Triple win for Great British Car Journey in2022 Tourism Awards

Great British Car Journey’s apprentice mechanic Luke Henshaw has been named as the 2022 Tourism Young Achiever in the Peak District and Derbyshire Tourism Awards.

Luke (18) was one of just 15 Gold winners at the awards, which were organised by Marketing Peak District & Derbyshire. ‘Tourism Young Achiever’ was a new award category added to the awards line-up to recognise the thousands of jobs supported by tourism across the Peak District and Derbyshire.

In addition to Luke’s win, the Ambergate-based classic car attraction also scooped the silver award in the New Tourism Business category and bronze in the Experience of the Year category for its unique Drive Dad’s Car experience just 10 months after opening its door to visitors.
Luke, from Mansfield, joined Great British Car Journey in April ahead of the popular attraction opening in May 2021. He works and learns alongside the attraction’s Chief Engineer and to keep a fleet of nearly 200 cars in working order.

Delighted to be recognised, Luke said: “it’s a great honour to be recognised. I was a little nervous but the atmosphere was brilliant and a great experience for my first awards ceremony. I’m learning so much at Great British Car Journey. It’s a fantastic place to work with an amazing variety of the cars that I get to work on daily. It’s brilliant.”

Richard Usher, founder and CEO of Great British Car Journey said: “We are absolutely delighted to have been recognised across three categories in the awards after opening just 10 months ago amidst Covid restrictions.
“Luke, as indeed all the team – from volunteers and paid employees – are integral to ensuring Great British Car Journey continues to grow and become the go-to destination for classic car enthusiasts throughout the UK.

“Despite recent setbacks with the weather, we’re all really looking forward to 2022. We have even more plans for the attraction in the pipeline and the team and I are definitely aiming for more golds in the awards next year.

Designed to recognise and reward excellence and outstanding achievement in the Peak District and Derbyshire’s valuable tourism sector, the awards brought together 41 finalists in 15 categories for a glittering ceremony at Chesterfield’s four-star Casa Hotel.
Great British Car Journey is open seven days a week from 10.00am until 5.00pm and charts the history of the British motoring industry through more than 130 cars on display, including Austin Sevens, Morris Minors, Minis, Ford Escorts and even a McLaren supercar.

You can book tickets to visit us at: www.greatbritishcarjourney.com

THANK YOU TEAM!

WOW…..What a week we’ve had here at Great British Car Journey and not one we’d like to repeat!

Like many businesses and local residents, we didn’t escape storms Dudley, Eunice and Franklin unscathed. At one point, the River Derwent was recorded as flowing at 220 tonnes per second through Matlock Bath (the highest ever recoded)

Our team has worked tirelessly to get the attraction open as quickly as possible for out visitors (it is 25,000 sq. ft!) and we were immensely proud to open the doors up at 10:00am today.

We’re not a big team, but every department has pitched in without hesitation, so thank you to the Cleaning, Catering, Office support, Reception, Maintenance teams and Volunteers. Without you we wouldn’t be where we are today.

Back open Friday

NEWS UPDATE

Thanks for all your well wishes today, following the flooding that has affected us and our neighbours around the Derwent Valley and Peak District.

Our flood defence system worked extremely well, but we did experience some minor water ingress into the main hall and as a result, need to carry out some maintenance and cleaning up around the site.

We will re-open this Friday the 25th of February and remain open 7 days a week from 10:00am until 5:00pm

If you have booked tickets for the next few days, we will be happy to honour them when you are next able to visit us and apologise for any inconvenience caused.

Great British Car Journey’s barn find proves Austin really is ‘Britain’s dependable car’

An Austin Heavy 12/4, which was owned from new by the same family for 90 years, is working once again despite having spent the last 43 years stored in an overgrown timber garage.

Purchased on 22 July 1931 by Fred Woodhall, the Austin 12/4 travelled many thousands of miles in the UK as well as throughout Europe. In 1961 the car was passed on to the original owner’s son and then great grandson, Charles Clarkson who has now donated it to the Great British Car Journey based in Ambergate, Derbyshire. 

Despite being forgotten about for more than 40 years, with only minor attention, the engine started, and the electrics worked. Additionally, the car’s brakes work, it pulls strongly in all gears, the dynamo charges, the radiator still holds water, and all major functions are fine; all testament to the manufacturer’s claim in the 30s that Austin was ‘Britain’s Dependable Car’.

Richard Usher, Chief Executive of Great British Car Journey explained: “I was absolutely flabbergasted when the car started given the storage conditions. The garage was so overgrown with ivy we couldn’t open the doors so had to physically remove them in order to get to the car. Once we got the car out and lifted the bonnet it looked like the engine had completely seized.”

The car retains all its original features and is in remarkable condition given its storage conditions. Now on display at the classic car visitor attraction, there are no plans to restore the Austin 12/4. Richard explained why: “We’ve given it a clean and a polish but that’s it. Great British Car Journey is all about preserving the history of vehicles and part of that is showing how they’ve been used and the life they have led.

