2.9 - 6 3000 Mk. I | Colorado Red | ||||
BT7 | Red | ||||
Left Hand Drive | |||||
6 January 1960 | United States | ||||
1960 | British Racing Green | ||||
2024 | Black | ||||
Rest: Nice | |||||
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829UYS |
40 more photos below ↓
Record Creation: Entered on 12 April 2024.
Photos of HBT7L6584
Click slide for larger image. This car has 41 photos. (Dates are when image was uploaded.)
Exterior Photos (7)
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Details Photos: Exterior (12)
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Detail Photos: Interior (16)
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Detail Photos: Engine (5)
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Detail Photos: Other (1)
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2024-04-12 17:19:56 | pauls writes:
Car to be at auction 4/24
cars.bonhams.com/auction/29331/lot/106/1960-austin-healey-3000-mki-bt7-roadster- ...
Auction description:
Goodwood Members' Meeting
LOT 106
1960 Austin-Healey 3000 MkI BT7 Roadster Registration no. 829 UYS Chassis no. H-BT7-L/6584
Estimate: £30,000 - £35,000
Registration no. 829 UYS
Chassis no. H-BT7-L/6584
• Delivered new to the USA
• Imported in 2016
• Restored by the vendor and Seb Morgan
• Converted to Right hand drive
• Bills for over £25,000 for parts alone
A BT7 four-seater model, this Austin-Healey 3000 MkI comes with a Heritage Certificate confirming that it was built on built 5/6th January 1960 and dispatched on 15th January that year to Hambro Trading Inc of Chicago, Illinois. The original colour scheme was Colorado Red with matching interior.
The Healey was imported by the late Mr Jackson in 2016 for complete restoration (UK taxes paid). There is correspondence between him and the Beverley Hills Car Club on file together with photographs of the car, which at time of importation had an Illinois title. Undertaken by the late owner and his son-in-law Sebastian Morgan , the restoration commenced in 2017. The car was repainted British racing green and converted from left- to right-hand drive. There are bills totalling over £25,000 for parts alone on file. Last MoT'd in 2017 and offered from a period of storage since the restoration's completion; an inspection is recommended before road use. Accompanying documentation includes a driver's handbook, assorted correspondence, numerous bills, and a UK V5C.
Roy Jackson was born in the middle of WW2 in the North West of England near Lancaster. He spent his boyhood fishing the local rivers and lakes and shooting. His father was also a car enthusiast and Roy's formative years were spent watching him race his Triumph and Lagonda in local races such as the Barbon Hill-Climb. He was always involved in his dad's motoring escapades, learning to drive in cars considered classics today on the driveway of the family home. Roy's first car restoral was a 1932 Alvis Firefly which he worked on in his father's building yard when he was a teenager. This project ignited in him an ambition to become a fully-fledged mechanic. However, his father had other ideas and wanted him to enter the family construction business, so Roy went and studied Civil Engineering. This was a profession he grew to love and he became managing director of the company at a young age, successfully running it until his retirement in 2013.
Since 2013 Roy had no wish to live the life of a regular retiree. Rather he saw this as the opportunity to resurrect the dreams of his youth and to start to restore classic cars as he had wanted to in his younger days. His home, a converted Cumbrian farm, was the perfect venue for his new career and these restorations became his life. Working together with his son-in-law Seb Morgan, what started as a dream quickly evolved. The workshop they built together became renowned locally and further afield. Roy and Seb rebuilt 26 classic cars and military vehicles over the 11 years they were working together, including the vehicles listed by Bonhams in this auction which are offered from his estate.