Hooper (coachbuilder)

51°30′17″N 0°16′48″W / 51.504695°N 0.2798804°W / 51.504695; -0.2798804

Post-phaeton
Windsor Greys in perfect step
made for Queen Victoria, 1842
Drags of the Four-in-Hand Club
Mr Holroyd, Lord Lonsdale and the Duke of Sutherland (sharing driving) on the box of the drag in the foreground
Tourer 1920
Rolls-Royce 40/50 Silver Ghost chassis
Limousine 1929
on a Rolls-Royce Phantom I chassis
A saloon in their postwar Empress style
on Daimler's smallest 2½-litre chassis
Touring limousine, 7 seater 1953
for The Prince Regent of Iraq.
This car is 19 ft long and 6 ft 5 inches wide and was built on a Rolls-Royce Phantom IV chassis.

Hooper & Co. was a British coachbuilding business for many years based in Westminster London. From 1805 to 1959 it was a notably successful maker, to special order, of luxury carriages, both horse-drawn and motor-powered.

Founding

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The company was founded as Adams and Hooper[note 1] in 1805 and held a royal warrant from 1830, building elegant horse-drawn carriages, supplying them to King William IV,[note 2] Queen Victoria and King Edward VII. They moved into motor bodies at the turn of the 20th century. The first royal car, a Hooper body on a Daimler chassis, was delivered to Sandringham on 28 March 1900.[1] It was painted chocolate brown with red lines; a livery which continued for the royal family well into the twentieth century.

Market

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Hooper specialized in the very top tier of the market, building the most luxurious bodies possible without consideration of cost. The models were not sporty, as the company specialized in stately, elegant carriages. Coach customers included the Marquis of Londonderry and the Marquis of Crewe .[2] Car body customers included the Kings of Spain, Norway, Portugal and Siam, the Shah of Persia and the Negus of Abyssinia. In 1911, Hooper built an extension onto their Kings Road works, due to increased customer demand. Their London showroom, opened 1896 (possibly earlier), was on the corner of St James' Street and Bennet Street. It included a vehicle lift so that coaches and cars could be displayed at first floor. The alterations are likely to have been overseen by Francis Hooper, architect, son of the then owner.

Aircraft

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During World War I, Hooper turned to aircraft manufacture, eventually producing Sopwith Camels at the rate of three a day. With peace, the firm returned to coachbuilding. They weathered the Great Depression of the 1930s far better than most coachbuilders, even building a second factory in Acton, West London. In the peak year of 1936, more than 300 bodies were built.

With re-armament in the late 1930s, another factory was opened in Park Royal, London, on Western Avenue, next to the Callard & Bowser confectionery works, and during World War II, they built fuselage sections for De Havilland Mosquito bombers, Airspeed Oxfords and gliders.

Expansion

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In 1938 Hooper acquired rivals Barker who were in receivership. Barker retained its separate identity.

Hooper was acquired by The Daimler Company in 1940,[3] becoming part of the BSA industrial group.

Lady Docker's cars

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Post war, Hooper became famous for making a series of outrageously bodied large Daimlers for Lady Docker, the wife of the BSA chairman. This season's extravagant new Docker Daimler was exhibited each October at the London Motor Show.

Docker Daimlers
  • 1951 Stardust or The Golden Daimler, limousine[4]
  • 1952 Blue Clover, 5 seater saloon[5]
  • 1953 Silver Flash, 2 seater fixed head coupé[6]
  • 1954 Star Dust, limousine
  • 1955 Golden Zebra, 2 door, 4 seater fixed head coupé

One Daimler, possibly the Golden Zebra. Was acquired by Salford City Council as a Mayoral car, it had two(!, and was in use from approx 1966. It had a gold plated radiator top and gold plated door handles. Whilst the paintwork was kept in glittering condition the rust came from behind and left gaping holes in the mudguards and cills causing much amusement. The Reg number at the time as I recall, was RJ 1.

Alloy structure

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As the era of building cars on separate chassis was ending, and with it the market for complete bodies, Hooper completed the transition from wood-framed bodywork to bodies built over a skeleton of cast or extruded aluminium.[7] Cast alloy was first used about 1933 in door and windscreen pillars where the 'fight' between roof and scuttle structures tended to cause cracking.

150th anniversary

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"Hoopers the coachbuilders, whose Rolls-Royce seven-seater limousine, at £9,185, is the most expensive car at the Motor Show[when?] ("We're not ashamed of it; it's a magnificent example of a chauffeur-driven car. Even the hinged rear quarter-windows are electrically operated — most unusual"[citation needed]), are celebrating their 150th anniversary in a dignified way. The atmosphere in their St James's street showrooms is halfway between that of a fine tailor's and the waiting-room of a distinguished physician.

