To Be OFFERED AT AUCTION at RM Sothebys' Monterey event, 15 - 17
August 2019.
- Originally delivered to the Maharaja of Darbhanga
- Beautiful, one-off coachwork installed in 1935 for the
Maharaja
- Featured in period in The Autocar and Modern Motoring
- RROC National First in Class and concours award winner
- A bespoke Phantom II of exquisite sportiness and grace
Rameshwar Singh Bahadur succeeded his older brother as Maharaja of
Darbhanga at his brother's passing on 3 July 1929. Six days later
he placed an order for an appropriate automobile, this Rolls-Royce
Phantom II, which was delivered on 25 January 1930 aboard the SS
Mulberra to the port of Calcutta. The car was originally fitted
with a tourer body by Hooper accentuated with all the bells and
whistles; the original list of accoutrements to the body flows over
three pages! It was originally registered in the UK as DS 8794.
In 1935 the Maharaja elected to update the appearance of his
Phantom II, having acquired a Thrupp & Maberly-bodied car and
admiring the London coachbuilder's work. They were commissioned to
build a new body for the five-year-old Rolls-Royce, one that still
had striking modern lines but kept some of the features that the
Maharaja liked in the previous body. With a swept and polished cowl
molding, elegantly rounded skirted fenders, and a windshield and
roofline lower than standard, the car had a uniquely sporting
appearance for a four-door tourer and appeared fully up to date. It
is the only known Phantom II to have been built to this one-off
design, number E.1061/A.
The completed car attracted much attention from British trade
publications. The 17 January 1936 issue of The Autocar featured
photographs of it with the top up and down, and it also appeared in
the February 1936 issue of Modern Motoring, noting it as "a
striking new body." A period photo of the Phantom II as completed
also appears in Lawrence Dalton's noted book Coachwork on
Rolls-Royce (p. 209).
The Rolls-Royce remained with the Maharaja until 1967, a remarkable
period of 38 years. It then passed through a succession of British
owners before its acquisition in 1976 by James Leake, the famous
American Rolls-Royce collector, who maintained it in his personal
collection for over a decade. At the sale of Mr. Leake's collection
in 1987, this car returned to England, later making its way into
the ownership of Gert Kaiser of Germany, from whom its next owner
acquired it in 1997.
Under the former ownership, the car underwent a complete mechanical
rebuild by noted specialists on both the East Coast and in the
United Kingdom, including such famous shops as Frank Cooke's
Vintage Garage. It had its engine rebuilt, including the
installation of a new cylinder head, pistons, bearings, and seals,
and it was completely rewired by Sports Classics of Brookfield,
Massachusetts. Rebuilding of the lamp fixtures and further
electrical work was performed by noted specialists in England,
while routine maintenance of the car since has been performed by
Seibert Rolls-Royce of Rochester, New York.
The former owner participated in numerous Rolls-Royce Owners' Club
tours in the United States and Canada, appearing in several issues
of The Flying Lady. It has also been very successful on the show
field, gathering no fewer than four Rolls-Royce Owners' Club
National awards, followed by Best in Class at the Meadow Brook
Concours d'Elegance in 2009. The car was subsequently acquired by
the current owner in 2015.
It is by no stretch of the imagination a Rolls-Royce fit for
royalty.To view this car and others currently consigned to this
auction, please visit the RM website at
rmsothebys.com/en/auctions/mo19.