“The fact this car has survived being driven many thousands of miles and is driveable after more than 40 years off the road is testimony to Austin’s build quality and Britain’s motoring heritage. I am delighted that we have been able to add this remarkable example of a pre war Austin to the Great British Car Journey collection.”

Cheeky Valentine’s survey proves classic car enthusiasts are Mini not Maxi lovers!

Despite the fully fold down rear seats and ample boot space, the Austin Maxi has been placed bottom in a poll of British classic cars favoured by drivers for a first date between 1960 – 1990.

Instead, in an online survey by Great British Car Journey, the original Mini has been declared the all-time favourite British car for romance.
Ahead of Valentine’s Day, the Derbyshire classic car visitor attraction asked its 16,000 strong social media following to tell them about the car in which they had their first or most memorable date in.

In the full list of the top 10 British cars for a first date, second and third place in the survey were claimed by the iconic Ford Capri followed by the loveable Morris Minor respectively.

1. Mini
2. Ford Capri
3. Morris Minor
4. Ford Escort
5. Austin Metro
6. Ford Fiesta
7. Hillman Imp
8. MGB
9. Austin Morris 1100
10. Austin Maxi

Richard Usher, Chief Executive of the classic car visitor attraction, said: “Cleary the cramped conditions of the classic Mini were no deterrent to romance as our survey has shown. The Maxi was a brave attempt to create something new but was let down by a simply shocking 5 speed gearbox and a dumpy unattractive shape. Despite its poor reputation the car had many redeeming features, particularly when it came to dating!

“Despite what its critics may say, the Austin Maxi was a great concept, and I am delighted to have a superb 1981 example in the Great British Car Journey collection.”

Produced from 1969 – 1981, the Austin Maxi is recognised for being Britain’s first genuinely family-sized hatchback, with plenty of space and seats that folded down into a lumpy double bed. Only half a million were sold compared to the far sexier Ford Capri which was launched the same year and sold 1.9 million worldwide by the end of production.

To celebrate Valentine’s Day and help people relive their dating memories of days gone by, Great British Car Journey is offering couples discounted admission to the attraction in Ambergate. Entry for couples is just £25, compared to £30 for two single admissions.

For couples that really want the ultimate trip down Memory Lane, they can also take the car they enjoyed their first or most memorable date in for a drive. The Drive Dad’s Car experience at Great British Car Journey offers people the chance to get back behind the wheel of 30 British classics including the Mini, Morris Minor and Ford Capri.

As part of our Valentine’s Day celebrations, Great British Car Journey is also offering 20% off all Drive Dad’s Car experiences booked up until midnight on Monday 14 February 2022. To claim the discount, simply use the code VALENTINES20 when booking online at www.drivedadscar.com

Founder’s Almanac 2021

January: Contractors of every trade working on Unit 4 to make it a suitable home for the GBCJ Car Collection and Visitors to it.  Snow in middle of month. Heavy rain and high river levels later on.  Purchased one owner XJS Cabriolet and Bristol 410.

February:  Work continues. Purchase Rover Streetwise on Valentine’s Day. Weather improves towards end of month. Still lots to do!

March: Humber Sceptre and another Austin Seven join us as well as a rare Vauxhall Victor from 1971 and a lovely MG TF.

Start trial hanging of banners in main display area.










April:  Morris 1800 is purchased. Alec Issigonis loved this car but unfortunately it did not sell as well as expected. Very low mileage MG ZR joins us. Pete Stevens did such a great job turning these Rovers into a really good hot hatch.  Drive -It day on April 25th attracts hundreds of visitors …to the car park. See you all again in 2022. 

May:  Working flat out!  McLaren 650S arrives … how I love this car!!

Press and opening day on May 19th. Great weather, lots of guests including the BBC who broadcast live for the Breakfast programme.

May 22nd is our first day open to visitors and thanks to the hundreds that turned up.










June:  Weather not great but loads of visitors. Welcome a big Morgan group on June 26th.

July:  At last, some Summer weather. We acquire beautiful Jensen 541S.  Welcome donation from Derby College of cutaway Ford Prefect Chassis. THANK YOU.

Visit to stud in Wiltshire where a cache of fascinating cars are hiding. More of them later

Buy a one owner from new Austin A40. My Mum learned to drive in one… I bounced around in the back!

Visitors keep coming and lots of people “Drive Dads Car”. Reviews are very favourable and at last we can open the Café properly (deliberate brief mention of the dreaded C- thing!)

August: Buy a wonderful Mk2 Cortina Ambulance.

Sunny days and rather warm.

August 30th  – De Loreans  take over. Thanks to the club for bringing the cars.














September:  Arrival of the Arrol Johnston and two lovely Jaguars.  Huge Thanks to the Plaister Charitable Trust for the loan of these wonderful cars.

