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awaiting images

1925 Hupmobile Eight Series E

Auction Ends: Wed 18th Feb @ 11:45 am

  • Registration Number

    YL4271

  • Engine Size

    4044cc

  • Engine Number

    53002

  • Chassis Number

    E6049

  • Gearbox

    Manual

  • VAT Status

    No VAT

  • Buyers Premium (excl. VAT)

    12%, Minimum £150

  • Documents

    V5C; buff logbook; 17 old MOTs; invoices; correspondence; photos; usage log; press cuttings; brochures; club magazines; technical literature etc

  • Tax and MOT status

    Tax and MOT exempt

Description

From a deceased estate; fascinating history; from long-term ownership; ex-musem car that starred in Chariots of Fire; only 8,000 miles on rebuilt engine; original RHD; wonderful patina; exceedingly rare and exceedingly spacious; what a beauty!

From a standing start in 1901 when Oldsmobile produced the first mass-produced car, American manufacturers became so good at making popular cars at affordable prices that, by the end of 1923, one-in-nine of the adult population of the USA owned a car.

In Britain that figure was only one-in-a-hundred, so it was no surprise that the US quickly targeted the UK market, becoming by far the largest foreign producer of cars for the transport-starved Brits. Some of the bigger firms even built factories here to assemble the cars on British soil.

Although they are barely remembered today, some of the best mid-market cars were made by The Hupp Motor Car Company of Detroit which were sold in the UK via the Hupp Motors showroom in London SW3. Founded by Robert ‘Bobby’ Hupp in 1909, who had learned his craft working for Henry Ford, Hupmobile initially only made four-cylinder cars but in 1925 they switched to eight-cylinders.

This was a bold move which paid off to begin with, but ultimately doomed the firm when the Great Depression hit home in the early-1930s, leading to a catastrophic drop in sales of these unnecessarily lavish and powerful machines. Unable to sell enough of them, Hupmobile made their last car in 1937.

The magnificent Straight Eight Series E you see here was one such machine, typifying Hupmobile’s aim to "build a car better than it needs to be" and capture the fast-dwindling market for luxuriously appointed leviathans.

Under the enormous bonnet, it packs a 65hp 4,044cc L-head straight-eight with a massively heavy crank, driving through a 3-speed gearbox to provide the smooth, effortless torque that buyers expected. The capacious all-steel American coachwork was conservatively styled but beautifully proportioned with all the build quality of a railway carriage - indicative of the mechanical robustness for which the cars were renowned.

In the UK, the Series E was sold as the Hupmobile 27/65 (reflecting the 27hp RAC rating) and all the UK market cars had solid disc wheels in place of the wooden artillery wheels of the American cars. It had braking to all four wheels and an electric starter motor, still quite a novelty at the time.

As an interesting aside, a 1977 letter on file from a fellow Hupmobile owner, Mr W Oldham, recalls how he was introduced to the Series E when his mother bought one in 1926. She was great friends with Alan Chorlton, chief engineer at Beardmore, who had designed the Tornado eight-cylinder diesel engines that powered the locomotives on the Canadian Pacific Railroad and were later fitted to the ill-fated R101 airship.

Chorlton had been so impressed with the Series E he was loaned while working in America, that he bought one for himself when he returned to England to replace his comparatively weedy Belsize. Hearing that Mrs Oldham was on the brink of trading her Austin 20 Ranelagh Coupe in for a Bentley 3-Litre, he advised her to think again and took her for a spin down to Plymouth in his Straight-Eight Hup: “She thought it fantastic, it was so smooth and silent, had such wonderful acceleration and would creep in top gear, that she forgot all about the Bentley”.

She wasn’t so keen on the American sedan coachwork, so she ordered hers from the Hupp Motors showroom on the Brompton Road with English ‘owner-driver’ saloon coachwork by Victor Broom, a popular choice among upper-class Hup owners who were generally pretty sniffy about most things American.

