For most of the twentieth century the van was the most ignored vehicle
on the road. It delivered the post, carried the tools, ran the shop, and
was worked until it died, at which point it was scrapped without a second
thought. Nobody kept vans. That is precisely why the survivors now matter:
a clean, original classic van is far rarer than the saloon it was based
on, and the nostalgia attached to these working vehicles has turned them
into some of the most sought-after classics Britain has.
Why classic vans are collectable now
The appeal of a classic van is mostly nostalgia, and it is a powerful
kind. These were the vehicles in the background of ordinary British life,
and people remember them with real affection: the red Post Office van at
the gate, the ice-cream van on a summer evening, the camper the family
holidayed in. A restored classic van taps directly into that memory in a
way a restored saloon often does not.
There is a practical side too. Many classic vans share their mechanicals
with far more common saloons, so parts and knowledge are easy to come by.
The bodies are simple. And a van offers something a car cannot: space.
Owners use them as mobile advertising for a business, as day vans and
campers, as show vehicles in period livery, and as characterful load-
carriers that happen to be tax and MOT exempt once old enough.
The catch is condition. Vans led hard lives, were rarely garaged, and
rusted accordingly, so genuinely solid original examples are scarce and
restored ones often hide a lot of replaced metal. Survival, not
mechanical complexity, is what makes a good one hard to find.
Liveries, campers and conversions
Two things set the classic-van world apart from the car world. The first
is livery. A van’s value is tangled up with what it says on the side: a
genuine period Post Office, GPO Telephones or brewery livery, or an
honest local trade name that has been on the van since new, adds history
a repaint cannot, and many owners research and reinstate the livery their
van actually wore. The second is the conversion trade. Vans became
campers, ambulances, ice-cream vans, mobile shops and breakdown trucks,
and those conversions, once just a working life, are now often the most
interesting and valuable survivors. A coach-built ice-cream van or an
original camper conversion carries its own following, its own shows and
its own price structure.
Both points push the same way when buying: provenance matters. A van
with a documented working history, in the livery it earned, will always
be the more interesting machine than a generic repaint, and usually the
better investment too.
The cars worth knowing
The Morris Minor van is the classic British small
van. Built on the Morris Minor’s underpinnings from 1953, it was bought
in enormous numbers by the General Post Office, whose red Minor vans
became a national fixture, and by countless small businesses. Over
300,000 Minor commercials were built, yet a clean original is now a
prized thing, especially in genuine Post Office livery.
The Bedford CF is the larger story. Launched in 1969 to
replace the long-running Bedford CA and to take on the Ford Transit, it
became one of the default medium vans of 1970s and 1980s Britain. Its
real classic following comes from what was built on it: Dormobile
campers, ambulances, ice-cream vans, and motorhomes, which is where most
surviving CFs are found today.
Where they sit
Classic vans are the honest, unglamorous end of the British classic
world, and increasingly the fashionable one. As saloon values have
climbed, buyers have looked to the working vehicles that shared their
mechanicals and found them cheaper, rarer, more useful, and richer in
nostalgia. A van also tends to be the friendliest thing at a show, the
one with the doors open and a story attached.
For the decades these vehicles belong to, see
British classic cars of the 1960s,
British classic cars of the 1970s, and
British classic cars of the 1980s, part of the
decade-by-decade guide. For the practical side of running
one, see owning and running a classic car.