
Jack Brabham’s Cooper T45 Climax (F2-10-58) enroute to the hold of P&O Line’s 30,000 ton SS Arcadia while Stirling Moss’ similar Rob Walker car (F2-9-58) awaits its turn at Tilbury Docks.
It’s October 20, 1958, seven weeks before the Melbourne Grand Prix at Albert Park on November 30 where this pair of drivers and cars were the star attractions in a 19 car field. The Arcadia arrived 11 days before the race allowing plenty of pre-event promotion.
I was contacted by P&O Heritage in June last year requesting assistance in identifying the cars and the event to which they were travelling, with the assistance of my good friend, Cooper expert Stephen Dalton, that wasn’t a drama. With their exhibition now well over we can share the shots.

Arfur Daley! was my first reaction, look at them all with their peaked-caps to ward off the brisk River Thames air. It’s Stirling’s Rob Walker owned T45, chassis F2-9-58, no less than the car in which Maurice Trintignant won the ’58 Monaco GP, and with which Moss was victorious in the non-championship F1 Aintree 200 and Caen GP that year.
Brabham’s F2-10-45 was acquired from the British Racing Partnership: Alfred Moss and Ken Gregory. It had been raced in 1.5-litre F2 events continuously throughout 1958 by Stuart Lewis-Evans in between his Vanwall F1 commitments and Tommy Bridger otherwise. Lewis-Evans had many top-5 placings and one win at Brands in June.


Still fitted with 1.5-litre Climax FPF, BRP entered Bridger in the Moroccan Grand Prix at Ain Diab. His only GP start, in a six-Cooper F2 race within a race, ended in tears after Tommy spun and crashed on oil dropped by Tony Brooks’ Vanwall the lap before, Bridger completing 30 of the 53 laps. He wasn’t badly hurt, but poor Lewis-Evans died from burns sustained after a separate accident caused by his Vanwall’s engine seizure.
BRP returned the car to Coopers for repair, Brabham then bought it and installed a 2.2-litre Coventry Climax FPF to race in the Antipodes, while the Moss car was fitted with an Alf Francis built 2015cc Climax.

The trip from Tilbury to Port Melbourne back then took on average, four-six weeks, here the new Arcadia (b1953-d1979) is tied up at Station Pier, Port Melbourne in late March 1954. The trailer leg to transport the cars to Albert Park is a short 6km.

The 32 lap, 100 mile Melbourne GP was the eighth of nine Gold Star rounds that year, Stan Jones in the #12 Maserati 250F won the ‘58 title.
Brabham is in #8, #7 is Moss, while another Jones, young Alan is the small white clad figure leaning on the nose of the Ford Zephyr. Moss won the race from Brabham with the very quick Doug Whiteford, Maserati 300S in third
Bib Stillwell was fourth in another 250F with Len Lukey fifth in a Lukey Bristol – Len’s evolution of a Cooper T23. Car #10 is Tom Clark’s 3.4-litre Ferrari 555, the car alongside him is Ted Gray, Tornado 2 Chev.


Both cars were then shipped across the Tasman to contest the Kiwi Internationals. Moss won the New Zealand Grand Prix at Ardmore from Brabham in a big field that included Bruce McLaren, Carroll Shelby, Jo Bonnier and Harry Schell on Maserati 250Fs, and Ron Flockhart’s works-BRM P25.

Moss (and the Cooper) then returned to Europe for his other commitments while Brabham did the Lady Wigram Trophy and Teretonga International for second/third, then returned home to New South Wales where he won the South Pacific Trophy at Gnoo Blas.
Jack then travelled to Cordoba to begin his F1 season with the February 16 Buenos Aires GP, but not before selling F2-10-58 to Len Lukey. The Melbourne Lukey Mufflers manufacturer used it to good effect to win the 1959 Gold Star, the highlight of which was an epic dice between Len and Stan Jones’ 250F in the AGP at Longford (AMS cover below) which was resolved in Stan’s favour.
The T45 remained in Australia forever, and in a nice bit of Cooper T45/Albert Park symmetry, Stirling Moss drove his Dad, and Jack’s old car in the historic car demonstrations during an Australian Grand Prix carnival in the early 2000s. Both cars are extant…

Etcetera…

An unmistakable Aintree shot of Stirling Moss aboard Walker’s T45 F2-9-58 on the way to victory in the BARC 200, April 1958.

