| Standard Factories:
The following are descriptions of the main sites used
by the Standard Motor Company in the UK.
Factories Abroad
are here
Conduit Yard, rear of Smithford St. Coventry
Premises taken by Reginald Maudsley in 1902. £5000 forwarded by Sir John Woolfe Barry
allowed Maudseley to purchase and examine several current one and two cylinder cars on
this site, before embarking on his own manufacturing ideas. The company had no name at
this time.
Much Park St. Coventry
The company was founded here in 1903 with £400 worth of machine tools and was outgrown by
1905. Alex Craig built the first Standard here in the summer of 1903 but it was never
offered for sale. The production run of two three and four cylinder cars was carried out
here in 1904. No known car from this era survives.The City Law Courts now occupy the site.
Bishopsgate Green Coventry
The company moved to these premises, now a Coventry City Council depot (CCS) in 1905.
These buildings were used solely for coachbuilding after the opening of the nearby Cash's
Lane site.
Cash's Lane Coventry
These were formerly the premises of Pridmore and Co. an old elastic weaving firm in a road
named after a similar weaving firm. J&J Cash, which still survives elsewhere in
Coventry. Standard took on the works in 1908 for chassis assembley and later it was used
to build BE12 figther aircraft. After transfer of aircraft production to Canley, the works
was used as a machine shop for engine parts. It is now occupied by Kwikfit.
Widdrington Rd. Coventry
Strictly speaking this plant was in Aldbourne Rd, just off Widdrington Rd and was where a
repair and servicing department was set up in the early twenties. By 1931 the premises
were taken over by Riley next door.
The Brewery, Leamington
One of four workshops in Leamington used by the company during the first world war for the
filling of ammunition shells. The work was mostly carried out by women, as the majority of
able men were using the ammunition in the trenches of Northern France. Does anyone know
where the three other sites were?
Canley, Coventry
The first buildings on this huge greenfield site were established in 1915 with "Ivy
Cottage" and a small clutch of assembly buildings. First used for wartime fighter
production, the site was rapidly expanded during the twenties and thirties, with moving
body assembley established in 1922. The bulk of Standards were built here as were most
postwar Triumphs until 1981. A further huge assembley area was built for the Herald ,
known as the "Rocket range" and opened in 1960. It was later used as Unipart's
spares warehouse. After the Leyland takeover, this became the headquarters of the
BLMC combine. Sadly, the whole site was demolished in 1995. The adjoining Fletchamstead
South works, built on the original works golf club as a shadow factory just off Tile Hill
Lane, was used initially to construct "Oxford" traning aircraft but used
latterly used as drawing offices and the experimental department. The whole area came into
the hands of "Arlington Properties". the British Aerospace subsidiary
during BA's reign. The objective was to maximise profits by demolishing the
factories and converting the land into commercial and retail units. So it all
dissappeared to be replaced by Sainsburys and other new retail outlets. Surviving
buildings off the A45 were used by Rover until 1997 when they too were demolished.
Only the Standard-Triumph Sports and Social Club, off Tile Hill Lane, built in 1932,
still survives, cut off from the remainder of the site by a new road.
Postscript 1
The author was saddened to visit the area in the
summer of 1996. Ivy Cottage has gone, along with all traces of this huge site. As far as
the eye can see, there are desolate piles of building rubble, crossed by a series of new
roads going nowhere. A sad end to such a historic part of British motoring history.
Postscript 2
When Ivy Cottage was demolished, the mosaic floor in
the entrace hall, in the form of the 20's Standard Radiator badge was lifted (It had been
covered by fitted carpet for some years). It is now mounted in a frame and is hung in the
upstairs bar at the Gaydon Heritage Motoring Centre. The only part of Ivy Cottage to
survive
Banner Lane Coventry
Wartime shadow factory built by Standard starting in 1939. Bristol Aero engine manufacture
was centered here during the war.and over 20,000 were produced. From 1946, the site was
used to produce "Little Grey" Ferguson tractors. Eventually however,
Standard sold out their tractor building interests to the Massey Harris company of Canada
in 1958. Much expanded subsequently, Tractor Production continues on the site to this day
and hopefully long into the future. The money raised enabled Standard to buy Fisher and
Ludlow, Beans and to finance the Herald plant at Canley.
