2013 Amelia Island Concours d'Elegance-3

1911 – 1914 Vauxhall Prince Henry

Originally built to compete in the 1910 Prince Henry Trophy, a German trial designed to discover the worldโ€™s best all-round touring car, the C-10 3-liter Vauxhall has since been acknowledged as Britainโ€™s, if not the worldโ€™s, first true sports car.

Laurence Pomeroy, Vauxhallโ€™s Chief Engineer, entered three C-10s in the 1910 event, each with tuned versions of the companyโ€™s 3054-cc side-valve engine. The cars were driven by Vauxhallโ€™s MD, Percy Kidner, and co-directors, AJ Hancock and Rudolf Selz, all of whom finished the 1230-mile event, but alas without collecting any awards. However, due to the carsโ€™ speed and durability, a legend had been created and later the same year a road version, known as the โ€œPrince Henry Typeโ€ was shown to the press.

The Autocar noted that the new car was, โ€œโ€ฆa particularly fast, light car for road work,โ€ with Vauxhall guaranteeing that the Prince Henry could achieve โ€œmore than 90 mphโ€ when fitted with a single-seat body.

The 1910 car photographed below has been owned by Vauxhall Motors since 1946 and is thought to be a pre-production example, one of only nine surviving cars in the world. It is fitted with the earlier 3-liter, 20-hp engine (later cars had 4-liter, 25-hp units), a lightweight chassis and low front axle. EI 641 was originally registered in Sligo, Ireland.

Technical Data:

Color: Red/silver

Interior color: Cream

Engine Capacity: 3054-cc

Top Speed: 65mph (90mph in competition trim)

0-60mph: n/a

Fuel Consumption: 25 mpg