Octane Magazine

FIT FOR THE Queen

It seems fitting that Daimler, by Royal Appointment since 1900 entitled to the legend ‘Motor Car Manufacturers to HM the King’, once made the biggest British car in production. Such was the claim in The Autocar in January 1948, though that was in a road test of the DE27, which, as the magazine admitted, was within a ‘few inches in wheelbase and overall length’ of the straight-eight-powered Daimler DE36 – which made the DE27 the second biggest British car in production at the time. If not quite fit for the King, it was perfect for Princess Elizabeth. And the 1947 DE27 you see here was Her Royal Highness’s first State limousine.

The young Princess had grown up with the Royal Daimlers not only of her father but also those of the generations above him, and in 1944, when she turned 18, he presented her with a 21/2-litre Daimler DB18 saloon. It wore the registration number JGY 280, which she transferred to every private car she ran thereafter. Princess Elizabeth gained a Military Provisional Driving Licence while serving in the Auxiliary Technical Service during 1945, and drove her DB18 regularly, even having it shipped to Malta when she was staying there.

But as the Princess’s life became increasingly public, and her engagements more and

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Octane Magazine

Octane Magazine2 min read
Spring Sale
IT’S SPRING ON the Kent coast; time to peel off the Austin-Healey and Triumph Trophy’s dust covers, wheel them outside into the sunshine, and check the tyres ready for their first run of the new classic season. This year there is one difference: I ha
Octane Magazine1 min read
The Ownership Prospect
‘I’ve always had a passion for engineering – I remember watching my dad strip, repair and tune everything from early Astons to rally-prepping a 2.7RS Lightweight. Then a friend ordered a very early 12C from McLaren Birmingham and I was lucky to join
Octane Magazine2 min read
F1, Round Two
McLAREN MAY HAVE been swathed in some negative headlines and unwelcome speculation for quite a few years now, but it’s easy to forget that there was a time not so long ago when the company was not only unimpeachable but untouchable. Its utter dominan

Related Books & Audiobooks