Nuffield Organization was the unincorporated umbrella-name or promotional name used for the charitable and commercial interests of owner and donor,
William Morris, 1st Viscount Nuffield. The name was assumed following Nuffield's gift made to form his
Nuffield Foundation
The Nuffield Foundation is a charitable trust established in 1943 by William Morris, Lord Nuffield, the founder of Morris Motors Ltd. It aims to improve social well-being by funding research and innovation projects in education and social pol ...
in 1943, it linked his business interests to his existing very generous philanthropy. The same enterprises had previously been referred to as the Morris Organizations and at first described itself as The Nuffield Organization, A Cornerstone of Britain's Industrial Structure.
["Morris Motors Limited and its associated companies, which together form what is now generally known as the Nuffield Organization."]
Morris Motors Limited. Statement by the Vice-Chairman, Sir Miles Thomas, D.F.C. circulated with the report and accounts. ''The Times'', Saturday, 7 June 1947; pg. 7; Issue 50781
Productive members of the Nuffield Organization

The productive businesses were owned by
Morris Motors Limited and this corporate structure appears to have been retained until the formation of
British Leyland in 1968.
:In 1945 the principal businesses among them were:
* Morris Motors Limited - Morris vehicles which was also the Nuffield Organization's holding company for:
*
Wolseley Motors Limited – Wolseley cars
*
Riley (Coventry) Limited – Riley cars
*
The M.G. Car Company Limited – MG cars
*
Morris Commercial Cars Limited – producing vans and trucks
*
The S.U. Carburetter Company Limited
:and included:
* Nuffield Acceptances Limited – Arranged finance in connection with hire-purchase agreements for the purchase of motor cars
*
Nuffield (Australia) Pty Limited
* Nuffield Exports Limited
*
Nuffield Mechanizations Limited – produced tanks during the war
*
Nuffield Metal Products Limited
*
Nuffield Tools and Gauges Limited – production equipment for the other companies
*
The Nuffield Press Limited – publishing handbooks, owners' magazine etc.
Morris-Austin merger
An agreement was reached between Morris and
The Austin Motor Company in October 1948 amounting to amalgamation in everything but financial structure. The terms included the constant interchange of information on production methods, research, design, buying and almost every other aspect of their work. It also envisaged the pooling of factory resources. In July 1949 Morris and Austin announced the end of their scheme, no further steps would be taken to pool production resources and no merger of any kind was contemplated.
[Morris-Austin Merger. Our Motoring Correspondent. ''The Times'', Saturday, 24 November 1951; pg. 6; Issue 52167]
"Nuffield and Austin broke off arrangements for the exchange of confidential information in 1949 following the revival of long-standing hostilities between their chief executives and the Labour Party's decision not to include the industry in its plans for future nationalisation."
Leonard Lord, chief of Austin, had been with Morris from 1923 to 1936, the last four years as Morris's chief executive. They had parted on extremely bad terms.
The motoring correspondent of ''
The Times
''The Times'' is a British daily national newspaper based in London. It began in 1785 under the title ''The Daily Universal Register'', adopting its current name on 1 January 1788. ''The Times'' and its sister paper '' The Sunday Times'' ...
'' said the two concerns were fundamentally different in their structure. The Nuffield Organization under the control of Morris Motors made three Morris models with Wolseley (two), Riley (two), MG (two) as well as Morris Commercial trucks,
Nuffield Universal tractors and marine engines. The main factory was at
Cowley, Oxford, there were more at
Birmingham
Birmingham ( ) is a city and metropolitan borough in the metropolitan county of West Midlands in England. It is the second-largest city in the United Kingdom with a population of 1.145 million in the city proper, 2.92 million in the We ...
,
Coventry
Coventry ( or ) is a city in the West Midlands, England. It is on the River Sherbourne. Coventry has been a large settlement for centuries, although it was not founded and given its city status until the Middle Ages. The city is governed ...
and
Abingdon. The Austin business,
Austin of England, was highly concentrated both in its huge
Longbridge factory
Longbridge plant is an industrial complex in Longbridge, Birmingham, England, currently leased by SAIC as a research and development facility for its MG Motor subsidiary. Vehicle assembly ended in 2016.
Opened in 1905, by the late 1960s Long ...
at Birmingham and in its products: six Austin car models, Austin trucks and marine engines and battery electric vehicles.
[
The nine different cars made by Nuffield using six engines and five (and a half) car bodies of which the "specialist" three were obsolescent, the rest very closely related if not identical.
