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Inside look at Triumph
Mr. Rosamond has done an excellent job recounting the last days of the Meridan Co-Op, the last days of the air cooled Bonneville. With the many outside -- and controlling -- f...Read more

Save the Triumph Bonneville! by John Rosamond (2009, Hardcover)

Author: John Rosamond | Publisher: Veloce | Language: English
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Save the Triumph Bonneville!: The Inside Story of the M
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    Product description

    Key Details
    Author:John Rosamond
    Language:English
    Format:Hardcover
    ISBN-10:1845842650
    ISBN-13:9781845842659

    Size
    Length:446 pages
    Height:9.3 in
    Width:6.5 in
    Thickness:1.2 in
    Weight:32 oz

    Publisher's Note
    There is no more famous motorcycle than the Triumph Bonneville, the Bonnie, "the best motorcycle in the world," and the Meriden factory producing this icon was a personal Mecca to fans of the marque. Film stars such as Steve McQueen visited Meriden for their Triumphs. But on the brink of what should have been its biggest ever sales season, the BSA parent company dramatically collapsed. The Conservative government reacted, and Norton-Villiers-Triumph was created. The new owners decided to close down Meriden ... so the workers locked them out.  There followed protracted political negotiations, affected all the while by national government changes, minister's attitudes, national and international economic conditions and, throughout all this, the world's continuing desire for the Triumph.  As much, a study of changing sociopolitical attitudes as of an economically traumatic time for both Triumph and the country, socialist John Rosamond's unique position within the worker's co-operative makes this work a fascinating account of a story never before told from the inside. The reversal of his role from worker to chairman brought with it new responsibilities, bringing home to him the passion that employees, customers and dealers had for Triumph, and how that could keep Meriden from closing and the Bonneville in production. During all these desperate struggles, the Triumph Bonneville became the best-selling motorcycle of its class, winning the coveted Motor Cycle News Motorcycle of The Year award at the end of the seventies. Yet within just a few years of this, Meriden and the Bonnie were finally gone.  All the rescue attempts, the lifesaving international orders, and the negotiations for a reprieve with the new Thatcher government are covered here in unique detail, as is the introduction of new models that Meriden hoped would attract a 'white knight'. Lavishly illustrated with never-before-seen photographs from the personal collections of the factory's workers, this inside-story of Triumph's last years at Meriden is the definitive history of the most famous of the Tony Benn worker's co-operatives.


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    Save the Triumph Bonneville! by John Rosamond (2009, Hardcover)
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    Inside look at Triumph

    Created: 10/01/10
    Mr. Rosamond has done an excellent job recounting the last days of the Meridan Co-Op, the last days of the air cooled Bonneville. With the many outside -- and controlling -- factions pulling and pushing the company around it's a wonder it survived as long as it did. But, as Mr. Rosamond indicates, that was due to a loyalty not only from the Meridan worker but to the Triumph rider. In spite of the apparent inept short-sightedness by its parent company, the most popular British motorcycling name survived because it was simply "the world's greatest motorcycle." Rosamond tells of the monumental struggle to overcome that bungling and onslaught by a government subsidized competition from the Orient. Lessons experienced, lessons for tomorrow.
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