Borgward - Germany's Second Largest Carmaker

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  • Опубликовано: 5 янв 2025

Комментарии • 507

  • @charlesmoss8119
    @charlesmoss8119 Год назад +177

    My grandfather who was fundamentally a Mercedes person rated the Borgward Isabella as one of the best cars he had ever owned (as an engineer he was able to assess within the technology time period of the cars construction) only the 126 Mercedes he had much later giving him as much satisfaction. It was probably the only time he strayed far from the 3 pointed star and he really rated it.

    • @jagdtiger7094
      @jagdtiger7094 Год назад +8

      My grandfather said exactly the same.

    • @Matt_from_Florida
      @Matt_from_Florida Год назад +3

      My grandfather, a mechanical engineer who designed motorized agricultural equipment (tractors, combines, etc.) always owned Mercedes exclusively. He passed in the late 1980s.

    • @richsackett3423
      @richsackett3423 Год назад +11

      The W126 is one of the best things they ever did. That's very high praise.

    • @harrickvharrick3957
      @harrickvharrick3957 Год назад +1

      Still a beautiful car to look at. But I don't understand how it can be described as having a '5 or even 6 person capacity' (accompanying text with images @ 10:10 showing two seats and zero extra space)

    • @paulricketts1089
      @paulricketts1089 Год назад +2

      ..My Grandfather had a couple of them and he really loved them as well. He had a Isabella and a Station Wagon. As a teen, I really thought they were strikingly like a Mercedes Benz as well. Super solidly constructed automobiles.......

  • @jenniebaker7180
    @jenniebaker7180 Год назад +6

    I learned to drive in a borgward. 1966. My father brought it back from Germany to New Haven CT. What fun to come upon this video. It was a great little car it was.

  • @JimmyRJump
    @JimmyRJump Год назад +114

    My father (from Belgium) temporarily worked at Borgward as a forced labourer during WWII. He also worked at Krüpp, Thyssen and I.G. Farben, mostly in the capacity of a truck driver. He escaped Germany in 1943 and made it to Verdun from where he traveled across the channel to England in a fishing trawler.

    • @jamesdellaneve9005
      @jamesdellaneve9005 Год назад +4

      Did he settle in Britain after the war or go back to Belgium?

    • @mjpfl8131
      @mjpfl8131 Год назад +9

      Great story about your father! Sounds like an amazing man.

    • @harrickvharrick3957
      @harrickvharrick3957 Год назад +3

      Wow, what a life story

    • @JimmyRJump
      @JimmyRJump Год назад +5

      @@jamesdellaneve9005 He came back to mainland Europe with the Americans right after D-Day. Drove trucks for the US army with provisions and ammo. Went home when the war had ended.

    • @aljaberhk
      @aljaberhk Год назад

      @user-nx7io1ns7p what the hell

  • @uliwehner
    @uliwehner Год назад +7

    my dad had an Isabella, and he maintained through is life that Borgwards were better than comparable benzes, and that Borgward was done wrong by the banks. I was a toddler back then, but i do remember the Isabella in the yard. Always felt the Isabella coupe was one of the best looking german cars ever.

  • @adow77
    @adow77 Год назад +7

    My elderly female cousin had an Isabella in the 60s. She was a farmer in the Adelaide Hills and the Isabella was only driven to church and to Adelaide. Why she chose such an arcane vehicle is a mystery, but as a teenager I was permitted to drive it, and even as a crass youth I could appreciate the quality, refinement and grace of the machine.

  • @mjpfl8131
    @mjpfl8131 Год назад +10

    Thank you for this video! Loved the comments too. When I was 20, my father bought me a used 1962 Borgward Isabella for $600 from a small garage/used car guy near his house in about 1964. It was maroon with beige leather interior, polished wood dash and trim and those fully reclining seats. The back seat was only good for packages and 5 year olds. Cost nothing to run. I LOVED THAT CAR! BEST CAR I'VE EVER OWNED! My claim to fame as a dumb, single 20 year old was that Vettes could beat me on the straightaway, but they'd eat my dust on the curves! Put SO MANY miles on that wonderful little car.
    I knew nothing of the car's history, but did learn about its quirks. I lived in NH and the nearest part source I ever found was a junkyard over 2 hours away in Rhode Island. He had a couple Borgwards and I'd go down with a car guy friend and scavenge parts. Time went on. I got married to someone who wasn't a car guy and was pregnant. The wipers weren't working because the Isabella wipers weren't the same as other Borgward wipers and nothing fit. The fuses were really finicky and would blow out on occasion during wet weather - I remember driving home late at night with no lights. Such fun!
    I just couldn't deal with my poor Isabella any longer so sold her for $1 to my old car guy friend with the hope he'd figure out a way to fix her. Twenty years later, I found out he had gotten her back on the road but something happened to her I never wanted to know about. (Even though I ended up marrying that guy in later years, I still never wanted to know what happened to my beloved Isabella!) So thanks again, I really enjoyed learning about the car company that built such a beautiful, fun to drive car. Old memories...

    • @siobhancrowley8777
      @siobhancrowley8777 4 месяца назад

      Such a nice story. Thank you for sharing. Greetings from Germany.

    • @dougtodd305
      @dougtodd305 3 месяца назад

      They did not make any coupe's in 1962 ,so I assume your car was a 1961, I've never had a car that handled like my good Borgwards, I can relate to what you reported.When I was young my parents bought 2 new. And after they went out of business my parents would buy every used one they saw for sale. When I turned 15 ,I bought every one I saw, with my parents ,we traveled to Los Angles to Earl C. Anthony's .He was the west coast importer,and one of two people importing them to America. I have been in the Borgward Owners Club for many decades , and still own a number of them.

