Delaunay-Belleville

Automobiles Delaunay-Belleville was a French luxury automobile manufacturer at Saint-Denis, France, north of Paris. At the beginning of the 20th century they were among the most prestigious cars produced in the world, and perhaps the most desirable French marque.

A 1911 Delaunay-Belleville HB 4 with replica coachwork[1]
Workers leaving the Delaunay-Belleville plant early in the twentieth century
The Delaunay-Belleville factory at Saint-Denis
Share of the S. A. des Automobiles Delaunay Belleville, issued 29 April 1924
1924 Delaunay Belleville P4B , coachbuilder: Salmons & Sons

History

Julien Belleville had been a maker of marine boilers from around 1850. Louis Delaunay joined the firm in 1867 and married Belleville's daughter. He changed his name to Delaunay-Belleville and succeeded his father-in-law in charge of the company.[2]

S.A. des Automobiles Delaunay-Belleville was formed in 1903 by Louis Delaunay and Marius Barbarou. Barbarou's family owned the boiler making company Belleville in Saint-Denis, with boiler design influences inspired by the company. Barbarou, then 28,[3] had experience working for Clément, Lorraine-Dietrich and Benz and was responsible for design and styling, including the trademark round grille shell.[4] The first car was exhibited at the 1904 Paris Salon, and it received enormous acclaim.[5]

The company started with three models, all four-cylinders:[6] a live axled 16 hp and a 24 hp and 40 hp model, both chain-driven.[7] These were likely the first automobiles to have pressure-lubricated camshafts.[8] The bodies were attached with just four bolts, and the brakes were water-cooled, from a 2 imp gal (9.1 L; 2.4 US gal) reservoir.[8]

Delaunay-Belleville were a prestige marque, and one of the world's leaders, from the outset, and by 1906, Emperor Nicholas II of Russia had purchased a 40.[8] Other royal owners included King George I of Greece and King Alphonso XIII of Spain.

The first French car maker to offer a six-cylinder engine, Delaunay-Belleville's 70 hp became available only in 1909, and then only in small numbers, remaining in limited production until 1912.[8] This model came to be known as the Type SMT, or Sa Majesté le Tsar, because Nicholas purchased one of the last 70s built.[8] He also ordered another in 1909; the demand for a silent starter, operable from the driving seat, became known as a Barbey starter, and was made standard at the end of 1910.[8]

Like most prestige marques, the cars were sold as bare chassis and bodies were coachbuilt for them. Between 1906 and 1914, British imports were mainly bodied by Shinnie Brothers, a Burlington Coachbuilders[9] subsidiary, in Aberdeen, then shipped to London for sale.[8]

Postwar, Continental bodies gained popularity, at least in Britain, as Belgium's D'Ieteren Frères became most associated with the company: their landaulette, on a 26 hp chassis, was priced in Britain at £900, pitting them between Napier and Rolls-Royce.[8]

In 1919, the company offered the P4, a 2 litre sidevalve 10 hp four-cylinder, undoubtedly the most expensive voiturette on the market, as well as a 2.6 litre OHC 15.9 hp four, the P4B, in 1922.[8]

After Barbarou resigned, Delaunay-Belleville quality began to slip.[8] New four-cylinder pushrod overhead valve 14/40 and 16/60 models appeared in 1926, and the pre-war 20 hp and 10 hp six-cylinder models continued to be produced until 1927.[8] The last gasps were the 3,180 cc (194 cu in) 21 hp six of 1928 and the 3,619 cc (220.8 cu in) 21/75 OHV six of 1930. In 1931, Continental engines, imported from the US, were offered, being quieter and cheaper.[8]

By the late 1920s, Delaunay-Belleville had lost its prestige, and converted to truck and military vehicle production. In 1936 the previously separate car company was merged with the Delaunay-Belleville parent. Production of the Delaunay-Belleville RI-6 continued through the late 1930s and was revived after the Second World War. This was a six-cylinder-engined car strongly resembling[8] the Mercedes-Benz 230, featuring independent suspension all-round; revived postwar, it featured Cotal preselector gearbox[8] and a front grille design apparently copied from the 1939 Buick.[10] However, the business was in decline: anyone buying a RI-6 in the 1940s would have done so in the knowledge after-sales service might disappear soon.[10] Six cars were completed in 1947 and only four during the first part of 1948.[10]

The company continued to advertise new cars for sale until 1950, but the factory was sold to Robert de Rovin in 1948 and thereafter used to make cyclecars.[8][10]

See also

References

  1. "Bonhams : 1911 Delaunay-Belleville HB4 Tourer Chassis no. 3783". www.bonhams.com. Retrieved 27 May 2019.
  2. "Stamina Status and Style". The Automobile. 26: 43–47. June 2008.
  3. Wise, David Burgess. "Delaunay-Belleville: The Car Magnificent", in Ward, Ian, executive editor. World of Automobiles (London: Orbis, 1974), Volume 5, p.525.
  4. Wise, p.525 caption.
  5. Wise, p.525.
  6. Wise, p.525 and p.526.
  7. Wise, p.525 and 526.
  8. Wise, p.526.
  9. Burlington Delaunay-Belleville www.coachbuild.com/forum, accessed 20 April 2022
  10. "Automobilia". Toutes les voitures françaises 1948 (Salon Paris oct 1947) (in French). Paris: Histoire & collections. Nr. 7: 40. 1998.
  • Wise, David Burgess. "Delahaye: Famous on Road and Race Track", in Ward, Ian, executive editor. World of Automobiles, Volume 5, pp. 525–526. London: Orbis, 1974, ISBN 9780839360094.
  • La Delaunay-Belleville (1904-1947), un fleuron de l'automobile, Pierre-Henri, Philippe et François Richer, Les Editions Page de Garde, 2002, Elbeuf.

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