(Redirected from British Leyland)
The 'British Leyland Motor Corporation' (BLMC) was a vehicle manufacturing company formed in the
United Kingdom in
1968. Ultimately, it would become
nationalised as ''British Leyland'', often referred to as just ''BL''. It incorporated much of the British owned motor vehicle industry, but had a troubled history. In 1986 it was renamed as the
Rover Group, later to become
MG Rover Group, which went bankrupt in 2005, bringing an end to mass car production by British owned manufacturers - with
MG becoming part of
Chinese Nanjing Automobile and
Rover disappearing completely, with its brand being bought by
Ford.
History
BLMC was created in 1968 by the merger of
British Motor Holdings (BMH) and
Leyland Motor Corporation (LMC), encouraged by the
Wilson Labour Government (1964–1970). At the time, LMC was a successful manufacturer, while BMH was perilously close to collapse. The Government was hopeful LMC's expertise would revive the ailing BMH. The merger combined most of the remaining independent British car manufacturing companies and included car, bus and truck manufacturers and more diverse enterprises including construction equipment, refrigerators, metal casting companies, road surface manufacturers; in all, nearly 100 different companies. The new corporation was arranged into seven divisions under its new chairman,
Sir Donald Stokes (formerly the chairman of LMC).
While BMH was the UK's largest car manufacturer (producing over twice as many cars as LMC), it offered a range of dated vehicles, including the
Morris Minor which was introduced in 1948 and the
Austin Cambridge and
Morris Oxford, which dated back to 1959. After the merger, Lord Stokes was horrified to find that BMH had no plans to replace these elderly designs. Also, BMH's design efforts immediately prior to the merger had focussed on unfortunate niche market models such as the
Austin Maxi (which was underdeveloped and with an appearance hampered by using the doors from the larger
Austin 1800) and the
Austin 3 litre, which was a car with no discernible place in the market.
BMH had produced several successful cars, such as the
Mini and the Austin/ Morris 1100/1300 range (which at the time was the UK's biggest selling car). While these cars had been advanced at the time of their introduction, the Mini was not highly profitable and the 1100/1300 was facing more modern competition.
The lack of attention to development of new mass market models meant that BMH had nothing in the way of new models in the pipeline to effectively compete with popular rivals such as Ford's
Escort and
Cortina.
Immediately, Lord Stokes instigated plans to design and introduce new models quickly. The first result of this crash program was the
Morris Marina in 1971. It used parts from various BL models with new bodywork to produce BL's mass market competitor. It went on to become BL's mainstay for the next decade, eventually outliving its welcome.
The company became an infamous monument to the industrial turmoil that plagued Britain in the
1970s. At its peak, BLMC owned nearly 40 different manufacturing plants across the country. Even before the merger BMH had included theoretically competing marques which were in fact selling substantially similar "
badge engineered" cars. To this was added the competition from yet more, previously LMC marques. Rover competed with Jaguar at the expensive end of the market, and Triumph with its family cars and sports cars against Austin, Morris and MG. The result was a product range which was incoherent and full of duplication. In addition, inconsequent attempts to establish British Leyland as a brand in consumers' minds in and outside the UK, print ads and spots were produced, causing confusion rather than attraction for buyers. This, combined with serious industrial relations problems (principally, the company's relations with hard-line
trade unions of the time); the
1973 oil crisis; the
three-day week; high inflation; and ineffectual management meant that BL became an unmanageable and financially crippled behemoth whose
bankruptcy in
1975 was assured.
Sir Don Ryder was asked to undertake an enquiry into the position of the company, and his report,
The Ryder Report, was presented to the government in April 1975. Following the report's recommendations, the organisation was drastically restructured and the
Labour Government (1974–1979) took control by creating a new holding company ''British Leyland Limited'' (BL) of which the government was the major shareholder. The company was now organised into the following four divisions
[1]:
★ ''Leyland Cars (later BL Cars)'' – the largest car manufacturer in the UK, employing some 128,000 people at 36 locations, and with a production capacity of one million vehicles per year.
