The sublime Californian Porsche 911 restomods of Rob Dickinson, guest on a recent episode of the Autocar podcast, are called Singers.
The name was inspired by both Rob's time in a rock band (his cousin Bruce also dabbles...) and the influential 1970s Porsche engineer Norbert Singer. And Rob's brand has become world-famous - just like its 20th-century namesake once was.
The original Singer Motor Co was entirely unrelated - and itself had nothing to do with the seminal sewing machine maker. The former was founded in Coventry in 1875 by George Singer, the latter in New York in 1851 by Isaac Singer (whose German father had shortened their surname from Reisinger).
Enjoy full access to the complete Autocar archive at the magazineshop.com
Further potential for confusion arises from George's previous work on sewing machines and the fact that one of Isaac's 26(!) children, Paris Singer, ran a competing motor company under his own name in the 1890s. (Incidentally, Paris later became Rolls-Royce's first-ever customer.)
George was one of the first makers of modern bicycles, inventing the curved fork. Then, in 1900, he bought the manufacturing rights to a one-cylinder engine that nestled within a wheel to create "unquestionably the handsomest motor bicycle that we had ever seen". "All who tried the machine were struck with its extreme ease of management," we gushed.
Its neat drop-frame design, simple control layout and uniquely reliable ignition (thanks to novel magnetos) made it the first motorcycle truly suited to women, claimed Singer - confirmed by our own Isabel Marks.
Three-wheelers soon followed, then proper cars from 1905 - first a licence-built 8hp Lea-Francis, then punchier four- and six-cylinders of the Coventry factory's own design.

In 1913, a Singer dealership was established in London by Robert Bamford and Lionel Martin, who also modified the cars for greater performance. Martin successfully campaigned them in road and track races and hillclimbs; in May 1914, we relaid from Buckinghamshire's Aston Hill that "the smooth running and easy climbing of Martin's Singer and the Bugattis were remarkable" as he won Class I - a performance that would inspire the name for his own car company, Aston Martin.
Another notable performance by a 10hp Singer came just months later, Beatrice Blore becoming the first female driver to conquer the imposing Great Orme tramway in Llandudno, with its 1:3 gradient - despite being six months pregnant.


Join the debate
Add your comment
Because I'm 67, I look back in great sadness at what we had, and let slip away. I remember the cycle manufacturers, the radio makers, even the toaster makers. All gone.