Ansty. Coventry
Another Standard Shadow works and used for the final assembly of Mosquito aircraft
from 1943. The Standard built Mosquito fighter bombers were built at Canley and then
transported to Ansty. Over 1000 entered service with the RAF and other airforces. Do any
survive?
Additional reporting supplied by Robin Penrice
Fisher and Ludlow, Tile Hill
Purpose built by Fisher and Ludlow in 1938 to build the Flying 8 bodyshells for delivery
to Canley. Also used to build Vanguard and 8/10 bodies in the post war period. Standard
purchased Fisher and Ludlow in 1958 with the proceeds of the Ferguson sale and the Site
was used to build Herald body parts. At one point Standard planned to construct a moving
conveyor along the railway that connects the site to Canley two miles away, but planning
permission was never achieved. The site is now the spares department for Peugeot.
Beans Industries, Tipton
Was a large foundry which had grown from the original
Bean Car company, (far more profitable than Morris) which if memory serves correct,
went bust following take over by the Hadfield company who modified an extremely good
product out of its existing market during the recession of the twenties and thirties.
There is a well established Car Club for Beans, with quite a few left running
and I think they were mass produced in some quite remarkable ways. Club is at
Wendy Cooksey, Springfield, 14 Albert Road, Wokingham, Berkshire RG40-2AL. Standards
bought it with some of the MHF money and continued to use it as a foundry for Standard
Triumph Product castings. A La William Haig "comment" regarding 14 pints a day,
the Union at Tipton had negotiated an agreement with the company for 18 pints a day for
each foundryman and the apprentices first job was to go to the pub in the morning at
7-30 to collect the first issue. At the end of the week he popped along with the money to
pay. It was always mild beer, a midland favourite, which with an SG of about 2.8 you could
drink all day without getting pissed, indeed stopping for a pint with the lads before you
went home for tea! Summer temperatures in the foundry could get as high as 130f, in the
winter of course it was a bloody marvelous place to work. It was a favourite with STI
students and apprentices, for the above reason, but the union was always a little funny
about allowing some of their precious allocation of the amber nectar down transient
throats, as we were only there for a maximum of three months work experience, which, over
the period, was around 1500 pints of their best Ansells Mild to their way of
thinking!! Whilst the factory is still there I don't know what ot does now. Jonathon Wood
has just written an excellent book on it called The Bean published by Shire.
Mulliners, Birmingham
I would be pleased to hear from anyone with information about this factory. Please send me
an email. Phil Homer
Speke No1 Plant, Liverpool
Built in the sixties to bring additional employment
to Merseyside, this was lastly used for TR7 production, until closed by a
disastrous
strike in the late 70's, causing car building to be abandoned. Now used by a Transport
company (must be a pretty big one)I would be pleased to hear from anyone with information
about this factory. Please send me an email. Phil Homer
Postscript added June 2005:
This factory is used for several
purposes. It is a massive structure and still standing. It is mainly
a retail park with different tenants like B&Q. There are some
smaller suppliers and retail outlets. You can rent as much or as
little space as you wish. Yes even as a trade union supporter myself
I feel that the strike was madcap. I was only 15 at the time and i
aspired to owning TR7 when I grew up. Of course by the time I could
afford to buy a car the model was ancient history.
The strike from Aug 77 to April 78 was about manning levels - who
did what job and when. How times have changed of course!!!! What
with the Thatcher revolution. Everyone has to get used to multi
tasking, flexible insecure labour markets or you can take a walk
down the road. Conditions then were a lot better now ill bet and I
think a well paying employer (by all accounts) was foolishly
sacrificed.
Having said that look at the way the car industry has gone. We are
no longer a volume car producer (british owned that is) and maybe
Triumph Speke would have closed down sooner rather than later due to
globalisation.
best wishes
Nigel Smith
I am aware that there are other cars
and information that could be added to this site to make it more comprehensive, so if you
have material and photographs, please let me know. Please send me, Phil Homer, a
message at: Phil Homer
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