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On this day in 1963

Hillman Imp rolls off production line in Linwood

When Midlands-based Rootes Group opened a car factory in Linwood, Renfrewshire, it got right down to work, with the affordable Hillman Imp soon rolling off the production line. The Renfrewshire plant supplemented sister plants in Coventry, Birmingham, London and Bedfordshire.

Hilman Imp on display at the V&A in Dundee
Hilman Imp on display at the V&A in Dundee

Splendid Scottish factory

The Sphere of 4 May 1963, under the heading “Cars from Scotland”, described the Linwood site as a “splendid Scottish factory” shortly after its official opening by the Duke of Edinburgh. “It has been under construction since May 1961 on a site measuring 278 acres at the village of Linwood, 14 miles from Glasgow. The plant, the most advanced of its kind in the world, has been designed to build 150,000 cars a year and eventually 5500 people will be employed there.” In addition, “by the end of the year, 1800 new homes will have been built at Linwood for Rootes employees and there are plans for four additional schools, two more churches, two shopping centres, cinemas and a new luxury hotel”.

The Imp was small, as its name suggests, and affordable, and designed to compete with the Mini, which had first appeared on British roads in 1959 and become an icon when celebrities were seen driving it.

The Scottish factory was built specifically for the Imp’s production, even though components were being produced in the Midlands and transported by road. Despite this logistical consideration, production continued until 1976, after which other models were produced on site.

Hilman Imp on display at the V&A in Dundee
Hilman Imp on display at the V&A in Dundee

Rootes Group sold

The Rootes Group was bought out by Chrysler, which was itself acquired by Peugeot-Citroen, which took the decision to close the Linwood plant in 1981. The decision was announced on 11 February that year, and scheduled to be actioned in June. The Daily Mirror reported on 12 February that the Peugeot-Citroen board “had before them the awesome figures for 1980 showing a massive loss of £20,000,000. For every car sold last year Peugeot-Citroen, which also owns Talbot, lost £100… mainly due to an appalling downturn in sales.” Moreover, continued the paper, it seemed that the plant had never made a profit during its entire existence.

Job losses

Speaking in the House of Commons on 11 February 1981, Alexander Fletcher, the Under-Secretary of State for Scotland, told the House that “apart from the 4,800 jobs which will be lost at Linwood itself, there will be consequences for suppliers. Linwood has, however, been operating at a low level of production for many months and the local sourcing of components is limited.”

A reference to “Linwood no more” is made in The Proclaimers’ song Letter From America.

 

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...and on this day in 1966

Cash machine is patented

Scottish inventor James Goodfellow patented the idea of the hole-in-the-wall cash dispenser, officially called the automated teller machine, or ATM, and the accompanying Personal Identification Number – PIN – that would allow customers to use it to retrieve money.

First ATM

The first ATM in public use was installed in Enfield, London, in June 1967. The first customer, on 27 June, was television comedian Reg Varney who, reported The Mirror the following day, “put a signed voucher into a drawer in the machine, tapped out his personal code number on a keyboard, and out popped a drawer containing the money.”

The system was still limited compared to modern incarnations. It could only dispense £10 at a time, and would only dish out cash to customers of the branch at which it was installed.

 


 

...and on this day in 1966

Renfrew Airport’s last flight departs

The last flight left Glasgow Renfrew Airport on 2 May 1966, after 33 years of commercial traffic. Before that, it had been a military airfield, to which it had reverted during the Second World War. Sadly, it didn’t go out on a high: its last flight was a short hop of less than a kilometre, to Glasgow Airport.


 

Yesterday…

Deacon Blue releases its debut album

Deacon Blue released its debut album, Raintown, in 1987. It included one of the band’s first singles, Dignity.

The National Trust for Scotland is founded

The National Trust for Scotland for Places of Historic Interest or Natural Beauty is a charity that looks after more than 100 properties.

Jenners opens on Princes Street

Jenners Department Store, originally known as Kennington & Jenner, was opened on Edinburgh’s Princes Street in 1838.

The Acts of Union come into force

The Acts of Union officially united Scotland and England as a single kingdom, even though the two had shared a monarch for some time.

Tomorrow…

SNP forms its first Scottish government

The Scottish National Party won more seats than any party in the 2007 Scottish Parliamentary election and thus formed a coalition government.

The Empire Exhibition opens in Glasgow

Glasgow hosted the second Empire Exhibition at Bellahouston Park from May 1938 until the end of the year. It had 13m visitors.