Morris Minor at 75: What happens when a much-loved classic starts to fade away?
I’ve been involved with Morris Minors all my life. In 1960, my dad bought a brand-new Minor 1000 Traveller (woody wagon) in London and we brought it to the States. I still own that car, which has its original ash timber frame, plus a few other Minors as well. In high school, knowing no one else who owned a Minor, I helped start the Morris Minor Registry club in the U.S.
If a car has been part of your whole life, what happens when you wake up to find that you’ve become one of “those old people with the weird old cars?” What if the newest version of a car that launched before you were born is now more than half a century old?
I went to the U.K. this summer to ask those questions to fans of the Minor, among the most iconic of British cars. Over three days of the sprawling Morris Minor Owners Club (MMOC) meet to mark the 75th anniversary of the car’s launch, I spoke with dozens of people. In particular, I focused on the innovative and much-imitated MMOC Young Members group, which brought an entirely new generation of regular drivers to these decades-old cars. My goal was to find out where the Minor goes from here—and what lessons enthusiasts can still learn from it.
Postwar star
The year 1948 saw the launch of two classic British cars: the Jaguar XK120 and the Morris Minor. They were the stars of the first national Motor Show held since the end of the war.
Britons crowded the stands at Earls Court in London, marveling at the sleek two-seat Jaguar—named for its 120-mph top speed—but imagining themselves driving a shiny new Minor. The postwar Morris was largely created by one man—engineer Alec Issigonis, who later designed the revolutionary BMC Mini. Sketched during his wartime stints of fire-watching, the Minor took shape as early as 1941. Issigonis admitted decades later he had been influenced by American designs—very possibly including the seminal Buick Y-Job of 1938, the first American concept car. His Minor wasn’t fast, but the handling delivered by its rack-and-pinion steering and torsion-bar suspension set it far above the ponderous Austins, Fords, Hillmans, and Vauxhalls of the day. It sold well into the early 1960s.
And yet, the Minor already looked old-fashioned by 1960—especially with the launch of the Mini the year before. Minor sales dwindled throughout the following decade, with the convertible ending its run in 1969, the sedans in late 1970, and the final Traveller woody wagon (at 215,000 produced over 18 years, the highest-production woody ever) in April 1971. Minor vans and pickups continued a few months beyond that.
The Morris name itself saw just one more dedicated model, the ill-fated Marina, sold as an Austin in North America. That was restyled into the Morris Ital, but it was the last Morris car. The brand died entirely in the late 1980s; SAIC of China now owns the Morris name.
The Minor’s friendly, rounded lines are indelibly etched into two or three generations of British culture. These days, it’s the car your granddad learned to drive in, or perhaps what your 1980s mum drove you to school in. In 1949, a shiny new two-door Minor saloon or Tourer (with rear side screens, no less) was an aspirational car for a growing British middle class. At its end, 23 years later, the Minor was a stodgy model driven by rural people, old folks, and the County Nurse making her rounds. Hundreds of thousands of Minor vans and pickups also did yeoman service for the telephone company, the Royal Mail, small businesses, and more.
Today, a Minor is among the cheapest cars a young Briton can drive. Despite its age, parts availability is superb, repairs are simple, it’s surprisingly reliable, and, crucially for younger drivers, it’s cheap to insure. Many MMOC Young Members under 40 (they started under 30, but, well, people age) still run them daily. And it’s been voted “Britain’s Most Popular Classic Car” more times than you can count.
So … what now?
The British do stately homes really well, and Chateau Impney, the site of this year’s MMOC meeting, offered a properly evocative photo setting. It’s an ornate Victorian pile in the style of a French chateau, set amidst green lawns and rolling fields usually occupied by sheep. On the first weekend of July, hundreds of Minor owners arrived, many towing trailers of all sizes. Minor owners tend not to be the Goodwood Revival crowd in Bentleys or Aston Martins, so tent camping and travel trailers are a thrifty way to do events.
Club officials and media reports claimed 750 Minors in attendance, an impressive number but half as many as attended the 50th-anniversary bash in 1998. Unsurprisingly, the majority of attendees (myself included) had white or silver hair, and I worried the event might come to feel like a last hurrah.
Thankfully, the pioneering MMOC Young Members chapter was very much in attendance. All acknowledged it’s unclear how long a Minor—a 12-foot, 1700-pound car of 28 to 45 horsepower—can continue to be practical for daily use, but that didn’t seem to quell their passion for the vehicles.
One key to the future, suggested Practical Classics magazine projects manager Matt Tomkins, age 30, is to get families involved—and underscore the idea that a classic car can be part of people’s everyday lives. His dad had an MG Midget in the 1990s, so the idea a decades-old car could be used regularly wasn’t foreign to him when Tomkins bought his first Minor at 17.
