Gavin Watson was inspired by Blydenstein’s work with the Borgward when he sought to build his own racer. He bought this car for £250 on eBay, and for that had a car that was in pretty good shape – although it did require new sills and some other welding. Copying Blydensetein’s blueprints for gasflowing and other tuning, he has a car that punches above its weight. However, because Borgward went out of business in 1961, there’s no more recent tuning know-how to replicate. “We’re marooned in the 1960s,” says Gavin. The car, therefore, cannot compete with the Rileys and Wolseleys that out-paced it in period, but it’s cars like the Borgward that add vital variety to the Jack Sears Memorial Trophy grid.
Borgward was established by the industrialist Carl FW Borgward and offered a proliferation of models throughout the 1950s. Borgward’s group also included car-makers Lloyd and Goliath, but it collapsed in controversial circumstances. Press reports suggested the company was insolvent, which led to state-backed finance being withdrawn. The company was forced into liquidation, but was able to pay off all creditors with money to spare. Whether the company would have been able to weather the storm of its cashflow problems of late 1960 will never be known, but by 1961 it was all over. Much of Borgward’s R&D team moved to nearby BMW (whose 1500 of 1962 reportedly bore a resemblance to the Isabella’s planned replacement) and the factory became a Mercedes-Benz facility. Carl Borgward died in 1963 still insistent that his company was solvent.
Borgward has a huge following in Germany, but in Britain Gavin’s outing in the Sears Trophy gives us an unusual opportunity to see an Isabella in action. Had things worked out differently, Borgward could have been where BMW is today.
Photography by James Lynch