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MG’s Abingdon Factory
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MG’s Abingdon Factory

SKU V5115P
£16.99
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MG’s Abingdon Factory
Product Details
Publisher: Veloce
ISBN: 9781787111158

By Brian Moylan

Paperback or eBook • 20.5x19cm • 96 pages • 164 pictures • Flowing format eBook

eBook available from: Glassboxx Apple Books Amazon Google Play Barnes & Noble 

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Back in print! The MG workforce was a mixture of skilled people coming from depressed areas of the UK, together with the few MG car workers who moved from Oxford to Abingdon. With over 160 photos depicting factory life, car building and the war effort, this is a fascinating story.

Back in print after a long absence!

This book is a pictorial study of the workers who built the legendary MG motor car. With over 160 period photos depicting factory life, car building and the war effort, this is a fascinating story.

The MG, from being a Morris car modified in the corner of a backstreet workshop, evolved into a sports car in its own right. The demand for this fiery little car caused the production to move to four different and progressively larger sites in and around Oxford, finally moving out of the city ten miles away to Abingdon, and a factory that might have been custom built for it. This factory was on the site of a tannery that had expanded to over twice its size, catering for the 1914-18 wartime demand for its leather products. The coming of peace caused it to deflate back to its previous level of production, leaving empty the rows of large hangars that had housed the wartime production effort. It was to this factory that Cecil Kimber, who had resigned his position as Managing Director of Morris Garages, brought his brain-child that he called the MG. Twin rows of eighteen inch (45cm) high raised tracks were built. The chassis was brought from the workshop where it had been made and, after the assembling of its suspension, it was mounted on to the track to start its journey from one stage to the next, finally emerging as a complete motor car. The car would then be tested on the factory s own test track before being deemed fit for its eagerly awaiting new owner. The men who took part in the assembling of the car were but a part of the organisation that went toward the finished article. Managers, Office staff, Storemen, Inspectors, Painters, Test drivers, Labourers and cleaners were all members of the great team, all had their part to play. As they worked together so did they play together, ground was obtained for a football pitch, room was found in the town for a snooker club and a place where the men could join for a well earned drink This later developed into a modern Sports Club with football, hockey and cricket pitches. The risk of fire in the factory was always present and to cope with this the factory had its own fire engine and a full time fireman augmented when needed by a volunteer crew of factory workers, who trained in their spare time. MG Abingdon‘s famous racing reputation gained in the 1930s made it the obvious place to site BMCs Competition department with its maiden venture the 1955 Le Mans 24 hour race.

The many original pictures in this book chronicle every aspect of the factory, from its opening amidst great euphoria in 1930 to its closing amidst great recriminations in 1980.

  • Includes many photos taken by employees and kept in private collections
  • Reveals the many facets of everyday factory life
  • Illustrates the willingness of the employees to adapt to change
  • The little known work carried out during the war
  • Illustrates the way that the factory governed the mens’ working and leisure lives
  • Captions reveal an intimate knowledge of the pictures’ subjects
  • An important record of MG history
  • Reveals MGs initiative in designing testing facilties to conform to EU & USA regulations
  • Tells stories of the generations of families working together in the factory
  • Will prove to many people that Abingdon could have still been in the forefront of sport car manufacture
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