The '53 Pop was actually a somewhat cheapened version of the pre-war Anglia. The pre-war one could reach about 45 mph; the '53 model about 55, with a tail wind, downhill, and if your nerves could stand it!! But they were relatively reliable and cheap to run, and a lot of people wouldn't have managed to own a car if it hadn't been for the Ford Pop.
I wondered if many people realise that car production didn't just stop dead in 1939, BTW. I said elsewhere that my older brother had a 1940 Minx, and no-one seemed to bat an eyelid! Production continued into 1940 for various makers, but tailed off for civilian owners; but of course, the armed forces needed cars, and production of 'militarised' versions continued, a lot of which ended up on the civilian market after the war as "1946" cars. Quite a few "1946" cars were in fact 1940 models that had been stored over the war years, quickly 'dolled up', and put on sale to get some much-needed cash flow going after the war. They certainly didn't last long; no doubt rust took a toll during storage. There were a few 1940-registered cars about, and my brother's Minx was one of them.
Virtually all the cars produced up to about 1948 or 9 were pre-war designs, often with little modification, and even my father's 1951 Humber Super Snipe was essentially the 1939 model with a boot added, and a bit of "streamlining". Jaguar was almost unique in bringing out the new XK120 in 1948, and that mostly because work on it was carried out during the war, due to Lyons' foresight, and as we know, it paid dividends.
Another feature of the war years was that people put their own cars into store. Between 1956 and 1960 my brother owned a Daimler Light 15 of 1934 vintage. It had belonged to a Birmingham Police Inspector, and he had laid it up over the war. After the war, he sent it to Daimler for a full refurbishment - costing around the same as its new price (£525), with the result that it was in superb condition even in 1956. On the other hand, my father, who had a petrol ration during the war, bought a 1934 Hillman Minx that was in bits, totally! Its owner was going to 'do it up' until war intervened, and since he was away in the forces, it was sold like that; my father paid £22-10s for it. He spent 6 weeks putting it together and getting it mobile; after the war, he sold it for £150, then buying a better one, the first of our family cars that I remember.
Dutchman you said about remembering the registration "how sad is that"? Well, I remember my father's second Minx in 1949...reg FXY329...... Even sadder, perhaps!!!!

And the 1939 Humber Snipe he bought about 1953...BDY222....and his Super Snipe....MTF174.......
