MenuClose
In This Article
Category: Sports Cars
Make: Mg
Model: Bgt
Year: 1971

While most automakers make special note of the final examples of particular models, there aren’t many volume automakers that fuss over production-number milestones. The MG Car Company did things differently, proudly celebrating the 100,000th MGA with a specially trimmed show car and following that by honoring the 250,000th and 500,000th MGBs built. The 250,000th MGB, a U.S.-spec 1971 GT, received star treatment in the Abingdon works, was awarded as the grand prize in a national contest, and then promptly disappeared. Except it hadn’t.

This past February, I was pleasantly surprised to receive an intriguing email with the subject, “Milestone MGB,” from Hemmings Sports & Exotic Car friend and supporter, Rodney McDonald. Spanish Fort, Alabama, resident Rodney is active in the South Alabama British Car Club, and with a lifetime of MG interest and a 1976 MGB and 1997 MGF in his current fleet, he’s keenly attuned to MG history and local MG news. He’d attached a grainy black-and-white photo of an MGB/ GT on the production line with a special “250,000th MGB” sign on its roof and “250 000 TH” plate on its front bumper, and written, “I wanted to share with you that I finally found this car after a 22-year search, and it has been in my part of the country the whole time. It is in a shabby state, but has been cared for by a gentleman who bought it from the winner of the contest in which it was given away in 1971.”

A Number to Celebrate

250,000th MG - BMC Archive Press Photo

Austin-Morris executive George Turnbull stands with factory workers and this car on the line at Abingdon. Note the roof sign and special number plate, both of which remain with the GT today.

Photo courtesy of the BMC Archive at Burton Hall & Associates

“GHD5UB250000G” had been a looker, striking in Blaze paint with Rostyle wheels, its 92-hp, twin-SU-carbureted 1,798-cc backed by the optional Laycock overdrive. This MGB/GT was built in May of that year, and its completion was carefully documented with numerous photos during final assembly on the line; posed with executives and workers, with “Old Number One” (MG founder Cecil Kimber’s 1925 competition car) parked alongside; going into the Roller Test driving station; and with “Miss MG 1971,” Ms. Pat Drew, parked outside in the dispatch lot.

This MGB would be earmarked for a unique purpose, as a contemporary magazine advertisement spread revealed:

“On May 27, 1971, the 250,000th B came off the production line. It was designated with a plaque attesting to its historical significance in MG history. And, to cap the occasion, we are going to give the car away instead of selling it.

“It’s The Great 250,000th MGB Giveaway- and it’s easy to get in the running. There’s nothing to buy. Just visit an Austin MG Dealer and pick up an official entry blank with complete details.

“The Great 250,000th MGB Giveaway officially closes Sept. 18, 1971. So hurry—act today.”

MG’s U.S. distributor, British Leyland Motors Inc., drew the nation’s attention to this handsome GT by holding the aforementioned raffle here to celebrate America being MG’s largest market. In a press release co-authored by former British Leyland PR guru and HS&EC columnist Mike Cook, dated December 17, 1971, we learned that more than 80,000 entries were received. The winner was 25-year-old Mobile, Alabama, resident William Lewis Newton, who’d submitted his entry at White’s Imports, Mobile’s Austin MG dealership. He received his prize from BL Vice President Michael H. Dale at an SCCA American Road Race of Champions runoff in Atlanta, Georgia, in November 1971.

Lost & Found

250.000th MG - Front straight on

Photo by Rodney McDonald

Amazingly, the 1971 display sign that this car wore both in England and during its awarding in Georgia is still with it, and in good shape.

After their moment in the spotlight, the MGB/GT and its owner disappeared from public view. Rodney told me that the car’s current caretaker, Tony Wilson, had bought it from Newton—who died in 2013— when it was 13 years old. Rodney first crossed paths with Wilson at a club event in 2000 and learned of the MG’s continued, local existence, but frustratingly lost track of him and it. Rodney explains, “Over the next several years, appeals for information about the car and its keeper were made on our club’s website and in a classic-British-car-focused blog I kept at the time, but nothing came of them. The subject of the 250,000th MGB came up in several online forums and in the North American MGB Register publication MG Driver, with most participants believing the car was lost.

“To my surprise, in June 2020, the current owner sent me an email after having seen the blog posts and the earlier appeal for information on our club’s website,” he continues. “I responded and we shared emails on the subject until the COVID pandemic put an end to any hope of a face-to-face meeting. In February 2023, after having moved house from Mobile to a small Southeastern Mississippi community, the gentleman in question contacted me again with an invitation to view his car. This time, I wasn’t going to miss the opportunity.

“On the agreed-upon day, my brother— a fellow MG owner—and I made the drive to the warehouse where the car was stored. We were warmly welcomed by Tony Wilson, who showed us his historic car. He’d bought the Blaze orange MGB/GT in 1984 after having seen it sitting in a vacant lot for several months; a friend had alerted Tony to the significance of the tired MG, and he was determined to purchase the car. Newton had by then moved to Birmingham, Alabama, and the negotiations were carried out through his parents, who still resided in Mobile. A price was agreed to, and the Blaze MG took up residence in Tony’s garage. There it would sit out of the elements for nearly 40 years.”

With the kind approval of Tony Wilson, Rodney shared numerous photos of 250000G in its current, non-running state. He reports it’s surprisingly free from serious corrosion, although the factory-applied paint and Rostyle wheels are in poor shape, the Ambla vinyl-upholstered interior tatty and missing its carpet. Shockingly, the original promotional display sign, custom number plates, and a thick file of paperwork confirming the unique heritage of this MGB/GT remain with the car. When pressed about his plans for it, Wilson told Rodney he dreams of performing a restoration now that he has time to devote to his transportation hobby, which also includes a ’72 MG Midget, three air-cooled VWs, and several motorcycles. Rodney hopes his club can welcome the GT for a special display in honor of the MG centennial at their October 2023 car show, and concluded, “Whatever may come, the 250,000th MGB is in good hands, just as it has been for nearly 40 years.”

Recent
How To Compute Compression Ratios
Photo: Jeff Smith

Only the most blasé of engine builders are not concerned with compression ratios. The relationship between the volume of the cylinder with the piston at the bottom of its stroke and the volume at the top of the stroke is inherently critical to engine performance. That simple comparison can help make power, improve throttle response, increase fuel mileage, and generally is one of the most important specs on any engine, either normally aspirated or super-turbocharged.

The best way to tell the compression ratio story is to start from the beginning. The factors that affect this volume relationship include the cylinder bore, piston stroke, the volume of the combustion chamber, the shape of the piston top, the position of the piston relative to the block deck (either below or above the deck), and the thickness of the head gasket.

Keep reading...Show Less
Personal Luxury Meets Pro Street Power In This 1975 Dodge Charger

For car enthusiasts who weren’t around in 1975, you might hear a variation of “look around, what is happening in today’s world is what happened back then.” There is a vein of truth to that. Just a few years ago, buying a car with over 700 horsepower and a warranty that was brightly colored and sounded like the devil’s personal limousine was only a matter of having enough money to cover the purchasing cost. Two-door, four-door, station wagon, sports car, all available. But sooner or later, the party ends and now we have companies trying to foist electric vehicles and small crossovers that they promise will excite in the same way. The sad truth is, they won’t. Something is lost. The “x-factor”.

Keep reading...Show Less

Trending