Little Book of The Mini
By Jon Stroud
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Little Book of The Mini - Jon Stroud
Contents
Introduction
The Seeds
The Alternatives
The Man behind the Mini
The Solution
Onto the Road
Acceptance
Minis with More
Enter the Cooper
Do It Yourself!
The Wilder Bunch
Rallying Round
On the Road Again
Into the Future
An End and a Beginning
A Legend Turns 50...
Mini Models Through the Years
Introduction
FEW PEOPLE COULD HAVE KNOWN it at the time, but after 26 August 1959 the motoring world would change dramatically, in fact in the long term it would never really be the same again. 26 August 1959 was also the day when the traditional notion of the small car was turned on its ears, and when the layout that now dominates mass-production car design was first thrust into the mainstream. Because 26 August 1959 was Mini Day – the day on which one of the most significant, successful and best loved cars in motoring history was first introduced to the public.
It was a very different kind of car indeed, and looking back at it, a very brave one. By any standards it was genuinely small (on the outside at least), it was mechanically way different from the late 1950s norm, and it had a look like no other car on the road – a look that was all about function and had very little to do with fashion. Incredibly, though, one of the first leaps towards this little car’s massive future success was that it would very soon become a fashion icon. And perhaps equally unlikely for a car that was launched with an 848cc engine and just 34bhp, it would become a sporting legend, too - its giant-killing performances in racing and rallying completely overturning yet another motoring convention.
IllustrationThe original Mini remained fundamentally unchanged throughout its life. This is a 1965 example
IllustrationFrom the start, the Mini has been a favourite for motorsport
But perhaps most unlikely of all in an industry where change is the life blood, the Mini in almost precisely its original shape survived for more than forty years, and at the end of those four decades the concept and image were still so strong that one of the most prestigious car makers in the world, BMW, took the reins and in 2000 turned the Mini into the MINI – a totally new second generation unmistakably drawing on the spirit of the first. And just as in 1959, it took the motoring world by storm.
In between, the original Mini -far from standing still as a superficial glance at its almost unchanging looks might suggest - had actually gone though literally thousands of improvements and dozens of widely differing models. There were booted Rileys and Wolseleys, half-timbered estates, vans, pickups, convertibles and the Moke. The Mini had sold more or less around the world (with the notable exception of never conquering America), and before the very last example of the original Mini rolled off the production lines at Longbridge, near Oxford, in October 2000, it had sold almost five and a half million copies. It had become the first-car of choice for whole generations of cash-conscious young and new drivers, a car for families, and a car for celebrities, even for royalty.
IllustrationThe Mini has starred in countless films and TV shows. This is the car Rowan Atkinson drove as Mr Bean
It became a film and television star, in roles from The Italian Job to Mr Bean. It had become a genuine sports car alternative for hundreds of thousands of enthusiasts who either bought their Mini performance off the shelf with the various Cooper and Cooper S variants, or bought the basic car then bolted the excitement on later. And that coincidentally created a whole new industry for aftermarket tuning, body-kit and ‘car improvement’ specialists. Its creator insisted that he never intended it as a sporting car, but the Mini won dozens of major rallies including three victories in the great days of the Monte Carlo Rally, and it won the European Rally Championship outright. On the circuits it won the European Touring Car Championship outright, against far bigger and more powerful opposition, it won the British Saloon Car Championship outright – the final time in 1979, an incredible twenty years after the car’s first appearance. In fact over the years it has won literally thousands of events in every branch of motor sport from driving tests to hillclimbs, rallies to races, and at club level at least, original Minis were still winning long after the new generation MINI had been launched (and started its own sporting career).
But what the Mini won most of all was a kind of affection and iconic reputation that was way out of proportion to its diminutive size. And that’s what makes the story of the Mini (and the MINI) one of the most fascinating in the whole history of motoring.
IllustrationAn impressive formation of MINI Ones, soon after the new car was launched in 2001
Chapter 1
The Seeds
NOW SPOOL BACK FOR A MOMENT to August 1959 and consider the world that the original Mini was born into – a world very different indeed from that which would welcome the second generation MINI, 42 years later. In Britain the year had started badly for motoring enthusiasts when newly crowned British World Champion racing driver Mike Hawthorn was killed in a road accident in Surrey in January. The hovercraft was the cutting edge of invention, and rock and roll was still in its infancy. Harold MacMillan was Prime Minister, and about to be re-elected as Britain enjoyed a generally affluent end to a decade that had had enough international unrest to create the need for a car like the Mini in the first place.
By the mid-1950s, when first thoughts for a car like the Mini were hatched, World War II, which had only ended in 1945, was still a relatively recent memory, and Britain’s motor industry (which at the time was a far more important part of the country’s industrial make-up than it is now) was only just getting properly back into its stride. For some time immediately after the war there had been no genuinely new cars, only rehashes of pre-war ones, because there simply wasn’t the money or the resources to start from scratch. You also had to have government authorisation to buy one, and if you did it could cost you around twice what an essentially identical car had cost before the war – including a tax bill of two thirds the basic cost of the car. And, on government orders, much of what was being built was strictly for export only anyway, to earn the money to pay for the imported raw materials to put British industry back on its feet. Even for those who could buy a car, either a ‘new’ one or a second-hand one, necessities like tyres and fuel were still in short supply – and in fact petrol rationing, introduced early in the war, wouldn’t actually be scrapped until May 1950. By which time, the effects of the World War were fading, but the problems of Korea and Japan, the tensions between the USA, Russia and China, and the ‘Cold War’ threat of the atomic bomb were all never far from people’s minds, even in Britain.
IllustrationWith Queen Elizabeth II newly crowned, Britain was in an upbeat mood in the 1950s
That said, Britain in the early years of the 1950s was pretty upbeat, and reasonably well off. In 1951 the Festival of Britain