
A Short history of British Seagull
Early History
The
‘MARSTON’ SEAGULL.

This advert was sent to me by Charles Palfreeman, thanks Charles.
More pages sent in by Charles Palfreeman, thankyou.
The motor above is a Marston 'OF' owned by Andy and pic by Charles Palfreeman. Does anyone know what the device on top of the carb is supposed to do?
In about 1938 they moved to Hamworthy, then by 1939 they were in Poole.
This is a very early Seagull advert. (Click on it to
enlarge.) It features Bill Pinniger and his wife in 1938! I am
indebted to Mrs. Ann Walch, Nee Pinniger, their daughter, for this
information and picture. The motor of course is one of those 102
models he designed!
Acknowledgement for much of this information must go to Robert Cordon-Champ, who has researched the Sunbeam Motorcycle, to the old British Seagull company, especially Mike Gregory and Mark Fishwick of Classic Boat. If you can add to what I have gleaned I would be very interested.
January 2006, I had this mail in from Robert Cordon-Champ, a little snippet on Mr Marston himself!
Dear John,
Herewith a little background for your SOS site.
John Marston (1836-1918) was a Victorian industrialist who started as an
apprentice with Edward Perry, Japanner and Tinsmith of Wolverhampton
(then) in Staffordshire, England. Having served his time, Marston
worked in neighboring Bilston and found the money to take Perry's over
when Edward Perry died in 1871.
Perry had made domestic ware such as spice-boxes, tea-caddies and
snuff-boxes mostly black-japanned ( a stoved enamel paint finish which
preceded modern enamel paints) and often lined-out in gold leaf.
Marston continued this, adding brass and copper ware to build a reputation
for quality of manufacture which is still recognised by collectors in this
field.
As a keen tricyclist himself, it was a logical development to move into
the embryo cycle trade in 1887, under the trademark of 'Sunbeam' with the
new company of John Marston Ltd. literally alongside Perry's
original works in Pool St. and Paul St. Wolverhampton just off the Penn
Rd.. ( At the time of writing the works are still standing)
'The Sunbeam' (Not just Sunbeam but THE Sunbeam!) became a beautifully made cycle with most of its works' enclosed and lubricated in the 'Little Oil-bath Chain-case' and finished in gleaming Japanned finish with the traditional 24ct gold-leaf lining on the expensive 'Golden' model. These cycles are highly prized today, one of the company's famous customers being Sir Edward Elgar, composer of Land of Hope and Glory.
In order to manufacture the many machined parts needed for cycle
production, Marston set up The Villiers Engineering Co. Ltd. in Villiers
Street with his son, Charles Marston, in charge. Villiers became the
largest maker of two-stroke motor cycle engines in the UK, their name
appearing on many thousands of flywheel magnetos as well. John
Marston Ltd. made the company's first Sunbeam car in 1897, at the same
time becoming a major vehicle radiator maker, and their first Sunbeam
motor cycle in 1912. Sunbeam also made lorries, 'buses and aircraft
engines.
In 1928 and 1929 the motor cycles won the Senior TT races in the Isle of
Man and the next new product was the Sunbeam 'Seagull' outboard motor,
finished in black with gold lining and made in the same factory
as the TT bikes, with machining done at Villiers.
The war loomed, however, and now as part of ICI,
Marstons began to sell off their products and transfer to mostly aircraft
component work. The cycles and motor cycles went to AMC of London in 1937,
then to BSA
in 1943. The Sunbeam cycle, to the 1892 basic design, was made until 1957.
Hope this helps, Bob.
Thanks Bob
Above are photos given to me by Seagull staff in 1996. They show racks of Seagulls ready to go. Date, 1977. At that time it is estimated there were up to 80,000 a year leaving the factory! From my reckoning I would think there were well over a Million Seagulls made, some estimates are over twice that number, no wonder there are a lot about still!
Above is an extract from a Seagull advertising leaflet of the 1960's.
John
S. Williams (Saving Old
Seagulls.)
Hello All, thanks for your patience, I have been out of action for a bit, I have had the surgery, which seems to have fixed my ongoing back problem. Fingers crossed! Back to normal parts service now!
John, SOS
To E-mail SOS john@saving-old-seagulls.co.uk or just click the bottle!
(or phone 01621 778859 )
If I am not answering the phone, this might give you a clue to where I might be!
Please look through the 'FAQ' page first, you might find what you need there.
Try also the 'I. D. your Seagull' pages, before mailing queries to me, as I now have to spend much time answering your e-mails! That, of course, keeps me from the workshop! UK queries may be better by phone, as I can ask you those extra little questions that might solve a problem easier. (Like why your 102 has a century plus gearbox!)
If you are in the UK it is probably best to phone me
on:- 01621 778859
Copyright: Saving Old Seagulls © 2001
All Photographs and text are Copyright of Sheridan Marine (British Seagull) and/or SOS (Saving Old Seagulls).
Reproduction of any of this site is forbidden without written permission of SOS.
Web Design by Spectrum Systems:- Sadly Barry the Webmaster died 19.04.05
a sad loss of a good friend, taken by Cancer aged 55.
Ver 9/ Last updated - Friday, 23 November 2007