★ ''Leyland Truck and Bus'' – the largest commercial and passenger vehicle manufacturer in the UK, employing 31,000 people at 12 locations, producing 38,000 trucks, 8,000 buses and 19,000 tractors per year
★ ''Leyland Special Products'' – the miscellaneous collection of other acquired businesses, itself structured into five sub-divisions:
:
★ Construction Equipment –
Aveling-Barford,
Aveling-Marshall,
Barfords of Belton and
Goodwin-Barsby
:
★ Refrigeration –
Prestcold
:
★ Materials Handling –
Coventry Climax (incorporating Climax Trucks, Climax Conveyancer and Climax Shawloader)
:
★ Military Vehicles –
Alvis and
Self-Changing Gears
:
★ Print –
Nuffield Press (which printed the company's publications) and
Lyne & Son
★ ''Leyland International'' – responsible for the export of cars, trucks and buses, and responsible for manufacturing plants in Africa, India and Australia, employing 18,000 people
In 1977 Leyland Cars was split up into ''Austin Morris'' (the volume car business) and ''Jaguar Rover Triumph'' (JRT) (the specialist or upmarket division). Austin Morris at first included MG but this marque was later transferred to JRT. Land Rover and Range Rover were later separated from JRT to form the
Land Rover Group.
In 1978 the company formed a new group for its commercial vehicle interests, BL Commercial Vehicles (BLCV) under managing director
David Abell. The following companies moved under this new umbrella:
:
★ Leyland Vehicles Limited (trucks, tractors and buses)
:
★ Alvis Limited (military vehicles)
:
★ Coventry Climax Limited (fork lift trucks and specialist engines)
:
★ Self-Changing Gears Limited (heavy-duty transmissions)
BLCV and the Land Rover Group later merged to become ''Land Rover Leyland''.
In 1979 ''British Leyland Ltd'' was renamed to simply ''BL Ltd'' (later ''BL plc'') and its
subsidiary which acted as a
holding company for all the other companies within the group ''The British Leyland Motor Corporation Ltd'' to ''BLMC Ltd''.
In 1982 most of the car division became the
Austin Rover Group marking the end of the Morris and Triumph marques although Jaguar and Daimler remained in a separate company called Jaguar Car Holdings.
In 1984 ''Jaguar Cars'' became independent once more, through a public sale of its shares.
Ford subsequently acquired
Jaguar. In 1986 BL changed its name to
Rover Group and in 1987 the ''Trucks Division - Leyland Vehicles'' merged with the Dutch
DAF company to form
DAF NV, trading as
Leyland DAF in the UK and as ''DAF'' in the Netherlands. In 1987 the bus business was spun-off into a new company called
Leyland Bus. This was the result of a
management buyout who decided to sell the company to the
Bus & Truck division of Volvo in 1988.
In 1988 the remaining ''Rover Group'' business was sold by the British Government to
British Aerospace (BAe).
Many of the brands were
divested over time and continue to exist to this day. The heir to most of the volume car business was
MG Rover which went bankrupt in April
2005, only to resume production two years later - though initially with just a sports car and upper-range saloon built in both
Britain and
China due to the takeover of MG Rover's assets by
Nanjing Automobile.
Timelines
Notes for the timeline table
★ The car brands of
BSA were divested, BSA was not merged into
Jaguar.
★ Mini was not originally a marque in its own right. See
Mini and
MINI (BMW) for more detail.
★ The BMC trademark is registered (1564704, E1118348) to MG Rover Group Ltd in the UK. BMC is also the name of a commercial vehicle manufacturer in Turkey, formerly the Turkish subsidiary of the British Motor Corporation. It is believed that Nanjing Automotive may have purchased this from MG Rover, however the brand has not been re-assigned as of
17 July 2006.
★ The Wolseley trademark is registered (UK 1490228) to MG Rover Group Ltd for automobiles only. It is believed that Nanjing Automotive may have purchased this from MG Rover, however the brand has not been -reassigned as of July 2006 to a different company. The UK building materials supplier
Wolseley plc owns the rights to the Wolseley name for all other purposes. Wolseley plc is a descendant of the original Wolseley company.
