Filter

Découvrez l'histoire oubliée des Chevaux de Troie: le Trojan Utility et son usine secrète de Croydon

Les Trojan sont des machines fascinantes. Lorsque la Trojan Utility a été mise en vente pour la première fois en 1922, elle ne ressemblait à rien de tout ce qui l'avait précédée ou suivie. Elle  était équipée d'un moteur « duplex » à deux temps opposés horizontalement, d'une boîte de vitesses épicycloïdale à deux rapports et était réputée pour son économie et sa fiabilité, à défaut d'être luxueuse et rapide. Le fondateur de la marque, Leslie Hounsfield, désapprouvait la conduite furieuse et voulait que ses voitures soient limitées à 20 miles par heure (sur ce point, elle a été renversée), mais il a réussi à mettre en production la voiture avec des pneus pleins, longtemps après qu'ils aient été considérés comme superflus, sauf pour les véhicules utilitaires.

 

Un autre point qui rend les Trojans particulièrement intéressantes pour cet auteur est le fait qu'elles ont été produites dans la ville de Croydon, dans le Surrey - sa ville natale - et il était donc particulièrement enthousiaste à l'idée d'ajouter cette photographie à ses archives. Il s'agit d'une image rare représentant une file de camionnettes Trojan à l'extérieur de la première usine de Croydon, sur Purley Way. Bien que Hounsfield ait opéré depuis 1914 dans un atelier d'ingénierie sur Vicarage Road à Croydon, celui-ci n'était pas assez grand pour lui permettre de mettre l'Utility en production, mais il a réussi à conclure un accord avec Leyland pour que l'Utility entre en production dans son usine située entre Kingston et Richmond, pas très loin de là. En 1927, Leyland décide qu'il ne peut plus construire de Trojans car il veut l'espace de l'usine pour son propre châssis Cub de 2½ tonnes, ce qui oblige Hounsfield à construire à la hâte sa propre usine.

 

En 1928, la production est transférée dans une usine spécialement construite sur un terrain qui n'avait pas été aménagé auparavant, mais qui s'industrialisait rapidement, au bord de la nouvelle route Purley Way. Comme on peut le voir, cette première usine était une structure assez basique, mais elle n'a pas duré longtemps. En 1936, elle a été démolie et remplacée par une structure en briques beaucoup plus grande, plus substantielle et mieux équipée, qui a bien servi l'entreprise jusqu'à ce qu'elle cesse complètement la production de véhicules dans les années 1960.

 

Nous pensons que cette photographie a été prise en 1928, lors de l'ouverture de la nouvelle usine. Nous pensons qu'il s'agit de fourgonnettes de 7 kilos, bien qu'un modèle de 10 kilos ait été ajouté à la gamme la même année. Les prix ont baissé après quelques années de production, et une camionnette de 7 kilos était une bonne affaire à seulement 135 livres sterling. Les Trojans étaient appréciées par des centaines d'entreprises, dont la plus célèbre était Brooke Bond Tea, mais elles étaient également fournies à Royal Mail et à des dizaines d'autres flottes dans tout le pays, et la production de fourgons utilitaires ne s'est pas arrêtée jusqu'à ce que les travaux de guerre les obligent à cesser leur production. Nous nous demandons ce que le destin a réservé à ces fourgonnettes ?

 

Paroles : Zack Stiling
Photographie : Collection Stiling

 

Publié:
mercredi décembre 11th, 2024
Alistair Hacking
16 Décembre 2024, 01:15
The Croydon RK series ran from December, 1922, to January, 1927. so the registration numbers allocated to the vans in the picture seem likely to have been issued in about 1925—also the open cab design had surely been superseded by doors with glass windows before 1928.
Lire la suite
Frazer Sloan
17 Décembre 2024, 17:01
Nineteen twenty-five is unlikely, or at least the 1925 model year is, as non-detachable solids were still the standard then.
By 1926 the detachable types were introduced and by 1927/28 the vans with wind-up windows appeared. So all considered, 1926 or early 1927 appears to be most likely.
Lire la suite
David Grimstead
15 Décembre 2024, 23:11
Trojan’s Purley Way Sales and Service depôt address first appeared in small adverts for second-hand, factory-overhauled Trojan vans in July, 1927. Shortly, it appeared in new Trojan adverts: “Sole Concessionaires in Great Britain for the Sale and Service of Trojan vehicles manufactured by LEYLAND MOTORS LTD.” Leyland built and supplied them on a royalty payment basis.