Reaching new audiences where they are is crucial. Young Member Steph Holloway, better known as Steph from I Drive a Classic on YouTube, brings to her 47,000-strong audience the idea that old cars are to be used. She drives a variety of classic cars, including a Minor named Nancy, with the attitude that old cars are accessible, interesting, and fun—even when they break down. The comments sections of her videos are full of people who agree. “Nancy was my first classic,” Holloway said with a smile. Looking over the car, freshly restored and just back from a weeklong, 1800-mile journey on which Nancy performed flawlessly, Holloway added: “I’m delighted she’s finally been put to rights.”
Also an MMOC Young Member, Becca Treston records the weekly Passenger Seat podcast from inside Peggy, her 1968 Morris Minor. Recent episodes covered her trip to the Netherlands in the 55-year-old car, as well as interviews from the 75th-anniversary event with MMOC Young Members about why they own Minors. “There are still 15,000 Minors in the U.K.,” she said. “So even if that number halves in the next 25 years,” she added, the cars will remain practical. A researcher by trade, Treston recently analyzed the costs of buying and running a Minor in the 1980s versus today. Accounting for inflation, it takes a larger proportion of a young person’s income today than it did then. Perhaps, she suggested, a rehoming or adoption system is needed for older owners to pass their Minors on to younger drivers who will use them.
Back on the field, Colin Frost, 45, stressed the need to bring entire families into the old-car fold. “It can’t just be something Dad does with his friends,” he said. Frost regularly joins other MMOC members for the annual Minors on Tour (MoT) event, in which several dozen drivers gather at a port, drive their Minors onto a ferry, cross the English Channel, and tour through France, Belgium, or Italy. This year’s event covered 1800 miles in a week, including one grueling 615-mile day.
“The key to this car is to make memories,” Frost said. “And carry on making memories for new people.” Sure, people of Frost’s age “think we’re absolutely crazy” to drive a 60-year-old car regularly—but “there’s also a kind of secret admiration.” His 16-year-old son Harry came on the MoT journey this year. Frost said Harry feels the old-car hobby has zero street cred, but Harry’s girlfriend “thought it was the coolest thing ever. He was embarrassed, and she gave him a right ticking-off.”
As beloved as it is in popular culture, the Morris Minor is now purely a part of Britain’s past. But it has a tenacious hold on the best of memories from bygone ages. An unnamed Minor lover within in a large group may have summed it up perfectly: “Perhaps it’s best there aren’t any more Morrises. We wouldn’t like the new ones, would we?”
The ones that do exist—possibly as many as 50,000 globally out of 1.6 million built—remain among the easiest old cars to use. And Tomkins of Practical Classics was at his most passionate when he offered advice that applies not just to Minors, but to any old cars: “Take your car out; don’t squirrel it away in the garage and just use it once a year. Take it on the school run, take it to the supermarket—and when you see people, wave, smile, and toot. If one percent of the people you engage with take up the baton, or at least have an understanding of why there’s an enthusiasm for preserving this heritage, then we’ve got a future.
“If we lock them away,” he said, “and we don’t allow the next generation to see classic cars and engage with them, we don’t stand a chance.”
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Many good points in the article.
The cost of insurance that allows a “young person” to drive any car all the time (let alone a classic) is a barrier for many…
One of the cars I will always regret not having had an example of – always loved them. I parked next to a white woodie wagon like the one to the extreme right of the title photo at a charity event a few weeks ago. Very cool car!
A friend of mine had one of these in 1968. It was the only one I ever saw in East Tennessee. We took it up to Gatlinburg one year and parked in front of the Shoney’s restaurant there. The starter had died some time back, so Chip pulled the crank from under the driver’s seat and started her up. When he got back in the car, he looked up, and everyone who could see out the front window was just staring. Some were open-mouthed and one guy actually had a fork full of food halfway to his mouth. Chip waved and we puttered off.
Kind of like a VW Beetle that’s had its nose pulled.
Been driving and enjoying Morris Minors since 1960, and now the proud owner of a family owned convertible bought new on June 30, 1960 which joins a four door sedan acquired from the original owner in 2011. Both with 193,400 miles and still looking like new and going strong. Well, as strong as 37 horsepower can be.
You might enjoy Brooklyn 2015. It is about a young Irish woman who leaves her home town, is terribly homesick, and eventually makes a life for herself and gets married.
Her sister unexpectedly dies, and she returns to her home town. She is successful, and much in demand. A wealthy young man takes her in his car – a Morris Oxford! The big brother of the Morris Minor.
This car stands out amongst the pre-war cars.
