Firestyle Magazine Issue 3 - Spring 2016 | Page 10
FIRE SERVICE RELATED
Don’t
Panic!
Corporal Jones’s Van is Back
in Service after Repairs at
its Dagenham Birthplace
The 1935 Ford BB van, which features in the legendary sitcom “Dad’s Army” as Corporal Jones’s van, has been
given a new lease of life as the new Dad’s Army film is launched.
A platoon of Dagenham-based Ford apprentices, under the command of Ford’s heritage vehicle technicians,
have helped repair the running gear of Jack Jones’s famous van - in the same building at Dagenham that it would
have left the plant, more than 80 years ago.
The original Dad’s Army television
series ran from 1968 to 1977, and
“BUC 852”, the van’s registration,
made its screen debut on 11th
September 1969 in the first colour
episode. Now it appears in the bigscreen version of Dad’s Army with
stars including Sir Tom Courtenay,
Toby Jones, Bill Nighy, Catherine
Zeta-Jones and Sir Michael
Gambon.
The van, belonging to local butcher
and home guardsman, Jack Jones,
is known for its role as a support
vehicle for the Walmington on Sea
branch of the Home Guard. It is
now owned by the Dad’s Army
Museum in Thetford, Norfolk.
Although it has undertaken
extensive cosmetic restoration,
Ford, together with a team of
its apprentices, was tasked with
returning it to operational duty.
This included a full engine rebuild,
replacement clutch, and new
wiring looms.
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The Ford BB truck was among the first commercial vehicles produced at the
Ford Dagenham site, which started production in 1931. The mechanical
repairs were carried out in one of Dagenham’s original buildings, which
remains in use today as Ford’s heritage workshop.
Stuart Wright, from the Dad’s Army Museum in Thetford, said: “This vehicle has
a special place in British entertainment history, and is enjoyed by the many
visitors to the Dad’s Army museum. It’s fantastic to see the van operational
again and we hope it will capture the imagination of the younger visitors less
familiar with Dad’s Army, as well as triggering happy memories for the older
generations.”