Gordon-Keeble

Gordon-Keeble was a British car marque, made first in Slough, then Eastleigh, and finally in Southampton (all in England), between 1963 and 1967. The marque's badge was unusual featuring a tortoise.

The Gordon-Keeble came about when John Gordon – formerly of the struggling Peerless company – and Jim Keeble got together in 1959 to make the Gordon GT car by fitting a Buick 3.5 litre V8 engine into a chassis by Peerless. The car, still at the development stage, was then tried with a 4.6 litre Chevrolet V8 fitted into a square-tube steel spaceframe chassis, with independent front suspension and all round disc brakes. The complete chassis was then taken to Turin, Italy where a body made of aluminium panels designed by Giugiaro was built by Bertone. The car's four five-inch headlights were in the rare, slightly angled "Chinese eye" arrangement, also used by a few other marques, notably Rolls-Royce and Triumph.

The complete car appeared on the Bertone stand at the 1960 Geneva Motor Show. After extensive road testing the car was shipped to Detroit and shown to Chevrolet management who agreed to supply Corvette engines and gearboxes for a production run of the car.

The car was readied for production with some changes, the main ones being a larger 5.4 litre engine, and a change from aluminium body to glass fibre. Problems with suppliers ensued and before any cars were made the money ran out and the company went into liquidation. About 90 cars had been sold at what turned out to be an unrealistic price of £2798.

In 1965 the company was bought by Harold Smith and Geoffrey West and it was re-registered as Keeble Cars Ltd. and production resumed, but only for a short time. The last car of the main manufacturing run was made in 1966. A final one was actually produced in 1967 from spares, bringing the total made to exactly 100. The Gordon-Keeble Owner's Club claim that over 90 of these still exist. An attempt was made to restart production in 1968 when the rights to the car were bought by an American, John de Bruyne, but came to nothing in spite of showing two cars badged as De Bruynes at that year's New York Motor Show along with a new mid-engined coupé.