  • @snich63
    @snich63 Год назад +24

    Before I was born, my Aunt had a pink Borgward coupe, presumably like the one in the YT screen cap. All of my Dad’s family lost their hair colour very early in life, so they all had white hair. My Aunt dyed her hair pink to match her car. Very outrageous in 1950s New Zealand.

    • @nygelmiller5293
      @nygelmiller5293 Год назад +1

      To snitch 63. I thought you said your aunt dyed her hair pink. Then I realised YOU DID say that! How cool! I would have loved to meet your aunt!

    • @callsigndd9ls897
      @callsigndd9ls897 3 месяца назад

      Your aunt were ahead of their time, she had style.

  • @LuisMedMartins
    @LuisMedMartins Год назад +2

    My father owned an Isabella, an Isabella coupe and I later on also had an Isabella. Outstanding vehicles!

  • @kayerickatson4814
    @kayerickatson4814 Год назад +12

    Thank so much you for this video. As a child I lived in Singapore. In 1960, when I was 7 years old my father bought a new Borgward Isabella TS, it was a lovely blue colour, I remember going to the dealership showroom with him on Orchard Road to collect it. We travelled all over what was then known as Malaya in the Borgward. Gosh, we all loved that car. Many years later in the early 80’s I saw one like it in a used car showroom in Toronto, I regret not buying it. I still have the original sales brochure that my father gave me.

    • @mjpfl8131
      @mjpfl8131 Год назад +2

      I owned one more or less by accident. When I was 20, my dad bought me a 1962 Isabella from a garage near his house. It was by far the best car I've ever owned. Loved it to pieces. I can imagine how much fun your family had with that car when you were a child!

  • @Jay_Speed
    @Jay_Speed Год назад +5

    My father had a couple of Borgward Isabella's in the sixties. They where scrapped in the seventies, together with a Goliath, a Isar and some Trabant, Lloyd , DKW and Hanomag. The other ones I forgot.

  • @stevecoinitin7521
    @stevecoinitin7521 Год назад +16

    Never knew of this car maker, thanks for showing this.
    That Isabella in metallic gun metal grey is like a shiny diamond! Any car that gleams in light and has lovely styling, is always a great sight.

  • @JohnSmith-yv6eq
    @JohnSmith-yv6eq Год назад +70

    Rural New Zealand in the late 1950's was a very conservative place.
    Due to Government restrictions only farmers and others earning overseas funds could import cars.
    The family that lived next to us had a 1958 Isabella TS, a beautiful car in stunning red exterior with a white interior.
    The husband had been a Lancaster bomber rear tail gunner and had survived a tour or two...but he didn't hate the Germans.
    It caused a real stir in the very conservative farming area when he bought a German car.
    It caused even more of a stir when people went for a ride in it and compared it to the mainly English cars they owned...and found their English cars very lacking in creature and ride comforts.
    Another local farmer/WW2 vet bought a beautiful Citroen DS.....the family kept it for many years.
    and another farmer/vet bought a huge Plymouth station wagon......used to carry their competition shotguns and shooting accoutrements.
    The rest of us made do with second hand British cars...until we cottoned on to the Japanese Domestic Market second hand (grey) imports in the early 1980's....
    English cars basically disappeared overnight.

    • @Elitist20
      @Elitist20 Год назад +9

      On a visit to NZ from Australia in the 70s (I was 13) Dad pointed out the old cars on the road, although things had started to change by then. But unfortunately the car we hired was a Leyland P76 - 'the Australian Edsel' as he described it to two American tourists we met at Wanaka (and then saw again at Milford Sound).
      EDIT: Just remembered I also had classic 60s boy's bedroom design curtains, featuring a road map of Europe with car badges, including Borgward! There were also Morris, MG, Rolls-Royce, Bentley, Rover, Simca, Citroen, Peugeot, Renault, Fiat, Ferrari, Alfa Romeo, Porsche, Mercedes, BMW, Auto Union (Audi), Facel, Opel, VW, Maserati, Lancia, Aston Martin, Vauxhall, Triumph, Sunbeam, Austin, Wolseley, Riley.

    • @donofon1014
      @donofon1014 Год назад

      Cars and politics deserve a serious history. Henry Ford was the world's more prolific and influential ant semite on planet earth, some of his work being adopted by Adolf Hitler. His patriotism was suspect. He took steps to make a do-over .. but the Ford war products were more imposed than voluntary.

    • @texleeger8973
      @texleeger8973 Год назад +4

      @user-nx7io1ns7p I know Allah. He owns the falafel stand down the street. Best falafels I ever ate. Highly recommend the manakeesh too.
      PS He drives a Mercedes CLS. Loves it.

    • @aljaberhk
      @aljaberhk Год назад +5

      @user-nx7io1ns7p just don't be one of the cringe religious people trying to spread stuff in replies

    • @peteolds
      @peteolds Год назад +1

      in the 1980s and 90s, out the back of Lincoln in Canterbury, there was an old seed shed with over 110 Borgwards in and around in it. We tracked down the owner once to an ordinary family on the other side of Chch who just liked them, and had collected them. No idea what eventually happened to them, but presumably they were sold off the South Island car collectors...

  • @davidjenkins1958
    @davidjenkins1958 Год назад +6

    This is the first in my 65 years of age I have ever heard of the Borgward Automobile. I must admit that it was an absolute Beautiful Automobile.

  • @faithlesshound5621
    @faithlesshound5621 Год назад +7

    As a schoolboy, I was an enthusiast for the Borgward Isabella, though they were rare in Scotland and I never actually got inside one. I had forgotten WHY: thanks for reminding me.

    • @royhorologic1732
      @royhorologic1732 Год назад +1

      My High School Art teacher had one. It was considered eccentric - and very appropriate for an Art teacher.

  • @rolliebear42
    @rolliebear42 Год назад +12

    I remember seeing an Isabella in person for the first time in the mid 80s. I was stunned by how gorgeous of a car Borgward built.

