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Autos - Cars > Rolls Royce Bentley > SunTimes: Found...
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SunTimes: Found: the lost Rolls of Kabul

by mail1606808@[EMAIL PROTECTED] Jun 10, 2007 at 11:00 PM

The Sunday Times
June 10, 2007

Found: the lost Rolls of Kabul
Christina Lamb

A ROLLS-ROYCE from the collection of the Afghan royal family that was
thought to have been lost during years of war and Taliban rule has
been found and renovated by a British businessman.

The 1932 Drophead Coup=E9 will go on display next weekend at the annual
Rolls-Royce show in Northampton****re. Its recovery is the culmination
of 20 years' detective work by Richard Raynsford, a barrister turned
political risk consultant, who has spent =A3500,000 and admits that the
car and its history "became a complete obsession".

Like many of the maharajas of nearby India, the Afghan monarchy
regarded the Rolls-Royce as its vehicle of choice. Between 1910 and
1938, five Afghan kings ordered 13 Rolls-Royces. In 1929, when King
Amanullah was forced to abdicate amid protests against his
modernisation programme, he fled to Kandahar in his Rolls.

The cars were believed by the Rolls-Royce Enthusiasts' Club to have
been lost in the fighting of the past three decades or destroyed by
the Taliban. But a derelict Rolls tracked down by Raynsford in Seattle
turned out to have belonged to Prince Shah Wali Khan, brother of King
Nadir Shah.

Known as the Liberator of Kabul for his military exploits, the prince
had been stationed in Europe from 1929 to 1945 as minister-
plenipotentiary and apparently enjoyed driving around Fascist Rome in
his gas-guzzling "enemy" car.

Part of the car's rarity stems from the fact that it was given a new
body in 1937 by Hermann Graber, a master coachbuilder from
Switzerland, making it one of only two examples of a prewar Graber.
The other is in the Swiss National Trans****t Museum in Lucerne.

But what makes it particularly special is its history. When Raynsford
first started looking for GRW 59, he was simply looking for his father-
in-law's old car and had no idea of its Afghan owner.

His search began in 1987 after his mother-in-law began reminiscing
about the Rolls her late husband, Major Tom Evill, had bought after
the war. She said she believed it had been owned by a Yugoslav prince,
and Raynsford's imagination was fired. "I always had a yen for this
Boy's Own adventure kind of thing," he said. "Little did I know I was
setting off on a 20-year odyssey." Rolls-Royce keeps a register of all
its cars and at first he thought the task would be easy. The Rolls-
Royce Association's president, a former army officer, said he
remembered seeing it in Austria after the war.

Then the trail went cold. After 10 years of writing letters, Raynsford
had almost given up when he spotted an American advertisement for a
s****ts Rolls in Rolls-Royce Magazine. Although the photograph was of a
wreck, he recognised the car. He flew to Seattle, where it had
languished for more than 30 years, and handed over =A317,000 in cash.

In February 1998, he ****pped it back to England and commissioned its
restoration by Fiennes of Oxford****re. He then began researching its
history.

Raynsford discovered it had been acquired in Rome in 1945 for =A3550
(around =A330,000 today) by the Reverend George Irving for the Church of
Scot-land. Irving was serving in Italy and Klagenfurt, southern
Austria, and was director of British Troops Welfare in Austria.

Although Irving was dead, his wife Maybell was still alive and had
fond memories of using the car to take tea and buns to the troops and
to tour Italy and Austria on her honeymoon in 1946. She told Raynsford
her husband had acquired the car from a "Prince Ali Walli of
Abyssinia".

"That set me off on a completely false trail for years," he said.
"Eventually I went to see the crown prince of Abyssinia, who now lives
in Frankfurt, and he said, 'You're crazy. All my family were locked up
by Mussolini so whoever was driving a black Drophead Rolls in Rome in
1945 was not one of us'."

One of those Raynsford recruited to the search was his old friend John
****pman, who headed the Horn of Africa section in the Foreign Office.
It was he who suggested that the owner could be Afghan because there
had been a Prince Wali Khan and Afghanistan had maintained a legation
in Rome in the war.

However, no information was forthcoming. Even though it was her old
family car, Raynsford's wife Rosemary began suggesting that he was
flogging a dead horse. "We'd spent =A3200,000 with nothing to show
except a pile of tin," he said, "and we needed to commit another
=A3200,000 to complete, knowing that even when finished GRW 59 would
most likely be worth only =A340,000 on a good day."

Then, just before last Christmas, a brown envelope arrived from the
private Swiss Car Register. Inside was a newspaper photograph of the
car being pulled from Lake Leman in Switzerland in July 1939. The
caption described the driver as the prince of Afghanistan, brother of
the late king, who had overshot the bend and plunged 20 metres into
the lake, "taking an unwelcome bath".

The mystery was solved. "I was delighted," said Raynsford. "I even had
my own Afghan royal connection, as I used to serve with the mounted
Life Guards and was commanding the first division when King Zahir Shah
visited England in 1971 and had to escort his carriage from Victoria
station to Buckingham Palace."

Prince Wali Khan was the uncle of Zahir Shah, Afghanistan's last king,
and in 1929 led the battle that brought his elder brother, Nadir Khan,
to the throne, only for him to be assassinated four years later.

"Presumably the prince had gone for a good lunch the day he drove the
car into the lake," said Raynsford.

"Ironically, now we've done all this work and uncovered her history,
we can't really drive the car because it's too valuable. But my son is
dying to get his hands on her."


http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/article1909901.ece
 




 1 Posts in Topic:
SunTimes: Found: the lost Rolls of Kabul
mail1606808@[EMAIL PROTEC  2007-06-10 23:00:52 

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