The Mini is as youthful as the
day that Sir Alec Issigonis first sketched its simple lines on a
restaurant table cloth. In four decades it has become an icon and is
destined to live on as one of the great legends of the world motor
industry. The modern motor car was born on 26 August 1959. On that day,
BMC (British Motor Corporation) launched the Mini. BMC had been formed
in 1952 by the merger of the Austin and Morris companies, so the Mini
was originally launched in two versions - the Austin Seven (some times
written "Se7en") and the Morris Mini-Minor. According to the
original publicity, the Austin was "The Incredible Austin
Seven" while the Morris was "Wizardry on Wheels." Alec
Issigonis (1906 - 1988, knighted in 1969) had been born in Smyrna in
present day Turkey, the son of a Bavarian mother and a Greek father who
became a nationalized Briton. After the war between Greece and Turkey
where Greece lost her possessions in Asia Minor, young Alec and his by
then widowed mother arrived in London in 1922. Here he pursued studies
of engineering and eventually began his career in the motor industry. In
1936, he joined Morris Motors at Cowley.
Under the impact of the Suez crisis in 1959 which for a brief period
brought gasoline rationing back to Britain, Leonard Lord decided that
BMC really needed a new small car. He asked Issigonis to design this and
gave him largely a free hand only stipulating that it must use the
existing A-series engine.

And so Issigonis, with a small team of assistants, began the design
of the Mini. His vision was of the smallest possible car that would
accommodate four adults and some luggage. Having established the basic
dimensions for this package, he then looked at how the engine could be
fitted into the car, which he saw as a box, little more than 10 feet by
4 feet by 4 feet. Before leaving Morris in 1952, he had already built a
special Morris Minor with front-wheel drive and a transverse engine, and
this idea was now applied to the new car. The masterstroke that made
this engine installation possible was the idea of putting the gearbox in
the sump of the engine. Other important space saving measures were the
tiny 10 inch wheels, and the compact all independent suspension with
rubber elements.
In the summer of 1958, Issigonis took Lord for a quick drive round
the factory in one of the early prototypes. Lord was quickly convinced
and told Issigonis to have the car in production within a year. And so
it happened - the production lines at both Longbridge and Cowley, for
Austin and Morris respectively, began to roll in the spring of 1959, in
readiness for the August launch date.
The new car was offered for just under £500 (approximately
US$786.75) in its least expensive, standard form in the home market. It
took a while for the Mini to find its place in the market, and
production in 1959 was only around 20,000 cars, although by 1962 BMC
turned out over 200,000 cars per year and went on doing so for the next
15 years.
Originally seen just as another small family car, the versatility and
charm of the Mini made it a favorite with the jet setters of the
swinging sixties. The car quickly became something else altogether - a
fashion/lifestyle statement, an icon.
Many different variations were to follow the original saloon. The
period 1960 to 1964 was especially fruitful, first with estate car and
van versions, then a pick-up, and in 1961 the badge-engineered luxury
versions of the Mini under the Wolseley Hornet and Riley Elf badges,
featuring miniature versions of the classic radiator grilles of these
brands, and also expanded trunks with increased luggage space.

More importantly, 1961 saw the launch of the first Mini Cooper, a
high-performance version developed jointly with the racing car
constructor John Cooper. The standard Mini's 848cc engine with 34bhp was
replaced by a 997cc engine developing 55bhp, and the Cooper for the
first time had front disc brakes.
In 1963 the Cooper was followed by the even more potent Mini Cooper S
with a 1071cc engine and a top speed of close to 100mph. While the
standard Mini and the Mini Cooper had already been used in rallying by
BMC's competitions department, the Mini Cooper S became an outstanding
rally car. The car won the prestigious Monte Carlo Rally three times for
BMC, in 1964, 1965 and 1967, apart from many other important victories,
in the hands of famous drivers such as Paddy Hopkirk, Rauno Aaltonen,
and Timo Makinen.