  • @tracylemme1375
    @tracylemme1375 Год назад +2

    Being raised in SoCal in the fifties and sixties, I remember many Borgwards. They seemed to be as common as other imports such as Simca , Renault, Anglia, and Opel.
    Thank you for the info on one of the best looking car of the group.

  • @jimfrodsham7938
    @jimfrodsham7938 Год назад +52

    I remember the Borgwards and Goliaths from when my dad was stationed in Germany in the '50's. A German neighbour had an Isabella and he took us for a drive in it once. My dad was green with envy, it was a beautiful car, especially compared to our beat up old DKW. 😅

  • @whitevanman8703
    @whitevanman8703 Год назад +13

    My parents bought a Borgward Isabella Combi in 1960 in Paris and exported it to Venezuela where we lived at the time. I remeber as a very young child trips into the high Andes and many places in western Venezuela in my childhood. A great car with fully independent suspension. I often wondered what happened to it. 12:03, this is what I remember.

  • @88SC
    @88SC Год назад +20

    A neighbor of ours here in the states - Orange, California - owned two Isabella coupes when I was very young. I assumed that they were common, but never saw another for years. It was difficult to find any reference material or media about them until they started appearing on the internet.

  • @steveknight878
    @steveknight878 Год назад +1

    A family friend of ours in Singapore had a Borgward Isabella in about 1960. It was a nice looking car.

  • @lorenzomagazzeni5425
    @lorenzomagazzeni5425 Год назад +4

    I am now realizing how old I am... In the 50' 60' Borgwards where quite popular in Italy. Ciao

  • @rogerk2049
    @rogerk2049 Год назад +3

    I had a Borgward in north of the Golden Gate in 1966, 4 gears on the column. This car helped me rehabilitate after an accident where my left leg was broken.Using the stick shift with a strong clutch my leg came back to its original strength. Cant remember if it was a six cylinder but was satisfied with its performance.🙂

  • @MichailKnoller
    @MichailKnoller Год назад +15

    Thank you very much for this documentary; very nice original material. I know Borgward - cars since I was 3 years old - and drive them since I got my driver's licence. Now, being a pensioner, I can spend the rest of my life working on them - and looking for a Goliath Express two - stroke....During my life, I drove a lot of cars - and I still think that Borgward is one of the best - certainly not Merc....Thank God this Chinese badge - car belongs to the past now. Carl F.W. Borgward would rotate in his grave...Borgward lives, in spite of the corrupt senate and German " government "...there is a lot more to say about this - which I am not going to do; I continue working on a Borgward front - axle right now...

  • @chrisweeks6973
    @chrisweeks6973 Год назад +14

    In 1963, my boss in the RAF had an Isabella TS that he'd brought back to the UK when his tour in Germany had finished. He really liked that car and I always thought it a very attractive and well-made vehicle. Such a pity that they didn't survive.

    • @QuenzaDuvalier509
      @QuenzaDuvalier509 Год назад

      @user-nx7io1ns7p In the mighty name of Jesus Christ I invite you to receive Jesus as your lord and savior and for you to renounce at idol Islam and and have a God that will truly answer your prayers

  • @gclarkbloomfield8848
    @gclarkbloomfield8848 Год назад +2

    …cheers, Ruairidh…
    …you’ve done it yet again…a superbly researched history of what should have been a serious contender in the German automotive market…but suddenly wasn’t…
    …speaking as a Yank car guy…despite their effort to enter the North American market in the mid-50’s, they were rarely seen…and completely unknown by 99 percent of American buyers…
    …just as with Renault…I somehow feel BorgWarner’s true commitment to getting Americans to buy his cars was lackluster and probably doomed the company from its serious financial issues…
    …too bad, certainly, as these were attractive and capable cars which should have had a long and storied history…👌🏼🆒😎

  • @Voxel-Ux
    @Voxel-Ux Год назад +19

    Thank you for this presentation. It was awesome learning about the Borgward and also the Lloyd. I first came across these two marques when I was a little girl and found them in an early Observer's book. It's been cool having their info expanded and put in context by your video. Your video is clean without unnecessary frills which is perfect. Cheers, again.

    • @MichailKnoller
      @MichailKnoller Год назад +3

      And the Goliath, Borgward's third make. Unfortunately, the video did not mention them a lot, but : the little three - wheeler sold very well and worked a lot to ease consequences of the war. Goliath - cars were - together with Gutbrod - the first petrol - injected cars. They did very nice vans and saloons; in the U.S., people might remember the " Hansa Tiger "...

    • @Voxel-Ux
      @Voxel-Ux Год назад +1

      @@MichailKnoller I've always had a passion for 2 types of cars: 3-wheelers and rear engine mounted cars. Thank you for your interesting added comment to my earlier post.

    • @MichailKnoller
      @MichailKnoller Год назад +2

      @@Voxel-Ux With pleasure !

  • @peterredman235
    @peterredman235 Год назад +23

    A very well put together, interesting and informative documentary. Congratulations! Give us more!

  • @stewy62
    @stewy62 Год назад +66

    It blows my mind that Mr Borgward was freed from prison in 1948 and six years later was producing the beautiful Isabella. Although it doesn’t seem to be your thing I’d love to see a video on the collapse of the German motorcycle industry in the 1960’s as affluent Germans switched from utilitarian motorcycles to cars 🇬🇧

    • @STR82DVD
      @STR82DVD Год назад +6

      Agreed.

    • @MichailKnoller
      @MichailKnoller Год назад +6

      Carl F.W. Borgward conceived the new Borgward Hansa 1500 whilst he was in a Southern German prisoner's camp - the engine was mostly based on the 4M1,4 engine, which was fitted in the small one - ton - lorry from 1938 onwards. It was the first newly conceived car in Germany after the war.

    • @naughtiusmaximus830
      @naughtiusmaximus830 Год назад +4

      I’m glad we didn’t murder him like so many other good Germans we killed.

