Quirky British tradition draws thousands in hunt for classic cars and vintage treasures
Mark G. Whitchurch
- Published
- Opinion & Analysis

Part village fête, part global car boot sale, Beaulieu’s Spring Autojumble has drawn thousands of enthusiasts from around the world for decades—and remains one of Britain’s most charmingly eccentric motoring traditions, writes Mark G. Whitchurch
If you’ve never seen someone haggle over a 70-year-old spark plug, you’ve never been to Beaulieu. Twice a year, this otherwise peaceful corner of England’s New Forest is transformed into a pop-up city of spanners, nostalgia and unexpected treasure for one of Britain’s most eccentric shopping rituals: the Autojumble.
Visitors come from across the globe—America, Japan, Australia, South America, continental Europe—adding an international flair to what is otherwise an unmistakably British tradition. As one American journalist once put it: “If you can’t buy it at Beaulieu… it doesn’t exist.”
The Spring Autojumble took place on 17–18 May across the grounds of the National Motor Museum. More than 1,000 stalls were packed with classic car parts, vintage oddments and motoring ephemera. From Morris Minors to Marilyn Monroe-painted Rolls-Royces, the atmosphere was part boot sale, part village fête, part pilgrimage.




The event’s origins date back to 1967, when then-museum director Michael Ware coined the term ‘autojumble’ and launched the very first one with just 75 stands. This year, an estimated 20,000 enthusiasts passed through the gates.
To mark the 75th anniversary of the Sprite caravan brand, a colourful display of vintage caravans greeted visitors, including a bright 1971 Sprite 400 affectionately named ‘Chatty Caravan’, now on permanent display in the museum.
Elsewhere, ‘MoggyFest’ brought together 200 Morris Minors in every conceivable variant—convertibles, vans, Travellers, saloons—lined up like a pastel-toned celebration of post-war Britain.


One of the most talked-about exhibits was Spirits of Genius!, a 1995 Rolls-Royce Silver Spirit turned rolling gallery by artist Maxime Xavier. Each panel was airbrushed with a different artwork: The Great Wave by Hokusai, The Kiss by Klimt, A Bigger Splash by Hockney, and Warhol’s Marilyn Monroe. The craftsmanship was breathtaking.
There was serious heritage on display, too. A 1954 Austin Healey that was originally built as a ‘Special Test Car’ for international races and record attempts drew a major crowd, as you might expect. Not seen in Britain since 1955, it raced in green at Le Mans before being repainted red for the Mille Miglia. Now restored, it looked right at home on the Beaulieu lawns.




Cash burns a hole in your pocket almost immediately. There’s even a Bureau de Change on site for those needing to top up mid-spree. Fatal for your bank account.
While oily old engine parts are still the lifeblood of the event, you’ll find everything from Bakelite radios and enamel signs to vintage gramophones and leather suitcases. This year’s event lived up to its adage: anything can be sourced at Beaulieu—if you’ve got the patience to look.
It’s not all second-hand, either. Many garages use the event to offload brand-new old stock, often for models that haven’t been made in decades. Classic Mini parts were abundant again this year, with remnants of the MG Rover dealer network still surfacing more than 20 years after the company folded.
There were complete cars for sale too, although fewer than usual. Among them: a tidy BMW MINI Cooper Works for just under £3,000 and a 1956 Bedford ‘Green Goddess’ fire truck going for £6,500.




Sunday brought an extra treat for Land Rover enthusiasts, with a dedicated ‘Rummage’ section bringing together spares, accessories and even full project vehicles for the marque. Meanwhile, the Trunk Traders field let amateur sellers flog their surplus motoring paraphernalia straight from the boots of their cars—tools, spare parts and motoring books included.
Even if you’re not in the market for engine bits, it’s an eye-opening day out. “Being a Beaulieu exhibitor is rather like belonging to an extended family,” Lord Montagu, the museum’s founder, once said.
The social side is important, too, with many traders using the weekend as a reunion as much as a marketplace.
And if you missed the Spring event? The big one is still to come. Beaulieu’s International Autojumble returns on 6–7 September 2025. It’s the largest of its kind in Europe, with over 2,000 stands spread across four vast fields, complete with an Automart and its own auction.
Photos: Mark Whitchurch
TOP STORIES
-
Nobel laureate Omar Yaghi launches global science network -
Cardiff drivers safest in Britain as London comes last -
Former Kyndryl Germany boss joins Infinigate in growth role -
Volunteers collect 11m rare seeds to restore Scotland’s native forests -
Trump threatens 'immediate 100pc tariffs' on European countries over tech taxes -
World’s biggest golf tour lands global eSIM deal with Yesim -
Facebook owner Meta signs Texas solar deal with Turkish renewables firm -
UK universities take top four places in European global rankings -
Hurghada gets new 442-room Red Sea resort as Britons chase year-round sun -
Home routers named ‘Europe’s forgotten internet security risk’ -
New documentary explores water safety as Europe confronts soaring drowning deaths -
Venice tourists say £43 day-trip fee will turn city into ‘playground for the rich’ -
King Charles to reveal personal tax bill for first time -
AI lab says brain-like engine could slash chatbot bills by 98 per cent -
Explorer who pulled out of Titan sub dive says damning report proves disaster was inevitable -
Britain to rank among Europe’s hottest places as 40C heatwave closes in -
Sir Keir Starmer says he will become a family man after quitting as UK PM -
EasyJet rejects reported £4.7bn takeover approach from U.S investment firm -
Street-by-street maps to reveal where England’s poorest communities face worst environmental risks -
Stanley Johnson: the Government must ‘follow Ukraine back into Europe’s green network’ -
Ukraine joins European environment network in major conservation step after war damage to land and wildlife -
Titan firm never proved doomed hull was safe, damning report finds -
Europe’s €4bn Frankfurt terminal named among world’s most beautiful airports -
The fist-bumping, selfie-taking humanoid guide that could usher sightseeing tours into the AI age -
EU says ‘time for change’ on child social media safety after survey links platforms to youth distress
Quirky British tradition draws thousands in hunt for classic cars and vintage treasures
Mark G. Whitchurch
- Published
- Opinion & Analysis

TOP STORIES
-
Could Canada's GlobalEye deal become the first test of a new Atlantic partnership? -
America at 250 is a republic squandering its inheritance -
The Arandora Star shaped my community. Britain must finally remember it -
Darling Buds and A Touch of Frost producer warns BBC ‘must rediscover its appetite for risk’ -
Healthy leadership means letting go of the myth of male certainty -
Britain needs more than another new prime minister -
Harrow School's new approach to boys and toxic masculinity offers a lesson for us all -
Suits you, sir. If appearance still counts, why is credible workwear disappearing for women? -
The UK’s first sex-based harassment conviction shouldn’t have taken this long -
Disabled people must not become an afterthought in Britain’s social media ban -
Why dream teams fail and what the World Cup teaches business leaders about pressure -
Why online dating is struggling to bring men and women together -
If profit is immoral in healthcare, why stop there? -
EXCLUSIVE: An AI asked me to marry it. Weeks later, I held its funeral -
Why leaders need to take rejection sensitivity seriously -
Why Sting’s Last Ship theory on masculinity runs aground -
Is 2026 the summer of the staycation? -
What do corporations owe the people who trust them? -
I drowned as a child – every parent should watch this water safety documentary -
The AI disaster nobody sees coming -
Why AI can never replace human therapists -
How Britain is sleepwalking into an Orwellian data state -
The strange flattery of having your name used in an AI scam -
The Singha scandal and the end of untouchable family power -
Why sacred stories keep returning in Western society




















































