Carriage Driving? Bentley? Surely, for any owner of, or enthusiast for Bentleys or Rolls-Royces, or indeed many of the other marques able to trace their lineage back to the dawn of motoring, the link is an obvious one. Whilst many of the early motor-cars evolved from the bicycle industry - Riley springs to mind others developed, the social historians would have it, as ‘horseless carriages’. Certainly, the cyclecar derivatives owe much to their utilitarian and plebeian background and many of the companies concerned were financially as flimsy as their products were physically. One may have the pleasure of watching a Star or a Royal Enfield heroically battling from London to Brighton on the first Sunday in November, but otherwise the name survives as a memory, no longer as a manufacturer. Motor Cars, as the Bentley driver thinks of them, were in the early years a more substantial proposition
and after the infant motor industry had grown to become a robust and vociferous toddler, many companies produced chassis for sale without bodywork, while many erstwhile makers of carriages for horse-drawn use were willing to apply their skills to the needs of the new R.A.C. horse-power. Bentley were such a vendor of naked chassis only, until the Standard Steel saloons of the era after the Second World War and many of the body-builders of this (pre-anabolic steroid) era had their background in the carriage trade. In passing, one may note the irony that “coachbuilt” is often regarded as a synonym for “quality” when so many coachbuilders failed to appreciate the different stresses induced by rear-wheel propulsion instead of anterior traction. Many problems with bodies resulted and it might be argued that not until Weymann devised a lightweight, flexible body did the motor car come of age.
With this in mind, it is natural for the Bentley or Royce enthusiast to wish to pay homage to our horse-drawn heritage. To enjoy a day in beautiful parkland in the shadow of Windsor Castle with enthusiasts for both types of horse-power, equine and fiscal, was too good a prospect to pass up.
On the day, with car and children washed, polished and generally made of respectable appearance (Windsor Great Park is a Royal park, do not let us forget), we set off with picnic, cameras and binoculars. We had to forget something it wouldn’t be a proper day out with nothing left to chance, would it? So in the spirit of adventure for which my family is known, we placed the maps securely under the hamper in the boot and forgot all about them. The paperwork for admission to the event we misplaced entirely, though the dog may know more than he’s letting on. In the event, we need not have worried (not that we did, until we met the custodian of the gate) as we found as so often before that arrival in a Proper Motor Car opens doors, or in this case, the gate. There was a problem, however: unbeknown to us, there was also a Classic Car show in the park that day which way to direct us? We were able to persuade the Custodian who I must say was unfailingly polite that despite all appearances we were not so ostentatious as to wish to make an exhibition either of ourselves or of our car and thus were directed to the area reserved for the Bentley Drivers Club. Here we were greeted by Mr. Carpenter, to whom we are very grateful for his organisational efforts, which extended even to providing programmes. He was also happy to share his (insiders’) knowledge of the Driving events and of where to obtain ice-cream. As R12 isn’t allowed in air-conditioning systems any more and my Scottish blood inhibits my use of the cheque-book to change the compressor, our ‘T’ isn’t chilly enough to prevent it from melting en route, which makes the children look untidy and feel sticky.
The Bentleys already parked we were amongst the last to arrive formed a remarkable selection from those which wear the winged-B badge. We saw a line of Vintage models, 3-litre, 4,5 and six-and-a-half, Derby and Crewe cars right through to a Continental R. A later arrival was to be an R-type Continental the owner of which assured me that he uses it for extensive continental touring, which I find cheering. He has even had bonnet louvers added, following experiences in slow-moving traffic near Madrid in summer. Even the greatest enthusiast for complete, just-as-it-left-the works originality must applaud the continued use of a Grand Tourer for the purpose for which it was intended. There is clearly a difference between changes to allow continued use and custom-car butchery, which may result in diminished utility, however much joy it may give to its’ owner.
The alternative, or original horse-power on show was also varied: a fiercely competitive Driving competition around the long course which covers a large area of the park, with a range of tight obstacles with names and themes: one had butterflies decorating the wooden fences which formed a sort of maze, while another, denser obstruction appeared to be centred around a newly-constructed old coach. Perhaps to simulate a Georgian traffic-jam. Less frenetic (but undoubtedly equally hotly-contested) driving tests took place in an enclosed ring. The former, for the most part, use lightweight carriages which bear comparison with hill-climb or desert-racing ‘specials’ from the internal combustion world, with welded tube frames, minimal or absent body-work and, to my surprise, disc brakes. The crew I did not learn the correct terminology had a driver who worked with great concentration with reins, whip and voice, while the other member of the team (presumably the inheritor of the role of travelling footman, though not of his clothing) performed gymnastics worthy of the side-car passenger in motor-cycle races. The nature of the obstacles was to require tight, precise turns, difficult enough with a pair of horses alongside each other: for the tandem pairs in-line it appeared impossible that they should clear some of the turns. We had great admiration for the drivers (and the horses) particularly when we saw one tandem carriage team go awry in a ‘maze’ and have to extricate themselves with reversing and doubling-back. Points must have been lost for failure to negotiate the course, but should have been added for verve and style! One minor complaint for the spectator (or photographer) was that, while the obstacles were close to the viewing area, the combination of the density of the obstacle itself (some were quite open, others a close-packed mass of woodwork) and the sponsors’ advertisements made the performance within difficult to assess. It is to be regretted that overt advertising must play a part in these activities: it jars unpleasantly, seeming out of keeping with events of this type. The clothing for the competitors was clearly practical for this athletic pursuit but bore no relation to the top-hats and tail-coats of coachmen of yore, neither was there any evidence of wigs or hair-powder under the safety helmets.