Nice to see the Austin Healey Club…the first car club I ever joined.

At last, after far too long, my wife and I do a tour with the Pre-War Austin 7 Club in the beautiful Lake District. What a wonderful little car.

October:  We welcome a terrific collection of cars from the Eastern Bloc. I want a Wartburg!

November:   We are given a wonderful 1931 Austin 12. A huge Thankyou to Charles Clarkson whose family have owned this car from new.  Thanks to Autoglym the Plaister cars are put on display looking magnificent.  Well done to our team for getting them running so sweetly.

Thanks to The Federation of Historic British Vehicle Clubs for making us and the cars so welcome at the NEC. We launch the Great British Car Club which now has nearly 200 members. Please join and come and see us regularly!!!

Snow makes an unwelcome appearance on the 28th.

Fortunately, it thaws and to much excitement we get the Arrol Johnston started and driving.

December:  Mark and Luke work wonders on the Austin 12 which after four decades locked in a garage, bursts into life and I drive her round the site. “As Dependable as an Austin”. You had better believe it!!!

I set sail in our Dutton on the 17th. The weather in Littlehampton is warm and the sea is calm!

The final arrivals of 2021 arrive at Ambergate on December 30th Two lovely Farina cars: An Austin Cambridge and a Riley 14/72. I drive them both and want to thank Christine Plummer and her late Father for donating these precious cars to us.
















THANK YOU to everyone who has visited in 2021. Please come again in 2022 and bring your friends with you. I wish you all a happy, healthy and prosperous New Year and thanks for all the encouragement in what has been an exciting but very challenging year.

Best Drive of 2022:  Austin Seven in Cumbria

Fastest Drive of 2022:  McLaren 650S (Of course!)

Slowest Drive:  Arrol-Johnston. Magnificent.

Weirdest Drive: Dutton into the water. Well done Tim.

Most Extraordinary: Austin 12. So Dependable!

Most unexpected: Riley 14/72 yesterday. Comfy and rather lovely.

ENJOY THE PLEASURE OF DRIVING A CLASSIC CAR!!!!!!!

See you all in 2022

Richard Usher   31/12/21.

Christmas Gifts at the Great British Car Journey

Great British Car Journey is a great place to buy gifts for the petrol-head in your life!!

As well as advanced tickets for our multi-award nominated attraction, you can buy a voucher for our “Drive Dad’s Car” experience from only £49, giving the lucky recipient the chance to drive one or more of our 30 Classic British cars. An attractive gift pack is available featuring an embossed travel wallet, enamel key fob and an old -style driving license.

For the really dedicated car enthusiast, why not buy membership of the new Great British Car Club? Members get unlimited access to the collection and all the amenities on site as well as some valuable discounts on a whole host of products and services. A quarterly newsletter “Classic Connections” keeps them informed of special member events and tours and their membership card comes in a stylish embossed travel wallet. Membership starts from just £31

The Gift shop at Great British Car Journey contains a great range of books, models, toys and branded car merchandise, guaranteed to raise a smile on Christmas day.

UK’s newest car club launched at Classic Motor Show

The UK’s newest classic car club was launched by Great British Car Journey at the Lancaster Insurance Classic Motor Show today (12 November).


The Great British Car Club celebrates diversity, welcoming enthusiasts of any old cars regardless of age, value or country of origin.


Richard Usher, founder and CEO of Great British Car Journey explained why he has launched the new club: “Having been a member of numerous clubs, I have noticed that younger enthusiasts and even oldies like me, have become less fixated on a single make and that enthusiasm for old cars now covers a very broad spectrum of makes and models and I wanted to create a club which represented this.”


As well as giving member unlimited visits access to the Great British Car Journey attraction and its facilities, membership of the new club aims to connect classic car enthusiasts through special events, newsletters and online forums as well as offering discounts on products and access to a specialist classic car insurer.


Richard added: “There are hundreds of excellent car clubs who are doing a great job encouraging interest in and the use of old cars, but we have the luxury of facilities at Great British Car Journey which we can put at our members’ disposal.”


Former CEO of McLaren, friend of Great British Car Journey and classic car enthusiast, Mike Flewitt has agreed to be Honorary President of Great British Car Club. Mike also opened the attraction in May earlier this year.

Great British Car Journey CEO Richard Usher and honorary president Mike Flewitt abourd the 1902 Affol Johnston

Annual membership of the club is from just £31.


Great British Car Journey can be found on stand 5-320 within the Federation of British Historic Vehicle Clubs (FBHVC) village at the Classic Motor Show.


As well as launching the new club, the stand will also host the attraction’s newest exhibit a 1905 Arrol-Johnston Dogcart. The latest acquisition at the attraction puts a century between the oldest car and the most recent classic car on display – a McLaren 650S.


