Certainly, the Gazelle drophead is one of the most charming convertibles of its day and the Imp-based Chamois Coupé and Sport were in the great tradition of the 1939 Nine Roadster, but the illustrious name was otherwise badge-engineered into oblivion.
Its demise in 1970 was no great shock to most industry watchers and, in a sadly ironic twist of fate, the final Gazelles and Vogues were just lightly modified versions of a Hillman that had inherited the Hunter name.
The Sunbeam MkIII’s toolkit is built into its bootlid
Meanwhile, the MkIII is magnificent proof that mass-production and an individualistic saloon of real distinction may not be mutually exclusive, yet it also marked the swansong for a genre of vehicle.
After 1957 the Rootes Group never really entered this market again, for the Sunbeam Rapier was aimed at a different form of driver – the chartered accountant with a club blazer and Mike Hawthorn flat cap, as opposed to a lounge lizard with a pencil moustache.
Another factor was that the firm lacked the resources to develop a rival to the compact Jags and, by 1963, with the debuts of the Rover P6 and Triumph 2000, this gap in the line-up seemed more acute.
That same year brought the introduction of the original Humber Sceptre, a car that was not so far removed from the Sunbeam-Talbot tradition, but by that time Rootes’ financial issues meant that it was never properly developed.
“Both were above the mere vagaries of style because they embody a very old-fashioned word, ‘integrity’”
For my own part, I would have each of these cars occupy my driveway because the Singer and the Sunbeam represent different but complementary aspects of post-war motoring.
The Singer Hunter would be used for the weekdays, arriving at the office with a quiet sense of dignity, while the Sunbeam is emphatically a weekend vehicle for jaunts to Brighton or to the races.
If only those patrolmen were still around to salute on your trip back to a sepia-tinted past.
Images: Tony Baker
Thanks to the Singer Owners’ Club; the Singer Motor Club; the Sunbeam-Talbot Owners’ Club; Brooklands
Factfiles
Singer Hunter
- Sold/number built 1954-’56/4750
- Construction steel chassis, steel body
- Engine all-iron, sohc 1497cc ‘four’, single carb; 48bhp @ 4200rpm; 79lb ft @ 2400rpm
- Transmission four-speed manual, RWD
- Suspension: front independent, by double wishbones, coil springs, anti-roll bar rear live axle, semi-elliptic leaf springs
- Steering recirculating ball
- Brakes drums
- Length 14ft 9in (4496mm)
- Width 5ft 3in (1600mm)
- Height 5ft 4in (1626mm)
- Weight 2520lb (1143kg)
- 0-60mph 26.3 secs
- Top speed 74mph
- Price new £975
Sunbeam MkIII
- Sold/number built 1954-’57/c2250
- Construction steel chassis, steel body
- Engine all-iron, ohv 2267cc ‘four’, single carb; 80bhp @ 4400rpm; 122lb ft @ 2400rpm
- Transmission four-speed manual, RWD
- Suspension: front independent, by double wishbones, coil springs, anti-roll bar rear live axle, semi-elliptic leaf springs
- Steering recirculating ball
- Brakes drums
- Length 14ft (4267mm)
- Width 5ft 2½in (1586mm)
- Height 4ft 11in (1499mm)
- Weight 2950lb (1338kg)
- 0-60mph 17.4 secs
- Top speed 95mph
- Price new £1127
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Andrew Roberts
Andrew is a long-time contributor to Classic & Sports Car