- Talbot
Infobox Company
company_name = Talbot
company_
company_type = Private
foundation = 1903
defunct = 1986
location = flagicon|UKNorth Kensington ,England , UK
key_people =Charles Chetwynd-Talbot, 20th Earl of Shrewsbury
industry = Automotive
products =Automobile s
revenue =
operating_income =
net_income =
num_employees =
parent =
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slogan =
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footnotes = This company has stopped producingTalbot is an
automobile brand, whose history is one of the industry's most complex.Inception of the British Talbot
"Talbot" was originally the British brand name used to sell imported French
Clément-Bayard cars. Founded in 1903, this business venture was financed byCharles Chetwynd-Talbot, 20th Earl of Shrewsbury , who lent his name to the firm. Starting in 1905, the company branded its imported cars asClément-Talbot and began assembling French made parts at a new factory inNorth Kensington , London, selling them under the name "Talbot". Locally designed cars followed from 1906 and by 1910 50 to 60 cars a month were being made. A Talbot was the first car to cover 100 miles (160 kilometres) in an hour in 1913.Parallel Talbots in Britain and France
During
World War I , the firm manufactured ambulances. French and British operations continued in separate, parallel production and marketing processes until 1919, when British-owned but Paris-basedDarracq took over the company; Darracq-made Talbots were marketed asTalbot-Darracq s. The following year, Darracq was reorganised as part of theSunbeam-Talbot-Darracq (STD) conglomerate.In 1916, Swiss native
Georges Roesch became chief engineer, and in the early 1920's, Talbot built a number of successful models, including the "14/45 hp", or "Talbot 105", which was first built in 1926. In the 1930's, Roesch-designed Talbots enjoyed success in racing with the Fox & Nicholl team, with drivers including the Hon. Brian Lewis,Johnny Hindmarsh , and John Cobb (better known for hisland speed record attempts). They were also highly successful in the Alpine Trial. [This era is documented in great detail by Anthony Blight in his book "Georges Roesch and the Invincible Talbot" (Grenville Publishing, 1970).]The Rootes era
In 1935 STD combine collapsed and the
Rootes Group took over Clément-Talbot. For Rootes, profits were more important than engineering - the existing models were simply rebadged. The French factory was bought by Anthony Lago who usedTalbot-Lago as a brand afterwards.In Britain, Sunbeam and Talbot
marque s were combined in 1938 to formSunbeam-Talbot . Production of Sunbeam Talbot automobiles ceased duringWorld War II and resumed again in 1946, and the Talbot name was dropped in 1955. The Sunbeam name continued under the Rootes management (Rapier, Alpine and Tiger) until 1967 when control was taken over by Chrysler.The Chrysler era
After the war, only the French Talbot-Lago continued until 1960. The brand was bought by
Simca in 1958.In 1967,
Chrysler took over Rootes and merged it withSimca to formChrysler Europe . The Talbot name was not used in this era, although the Chrysler "Pentastar" logo and name (used as the marque) gradually replaced the Rootes brands as the 1970s progressed.Chrysler had just developed with Simca new Horizon/Omni line, and the Talbot Horizon was produced in
Finland atUusikaupunki factory. Other Chrysler-based Talbots were also made there,Talbot 1510 andTalbot Solara . Top-of-the line model was called Talbot Solara VIP.The Peugeot era
At the end of 1978,
Peugeot took overChrysler Europe and resurrected the Talbot name — using it to re-badge the former Simca and Rootes models. The Peugeot takeover saw the end of Chrysler Hunter production, but the Chrysler-designed 1510 (Alpine in UK), and Horizon remained in production.All former Chrysler products registered in Britain after
1 August 1979 bore the Talbot badge.The last remaining car produced by the Rootes group, the Chrysler (previously
Hillman ) Avenger, remained in production as a Talbot until the end of 1981. 1981 also saw the end of production of the Avenger-derivedTalbot Sunbeam . The entry-level model in the Talbot range from 1982 onwards would be theTalbot Samba , a three-door hatchback based on the Peugeot 104.In 1981, Peugeot began producing the
Talbot Tagora , a boxy four-door saloon marketed as aFord Granada rival. But it was not popular in either Britain or France and production ceased in 1983.At the end of 1984, the Alpine hatchback and its related Solara saloon were rebadged Minx and Rapier depending upon specification rather than body shape. The new names were inherited from the Rootes Group; Rootes had previously produced the
Hillman Minx andSunbeam Rapier . These cars were produced until1986 .At the end of 1985, Peugeot replaced the Talbot Horizon with the
Peugeot 309 . Peugeot had originally planned to sell the car as the Talbot Arizona but had now changed its plans and was now intent on phasing out the Talbot marque. Production of the Horizon continued inSpain andFinland until 1987.During 1986 all passenger cars were discontinued, although the
Talbot Express panel van continued in production until 1992 when the entire Talbot brand was axed.Resurrection
As of 2008, PSA is considering re-introducing Talbot to the market, targeting low-budget buyers, as Renault did with its
Dacia Logan . Initial cars could be models produced in China such as Talbot versions of theCitroën Elysée and of thePeugeot 206 . [http://www.autocar.co.uk/News/NewsArticle/AllCars/234778/.]Cars built by Talbot (1979-1986)
*
Talbot Sunbeam
*Talbot Samba
*Talbot Avenger
*Talbot Horizon
*Talbot Alpine
*Talbot Solara
*Talbot Tagora
*Talbot Minx
*Talbot RapierTalbot in Formula One
Talbot had two brief spells in Formula One. The 4.5-litre, six-cylinder Talbot-Lago T26 was eligible for F1 competition post-war, and many examples, both factory and private, appeared in the first two years of the F1 World Championship, 1950 and 1951. Talbots came fourth and fifth in the inaugural World Championship race, the
1950 British Grand Prix , piloted byYves Giraud-Cabantous andLouis Rosier respectively. The move to two-litre F2 regulations for 1952 effectively ended Talbot's F1 spell as a manufacturer.There was a brief participation in Formula One in 1981-1982 by associating with
Ligier and using its Matra connection to secure a Matra engine for them, and although the cars were known as Ligier-Matras the team was using the Talbot brand and sponsorship. This lasted two years and was moderately successful,Jacques Laffite coming fourth in the 1981 championship.References
External links
* [http://www.stdregister.org.uk/ The Sunbeam Talbot Darracq Register] , additional details on the history of Talbot
* [http://www.simcatalbotclub.org/ Simca Club UK, caters for all Talbot vehicles 1951-1986.]
* [http://www.talbot-sunbeam.de/index_english.html Chrysler Simca Talbot Sunbeam website]
* [http://www.talbotownersclub.co.uk/ Talbot Owners' Club, caters for Talbot Cars from 1903 up the last Roesch designed cars in 1937]
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