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| Philip Conrad
Vincent was born in Fulham on 14th March 1908.
His parents farmed in Argentina. Educated first by his mother and
then at a British Preparatory school in Argentina,
he then came back to England to live with his
uncle John Vincent in High House, Horndon-on-the-Hill.
John was a veterinary surgeon who, with his
brother, an agricultural engineer, was involved
in the local Orsett Agricultural Show, and these
two gentlemen are commemorated by the name in
Vincent Close in Horndon. An
extension was built onto the back of High House,
the ground floor of which became a schoolroom and
Phillip, his two sisters, Marjorie and Gwendoline,
cousin Mary Kirk, (and four local children
considered suitable companions) were
all educated there together until Phillip went
off to Harrow School which was where he first
became interested in motorcycles. He returned to
Horndon for holidays. He said he found this time
in his life very cold and damp after the warmth
of Argentina.
He got his first motorcycle
second hand from Gamages in Holborn at Christmas
1924, it was a 350cc BSA. Vincent went to
Cambridge in October 1936 to read Mechanical
Sciences at Kings College. However, his heart was
not in his studies.
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At 18 he had a workshop and was
designing and building motorcycles. His father eventually
agreed to let him leave Cambridge and fund him for a
trial period in this venture. His first machine was
"Vincent Special" which was okay. Philip then
formed a company with Frank Waller a family friend.
In 1928 HRD Motors came on the
market and was bought. HRD were the initials of its chief
Howard Raymond Davies, a racer. The new company was
called Vincent HRD and they had their premises at
Stevenage, where they remained until the company's demise
in 1956. They produced 12,500 motorcycles for both road
and sporting use collecting both National and World
records.
Philip Conrad Vincent passed away
in 1979 and his ashes are interred in the family plot at
St Peter and St. Paul's, Horndon on the Hill.
In 1948 the Vincent HRD Owners Club
was formed and in 1999 on their Golden Jubilee they held
a rally at the Isle of Man. Andrew Everett who organised
the event, tells us that over 300 Vincents took part and
217 took part in a parade lap on the TT circuit. The
participants included the Vincent Black Shadow seen above
which is the property of Peter Merrick and has been
ridden regularly including the trip from Thurrock to the
Isle of Man. Less than 1,800 of the 1,000c.c.Vincent
Black Shadows were ever made. It was the custom order
version of the Shadow the Black Lightning that broke the
land speed record with a pass of 150.313 mph. A Thurrock
Heritage Plaque to Vincent was unveiled by Philip Vincent-Day,
his grandson, at High House on 21st July 2002 . The
plaque was supported by members of the Vincent HRD Owners
Club and Thurrock Council.
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