WO Bentley


Walter Owen Bentley (1888-1971) was about as racy as his cars. The Bentley Drivers’ Club sanctifies him in a way he scarcely needs or perhaps deserves. As I wrote in The Sunday Times of 11 September 1988, he had been a flop at running his company, and Royce’s opinion of him was perhaps near the mark.

WO Bentley’s engineering was empirical rather than theoretical. A cornerstone of his reputation in 1920 was having made an indifferent and unreliable French aero engine into one of the most powerful used by the Allies in the First World War. He was not a mathematician, and the Bentley 3 Litre was the first time he had ever planned anything wholly original. He never claimed to be a designer. He had been “responsible for the design” of cars, which means he told formally qualified technicians what he wanted, and let them draw it up. Perceptive journalist and author Michael Frostick, who recognized humbug when he saw it, compared him with Enzo Ferrari, a motivator who knew what sort of car people wanted and led the team to achieve it.

Anthony Bird was more picturesque: “In the first years of the century racing car engines were composed of air and optimism encased in the least possible thickness of metal; designers were concerned primarily with making very large engines of the least possible weight, rather than with high specific output.” WO’s style was to make engines big rather than efficient. High compression ratios and fast crankshafts were too difficult.

WO made his engines light, with aluminium and magnesium alloy for the sump and camshaft housing, but was so concerned with strength and reliability elsewhere that, as Laurence Pomeroy, technical editor of The Motor and son of the distinguished Vauxhall designer pointed out, “…some items were grotesquely heavy such as the cam-action filler caps… yet the main chassis members came so far short of full capability (they were only 4in (10.16cm) deep) that they had to be buttressed by cantilevers. Racing Bentleys would have pedals and levers drilled for lightness, saving ounces, while pounds of metal were lavished at all four corners.”

Nowadays WO would have qualified for a knighthood. He managed an MBE, one rung below the OBE the Bentley Drivers award him. The secretive honours scrutiny committee of the 1930s was sensitive over private lives and while three marriages was OK (WO’s first wife Leonie Gore, whom he married on New Year’s Day 1914, died in the 1919 influenza epidemic) his second finished in divorce.

On 7 April 1920 WO aged 32 married 25 year old Audrey Morten Chester Hutchinson (Poppy) at Holy Trinity, Brompton. Racing driver Clive Gallop was best man and the couple moved to 7 Pelham Crescent, South Kensington. The marriage lasted until June 20, 1932 when Audrey sued for divorce. A decree nisi was granted on 12 December, becoming absolute on 15 June 1933, and WO moved to 54 Queen’s Gate, South Kensington.

On 31 January 1934 at he age of 45 WO married Margaret Roberts Hutton, 41, at Kensington Register Office. As Malcolm Bobbitt recounts, in his insightful WO Bentley The Man Behind the Marque, Breedon Books, 2003, The Times carried details of Mrs Hutton’s divorce, on the grounds of her frequent adultery with WO, and claims by her husband of £5,000 in damages. Supposing that the creator of the Bentley was wealthy turned out to be a mistake, however his brother was a partner in a good law firm, and the damages were reduced to £1,000.

Divorce proceedings at the time involved correspondence, detailing the couple’s residence at the Grosvenor Hotel, Victoria in May and June 1932, testimony that the BDC described as mere tittle tattle. WO Bentley died aged 83 on 13 August 1971. In 1989 Mrs Margaret Bentley died aged 98, having survived WO by 18 years. Rolls-Royce nurtured the Bentley as The Silent Sports Car for 60 years after 1934. German engineering recreated it as a Pan-European masterpiece of the 21st century.

Montagu Award



Rob Halloway of Mercedes-Benz, Lord Montagu of Beaulieu, Eric Dymock

I could not have put it better myself. Clive Jacobs’s introduction to the award at the Guild of Motoring Writers’ dinner in the Royal Automobile Club, Pall Mall, was gracious.

“There was a very large entry for this year’s Mercedes-Benz Award for the Montagu of Beaulieu Trophy. A tough task for the judges then in deciding who in 2009 made the greatest contribution to recording, in the English language, the history of motoring.

But in the end they reached an accord and the trophy will be jointly presented by Lord Montagu and Rob Halloway, Public Relations Manager of Mercedes-Benz Cars.

The winning citation says – "this book is beautifully written, well laid-out and provides a very thorough history of an important British marque that is equally attractive to both enthusiasts and passing browsers. With its company chronology and history of production models and prototypes it is also a comprehensive reference work."

That book is…”The Complete Bentley”… and the author and publisher is Eric Dymock.”

There were lots of people to thank. Clive’s reference to the book’s layout was a tribute to Andrew Barron’s design. It was good that Martin Broomer of Bentley Motors was on hand; he was encouraging throughout the book’s production. The reviewers have been generous, particularly Stuart Bladon in the Jewish Chronicle: “A brilliant production, The Complete Bentley deserves to be recognised as one of the great works of motoring history and merits a place on any keen motorist’s bookshelf, eminently worth its price of £55.”

Malcolm Tucker wrote kindly, in the Rolls-Royce Enthusiasts’ Bulletin: “Buying a book by Eric Dymock is a bit like eating a meal prepared by Gordon Ramsay, watching a film starring John Travolta or visiting The Dorchester Hotel in London; you expect something special. This does give us the whole panoply of Bentley lore.”

There were more to thank, including Richard Charlesworth, Julia Marozzi, Denis Miller-Williams and other members of the communications staff at Rolls-Royce and Bentley, Crewe. Thanks were also due to Philip Hall of the Sir Henry Royce Memorial Foundation, who was especially helpful in providing access to the photographic archives of the Foundation and the Rolls-Royce Enthusiasts’ Club. Alan Bodfish administrator of the WO Bentley Memorial Foundation and the Bentley Drivers’ Club provided many photographs. Motoring art collector Tony Clark of Burrington, Cherry Garden Lane, Wye, Ashford, Kent gave permission to use artwork items loaned from his extensive collection. More photographs came from Frank Dale and Stepsons and LAT. Michael Turner allowed us to reproduce his 1984 painting of a Bentley at Mulsanne. It was thanks to Warren Allport, formerly of Autocar and editor of Queste, who read the manuscript and made valuable amendments and corrections that The Complete Bentley is notably accurate in the detail of the specifications and descriptions. Notable Bentley book writers whose work we consulted include Malcolm Bobbitt, Jonathan Wood, Graham Robson and Richard Feast.

As with all Dove Publishing books, my thanks also went to print consultant David Bann, publishing director Mike Roberts and most of all Dove Publishing’s finance director Ruth Dymock.

At 83 His Lordship is taking time to get over an injury to his head, suffered when he fell out of a bunk on a rolling ship, sustaining an injury requiring 13 stitches. He couldn’t quite make the podium for the presentation. We are fortunate that Mercedes-Benz is so mindful of its heritage role that it can sponsor an award like this, which inevitably can feature rival makes of car.

This was our second Montagu Award. In 1997 the Guild presented it for Saab, Half a Century of Achievement.



Guild Award winners including, from sixth left Ray Hutton (Bentley International Award), Tony Dron (Rootes Gold Cup), Rhian Angharad Jones (Sir William Lyons and Phil Llewellin Awards), Ray Massey, Daily Mail (Journalist of the Year) and Eric Dymock.