Saturday, December 31, 2011

Lennon's Lost Rolls Royce: End of Year Review

Photo credit: http://kenwoodlennon.blogspot.com
Guest blogger Eric Roberts provides a year-end update on the search for John Lennon's white Rolls Royce.

It's been 18 months since we began researching the whereabouts of John Lennon's white Rolls Royce, registration EUC 100C, chassis 5VD63. Sifting fact from fiction, myth from misinformation, gradually the untold story of Lennon's second 1965 Phantom V, which came to epitomize his public love affair and social activism with Yoko Ono, began to emerge.

However, despite our best efforts, we have been unable to discover who currently owns EUC 100C and where it is located. Indeed, to the best or our knowledge, it has not been seen in public since 1985, when it was withdrawn from a charity auction at Christies in London.

The only clues we have to go on are as follows. According to a New York Times article in 1999, it was once owned by Alan Klein, possibly a part of the financial settlement when he successfully sued the Beatles in the early 1970s. Second, if we are to believe Alan Hobbs - who left a brief but tantalizing comment on this blog nearly 12 months ago - EUC 100C is still residing somewhere in England. Frustratingly, for the time being, the owner wishes to remain anonymous.

The fate of John and Yoko's famous white Rolls Royce could not be more different to that of his original black Phantom V, registration FJB 111C, chassis 5VD73. At one time “the most expensive car in the world”, today Lennon's so-called “psychedelic Rolls Royce” is proudly displayed in the Royal British Columbia Museum in Victoria, Canada. Given the anonymity and secrecy surrounding its present ownership and location, it is possible that we shall never know what became of EUC 100C. The information we have gathered below represents only fragments from the “life” of one of the most historically significant automobiles ever built. We can only hope that the world will not continue to be denied closure to the narrative of EUC 100C and that it may one day be put on permanent public display, like its twin in Canada.

In the meantime, no one should be taken in by false claims that Lennon's white Rolls Royce is on view in the town of Pensacola, Florida, or that it is part of the Tebo Auto Collection in Colorado. Both of these look-alikes are left hand drive, and there is no record to our knowledge of EUC 100C ever having been shipped to the United States.

We would welcome your contributions to this on-going research. Any reader's recollections or inside information, no matter how incidental, will be gratefully received and published. The same applies to any photographs of John Lennon's white Phantom V that you may have at your disposal.

8 comments:

Dixon Cannon said...

careraderie100: Here is my blogspot on the Psychedelic 'Roller'; jol-rr.blogspot.com/ I too saw EUC100C parked in Savile Row in front of Apple, back in 1972. In your shot, it appears to be (by the big Afro hairdo!) to be Apple "House Hippy" Richard Di Lello sitting in the back seat. Perhaps on his way to deliver the "First Four" Apple releases to the Queen in 1968!

Forsythe Clemson said...

One of the rarest cars in the old lore of the previous decades. I have yet to see one in a showcase.
limo hire perth

Unknown said...

The Rolls Royce in Pensacola is right hand drive... not on the left... true British car. I don't know if it's the car in question... but I saw it last weekend.

Unknown said...

The Rolls Royce in Pensacola is a true British Car... steering is on the right. However... it is not a limo. In the photo of the 4 Beatles standing next to it, you can clearly see the large back window behind the rear door... the Pensacola car has a small back window behind the rear door. It's not the same car the Beatles posed in front of in that photo.

Eric Roberts said...

To Martin Bell from Eric Roberts:

Thanks for the correction, Martin. Are you speaking about the one permanently parked outside Reeves' office, or the one parked outside an apartment block with no number plate and distinctive white wall tyres? I suspect that you are talking about the latter. If so, you are absolutely right about the different sized rear windows. The reason for this is that the Rolls Royce you refer to is not a 1965 Phantom V, but a 1962 - 1965 Silver Cloud III - like the one Phil Spector owns. The Phantom V is almost 20ft long while the Silver Cloud III is about 17 and a half feet long. Interesting, though, that it is right hand drive... must be why it has no registration plates.

Eric Roberts said...

To Martin Bell from Eric Roberts:

Thanks for the correction, Martin. Are you speaking about the one permanently parked outside Reeves' office, or the one parked outside an apartment block with no number plate and distinctive white wall tyres? I suspect that you are talking about the latter. If so, you are absolutely right about the different sized rear windows. The reason for this is that the Rolls Royce you refer to is not a 1965 Phantom V, but a 1962 - 1965 Silver Cloud III - like the one Phil Spector owns. The Phantom V is almost 20ft long while the Silver Cloud III is about 17 and a half feet long. Interesting, though, that it is right hand drive... must be why it has no registration plates.

Brendon O'Hanlon said...

It has just driven past in all its glory, on a beautiful spring morning in Piccadilly, London, England

Unknown said...

EUC100C changed hands, or at least a new V5c logbook was issued for EUC100C on 20th March 2021. Still registered by the DVLA as white.