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WHY BRITISH???

To: british-cars@Autox.Team.Net
Subject: WHY BRITISH???
From: RFeibusch@aol.com
Date: Mon, 10 Mar 1997 12:25:14 -0500 (EST)
Dear Listers,
Anyone out there ever analyze what elements in your 
childhood are responsible for your interest in British 
cars? I know that many of us are car nuts and motorheads 
in general and are into ALL cars in one way or another, 
but it takes a certain sort to be a British car owner.

I personally have three major influences that got me 
going in a British direction very early in life. To start 
with, my mother informs me that I showed a major 
interest in cars from about the time I began to talk. 
My first three words were mama, dad, and Buick! 
The only toys that I seemed to like had wheels on them. 
Being that this was going on in the late Forties, might 
explain why my favorite cars come from the 1938-1954 
era and in particular, Morris Minors, that are the LBC embodiment of this era
of styling.

1)   I come from San Francisco, a place that was steeped 
in British cars during the British "Export or Die" years 
right after the war. These cars were everywhere. We had neighbors with Austin
A40s and family friends with a 
Hillman Minx convertible. My father, a non-motorhead who didn't buy a family
car until 1954 (there is great public transportation in SF) took me to the
road races held in 
Golden Gate Park in the early Fifties. Even though I was 
only four or five years old at the time, I vividly 
remember those races. I can still hear the Cad-Allards 
and Jag XK120s winding up to a roar on the straights, 
then backing off and popping little backfires of rich 
mixture as they slowed for the corners.  
The little MGs looked, to me, exactly what a car should
look like; swooping fenders separate headlamps and a 
tyre on the back. It took me 33 years to finally own one 
of these (a BRG '50 TD) and I wasn't disappointed. 
I'm sure that there were other nationalities of cars 
there, but the only ones I seem to remember were British. 
This makes vintage racing such a great experience for 
me as I'm one of the few of my generation who actually 
saw many of these early cars race.

2)   Dinky Toys and to a lesser extent Matchbox Toys. 
Though I never actively "collected" them, I had many 
and knew the whole line.  Here was an American five 
year old who knew what a Riley Two-and-a Half Liter 
series RM saloon and a Morris Oxford was! I had a model 
of every postwar Austin including the FX3 taxi, an 
Atlantic drophead and an A40 Van. My first model kit 
was a Revell "Highway Pioneers" MGTD that my mom 
built for me. She painted the interior with nail polish 
that "crinkled" it up like real leather!  I didn't stand 
a chance.

3)   When I was about six, my folks took me to an English 
film called Genevieve, a comedy about the London to 
Brighton race of brass-era cars .  At this point I was 
able to see the place where the cars came from.  
I was hooked. At six, I decided that outside of San 
Francisco, England was the place to be. I didn't get to 
go there either until many years later and also was not disappointed.

This was long before Carnaby Street, Monte Python and 
The Beatles. Mick and the Stones were still in school!  
All Americans are Anglophiles to one extent or another,
but I feel that most British car owners have an earlier 
or "past-life" connection to an English way of life.

How about the rest of you out there?  Why do you like British cars?  See you
on the Funway!              
Rick Feibusch                      
Automotive Journalist/Appraiser
http://www.EnglishCars.com/rick.html
mailto:RFeibusch@aol.com              
61 Minor pickup
60 Minor Saloon
59 Minor Convertible
69 Chevelle Malibu 350 


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