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Sir George
Kenning.....Wheels of Fortune > The following article by Vivienne Smith
appeared in the Derby Evening Telegraph on 28th August 2001 and is reproduced
with their kind permission.
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 Sir George
Kenning 1880 - 1956
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| When young George Kenning won a car in a competition in the
early 1900's, he immediately saw the potential for distributing and servicing
his pioneering form of transport. At his death in 1956 he left a business with
a £20m turnover and showrooms all over the country. Vivienne Smith traces
the success story of the lad from Clay Cross. |
Getting your first car can be a memorable experience. But for
George Kenning almost a century ago, it was much more than that. Winning one in
a competition at the dawn of the motor age, he realised the new mode of
transport had great potential.
Born in Clay Cross on May 21, 1880,
George was the second son of Frank and Ann Kenning. His Father had previously
been a miner at the local colliery. But in 1878, Frank Kenning found himself
trapped in a cage in a winding incident. He swore that if he got out alive he
would never go down the pit again. True to his word, he began hawking
door-to-door with a basket of pots instead. Establishing a hardware shop on
King Street in Clay Cross, he bought an old colliery horse for £4 and
took his goods further afield.
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As a young boy, George helped his father on this market stall in
Chesterfield, selling everything from matches and soap to pots and pans and
paraffin. Leaving school at age 11 he began working for the family business
full time.
By the turn of the century, F Kenning & Sons was hawking
paraffin oil throughout the Chesterfield area, for in 1901, George's father
signed an historic agreement with the Consolidated Petroleum Co Ltd,
forerunners of Shell and BP. The paraffin arrived by rail and was transferred
into small horse-drawn tankers for delivery to customers.
In 1908,
following the death of his father and his older brother Frank, George assumed
control of the firm, helped by his younger brother Herbert. The young man soon
began to expand the business. He hired out bicycles to the oil companies for
their commercial travellers and, purchasing 60 horses, he leased them out to
pull the tank wagons.
But a new kind of vehicle was beginning to appear
on the country's roads; the motor car. When a soap company ran a competition
with a car as the prize, George was determined to win it. The vehicle was to go
to the person who sent in the greatest number of soap wrappers. As the young
man was already selling the brand in his shop, he persuaded dealers and
customers alike to part with their wrappers. Thus did George Kenning secure his
first motor car. With an eye to business, he began to see great possibilities
in the distribution and servicing of this new mode of transport.
By
1910, he had acquired his first motor agency, becoming a distributor for BSA
Royal Enfield motorcycles. Six years later, he became an agent for Ford. Then
in 1919 through his friend Dr T F Wilson, a local physician, he was introduced
to William Morris. Better known today as Lord Nuffield, Morris had begun
building motor cars in a shed behind his office at Cowley a few years earlier.
With his dreams of making small cars at affordable prices for the man in the
street, he was set to revolutionise Britain's motor industry much as Henry Ford
had done in America.
Kenning decided to visit him at Cowley in a bid to
win the sole agency for Morris cars in Derbyshire. The meeting was to prove
memorable for both men. To pinpoint exactly where Kenning had come from, Morris
got out a map. He said, "You ask for the agency of Derbyshire and you live at
Clay Cross, a little place near Chesterfield." Kenning was quick to reply, "No,
it is Chesterfield near Clay Cross. After all Cowley is not on the map except
as a suburb of Oxford, but you make the finest light car here and I will put
Cowley on the map; give me the car and I will sell it." And he proceeded to
offer a contract for 185 cars. At the time, he did not have the cash to pay for
them, neither was it certain that Morris had the capacity to produce them. Yet
this did not deter the two men from doing business. Shortly afterwards, Kenning
negotiated the sale of the first fleet of Morris cars ever sold: 181 two-seater
bullnose Morris Oxfords for Shell representatives. He went on to sell the first
three fleets of trucks for Morris as well. -Salesmen like George Kenning were
vital to the early expansion of Morris Motors, and he and William Morris became
good friends. During the 1920s, Kenning was the only company in the country to
hold both Morris and Austin distributorships. They also held the first agency
granted by the truck making firm Dennis.
George Kenning's reputation as
a salesman was legendary. In the early days, he used to collect the cars from
Oxford himself and often sold them on the journey back to Clay Cross. As a
member of the Chesterfield Hospital Board of Management, he conducted the odd
transaction during meetings. Once accused of contributing nothing to the
discussion, he equipped, "Not true, I've sold a lorry to the man on my left and
a motor car to the man on my right." It was even said that he sold vehicles to
all the doctors who had treated him following an operation in
1934.

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As well as
sales, the businessman provided a growing number of services for car owners. At
Kenning depots, customers could not only buy petrol and a variety of
accessories; by 1939, state-of-the-art valeting equipment had been installed at
the Sheffield and London branches. Vehicles could be washed, vacuum-cleaned and
polished in just eight minutes. The London installation could cope with 500
cars a day and was said to be the best equipped valeting station in the world.
Another new-fangled invention that fascinated George Kenning was the aeroplane.
In the early 1930s, he even piloted a Blackburn Bluebird plane, nicknamed
Cobra, in the King's Cup Air Race.
Despite the demands of his growing
empire, the businessman maintained an active interest in his native Clay Cross.
For almost 30 years, he served both on the Urban District Council and as a
member of Derbyshire County Council. In 1931 he gave Kenning Park to his home
town as a public recreation ground in memory of his parents. In fact, he was a
generous supporter of many good causes. No mean philanthropist himself, Lord
Nuffield once commented that George Kenning had "done so much more than people
may know". His public and political work in the country even brought him a
knighthood in 1943.
When Sir George Kenning died on February 6, 1956,
aged 75, more than 500 attended his funeral. Among those present were
representatives from every sector of the country's motor trade. The hawker's
son from Clay Cross had succeeded in establishing one of the largest car
distributors in the land, with a staff of over 2,000 and an annual turnover of
£20m. Yet it seems he was not the typical self-made man. Methodist leader
Dr W E Sangster added his own tribute to Kenning's obituary in The Times: "He
was gentle and unassertive, humble and astonishingly kind, ready to defer to
the judgement of others and at ease in all strata of life."
On July 14,
1930, the world of motoring descended on Derby for a rather special ceremony.
Sir William Morris was to open Kenning's new depot in Queen Street. The company
had established its first premises in the town just four years earlier. But at
a cost of £20,000 the new Morris House featured up-to-date showrooms,
garages, repair shops and stores. Every kind of Morris motor was on display,
from the original Morris Minor at £135 to the £285 Morris Oxford
Six. At the opening ceremony, Sir William unlocked the door to the new premises
with a golden key. Afterwards a special luncheon at the Royal Hotel, he praised
the enterprise of his old friend. "Morris Motors", he said, "were very proud of
Mr George Kenning." |
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