    • @onemoremisfit
      @onemoremisfit Год назад +8

      Doesn't seem fair to me that they made a crime out of him owning a company that did business with the regime in power in his own country.

    • @StewartMarsden11440
      @StewartMarsden11440 Год назад +7

      ​@@onemoremisfitIt was mainly the use of forced labour and their treatment etc, that got him locked up

  • @tapanikittela
    @tapanikittela Год назад +1

    Hi from Finland. Our family had Bward Isabella Combi and i still miss that car! It was the best time in our family indeed!!!

  • @deltavee2
    @deltavee2 Год назад +1

    Thanks for the info on Borgward, Rory. When posted to Paris in 1956 by the R.C.A.F. we bought a new Opel Rekord wagon which proved to be too small for our numerous camping expeditions across Europe. The replacement in 1957 was a brand new purchased at the factory Borgward Isabella station wagon which went on to provide yeoman service with sufficient space for camping gear and three boisterous boys until we returned to Canada in 1960 where it continued to serve until we acquired a new 1962 Ford Fairlane sedan which was the car I used to get my license to drive. Dad: "Are you _trying_ to hit every pothole you see?" Sunny memories....

  • @2coolwheels139
    @2coolwheels139 Год назад +2

    Great presentation, I learned a lot I did not know about Borgward. My dad bought an estate (station wagon) new in 1959, and I remember it well. Unfortunately, it had been involved in several accidents, and he eventually sold it. I have ever since, been interested in the brand, and hope to obtain an Isabella Coupe one day.

  • @adow77
    @adow77 Год назад +1

    Excellent documentary - great research and archival footage.

  • @markfreedman2470
    @markfreedman2470 Год назад +2

    When I was young we had 2 1959 Borgward Isabella Combi Wagons. They were great cars and they were built like tanks. In the middle of the winter in a blizzard, My mother got into a low speed, offset, head on collision. She got out with very minor injuries. If she had been in another car of that period, it could have been fatal. The car had a collapsible steering wheel. Immediately after the accident, my dad went out and bought another one.

  • @ronaldjohnson1474
    @ronaldjohnson1474 Год назад +23

    As a young motorhead of the late 1950's, this brought back memories. It seems there were a lot of auto firms that collapsed about the same time.

    • @theothertonydutch
      @theothertonydutch Год назад

      Just like what happened during and after the 2008 crisis. A lot of cool and interesting brands merged or were discontinued, especially on the american car market. It's a shame, becuase a reduction in choice actually goes against the capitalist ideals. Then again, capitalism has been slowly turning everything in to grey sludge over time anyway.

    • @jamesdellaneve9005
      @jamesdellaneve9005 Год назад +4

      It would have been hard to be a German car maker after WWII. No local market. Everyone was poor and the country was re-building.

    • @faithlesshound5621
      @faithlesshound5621 Год назад +4

      @@theothertonydutch Contrary to what we are taught, The Market does not like competition very much and prefers to create a monopoly or, failing that, oligopoly.

    • @gerhardw.933
      @gerhardw.933 Год назад

      @@theothertonydutch I would say that you can't compare the German 'economic miracle' after the war to the 2008 crisis...

  • @DaveSCameron
    @DaveSCameron Год назад +7

    I'd never heard of them before this, many thanks again Rory. 👍

  • @gtracer6629
    @gtracer6629 Год назад +2

    When I was in high school had a summer job at as foreign car dealership. Among the cars they had for sale was a couple of Borgwards. This video is the first I've heard anybody mentioned the brand are over sixty years. In fact I've never heard anybody who had even heard of them. Back in the 50s an early 60s there were a lot of cars that were sold in America that nobody remembers.

  • @davidhull1481
    @davidhull1481 Год назад +3

    My dad seemed to appreciate foreign cars. He bought SAABs starting in the late 50’s, back when they had two stroke engines. And in the mid 60’s he bought a Borgward Isabella, and I remember driving it to high school. I don’t know what happened to it after I left for college, but I do remember it being a nice drive.😅
    After watching this video I now realize I was driving the combi version.

  • @yournamehere6719
    @yournamehere6719 Год назад +1

    In the early '90s West LA, there was an Isabella sticking out from a carport on my bike commute route. No internet back then, so I couldn't look it up and figure it out. Thanks for this video!

  • @ivorscruton5121
    @ivorscruton5121 Год назад +3

    At 10 years of age, I learned to drive in a 1959 Borgward Isabella in what was then Rhodesia, now Zimbabwe. We raced around on a dirt track with a DKW 2 stroke and a Hillman Imp. The Borgward was the most reliable at taking the punishment we gave them.
    Ironically another car mentioned was the Glas, my father had what was known as a BMW Cheetah 2000, a Glas bodywork with BMW running gear, circa 1974.

    • @dougtodd305
      @dougtodd305 3 месяца назад

      I am a Borgward addict ,but I did own 2 Glas,1700s. Modern engineering,and I really liked the styling.

  • @takuan650
    @takuan650 Год назад +2

    Great video. I was born in Bremen and remember Borgward well. It was a highly respected car brand name and I remember the shock waves when the firm suddenly disappeared.

  • @Er_Guille
    @Er_Guille Год назад +15

    Excellent and very comprehensive video. My father owned an Isabella when I was born and, even though he sold it when I was four, I still remember the car nicely. I hope I can someday lay my hands in a restored model.

    • @neiloflongbeck5705
      @neiloflongbeck5705 Год назад +1

      The script and picture at the 2:15 mark don't match up. Hardly excellent.

    • @Er_Guille
      @Er_Guille Год назад +1

      @@neiloflongbeck5705 One mistake in script:picture matching hardly makes this video a poor one.

