In addition to the possible pending resurrection of a couple of important UK coachbuilding names – Hooper, plus Freestone and Webb – a pair of other former British car craftsmanship modifier names have already been revived; Radford, and more recently, Crayford.
The relaunch of the Radford name was staged within the Earls Court Motor Show at the 2021 Goodwood Revival; with chief shareholders ex-F1 World Champion Jenson Button and well-known television car fiddler Ant Ansted unveiling their first brand new Radford; the Type 62-2, an extensively modified Lotus Exige. Though the key management of the new Redford concern are all Brits, with its Type 62 based on an all-British Lotus and inspired by the iconic Lotus Type 62, the Company’s main production workshop is based in the USA (though it also has UK facilities in Hertfordshire). When it comes to the Radford name, confusion reigns, as the Company has had more comebacks than Noel Edmonds, having had long periods of dormancy in between being owned at various points by H R Owen, plus many other parties, including now forming part of the Finest Coachbuilding Group (FCG).
Radford was first founded in 1948 by Harold Radford, an ex-London car salesman, specialising in Rolls-Royce, Bentley and supplying bespoke military vehicles during WWII. From his high-profile showroom opposite South Kensington tube station, in 1948 Harold Radford introduced his coachbuilt Bentley MK VI Countryman, updated with a rear opening split tailgate, folding rear seats, picnic tables, a double bed facility and even a kettle!
Harold Radford also successfully later applied his coachbuilt Countryman modification to the Rolls-Royce Silver Dawn and Silver Cloud, plus an Armstrong Siddeley Sapphire, Jaguar MK VIII and Humber Super Snipe. Radford famously went on to customise BMC Minis into luxury city limousines, plus Aston Martin DB4/5 Shooting Break conversions and a few bespoke modified Alfa Romeo GT Juniors, Volvo P1800 Convertibles and Vauxhall Crestas. After disappearing for a while, the Radford name made a comeback in the 1980s, and the again in the 1990s, with luxury modified Minis, made by an ex-Vauxhall employee (who bizarrely also claimed to own the rights to the ex-BMC/BL Italian Innocenti marque!). As well as the FCG-owned Radford, the name is also believed to still exist as a separate classic car restoration specialist.