That motoring icon, the Austin Seven, reaches its centenary in 2022 and to mark the occasion more than 100 survivors took to the Goodwood Motor Circuit at Revival. Icon is an over-used word in the motoring landscape, but the highly influential Seven is deserving of such acclaim.
It took conventions of larger cars of the time and scaled them down into tiny dimensions. The result was the first affordable British car for the masses. While sales began slowly – and below-target 2500 were built in the first year of production – by the time it ceased to built in 1939, around 290,000 had been built. Such volume means many survivors today and a a whole industry exists to support them.
Variants of the Seven were built in France, Japan and Germany. Indeed, BMW’s first smalll car, the Dixi, was a Seven built under licence and the coachbuilt Swallow version helped to lay the foundations for Jaguar. The Seven also provided a platform for race engineers. The first cars built by Colin Chapman and Bruce McLaren were assembled using the Austin Seven’s chassis. Given what those companies went on to, the humble Seven’s influence is still felt in today’s motor industry.
There were 35 body styles for the Seven available from the Austin factory, and countless aftermarket adaptions. See how many you can spot in our centenary celebration.
Photography by Jordan Butters
Revival 2022
Austin
Austin 7
Gallery
Goodwood Revival