Mr. McCormack resigned from the Wolseley Directorship at the end of 1923 and the link between Alastair Miller and Wolseley was severed. During the 1924 racing season, however, Barnato continued to race his " Moth II," taking two second and two third places at the main Brooklands Meetings and winning the 75-m.p.h. Short Handicap at East' at 79.25 m.p.h. and the " go Short " easily at the Autumn races, at 76.5 m.p.h. Pop Cory, the actor, who had had a share in the Viper, ran " Moth I " without success, Norris driving it on one occasion, and Randall entered the 200-Mile car, without gaining a place. Barnato had a number of retirements, the radiator leaking at a J.C.C. Meeting, although lie took another second, on a day when Miller took time off from Bianchi preoccupations to drive his old " Moth," Which retaliated by shedding a rocker. He drove it at other small meetings at the Track, getting a third in an M.C.C. race, while Cantle appeared with the 200-Mile car in a 50-mile Handicap at an Essex M.C. Meeting, achieving a lap lead before serious misfiring caused it to retire.
By 1925 these cars, the design of which originated circa i9t9, seemed at last to have ended their long and auspicious racing career, although Miller used " Moth I " for the ambitious Essex M.C. too-Mile Race, and got as high as second in five laps, before No. 4 plug sooted up, a difficult one to remove, after 26 of the 37 laps. J. Noel entered one, painted black, its engine size declared as 67 x 90 mm. (1,270 c.c.), for the Whitsun and Summer Brooklands races, when it ran badly. (Unless it was the 200-Mile car this may have been " Moth I," as I believe Miller painted it about this time and displayed the name " Moth " on the radiator cowl in big letters, for the first time.) J. S. Worters and Douglas Hasekes were to have driven Barnato's " Moth II " at the Autumn Meeting, but non-started. Miller made a re-appearance with " Moth I," now with a red stripe along its body and red bonnet, at the t926 B.A.R.C. Autumn Meeting but although it was going extremely well, he was out-classed. The following year " Moth II " passed into the hands of F. W. M. Matthews and had black wire wheels (perhaps from the 200-Mile car ?), this fact even being noted in the race-card. It cost him a three-soy, entry fee but never appeared. Later in the season, however, Dudley Fray drove " Moth I" to a convincing victory in the 50-Mile Handicap at a Surbiton M.C. Meeting, winning by it miles, at 82.31 m.p.h. Even now, the " Moths " refused to lie down and die. Miller entered one (as the original car) in 1928, still with aluminum body and black wheels, in one race, for K. C. Dodson, who lived in a nice house in Hampstead (today occupied by the attractive and well-mannered young ladies of St. Godric's Secretarial College), but it failed to appear, so was probably too slow to be any use. But in 1929 a rather remarkable thing happened. It seems that Miller was told that a racing Wolseley had appeared in a showroom in Henley-on-Thames. Hastening there, he apparently found it to be " Moth II," in good fettle. The salesman spun him a tale, perhaps telling him that it had been raced by Segrave or Malcolm Campbell, but Miller was able to date the car as already ancient and obtain it at his price. He had set his heart on winning the Founders' Gold Cup, awarded for the Cornwall Junior Short Handicap at the 1930 B.A.R.C. August Meeting. Dodson and Miller shared the car during 1929 but made no impression. It came out again at the 1930 B.A.R.C. Whitsun Meeting, with a good handicap. Then, at the 1930 August Meeting, entered by Dodson, Miller started 4 sec. after Horsman's Triumph Super Seven single-seater, caught Horsman, lapped at 7t.45 and 83.28 m.p.h., and stayed ahead to the end, winning the magnificent cup at a speed of 71.08 m.p.h., pursued by S. C. H. Davis in the experimental blown Riley 9, which, boiling, was 14 sec. behind but just pipped the Triumph to the finish by t sec., as Victor Gillow slid along the Railway straight underneath his s.v. Riley, which had burst a tyre-exciting; I was there to see it. The Autocar brushed the winning Wolseley off as "a quaint-looking car, rather like a goldfish on wheels," but I am sure that as Miller climbed out of the deep cockpit of the nine-year-old racer, he must have felt very pleased with himself. After all those years its speed had hardly diminished and it had taken the Gold Cup from a field of 13, which included Bouts' 5-litre Sunbeam, Dunfee's Ballot and Waite's works supercharged Austin 7. . . .
" Moth II," still aluminum and black, ran again, driven by Bomber, and at the Autumn Meeting by Cyril Paul, but it was now out-handicapped. It was for sale in Gt. Portland Street in 1931, at £125. That year the axe had fallen on pre-t93t cars at Brooklands, but in 1932 P. C. A. Thompson and A. Lyon-Clark somehow resuscitated one, which they soon painted green and black, and later red. This did nothing to alleviate a long run of trouble, and that was that. . . . But these little Wolseleys hadn't done too badly in their ten seasons of activity.
The effectiveness of the " Moth " engine was perpetuated in the Becke Powerplus, in which the spare engine laid down by Wolseley when their racing project was initiated was installed, circa 1928. This car performed creditably at Shelsley Walsh, etc., for many years both before and after the war and is, of course, still in existence, its capacity now reduced to under 1,1oo c.c. The two-bearing crankshaft stands up to a boost of some 15 lb./sq. in, and a c.r. in the region of 9.0 to 1, but the original cast iron flywheel disintegrated during the Brighton Speed Trials one year, with unhappy results.
What became of the Miller Wolseleys is a mystery. All vanished without trace. During the war I heard that one of the " Moths " had been owned by a Law graduate at Oxford and was in a shed behind the " Three Tuns " at Henley. No trace of it was found, but it appears to have been converted into a two-seater by flattening and widening the bonnet, and fitting fixed cycle wings, lamps and horn. It had been registered for road use as UD 557o and this, and its radiator cowl and artillery wheels, suggest that it was " Moth I."
Although this saga of the racing Wolseleys ends in 1930, the Track performance of the late 6-cylinder 57 X 83 mm. (1,271 c.c.) Wolseley Hornets, notably as modified by Michael McEvoy, must not be overlooked. Kay Petre, B. H. Wickens and Vic Derrington ran them in 1932, but even the last-named, with a blown car, did not go as fast as the old " Moths." But a team of them, driven by F. S. Hutchens, Wickens and E. J. Erith, won the L.C.C. Relay Race that year, at 77.57 M.P.H.-W. B.