Background
Launched in 1959, the Austin-Healey 3000 was built by Jensen Motors at BMC’s Abingdon factory.
Available as both a two-seater and 2+2, the four-seater version opened up the car to a family audience which had previously been excluded from the sportscar market.
As a result, the Austin-Healey 3000 sold very well to an expanded demographic that included singletons, couples, and families with young children.
Above all, it sold very well to Americans, who imported them as fast as Abingdon could knock them out and, in total, bought over 90% of all the ‘Big’ Healeys ever made.
The MKII Austin-Healey 3000 arrived in August 1962. It had a new wrap-around windscreen, wind-up side windows, and a much better folding roof. The MKII was faster and more luxurious than the cars that preceded it.
The Mark III was announced in February 1964, with power increased to 150 bhp by a new higher lift camshaft and bigger carburettors. Power-assisted braking came as standard.
In May 1964 the Phase II version of the Mark III was released. This was the final incarnation of the Austin-Healey 3000 and was the model’s apogee, bringing more power, speed, refinement, poise, agility and useability than its forbears.
Vitally, though, it retained the car’s distinctively British and decidedly macho personality. This was, and remains, a car that insists you eat all your spinach, roll up your sleeves and do a few squat thrusts before you even think about pressing on a bit down an English country lane.
The Mark III remained in production until the end of 1967 when manufacture of the Austin-Healey 3000 ceased.
And, sometime between the 18th and the 22nd June 1964, this absolutely sublime Mk III Phase II Austin-Healey 3000 rolled off the production line just up the road from us in Abingdon.
We’re confident that it looks and performs every bit as handsomely now as it did then.
Quite possibly more so.







