First lap of the 1975 Lady Wigram Trophy held on the RNZAF circuit of the same name, on January 19.
It’s Graham McRae, McRae GM2 Chev from Warwick Brown, Lola T332 Chev with the partially obscured Talon MR1 Chev of Chris Amon tucked in behind WB, John Walker, Lola T332 Repco-Holden, then David Oxton aboard Max Stewart’s T330 Chev with John McCormack’s Elfin MR6 Repco-Holden at the rear of the gaggle.
I’ve always had a soft spot for this place, despite not ever having been there! It’s ‘snapper heaven of course, with so many interesting backdrops to work; Terry Marshall was the top of the local photographer pops in this era.
(T Marshall)
GP McRae won the race in his year-old McRae GM2, albeit with no shortage of aero-adornments which made this lovely car both quicker and uglier than the svelte beauty that won the 1973 Australian Grand Prix at Sandown that November, its second race.
McRae’s GM2 Chev in its original, erotic form alongside 1974 Tasman Cup winner Peter Gethin’s Chevron B24 Chev at the start of the NZ GP at Pukekohe. Then John McCormack, Elfin MR5 Repco-Holden and David Oxton, Begg FM5 Chev #18, with Graeme Lawrence – chequered helmet design – Lola T332 Chev, behind, and the rest (T Marshall)Warwick Brown in Pat Burke’s Lola T332 Chev, chassis HU27 was the very first T332 built, at Wigram in 1975 (T Marshall)
John McCormack’s Elfin MR6 Repco-Holden was second – Mac and his team having given the Repco-Leyland V8 the lemonade and sars after a dismal, slow, unreliable ’74 Gold Star – with John Walker third in his unique Repco-Holden powered Lola T332, then Max Stewart’s new and uncooperative Lola T400 Chev and Graeme Lawrence’s T332 Chev.
McCormack, McRae and Walker (unattributed)(T Marshall)
John Walker blasts past the Wigram hangar in his Lola T330 during the 1974 Trophy ‘with Repco Holden F5000 V8 thunder echoing off the hangar walls’ as Marshall beautifully put it! Love the arty-farty surreal quality of this shot.
Tangentially, Kevin Bartlett on the differences between the rear suspension on a Lola T330 and T332 in a Facebook commented about Ken Smith’s Lola T330-332 HU8 ex-Chaparral-Haas.
‘Just about nil change to geometry as such. Twin link lower links at the rear (T332) replaced the A-arm (T330). Made for easier toe change without affecting bump steer. Aero was different with horizontal radiators, oil coolers lowered and mounted behind the front suspension, instead of the rear and side of the tub. The rear roll-bar was mounted differently on most. The tub was extended and foam-filled at the cockpit area. Visually, the bodywork was quite a bit different, as you would see if both were together. Ken Smith’s car was as much a T332 as my second car of that era. Its difference was the A-arm rear suspension and roll-bar I kept for various reasons.’
Speaking of KB, here he is giving his new, Lola T400 Chev the ‘one-handed Scandinavian-flick’, and commenting, again on good-ole Facebook, ‘Yep always did it that way as I had better feel with one control hand. After all, the steer is by throttle, lock used to point it where you want to go. Ask any drift merchant for confirmation. HeHe!’
(T Marshall)
John McCormack had a good 1975 Tasman series in his MR6 – fourth – then went home and won the Gold Star in it with 27 points from Walker’s T330/332 and Max Stewart’s T400 Chev.
Butt shot of McRae’s GM2, Terry Marshall comments, ‘Wigram showing those big fat rear tyres in action. Here G.P.McRae exits the loop over the water grates and out on towards Bomb Bay. Can’t ya just feel it.’
Indeed…
Etcetera…
(S Dent)
Graham McRae debuted his new McRae GM2 Chev at Brands Hatch on October 21, 1973 (above) before shipping it to Australia where the combo won the ‘73 AGP at Sandown, the Ampol livery readily apparent in the shot below…
At Brands McRae was a DNF with a shock absorber problem having missed practice, while at Sandown he won from Q4 with McCormack and Walker second and third; Fifth Former me was there and remembers the race well!
McRae sussing McCormack’s Elfin while J-Mac in the browny-orange driving suit has his back to us (Stupix)
Allan Moffat does his best to avoid soiling his undergarments as Fred Gibson lines up his works-Ford Falcon 500 XC on Moff’s right-hip-apex of the swerve. Colin Bond is behind, with John Goss, Murray Carter and Ron Dickson the other unsighted members of the troupe.
The angle on the camera dangle heightens the excitement but there is still no way known I’d want to do it.
By 1973 Australian tariffs on manufactured goods were significantly reduced, this exposed the local products of Ford, Holden and Valiant (Chrysler) for the junk they were.
Holden responded, inter alia, with their RTS – Radial Tuned Suspension – HZ Holdens under the leadership of Peter Hanenberger aka ‘Handlingberger’. Hanenberger was a GM Opel-trained engineer who rose all the way through the GM Empire of Suits to be, in his second Australian stint, MD and Chairman of General Motors Holden.
Hanenberger, spunk-muffin and early Commodore (GMH)
RTS was all piece of piss stuff: changes to geometry, springs, bars, shocks, bushes, mounts etc. The exact specs are neither here nor there; the point is that Hanenberger instructed his staff to do what they should have done when the HQ was originally designed and developed way back circa-1971.
Hanenberger was a breath of fresh air at Holdens after a succession of crew-cut Americans on the corporate climb who ran the show without much savoir-faire.
