1934 Bentley
3½-Litre
Park Ward Saloon B26BN
£ 39500
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Body
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Sedan
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Transmission
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Manual
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Exterior Color
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Red
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Upholstery
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Leather
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VIN
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BLA 213
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A good, sound car, perhaps needing some cosmetic improvement, but in sound, correct condition, and has been used & enjoyed recently by the last owner. The deep red paintwork is suffering from age, but the structure of the coachwork is fine, the doors closing nicely & fitting well. The interior is grey leather with fresh grey carpets and the headlining is in good order. Overall, the car is very useable & looks impressive with its array of lamps and horns, and is fitted with a ‘backward leaning’ flying B mascot. The history file includes various correspondence, old MoT certificates, a green 1960s logbook, an original handbook as well as a modern reproduction. Mechanically good following a great deal that has been spent on the car over the last fifty years, totalling £135,000, all fully documented with invoices. This includes major works, such as engine, rear axle & radiator overhauls, & much more besides, details of which are available. In addition to this, the car is fitted with a high ratio back axle, which very much helps with cruising on long-distance touring. All of this puts the car puts the car in good stead for the future!
Chassis No. B26BN Reg No. BLA 213
Snippets: Land, Steel & Steam Rollers
John “Jock” Wightman (1902/76) took delivery of B26BN at Maltby House, Louth which the Wightman family had owned since the turn of the century. His mother, Hannah Louise Wightman was also a motorist with GSY76, a 1933 Rolls-Royce Hooper Sports Saloon being registered to her. Between the two generations we know of at least 8 Bentley & 3 Rolls-Royce cars that the family owned. The Wightman family also owned The Lodge at Carlton & Thathwell Hall in Louth. Hannah Wightman was the daughter of George Milnthorpe, his 1st wife died in 1915 aged 73 and he remarried in 1916 to a young lady who was only 28 when they wed! When George died in 1923 his estate was worth some £323,000 & all his motorcars where specifically left to Hannah and only £500 to his young widow………..
In 1941 B26BN Was sold to Charles Batten of Ductile Steels Ltd. He had joined the company in 1924 and within 6 years was made a partner of the business. In the early 1930s Ductile Steels were importing over 6,000 tons of steel annually and in view of the new import tariffs of 33% he purchased 2 cold rolling mills and constructed a “coffin-pot” furnace – this ensured that they produced the steel that the company needed. Charles became Deputy Chairman and Joint Managing Director to the Ductile Steel group of companies.
Before Charles died he sold B26BN to Harvey Neal, a director of Trent Valley Paint Varnish Co of Nottingham who supplied “all your spring cleaning requirements”. Members of the Neal family included Brewers, councilmen and engineers.
In 1967 the Bentley was discovered by Frederick Albert Coley (1913/2003) whose career path included being a garage proprietor in Old Hill, an employee of Fisher & Ludlow (in the 1930s the firm produced car bodies for Standard Motor Co & after WWII for Rover & Jaguar). In the early 1960s before finding B26BN Fred became a clergyman! His interest in all things mechanical started from an early age as his father was the transport manager of a firm with a fleet of steam traction engines - this became another hobby of Fred’s and there are newspaper reports of him conducting a service from the footplate of his 1902 McLaren traction engine "Apollo"!
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