File:Morris Six first reg July 1953 2215cc.JPG, Morris Six]
2215 cc
File:Morris Oxford MO Saloon.jpg, Morris Oxford
1476 cc
File:1949 Morris Minor.jpg, Morris Minor
918 cc
File:MG Type YA Saloon.jpg, MG 1¼-litre saloon
1250 cc
File:MG 1950 - Flickr - mick - Lumix.jpg, MG TD
1250 cc
File:Wolseley 6-80.jpg, Wolseley 6/80
Wolseley may refer to:
People
*Sir Charles Wolseley, 2nd Baronet (c. 1630–1714), English politician
*Sir Charles Wolseley, 7th Baronet (1769–1846), English landowner and political agitator
* Frances Garnet Wolseley, 2nd Viscountess Wolseley ( ...
2215 cc
File:Wolseley 4-50 front.jpg, Wolseley 4/50
1476 cc
File:Jodrell Bank (5960779768).jpg, Nuffield Radio Astronomy Laboratories Jodrell Bank
File:1.5 litres Riley.jpg, Riley RMA 1½ Litre
1496 cc
File:1950 Riley 2.5L RMD AL-58-52 p5.jpg, Riley RMB 2½ Litre
2443 cc
;The matrix of images shows the links between the models.
*The four images on the left hand side are the mid-size and large Morrises with the matching Wolseleys beneath them.
*The four images on the right hand side are two MGs — sharing one engine used in two bodies and two Rileys — two different engines sharing one body
*The long-lived Morris Minor is top centre and Lovell Telescope
The Lovell Telescope is a radio telescope at Jodrell Bank Observatory, near Goostrey, Cheshire in the north-west of England. When construction was finished in 1957, the telescope was the largest steerable dish radio telescope in the world a ...
at Jodrell Bank, to which Lord Nuffield provided part of the funding.
The specialist MGs and Rileys were to be the last of their separate-chassis line — except for the MG Midget TF and MGA, which latter lasted until the monocoque
Monocoque ( ), also called structural skin, is a structural system in which loads are supported by an object's external skin, in a manner similar to an egg shell. The word ''monocoque'' is a French term for "single shell".
First used for boats, ...
MG MGB of 1962. The bigger Morris and Wolseley cars shared an identical monocoque structure aft of their engine compartments and almost all mechanicals, the Minor's structure was a smaller version of the same monocoque design.
However, on Friday 23 November 1951 a joint statement announced plans for a merger. The two companies would retain their separate identities and would not produce the same models.[ Forty years later the merger was recognised to have been a political decision in the face of American competition and the absence of heirs for either Morris or Austin.
]
British Motor Corporation
Morris Motors Limited merged with The Austin Motor Company Limited in The British Motor Corporation Limited in 1952. The two groups were very evenly matched, not only in financial terms, each had produced and sold in the previous year an almost identical number of vehicles.
By an agreement between the Nuffield and Austin groups announced in November 1951 a new company was incorporated in February 1952 and named The British Motor Corporation Limited. On 29 February 1952 it offered to buy all the shares in Morris Motors Limited giving in exchange shares in BMC.
Holders of the ordinary share
Common stock is a form of corporate equity ownership, a type of security. The terms voting share and ordinary share are also used frequently outside of the United States. They are known as equity shares or ordinary shares in the UK and other Com ...
s in either Morris or Austin received the same number of new ordinary shares in BMC.[Morris-Austin Merger. ''The Times'', Saturday, 1 March 1952; pg. 9; Issue 52249]
Holders of preferred shares, because of the four different classes in Austin's capital received various apportionments of new 5% cumulative preference shares related to their market valuations.[ If BMC's offer had been accepted in full the capital of BMC would have been £9.2 million in preference shares with £4.8 million in ordinary shares.][ The effective date for exchange of the shares was to be 31 March 1952.][
On 10 April 1952 it was announced that sufficient acceptances had been received to satisfy the conditions of the offer of 29 February.
The first published balance sheet of BMC, 31 July 1952 showed:
::Current assets £54.8 million
::Current liabilities £28.0 million
:::Net current assets £26.8 million
:::Fixed assets £17.5 million
:::Issued capital and reserves £44.3 million
On 8 September 1952] the British Motor Corporation advertised that it included:
* Morris Motors Limited
* Morris Commercial Cars Limited
* Nuffield (Australia) Pty Limited
* Nuffield Exports Limited
* Nuffield Metal Products Limited
* Riley Motors Limited
* The M.G. Car Company Limited
* The S.U. Carburetter Company Limited
* Wolseley Motors Limited
as well as:
* The Austin Motor Company Limited
* Austin Motor Export Corporation Limited
* The Austin Finance Company Limited
* Vanden Plas (England) 1923 Limited
* The Austin Motor Company (Canada) Limited
* The Austin Motor Company Limited (England)
* The Austin Motor Company (Australia) Limited
* The Austin Motor Company (South Africa) (Proprietary) Limited
* The Austin Motor Company (Rhodesia) Limited
Continuing identity
The Nuffield Organization and its members retained their individual identities until the formation of British Leyland.
See also
* Nuffield Health
Notes
References
{{British Car Industry
Defunct motor vehicle manufacturers of the United Kingdom
Organisations founded by Viscount Nuffield