As well as the undercover exhibition at Great British Car Journey, the attraction also offers visitors the opportunity to drive more than 30 classic cars on a private route as part of the Drive Dad’s Car experience.


Since opening in May, Great British Car Journey has proved a hit with classic car enthusiasts attracting 25,000 visitors. Both the attraction and Richard Usher have also been named as finalists in the Royal Automobile Club Historic Awards and The Historic Motoring Awards.


Richard added: “We are tremendously excited to be at the Classic Motor Show and are grateful to the Federation for helping us tell thousands more people about the Great British Car journey, Drive Dad’s Car and the brand new Great British Car Club.”

Click here to find out more and join the Great British Car Club

Winter Opening Hours

Please see below for our revised opening timetable for the winter period:

November

Open between: 10am till 5pm – Last entry at 3.00pm

Closed every Tuesday and Wednesday

December

Open between: 10am till 5pm – Last entry at 3.00pm

Closed every Tuesday and Wednesday

W/C 20th December open all week except closed on the, 24th 25th 26th

Open 27th 28th 29th 30th

Closed 31st

January

Open between: 10am till 5pm – Last entry at 3.00pm

Closed 1st

Re open 2nd Jan all week

Closed 11th -12th (Tuesday/Wednesday)

Closed 18th -19th (Tuesday/Wednesday)

Closed 24th Jan Re-open Friday 4th Feb

February

Open between: 10am till 5pm – Last entry at 3.00pm

Closed 8th-9th (Tuesday/Wednesday)

Closed 15th 16th (Tuesday/Wednesday)

Open every day from 17th Feb onwards

LOOK WHO’S DROPPING IN THIS HALLOWEEN!!

Great British Car Journey to host Harry Potter Halloween special event

Calling all wizards, witches and muggles! Come join the Great British Car Journey for a very special Harry Potter-themed event for all the family on Sunday 31 October.

A 1960 Ford Anglia 105E, which was enchanted by Ron Weasley’s father in Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets – is flying into Great British Car Journey to take centre stage at the event.

The event also celebrates 82 years since the very first Ford Anglia model, the E04A, was released for sale on the 31 October 1939.

The Great British Car Journey Harry Potter Halloween Special promises to be a magical spectacle with family entry to the attraction discounted on the day.

On the day, the Ford Anglia 105E Owners Club will be bringing along a selection of the classic cars which were immortalised in the Harry Potter film to display at Great British Car Journey.

There will also be be a ‘Hedwig Hunt’ for children in the attraction’s collection of more than 130 classic cars as well as plenty of ghoulish goodies in the café and prizes throughout the day for visitors wearing Harry Potter-themed fancy dress.

Manufactured in Dagenham by Ford between 1959 – 1968, the Anglia, with its American-influenced styling, including a sweeping nose line and its prominent ‘eye’ headlamps, has rightfully claimed its place in the Great British Car Journey collection of classic cars, which boasts its own Ford Anglia 105 Estate.

In total more than 1.5 million Ford Anglias were produced, yet only around 320 remain today.


To celebrate the Ford Anglia’s birthday 82nd birthday, family tickets (2 adults and up to 3 children) are discounted to £30, a saving of £10. Entry includes access to the special Harry Potter Halloween event from 10.00am – 6.00pm (last entry at 4.00pm). Pre-booking is essential for the Halloween event.

To book tickets for the Harry Potter Halloween Special event on Sunday 31 October at Great British Car Journey, please click here: Admissions or call 01773 317243.

Classic Mini scales the Heights

A classic 1989 Mini can now be found atop the Heights of Abraham !

Visitors to Matlock Bath’s Heights of Abraham are set for a surprise when they alight the cable car at the top of the 60-acre Hilltop Estate. They’ll be greeted by a classic 1989 Mini!


The Mini has been lent to Derbyshire’s oldest tourist attraction by Derbyshire’s newest one, Great British Car Journey, which opened in May earlier this year.


Getting to the top of the Heights of Abraham was no mean feat for the 31-year-old car, which faced a half mile climb to reach the summit which is 1000 feet above sea level.


Rupert Pugh, Director of the Heights of Abraham, drove the car to the summit himself, negotiating the steep, narrow paths and tricky hairpin bends that wrap around Masson Hill. One slip and the car could have ended up back down the hill!


The branded 30th Anniversary edition Mini, which promotes the classic car attraction in Ambergate, will now greet visitors to the hilltop attraction. Visitors to the Heights of Abraham will also get discounted entry to Great British Car Journey.


Rupert commented: “I had a great deal of fun acquainting myself with the Mini. Initially I was rather sceptical that it could make the climb, but it surprised and delighted me on the journey up to the summit. It’s already proving a real talking point with visitors with many asking how we got it up here.”


Richard Usher, CEO of Great British Car Journey said: “I am very grateful to Heights of Abraham for giving us the opportunity to promote Great British Car Journey. Being a new attraction in the area we’re very keen to ensure as many people as possible know about us and visit. We’re looking forward to welcoming many of the people that visit Heights of Abraham each year to Great British Car Journey.”


