Philip Conrad Vincent is born in Wilbraham Gardens in the southwest London district of Fulham.
Phillip Vincent bought his first motorcycle, a used 350cc BSA from Gamages (a department store in Central London that sold everything from motor parts to pets to shotguns) at Christmas of 1924. By the age of 18 he had a workshop and was designing and building his own machines. In 1928 he had registered a patent for his design of cantilever rear suspension.
In 1928, the first Vincent-HRD motorcycle used a JAP single-cylinder engine in a Vincent-designed cantilever frame. After a disastrous 1934 Isle of Man TT, with engine problems and all three entries failing to even finish, Phil Vincent, along with Phil Irving, decided to build their own engines. In 1935 the first all Vincent powered motorcycle, The 499cc Comet model was launched. It was quickly followed by the 998cc Series A Rapide in 1936.
Vincent and Irving designed the Series B twin engine which powered the 1946 Series B Rapide. In 1948 the liver-quivering Vincent Black Shadow and Black Lightning models, powered by the Series C Rapide were introduced. They had a 998cc, 50 degree, OHV V-twin engine running a 7.3:1 compression ratio and was capable of 125 mph.
In 1955, one week before Christmas, the last Vincent came off the production line and was promptly labeled "The Last". Grown men were heard sobbing uncontrollably.
Journalist Hunter S. Thompson wrote that, "If you rode the Black Shadow at top speed for any length of time, you would almost certainly die."