Back to photostream

PEERLESS - FN 5284 1915 Peerless TC 4 4-Ton Open Back LorryRegistration no. FN 5284Chassis no. 621Engine no. 419

With British manufacturers struggling to meet demand for motor lorries

for war service, in 1914 the British Government contracted with export

agents Gaston, Williams & Wigmore to supply American chassis to

be fitted with bodies in England. Prominent among these makes was

Peerless of Cleveland, Ohio, a firm that had started life in Victorian

times making mangles before turning to cycle manufacture and then, in

1900, entering the car market with de Dion-engined voiturettes. Within

a few years, Peerless had become one of America’s most prestigious

manufacturers, ranking alongside Packard and Pierce-Arrow. Trucks

of 3-ton, 4-ton and 5-ton capacity were added to the product line in

1911 and found favour with the US Army.

Between 1915-18 the British Government bought a total of 12,000

Peerless truck chassis, which were imported via Liverpool, then

inspected and made “ready for service” at a Gaston, Williams &

Wigmore repair facility at Islington, North London.

After the war ended, the American made arrangements for the

60,000 or so trucks that they had in Europe to be sold. Many

were sent to the Government repair depot at Slough. In 1920 the

Government Surplus Disposal Board sold the Slough site and all the

vehicles – including those still in France, Egypt, Turkey, India and

Mesopotamia – for over £7 million to a group of investors headed by

Sir Percival Perry and Noel Mobbs, who continuing rebuilding and

selling reconditioned lorries before converting the site into the Slough

Trading Estate.

FWD and Peerless established independent companies on the

estate, and after war service this 4-ton truck, which was built in

Cleveland in 1915 and shipped to Europe in 1916, was extensively

rebuilt in 1921 by the Peerless Trading Company at Slough. It has

a 6.76-litre bi-block T-head engine driving the massive cast iron

rear wheels through a four speed and reverse gearbox and side

chains. From Slough, the Peerless was acquired by C & G Yeoman

of Canterbury, Kent, who were nationalised in 1948, becoming

part of the East Kent Group of the South Eastern Division of British

Road Services.

The old Peerless remained in BRS service until 1956, when it was

auctioned off. Ten years later, Michael Banfield acquired the Peerless

as a chassis for £30 from J.T. Evans’ scrapyard at Wiggington, near

Tring, and subjected it to a typically painstaking restoration, its body

being built and painted “in-house” at Nunhead Lane as a replica of

a Peerless operated in the 1920s by W. G. Mersh of Albion Street,

Rotherhithe. Typical of the standard of restoration, the impeccably

lined-out apple green paintwork represents some 30 coats of paint

and varnish, and the lettering is in real gold leaf. Running well, the

Peerless has been officially dated as 1915 by the Veteran Car Club.

£20,000 - 25,000

€25,000 - 31,000

11,758 views
14 faves
3 comments
Uploaded on June 13, 2014
Taken on June 13, 2014