Rides from the Readers: 1974 Land Rover Series III
10 September 2020
Hagerty readers and Hagerty Drivers Club members share their cherished collector and enthusiast vehicles with us via our contact email, tips@hagerty.com. We’re showcasing some of our favorite stories among these submissions. To have your car featured, send complete photography and your story of ownership to the above email address.
Today’s featured vehicle is a 1974 Land Rover Series III. The third generation of British Leyland’s hard-working off-roader first hit American shores in 1971 and, thanks to stringent U.S. regulations and the first OPEC fuel crisis, didn’t come stateside at all after 1974. These trucks received a handful of cosmetic changes—a plastic (rather than a wire mesh) grille piece and new trim around the fender-mounted headlights. However, the biggest news was mechanical: the transmission boasted synchros in all forward gears and British Leyland replaced the Series IIA’s generator with an alternator.
Mechanical upgrades aside, this particular Land Rover’s owner, Jeffrey Rosenberg, points out another distinguishing element of this Land Rover: its no-frills personality. The Series III came with no radio nor air conditioning—and the windows don’t even have cranks; they just push open. The Land Rover’s lack of creature comforts stood in contrast to the lavishly equipped upper trims of American 4x4s. Take, for example, the Jeep Wagoneer, which Rosenberg’s father might have bought back in 1974 if not for his son’s advocacy on behalf of the Brit. For only $800 more than the Series III, the Wagoneer offered a V-8 engine (versus the U.S.-spec Land Rover’s 2.25-liter four-cylinder), power steering and brakes, air conditioning, a radio, and a built-in eight-track tape deck.
“I knew [the Land Rover] was going to be a hard sell,” Rosenberg recalls. He was then taking a college course in sales. This was the perfect time to exercise his newly-acquired skills. “I drew up something called a decision matrix … I had to be very creative to show how much better the Land Rover was against the Jeep.” Between his son and the local Land Rover dealer, the elder Rosenberg was convinced. In fact, from 1974 to his death in 2011, he drove the Land Rover almost every day. “He grew to love it and actually refused to get newer and better vehicles to replace it.”
Since his father’s passing, Jeffrey Rosenberg has treated the trusty Landie to a frame-off restoration. “My five-year-old grandson Mason has a fascination with the Land Rover and only wants to ride in it and eventually drive it one day. The same goes for my year-and-a-half-old grandson Harrison, who points to it and says, ‘my cah.’ And why not? It’s now a family heirloom.”
Article courtesy of Hagerty