Post
by SteveM2 » Fri Feb 24, 2012 8:36 pm
It's great to see a Tourer found in the US for a change -- lately the trend had been toward US Tourers lost. Dirk's find is not the Mark Perlmutter car, which I last saw in the Boston, Massachusetts area in the early 1990's. At the time this car was cream and red with original brown interior, though the body had been black when a previous owner Derek Durst owned it. We have lost contact with Mr. Perlmutter and don't know what happened to this car.
My father kept in touch with another Massachusetts Tourer owner, Sue Mix, for years, but he heard that her car was destroyed in a restoration shop fire a few years ago. He came to hear about this when he came across the hood and side screens for sale at Hershey. I don't have a record of the chassis number of this car, but the UK number plate was CXC 311G.
Dad's Tourer is alive and well following extensive restoration of the alloy body panels a few years ago and partial mechanical re-rebuild last year thanks to help from Dirk and many others.
I'm wondering whether Dirk's car could have been owned by a Capt. Joe Kirby of Ocean Springs, Mississippi in 1970. Dad's Tourer file turns out to include letters going back to 1970 when he bought our Tourer and had it shipped to the US. It appears that Dad somehow made contact with Capt. Kirby, and first learned of RSR from him. I gather that Kirby's car was for sale, so maybe Dad responded to an advertisement. The file includes a letter back from T. L. J. Bentley whom Dad contacted at Kirby's suggestion.
It's interesting to see what was known about Tourers at the time: Mr Bentley wrote, "Definite information on the '47 Twelve Tourer is unavailable, because the model was never catalogued, announced or reviewed: but the fact appears to be that the model was specially produced for an overseas market and a number were supplied to Rover agents in this country. It is believed that the total production was 200." He goes on to say that subscription to the Register was 1.00 gbp with option to have the magazine sent by airmail for 17s 6d!
--Steve Manwell