When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Morris Oxford - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Morris_Oxford

    Morris Oxford is a series of motor car models produced by Morris of the United Kingdom, from the 1913 'bullnose' Oxford to the Farina Oxfords V and VI.. Named by W R Morris after "the city of dreaming spires", the university town in which he grew up, the manufacture of Morris's Oxford cars would turn Oxford into an industrial city.

  3. Morris Oxford MO - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Morris_Oxford_MO

    A two-door estate version of the Series MO was introduced in September 1952. [6] Marketed as the Oxford Traveller, it had an exposed wooden frame at the rear. Just 3½ inches longer than the saloon which its dimensions otherwise matched the Traveller was given bench seats front and back, the front backrest split for access to the back.

  4. Morris Oxford Series III - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Morris_Oxford_series_III

    Morris Oxford is a series of motor car models produced by Morris Motors of the United Kingdom, from the 1913 bullnose Oxford to the Farina Oxfords V and VI. The manufacture of Morris's Oxford cars, named by W R Morris after the university town in which he grew up, would turn Oxford into an industrial city.

  5. Morris Oxford Series II - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Morris_Oxford_series_II

    Morris Oxford is a series of motor car models produced by Morris Motors of the United Kingdom, from the 1913 bullnose Oxford to the Farina Oxfords V and VI. Named by W R Morris after the city of dreaming spires , the university town in which he grew up, the manufacture of Morris's Oxford cars would turn Oxford into an industrial city.

  6. Morris Oxford Farina - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Morris_Oxford_Farina

    Like its predecessors, the Morris Oxford for the 1960s was a four-cylinder family car. It would have been seen as mid-sized in the UK, which is where most of the cars were sold. The Oxford (Farina) competed with models such as the badge-engineered A55/A60 Austin Cambridge, the Singer Gazelle and the Vauxhall Victor.

  7. Morris Oxford Empire models - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Morris_Oxford_Empire_models

    Morris Oxford is a series of motor car models produced by Morris Motors of the United Kingdom, from the 1913 bullnose Oxford to the Farina Oxfords V and VI. Named by W R Morris after the city of dreaming spires , the university town in which he grew up, the manufacture of Morris's Oxford cars would turn Oxford into an industrial city.

  8. Morris Motors - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Morris_Motors

    A later Morris Oxford (the 1956 Morris Oxford III) was the basis for the design of India's Hindustan Ambassador, which continued in production until 2014. The nine different cars made by Morris Motors and its wholly owned subsidiaries at the time of the formation of BMC

  9. Morris Oxford bullnose - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Morris_Oxford_bullnose

    The 1919 Oxford (advertised as early as September 1918) was assembled from locally made components and now took on the rather more substantial aspect of 1915's Cowley. Longer and stronger than the old Oxford, enough to carry five passengers, the new Oxford retained the pre-war Bullnose radiator style in its larger version. [5]