Trojan’s move out of Leyland’s Kingston factory was announced in May, 1929, and Leyland’s chairman confirmed in January, 1930, that his company had surrendered its licence and was no longer concerned in any way with production or sales of Trojans. That January at Purley Way, Basil Monk, then Trojan’s M.D., launching its new models, said that its cars had been built by Leyland at their works until 12th August, 1929.

The new models were designed by Leslie Hounsfield with pneumatic tyres, reduced ground-clearance and an engine at the back. Cost was £179 for a five-seater saloon or tourer and £390 for a commercial six-wheeler. They were built by Vicarage Road production manager Mr. A. Flowers and scheduled to reach an output of fifty cars per week by spring – both sites recruited a lot of experienced motor engineering staff from mid-1929 to mid-1930. Parts bought in or manufactured at Vicarage Road were transported to Purley Way for final assembly.

Monk, who had joined the twelve staff at Vicarage Road in 1921 after war service, became joint manager in 1923 presumably because Hounsfield concentrated on the engineering of Trojan cars by and at Leyland’s in Richmond. Monk was evidently Trojan Ltd.’s driving-force by the mid-1920s and became sole M.D. in 1926. He even took a Trojan on the 1932 R.A.C. Rally and came seventh. He was unplaced in 1933 but adverts claimed that a Trojan had crossed the Sahara Desert that year.

In his 1930 speech at the Purley depôt, he claimed that Trojan produced its first car at Vicarage Road in 1910 and retained its first 1913-registered model. The company was formally incorporated there in 1914 and it was still “head office” in the mid-1930s when the public company, Trojan Holdings, was formed to take over the original business. Trojan Holdings under Monk constructed and partly equipped the expanded Purley facilities, on Trojan Way behind the depôt buildings, by mid-October, 1936. Coincidentally, “the Trojan way” was a term used in adverts to define their product’s uniqueness.

Trojan Holdings claimed in its share issue notice that it had supplied Brooke-Bond with 325 vans per year for ten years from 1925 and it had sixteen other major fleet purchasing customers by 1936. Monk announced that the company’s future main turnover would be in commercial vehicles, nine types from 7cwt. to 20/25cwt., although it had already become a major supplier of aircraft components and would be saved by manufacturing those throughout the Second World War. In 1937, Monk bought Trojan a 20 per cent. stake in the metals business of Bean Industries.

In the 1950s, Trojan would supply 200 ice-cream vans to Walls—the last with a golden ignition key. After vehicles, its biggest output was post-war Mini-Motors for bicycles, for which they claimed sales of 19,000 in Great Britain, Europe and America by May, 1950, when they were making 1,000 per week. The part of the factory with a frontage on Purley Way was only put up for sale in 1957.

Not born there, Monk was a Croydon alderman from 1933, mayor in 1954-55, remained Trojan’s M.D. until 1952 and was its chairman until retirement in May, 1959, after 38 years with them and after Trojan had merged with James and Peter Agg's Lambretta Concessionaires. Most Lambretta staff moved to Croydon from its Kingston By-pass site.

