Lot Ended
Description
AMENDMENT
From a deceased estate; first owned by the Earl of
Listowel; interesting history from new; current owner 29 years; unfinished
project; Mille Miglia eligible; find another one!
The Fiat
508 Balilla was in production from 1932 – 1939 but changed considerably
over that time, morphing from a very traditional and upright pre-war car into a
much more modern and streamlined machine with the arrival of the 508C in 1937.
There were also some wonderful coachbuilt Sport Spider and Aerodinamica versions
which have fetched £150k+ at auction in the past. In fact a 1934 508S
Aerodinamica made over 184k Euros at the Artcurial Retromobile sale earlier this
month.
While the
early cars made do with a 20bhp 995cc engine and a 3-speed gearbox, the 508C had
a 32bhp 1,089cc four-cylinder unit mated to 4-speed transmission which gave it a
top speed of 60mph. Unusual for a small car of the time was the independent
front suspension which gave it fine ride and handling and made it
popular among the racing fraternity, even competing in the
Mille Miglia, an event for which the 508C is still eligible. Around 57,000 were
built in total including Berlina, Spider, 2-door Cabriolet and 4-door
Convertible Saloon versions and survivors are exceedingly rare
today.
As the buff logbook confirms, this
508C Convertible 4-door pillarless Saloon was first registered in
January 1939 and was originally owned by the 5th Earl of Listowel who
kept it at his London address in Dolphin Square SW1, an estate of upmarket
apartments that was home to over 70 MPs and a dozen Lords in the late
1930s.
Born in 1906, Listowel had a distinguished career in the House of
Lords from 1932 onwards, serving in Winston Churchill’s wartime administration
followed by a spell in the Colonial Office, becoming Secretary of State for
India and Burma in the late-1940s and Governor-General of Ghana in the 1950s. He
continued to hold senior roles in the Lords until his death in 1997 (Daily
Telegraph obituary on file).
The Earl must have
loved the Fiat because he kept it until 1952. The next
owner was Stanley Holgate of Heston (now part of Hounslow) who was to keep it
for the next 23 years. In 1975 it was acquired by Paul Chamberlain of Surrey who
relates in a letter on file how he discovered it languishing in a railway arch
in Wandsworth, by which time it was in a fairly poor state.
He carried out a rolling restoration with the aim of getting it ready
to attend the Queen’s Jubilee Show at Ascot in 1977. He then used it on many
Fiat Register events, scooping many awards. He also completed the French Fiat
Register’s Champagne Rally in 1979, recalling that: “It was a super little car
with amazing performance for an 1100cc engine and I had many enjoyable times
with it”.
Six old MOTs imply that it covered
some 9,400 miles between June 1976 and May 1987 and if the odometer is correct
it has only covered around 50 miles since.
In
June 1987 Chamberlain sold the Balilla to Barrie Smith of Devon,
founder of the Chudleigh Motor Museum, where it was displayed until the museum
closed down in the mid-1990s and the cars were sold at auction. The next owner
was John Aspinall of Walsall who acquired the car from classic car dealer
Malcolm Elder of Enstone in March 1995, the invoice stating that it was ‘Sold
for restoration’ and cost £6,300. Aspinall bought various new parts for the
car from Fiat specialist Ezio Casagrande of Switzerland, as detailed in a May
1996 invoice on file.
In September 1996 the
Fiat appeared in a Sotheby’s auction in Hendon, the catalogue description
calling it a "Balilla Pillarless Cabriolet" and stating that it was: “In sound
unrestored condition… ripe for minor recommissioning… with a number of spare
parts including a new brake master cylinder, wheel cylinders and brake pipes,
new/old stock semaphore indicators and front and rear
bumpers”.
Our vendor acquired the car at the
auction and we imagine that it is in much the same condition now as it was then,
although there is an invoice for a new set of tyres from Longstone in April 2002
and what looks like a rebuild of the rear axle and diff in April 2003 (although
the axle appears to have been hastily re-fitted to the car back-to-front). There
is also a stainless steel exhaust which looks virtually new, and the
bumpers also look to be in decent shape. The prop shaft was located after we
collected the car but should be here in time for the sale.
On offer here from a deceased estate and retaining its original
(transferable) London-issue number plate FLB 268, this rare and well-historied
Balilla is now in need of an enthusiastic new owner who can add their own
chapter to its interesting life to date. On offer at no reserve, it should amply
reward the remedial works required.
Consigned
by James Dennison – 07970 309907 – [email protected]
AMENDMENT: Please note that the exhaust
manifold is NOT present, as was previously stated. There may also be other
parts missing - the rear lights for instance. What you see in the photos is what
you get.