The inaugural Southern Cross Rally held from October 6th to 9th 1966 brought international rallying to Australia and attracted European stars Paddy Hopkirk and Rauno Aaltonen both of whom ran Morris Cooper S…
The event covered 4,000 km and ran from Sydney to Melbourne and return- Roselands Shopping Centre was the end point 17 km from Sydney’s CBD.
The Barry Ferguson/Tony Denham VW Beetle 1600 took the lead on the second night and set a fast pace until an exchange with a tree ended their great run 360 km from Sydney, this allowed the works Harry Firth/Graham Hoinville Cortina GT to win from the Greg Garard/Frank Goulburn Holden HR and Ian and Roger Vaughan Cortina GT in third place.
The opening photograph was taken at Huthwaite’s Shell Service Station in Edward Street Wagga Wagga- isn’t it a beauty?, but its also a mystery as to the crew. #2 is not on the entry list below nor does it appear to be a ‘missing number’ GT but rather a poverty pack Cortina of some sort- ideas folks?! https://southerncrossrally.blogspot.com/2019/07/1966-entries.html
The Firth/Hoinville Cortina takes centre stage alongside the #15 Garard/Goulburn Holden HR X2 and #17 Vaughan Brothers Cortina GT at Roselands.
The HR to the left behind is the Reg Lunn/Geoff Thomas ‘Dustings of Burwood’ (Melbourne) entry and the #14 Max Winkless/A Smith Volvo 122S to the right- rear centre is the distinctive Alec Mildren entered Alfa Romeo Giulia Super run by the versatile Doug Chivas and Lindsay Adcock.
Rauno Aaltonen and Roy Denny during the night on day 3 north at Cooma in the New South Wales sub-Alpine country. Click here for the full story of this event on the marvellous Southern Cross Rally website; https://southerncrossrally.blogspot.com/2016/03/1966-story.html
On balance Rauno had a pretty good month in Australia, whilst ‘in town’ he took in the 2 October Bathurst 500 enduro sharing a car with Bob Holden to an historic win in front of eight other Cooper S’!- they were a lap clear of the Fred Gibson/Bill Stanley and Bruce McPhee/Barry Mulholland machines.
The upper photograph is Rauno on his own at Mount Panorama, the lower one is Aaltonen chasing the BMC works Cooper S #28 of Paddy Hopkirk and Brian Foley, DNF after 28 laps.
Etcetera: Firth/Hoinville works Ford Cortina Mk1 GT…
Firth’s car was one of the 110 GT500s Harry and his crew in Queens Avenue, Auburn built prior to the 1965 Bathurst 500- this run of cars was a very successful ‘homologation special’ with Bo Seton and Midge Boswell winning the classic that year.
Whilst the Melbourne pairing of good friends and great engineers were lucky to benefit from Ferguson’s misfortune in the Southern Cross, so that is almost always the case- the ‘to finish first, first you have to finish’ adage holds good.
Meritorious was that Harry had competed in the Bathurst 500 together with quite a few other ‘Cross runners the week before and immediately prior to that had returned from the US where he contested two Trans-Am rounds- on 10 September, the Green Valley 6 Hour for ninth place and 18 September Riverside 4 hours- seventh in a Lotus Cortina with Allan Moffat- Moff ran selected rounds of the series that year amongst his primary program the ‘1966 Central Division (Cendiv) Touring Car Series starting in May in the American Midwest.
Moffat said of Firth in his autobiography written with John Smailes ‘Harry Firth was fantastic. The race was half day, half night and, when darkness fell, he drove like the rally star he was. He pulled back four of the six laps i’d lost and brought us up to second in class behind Kwech’s Alfa. Then a throttle cable fell off and he dropped another six laps and had to start again. This time he got into ‘man possessed’ mode. On a track with questionable grip, in the pitch dark, he set a new under 2 litre lap record. We finished fourth in class and ninth outright. Ray Parsons with Jon Leighton was third in class and seventh outright.’
A week later the team were 2,200 km away in Riverside, again Moffat sang Harry’s praises- ‘…Harry surprised us again. He removed the cylinder heads from both our cars and took them to a local machine shop where he performed some magic. Its not that I didn’t want the details but Harry wasn’t called The Fox for nothing. All I needed to know was that the work was legal and quicker. He assured me it was. Harry came down with the flu that weekend so I dove solo. My job, if I could, was to spoil Horst Kwech. For four hours we raced like crazy for second in class, while Frank Gardner sprinted ahead to score Alan Mann’s only victory of the series’ John Smailes recorded.
