We haven't had mum-mobiles yet....
My father was a naval officer; so was my mother (he a regular for 36 years, she a wartime Wren officer): they met during WW2 in Orkney. He was born in 1906, she in 1917, so I can go back further than some of you.
He told me his first car was a GN cyclecar; then several Fords in the 1930s. After the war he got a pre-war Wolseley while putting his name down on the long waiting list for an Austin. The A40 Devon came through in 1951: happy childhood memories, before safety was invented, of standing on the front seat with my head through the suroof, even with the car in motion. It was a good car, and distinguished from the Ford that he might have had by its 4-speed gearbox, independent front suspension, electric windscreen wipers and an ability to start in the morning.
He used to buy new and keep for some time. The A40 was followed by an A55 Farina, then an MG 1100 (which he generously gave to me for my 21st birthday in 1969 when it was 3 years old). Then an Austin 1300GT and finally, loyally supporting his local garage which had given up BL, a Chrysler Avenger. Once a Hillman always a Hillman - this was typically underpowered and stodgy. But he was in his seventies by then and at least its boot swallowed both his bag of golf clubs and the trolley.
My mum's first car, just after the war, was a pre-war Fiat 500, which she loved, then a 1947 Hillman Minx, which she didn't. To save money she then had a 3-wheel AC Petite (as awful as it sounds), then a Vespa scooter (which worked well and never went wrong).
After that, my grandmother subbed her and she got a Morris 1100, on which she taught me to drive (my father, having been rescued from HMS Courageous in 1939, was less worried than she thought he ought to be if I did somethng wrong).
Then she had a Triumph 1300 (supremely comfortable), an Allegro (less so) and several Fiestas in succession, which she was very happy with until giving up driving. She never quite got over her surprise at how much the Fiestas cost after 1970s inflation, remembering that in her 1930s youth the equivalent small Ford (the 8) cost £100.
Edited by Avant on 18/04/2020 at 15:42
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