Jowett

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Jowett Cars Ltd
Industry Motor cars
Fate Ceased operating 1955
Founded 1906
Defunct 1955 Voluntary Liquidation
all liabilities paid in full
ample capital surplus returned to shareholders
Headquarters Idle, Bradford, England, UK
Key people Benjamin and William Jowett
Gerald Palmer

Jowett was a manufacturer of light cars and light commercial vehicles in Bradford, West Yorkshire, England from 1906 to 1954.

Early history

Jowett was founded in 1901 by brothers Benjamin (1877—1963) and William (1880—1965) Jowett with Arthur V Lamb.[1] They started in the cycle business and went on to make V-twin engines for driving machinery. Some early engines found their way locally into other makes of cars as replacements. In 1904 they became the Jowett Motor Manufacturing Company based in Back Burlington Street, Bradford. Their first Jowett light car was produced in February 1906 but as their little workshop was fully occupied in general engineering activities, experiments with different engine configurations, and making the first six Scott motorcycles, it did not go into production until 1910 and then after more than 25,000 miles of exhaustive trials.

Jowett Eight prewar example

Their intention was to provide a low weight vehicle at a low price and with low running costs. The prototype could be described as England's first real light car. Engine and gearbox were specifically designed for a light car and made largely of aluminum. Its low speed torque and gear ratios were ideally suited to the hills about Bradford and Yorkshire's terrain where poor roads provided little use for a high top speed or quick acceleration. Construction of the engine and the rest of the car was robust. Benjamin Jowett held that their light car class was suffering from engines either from cyclecars with sufficient power but subject to rapid deterioration because of inadequate bearing surfaces, or engines from larger cars too heavy for the rest of the car's structure leading to a different set of troubles. The Jowett engine was designed and built for a light car.[2]

The production car "quickly became popular".[1] It used an 816 cc flat twin water-cooled engine of 6.4 hp[3] and three-speed gearbox with tiller steering. The body was a lightweight open two-seater. Learning popular opinion was that 10 hp was a minimum Jowett advertised their third car as being 8 hp without changing the specification. Twelve vehicles were made before an improved version with wheel steering was launched in 1913 and a further 36 were made before the outbreak of the First World War when the factory was turned over to munitions manufacture. Two tiller steerers still survive.

Inter war years

Jowett Cars Limited was a new private company formed in June 1919 to make and sell motorcars and it purchased the car manufacturing portion of the business carried on by the Jowett Motor Manufacturing Company. It became a Public Company listed on the London Stock Exchange in 1935.[1]

Jowett Seven Long Tourer 1929 example
Jowett Eight 1937

That year, 1919, a new works site was bought at Springfield, Bradford Road, Idle, outside Bradford, the site of a disused quarry. Car making started in the new factory in 1920. The first vehicle was the Jowett Seven using an enlarged version of the pre-war flat twin. First it was enlarged to 831 cc then to 907 cc in 1921 when the claim to 8 hp was dropped from advertising. Thereafter all Jowetts were Sevens until the introduction of the four-cylinder engine in 1936. The engine developed its maximum torque at low revs and was soon famed for its pulling power, reliability and economy.

Commercial vehicles based on the car chassis were also built from 1922 and became an increasingly important part of the company's output. Jowett first exhibited at the London Motor Show in 1921 and gradually broke out of their previous local market. In 1923 coil ignition and electric starting were added and the four-seater "Long Four" was introduced in tourer form priced from £245 followed in 1925 by a closed saloon model, the previous short-chassis two-seater continuing in production. In 1929, the engine received removable cylinder heads to ease maintenance and braking was on all four wheels. Production was briefly suspended in September 1931 when fire swept through the works.

1934 saw the launch of the Jowett Kestrel with four-speed gearbox and in 1935 there was the oddly named Weasel sports tourer. The first four-cylinder (flat four) car arrived in 1936 with the 1166 cc twin carburettor Jowett Ten which continued until the outbreak of war alongside the traditional twin-cylinder models which grew to 946 cc in 1937. In 1935 the company went public and in 1936 Benjamin Jowett retired. Brother William carried on until 1940.

World War II

Production of cars stopped in 1940 but engine production for motor-generator sets continued alongside aircraft components and other military hardware. The engine was (besides being used as a generator set) also used in the Jowett engine powered Fire Pump.[4] The company was bought by property developer Charles Clore in 1945 and he sold it in 1947 to the bankers Lazard Brothers.