The quiet, unruffled representatives of the firm (now in the B.S.A. group) at the Hooper stand at Earls Court give a reassuring impression of solid continuity. All their car bodies are still handmade. "After a car is sold we're still very interested in it. King Feisal II—that was a Silver Cloud wasn't it? The Crown Prince of Iraq, he had a Bentley. The Shah of Persia, a Rolls-Royce. The King of Afghanistan, he had an open tourer Daimler." The roof of a car for The Ameer of Bahawalpur was entirely of Perspex. There was also the Dockers' famous golden car — a wonderful piece of craftsmanship." [8]

End of production

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Rolls-Royce, and their subsidiary, Bentley, became the main supplier of rolling chassis for the coachbuilding trade.[9] Hooper's management decided to end production of coachbuilt bodies after Rolls-Royce's plans to cease series production of separate-chassis cars and use unibody construction exclusively became known to them in 1958. Their showroom at St. James's Street closed down at the end of September that year.[10] Production at Daimler, Hooper's in-group chassis supplier, fell to 110 Daimler SP250 sports cars in 1959, with no saloons or limousines being built that year.[11]

Hooper exhibited their coachbuilt cars for the last time at the 1959 Earls Court Motor Show.[10] Four cars were on the stand: a close-coupled saloon based on a SP250 chassis,[9] two Rolls-Royces, and a Bentley S2.[10] In addition to being the only Hooper-bodied S2, and being built on BC1AR, the first S2 Continental chassis, the Bentley had the last bespoke body Hooper built, number 10294. It was finished in October 1959.[10]

At the end of 1959, BSA transferred the remaining business to a new entity, Hooper (Motor Services) Ltd, which acted as a sales and service company.[10] In 1970 the company became a Rolls-Royce distributor.

Revival

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In 1988 used Rolls-Royces and special rates for servicing them were offered by "authorised Rolls-Royce and Bentley dealers" Hooper & Co (Coachbuilders) Limited of Clabon Works, Kimberley Road, London NW 7SH[12] and in addition they offered these special coachbuilt motor cars:

  • Rolls-Royce Silver Spirit two-door (Genève 1985)
  • Bentley Turbo R two-door (Genève 1986)
  • Empress II (Genève 1988)[13]
  • Emperor state limousine (Genève 1990)

A brief news item at the end of 1990 reported they would restore classic cars[14] but the advertising did not continue.

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Archives

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  • Science Museum, South Kensington, London - Hooper (Coachbuilders) & Co. Ltd. – original design drawings and motor car construction records c1910-59
  • Denver Public Library - items from Hooper and Company records, 1947-1979 - received from Rippey's Veteran Car Museum (Denver, Colo.) including the collection of Osmond Rivers, Hooper designer 1930s to 1950s and Managing Director

Notes

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Footnotes
  1. ^ City of Westminster Archives Centre: Hooper and Co Records: ref 738. Administrative history: Hooper & Co, coachmakers, began trading in 1846 at 28 Haymarket. However, the company can be traced back to 1807 when J and G Adams opened a coachmaking business at 57 Haymarket. In 1811, George Adams moved to 28 Haymarket, joined later by George Hooper in 1833. In 1846, the company was renamed Hooper & Co. In 1867 the company moved their premises to Victoria Street, then, to 54 St James's Street in 1897. Hooper and Co. closed in 1959, by which time they were a subsidiary company of the Birmingham Small Arms Company.
  2. ^ Imperial College & Science Museum Libraries: Science Museum Library Swindon: ref MS 228. Includes articles, company advertisements, particulars of various state coaches, a 1956 report on Hoopers for the board of BSA, and numerous photos. The photos are of special coaches and motor cars, royal visits to Hoopers in the 1930s, the Hooper factory in the second world war and workshops in the 1950s. Includes also a lacquered coloured line drawing of a char-a-banc designed by Prince Consort and built by Hoopers in 1845
Citations
  1. ^ Douglas-Scott-Montagu & Burgess-Wise 1995, p. 68.
  2. ^ Richards & Ravilious 2012, p. [page needed]
  3. ^ Bennett 2010, p. 155.
  4. ^ Douglas-Scott-Montagu & Burgess-Wise 1995, p. 259.
  5. ^ Douglas-Scott-Montagu & Burgess-Wise 1995, p. 262.
  6. ^ Douglas-Scott-Montagu & Burgess-Wise 1995, pp. 264–265.
  7. ^ Douglas-Scott-Montagu & Burgess-Wise 1995, p. 271.
  8. ^ "Table Talk by Pendennis", The Observer October 20, 1957, page 14
  9. ^ a b Long 2008, p. 82.
  10. ^ a b c d e Bennett 2010, p. 156.
  11. ^ Douglas-Scott-Montagu & Burgess-Wise 1995, pp. 275–276.
  12. ^ Hooper. The Times Friday, 6 January 1989; pg. 26; Issue 63284
  13. ^ Hooper & Co. The Times, Friday, 13 May 1988; pg. 39; Issue 63080
  14. ^ Drivealongamax. The Times, Friday, 14 December 1990; pg. 29; Issue 63889

References

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  • Bennett, Martin (2010) [1998]. Bentley Continental: Corniche & Azure 1951-2002. Dorchester, UK: Veloce Publishing. ISBN 978-1-84584-210-9.
  • Douglas-Scott-Montagu, Edward John Barrington & Burgess-Wise, David (1995). Daimler Century: The full history of Britain's oldest car maker. Sparkford, Nr Yeovil, Somerset, UK: Patrick Stephens. ISBN 1 85260 494 8.
  • Long, Brian (2008). "Five Hooper's close-coupled saloon". Daimler V8 S.P. 250 (2nd ed.). Veloce Publishing. pp. 80–87. ISBN 1-9047-8877-7. Retrieved 1 December 2014.
  • Richards, James Maude; Ravilious, Eric (2012) [1938]. High Street (A Facsimile ed.). Harry N. Abrams. ISBN 9781851776894.
  • Vickers, Robert (1994). Vickers, Robert (ed.). "Coachbuilding in London". London's Industrial Archaeology No.5. Greater London Industrial Archaeology Society.
  • Walker, Nick (1997). A-Z of British Coachbuilders. Bay View Books. ISBN 978-1-870979-93-1.
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