Ahead of Hagerty’s Festival of the Unexceptional this weekend, author Giles Chapman ponders which of today’s current crop of cars will become the unexceptional classics of the future.
Among the cars that draw really appreciative crowds at Britain’s unique showcase of motoring’s guilty pleasures, you’ll be sure to find some of the progency of British Leyland from 40 or more years ago.
Year after year in the 1970s, the malaise of Britain’s ailing nationalised carmaker was a staple of the evening TV news. Comedians stitched the Austin Allegro into their routines, and politicians despaired at the dreadful state of management-worker relations that led to strikes and Friday afternoon cars being made every day of the week.
Yet we were still so patriotic that we dutifully bought those cars, stoically tolerating the faults of the Morris Marina and Rover SD1. We still feel oddly attached to them even now.
Fords and Vauxhalls of the time were more dependable, but usually they were old-fashioned motors dressed up with flashy styling, black nylon interiors and fake everything – from pretend wooden dashboards to ersatz alloy wheels. Foreign cars were often just plain odd to British eyes, and if they came from France or Italy then rust spots would bubble up the moment you left the showroom.