The classic Mini was produced by the British Motor Corporation (BMC) and its successors from 1959 until 2000 and is considered one of the most influential cars of the twentieth centuries. Despite 5.3 million original Minis being produced, today just 8,176 exist in the world.


Great British Car Journey boasts seven original Minis in its collection, including a rare unregistered Mini with just 12 miles on the clock. For people keen to take one for a drive, Great British Car Journey also offers a 20-minute Drive Dad’s Car driving experience in four Minis, including a 1966 Mini 850 MK1, and a Mini Cooper which was manufactured in 2000 and one of the last Minis ever made.


Alongside Minis, visitors to Great British Car Journey will find a collection of 130 popular cars designed and manufactured in the UK between 1920 and 2000, including the Austin Seven, Morris Minor, Ford Escort and Vauxhall Chevette – cars that were all produced in their millions and were on virtually every street and carpark in Britain but have since all but disappeared from the roads.


To arrange a Mini driving experience at Great British Car Journey, visit www.drivedadscar.com or to book tickets for the exhibition, click here: Buy tickets

Great British Car Journey goes back to the future with DeLorean Day event on 30 August

Great British Car Journey will be celebrating the fortieth anniversary of the iconic DMC DeLorean sportscar later this month.

Monday 30 August has been declared DeLorean Day at the classic car visitor attraction in Ambergate. To celebrate, there will be something for every member of the family to enjoy at Great British Car Journey.

Production of the DeLorean began in 1981 just four years before the car was catapulted into the spotlight by the highest-grossing film of 1985 – Back To The Future.

With its revolutionary stainless-steel body and distinctive gull-wing doors, the DeLorean was born with film star appeal. 

The futuristic DMC-12 sportscar now enjoys cult status for its time-travelling antics with Marty McFly and Doc Brown in the blockbuster Back to the Future movie franchise.

There will be a selection of DeLorean cars on display at the attraction, including a very rare right hand drive model on loan from the DeLorean Owners Club UK.

There’s even the opportunity to sit in a DeLorean and utter the immortal words of Doc Brown – “Roads? Where we’re going we don’t need roads!”

Kids are also encouraged to come in Back To The Future costumes, with a prize for the best mini Marty McFly and Doc Brown on the day. Prizes include a ride in a DeLorean, model cars and goody bags.

However, it’s not all about Back To The Future. At the event enthusiasts can meet with one of the foremost DeLorean experts in the UK, Chris Parnham, author of DeLorean: Celebrating the Impossible. Chris has an encyclopedic knowledge of the DeLorean and its inventor John Zachary DeLorean.

Manufactured in Northern Ireland, the DeLorean has rightfully claimed its place in the Great British Car collection which features more than 130 cars manufactured and designed in the UK.

Pre-booking is essential for DeLorean Day. Family tickets (2 adults and up to 3 children) for the day are just £30, a saving of £10, and include access to the full exhibition from 10.00am – 5.00pm

To book a ticket for the DeLorean Day event on Monday 30 August at Great British Car Journey visit www.greatbritishcarjourney.com or call 01773 317243.

FOUNDERS BLOG: JUNE 11TH 2021

Another busy week!

Another busy week at GBCJ  with some great Classics visiting today from Staffordshire and beyond.  Groups are always very welcome and hopefully as Covid recedes, we will be able to host Club meets in both the attraction and our licensed café . Like most hospitality businesses , we are struggling to recruit catering staff so if you fancy working in a place for the car-intoxicated and you have some catering experience , PLEASE get in touch by emailing info@greatbritishcarjourney.com

Practical Classics has done us proud in the July edition so thanks as ever to Danny Hopkins for his infectious enthusiasm. I have also seen an advanced copy of the next EVO which has a review by my old friend John Barker.

I hope everyone is enjoying this overdue warm spell and that it remains hoods down for the foreseeable future.

Don’t forget Fathers Day …why not buy him a Drive Dad’s Car Experience?

Stay Safe

 Just one of the beautiful cars popping in to visit today!

CHAIR OF BRITISH TOURIST AUTHORITY VISITS PEAK DISTRICT & DERBYSHIRE TO SUPPORT TOURISM RECOVERY

We were happy to welcome the Chair of the British Tourist Authority on his whistle-stop tour of Peak District & Derbyshire

The Chair of the British Tourist Authority has enjoyed a whistle-stop tour of Peak District & Derbyshire to celebrate the reopening of local tourism and hospitality businesses.

Lord Patrick McLoughlin CH visited some of the county’s top visitor attractions and destinations during a day trip to discuss how businesses are working hard to welcome visitors back safely, and to discuss the ongoing challenges facing the sector during the Covid-19 pandemic.

