
Triumph Motor Company
The Triumph Motor Company had its origins in 1885 when Siegfried Bettmann (1863-1951) and Moritz (Maurice) Schulte started producing Triumph bicycles in Coventry, England.
History
From bicycles, the company branched out into making Triumph motor cycles in 1902 and in 1921, Bettmann was persuaded by his general manager Claude Holbrook (1886-1979) to acquire the assets of the Dawson Car Company and started producing a 1.4 litre model called the Triumph 10/20. A number of other models were made up until the 1929 Great Depression when production almost stopped entirely.
In the 1930s the company changed its name to the Triumph Motor Company. Donald Healey became the companys Experimental Manager in 1934.
The Triumph bicycles and motorcycles were sold off 1936, the latter to become Triumph Motorcycles. Healey purchased an Alfa 2.3 and developed an Alfa/Triumph called the Triumph Dolomite.
In July 1939, the Triumph Motor Company factory, equipment and goodwill were offered for sale. T.W. Ward purchased the company and placed Healey in charge as general manager, but the effects of World War II again stopped the production of cars.
After the war, what was left of the Triumph Motor Company and the Triumph brand name was bought by Standard Motor Company. Subsequent cars were called Standard Triumph, then the Standard part of the name was dropped.
In December 1960 the company merged with Leyland Motors Ltd.
In the 1960s and 1970s, Triumph sold a succession of Michelotti-styled saloons and sports cars, including the advanced Dolomite Sprint, which, in 1973, already had a 16-valve four cylinder engine. But many Triumphs of this era were unreliable, including the 2.5 PI with its fuel injection problems, and the poor quality of the TR7 and TR8 sports cars, which killed the marque in the United States.
The last Triumph model was the Acclaim which was launched in 1981 in a joint venture with Japanese company Honda. The Triumph name disappeared in 1984, when the Acclaim was replaced by the Rover 200, which was also simply a rebadged version of Honda's Civic/Ballade model.
The trademark is currently owned by BMW, acquired when it bought the Rover Group in 1994. When it sold Rover, it kept the Triumph marque. The Phoenix Consortium, which bought Rover, tried to buy the Triumph brand, but BMW refused, saying that if Phoenix insisted, it would break the deal.
| Model Name | Engine | Year |
|---|---|---|
| Triumph 10/20 | 1393 cc inline 4 | (1923Ð1925) |
| Triumph 13/35 | 1872 cc inline 4 | (1927Ð1927) |
| Triumph 15/50 | 2169 cc inline 4 | (1926Ð1930) |
| Triumph Super 7 | 832 cc inline 4 | (1927-1932) |
| Triumph Super 8 | 832 cc inline 4 | (1930) |
| Triumph 12-6 Scorpion | 1203 cc inline 6 | (1931-1933) |
| Triumph Super 9 | 1018 cc inline 4 | (1932) |
| Triumph Ten | 1122 cc inline 4 | (1933-1934) |
| Triumph Southern Cross | 1018/1122 cc inline 4 | (1932-1934) |
| Triumph Gloria Four | 1087/1232 cc inline 4 | (1934-1937) |
| Triumph Gloria Six | 1476/1991 cc inline 6 | (1934Ð1937) |
