Gawsworth Hall escaped the weekend downpours with another outstanding display of vehicles for its annual Classic Car Show on Monday.
Car of Show in the informal concours went to the magnificent 1925 Lanchester Forty limousine brought by Paul Wilson. It took pride of place in front of the beautiful Tudor mansion alongside Rodney Bishop’s gleaming 1946 Invicta Black Prince prototype – one of just 17 – and Jeff Brooks’ 1964 Gordon-Keeble (the 12th built), resplendent in Ferrari Azzurro metallic.
Pre-war cars are always well-represented at the busy Cheshire event and the prize for the best went to Peter Bradley’s superb 1930 Lagonda 2 Litre. The Denis Ferranti Prize – in honour of the car-fanatic electrical engineering entrpreneur who owned Gawsworth for 30 years – went to another stunning vintage machine, the 1926 Bentley 6.5 Litre ‘Big Blue’ of Chris Jonas.
A fine turnout from Cheshire Sevens – part of the Pre-War Austin Seven Club – included a couple of superbly restored examples: Rob Jacks’ 1933 Box saloon (on right of four in top photo) and the two-tone ’36 Nippy (next to it) that David Gregson rebuilt “from the ground up, but to the original pattern and specification”. Ruth and David Howard brought their ’35 Ruby saloon. “They’re addictive,” enthused Ruth, “and who wants to be cured?” A copy of a period advert in its back window boasted the tagline: ‘You buy a car – but you invest in an Austin’.