Morris Mini Traveller (1969): Well-bought Wednesday

Morris Mini Traveller was very well bought for just above its lower estimate

Morris Mini Traveller was very well bought for just above its lower estimate

Every week, we’re highlighting an auction bargain that we reckon was well bought. Thanks to our friends at Classic Car Weekly, and its roving classic car auction reporter, Richy Barnett, we’ll bring you some interesting classics at much lower-than-expected prices. This week, we’re looking at Morris Mini Traveller that sold at the bottom end of its estimate, and was oh-so well storied..

  • Car 1969 Morris Mini Traveller

  • Sold for £8250

  • Original estimate £8000-£10,000

  • Classic Car Auctions

Long story short: Mini estates don’t appear at auction as often as you think

While the Minor Traveller, often associated with Anglican men of the cloth, is a common occurrence in classic sales, Mini estates in any form – and certainly in earlier exposed door hinge guise, like this one – are few and far between. We’ve seen a couple of later Clubman estates coming to auction, CCA offering an early bluff-front model some time ago, but the early cars, by the very nature of the being an estate, really don’t. As a result, the decent ones, like this auto, tend to get snapped up quickly, which makes this one, which sold towards the lower end of its estimate, a better deal than the numbers alone suggest

The interior – red seats with black carpet – was bright and fresh. Seat facings showed little signs of wear or sagginess, the trim panels were as good and the black carpet fade- and wear-free. The boot area was clean and tidy and the inside of the back doors devoid of load scrapes and knocks, too.

Morris Mini Traveller price guide

  • Concours £15,000-20,000

  • Good £7500-12,000

  • Usable £3500-7500

  • Project £1750-3000

  • THIS CAR £8250

Well bought Morris Mini Traveller: The verdict

With new metalwork the panel fit was very good, with doors and wings lining up nicely and there was no sign of the tinworm that often put paid to the MkII models. The Tartan Red paint remained deep and lustrous, and this was a theme that continued into the engine bay. As with the Minor, the condition of the wood can make or break these models, but in this case it has lasted well.

Coming with a file of restoration photographs, a selection of MoT test certificates and an owner’s manual, this petite hauler would make a highly usable runaround and wouldn’t take too much effort to keep in its current condition. Being easy to run and backed by good spares support added to its appeal. In all, this was a small, but mighty sensible buy, with plenty of character.

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