★ The Vanden Plas trademark is owned by Ford (through Jaguar) for use within the USA and Canada, and as (UK 1133528, E2654481) to MG Rover Group Ltd for use in the rest of the world. It is believed that Nanjing Automotive may have purchased this from MG Rover, however the trademark has not been recorded as reassigned as of
17 July 2006. This is why Jaguar XJ Vanden Plas models are branded as Daimlers in Britain. The last Rover to use the Vanden Plas name was the Rover 75 Vanden Plas, a long wheelbase limousine model.
★ The Rover trademark was owned by BMW and was only licenced to MG Rover Group Ltd. BMW sold the brand to
Ford in September 2006.
★ Alvis was purchased from British Leyland by
United Scientific Holdings plc in 1981, in 2002 Alvis merged with part of
Vickers Defence Systems to form
Alvis Vickers which was purchased by
BAE Systems in 2004. BAE Systems did not acquire Alvis through their ownership of Austin Rover Group / Rover Group in the early 1990s. Production of Alvis branded cars ceased in 1967. The trademark is owned by Alvis Vehicles Ltd
★ The use of the Triumph name as a trademark for vehicles is shared between BMW and
Triumph Motorcycles Ltd. The former for automobiles and the latter for motorcycles. The motorcycle and car business separated in the 1930s.
Merged companies
The car firms (and car brands) which eventually merged to form the company are as follows.
The dates given are those of the first car of each name, but these are often debatable as each car may be several years in development.
★ 1895
Wolseley Motor Company
★ 1896
Lanchester Motor Company
★ 1896
Leyland Motors (commercial vehicles)
★ 1896
Daimler
★ 1898
Riley
★ 1903
Standard
★ 1904
Rover
★ 1905
Austin
★ 1912
Morris
★ 1913
Vanden Plas
★ 1919
Alvis
★ 1923
MG created by Morris
★ 1923
Triumph Motor Company
★ 1924
BSA used as a car brand
★ 1935
Jaguar
★ 1947
Land Rover created by Rover
★ 1952
Austin-Healey created by Austin division of BMC (see below)
★ 1959
Mini created by Austin division of BMC (although the name '
Mini' was first used on a variant with Morris badges)
Other merger events
Several of these names (including Jaguar, Land Rover and Mini) are now in other hands. The history of the mergers and other key events is as follows:
★ 1910
Daimler purchased by the armaments-and-motorbikes engineering company
BSA
★ 1931
Lanchester purchased by BSA (last Lanchester 1956)
★ 1938
Morris incorporates
Wolseley and
Riley forming the
Nuffield Organisation
★ 1944
Standard acquire
Triumph, forming
Standard Triumph
★ 1946
Austin acquire
Vanden Plas
★ 1952 The Nuffield Organisation and Austin merge to form the
British Motor Corporation (BMC)
★ 1960
Jaguar buy the car-making interests of BSA, including Daimler
★ 1961
Leyland Motors acquire Standard Triumph
★ 1962 Leyalnd Motors acquired ACV, the renamed AEC (
Associated Equipment Company) company.
★ 1963
Jaguar acquire the engine and fork lift truck manufacturing company
Coventry Climax
★ 1965
Rover acquire
Alvis
★ 1966 BMC merge with Jaguar to form
British Motor Holdings (BMH)
★ 1967 Leyland absorb Rover
★ 1968 Leyland merge with British Motor Holdings to form the British Leyland Motor Corporation (BLMC)
★ 1972 BLMC take control of
Innocenti
★ 1974 Cessation of production of cars in Australia
★ 1975 Publication of the Ryder Report, British Leyland effectively nationalised due to financial difficulties with new holding company formed British Leyland Ltd later BL plc with the government as the principal (but not the only) shareholder
★ 1977 Michael Edwardes appointed as Chairman by
Labour Government. Begins massive cull of excess BL assets.