Post War

Jowett Javelin saloon in original (metallic) finish, 1949 example
Jowett Javelin saloon
Jowett Jupiter Tourer

When production restarted after the Second World War, the twin-cylinder engine was dropped from the range of new cars, but continued in 1005 cc form to the end of production in the commercials, now comprising a light lorry, the Bradford van, two versions of an estate car called the Utility, and chassis front-ends and kits for outside coachbuilders, many abroad. The new cars were a complete change from what had gone before with the streamlined Jowett Javelin designed by a team led by Gerald Palmer. This had such advanced features as a flat four push-rod engine, independent front suspension with torsion bars front and rear and unitary body construction. The car was good for 80 mph (130 km/h) and had excellent handling. In 1950 the Javelin was joined by the Jowett Jupiter sports with a chassis designed by Eberan von Eberhorst who had worked for Auto Union. Javelins were designed for production levels never before attempted by Jowett with Javelin and Bradford body production out-sourced to Briggs Motor Bodies who built a new plant at Doncaster. Briggs supplied the bodies fully trimmed and ready to be applied to the mechanicals.[5] The Jupiters were always built in-house at Idle. The new mechanicals had teething troubles but Javelin bodies were still being mass-produced to the original schedule leading to them being stockpiled. Export sales collapsed by 75% in 1952 followed by sluggish domestic sales while the nation waited for the removal of a "temporarily" increased purchase tax, finally eased in April 1953 with disastrous long-term consequences for Jowett.[6]

Poor business strategy and direction, over-confidence, was the financially sound company's downfall and even after the engine and gearbox problems were solved the Idle plant was never able to build, or, during 1952, the distribution network to sell, the expected volume. Collapse of the arrangements for the supply of bodies led to suspension of Javelin production in 1953 together with the by now outdated Bradford though tooling had been completed for new models.[5] Jupiters remained in demand and were built up to the end of 1954. The company did not go broke, but sold their factory to International Harvester who made tractors at the site until the early 1980s. The factory was demolished in 1983.

Jowett switched to manufacturing aircraft parts for the Blackburn & General Aircraft Company in a former woollen mill at Howden Clough, Birstall, near Batley. Jowett, just the "shell" of the company,[7] was later taken over by Blackburn in 1956, although spares for the postwar cars were kept available until 1963, when the remainder of the Jowett company was closed due to the rationalisation of the aircraft industry.

Crisis and closure

Purchase tax on new cars was reduced by 25% on 15 April 1953 (from 66⅔% to 50%): this triggered a surge in demand for new cars on the UK market. In the resulting scramble for production facilities Ford bought Briggs whose new Doncaster, Yorkshire plant built the unitary construction bodies and fully trimmed them for Jowett Javelin cars and Bradford vans. In April 1953 Ford Motor Company Limited purchased from the US shareholders majority control of Briggs Motor Bodies Limited whose main factory was adjacent to the Ford plant at Dagenham. Remaining minority shareholders were bought out, and Ford quickly acquired full ownership of the Briggs business. Briggs factory at Doncaster [8] was surplus to Ford’s requirements and it was sold to Fisher and Ludlow. Fisher and Ludlow itself was quickly swallowed up by the newly created British Motor Corporation, .[9]

At the beginning of July the Chairman of Jowett Cars Limited, AF Jopling (who at the time was also a senior employee with Blackburn Aircraft), informed Jowett shareholders at their Annual General Meeting that difficulties had arisen over the future supply of car bodies. Negotiations were proceeding, but an interruption in delivery of completed vehicles appeared likely to occur in the closing months of that year. He also reported that exports for 1952 were almost 75% down on 1951. On the home market, during the six month run up to tax changes in April 1953, the anticipated success of an organised campaign for a reduction in purchase tax had sharply reduced previously buoyant UK new car demand. Home market sales in the last quarter of 1952 were only 15% of the sales in the three preceding quarters.[6]

In mid September the board advised shareholders that the forecast break in production could not be avoided and that it might prove to be of considerable duration. Having regard to this possibility negotiations extended to suitable alternative work which would keep the factory reasonably employed. He also advised that the difficulty in arranging supplies of new bodies would unfortunately postpone the production of the new range of commercial vehicles and the estate car which were fully tooled-up.[5]

The business appears to have been running out of working capital. Car production ceased.

