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Humber
Fate Merged
Successor Rootes Group
Founded 1868
Defunct 1931
Headquarters Coventry, England, United Kingdom
Industry Automotive industry
Products Automobiles
Subsidiaries 1929 - 193 Hillman Motor Car Company
Humber Marque
Current owner PSA
Country of origin United Kingdom
Discontinued 1976
Markets Automotive
Previous owners 1868 - 1931 Humber
1931 - 1967 Rootes Group
1967 - 1979 Chrysler
Humber Humberette 5 HP Voiturette 1903

Humber Humberette 5 HP Voiturette 1903

Humber 11,4 HP Saloon 1924

Humber 11,4 HP Saloon 1924

Humber 9 20 1926

1926 Humber 9/20 tourer

Humber 8-18 - EL 9222 at NCMM 09 - IMG 5292

Humber 8/18 HP

Humber 14 40 HP Tourer 1928

Humber 14/40 HP Tourer 1928

Humber 14 40 HP 2-Seater 1929

Humber 14/40 HP 2-Seater Sports 1929

Humber Heavy Utility 1940

Humber Heavy Utility 1940

Humber Pullman

Humber Pullman

Humber zurich 2005

1965 Humber Sceptre Mark II

Humber was a British automobile marque which could date its beginnings to Thomas Humber's bicycle company founded in 1868. In 1931 it was taken over by the Rootes brothers to become part of the Rootes Group. The car range focused on luxury models, such as the Humber Super Snipe.

Thomas Humber went to school in Kingston upon Hull, which lies on the Humber Estuary. However, this is the only connection between the Humber car brand and the City of Hull.

History[]

The first car was produced in 1898 and was a three-wheeled tricar with the first conventional four-wheeled car appearing in 1901. The company had factories in Beeston near Nottingham and Coventry. The Beeston factory produced a more expensive range known as Beeston-Humbers but the factory closed in 1908 after financial problems.

Before the First World War a wide range of models were produced from the 600 cc Humberette to several 6-cylinder 6 litre models. In 1913 Humber was the second largest manufacturer of cars in the United Kingdom.[citation (source) needed]

In 1925 Humber moved into the production of commercial vehicles with the purchase of Commer. In 1928 Hillman was added but independence ended in 1931 when the Rootes Brothers bought a majority shareholding.

During World War II, several "armoured" cars were produced under the Humber name, along with heavy-duty "staff" cars.

In the postwar era, Humber's mainstay products included the four-cylinder Hawk and six-cylinder Super Snipe. Being a popular choice of businessmen and officialdom alike, Humbers gained a reputation for beautifully-appointed interiors and build quality. The Hawk and the Super Snipe went through various designs, though all had a "transatlantic" influence. They offered disc brakes and automatic transmission at a time when these were rare. A top-flight model, the Imperial, had these as standard, along with metallic paintwork and other luxury touches. The last of the traditional large Humbers were sold in 1968, when Chrysler, who by then owned the Rootes group, pulled the plug on production. Several V8 models had been in pre-production at this time, and several of these test examples (prototypes) survive today.

Its last car was the second generation of Humber Sceptre, a badge-engineered Rootes Arrow model. The marque was shelved in 1976 when all Hillmans became badged as Chryslers. The Hillman Hunter (another Arrow model) was subsequently badged as a Chrysler until production ceased in 1979 when Chrysler's European division was sold to Peugeot and the marque renamed Talbot. The Talbot marque was abandoned at the end of 1986 on passenger cars, although it was continued on vans for six years afterwards.

Main Models[]

  • Humber 8 - 1902
  • Humber 12 - 1902
  • Humber 20 - 1903
  • Humberette - 1904 and 1911-15
  • Humber 8/10 - 1905
  • Humber 10/12 - 1905-07
  • Humber 30/40 - 1908-09
  • Humber 11 - 1912
  • Humber 10 - 1919-21
  • Humber 15.9 1919-25
  • Humber 11.4 and 12/25 - 1921-25
  • Humber 8/18 1922-25
  • Humber 15/40 1924-28
  • Humber 9/20 and 9/28 - 1925-30
  • Humber 14/40 - 1926-29
  • Humber 20/55 and 20/65 - 1926-29
  • Humber 16/50 - 1928-32
  • Humber 23.8 Snipe - 1929-35
  • Humber 16-60 Snipe - 1933-35
  • Humber 12 - 1933-37
  • Humber 16 - 1936-40
  • Humber Snipe - 1929-47
  • Humber Pullman - 1930-54
  • Humber Imperial - 1938-67
  • Humber Hawk - 1945-67
  • Humber Super Snipe - 1938-67
  • Humber Sceptre - 1961–67,1967-76
  • Humber Vogue - 1963-66 (Australia)

Surviving cars[]

There is a thriving club, and many of these upmarket cars survive today.

The world's largest collection of Humber cars can be viewed at the Marshalls Post-Vintage Humber Car Museum in Hull. Includes 21 Humber cars dating from 1932-1970 on permanent display, plus 24 unrestored cars.[1][2]

When the Queen Elizabeth, Queen Mother visited Western Australia in the 1950s, a Humber was shipped over for her. It was left in a paddock, and was rediscovered and verified in 2002. It has since been restored and is currently privately owned.

Examples regularly appear at Steam rallies and Classic vehicle shows in the UK.

Please list known survivors here (to be added to a PML table when a few examples listed)

Template:PML Humber

See also[]

References / sources[]

  1. "BBC News UK Remembering the Humber". Retrieved on August 18 2006.
  2. "www.MotorSnippets.com". Retrieved on August 18 2006.

External links[]

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Smallwikipedialogo This page uses some content from Wikipedia. The original article was at Humber Cars. The list of authors can be seen in the page history. As with Tractor & Construction Plant Wiki, the text of Wikipedia is available under the Creative Commons by Attribution License and/or GNU Free Documentation License. Please check page history for when the original article was copied to Wikia


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