The Wolseley Motor Company was a British automobile manufacturer founded in 1901.
After 1935 it was incorporated into larger companies but the Wolseley name remained
as an upmarket marque until 1975.
The origins of the company as an automobile brand was in about 1895-96 when 30 year
old Herbert Austin, then employed as a works manager at the Wolseley Sheep Shearing
Company, became interested in engines and automobiles. During the winter of 1895-96
he made his own version of a design by Léon Bollée that he had seen in Paris. Later
he found that another British group had bought the rights so Austin had to come up
with a design of his own. In 1897, the second Wolseley car, the Wolseley Autocar
No. 1 was revealed. It was a three wheeled design (one front, two rear) featuring
independent rear suspension, mid engine and back to back seating for two adults.
It was not successful and although advertised for sale, none were sold. The third
Wolseley car, the four wheeled Wolseley "Voiturette" followed in 1899. A further
four wheeled car was made in 1900, this time with a steering wheel instead of a
tiller. The first Wolseley cars sold to the public were based on the "Voiturette",
but production did not get under way until 1901, by which time the company had
changed hands. In that year the automobile division was spun off (with financing
from Vickers) as an independent concern in Adderley Park, Birmingham. Austin
managed the new Wolseley company for a short time before resigning to form his
own concern, the Austin Motor Company, in 1905.
Wolseley purchased the Siddeley Autocar Company, with founder John Davenport
Siddeley in charge. Siddeley (later Baron Kenilworth) took control of the merged
concern, renaming the marque Wolseley-Siddeley until his resignation in 1910. He
went on to manage the Deasy Motor Company, which became Siddeley-Deasy. This later
merged with Armstrong-Whitworth to become Armstrong Siddeley. In 1912 they were
commissioned by the Russian Count Peter P Schilovski, a lawyer and member of the
Russian royal family, to build the Schilovski Gyrocar.
The company officially became the Wolseley Motor Company in 1914. It also began
operations in Montreal and Toronto, Canada as Wolseley Motors Limited. This became
British and American Motors after World War I...