1924 Bentley 3 Litre
Red Label Speed Model-
Year of manufacture1924
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Car typeConvertible / Roadster
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DriveRHD
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ConditionUsed
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Interior colourGreen
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Interior typeLeather
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Number of doors4
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Number of seats2
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Location
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Exterior colourGreen
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GearboxManual
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Drivetrain2wd
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Fuel typePetrol
Description
•Extensive ownership history from new
•Vanden Plas-style four-seater tourer
•Driven by actor Douglas Fairbanks Jnr in Mister Drake’s Duck
•Presented in extremely original specification
With a rich continuous history that includes a stint in India during the 1920s and a cameo role on the big screen in the 50’s, this Bentley 3 Litre Red Label is a very attractive example of this popular British vintageant.
The service records for short chassis number 488 show that it was sold new to Major EA Fitzgerald of Mayfair, London and bodied by Weyman as a saloon, and that it returned to the factory in July 1924 to have twin SU carburettors fitted.
By 1929, the Bentley was clearly in India because its records include a list of parts that were to be sent to Karrier Motors Ltd in Bombay. During that same year, it was sold to RE Allen, an RAF officer whose address was given first as ‘c/o Karrier Motors’ and then as ‘c/o RAF Club, Piccadilly’.
The Bentley returned to the UK and was once again registered here in May 1931. Having started life as a Weymann saloon, it was then fitted with a Vanden Plas-style four-seater tourer body.
The logbooks record a series of owners through the 1930s, and in May 1939 the Bentley was acquired by David Southwell of St Margarets, on the south-west fringes of London. The logbook includes a stamp dated 13 September 1939 from the Petroleum Department, which had been set up in the immediate aftermath of the outbreak of war.
The next owner is listed as being Linwood Mertens, who bought the Bentley in May 1944. By the end of that decade, it had passed to the owner of an aeronautical engineering firm whose son later said that the Bentley was in a ‘very shabby state’.
Having been rebuilt, the car appeared in the 1951 film Mister Drake’s Duck, being driven by leading actor Douglas Fairbanks Jnr. During the 1960s, the Bentley was bought jointly by brothers Stephen and James Lee, who had it rebuilt by HJK Townshend at Elmdown Vintage Automobiles at the then-considerable cost of £3166.
The Lees later sold the Bentley to an enthusiast who stopped James while he was driving it down Grantham High Street and immediately offered him £7000. Subsequent owners included Paul Weldon and Kenneth Tams during the 1970s, and in 1980 it was taken on a Bentley Drivers Club tour to Le Mans. In 2001, it was treated to a full mechanical rebuild, including an engine overhaul, by Clive Oliver.
This very handsome and much-loved Bentley sporting 3 Litre is now being offered for sale in extremely original specification, and it exudes the sort of charm for which these early cars are rightly renowned.
