Morris














The Morris Motor Company of Cowley, Oxford was a British manufacturer of cars and lorries. After the incorporation of the company into larger corporations, the Morris name remained in use as a marque until 1984. Motorcycles were also produced from 1902 to 1905.
General
1910 The Morris Motor Company was started when bicycle manufacturer William Morris turned his attention to car manufacturing.
1912 Company founded as W. R. M. Motors in Oxford.
1913 A factory was opened in Cowley, Oxford after a London car dealer placed an order for 400 cars
1913 393 cars were manufactured.
c1920 They acquired also the business of Hollick and Pratt, body-makers, Coventry, and the works of the Osberton Radiator Co of Oxford.
1923 They had a policy of buying up suppliers with, for example, Hotchkiss in Coventry becoming the Morris Engines branch in 1923. Leonard Lord was working for Hotchkiss and became part of Morris at this time
In 1924 the firm took over the factory previously occupied by E. G. Wrigley and Co in Birmingham, and there commenced the manufacture of Morris Ton Trucks and Commercial Vehicles. Frank Woollard, the assistant MD of Wrigley moved to Morris at Oxford.
1924 The head of the Morris sales agency in Oxford, Cecil Kimber, started building sporting versions of Morris cars, called MG after the agency, Morris Garages. The MG factory was in Abingdon, Oxfordshire.
In 1924, they overtook Ford to become the UK's biggest car manufacturer, holding a 51% share of the home market.
1926 Became a public company.
1927 See Aberconway for information on the company and its history.
In 1932 Morris appointed Leonard Lord as Managing Director and he swept through the works, updating the production methods and introducing a proper moving assembly line.
1936 Morris and Lord fell out, and Lord left in 1936 — threatening to "take Cowley apart brick by brick".
1936 William Morris sold Morris Commercial Cars Limited, his commercial vehicle enterprise, to Morris Motors.
1938 William Morris became Viscount Nuffield, and the same year he merged the Morris Motor Company (incorporating Wolseley) and MG with newly acquired Riley to form a new company: the Nuffield Organisation.
WWII Produced over 3,000 Tiger Moths.
1950 Cowley plant capable of producing a total of 150,000 Morris and Wolseley cars.
Cars
- See Morris: Cars
Lorries
- See Morris: Lorries
Buses
- See Morris: Buses
Vans
- See Morris: Vans
Motorcycles
Tractors
Sources of Information
- [1] Wikipedia