Aston Martin Le Mans 1935
Aston Martin are now one of the most desirable marques in the world but it took a great deal of trial and angst before they achieved real success. Competition was always their Achille’s heel and in the 1930s they raced cars more than they built them, suffering any number of financial collapses and buy-outs as a result. Yet all through these troubled years they produced cars that are a delight to the eye, machines that one could hunger for even today. Let me show you what I mean.
Take the MG TF of the thirties, for instance, a car that anyone into automotive history will know and love. It’s a pretty little thing, there’s no denying it:

But, if you think that is the height of British sports car building, then you’ve never seen the Aston Martin Le Mans of the same period. Admittedly, it was intended for racing and was bound to be a bit more extreme than the MG, but many were kept for road use. Look at this beautiful example, for instance:

Notice how the bicycle mudguards give the car a serious air, proclaiming its competition ancestry. And the body of the car is so well put together, giving a look of strength and durability that the MG lacks. One can imagine the MG as a car for fun, ideal for a quick blast down some country back roads, but the Aston is for serious motoring, a car that, in its day, could take on any sports car on the road.
They are both cars from a long time before my day but I can appreciate them as dream machines of the pre-war years. And, if I were given the choice between them, there are no prizes for guessing which I’d take!


