Marque: Morris - Company History & Models - Cars By Brand

Morris
Morris (started by William Morris - Viscount Nuffield) was an extremely successful firm during the late 1930s. Its well-liked products included the affordable Morris Eight (unusually for a small car of the time, featuring hydraulic brakes), plus the mid sized Ten and Twelve, also the much larger but similarly styled Fourteen, Sixteen and Eighteen. The War temporarily finished car building for public…
Morris Minor / 1000

PRICE: Saloon: £100 - £3000; Other models: £200 - £7000+
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- Produced:
MM: 1948-52 Series II 1952-56; 1000 1956-71 - Bodywork:
Two-door saloon; four-door saloon estate (‘Traveller’) drophead van & pick-up - Engine:
MM: Sidevalve, in-line four-cylinder 918cc 28bhp; Series II: Overhead valve in-line four-cylinder 803cc 30bhp; 1000:1956-62: Overhead valve in-line four-cylinder 948cc 37bhp; 1962-71: Overhead valve in-line four-cylinder 1098cc 48bhp - 0-60 mph:
Series II 50+ sec; 1000 1956-62 30 sec; 1000 1962-71 24 sec - Top Speed:
MM 60+ mph; Series II 62 mph; 1000 1956-62 75+ mph; 1000 1962-71 80 mph - MPG:
35-44
The Minor is one of the most user-friendly classic cars you can find; economical, reliable, easy to work on and with a superb spares back-up. Replacing the Eight Series E in 1948, and the brainchild of (Sir) Alec Issigonis, the new car was thoroughly modern in concept, featuring all-new bodywork, torsion bar front suspension and rack and pinion steering. Originally powered by the Morris Eight type sidevalve engine, the Minor received the Austin A30’s overhead valve 803cc unit in 1952, following the formation of the British Motor Corporation (BMC). The Minor ‘grew up’ in 1956, with the adoption of BMC’s 948cc A-Series engine; it was now was faster and more rewarding to drive. More power came in 1962, when the 48bhp 1098cc version of the A-Series motor was installed. An all time great and so classless.
Morris J4 ‘59-‘74

Fast Facts
- Produced:
1959-1974 - Engine:
1622cc - 0-60 mph:
20 secs - Top Speed:
79mph - MPG:
30mpg
In the pre-Transit era of British panel vans the Morris J4 was considered the state of the art LCV. It’s forward control styling gave a load capacity of 160 cuft while the load space represented some 60 per cent of the van’s overall length. And it became a familiar sight in red for the GPO or as a Black Maria a la the cover of Abbey Road. The pick-up variant was offered for the building market; in the 1960s they were always seen on motorway construction sites. The payload was increased to 10cwt in 1961 with the J4-M10 and this was replaced by the 14cwt 180J4 and the 20cwt 200J4 in 1968. Known as an ‘Austin- Morris’ from 1969 onwards, the J4’s forward control styling became increasingly less popular in the 1970s because it offered minimal crash protection and servicing could be time-consuming. So it wasreplaced in 1974 by the more conventional, trusty, Sherpa that carried on well into the 1990s as the Leyland DAF 200/400.