Belsize Motors
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Established in 1901, Belsize Motors was based in Clayton,
Manchester Manchester () is a city in Greater Manchester, England. It had a population of 552,000 in 2021. It is bordered by the Cheshire Plain to the south, the Pennines to the north and east, and the neighbouring city of Salford to the west. The t ...
, England. The company was founded by Marshall & Company and took its name from their Belsize works, where they had built bicycles.


Marshall & Company

Marshall & Company of Clayton Lane, probably Manchester's first automobile manufacturer, built its first car in 1897. The cars were very similar to the French
Hurtu Hurtu was a pioneering French car made by Diligeon et Cie based in Albert, Somme from 1896 to 1930. As well as cars, the company also made sewing machines and bicycles. The company was founded in 1880 as Hurtu, Hautin et Diligeon as a maker of s ...
, itself a Benz replica, and were sold badged as Marshalls. Agencies were established in London and Dublin and the car gained a Gold Medal for efficiency at the 1899 London exhibition. A new more modern four-seat model appeared in 1901 with twin-cylinder engine made by Buchet and was the first to carry the Belsize name as the "Marshall Belsize". In 1903 the company name was changed to Belsize Motors and Engineering. In 1906 this changed again to Belsize Motors Ltd. Before the First World War they were a major player in the United Kingdom's motor industry, employing 1200 people and making up to 50 vehicles a week. A bewildering range of models were made including taxis, commercial vehicles and fire engines with engines of up to 14.5 litre capacity.


Post First World War

After the First World War they followed a single model policy at first with the 15 hp of 2798 cc but this was joined in 1921 by the Belsize-Bradshaw with a 9 hp 1294 cc V-twin engine made by Dorman and designed by
Granville Bradshaw Granville Eastwood Bradshaw OBE, AFRAeS (1887–1969) was an English engineer and inventor who designed motorcycle, auto, and aero-engines. History Bradshaw was born in Preston, Lancashire in 1887 as the son of William and Annie Bradshaw. His ...
that was partly air-cooled and partly oil-cooled. This gained a reputation for being unreliable and was dropped in 1924. It was replaced by a 1250 cc conventional 4-cylinder model, the 10/20 or RM, and a 1696 cc six the 14/30. The latter was at last an up-to-date car with overhead valves, four-wheel brakes and a four-speed gearbox, but at £415 to £650 it was expensive when compared with the opposition. It was however, too late. The company, which had been in the hands of the receiver since 1923, ceased trading in late 1925. The company also tried to build a 2496 cc, straight eight engine but this probably never got past the prototype stage although it was advertised at £1050.


Main car models

*12 hp 1728cc 2-cylinder 1901 *15/20 2860cc 4-cylinder 1904 *18/24 3940cc 3 or 3300 4-cylinder 1906 *24/30 5880 cc 6-cylinder 1906–1908 *40 hp 7774 cc 6-cylinder 1908 *60 hp 11,724 cc 6-cylinder 1908 *14/16 2543 cc 4-cylinder 1909–1913 *18/22 3000cc 6-cylinder 1910–1913 *10/12 1950cc 4-cylinder 1912–1916 *15 2800cc 4-cylinder 1919-23 (enlarged to 3100cc and known as 15/20 in 1923) *9 hp Belsize-Bradshaw 1100cc V2 cylinder 1921–1924 *14/30 1700cc 6-cylinder 1924-25 (also available with 2500cc straight 8-cylinder as the 20/40)


See also

* List of car manufacturers of the United Kingdom


References


External links

{{Automotive industry in the United Kingdom Defunct motor vehicle manufacturers of England Manufacturing companies based in Manchester Vehicle manufacturing companies established in 1897 Defunct companies based in Manchester