The ex-Denis Conan Doyle/ Edward Mayer
1928 Mercedes-Benz Typ ‘S’ 36/220 Sports Tourer
Private Portfolio No. 065
Kommissions n o .
Prof. Porsche designed, supercharged sports-racing Mercedes-Benz Rare example with known
40729
provenance and ‘matching numbers’ throughout In event-ready condition following 27 years in two
Chassis no.
major Mercedes collections Eligible for Goodwood Revival, Le Mans Classique, Mille Miglia and most
35951
prestigious concours d’élègance Handsome, rugged appearance, famed banshee wail from blower
Engine no.
71807
UK registration
KP 1813
Price on request
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and 100mph-plus performance
“This is what the book is all about- for here are the ‘Mercs’ of
motoring mythology. And a surprising bunch they turn out to be.
Here the three great exhaust pipes emerge from the bonnet side to
be copied by all and sundry who wanted to make a Mercedes-like
impression. Here the great three-pointed star rides so big and large
before the driver that it becomes almost a fighter pilot’s sight. And
nowhere else but in a fighter plane could one sit behind so much
engine.” Michael Frostick, The Mighty Mercedes, 1971.
Few examples of the iconic supercharged Mercedes-Benz cars of
the interwar years can have such a distinguished provenance as this
impeccably presented example, originally registered ‘KP 1813’ in
the English county of Kent in mid-1928. Supplied new via British
Mercedes-Benz of London W1, its first owner was Denis Conan
Doyle, son of the famous novelist Sir Arthur Conan Doyle (who
himself owned an S-series Mercedes-Benz), creator of the Sherlock
Holmes adventures. Denis and his elder brother Adrian ran a stable
of four S-series Mercedes-Benz cars which they actively campaigned
in sporting events, such as the Skegness Sand races of 1936 where
the two brothers were entered in similar S-series sports tourers by
Private Portfolio No. 065
1928 Mercedes-Benz Typ ‘S’ 36/220 Sports Tourer
Denis’s wife, the glamorous Princess Nina Mdivani; Denis drove ‘KP 1813’ on that occasion. He sold the car
a year or two later.
Originally delivered with standard Sindelfingen-built ‘Sport Tourer’ four-seater bodywork, ‘35951’ later saw its
rear section modified to two-seater roadster style and was certainly in this form in 1950 when it was in the
ownership of Edward Mayer. The Patron of the Mercedes-Benz Owners Club, Edward Mayer was known as the
“doyen of English Mercedes enthusiasts” and was a legendary figure in the field of Mercedes collecting, for in
his long motoring life he owned no fewer than 160 examples of the marque going right back to the 60-hp of
1903. During his ownership of ‘35951’, the engine was rebuilt “and some £700 spent on its beautification”.
In the spring of 1954, “after refusing many fabulous offers for this wonderful carriage”, Mayer sold the car to
the well-known dealer Jack Bond of Vintage Autos, who offered it for sale at £450 on condition that it was only
available “to a genuine enthusiast who will look after its well-being like its previous well-known owner has done
for so many years”.
Perhaps inevitably at the time, that meant that the car’s next owner
was an American, longstanding Mercedes collector Ed Wachs of
Prairie View, Illinois; by 1965 the Big Merc was awaiting restoration in
the ownership of a Mr H. Kizer of Indianapolis.
It had returned to Europe by the end of the 1970s, and in 1980 the
respected expert Brian Classic restored the car’s rear bodywork to its
original Sindelfingen configuration for its new owner. Now to factory
specification, this is one of the truly great German sporting
automobiles.
‘35951’ is from the first series of the ‘S’, model W9856, of which 26
examples were built in 1927-28, out of a total output of
approximately 170 cars in four series. Few could afford such sporting
luxury, with a price tag of no less than 26,000 Reichsmarks.
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Mercedes had led the way in putting supercharged cars into
production in the early 1920s, making full use of the lessons the
company had learned from building aircraft engines for high altitude
Private Portfolio No. 065
1928 Mercedes-Benz Typ ‘S’ 36/220 Sports Tourer
Above: Southport Races, 1936: brothers Denis and Adrian Conan Doyle before the start with their formidable
‘Blown Merc’.
operation during the Great War. The ‘S’ Series, introduced as a 6.8litre fast tourer in 1927, was the work of the company’s new chief
designer Ferdinand Porsche, and, like all pre World War Two
supercharged Mercedes-Benz cars, it employed an ‘on demand’
supercharger that only came into operation when the throttle pedal
was fully depressed, which clutched in the Roots-type blower to
boost acceleration and raise power output from 140 to 200 brake
horsepower, accompanied by a distinctively piercing sound that the
British magazine Motor referred to as “a threatening high-pitched
whine”.
The Mercedes S-Type was a car that excelled in endurance racing
and hillclimbs: for instance, the great Rudolf Caracciola enjoyed
many successes at the wheel of an early ‘S’, winning his class in the
opening meeting at the Nürburgring in June 1927 and setting
“sensational times” at that year’s Baden-Baden Automobile
Tournament. In the United States, Ralph de Palma drove a Mercedes
S to victory in the 15- and 30- mile races at Atlantic City, averaging
128.5 kmh (80 mph).
Kidston SA
7 Avenue Pictet-de-Richemont
1207 Genève, Switzerland
Tel +41 22 740 1939
Fax +41 22 740 1945
[email protected]
www.kidston.com
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During the quarter century of its last ownership with German
Kompressor authority Hans Maag, ‘35951’ was used for long
distance touring, historic events such as the Mille Miglia and display
purposes (it has been loaned to Mercedes-Benz for various Museum
functions and featured in factory literature), and was the subject of
numerous motoring magazine and book articles before its sale in
2006 via Kidston SA to the present US owner, one of the world’s
leading classic car collectors. Now offered due to a change of
strategy, it is a well-known, ‘no questions’ example of one of
Mercedes-Benz’s most sought after and evocative models, from
highly respected private ownership, and is ready for immediate,
reliable enjoyment. The ‘Mighty Mercedes’ indeed…