Het wereldwijde magazine en verkoopplatform voor liefhebbers van klassieke auto’s, door liefhebbers.
Het wereldwijde magazine en verkoopplatform voor liefhebbers van klassieke auto’s, door liefhebbers.
Persbericht
Op 5 juli 2025 komt de autogeschiedenis tot leven tijdens de St Margarets Fair in Moor Mead Park, Twickenham (TW1 1JS). Deze bijzondere gelegenheid viert 125 jaar sinds het ontstaan van Twickenham’s auto-industrie, met als hoogtepunt een historische reünie van ten minste vier—en hopelijk alle vijf—overgebleven “New Orleans” Voiturettes uit 1900, die ooit in Twickenham werden gebouwd.
De merknaam “New Orleans” is tegenwoordig misschien minder bekend, maar speelde een pioniersrol in de vroege Britse automobielgeschiedenis. De auto's werden in 1900 ontwikkeld door de Perfecta Motor Company in de Orleans Works in Twickenham, en waren verfijnde voiturettes in continentale stijl die technische ambitie en vooruitstrevendheid toonden. Ze vormen een essentieel onderdeel van het rijke autoverleden van de regio.
Maar dit evenement draait om meer dan één merk. Het is een viering van Twickenham’s opmerkelijke 25-jarige bijdrage aan de automobielindustrie, die in de jaren ’50 en ’60 nieuw leven werd ingeblazen met de productie van gespecialiseerde en competitieve voertuigen. Ook deze Twickenham-racewagens zullen aanwezig zijn, als bewijs van de voortdurende innovatiekracht van de regio.
Een bijzonder moment tijdens het evenement is de erkenning van Eel Pie Island—een excentriek eilandje in de Theems—als mogelijke échte geboorteplaats van de Britse auto-industrie, dankzij vroege technische activiteiten die daar plaatsvonden.
Dit is een eenmalige kans om deze zeldzame voertuigen zij aan zij te zien, voor het eerst in meer dan een eeuw. Het evenement loopt van 12:00 tot 18:00 uur, en maakt deel uit van de levendige St Margarets Fair, wat zorgt voor een feestelijke en gezinsvriendelijke sfeer.
The Orleans Works was a contributor to the Transvaal War Fund on several occasions in 1900, but does seem to have been subject to a number of claims in 1900-1901 by unhappy plaintiffs who took them to court disputing work done or unjustified pricing and won damages. Although, the company did win a case against the Western Bicycle Co of Chiswick.
F. A. Rodewald was an important contributor to the New Orleans’ story. He was a well-to-do international businessman, sportsman, steam and sail yachtsman, hunter and dog-breeder who lived in Heathfield House, Wimbledon Common.
From its bicycle, motor and general engineering beginnings, Burford, Van Toll and Co. of Twickenham became serious motor car constructors whose New Orleans voiturette, No.27, took part in the Automobile 1000-mile Motor Car Tour in May 1900. Supporting it in a 4-h.p. Daimler car was Mr. John Van Toll, who stated he was an accomplished driver who had been associated with Daimler for eleven years by then. The 3-h.p. New Orleans car was £130 and some reports declared it “a Belgian design made entirely in England”, without mentioning any connection to “Ateliers Vivinus”, on whose cars it is generally agreed they were based. The full range of “ingenious” New Orleans motor cars and voiturettes was displayed at the Stanley Show in December 1900. It is quite possible that they purchased chassis tubing from the Perfecta Seamless Steel Tube Co. of Birmingham.
In March 1901, Burford, Van Toll and Co. was taken over to form the New Orleans Motor Company Limited. This new non-public company was registered with a capital of £20,000 in £10 shares, “to acquire the business of engineers and motor-car manufacturers, now carried on by Burford, Van Toll and Co., to adopt an agreement with F. A. Rodewald and the Société Anonyme les Ateliers Vivinus, and to carry on the business of carriers, electrical, oil, and other motor engineers and contractors, suppliers, of electric and other power, &c.” The directors were F. A. Rodewald, Count J. de Liederkerke, Count M. de Bousies, and A. Vivinus. It was registered at Holly Place, Twickenham. F. A. Rodewald subsequently drove New Orleans and Orleans cars in competition, including in the 1905 Delhi-Bombay Road race driving a 12-h.p. car.
New Orleans production moved into bigger premises in April 1901, where Charles Erard was the works manager and the foreman was Ernest Coxhead. The H.M. Inspector of Factories fined them for operating with a dangerous unfenced gas-engine flywheel in November 1901. Moving from air-cooled to water-cooled engines, they offered 3- and 6-h.p. cars in June 1901, on sale as far north as Aberdeen and in October their 7-h.p. car was awarded a silver medal in the Scottish motor-car trial. 1902 saw a 14-h.p., although a 3.5-h.p. New Orleans dog-cart could still be bought for £80 in 1904 – all still supplied from Twickenham. By 1908, cars were named just “Orleans” and had engines with up to six cylinders and 34-h.p.
An Orleans Cycle company was still in production in King Street and Staines Road, Twickenham in 1905, under control of Mr. W. F. Tamplin, who had moved from his 1896 shop at 59 London-road. H. G. Burford went on to join Milnes-Daimler (Mercedes) before joining Humber as general manager in 1909.
John Van Toll perhaps wanted out of the business in 1901 as he was in court at the time, sued for failure to supply two-speed Planet cycle gearboxes to a Mr. Field. Van Toll was born in Arnhem in 1861, moved to England in 1894 as a representative of the Daimler Engineering Company, worked with F. R. Simms on Daimler-engined boats and was manager of Daimler’s Coventry factory for a while. Moving to Twickenham, he helped start the New Orleans car company bought-out in 1901. Van Toll’s wife, Florence, later said he went to Paris with the Hon. Evelyn Ellis to bring back to England the latter’s new Panhard, first car in England and his obituary said he was the driver of the Daimler in which King Edward VII was first driven. His health declined from 1909 and he died in May 1913, aged just 52. Lord Montagu was represented at his funeral. By coincidence, Ateliers Vivinus, established in spring 1899, was bankrupt in 1913.