The small Rolls-Royce design that Princes coveted in the 1930's for sale

Buxton Pavilion Gardens auction, 6th October 2021

01/10/2021     General News

One of just 22 Rolls-Royce 20/25 chassis to be fitted with the highly desirable Owen Sedanca coachwork, this graceful car attracted commissions from the likes of King George V’s three sons and Prince Ali Khan, the husband of film star Rita Hayworth.

1933 Rolls Royce for sale H&H Classics Auction Buxton Pavilion Gardens 6th October

1933 Rolls-Royce 20/25 Owen Sedanca Coachwork by Gurney Nutting, Estimate £50,000 - £60,000

Damian Jones of H&H Classics says: “This is a rare opportunity to acquire one of the most sought-after pre-WW2 ‘small’ Rolls-Royces ever made. It is offered for sale with V5 Registration Document, copy RREC build records and ‘lots of invoices for servicing and some repair work’.

The London coachbuilder J. Gurney Nutting & Co Ltd’s luring of designer A.F. McNeil away from the shipbuilder Cunard was instrumental in it being appointed ‘Motor Body Builders to His Royal Highness The Prince of Wales’ during 1931.

Possessed of a fabulous sense of proportion and a real eye for detail, McNeil penned some of the 1930s most elegant coachwork for Rolls-Royce, Bentley and even Duesenberg chassis. Reputedly built to the specifications of London Rolls-Royce dealer Captain H.R. Owen, his so-called ‘Owen Sedanca’ design for the Rolls-Royce 20/25 chassis was a case in point. One of just twenty-two Rolls-Royce 20/25s to be clothed with Gurney Nutting’s highly prized Owen Sedanca coachwork, chassis GLZ61 was supplied new to Mrs G. Hamilton for touring usage.

Little is known of the Three-Position Drophead Coupe’s subsequent history before its re-emergence in Louisiana during the 1980s. Repatriated by Martin Sargeant of the renowned marque specialist Sargeants of Gourdhurst, the 20/25 has been in the current ownership since August 1994. Looked after by Martin and then his sons until the company that bore their name stopped trading, the Rolls-Royce is said to ‘run and drive very well’.

Recently recommissioned after five years’ dry storage including the fitment of a reconditioned cylinder head (new valves, springs, seals and guides etc), ‘AUV 980’ is described thus by the seller: ‘The car “scrubs up well” but would benefit from remedial renovation work.

Join us at the Buxton Pavilion Gardens for the auction of classic and collector cars on the 6th October. You can bid with us at the venue, online, by telephone or via commission.

Register to bid here.