    • @neiloflongbeck5705
      @neiloflongbeck5705 Год назад

      @@Er_Guille one easily spotted and obvious error to anyone who was paying attention. How many other errors that only those with knowledge of the company would spot? The fact that he glossed over the slavery issue, the reason why Borgwald was imprisoned after the war is also significant to the story (others have questioned why the imprisonment occurred). 2 thing that make this not the excellent and comprehensive video that you think it is.

    • @Er_Guille
      @Er_Guille Год назад

      @@neiloflongbeck5705your opinion. Whatever.

    • @neiloflongbeck5705
      @neiloflongbeck5705 Год назад

      @@Er_Guille yes, and your opinion as well. But at least I know what excellent and comprehensive mean.

  • @51pogo
    @51pogo Год назад +1

    Back in the mid to late 1950's, when I was a little kid in North Jersey, my dad pointed out an Isabella in traffic and said "Borgward." He was an engineer and interested in most makes, but was not adventurous to buy any, especially a German car, it being only 10 or so years sice "The War" was over. They weren't very common, but they could be spotted in rare instances. Last one seen was nicely restored was a maroon job about ten years ago. In traffic! A good job on the overall history.

  • @RobinWood-it6id
    @RobinWood-it6id Год назад +3

    My Dad had a Borgward Isabella. We frequently used in the late 50s. It was way ahead of other manufactures of other car-makers. It was a pity to see it go

  • @airdailyx
    @airdailyx Год назад +2

    16:55 location is the Baldwin Hills Mall in Los Angeles. Much of the building is still in use and regulated a historical landmark.

  • @mikaelabowen5781
    @mikaelabowen5781 Год назад +1

    A friend's father dad an Isabella saloon in the late sixties and absolutely loved it.

  • @unreliablenarrator6649
    @unreliablenarrator6649 Год назад +1

    When I lived in Berlin in the early 1990's, my neighbors had a beautifully maintained Bogward handed down in their family. Wonderful, stylish car.

  • @godfreyberry1599
    @godfreyberry1599 Год назад +13

    Borgward Isabella incredibly robust engineering and extremely fast and excellent handling for their day. I have personally experienced being left in the dust by an enthusiast a few years ago - amazing. Very sorry it didn't survive.

    • @mjpfl8131
      @mjpfl8131 Год назад +2

      Maybe 15 years ago I saw an ad for an Isabella for sale at a car show in Calif. for about $150,000. I thought that was much too low for what that car was. I loved mine so much! My first car and the best car I've ever driven or owned. It's a shame it didn't survive, for sure.

  • @alyro-ls1dv
    @alyro-ls1dv Год назад +3

    dear ruairid, thank you very much for this portrait, lots of informations i didn't know before, paying the borgward developers and workers hughe respect for their widespread production panel. bmw was strugling in these years, mercedes focused on big cars, vw only produced the käfer and the bus, borgward had a portfolio from tiny lloyd to impressive hansa, also catering for the small trucks range with many running as civil defence or firebrigade service mobiles. the impact of borgward on the car development and the travel habits in the early sixties should be corrected on the light of your very nice, as always, well researched documentary. Best Albrecht

  • @alanfenick1103
    @alanfenick1103 Год назад +1

    When I lived in Sydney Australia the pastor of Balmain Methodist Mission had a 1961 Borgward Isabella. He allowed me to use it on occasion. The Isabella was extremely comfortable and reliable. It was not fast, but you could go 60+ miles per hour without problem. The seating was exceptional even for a 230 lb guy. It’s a shame that the company did not survive as it was a “different” car in many ways from the competition especially Mercedes and NSU and Opel. I believe the craftsmanship was the equal or better than the BMW’ and Mercedes Benz in many new technologies from shock absorbers, transmissions and safety features. Lastly it was a real head turner.

  • @edwinsalau150
    @edwinsalau150 Год назад +2

    Thank you for the information! Never heard of the brand here in the states. They produced very good looking models.

  • @albertseabra9226
    @albertseabra9226 Год назад +6

    The Borgward Isabella looked great.
    And the Coupe was a gorgeous vehicle..

    • @MichailKnoller
      @MichailKnoller Год назад +2

      In fact she is....never saw a more beautiful car;

  • @marinedrive5484
    @marinedrive5484 Год назад +15

    I do remember seeing some Borgward Isabella models in New Zealand back in the 1960s, but now there are just a few left in the hands of collectors. I once visited a country doctor who had amassed a collection of eight Isabellas - unrestored. When I was younger I thought they were from one of the Scandinavian countries because they didn't look particularly German, but as pointed out, this was probably due to American styling influences. It does bear a resemblance to the Mercedes 500 SL of the same era tho'.

    • @MichailKnoller
      @MichailKnoller Год назад +3

      You certainly mean a " 300 " ? Funny enough, my mate wants to sell me a Goliath from New Zealand - I shall do that; never had a RHD Goliath. Do the Isabellas still exist ?

    • @joelawrence56
      @joelawrence56 Год назад +3

      family friend on the Taieri had one for years...even remember a wagon as well

    • @marinedrive5484
      @marinedrive5484 Год назад +3

      @@MichailKnoller It was back in the early 90s that I visited the doctor and he was just about to retire - I was a medical rep at the time. I suspect the Isabellas have been onsold by now.

    • @MichailKnoller
      @MichailKnoller Год назад +3

      @@marinedrive5484 Ah, I see...you know, it is always worth asking. If I can rescue a Borgward, I do it...regards to NZ

    • @marinedrive5484
      @marinedrive5484 Год назад +3

      @@MichailKnoller Yes, indeed, especially one of the convertible models which have similar lines as the Mercedes 300 SL convertible. Good hunting!

  • @johnjackson3800
    @johnjackson3800 Год назад

    I love your channel, especially the videos on automobile and aviation history, topics that don't get the spotlight that they deserve.

