phased out as derivative offerings were rationalised.
For more detailed information on the history of the MG
marque, take this link
History of the MG and Rover
Marques
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