Rare and stately Humber with a lusty 100bhp 4.1 straight-six engine; 
highly original with some fabulous Art Deco features; only four former 
keepers; former wedding car in need of recommissioning following a 
period in storage; ideal winter project 
Among the 
pioneers of the British motoring scene, Humber produced their first car in 1896 
and went on to make a range of sturdy, luxuriously trimmed saloons aimed at the 
upper middle classes. Following the Rootes takeover in 1932, they concentrated 
on large six-cylinder cars under the Snipe, Imperial and Pullman brands which 
were used almost exclusively by civic dignitaries and top-brass military types. 
In the Desert War against Rommel’s Afrika Corps, 
Field Marshal Montgomery became immensely fond of ‘Old Faithful’, his Super 
Snipe staff car, which had mine-proof floors, long range fuel tanks and balloon 
tyres. Winston Churchill became equally attached to FLY 176, his Snipe Imperial 
Limousine, which got him and his loyal Tommy-gun-toting bodyguard, Walter H 
Thompson, out of many close scrapes. 
First 
registered in Leeds in July 1938, this impressive Snipe Imperial sadly comes 
with very little history so we will never know what role it might have played in 
the rich life story of our island nation - if only cars could talk... 
Powered by the same rugged 100bhp 4,086cc straight-six that was used in the 
gargantuan Pullman Limousine, it has four-speed manual transmission, independent 
front suspension and a luxuriously trimmed dark blue leather interior with rear 
picnic tables and wonderfully Art Deco Jaeger dash instruments and white 
Bakelite HMV radio. 
A 1937 model, it has had 
just four former keepers, according to the V5C, and was first sold by 
Brightwells back in 2013, at which point it had been in the vendor’s ownership 
for 12 years. Although it was in running order with a recently fitted stainless 
steel exhaust, it was stated to be in need of precautionary recommissioning, the 
last MOT having expired in July 2009 when it was being used as a 
wedding car (hence the flowers on the rear parcel shelf). 
It then appeared in another Brightwells auction in 2016 when it was 
bought by a collector near Pershore who kept it in storage along with many other 
cars. Our vendor acquired the Humber about four years ago when the Pershore 
collection was dispersed following the death of the owner. He has also kept it 
in dry storage and has not registered the car in his name so the V5C still only 
records four former keepers.
On offer here at no 
reserve as a straightforward winter project, this stately old Humber has bags of 
charm and originality and now needs an enthusiastic new owner who can get it 
back on the road where it belongs. Retaining its original (transferable) 
Leeds-issue number plate, GUA 418 also comes with an original 63-page 
Instruction Book which will no doubt prove useful. 
An extremely rare 
model nowadays, believed to be one of only around half-a-dozen surviving, it 
shouldn’t take much to get it going and it would be a fine way to travel to 
the Goodwood Revival next summer with a bunch of mates on 
board.
Consigned by James Dennison – 07970 
309907 – [email protected]