Tommy Bridger holding off Bruce McLaren’s works Cooper T45 Climax and Ivor Bueb’s Lotus 12 Climax aboard the BRP T45 F2-10-58 during the May ’58 Crystal Palace Trophy. He was second, bested only by Ian Burgess’ works Cooper T45, in a great performance.
Credits…
P&O Heritage, Allan C Green-State Library of Victoria, Bob King Collection, Stephen Dalton Collection, sergent.com.au, MotorSport Images, unattributed shots via Bonhams photographers unidentified, Terry Marshall, National Library of New Zealand
Tailpiece…

Tommy Bridger in the 1.5-litre F2 BRP Cooper T45 Climax F2-10-58 chasing Gerino Gerini’s Centro Sud Maserati 250F at Ain Diab during the October 19, 1958 Moroccan Grand Prix. Gerini was 11th from Q17 and Bridger DNF from Q22 after the accident described earlier.
The race-within-a-race of six Cooper F2 cars comprised T45s raced by Salvadori, Brabham, McLaren, Bridger and Andre Guelfi, plus Francois Picard’s older T43. Bridger qualified behind the works-Coopers of Roy, Jack and Bruce…he was pretty handy. See more about him here: https://500race.org/people/tommy-bridger/
Finito…
Mark,
Ardmore 1959 shows 2 Tec-mecs? I think these stayed in NZ for some time – Ross Jensen and A N Other?
Bob
Bob,
Ross raced two 250Fs, this one is the second, #2509 despite the confusing bodywork. He won the ’59 Bathurst 100 in it, top driver with some works-Lister Jag drives in the UK to his credit.
Tec-Mec can’t be bothered looking!: 8WForix.com is the Maserati 250F bible…
M
Rod Coppins
Rods Tec Mec had a Chevy V8
Len Lukey won the Gold Star in 1959. Lukey – Jones AGP dice also 1959. Owen Perkins owenperkins@bigpond.com
Cheers Owen.
M
Moss` mechanic, Tim Wall?
Sounds good to me Bruce,
Went to Brabham and looked after Dan Gurney I know from current Brabham book research…
Mark
Hi Mark,
You mention the two 250Fs of Ross Jensen: not sure you called it right.
2509 was the Owen Organisation car – Dunlop D Type wheels and disc brakes and an illustrious history.
Bruce McLaren took it out to NZ and my (late) dear friend Gavin Quirk sold his Squealey 100S – that he had bought from Bruce after he left for Blighty- and bought 2509.
At some stage it went back to Modena for a rebuild and came back bearing chassis plate 2506, but with the Dunlop bits it was obviously 2509 Gavin got back.
Gavin raced it for a few years, modified the bodywork with higher cockpit sides etc, and eventually sold it – at a heartbreaking price – to the racing museum fellow, who I think may still have it.
I have some memories of Ross Jensen racing his Piccoloesque car here and, apart from the strange nose (Ferrari 156 shark) it had Borranis fitted.
So it wasn’t 2509.
Rod,
The best Maserati A6GCM/250F reference site in my opinion is this one: http://8w.forix.com/250f-redux.html
Mark
Thanks Mark,
Yes, I’m aware of 8W, it is excellent.
I just recall Gavin regaling me with his many tales of 250F ownership – he would often drive it to meetings if he thought he could get away with it, with his wonderful wife Shirley roaring along behind in their Mk7 Jag.
He had whole heap of other exploits too, some of which would still make Shirley blanch at the thought.
He enjoyed life almost to the end: it got cruel then.
Whoops, got interrupted there.
Chris Amon bought the car from Gavin and raced it here of course. Which was the real start of things for him.
Gavin may have repurchased the car from Chris, but I’m a bit hazy on that.
But it did finish up at Southwood (?) museum, still with the Dunlop bits in place, which does make it unmistakeable.
Thank you for the great article mentioning my great-uncle Tommy!
[…] #12 is Stan Jones’ Maserati 250F (DNF), #10 Stan Clarke’s Ferrari 555 Super Squalo (10th) with Ted Gray’s Tornado 2 Chev V8 (DNF) inside him. See here: https://primotipo.com/2024/01/12/coopers-aloft/ […]