From 1964, the Mini Cooper S was fitted mostly with a new 1275cc
version of the A-series engine while there was also a short lived 970cc
version. The non S Mini Cooper received a 998cc engine which had already
been introduced in the Wolseley and Riley models. At the other end of
the Mini range, the utilitarian Mini Moke was introduced, a simple
lightweight vehicle originally intended for military applications. Also
in 1964, many Minis received the interconnected Hydrolastic gas/fluid
suspension system.
By 1967, a small face lift was deemed to be in order, and the Mark II
Mini range, introduced at the Motor Show, had new radiator grilles,
bigger rear windows, and other cosmetic changes. The standard models now
became available with the 998cc engine as an alternative to the 848cc
size. The new range for the first time lost the traditional Austin and
Morris names - Mini now became established as a brand in its own right.
Compared to the original models, improvements across the board included
wind down windows in place of the original sliding door windows, and new
concealed door hinges. The entire bodyshell was an additional model
range featuring an alternative front end design, the Clubman saloon and
estate car models, as well as a new 1275 GT model. Riley and Wolseley
versions were however discontinued, and of the Mini Cooper models only
the 1275cc S lived on briefly in a Mark III version before being
discontinued in 1971. Van and pick-up models were continued, but the
Mini Moke had been dropped from the UK line-up in 1968, although
production continued in Australia, and later in Portugal.
The first millionth Mini was made in 1965, with the second millionth
in 1969. The highest annual production figure of more than 318,000 Minis
made worldwide was reached in 1971 and in 1972, the third millionth car
was made, followed in 1976 by four million. After several abortive
attempts at replacing the Mini, the BL company now had a new small car
under development, to be launched as the Austin Mini Metro in 1980. The
Clubman models, including the estate car and the 1275 GT, and the van
and pick-up versions all disappeared. The 850 saloon also disappeared,
leaving only the 1000 saloon to carry on.
A special anniversary model was also produced, becoming the first of
many Mini-based limited editions. In 1986 the five millionth Mini came
off the Longbridge production line.
In 1986, the BL company became the Rover Group, under Graham Day's
management, and Day personally authorized a new campaign to revitalize
the Mini, with famous slogans such as "You never forget your first
Mini" and "Minis have feelings too." These efforts bore
fruit particularly in export markets, notably in Japan where Mini sales
rose from 1,000 cars in 1985 to a remarkable 12,000 in 1990, helping the
Mini to achieve its best recent production figure of 46,000 cars.
By now the Mini had celebrated its 30th anniversary. In 1990 Rover,
again with the enthusiastic help of John Cooper, brought back the Mini
Cooper, first as a limited edition, soon after as a standard production
model. The new Mini Cooper quickly became the best-selling Mini version.
The 1275cc engine from the new Mini Cooper was eventually also fitted,
in a less powerful form, to the standard Mini saloon, while in 1992 the
first Rover produced Mini convertible appeared - after numerous
aftermarket conversions over a period of 30 years. At £12,000
(approximately US$18,882) this was the most expensive Mini ever but
still found a niche in the market.
In 1994, BMW acquired the Rover Group, thus adding the Land Rover,
Rover, MG and Mini brands to the BMW Group portfolio. Investment by BMW
into the Rover Group enabled the company to confirm, in 1996, that there
would be an all-new Mini for the new millennium, to be built in the UK.
There was also a new much-modified 1997 Mini range of two models, Mini
and Mini Cooper, both sharing the same engine, a 1275cc A series with
multi-point fuel injection and 63bhp. Both models cost £8995
(approximately US$14,153.60) on the road in the UK, but potential
customers could easily spend a lot more on a Mini, choosing special
equipment, accessories and paint and trim schemes from a wider options
list. With these new models, Rover gave a clear signal that the Mini now
and for the future would be positioned as a specialized more up-market
type of small car, not as a mass-produced entry-level model. The image
of the Mini brand was reinforced and sharpened with a new badge, and a
special set of brand values defined as "energy, escapism,
excitement, individuality and innovation".
A glimpse of the future Mini, code named Project R50, was revealed
the evening before the Frankfurt motorshow in September 1997. The new
Mini is scheduled to launch in Europe and Asia in 2001. The company is
currently researching the possibility of the Mini's return to N.
America.
Clearly, the legend that is Mini lives on.