| Triumph Gloria Southern Cross | 1232/1991 cc inline 4/6 | (1934-1937) |
| Triumph Gloria 14 | 1496/1767 cc inline 4 | (1937-1938) |
| Triumph Dolomite 8 | 1990 cc inline 8 | (1934-1935) |
| Triumph Dolomite Vitesse 14 | 1767/1991 cc inline 4/6 | (1937-1938) |
| Triumph Dolomite 14/60 | 1767/1991 cc inline 4/6 | (1937-1939) |
| Triumph Dolomite Roadster | 1767/1991 cc inline 4/6 | (1937-1939) |
| Triumph 12 | 1496 cc inline 4 | (1939Ð1940) |
| Model Name | Engine | Year |
|---|---|---|
| Triumph 1800 Saloon | 1776 cc inline 4 | (1946Ð1949) |
| Triumph 1800 Tourer | 1776 cc inline 4 | (1946Ð1948) |
| Triumph 2000 Saloon | 2088 cc inline 4 | (1949Ð1951) |
| Triumph 2000 Tourer | 2088 cc inline 4 | (1948Ð1949) |
| Triumph Renown | 208 cc inline 4 | (1949Ð1952) |
| Triumph Mayflower | 1247 cc inline 4 | (1949Ð1953) |
| Triumph TR1 / 20TS | 208 cc inline 4 | (1950) |
| Triumph TR2 | 1991 cc inline 4 | (1953Ð1955) |
| Triumph TR3 | 1991 cc inline 4 | (1956Ð1958) |
| Triumph TR3A | 1991 cc inline 4 | (1958Ð1962) |
| Triumph TR3B | 2138 cc inline 4 | (1962) |
| Triumph Italia | 1991 cc inline 4 | (1959Ð1963) |
| Triumph TR4 | 2138 cc inline 4 | (1961Ð1965) |
| Triumph TR4A | 2138 cc inline 4 | (1965Ð1967) |
| Triumph TR5 | 2498 cc inline 6 | (1967Ð1969) |
| Triumph TR250 | 2498 cc inline 6 | (1967Ð1969) |
| Triumph 2-litre GT | (1967Ð1971) | |
| Triumph Dove GTR4 | 2138 cc inline 4 | |
| Triumph TR6 | 2498 cc inline 6 | (1969Ð1976) |
| Triumph TR7 | 1998 cc inline 4 | (1974-1981) |
| Triumph TR8 | 3528 cc V8 | (1979-1981) |
| Triumph Spitfire I | 1147 cc inline 4 | (1962Ð1965) |
| Triumph Spitfire II | 1147 cc inline 4 | (1965Ð1967) |
| Triumph Spitfire III | 1296 cc inline 4 | (1967Ð1970) |
| Triumph Spitfire IV | 1296 cc inline 4 | (1970Ð1974) |
| Triumph Spitfire 1500 | 1493 cc inline 4 | (1974Ð1980) |
| Triumph GT6 | 1998 cc inline 6 | (1966Ð1973) |
| Triumph Herald 948 | 948 cc inline 4 | (1959Ð1964) |
| Triumph Herald 1200 | 1147 cc inline 4 | (1961Ð1970) |
| Triumph Herald 12/50 | 1147 cc inline 4 | 1963-1967 |
| Triumph Herald 13/60 | 1296 cc inline 4 | (1967Ð1971) |
| Triumph Vitesse 1600 | 1596 cc inline 6 | (1962Ð1966) |
| Triumph Vitesse 2 litre | 1998 cc inline 6 | (1966Ð1971) |
| Triumph Sports 6 (US version of Vitesse) | (1962Ð1963) | |
| Triumph 1300 | 1296 cc inline 4 | (1965Ð1970) |
| Triumph 1500 | 1493 cc inline 4 | (1970Ð1973) |
| Triumph Stag | 2997 cc V8 | (1971Ð1977) |
| Triumph Toledo | 1296 cc inline 4 | (1970Ð1978) |
| Triumph Dolomite 1850 | 1850 cc inline 4 | (1972Ð1981) |
| Triumph Dolomite Sprint | 1998 cc inline 4 | (1973Ð1981) |
| Triumph 2000 | 1998 cc inline 6 | (1963Ð1975) |
| Triumph 2.5 PI | 2498 cc inline 6 | (1968Ð1977) |
| Triumph Acclaim | 1335 cc inline 4 | (1981Ð1983) |
| Vale Special | (1932Ð1936) very low built two-seater based on Super 8 and Gloria |
| Swallow Doretti | (1954Ð1955) |
| Amphicar | |
| Bond Equipe GT | (1964Ð1967) |
| Fairthorpe Cars | |
| The Lotus Seven Series 2 had many Standard Triumph parts. |