The Austin Maestro van is not, truth be told, the most distinguished of Royal Mail artefacts. Current owner Steve Knight knows that.
The British postal service ordered a fleet of 70 in 1984 but found them dismally inadequate: the noisy 2-litre Perkins diesel engine couldn’t haul them up some steeper gradients.
The Ford Escort Mk3 van, though, had no such failings, and rapidly became the Royal Mail’s default choice.
Knight wasn’t really looking for a Maestro. His true passion is postboxes, and, owning nearly 150 of them, he has one of the most historically important and diverse collections in the country.
Where most people have statues in their gardens, Knight has lovingly renovated postboxes, and his garage is crammed with more.
There, the international set stands alongside other rare examples of Post Office paraphernalia, such as stamp-dispensing machines.
“I was offered the Maestro van for free,” he explains. “After I made some enquiries with people who know their Post Office vehicles, they all said ‘yeah, great – get it’. I liked it as something to display next to my two Post Office bicycles.”