Series II (foreground) and Series I In 1954 the Austin Motor Company of Australia and Nuffield Australia merged to form British Motor Corporation (Australia) with the Nuffield facility at Victoria Park becoming the group headquarters of the new company. Austin and Morris vehicles were assembled at the facility and subsequently it was to be the design and manufacturing centre for BMC Australia. This factory produced the
Austin Lancer and
Morris Major models which were based on the
Wolseley 1500 but modified for Australian conditions. In another example of the badge engineering prevalent at the time, the
Morris Marshal was produced, based on the
Austin A95 Westminster. In 1961 the
Mini entered production in Australia as the Morris 850. The Mini proving very popular in Australia as it was in the UK. Its success prompted a revised Australian only model line up to be introduced in 1965, beginning with the Morris Mini Deluxe, the first to use
Hydrolastic suspension, to have wind-up windows, ignition key operated starter and an improved level of trim and options. Australian Minis were fitted with wind-up windows years ahead of their UK counterparts. Morris Mini Coopers and Cooper S were also made and supplied to the Australian and New Zealand Police forces as high speed pursuit vehicles. The Mini K (for Kangaroo) was the renamed Deluxe MKII and launched in March 1969 complete with Kangaroo decals. Released in 1962, the
Austin Freeway and
Wolseley 24/80 models were Australian built variants of the
Austin A60 Cambridge and
Wolseley 15/60 respectively, both powered by a six-cylinder version of the
BMC B-Series engine. To add some Australasian brand confusion, in New Zealand the Austin Freeway was badged as a Morris Freeway and the Morris Mini Deluxe was badged as an Austin Se7en. All were made in the Sydney factory. A local version of the
BMC 1100 joined the line up, badged as the Morris 1100 and henceforth the smaller front-wheel-drive BMC models were all to be badged as Morris and the larger ones as Austins borrowing from the established markets where Vice Regal cars were Austin Princess limousines and Morris cars were mass motoring cars. Production of the
Morris Mini Moke started in 1966 but fitted with larger, 13-inch wheels and longer rear wheel arms, than the UK original 10-inch. A local version of the
Austin 1800 was also produced from 1965 and this was developed into the Austin X6 range in 1970 with a six-cylinder version of the OHC
BMC E-series engine and a longer wheelbase than the original. These were called the
Austin Tasman for the basic model and
Kimberley for the de luxe hi-end model. In New Zealand these were also sold with Morris badging and some were assembled there. In December 1966, a plant in
Rocklea,
Queensland was opened. ==Leyland Motor Corporation of Australia==