Rolls-Royce Motor Cars PressClub · Article.
ROLLS-ROYCE ‘MAKERS OF THE MARQUE’: HENRY ROYCE
Mon Mar 25 12:56:00 CET 2024 Press Release
As the marque celebrates its 120th anniversary year, the ‘Makers of the Marque’ series profiles the principal characters in the Rolls-Royce foundation story. The second in the series features Henry Royce, one of the marque’s co-founders whose life followed a truly extraordinary arc – from impoverished origins and with minimal formal education, he became a giant of 20th Century engineering and innovation.
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Author.
Andrew Ball
Rolls-Royce Motor Cars
HENRY ROYCE: 27 MARCH 1863 - 22 APRIL 1933
- A brief overview of the life and career of Henry Royce, born 27 March 1863
- The self-taught engineering genius who designed and personally approved every component in every Rolls-Royce motor car from 1904 until his death in 1933
- Second in a series profiling the principal characters in the Rolls-Royce Motor Cars foundation story as the marque celebrates its 120th anniversary in 2024
- Insights into the people, personalities and intertwined relationships that indelibly shaped the marque’s creation, development and lasting legacy
- Each account underlines and celebrates the essential human dimension of ‘the best car in the world’
“Henry Royce’s life followed a truly extraordinary arc. From
impoverished origins and with minimal formal education, he became a
giant of 20th Century engineering and innovation,
responsible for designs and technology that helped shape the world
we live in now. But this classic rags-to-riches tale belies the
complexity of the man, and understates the many challenges he faced
during his remarkable life. After 120 years, his influence on the
marque he co-founded remains powerful and pervasive; he literally
made us who we are today.”
Andrew Ball, Head of Corporate Relations and Heritage,
Rolls-Royce Motor Cars
Frederick Henry Royce was born on 27 March, in 1863
at Alwalton, near Peterborough. He was the youngest of five children
in a family with dire financial problems: Henry’s father was finally
declared bankrupt and, under the law of the time, imprisoned. This
early poverty and hardship would affect Royce’s character, and his
health, for the rest of his life.
Aged just 10, Royce started working in London, first as a
newspaper seller and later as a telegram delivery boy. Then in 1877,
with financial support from his aunt, he secured a coveted
apprenticeship at the Great Northern Railway (GNR) workshops in
Peterborough. His natural aptitude for design and working with his
hands were immediately obvious. A set of three miniature wheelbarrows
he made in brass demonstrated the exacting standards he would set for
himself and others throughout his career.
But two years later, his aunt’s own money troubles left her
unable to pay his annual apprenticeship fee. Undaunted, Royce returned
to London and, in 1881, began work at the fledgling Electric Lighting
& Power Generating Company (EL&PG). Electricity was then so
new it had no professional institutions, and therefore no formal
examinations or entry qualifications. For Royce, who had only the most
rudimentary schooling, this was a priceless advantage.
His fascination for the subject, formidable work ethic and
commitment to improving himself (he attended evening classes in
English and Mathematics after work) meant that in 1882, the EL&PG,
by now renamed the Maxim-Weston Electric Company, sent him to manage
the installation of street and theatre lighting in Liverpool. But when
the company abruptly went bust, Royce, still only 19, again found
himself unemployed.
But not for long. In late 1884, he founded F H Royce & Co in
Manchester. Initially producing small items such as battery-powered
doorbells, the company progressed to making overhead cranes, railway
shunting capstans and other heavy industrial equipment.
By 1901, years of overwork and a strained home life were taking
a severe toll on his health, which had probably been permanently
weakened by the privations of his childhood. Matters worsened the
following year when the company found its finances stretched, owing to
an influx of cheaper imported electrical machinery that undercut its
prices. Ever the perfectionist, Royce was not prepared to compromise
the quality of his products, but the resulting strain meant that in
1902, his health collapsed completely.
Royce’s doctors prescribed complete rest and persuaded him to
take a 10-week holiday with his wife’s family in South Africa. On the
long voyage, he read a newly published book, ‘The Automobile – Its
Construction and Management’. What he learned would change his
life – and ultimately, the world.
On his return to England, fully revitalised, Royce acquired his
first motor car, a French-built 10 H.P. Decauville. The story usually
goes that this first car was so poorly made and unreliable that Royce
decided he could do better. In fact, his holiday reading had already
focused his mind on producing his own car. He chose the Decauville
precisely because it was one of the finest cars available to him, in
order to dismantle it and then, in his most famous phrase, ‘take the
best that exists and make it better’.
He began by building three two-cylinder 10 H.P. cars, based on
the Decauville layout. With these foundational machines, he
demonstrated the analytical approach, attention to detail and pursuit
of excellence in design and manufacture that were the hallmarks of his life.
His friend and business associate, Henry Edmunds, borrowed one
of these original Royce 10H.P. cars to complete in the 1,000-mile
Slide Slip Trials organised by the Automobile Club of Great Britain
& Ireland (later the Royal Automobile Club, or RAC) in April 1904.
Edmunds was enormously impressed, and realised this was precisely the
high-quality, British-made model that a friend and fellow Club member
was looking for to stock in his new London car dealership. That friend
was, of course, The Hon. Charles Stewart Rolls.
As the technical mastermind behind the new partnership, Royce’s
output was astoundingly and relentlessly prolific. From the company’s
foundation in 1904 until his death in 1933, he personally created the
initial concept for every mechanical item in every Rolls-Royce motor
car. An instinctive, intuitive engineer, he had an uncanny ability to
assess components purely by eye. He firmly believed that if something
looked right, it probably was – and he was almost invariably proved correct.
As demand grew, and the motor cars themselves became
increasingly complex, he established a design team, governed by his
maxim, ‘Rub out, alter, improve, refine’. Everything the team produced
would then either be rejected and sent back for more work, or finally
signed off, by Royce alone. In contrast to modern motor manufacturing,
where models are introduced, updated and replaced at defined
intervals, Royce made continuous improvements to his products, without
any announcement or notice. Some of these improvements were tiny – a
washer here, a hose-clip there – but the net effect was that almost no
two Rolls-Royce motor cars were exactly alike in every detail. This
system, allied with Royce’s relentless pursuit of excellence in all he
did and supervised, made Rolls-Royce motor cars the nearest thing to
mechanical perfection possible, given the knowledge and technology of
the day.
It is worth restating that Royce never designed a complete car:
up to 1949, Rolls-Royce produced only ‘rolling chassis’, equipped with
engine and drivetrain, upon which a specialist coachbuilder then built
bodywork to the customer’s specification. The rolling chassis did,
however, include the bulkhead (the panel separating the engine
compartment from the passenger cabin) and the radiator, which
determined, at least in part, the finished motor car’s overall proportions.
A highly driven – some might say obsessive – man, Royce brought
his meticulous, enquiring mind and insatiable appetite for hard work
to every aspect of his life. Such is the power of his ethos, it still
informs and inspires the company that bears his name 120 years later.