To my eyes at least, the Morris starts out with the major plus of being the most attractive of our trio.
There might be bits of 1940s Chevrolet and Packard in its make-up, but the lines are neat and harmonious, lifted by the vee ’screen and the brightwork.
Longer and wider-tracked than the Minx and Somerset, the Oxford looks more planted.
There are also lots of attractive details: pull handles for the doors, a flip-up cover for the starting handle, a painted coachline on the colour-coded wheels.
Particularly delightful are the little running boards, with their kickplates, that are exposed when the front doors are opened.
The Morris Oxford’s well-designed cabin
Inside, the brown-crackle instrument panel and gold-painted dash are more obviously styled, right down to the concealed glovebox release.
The front bench means a cosier rear, but there’s plenty of legroom, with overall space being similar to the Somerset.
As a standard model rather than a De Luxe, the seating is in leathercloth rather than hide – just as there are no bumper overriders, nor a heater and only one sunvisor.
Start driving the MO and the first thing to hit you is that here, at last, is a car with steering that is genuinely good.
The Oxford’s rack is needle-sharp, accurate and not at all heavy; it’s delicious.
Building on this, the Morris feels more poised over pockmarked Fenland roads with a shifting camber and the poor surface doesn’t throw the car about as it does the other two.
The Morris Oxford, Hillman Minx and Austin Somerset delivered no-nonsense family transport for thousands in the post-war years
The MO has firmer responses, and that extends to brakes that are more progressive plus a crisp column shift.
The sidevalve engine could reasonably be expected to be the deal-breaker, but bear in mind that it is the biggest of the three power units, and delivers its 65lb ft of torque – 3lb ft more than the Austin – at just 2000rpm, against the Somerset’s 2500rpm.
Despite the usual low gearing, acceleration is not good in third, but the Morris cruises happily at 50-60mph, the engine never becoming coarse.
You can also keep the car on the boil by driving it in a more spirited manner than its rivals, taking advantage of its secure handling to keep speed up through the corners.
The Oxford is in fact the only car of the three that feels to be the work of people who wanted you to enjoy driving. For that reason it stands as the easy winner of this comparison.
The Hillman, meanwhile, is a thoroughly acceptable if unemotional transportation device – a sweet, easy car, with decent performance.
As for the Austin, its cuddly looks will probably win over more hearts than its less-flamboyant rivals. It does the job – compromised by its suspension – with perfect adequacy, but nothing more.
The advantage, sidevalve engine notwithstanding, goes to Cowley.
Images: Tony Baker
Thanks to: Austin Counties Car Club; 6/80 and MO Club; Hillman Owners’ Club; and Tom Clarke
This was first in our May 2015 magazine; all information was correct at the date of original publication
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Jon Pressnell
Jon Pressnell is a contributor to Classic & Sports Car