Organised by Marketing Peak District & Derbyshire, the area’s official destination management organisation, the trip enabled Lord McLoughlin – who was MP for Derbyshire Dales between 1986 and 2019 – to see first-hand how the industry is preparing to recover and rebuild following the easing of lockdown restrictions.

Highlighting the Peak District & Derbyshire’s appeal as a year-round, all weather destination, the day began with a visit to the newly-opened Great British Car Journey at Ambergate. Lord McLoughlin toured the state-of-the-art exhibition – which celebrates 100 years of British motoring history – before sampling the Peak District region’s first whisky, recently launched by the nearby White Peak Distillery.

Lord McLoughlin then visited Chatsworth, where he was welcomed by the Duke of Devonshire for a tour of the magnificent Grade I listed House, before enjoying a networking lunch with local tourism businesses and representatives.

The trip also included visits to the Old Original Bakewell Pudding Shop and Thornbridge Brewery, where business owners highlighted the ongoing difficulties and unique set of challenges facing the tourism and hospitality industry as businesses continue to adapt to new restrictions.

The final stop of the day was Buxton where Lord McLoughlin toured the town’s iconic Opera House, which recently reopened following 16 months of closure, and the Ensana Buxton Crescent Hotel & Thermal Spa, the destination’s first 5-star hotel which opened in October 2020 following a £70 million renovation.

The visit follows the launch of Marketing Peak District & Derbyshire’s £70,000 Escape the Everyday marketing campaign, supported by funding from VisitEngland, to boost the recovery of local tourism and hospitality businesses.

British Tourist Authority Chairman Lord Patrick McLoughlin said:“I’m so pleased to be in Derbyshire today as English Tourism Week draws to a close. The week has been dedicated to showing support for tourism businesses and destinations across the sector as they reopen and start to rebuild. Local businesses have been working so hard to welcome visitors back safely, adapting and innovating to meet new ways of working and still providing a great visitor experience.

“And it is great to see the activity that Marketing Peak District & Derbyshire will be delivering locally, with support from VisitEngland funding and aligning with our national ‘Escape the Everyday’ campaign, to encourage more people to get out and discover the outstanding destinations and quality attractions here on our doorstep and to drive bookings.

“Millions of jobs and local economies depend on tourism right across the country and the industry needs all of us to make sure it gets back on its feet.”

Jo Dilley, Managing Director of Marketing Peak District & Derbyshire, said“It’s great to welcome Lord McLoughlin to the area to recognise the efforts made by local businesses to reopen safely, and to also see up close some of the exciting new additions to our tourism offer.

“Over 32,000 local jobs depend on tourism and I am confident that we left him in no doubt that, despite ongoing challenges, the businesses that make up the Peak District & Derbyshire’s visitor economy are resilient, passionate and fully focussed on the future and their role in successfully supporting the county’s economic recovery.

“More than 900 local businesses have now signed up to the We’re Good To Go industry standard, demonstrating they have all the right safety measures in place, and the continued success of the vaccination programme is going to be vital in helping us get the sector back on its feet.

“However, it will take at least two years for tourism to recover back to its pre-pandemic value, so it’s never been more important for us all to support our local businesses and visitor attractions – and the industry is looking forward to welcoming you back.”

Councillor Barry Lewis, Leader of Derbyshire County Council, said“Tourism is a vital part of the Derbyshire economy which is worth around £2.5bn a year to the county, supports 32,000 jobs, attracts 41 million day visitors and more than 4.3 million staying visitors.

“As we move further along the Government’s roadmap out of lockdown, we’re looking forward to welcoming more visitors back and are working hard with our partners to help rebuild our visitor economy following the pandemic.

“With uncertainty about foreign travel, more and more people are looking at staying in the UK for their holidays and Derbyshire is a perfect destination for short or longer stays.

“From stunning, specially protected landscapes, exciting outdoor activities and brilliant attractions to rich history and heritage, quality accommodation and fine, locally produced food and drink, Derbyshire has everything. There are lots of new places to explore too and this year we’re especially encouraging people to come to Derbyshire to discover many of our hidden gems that are off the main tourist trails.

“Whether people are looking for a local day out or wanting to stay longer, Derbyshire is a fantastic and fun place to visit and we’re pleased that Lord McLoughlin, in his role as chair of VisitBritain, has taken the opportunity to visit Derbyshire to discuss the challenges businesses have faced during the pandemic and get first-hand experience of how they have adapted to reopen safely.”

FOUNDERS BLOG: MAY 31st 2021

End of May round-up

Feedback from visitors has been fantastically positive and we look forward to welcoming many more in the coming weeks. The Drive Dads Car fleet has been well driven over the weekend and apart from a rather large nut falling off the Sunbeam Rapier, the cars have behaved as well as the drivers.