Divestments
★ 1969 The last
Riley Elf,
1300, and
4/72 models were built, thus ending the Riley marque
★ 1975 Innocenti passed to
Alejandro de Tomaso
★ 1976 Final Wolseley, a
2200, is built, thus ending the Wolseley marque
★ 1978 Land Rover separated from Rover to form a separate company, still part of BL
★ 1979 Collaboration with
Honda begins, sacking of
Derek Robinson ("Red Robbo")
★ 1978 Closure of Triumph assembly plant in Speke - production moved to Canley
★ 1980 Closure of MG and Triumph assembly plants in Abingdon and Canley
★ 1981 Closure of Rover-Triumph plant in Solihull
★ 1981 Alvis sold to United Scientific Holdings
★ 1982 Michael Edwardes steps down as Chairman, BL Cars Ltd renamed
Austin Rover Group (ARG)
★ 1984 Morris Ital goes out of production, signalling the end of the Morris badge
★ 1984 Jaguar floated off (including Daimler and the US rights to Vanden Plas); bought by
Ford in 1989
★ 1984 Final
Triumph Acclaim rolls off the production line, ending the Triumph name
★ 1986 BL plc renamed
Rover Group, Austin badges disappear the following year
★ 1986 Leyland Bus floated off; bought by
Volvo in 1988
★ 1987 Leyland Trucks division (including Freight Rover vans) merged with
DAF to form
DAF NV/Leyland DAF. Vans became independent as
LDV in 1993, as did Trucks as
Leyland Trucks. Leyland Trucks was taken over by US giant
PACCAR in 1998 and integrated with
Foden.
★ 1987 Unipart, BL's spare parts division acquired by management buy-out
★ 1988 Rover Group privatised; sold to
British Aerospace
★ 1994 Rover Group sold to
BMW; collaboration with Honda ends
★ 1994 Maestro and Montego go out of production.
★ 1998 Metro/100-series goes out of production - the last of the former Austin models.
★ 2000 BMW decides to break up and sell the Rover empire; Land Rover sold to Ford
★ 2000
BMW MINI, Triumph, and Riley trademarks retained by BMW, but BMW's other interests sold off
★ 2000 Remainder of company became independent as the
MG Rover Group
★ 2005 MG Rover goes into administration with huge debts, and is taken over by
Nanjing Automobile.
★ 2006 Ford acquires the rights to the Rover brand name from BMW, though without any immediate plans for using it on production cars.
[2].
List of notable BL and BMC and related models (up to 1986)

A small British Leyland badge on one of their many products.
★ 1948
Land Rover (Rover)
★ 1948
Morris Minor (Nuffield)
★ 1952
Rover 90 (Rover)
★ 1952
Morris Oxford (BMC)
★ 1954
Austin Cambridge (BMC)
★ 1959
Triumph Herald (Standard-Triumph)
★ 1959
Austin Gipsy (BMC)
★ 1959
Mini (BMC; Initially badged as the Austin Se7en and Morris Mini-Minor)
★ 1961
Jaguar E-type (Jaguar)
★ 1961
Riley Elf (BMC)
★ 1961
Wolseley Hornet (BMC)
★ 1962
Triumph Spitfire (Leyland-Triumph)
★ 1962
Morris 1100 (BMC)
★ 1962
MGB (BMC)
★ 1963
Triumph 2000 (Leyland-Triumph)
★ 1964
Mini Moke (BMC)
★ 1964
Austin 1800/2200 (BMC)
★ 1964
Rover 2000 (Rover)
★ 1968
Jaguar XJ6 (BLMC)
★ 1969
Austin Maxi (BLMC)
★ 1970
Triumph Dolomite (BLMC)
★ 1970
Triumph Toledo (BLMC)
★ 1970
Range Rover (BLMC)
★ 1971
Morris Marina (BLMC)
★ 1971
Triumph Stag (BLMC)
★ 1973
Austin Allegro (BLMC)
★ 1975
Leyland Princess (BL)
★ 1975
Triumph TR7 (BL)
★ 1975
Jaguar XJS (BL)
★ 1976–1987:
Rover SD1 (BL)
★ 1980–1990:
Austin Metro (BL)
★ 1980–1984:
Morris Ital (BL)
★ 1981
Triumph Acclaim (BL)
★ 1982
Austin Ambassador (ARG)
★ 1983
Austin Maestro (ARG)
★ 1984
Austin Montego (ARG)
★ 1984
Rover 200-series (ARG)
★ 1986
Rover 800-series/Sterling (ARG)
Competing models
In some cases, British Leyland continued to produce competing models from the merged companies at different sites for many years. However, any benefits from the broader number of models were far outweighed by higher development costs and greatly reduced economies of scale.
