"In 1958 ex-soldier and sometime Italian resident John Gordon was the managing director of Peerless cars, who were based in Slough. Peerless made four-seater sports saloons, using a tubular frame, supporting a fiberglass body, with a de Dion rear suspension and "
Gordon Keeble GT Concept
21 year-old Giugiaro's Bertone rarity
It had a tortoise as a logo, a 5.4 Litre Chevy V8 and one of the greatest automotive pensmen of the 20th century as a designer.
Still, you probably won’t have spotted many Gordon Keeble cars on the streets. Only 99 of the Anglo-Italian hybrid were made and so are rare as Hen’s teeth these days. John Gordon and Jim Keeble, who came together to create the idea of the car, had been working for a variety of struggling English auto companies when they forged an alliance over a G&T, setting up shop in Eastleigh near Southampton at the end of the fifties.
Giugiaro’s quirky design, with that acreage of glass and the cambered headlamp setup, recalls only the most elusive mid-sixties Lancias.
Launched at Geneva in 1960, the Gordon was the central attraction of the Bertone stand that year.
There’s no doubt that the Gordon Keeble will be remembered as a highlight of a great designer’s juvenilia.
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Never realised that there were so few. Ogled one in Edinburgh several decades ago.
I worked on many of these cars in the mid seventies. There was a Coach works / Garage in Brackley near Banbury (Oxfordshire, UK) Ernie Knott was the man in charge and an Iconic figure in the UK with the Gordon Keeble Marque