EPISODE 134: ONCE UPON A TIME THERE WAS A MOTOR CAR CALLED THE LITTLE SKEOCH(also called The Skeoch Motorcycle Car)alan skeochNov. 27. 2018
REVISED OCT. 2020 (slightly)
It has now been two years since I touched base with the men rebuilding The Litle Skeoch Motor Car
in Scotland. It is a daunting task. We had planned on a visit to their workshop but sad events
got in the way…and Covid 19 makes such visits difficult today. How the world has changed.
Maybe I can get a progress report from Scotland. Meanwhile I feel this story should be part
of the Episodes (#134) just in case it gets lost.
alan
Maybe we should bring back the LITTLE SKEOCH MOTOR CAR. It was small,, cheap and simple…sort of a 4 wheel bicycle seating two people with a chain drive and small
motorcycle engine. So small that only two very slim people could ride in it since thecar was only 31 inches wide and a little over 8 feet long.Some of you may think this is some kind of joke. Wrong. In 1920, James Skeoch built his first Little Skeoch, then entered it in a Scottish auto show and sold itin ten minutes. All told less than a dozen Little Skeoch’s were built in his small factory. Ten were quickly purchased at that auto show. Price? 180 pounds…which was the cheapest car in the show. None have survived. Sadly in 1921 a fire consumed his little factory and as a result the Burnside Motor Company in Dalbeattie, Scotland, ceased to exist.Pictures of the Skeoch production line were retrieved from Skeoch family albums. Not exactly an automated factory.But the LITTLE SKEOCHS were real mini cars and seemed about to make a big splash in the booming car market of the 1920’suntil fire ended the enterprise. Everything became a blackened pile of scrap iron.James Skeoch moved on. His skills were valued. He had a long successful career and died in 1954.Not many people, by 1954, were even aware that there was such a car as the SKEOCH. Memories are short especially sincenone of the Little Skeochs survived. Gone Gone Gone.Well, not quite.POSSIBLE REBIRTH OF THE LITTLE SKEOCH
HUMPTY DUMPTY SAT ON THE WALL
HUMPTY DUMPTY HAD A GREAT FALL
ALL THE KING’S HORSES
AND ALL THE KING’S MEN
COULDN’T PUT HUMPTY TOGETHER AGAIN.
…Then along came GEORGE ALLISON and his men from Dalbeattie, Scotland…who
plan to put Humpty togehter again.
P.S. BELOW IS AN ARICLE ON THE SKEOCH MOTOR CAR WRITTEN
FOR BBC SCOTLAND NEWS , Feb. 27, 2018
Drive to rebuild ‘forgotten’ early car
By Nichola Rutherford
BBC Scotland News
When James Skeoch designed and built one of Scotland’s firstaffordable cars, he must have dreamed of huge success.
With a price-tag of just £180, the first Skeoch Utility Car was the cheapest on display at the Scottish Motor Show in 1921.
It sold within 10 minutes and a further nine were quickly snapped up by customers keen to join the automobile revolution.
But within months Skeoch’s business was in ruins. His uninsured workshop in Dalbeattie, Dumfries and Galloway, burned to the ground.
Since then the Skeoch Utility Car has been largely forgotten by all but keen historians of Scotland’s motor industry.
Now, almost 100 years later, plans are are being drawn up to recreate the so-called “cycle car” in the town where it was manufactured.
The ambitious project has been taken on by a group of mainly retired local men, known as Dalbeattie Men’s Shed.
Using some of the original parts and working from the original drawings, they hope to build a working Skeoch car in time to mark its centenary.
Motoring enthusiast Martin Shelley approached the Men’s Shed with the idea for the project after reading about the group on the BBC Scotland website last year.
The group, which meets in a workshop in Dalbeattie twice a week, was named Shed of the Year for its efforts to “help as many local people as possible”.
“Using the Dalbeattie Men’s Shed’s energy, enthusiasm and skills to recreate the car seemed like a match made in heaven,” Mr Shelley said.
He said “cycle cars” were first invented in the early 1900s and they got their name after using motorcycle engines and wheels.
They became increasingly popular after World War One, when soldiers returned home from the front line, having become used to driving.
Mr Shelley said: “After World War One, the ordinary working man was much more used to the idea of riding a motorcycle or driving a car so they knew about the technology and now they wanted to try and build their own cars.
“In the early 20s, there was a huge flowering of people making these cars. As it turned out, Skeoch in Dalbeattie were the only people in Scotland to ever attempt to make these things commercially.”
The original drawings and parts – including the radiator badge – were found in the Wishaw home of Ron Skeoch, James Skeoch’s son, after he died last year.
Mr Shelley said he hoped they could be used to capture the “spirit” of the 1920s vehicle.
“You could make a replica of the car which would pass muster, using a modern engine and a modern gear box and using modern parts. But the spirit of the car is very much based on the parts that were available in 1920,” he said.
“This project will be very like the original car and that to me is what the joy of the whole thing is.”
The granddaughter of James Skeoch, Fiona Sinclair, is also involved in the project.
She never knew her grandfather – he died in 1954 – but she hopes that her mother – Skeoch’s daughter – will get the chance to ride in one his cars.
“I think it’s going to mean a lot to my family,” she said. “It’s tragic that the fire put an end to his ambition.
“I’m actually rather hoping I can physically get to sit in the car, I’m not quite sure I could be trusted with driving it.
“It’s only got two gears apparently but I think it would be rather wonderful. What I really hope is that my mother gets the opportunity to actually sit in the car as well.”
The project is “immensely exciting”, said Geoff Allison, the secretary of the Dalbeattie Men’s Shed, which has members with engineering and mechanical skills.
“It’s engineering-rich, it’s Dalbeattie-rich, it’s community-rich, it fills so many of our requirements,” he added.
“It’s big, it’s going to be eye-catching, it’s going to be something for posterity. It’s got a lot to recommend it.”