The global magazine and marketplace for classic car enthusiasts, by enthusiasts.
The global magazine and marketplace for classic car enthusiasts, by enthusiasts.
If you ever drove cross-country from Blackburn to Blackpool in the 1960s (avoiding the four thousand holes in Blackburn, Lancashire…), chances are you passed through the town of Inskip. And, as a motoring enthusiast, you would surely have remembered. For The Derby Arms pub in Inskip – better known as The Motoring Bar or the Grand Prix Bar – had nothing less than a Lancia Lambda mounted on its roof to attract visitors.
The Derby Arms is believed to have been the first motoring-themed pub in the country, and is also said to be the birthplace of “Chicken in the Basket” – or so the story goes. There is some delightful British Pathé footage showing the pub’s exterior and interior in vivid colour and detail. Note also the other pre-war cars arriving in the film.
The main question that remains with us, however, is: what became of the Lancia? And what model Lambda was it, anyway? We came across a photograph of it being hoisted into place by Inskip Motors, and the picture looks as though it could even date back to the 1950s. But how long did the Lambda stay up there? Even if it stood on the roof for decades, might it still have been salvageable? Who knows more about the fate of this remarkable car?
Words: Jeroen Booij
Picture source unknown