In July 1954 it was announced that Jowett Cars Limited would sell their main factory at Idle to International Harvester excluding plant and equipment needed for the service and spares departments.

A note was added by the Times newspaper that Jowett Cars had run into difficulties last year (1953) after the acquisition of the motor body suppliers Fisher and Ludlow by BMC[10] completed in September 1953. "It is now stated that since the company ceased manufacturing Javelin and Bradford vehicles it has not been found possible to keep the main factory operating at an economic level." However Jowett Cars Limited reported a (small) profit for the financial year.[11]

At the 35th Annual General Meeting in August 1954 the chairman advised the profound regret of the board and all associated with the company, including the users of the some 65,000 vehicles which had been made since 1946, for their joint circumstances.[12]

Ultimately shareholders received back rather more than the nominal value of their shares. This process was completed in mid 1955.

Jowett 1930s Gallery


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Important models

Type Engine Production body styles Year Notes
Jowett 6 hp[3] 816 cc side-valve flat twin water-cooled 48 2-seater 1906–1914 Three speed gearbox. 831 cc from 1914
Jowett 7 hp[3] 907 cc side-valve flat twin 11,444 (inc Long 7) 2-door fabric saloon, 2-door coachbuilt saloon 1919–1930 Three speed gearbox. Four wheel brakes from 1930. 84 in (2,100 mm) wheelbase
Jowett "Long" 7 hp 907 cc side-valve flat twin 11,444 (inc Short 7) 2-seater, sports tourer, 4-door fabric saloon, Kestrel coachbuilt saloon, Black Prince, Silverdale and Grey Knight de-luxe saloons, Simba tourer, Weasel sports tourer. 1930-36 102 in (2,600 mm) wheelbase.
12-volt electrics from 1933. Four-speed gearbox from 1934. Twin carburettors on the Weasel.
Jowett Ten[3] 1166 cc side-valve flat four 1881 saloon (Jupiter, Jason, Plover and Peregrine), van 1936–1940 Twin carburettors up to 1937.
Jowett Eight[3] 946 cc side-valve flat twin 2888 saloon 1937–1940
Jowett Javelin 1486 cc overhead-valve flat four 23,307 saloon 1947–1953 Class win, 1949 Monte Carlo Rally. Class win, 1949 Spa 24-hours race. Outright win, 1953 International Tulip Rally. Class win, 1952 & 1953 RAC Rally
Jowett Jupiter 1486 cc overhead-valve flat four 900 convertible 1950–1954 Tubular semi-space frame, hydraulic brakes. Some supplied as chassis to independent coach builders such as Pininfarina, Ghia Suisse, E. D. Abbott Ltd, Harold Radford. Class-winner at 1950 24 Hours of Le Mans in its first race. Also, outright win of the 1951 Lisbon International Rally and class win at Le Mans in 1951. In 1952 Le Mans was class-won by the sports-racing variant Jupiter type R1.
Jowett Bradford 1005 cc side-valve flat twin 38,241 light truck, van and utility 1946–1953 Three speed gearbox
Jowett R4 1486 cc overhead-valve flat four 3 sports 1953 Body fabric reinforced plastic. Never reached production. Top speed 100 mph (160 km/h)

Clubs

There are some eight Jowett club regions in the UK and very robust Australian and New Zealand groups, that exist to support and promote the Jowett. Members gather with their cars for sectional meetings and once a year, for a National Rally. Members and their cars from the USA and Europe have attended.

Famous Jowett Jupiter owners

See also

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Information published in compliance with the regulations of the Committee of the Stock Exchange, London. The Times, 25 March 1935, p. 24.
  2. Paul Clark and Edmund Nankivell, The Complete Jowett History, 1991, Foulis Haynes
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4
  4. National Geographic "Britain's Greatest Machines, Season-1940s (War, The Mother of Invention)"
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 The Times, Thursday, 17 September 1953; p. 8
  6. 6.0 6.1 The Times, Monday, 6 July 1953; p. 11
  7. The Times, Friday, 2 September 1955; p. 12
  8. The Times, Thursday, 23 April 1953; p. 12
  9. The Times, Thursday, 26 November 1953; p. 13
  10. The Times, Friday, 31 July 1953; p. 12
  11. The Times, Tuesday, 20 July 1954; p. 8
  12. The Times, Tuesday, 24 August 1954; p. 11

Books

External links

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