Lot Ended
Description
1922 Bean 14 Tourer
Very original and much
loved Bean; family transport; weather equipment; a well known car: spare
engine
Bean
Industries had an aggressive plan to become the next 'Ford of Detroit', pumping
literally £millions of investors money in expanding production facilities along
the lines of Fords Highland Park site in their Smethwick, Tipton and Dudley
factories.
Scuppered
completely by the depression of the early 1920s when car demand all but
disappeared, production resumed on a much more modest scale in 1922 and in 1924
Bean’s 11.9 was replaced by two newer models, the 14 and the 12. A combination
of bad management and poor investment meant things soon went from bad to worse
and increased competition from rivals like Austin and Morris meant the climate
had changed and Bean struggled to make ends meet.
Ten
years had passed since Bean's first bold attempt to turn Dudley
into Detroit, but in that time only 17,000 cars had rolled from the factory
gates but by 1929 it was all over.
Today fewer than 100 Bean cars are
known to survive worldwide – the majority of them in Australia where a Bean 14
won everlasting fame by becoming, in 1924, the first motor car to drive across
the continent and back. An epic 14,000 mile journey across the trackless, still
largely unexplored outback.
This
lovely original 1924 14hp example has led a much more sheltered life and comes
to us from a deceased’s estate. Complete with weather equipment including side
screens, it lived down south in the 1990s and moved closer to home in the early
2000s when it was owned by Malcom Knowles, a prominent Councillor who lived in
the Stourbridge area.
He
passed away in 2012 and we think this was when it was acquired by the
vendor’s late father, also of Stourbridge. He used it regularly and it was often
seen around and about.
He
sadly passed earlier this year and the car has been in a nice dry garage since.
It hasn’t run for a little while, but should provide few issues getting it up
and running again.
There
are several spare beaded edge tyres in the rear and it comes with a spare
engine partially dismantled. The car carries the lovely patina of
an older restoration that has been much loved.
Full
of quality parts such as lighting and a full instrument display, for someone
looking for robust and reliable family transport, this Bean looks just the
ticket.
The
file includes a V5C, copious notes about starting and driving from a previous
owner and a super original sales brochure from 1924 – listing the Five-seater
Tourer at £395…
For
more information – contact [email protected]
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