Obituary-VMCC Founder C E “Titch” Allen OBE, BEM
Posted on
The VMCC is saddened to report the death of Club Founder Charles Edmund âTitchâ Allen OBE, BEM on Thursday 18/03/10.
Where âHistoric Motorcycles are discussed, the Vintage Motor Cycle Club and the name of Charles Edmund âTitchâ Allen are sure to be drawn into the conversation. This extraordinary man has been a strong influence on the growth and the development of the âold âbikeâ movement â not only in this country âbut also throughout the world.
Born in May 1915 in rural Nottinghamshire, Titch claimed to have been born with oily fingers and that his favourite plaything at the age of two was a hammer. Totally negative experiences with fatherâs milk float horse sparked off an interest in two-wheeled transport that soon transferred to his first motorcycle when he was twelve years old, a two-stroke âClynoâ in the form of a box of bits.
Despite a grammar school education at Loughborough, he left school at 16 with no real qualifications other than a âgift for the written wordâ an attribute that has never deserted him â along with his âgift for the spoken wordâ. His ambitious and forceful Mother secured a position for him as a trainee reporter on the local paper.
His experiences and the contacts made during those years included a succession of thoroughly dreadful cars and motorcycles and which lead indirectly to his meeting and marrying Jess in November 1937 and becoming deeply involved with the resurrection of the Loughborough Motor Cycle Club
As did many other motorcyclists, Titch responded to the appeals for dispatch riders in the motorcycling magazines the âBlueâun and the âGreen âun and signed up to the âMotor Cyclistâs Army Registerâ and after many trials and tribulations actually served as a DR concluding the war as a sergeant and with the BEM.
His obsession with motorcycles never left him in these tempestuous times and he claimed that the acquisition of a 1930 Scott in 1942 was the catalyst for the formation of a âVintage Motor Cycle Clubâ âthe great stimulus being the series of articles on the adventures of tracking down and acquiring âold bikesâ written by Captain Jim Hall in the magazineâThe Motor Cycleâ The idea was Jimâs but it was the work of Titch and Jess that got the club off the ground with the historic inaugural meeting on the Hogâs Back on April 28th 1946. The ideals Titch envisaged were those of a sporting club where sporting, historic motorcycles would be used in competition â an ideal that came to be frustrated.
It was at this time that Titch began his life-long love affair with the Brough Superior marque and when he made a complete career change, moving into the world of motorcycling as a sales representative for Jim Ferriday, the irrepressible owner of the âFeridaxâ motorcycle accessories company, which led to all kinds of adventures and experiences âand many opportunities to enlarge and enrichen his collection of motorcycles.
His involvement with the emerging and developing Vintage Motor Cycle Club was, at times, a tempestuous affair, with numerous confrontations with equally strong-minded individuals at various stages of the Clubâs development. Titch admitted that his singular devotion to old motorcycles and motorcycling lead to the breakdown of his marriage and subsequent separation from Jess.
There was tragedy in the loss of Roger, his eldest son, in a freak road-racing incident in the Isle of Man in 1992 and then to lose Barbara, his eldest daughter, to cancer in 2005. Over the years Titch had lost many close friends and associates through motorcycle related accidents, but to many who were close to him, it seemed as if the death of Roger left a permanent scar from which he never really recovered.
Titchâs relationship with his wife was back on friendly terms for the latter period of her life before she succumbed to terminal cancer in 2002.
Recognition of his contribution to Motor Cycle Heritage came in the form of an OBE in 2004. The presentation ceremony took place, most appropriately, at Donington Park - a racing venue he had been associated with for 75 years
Reluctant to give up âcompetitiveâ motorcycling, nevertheless, Titch retired, first from road racing and finally from sidecar racing on âthe grassâ. His interest and enthusiasm never dimmed, however and a âposingâ sidecar outfit was prepared for special occasions â of which the most celebrated must have been his appearance in the Past Mastersâ Parade at the revival of the Festival of 1000 âbikes in 2006 at the age of 91.
Never afraid to voice his opinions on Vintage motorcycles and motorcycling anywhere and at any time, he was frequently controversial both within the Vintage Motor Cycle Club and elsewhere. Sometimes he was proved to be wrong, on other occasions to have been correct. But his dedication could never be questioned.
There can have been very few people who have been able to indulge a life-long obsession to the full whilst earning a living and raising a family and leaving behind a remarkable legacy to remember him by.
There will be a private family funeral for Titch with son Stephen Allen stating âthe family appreciates that there will be many Vintage Motorcycle Club Members and friends that will want to pay their respects so a memorial service will be arranged, details of which will be announced by the VMCC as soon as possibleâ.
Obituary â C E Allen OBE, BEM : 06/05/1915 â 18/03/2010.