  • @carsyoungtimerfreak1149
    @carsyoungtimerfreak1149 Год назад +27

    I am old enough to remember, fondly, the Isabella. A beautiful car which was also quite sporty. To me it has always been clear that BMW/Quandt played a dirty game. They simply wanted to kill a competitor to their newely developed 1500... The Bremer Senate also playing a dirty game. But then, the Quandt family was and is very rich and one can never win from money... It is a sad world!

    • @MichailKnoller
      @MichailKnoller Год назад

      You are a 100 % right. And don't forget : Adenauer was a friend of Flick ( Merc ) and the chairman of Hanomag - Borgward was one of Germany's biggest lorry - manufacturers....enough said ? No....Bavarian politician Franz - Josef Strauß....they decided that a B a v a r i a n made 4WD had to be bought for the German army, the DKW " Munga ". And they cancelled orders for Borgward's military lorry, the B 2000 A....material for millions of Deutschmarks had already been ordered - just for the birds. And this material was worth more than 10 million Deutschmarks. So much for Germany.

    • @jorgfinger1036
      @jorgfinger1036 Год назад +2

      BMW = Borgward Macht Weiter

    • @dougtodd305
      @dougtodd305 3 месяца назад

      I have owned close to 100 Borgwards ,I have owned 0 BMWs . Borgwards , I have owned sedans, combis, TSs, coupe's, and a military troop carrier.

  • @sachideshmane5088
    @sachideshmane5088 Год назад +6

    The Subaru 360 had an inline 2 cylinder 2 stroke. The 1966 Subaru 1000 was the first Subaru with a flat 4.

  • @BangFarang1
    @BangFarang1 Год назад +1

    I remember that back in 1996-7 they found 4 brand new Borgward Hansa sedan in a warehouse in the middle of Bangkok, Thailand. The hood opened by the side. The cars had 0km mileage. Apparently some guy imported them in the 1950s and was not able to sell them. I don't know the wereabout of those gems.

    • @MichailKnoller
      @MichailKnoller Год назад +1

      It would be v e r y interesting to know...

  • @BuzzSargent
    @BuzzSargent Год назад +1

    Excellent show about a car I had never heard of till now. Odd how fast the fate of a car company can change. Happy Trails

  • @LotharWolf-i9q
    @LotharWolf-i9q Год назад

    Thank you for your wonderful BORGWARD documentary. In 1965 I learned driving in a Glas 1700, more or less the successor of the Isabella, really in terms of quality. The car was advertised as "Büffel im Frack" I loved that car, but not my driving instructor, I think he was a left over nazi, judging by the way he communicated. BUT with his rigorous teaching style I learned driving car and bike in a short 2 weeks, or was it even days, getting a "Führerschein" for a small ammount of money. In the 1970's I lived in Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe) and found that my CHEETAH was actually a Glas 1700 body with BMW badge and 1800cm³ BMW engine. It served me very well and never let me down. Nostalgia ;-) In 2017 working as supplier to BMW in Shenyang, northern China, I owned a BORWARD BX6, also gone down the drain ;-((

  • @stephenburnage7687
    @stephenburnage7687 Год назад +1

    Many years ago, i struck up a friendship with one of the senior Captains of Air Ceylon's 747 fleet, which he flew to London, and he would proudly boast about his Borgward Isabella, back home in Ceylon (now Sri Lanka). He claimed it was superior to his 747.

  • @willweaver5024
    @willweaver5024 Год назад +12

    My father bought a Borgward Isabella station wagon. He thought it was a fine car. I was the second in a long line of cars he bought that went out of business (in the US market) after he bought them. He had had a Kaiser Henry J before that, two Peugeots after before the two or three SAABs he had until he stopped driving in 2012.

    • @inesschulz9326
      @inesschulz9326 Год назад +2

      Your father was a real carguy. God bless him.

  • @alanblanes2876
    @alanblanes2876 Год назад +2

    Thanks for a delightfully informative report!

  • @Smolensk18
    @Smolensk18 Год назад +2

    Isabella, unos de los coches más hermosos jamás construídos,

  • @iningizimu
    @iningizimu Год назад +3

    Its great tragedy that Borgward was not assisted to continue, politicians messing up things, as usual.

  • @PLANETIA01
    @PLANETIA01 Год назад +3

    I've never heard of this brand of car. Also, I never knew it was at some stage sold in Australia. It appears to me that this car company went the way that many car companies have gone, bankrupt. Which is very unfortunate. The Chinese buy up everything these days, at least they had a chance to bring back BORGWARD in their limited editions and concept cars. Sad that this has happened, just like HOLDEN in Australia. Thanks for creating and posting. DM.

  • @DopravniPoradce
    @DopravniPoradce Год назад +2

    Thank you for the video. I saw Borgward Isabella in Sinsheim and had no idea what it was.

  • @arnepianocanada
    @arnepianocanada Год назад +1

    2:16 - the Goliath photo shows a single FRONT wheel vehicle - not single rear as stated.

  • @ronnymatthews4133
    @ronnymatthews4133 10 месяцев назад +1

    Ron M. Canadian is 😊 It's ist time i saw this Borgward car?¿ eh!😊

  • @DAVJULART
    @DAVJULART Год назад +1

    The 1955 Isabella had equivalent performance to the 1955 Jaguar 2.4 later termed as the Mk 1, not the 2.4 Mk 2 which was released in 1959.

  • @stijnvandamme76
    @stijnvandamme76 Год назад +4

    The Isabella Coupé (2+2) had many similar looking lines to the Karmann Ghia

    • @michaelbenardo5695
      @michaelbenardo5695 Год назад +1

      Yes, it did! Guess where the Karmann Ghia got it's styling from? The Chrysler show car of the early to mid 50s called the D'Elegance.

    • @joelcheek3494
      @joelcheek3494 Год назад

      You can't sit in the back of the Coupe. A two seater only.