Our resident mechanical wizard : Doctor Mark Lawrence will no doubt be able to advise what said nut should be doing but I am afraid that the Rapier is currently in the sick bay!!  We have been visited by many superb classic cars ranging from a magnificent pre-war Lagonda to Citroen 2 CVs and a rather lovely Volvo P1800 as driven by Roger Moore in “The Saint”.

Please feedback to us with any criticisms (or otherwise) and do join us on all the usual social media channels. Above all, thanks for coming and we hope to see you again.

Richard

FOUNDERS BLOG: MAY 27TH 2021

From one Extreme to the other!

I doubt anyone else on the planet has driven two cars at the extreme end of the spectrum as I have today.

Our 2000 Reliant Robin is one of the last ever made and always makes me smile. I did a couple of laps of the Drive Dads Car driving route today and it whistled along in its own slightly terrifying way!

The gear change is slightly eccentric, the handling is slightly scary but it goes quite quickly and is a very light and easy way of getting from A to B. At over 8 grand  20 years ago, it was quite an expensive proposition and sadly the end was almost nigh.

Tonight, on a beautiful (at last) Spring evening I took the McLaren for dinner with Mrs Usher at the marvellous Lathkil Hotel in Over Haddon. The contrast with the Reliant makes chalk and cheese look like twin brothers. It is an epic car and probably one of the last true Supercars to unashamedly gulp fuel at a truly prodigious rate when driven with spirit. I think it will need a bit of a clean before it goes back on display tomorrow.

So we have almost completed our first week. Thankyou to well over a thousand people who have already paid us a visit and I look forward to meeting plenty more of you over the weekend.

Reliant and McLaren in one day : I truly do love cars!!!

Great British Car Journey opens its doors

Born from an idea spawned by a 32-year-old Austin Maestro, and after four years in the making, the UK’s newest visitor attraction Great British Car Journey has opened its doors.

Making the once ordinary extraordinary, the Great British Car Journey is packed with British marques and models that dominated the roads for nearly a century.

Motors fixed in our memories, like the Morris Minor, Ford Capri, and everything before, after and in between, are cars that are now so rare that you’re more likely to see a £150,000 supercar on today’s roads.

More than 130 vehicles now fill a former wire works factory on the banks of the River Derwent in Ambergate, Derbyshire.

Richard Usher, CEO of Great British Car Journey explained: “Four years ago, when I owned and managed Blyton Circuit, a gentleman approached me asking if I’d like to buy his 1989 Austin Maestro in mint condition with just 10,000 miles on the clock. My first thought was ‘no’, but it then got me thinking about when I last saw an Austin Allegro, Metro, original Mini, or even a Ford Cortina on the road. These were cars that were once on virtually every street in Britain and sold in their millions.”

The seed was planted and Richard, together with four private investors, set about amassing one of the largest privately owned collections of British designed and manufactured cars in the country.

Visitors to Great British Car Journey will be guided round the exhibition with a unique handheld audio device which tells the fascinating story of individual vehicles as well as the development of the UK’s motor industry.

Starting with the Austin Seven in 1922, the Great British Car Journey chronicles car design and production in the UK through to the modern-day McLaren 650S, which has been lent to the attraction by the supercar manufacturer.

Mike Flewitt, CEO of McLaren Automotive said: “Richard and the team have done an amazing job bringing Great British Car Journey to life. I am delighted that McLaren is able to support the exhibition which celebrates Britain’s motoring history from Bruce McLaren’s Austin Seven, where our brand story began, through to modern day supercars such as our 650S.”

The collection of almost 150 cars has been brought together over the last four years. One of the most difficult cars to find for the exhibition was a Vauxhall Chevette. Only a handful of Chevettes in roadworthy condition are thought to exist in the world today, despite around half a million being sold in Britain between 1975 and 1984.

Explaining his vision in more detail, Mr Usher said: “I really wanted the cars to tell a story, so the journey charts the growth of car ownership from Austin’s Seven to the present day.”

“It has a motor show feel with cars grouped in the decades – or chapters – in which they were produced, with period adverts and graphics prominently displayed.

“The vehicles are easily accessible. We want people to smell the old car smell, marvel at the interiors and jog memories of trips in the family car, their first car or back seat fights with their siblings when they were growing up.

“Everyone who has been on the journey, whether a car nut like myself or not, doesn’t fail to have a smile on their face remembering days gone by. Great British Car Journey is the ultimate trip down Memory Lane,” added Richard.

And the cars aren’t purely for looking at; more than 30 of them can be driven.

For an authentic, hands-on trip down Memory Lane 32 cars, including the Maestro that started it all, are available to drive on a private road as part of the Drive Dad’s Car experience.

All the vehicles in both the exhibition and Drive Dad’s Car experience are in working order and fully maintained by Great British Car Journey’s own time-served technician and apprentice. Visitors are welcome to watch them at work in the onsite workshop within the exhibition hall. 

“Great British car journey is very much a working attraction. We have a large collection of well-thumbed Haynes manuals which are regularly consulted when we need to locate a bonnet catch or various engine parts to ensure the maintenance of the collection,” added Mr Usher.