Sadly, potential benefits associated with rationalising parts usage were lost, as for example, the company made two completely different 1.3 litre engines (BMC A series and the Triumph 1.3 litre), two different 1.5 litre engines (BMC E series and Triumph), four different 2 litre engines (4 cylinder O series, 4 cylinder Triumph Dolomite, 4 cylinder Rover and 6 cylinder Triumph) and two completely different V8 engines (Triumph OHC 3 litre V8 and Rover 3.5 litre V8).
Examples of competing cars were:
★
Morris Minor and
Austin A40/
Austin 1100
★
Austin 1300 and
Triumph Herald/
Triumph Toledo
★
Morris Marina,
Austin Allegro, and
Triumph Dolomite
★
Triumph 2000,
Rover 2000, and
Austin Princess
★
Triumph Spitfire,
MG Midget and
Ausin Healey Sprite
★
Triumph TR6/
Triumph TR7 and
MG B
★
Rover 3500 and
Jaguar XJ6
Badge-engineered models
In contrast to the continued development of competing models, British Leyland continued the practice of
badge engineering of models which had started under BMC; selling essentially the same vehicle under two (or more) different
marques.
★
Riley One-Point-Five/
Wolseley 1500
★
MG Magnette ZA/ZB/
Wolseley 4/44
★
MG Magnette ZB/
Wolseley 15/50
★
Morris Oxford MO/
Wolseley 6/80
★
Austin A99 Westminster/
Wolseley 6/99
★
Austin A110 Westminster/
Wolseley 6/110
★
Austin 1800/
Wolseley 18/85/
Wolseley Six
★
Austin A55 Cambridge/
MG Magnette Mk. III/
Morris Oxford V/
Riley 4/68/
Wolseley 15/60
★
Austin A60 Cambridge/
MG Magnette Mk. IV/
Morris Oxford VI/
Riley 4/72/
Wolseley 16/60
★
Riley Pathfinder/
Riley Two-Point-Six/
Wolseley 6/90
★
Austin Se7en/Morris Mini-Minor
★
Morris Mini Traveller/Austin Mini Countryman
★
Riley Elf/Wolseley Hornet
★
Austin 1100/
Austin 1300/
Morris 1100/
Morris 1300/
MG 1100/
Riley Kestrel/
Riley 1300/
Vanden Plas Princess/
Wolseley 1100
★
Austin-Healey Sprite/
MG Midget
See also
★
Leyland Motors Ltd
★
Ashok Leyland
★ For history and models after 1986 see
MG Rover Group
★ Other
nationalised industries
Notes
1. BL Booklet - Graduate opportunities with British Leyland
2. Rover brand name passes to Ford
External links
★ Model-by-model history http://austin-rover.co.uk
★ http://www.team.net/www/morgan/history/linage.html
★ http://members.fortunecity.com/routeman68/history.htm - Leyland Truck & Bus
★ http://www.dloc.org.uk/ - Daimler, Lanchester and BSA
★ http://www.heritage-motor-centre.co.uk