La rivista e il marketplace globale per gli appassionati di auto d’epoca, creati da appassionati.
La rivista e il marketplace globale per gli appassionati di auto d’epoca, creati da appassionati.
Mabel Boll non è un nome famoso oggi, ma negli anni ’20 era nota per il suo stile e la sua bellezza. Nata nel 1893 a Rochester, New York, Mabel entrò nell’alta società sposando uomini potenti, tra cui Hernando Rocha, un magnate del caffè colombiano, che la ricoprì di gioielli dal valore di $400.000. Conosciuta come la "Regina dei Diamanti," Mabel attirava l’attenzione di tutti.
Negli anni ’30, si lanciò nell’aviazione e fu la prima donna a volare senza scalo da New York a L’Avana nel 1928. Tuttavia, il suo sogno di attraversare l’Atlantico svanì quando Amelia Earhart compì l’impresa nel 1932.
Purtroppo non sappiamo molto dei gusti di Mabel in fatto di automobili, o se fosse un’appassionata di motori. Tuttavia, possiamo immaginare che, qualunque fossero le sue preferenze, scegliesse solo il meglio tra vetture sportive e di lusso. Nel 1935, nota come Contessa de Porceri, possedeva una raffinata SS1 tourer. Mabel aveva sposato il conte polacco Henri de Porceri a Parigi nel 1931, ma la coppia si separò nel 1933. Come Contessa, è registrata come proprietaria di questa splendida SS1 del 1935.
Lanciata nel 1931, la SS1 era il risultato di un accordo tra William Lyons e Standard per utilizzare il telaio 16hp, adattato per creare un design più basso ed elegante. Il risultato? Una silhouette slanciata che sembrava appartenere a una vettura di lusso, ma con un prezzo sorprendentemente accessibile. Il Daily Express la definì "L’auto con il look da 1.000 sterline al prezzo di 310 sterline."
Nel 1933 furono introdotte la versione tourer a quattro posti e motori più potenti: il 16hp passò da 2.054cc a 2.143cc, mentre il 20hp da 2.552cc a 2.663cc, raggiungendo una velocità massima di 120 km/h. La SS1 era perfetta per una donna sofisticata come la Contessa.
Non sappiamo dove la usò, ma nel 1964 – 15 anni dopo la sua morte – l’auto si trovava alle Hawaii. Restaurata nel 2013, la SS1 tornò nel Regno Unito e fu rimessa su strada nel 2019.
Ora, con il suo motore 20hp e una sobria tonalità crema, questa SS1 è pronta per gite estive o un Concours d’Elegance. È in vendita presso Le Riche Automobile Restorers a Jersey: perché non regalarsi un gioiello d’epoca?
The latest sales advert for this SS1 states that it was delivered new to Countess Porceri/Mabel Boll in February, 1935. She was then still living at her villa in the south of France and did so until at least late in 1936 but, according to the February 6th, 1935, Bystander magazine, for that month at least Countess Porceri was staying in London with her son Robert Scott II., often mingling with other guests at the Dorchester Hotel. Perhaps they even visited Mabel’s sister Lillian, married to Leicester hosiery equipment manufacturer Dr. Edwin Wildt since 1925.
Mabel’s son was born on November 12th, 1913, during her first marriage, meaning that early in 1935 he had only recently turned twenty-one. He had lived mostly with his grandparents or uncle George Boll in Rochester, N.Y., but did live with Mabel and her mother in Paris for a while from 1923, returning to live in Rochester by 1930. Did he take the SS1 back to the U.S.A. after his 1935 London visit? If so, he could only have owned it for a few years because he died in 1942, by then a respected Manhattan jeweller.
Of Mabel Boll and her cars, there are a few recorded sightings. Notorious for her desire to fly but not as a pilot, neither was she was notable as sports car owner or even an owner-driver.
Fleeing from a threat of a robbery attempt on her jewellery in Nice around 1925, she had to be taken from Gare de Lyon to a Barclays bank vault in an armoured car. With more newly-acquired wealth after the death of Hernando Rocha in a car accident in Columbia in 1928, she was described in New York “being whisked from luncheon to shop to aviation field in her green Rolls-Royce” and later reports claimed she had also used a bright green Rolls in Paris. In England in June, 1928, she was reported to have motored up to see her sister, viâ the Shady Lane arboretum in Leicester, but was also photographed alighting from her chauffeur-driven 1928 Minerva at a hotel in Nice before taking it back to New York that year.
Divorcing Count Porceri in August, 1933, she purchased her Duesenberg by February, 1934. Reports of what happened next do vary but she was described first arriving from Paris at a French Riviera hotel “with her maid and chauffeur.” Reuters’ news-agency reported May 16th, 1934: “Soon she and a good-looking young man became a familiar sight to residents as they raced along the coast in sports cars.”
She took over the Villa Florentina, St. Jean, Cap Ferrat overlooking the sea but seemingly refused to let her 27-year-old suitor, hotel owner and dancer Georges Charlot, move in. Rebuffed, he tried unsuccessfully to commit suicide by shooting himself in her garden, resulting in hospital treatment. Mabel, Reuters then said, “drove up in his blue sports car” at the nursing home in Nice where he was recovering. Two hours later she had to evade a crowd of paparazzi to re-enter the car and escape. She returned to collect him later in an ambulance, which drove off in the direction of her villa.
After her sojourn in London with her son in 1935, she was in London in September, 1936, “at the Savoy with only a French maid to guard her £250,000-worth of jewels while she drove about London for six days” before returning viâ Paris to her Riviera Villa. There she continued to use her Franay-bodied Duesenberg until at least the end of the year but, when war threatened, she left it there and returned to the U.S.A. for good. She married again in spring, 1940, having already bought a house in Florida, where she was seen with her husband and son, but died in New York in 1949.