    • @dougtodd305
      @dougtodd305 3 месяца назад

      First the D 'Elegance,then the Karmann Ghia ,then the Coupe' .Borgwards wife liked the VW so he designed her a car.

  • @michaelherrmann3423
    @michaelherrmann3423 Год назад +1

    Thank you for this detailed report. Greetings from Cologne.

  • @1maico1
    @1maico1 Год назад +1

    My claim to fame is seeing a Wartburg and a Borgward parked in the same street in 1970! We walked past them on the way to school in Hampstead London. As 9-year-olds we found the names hilarious...

  • @albertseabra8993
    @albertseabra8993 Год назад +1

    Gorgeous car, the Coupe. Pink is not my cup of tea, but the car is fabulous in any color.

  • @sandraconnor5484
    @sandraconnor5484 Год назад

    I learnt to drive on a Borgward Isabella Combi which was purchased in Aden and shipped to the UK in 1961. It was a great car, could park it anywhere and the great asset was parking lights on either side of the car, so if you were were parked on a road, on the traffic side you put on the parking lights on that side only. Unfortunately around 1968 there was an advert in Britain which showed a Borgward going over a cliff in the UK which I found upsetting. Our family kept this car well into the 1980s and the vehicle had great mileage on the clock. We used to get it serviced under Stamford Bridge garage in London. Miss that vehicle.

  • @ukharry02
    @ukharry02 Месяц назад

    My late uncle had a sky-blue Borgward Arabella. As kids, we loved riding with him.

  • @Oldjohn52
    @Oldjohn52 Год назад +1

    My dad had an Isabella TS in1966. Four speed manual on the column was more than mom could manage.

  • @5CGQ
    @5CGQ Год назад +1

    At 2:20 refers to "a single rear-wheeled" while showing an image of a vehicle with a single front wheel.

    • @MichailKnoller
      @MichailKnoller Год назад

      Yes, but they did single - rear - wheeled Goliaths as well. Slight mistake.

    • @neiloflongbeck5705
      @neiloflongbeck5705 Год назад

      ​@@MichailKnollerthe picture is not of a Goliath (Standard or Rapid) but the much later Goliath Pioneer of 1931 not 1926. Pictures of the former are available via Wikipedia.

    • @MichailKnoller
      @MichailKnoller Год назад +2

      @@neiloflongbeck5705 Yes, I know. I just wanted to point out that Standard and Rapid were " the other way round ". I know them pretty well; a good friend of mine worked at the Goliath - factory from 1935 onwards.

  • @ianrundle5862
    @ianrundle5862 Год назад +1

    We had a Borgward in the 1960's in Northern Rhodesia (Zambia).
    It was robust and very reliable

  • @magnusdanielsson2749
    @magnusdanielsson2749 Год назад +1

    We found an Hansa in the woods. Having never heard of borgward it was a surprise to see such an ”exotic looking” car as a wreck in the woods.
    Such an interesting story and to think what could have been if the company had lived on.

    • @MichailKnoller
      @MichailKnoller Год назад +1

      Do you mean a Goliath Hansa or a Borgward Hansa ? Please, let us know more....

    • @magnusdanielsson2749
      @magnusdanielsson2749 Год назад +1

      @@MichailKnoller a borgward hansa. Its only the body left. The chassi is rotted out. Probably been in the woods for what 60 years?
      It used to be that people just drove their old cars out in the woods and left them 🤷‍♂️
      We have cleared out many wrecks in the past.

    • @MichailKnoller
      @MichailKnoller Год назад

      @@magnusdanielsson2749 Very interesting. Are engine, gearbox and running gear still in place ? She might be worth rescueing...I have got 2 Hansas, one petrol, one diesel.

  • @michaeloreilly657
    @michaeloreilly657 Год назад +1

    Nice to see your own work included in the video.

  • @tomsurrey2252
    @tomsurrey2252 Год назад

    In the late 1960s'... my friend, our ages were around 18, bought a part exchange Borgward from a dealer for £50, haha... it was brilliant!

  • @Whatshisname346
    @Whatshisname346 Год назад +1

    Thanks for this. I went down this rabbit hole after hearing about the revival. A very interesting company but one in hock to the personality of one man. Goes to show that diverse ownership and control can lead to more sustainable outcomes in auto manufacturing.

    • @kenon6968
      @kenon6968 Год назад

      A really crazy story from the wild west days of car manufacturing is that of Archie Andrews, coin op entrepreneur come millionaire come motor company CEO who killed of like four or five car companies in the early days of the depression. There's even a story of how the board of directors locked themselves in a conference room in order to avoid Archie taking over their company (Moon motors iirc). He did give us the fabulous fwd Ruxton though.

    • @mrdanforth3744
      @mrdanforth3744 Год назад

      I doubt a committee could have built up the company the way Borgward did. All the great auto companies were the result of one man's vision. Henry Ford, William Lyons of Jaguar, W C Durant of General Motors, Porsche of VW and Porsche, the list goes on.

  • @brucestarr4438
    @brucestarr4438 Год назад +3

    A 1959 Borgward wagon was the only 4 speed column shift manual transmission vehicle I have driven. 3 speed, 3 on the tree manuals were fairly common in my youth.

  • @kennedysingh3916
    @kennedysingh3916 Год назад

    WAtched from Jamaica and I remember reeding about the in some old Popular Mechanics magazine.

  • @ivanconnolly7332
    @ivanconnolly7332 Год назад +3

    Could it go forward as well as Borgward?.

  • @noahwail2444
    @noahwail2444 Год назад +7

    My parrents owned a Lloyd Alexander in the early 60´es, 2 cylinder 4 stroke. If it met a hill to steep, it would be turned around and reversed up. A funny litle thing.

    • @MichailKnoller
      @MichailKnoller Год назад

      Very odd. The four - stroker was quite powerful; I never had any problems, not even on the steepest hills.