Visitors to Great British Car Journey are guided round the exhibition with the handheld audio device while an army of volunteers is on hand to explain the finer details of the vehicles, from hidden petrol caps masquerading as taillights to the split bumper on the Morris Minor and one car once owned by a British music icon.

Entry to Great British Car Journey costs just £15 for adults (concessions are available)

Tickets for Great British Car Journey and the Drive Dad’s Car experience can be booked online at www.greatbritishcarjourney.com and at www.drivedadscar.com

Gift Vouchers are now available!

Great News – Gift Vouchers are now available for the Great British Car Journey!

Just in time for Fathers Day, our gift vouchers are now available to purchase from our website. Sold in denominations of £15, they will make a fantastic gift and allow the recipient to come and experience the Great British Car Journey and re-live their memories of years gone by.

Featuring over 120 cars, We take you on a journey through a British industry which in its heyday was a worldwide force and its products could be found in all corners of the globe. The cars are the stars of our exhibition and hail from a bygone era when for half a century, British cars did literally “rule the road”.

You can buy your gift vouchers here on our dedicated page: GIFT VOUCHERS

We look forward to seeing you all soon!

Great British Car Journey taking part in Drive It Day on Sunday 25 April

Come and visit us on National Drive it Day!

Ahead of Derbyshire’s newest visitor attraction officially opening next month, Great British Car Journey will be taking part in the Federation of British Historic Vehicle Clubs National Drive It Day on Sunday 25 April.

Great British Car Journey is welcoming people to stop in at the site, based at the former Wire Works factory in Ambergate (DE56 2HE), where refreshments and toilet facilities will be available.

Created by the Federation of British Historic Vehicle Clubs (FBHVC) in 2005, National Drive It Day is the occasion when historic vehicle enthusiasts and the public at large have the opportunity to celebrate the One Thousand Mile Trial organised in 1900 to prove the viability of the new invention, the motor vehicle.

It’s also a chance to raise awareness and support amongst the public for the historic vehicle movement and keeping transport heritage on UK roads.

Opening its doors on Saturday 22 May, Great British Car Journey will boast more than 150 British designed and manufactured classic and historic vehicles from the 1930s – 1990s. Visitors to the indoor attraction will be taken on an interactive journey through the golden years of British car design and manufacturing using a unique audio-visual device.

The final touches are now being put to the four-acre site ahead of opening to the general public. Entry costs just £15 per adult and advance tickets can now be purchased at www.greatbritishcarjourney.com

Richard Usher, owner of Great British Car Journey, explained why the attraction is getting involved this year, saying: “This is a fabulous annual event which I have long supported. Although the attraction isn’t yet open, we have great outdoor space that we are able to use to welcome historic vehicle enthusiasts to the site. Not only will it be a great event ahead of us opening but we are also helping to raise money for a very worthwhile charity.”

This year, FBHVC has teamed up with the NSPCC’s Childline® to raise money as an integrated part of Drive it Day in order to use the movement to contribute to a section of society that has needed huge help and support during the pandemic – vulnerable children. 

Great British Car Journey will also be making a donation to NSPCC based on the number of visitors to the site on the day.

Sir Peter Wanless, Chief Executive of the NSPCC said “We are delighted with the support of classic and historic vehicle enthusiasts in contributing to the work of Childline® in our first year of partnership.  This support is especially important at the moment, Childline® is a crucial service on which young people can rely – day or night – whatever problems or dangers they are facing.”

David Whale, Chairman of the FBHVC said, “National Drive it Day has its place as a symbolic season opener, a chance to get historic vehicles of all shapes, sizes and types out in use, seen by the public and enjoyed by their custodians. It’s a statement of national importance because, not only does it ensure that our transport heritage continues as a moving, working, living experience, but also raises awareness of the size, importance and contribution that the historic vehicle movement makes to the world.”

Another Media day!

Another Media day!

After a stormy night, it’s been mainly dry at Ambergate today which is a relief as we have had film crews shooting both inside and out.

As public open day gets ever closer (May 22nd), our willing team of contractors are starting to clear the building and leave the GBCJ team to fettle the cars and the displays. Foremost amongst the team are our wonderful volunteers who have been hard at it with the Autoglym which has been kindly supplied free of charge by the company…it really is a quality range of products.

Similarly, Fuchs who were of course once a Company called Silkolene based down the road in Belper have been very supportive and we are proud to recommend and sell their range of classic lubricants.

Our McLaren 650S has also arrived safely and if you see a bright orange one on the road between Ambergate and Longcliffe, the man grinning at the wheel is probably me, just checking that everything is functioning as it should.

New employees join us daily and particular thanks to the cleaning staff who are busy making sure that we are and remain super-clean whilst ever Covid is still a threat.

Stay safe. 

Richard