This particular Hup is identical to Chorlton's car (even the paint is the same Larchmont Blue) and comes with a large and fascinating history file which will take the next owner many happy hours to digest. Supplied new by Economical Cars of Birmingham in September 1925 (their brass plaque is still on the dash), it was in regular use until war broke out in 1939 at which point it was put into storage with just 18,000 miles on the clock.

The trail then goes cold until the car turned up at Fred Plant & Sons scrapyard in Dudley in 1959 where it was spotted by the current owner’s father who immediately fell in love with it and managed to buy it for the princely sum of £15 (about £500 in today’s money).

Despite being in a scrapyard, the Hup was basically in good condition and the current owner, who was 12 at the time, helped his father to restore the car to running order. It was then in light regular use around the Bewdley area until the father finally sold it at auction in 1974 for £1,000, much to the regret of the son.

He never forgot about YL 4271 and in 1987, by a wild stroke of luck, he just happened to be in a friend's living room when the Hup suddenly popped up on the telly, being used in a Granada TV sitcom called Watching. He managed to contact Granada and they told him that the car had been supplied for the programme by Lark Lane Motor Museum in Liverpool. He rang the museum to explain his interest in the car and was cordially invited by the owner, Jim Baxter, to come and see the Hup and take it for a drive for old time's sake.

It transpired that Mr Baxter had bought the Hupmobile in 1978 from a Mr Eric Biddle who ran the Squirrel Hotel in Anderton. At this point the car was still in good condition but had been living outdoors as Mr Biddle didn't have a garage large enough to store it in. As Mr Baxter used the museum cars for film and wedding work, he needed to ensure that it was in tip-top running order so he had the engine rebuilt, the braking system fully overhauled and a new set of tyres fitted. In 1980/81 it was used during the filming of Chariots of Fire and it also appeared in another major film and various TV shows.

Two small notebooks in the history file record every journey made in the Hup from August 1984 to the summer of 1987 during which time the mileage rose from 5,054 to 8,150 miles. Many of these trips were for wedding duties in the Lancs/Merseyside area, the flower-filled silver vases up front and the cocktail cabinet in the rear being much appreciated by assorted blushing brides. From the notes it seems that the Hup averaged around 15mpg and cruised happily at 50mph with another 20mph on hand if you were feeling brave enough...  

Mr Baxter was in the process of winding down the Lark Lane museum so in 1988 he was persuaded to sell the Hupmobile to the current owner who continued to use it regularly, just as his father had done, adding another 4,000 miles to the odometer over the next 20 years (as shown by 17 old MOTs from 1986 to 2008) and scooping numerous awards at local shows.

Soon after this the owner fell ill and the Hup was parked up in a nice dry barn in Shropshire where it was to remain for the next half-dozen years. In early 2014 it was sent to those good chaps at Fisher Restorations of Rushock with instructions to recommission the car for sale (invoice on file). However, once it was back running again, the owner couldn’t bear to part with it so it went back into the barn where it remained until he sadly passed away in 2023.

Delivered to Brightwells on a trailer, we are told that the car was in good running order when parked up so, with any luck, it should need little more than some fresh fuel and a new battery to get it roadworthy again (it has only done 8,000 miles since the engine was rebuilt by Mr Baxter). We will endeavour to get it running in time for the viewing days.

On offer here from a deceased estate, this magnificent Straight-Eight is an extremely rare car with what seems an insultingly low guide price. It is thought that only a tiny handful still survive today, with just one other Series E known to exist in the UK back in the late-1970s, according to correspondence from the Hupmobile Register. We can find no record of any being offered at auction in the last 20 years or so, which means it could be a very long time before you see another one for sale.

As you can tell from the photos, this is a hugely impressive machine with bags of character and tons of history. All it needs now is a sympathetic new guardian who can continue to preserve it and add their own chapter to its fascinating 101-year-life to date.

We love this gentle giant and have fallen completely under its spell. Just sit inside for a few moments, soak in the atmosphere of the soft velvet, the warm woodwork, the gleaming nickel and silver trim, and the world immediately feels like a better place...    

Consigned by James Dennison – 07970 309907 – [email protected]

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