Not forgetting designer and founder Hounsfield who, after several years in his Edwardian Clapham works engineering tools and motor repairing, was already a respected motor and general engineer by 1909, being a signatory to the report of the Institute of Automotive Engineers on engine power rating. His application for a patent for a “Two-stroke cycle internal combustion engine” followed in autumn, 1913. A perhaps telling statement from Hounsfield’s presidential address to the Institute in October, 1928, was widely re-quoted: “Integrity in business is analogous to sportsmanship in the playing fields.” After 16 years with Trojan, he resigned in 1930…

He went back to inventing, designing and making a range of test equipment and a very successful camp-bed, remaining in business until he died in 1957. In 1942, he had published some contentious ideas about a post-war car for the masses, saying it should have a built-in road tax and insurance metre (£1 per 1,000 miles), which would either sound a bell and light-up an external yellow warning lamp when speed exceeded 35 m.p.h. or at least jack-up the car’s taxation and insurance rate.
Lire la suite
Brian
15 Décembre 2024, 19:25
Trojan also built go-karts, the Trokart. This was my first kart back in the early 1960s. Mine was fitted with a Clinton A490 engine. Great fun.
Lire la suite
Richard Giffard
13 Décembre 2024, 18:21
I have a vivid childhood memory of being in a workshop with my grandfather (who was a sheet metal worker) possibly/probably at Trojans (Purley Way, Croydon) with a McLaren F1 car. It would have been in the 1970s. Would this make any sense to anyone?
Lire la suite
Frazer Sloan
15 Décembre 2024, 10:08
Yes. Trojan Ltd. under Peter Agg had a Formula One team in the 1970s.
Lire la suite
David Scott
11 Décembre 2024, 17:56
Of course, they also made the customer McLaren Can-Am cars, the M8F I think, and Brooke Bond were famous for their red Trojan vans.
Lire la suite
Frazer Sloan
11 Décembre 2024, 11:20
The Trojan engine was actually a parallel-paired-twin two-stroke, not horizontally-opposed as you've written.
The factory at Kingston-upon-Thames I think was part of the Sopwith works, by the early '20s partially redundant due to the end of the First World War.

On a side note, about regional manufacturing, the Ner-a-Car motorcycle was made a mile or two away, also in Kingston-upon-Thames. It offered another solution to not walking, and was also sponsored by a big truck/luxury car manufacturer, Sheffield-Simplex (whereas the Trojan was financed by Leyland, which made trucks and the ill-fated Leyland Eight).
Lire la suite
Larry Lewis
11 Décembre 2024, 00:28
I was at a classic car show at the Amberley Museum a few years ago and there was a Trojan tourer there. The period advertising with the car explained, by comparing its maintenance costs and the costs of buying a pair of shoes and having them re-soled every year was proof that owning a Trojan was cheaper than walking.
Lire la suite
John Davies
12 Décembre 2024, 12:06
I believe their slogan was "Can you afford to walk?", and that they were to only manufacterer to advertise in the Church Times. It's said that Parry Thomas was disgusted by the crudity of the Trojan car.
Lire la suite
Larry Lewis
19 Décembre 2024, 05:54
The one I saw at the show was pretty crude to be honest but still, it did have some appeal to me as I love two-stroke cars, no matter how peculiar.
Lire la suite
Richard Faulkner
11 Décembre 2024, 08:14
I saw the word Trojan and homed in as I have a Heinkel Trojan. Coincidentally they were made in Croydon. Does anybody else know anything else?
Lire la suite
Frazer Sloan
11 Décembre 2024, 11:26
Trojan Ltd in Croydon produced Perkins diesel and two-stroke vans/commercials, as well as assembling the Heinkel bubble car from kits, I believe. They also imported Lambretta scooters and produced a host of other products, such as the Trojan hay-bailer, the TroKart (go-kart) the Toraktor (small tractor), Trojan Mini-Motor (for attaching to a bicycle) and the Trobike (a monkey bike). The Trojan company folded, I believe, in 1966.

The Trojan Museum Trust holds more information on the company and its products.

Lire la suite

Ajoutez un commentaire...


Connectez-vous pour poster directement votre réaction

Téléchargez des images de votre réaction