The piece above is interesting- Harry was multi-talented as all you Australian enthusiasts well know.
He was a great preparer/builder of race and rally cars, an elite level rally and production-sedan driver not to forget his abilities to develop competitive performance car packages with manufacturers (Ford and Holden). After his own driving career he was a great talent spotter (mind you he nurtured talent whilst still driving too) and team manager of people, budgets, builds and race-day strategy- he schmoozed sponsors and manufacturers as well.
He really was rather an amazing hombre, consistent with Ken Blair’s thesis in the article above Harry also won the first Australian Rally Championship in 1968 in either/and/or a Lotus Cortina Mk2/Cortina Mk2 supercharged- perhaps one of you rally nutters can set me straight- he was fifty then by the way.
Credits…
‘SCB’- southerncrossrally.blogspot.com, Getty Images, Stuart Charlton, ‘Allan Moffat: Climbing The Mountain’ Allan Moffat with John Smailes
Tailpiece…
GT500 out front of Ford’s Australian headquarters on the Hume Highway, Broadmeadows in 1965, I wonder if JFF-368 was the factory press car, and whether it still exists.
Finito…
Sent from my HTC
Kim,
Maybe try again, no text came thru.
Mark
Hi Mark,
It is amazing to think that the Southern Cross Rally was just a week after the Gallaher (Bathurst) 500. It suited BMC who had their rally stars climbing the Mountain one week and out in the forest the next! Not all competitors were quite so lucky….
Barry Arentz used his Cooper S, that had finished ninth with Bo Seton at the Great Race in the Rally. A change of tyres and a sump guard and he was away. However a lack of ground clearance made the Cooper S unsuitable and given that this was Barry’s daily driver he wisely withdrew from the rally to preserve the car. Sadly the Cooper S was burnt to the ground the following year, a story I told in Australian Muscle Car magazine #105. As an aside, Harry Firth had a high regard for Arentz’s ability behind the year.
A photo correction. Aaltonen is chasing the BMC works Cooper S #28 of Paddy Hopkirk/Brian Foley. The Brian Foley Motors Cooper S #42 was driven by Laurie Stewart and Ray Morris, father of Bob. Young Bob didn’t make his Bathurst until 1968 in a Toyota Corolla.
Paul
Paul,
Love the Arentz story- road, rally and racer, what an adaptable club car they were! I drove quite a few Coopers/Clubman GT but never quite managed to own one. Thanks for the caption correction, not sure how i buggered that one up!
M
Mark,
Re your question on Harry Firth’s mount for his 1968 Australian Rally Championship win, this link http://www.snooksmotorsport.com.au/wp-content/uploads/2018/07/1968-CAMS-AUSTRALIAN-RALLY-CHAMPIONSHIP-FIN.pdf makes no mention of the car being supercharged, however the report on the Warana Rally (Round 5) in Racing Car News describes the car as “the supercharged Lotus Cortina”. Whether this applied for all rounds or just that one I am not able to say. Interesting to note that Harry won the title despite missing the final round due to his London – Sydney Marathon commitments with Ford. And that turned out rather well too.
Rob Bartholomaeus
Thanks Rob,
Be great to understand the detail spec of the car- the supercharged was probably a Shorrock Harry had sitting around the ‘shop from his MG days!
Mark
Hi Mark,
Harry’s 68 ARC cortina ran a Marshall supercharger plus some other good bits, Harry gives a good description of the mods in the AMC publication “Ford and I” by Harry Firth, love the website keep up the great work.
Gary
Thanks Gary,
I don’t have that publication- was it a supercharged twin-cam or supercharged pushrod Ford?? This little tid-bits of the past are interesting aren’t they!
Mark
Mark it was a supercharged twin-cam, 1680cc 9.5 compression ratio running 6-8 lbs of boost and Harry claimed 220+HP which would have been extraordinary in it’s day.
Gary
Thanks Gary,
I missed your response- that is heaps of poke for a rally machine of the day isn’t it. Our rules at the time must have been fairly liberal.
Mark