Volkswagen as we know it was born in 1949, after being returned to German ownership after World War Two.
Britain’s management of the company in the years between 1945 and the 1949 handover consisted of deliberately limiting production.
Britain’s great industrial blunder
October 8 1949 is the date that Britain officially gave away what would become one of the most profitable automotive enterprises of all time: the Volkswagen Group we know today.
The Beetle was, at the time, judged by British car manufacturers as “quite unattractive to the average buyer”.
“The vehicle does not meet the fundamental technical requirement of a motor-car… To build the car commercially would be a completely uneconomic enterprise.”
How wrong they were. Volkswagen’s short history under British control saw the Beetle made in small numbers, for military use to begin with.
A total of 20,000 was ordered initially. Within six years following the company’s handover to the German people in 1949, the one-millionth Beetle would be made.
Interestingly, it was the British Major Ivan Hirst who saved the factory, both from an unexploded bomb and later controlled demolition after UK carmakers turned it down.
If that bomb had gone off, the Beetle, and ultimately Volkswagen, may not have lived on.
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