She is about to marry the handsome young man and move into the big house. But then…
The “small town mentality” clicks into place.
My father drove a Morris Oxford to Yugoslavia where it broke down. Fibre overhead cam gears.
If such a thing exists.
I know exactly how those “aging in place” MM owners feel, as I have the French equivalent, both in appearance and market target: a Renault 4CV. Bought it used in 1963, it was my daily driver until I moved upward–way upward–to a BMW 2002 in 1978. But I still have the car, just not used too much today.
They built over a million 4CVs…but how many do you see, even at car shows today? In its daily driver guise, it’s been to 23 US states and to Mexico City–all 28 hp (eventually modified by me to 43, with a lower final drive and a 4 speed–the original 4.71 diff wasn’t too conducive to 70 mph freeways). When gas prices started to approach $5/gallon, I was close to reactivating it as a daily driver–in its final iteration it got 42-43 mph around town–on what was basically a 1942 design. And it’s still fun to drive, be stared at and often mistaken for…a Morris Minor.
Actually, I just discovered a 4CV that’s been in a Southern California garage since 1973. It’s looking for a new home … any advice?
A nice location for a car show.
Growing up as a kid in Rhodesia, now Zimbabwe, every second person in my home town of Bulawayo had one or other of a Ford Anglia, Mini, or a Morris Minor.
When I got my first car it was a Austin A40, then an Austin 1800 followed by Mini Countryman.
In 1974 I traided the (much modified) Mini Countryman for a 1967 Mk1 Austin Cooper S which I still own to this day, along with 2 others – a 66 Morris Cooper S which I am almost done restoring, and a 68 Mk2 Morris Cooper S that I have owned since the mid 80s and spent many years rallying and racing (now to heavily modified to be driven on the road).
I drove many Morris Minors, they’re a bit to pedestrian for my taste, but they are very entertaining to drive.
The nicest one I drove had been tastefully modified with MGB mechanicals – turned it into a spectacular fun car that embaracingly could hang onto my Cooper S until we hit the bendy bits !
Tom Cotter (he of Barn Finds) used to race a highly modified Morris Minor in Vintage events – boy could he hustle it around the track 🙂
I love driving my Sprite everywhere. It’s simple, cheap, and fun. The Sprite does require more maintenance than modern marvels and it is certainly slower, but I enjoy the fact that I can easily maintain it myself, even engine pulls only takes a few hours, and gas mileage is very good. Handling is very good and driving in town there is never a feeling of holding up traffic.
“… you’ve become one of “those old people with the weird old cars?”
When I moved into your dorm room at Stanford in 1979, you were already one of “those old people with the weird old cars” — old in wisdom, and already cultivating the cultivated eccentricity Brits of which are so fond.
I don’t think a single other American undergraduate had a roommate with posters reading “When a man is tired of London he is tired of life“ and “Profit is not a four letter word”.
And I guarantee there was no other American undergraduate with a roommate who banged out a Morris Minor newsletter on his manual typewriter at a speed that a 1950s secretary would’ve been proud of.
To be fair, John also had an early Pontiac GTO in the dorm parking lot. So he wasn’t entirely a British eccentric. But who am I to talk, since I parked my Triumph Spitfire there also. Great article JV, but I was crushed that there was no mention of Mr. Bean, who learned to drive in his mother’s Morris Minor on the family farm. Best wishes and I hope your personal Traveller restoration project is going well.
What an excellent article on an Old Friend, Thank you.
Beautifully written as always by John Voelcker.
A black, well used 1960 Minor 1000 was my first car, purchased from my father in about 1967. A real “chick magnet” vehicle that was about as basic as transportation could be back then. In high school, and before I owned the beast, a group of other students (rascals by any standard) picked up the car I drove to school that day and carried it into an almost impossible-to-escape location in which I was able to negotiate an escape route but one in which the school principal called my mother threatening to end my association with that institute of learning.
Many admirers don’t realize that the small keyhole in the front bumper was actually not decorative but rather served as an entry portal for the car’s lift jack handle to engage with a matching cog in the engine crankshaft in the all-to-often “no-crank” tantrum which allowed the driver to manually crank the engine over to a start event. All said, I truly miss the little beast and I don’t even know if I have a photo of it. Your article brought back so many memories of my life with that car. Bravo!
The first car I ever drove (illegally – I was 14!). I was taken by my parents to meet up with some friends of theirs at a country pub, and told to go and entertain myself whilst they chatted. As the car had been left with the key in the ignition I thought I’d see what it was like to drive – and I discovered it was very easy! Didn’t go far and then turned round and reparked it, but I didn’t confess for years. I’m now 80, so the traffic volumes in deepest England weren’t what they are today.