  • @Dan_Gyros
    @Dan_Gyros Год назад +3

    Neat! I never knew about this company, but they made some fantastic looking cars!

    • @k3D4rsi554maq
      @k3D4rsi554maq Год назад +3

      This video is the first time I ever heard of this company, too.

    • @Pfsif
      @Pfsif Год назад

      AI produced including comments? Most of the commenters to this video have little to no content. Screams bots.

    • @Dan_Gyros
      @Dan_Gyros Год назад

      @@Pfsif I doubt it's ai produced, or even all the comments ai

  • @airdailyx
    @airdailyx Год назад +1

    17:01 is also a landmark building now a coffee shop in UCLA village. The entire block is pretty much the same today as shown in this footage. Amazing!

  • @devroombagchus7460
    @devroombagchus7460 Год назад +1

    I never realised that I made two pronunciation mistakes in Borgward. I used an « ah » and a « t ».

  • @murrayedington
    @murrayedington Год назад

    I visited BAIC / Foton / Borgward in Beijing some time around 2017/2018 and saw a variety of the BX vehicles in their car park, although I didn't see inside one, least of all drive one. We were there trying to sell electric turbocharger and thermostat actuators. Funnily enough, my mother in law (in her nineties now) fondly recalls owning a Borgward years ago, presumably an Insabella. I wondered what became of them - pity to hear they went under (again). Thanks for researching and posting this!

    • @MichailKnoller
      @MichailKnoller Год назад

      Not " again ". This Chinese stuff has got nothing to do with Borgward - just abusing the badge...

  • @TheHylianBatman
    @TheHylianBatman Год назад

    Aw man what a delight!
    Those things seem such fun.

  • @simonbertioli4696
    @simonbertioli4696 Год назад

    I remember these smart stylish cars, lsabela....they had a similarity to the Merc sports.. although others with American styling.
    A very interesting video/ documentary.
    Thanks

  • @bennyhannover9361
    @bennyhannover9361 Год назад +1

    10:30 the Isabella shown here are Coupe models those have been presented in the year 1957 with big Rhombus the smaller one appeared in the course of the year 1958 for the 59 modelyear. In fact after summer of 1961, some cars for the 62 modelyear have been produced with black Bakelite steering wheels

    • @MichailKnoller
      @MichailKnoller Год назад

      Yes. And round instruments, additional parking - light... - the estate's tailgate opening upwards on the 1962 - model.

    • @dougtodd305
      @dougtodd305 3 месяца назад

      True but they did not build any coupe's in 1962, and 62-63cars were built with surplus parts and later by an independent enthusiast.

    • @dougtodd305
      @dougtodd305 3 месяца назад

      Only 4 cars in 1957, 1958 started real production. 1959 when they updated to smaller Rhombus, they remained very similar till they ceased production in 1961.

    • @dougtodd305
      @dougtodd305 3 месяца назад

      I own a true 1961 coupe ,with a sax-o-mat clutchless transmission, slight variations as it was one of the last.

  • @danielulz1640
    @danielulz1640 Год назад

    I well remember Borgward being sold in the US in the 50's, and saw a beautiful, new one parked on the street of Monterey Mexico, Easter 1970.

  • @atatexan
    @atatexan Год назад

    You are an amazing researcher and presenter.

  • @slh950
    @slh950 Год назад +12

    we saw a lot of the Isabella's in Austalia

  • @golden.lights.twinkle2329
    @golden.lights.twinkle2329 Год назад +5

    I've heard of Borgward but I've never seen one on the road in the UK or USA. They were always extremely rare.

    • @Akabei01
      @Akabei01 Год назад +1

      Imports from other countries had been rare in general back then. I'm not sure if you'd ever seen a BMW (or even a Mercedes) in the UK or USA, had those companies gone bankrupt in 1963.

    • @5610winston
      @5610winston Год назад +2

      Keeping in mind that the company built its last car more than sixty years ago, I can't say I'm surprised you haven't seen one.
      It's been nearly thirty years since I last saw one in a scrapyard in west Atlanta, though I did glimpse one going the opposite direction on I-24 west of Chattanooga more recently, a white Kombi maybe not keeping up with interstate traffic speeds, but maintaining a stately and respectable pace for a late-fifties four-cylinder car.
      Incidentally, _Consumer Reports_ tested an Isabella Kombi in 1958 alongside such monstrosities as an Oldsmobile 88 wagon and an Edsel Villager. Surprisingly, they seemed to like the Borgward.

    • @MichailKnoller
      @MichailKnoller Год назад

      Well, you see, it is a b i g country....Borgwards sold very well in the U.S.; not to mention a lot of Coupés that went to...Hollywood.

    • @joelcheek3494
      @joelcheek3494 Год назад

      ​@5610winston I bought a 59 Isabella TS sedan out of a scrap yard in "West Atlanta" after seeing it in 2007. Maybe its the same one. I've also got two Isabella Coupes. I'm in Newnan.

    • @5610winston
      @5610winston Год назад

      @@joelcheek3494 Was it green? Did you restore it?

  • @nygelmiller5293
    @nygelmiller5293 Год назад

    An incredible history of Borgward! You must be a real fan! Amazing that the company at the time was the 2nd largest in Germany! Did you realise that originally Studebaker was the largest American company? Till the Volkswagen Beetle changed thing's, by making SMALLER cars popular' and larger expensive car s like Studebaker sold less than before. Did you, by any chance, make THAT video? This video is something of a "scoop" , in journalistic terms! No- one else knew what happened to the partly revived company! I think I would have bought one myself!

  • @alanriley9754
    @alanriley9754 Год назад

    Have a few Borgward brochures in the collection. Given to me in the mid 60s.

  • @Seasonstobecheerful
    @Seasonstobecheerful Год назад

    Nice slice of Automotive history 👍🌟🏁

  • @bjc9520
    @bjc9520 Год назад +1

    Subbed. That was excellent.