• Year of manufacture 
    1928
  • Car type 
    Convertible / Roadster
  • Reference number 
    13762
  • Drive 
    RHD
  • Condition 
    Used
  • Location
    United Kingdom
  • Exterior colour 
    Beige

Description

  • Fresh total restoration by specialists R.C. Moss
  • Semi-team car specification, striking blue coachwork
  • Wartime history in Africa and epic tours from Zambia to South Africa
  • Prior very long-term ownership and concours-winning restoration
  • Accompanying report by marque authority Dr Clare Hay

This Bentley 4 ½ Litre has very recently completed a comprehensive restoration with leading specialists R.C. Moss – renewed in semi-team car specification and presented for new ownership in outstanding condition.  

Chassis XR3326 was delivered new to the order of H.C. Turner of Batley, Yorkshire, a businessman affiliated with Anglo-Scottish Textiles. With Vanden Plas sports four-seater coachwork, she was one of six Bentleys owned by Turner, and registered UA 4906. 

After a series of private owners including a Royal Navy Lieutenant, adventure awaited, as the Bentley was shipped out to Africa. As chronicled by former owner Dr. Frank Hanford, she was involved in a pre-war attempt to drive from Cape Town to Nairobi and then possibly to Cairo, and was a well-known sight in Lusaka during the war. 

XR3326 was refurbished locally in the mid-fifties by Colin Nightingale, an engineer with the Mufulira Copper Mine. A heroic long-range journey to Cape Town followed, mainly over dirt roads with owner, wife, and three children aboard. Across some 2,300 miles it must have been quite the holiday and a test of family solidarity if there ever was one. 

Acquired by Hanford in 1967, she was again rebuilt, and in 1974 the epic journey from (now independent) Zambia to South Africa repeated, running to Durban and the sea to board the steamship S.A. Vaal which finally returned the Bentley to England. “It was a drive I shall always remember…if flashing lights and thumbs up signs are anything to go by, we gave pleasure to hundreds of others.”

Back in England, UA 4906 was sold to David Wickens in the late 70s and skilfully restored by Roger Cook, including new coachwork as a sporting four-seater. She won the Best Vintage Bentley Award at the 1979 BDC Kensington Gardens concours, before entering very long-term private ownership, and remaining essentially unchanged for forty years.

As noted in the accompanying Clare Hay report, this Bentley retains her original engine carburettors, steering column, and rear axle. The front axle and chassis are period factory replacements, with works carried out and recorded in Bentley service records. A “C” type gearbox is currently fitted.

Over the last two years and under devoted new ownership, UA 4906 was treated to the lavish restoration at R.C. Moss, with all the related and very substantial invoices on file. Every mechanical component was overhauled, the body reskinned in alloy and Rexine where appropriate, and new paint and trim executed to the highest standards.

Once again an object of total beauty, this handsome vintage Bentley is ready to enjoy for another generation – with her intrepid history of very long range touring, she will thrill any fortunate new owner on new adventures at home and abroad.