1948 Healey Elliott Sports Saloon
RAF training and Monte Carlo Rally victories shaped Donald Healey’s approach when he founded his motor company in 1945. The Elliott Sports Saloon emerged as his first production model the following year, built in a converted aircraft hangar in Warwick alongside the Westland Roadster.
Riley’s proven 2.4-liter four-cylinder twin-cam engine provided the power, mounted in Healey’s own welded X-braced chassis. The innovative trailing arm independent front suspension system distinguished these early Healeys from most contemporary sports cars still using beam axles.
Performance figures impressed the motoring press and competitors alike. Independent testing at Jabbeke, Belgium in 1947 recorded a top speed of 110 mph, making the Elliott the world’s fastest closed four-seater production car at the time. This achievement established Healey’s reputation for combining touring comfort with genuine sports car performance.
Coachwork by Samuel Elliott & Sons provided elegant four-door styling that disguised the car’s competition capabilities. Production remained strictly limited, with only 101 Elliott saloons completed before the model gave way to the Tickford-bodied Healey Saloon in 1950.
The Elliott’s brief production run and impressive performance credentials have made surviving examples highly sought after, representing Donald Healey’s ambitious vision for British sports car manufacturing in the immediate postwar period.
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