Artificial Intelligence
Then I thought, hang on a minute, my currrent Trump inspired high level Anti-American stance is maybe clouding my judgement. So I put my favourite AI tool to work (CoPilot) to produce a list of GMH Managing Directors and then teased out of it, their contributions.
I use AI – when I do at all – very carefully and only where I have strong subject matter knowledge in order to exclude the bullshit. I don’t have the interest or subject matter knowledge of this stuff much at all; it’s all reproduced verbatim, including all the floral adjectives and American spelling, so I am in your hands, Holden experts…
Managing Directors of GM-Holdens
Managing Director
Tenure
Nationality
Notable Contributions or Context
A.N. Lawrence
1931
Australian
First MD after GM-Holden’s formation
H.W. Page
1930s–1940s
American
Oversaw wartime production and early expansion
Laurence Hartnett
1936–1946
British-Australian
Instrumental in developing the first Holden car (48-215)
Harold Bettle
1950s
American
Managed post-war growth and Holden’s market dominance
David H. Hayward
1960s
American
Expanded Holden’s export programs
John Bagshaw
1970s
Australian
Oversaw HQ Holden development and local engineering initiatives
Chuck Chapman
1980s
American
Promoted Commodore and Group A racing involvement
Bill Hamel
Late 1980s–1990s
American
Focused on global integration and platform sharing
Led VE Commodore development and global platform alignment
Mark Reuss
2008–2009
American
Later became GM President; emphasized global product strategy
Alan Batey
2010–2013
British
Managed Holden during restructuring and brand repositioning
Mike Devereux
2013–2015
Canadian
Announced Holden’s manufacturing exit
Mark Bernhard
2015–2018
Australian
Last Australian MD; led Holden through transition to import-only
Kristian Aquilina
2019–2020
Maltese-Australian
Final MD before Holden’s closure in 2020
The Shifting Helm of Holden : A Narrative of Leadership and Legacy
From its 1931 inception as General Motors-Holden’s Ltd, the company’s leadership mirrored its hybrid DNA: Australian in spirit, American in ownership. Each Managing Director brought a distinct lens—some engineering-driven, others commercially focused—shaping Holden’s trajectory through war, prosperity, global integration, and eventual closure.
Foundations and National Pride (1930s-1940s)
A.N. Lawrence (Australian) was the first to steer GM-Holden’s after its formation, laying the groundwork for a uniquely Australian automotive identity.
Then came Laurence Hartnett (British-Australian), whose visionary leadership birthed the first Holden car—the 48-215. Hartnett’s push for local design and manufacturing made him a national figure, often dubbed the “father of the Holden”.
Post-War Expansion and Engineering Dominance (1950s-1970s)
Harold Bettle and David H. Hayward (both American) managed Holden’s post-war boom, with the FX and FJ Holdens becoming cultural icons.
John Bagshaw (Australian) took the reins during the HQ Holden era, championing local engineering and design. His tenure reflected a shift toward Australian autonomy within GM’s framework, with Holden’s technical teams gaining global respect.
Commodore Era and Global Integration (1980s-1990s)
Chuck Chapman (American) embraced motorsport, aligning Holden with Group A racing and the rise of the Commodore.
Bill Hamel (American) began integrating Holden into GM’s global platform strategy, a move that would later define the VE Commodore’s architecture.
Engineering Renaissance and Strategic Realignment (1999-2013)
Peter Hanenberger (German), a former Opel executive, reignited Holden’s engineering culture. Under his leadership, the Monaro was reborn, and the VE Commodore became a world-class platform.
Denny Mooney and Mark Reuss (both American) continued this global alignment, balancing local innovation with GM’s broader product strategy.
Alan Batey (British) managed Holden during a time of brand repositioning and market uncertainty.
Decline and Closure (2013-2020)
Mike Devereux (Canadian) announced the end of local manufacturing—a seismic moment in Australian industry.
Mark Bernhard (Australian) became the last local MD, tasked with guiding Holden through its transition to an import-only brand.
Kristian Aquilina (Maltese-Australian) closed the final chapter, overseeing Holden’s wind-down in 2020 with a focus on dignity and legacy.
Each Managing Director’s nationality wasn’t just a footnote—it often shaped Holden’s priorities. Australian leaders like Hartnett, Bagshaw, and Bernhard emphasized local engineering and cultural relevance. American and European MDs brought global integration, technical rigor, and strategic realignment. Together, they formed a mosaic of leadership that reflected Holden’s complex identity: proudly Australian, yet forever tethered to Detroit.
Holden’s Leadership and the Pulse of Performance : Motorsport and Engineering in Motion
Holden’s Managing Directors didn’t just steer corporate strategy—they shaped the soul of the brand. Their decisions echoed across racetracks, engineering labs, and suburban driveways, where the roar of a Holden V8 became a symbol of national pride.
Engineering Identity : From FX to HQ
Under John Bagshaw, Holden’s engineering teams flourished. The HQ Holden wasn’t just a car—it was a declaration of independence. Designed and engineered in Australia, it featured a perimeter frame chassis, a bold departure from GM’s global norms. Bagshaw’s support for local innovation gave engineers like George Roberts and Leo Pruneau the freedom to craft a car that could handle Australia’s rugged terrain and reflect its cultural swagger.
The HQ’s success wasn’t just commercial—it laid the groundwork for Holden’s motorsport dominance. Its robust chassis became the backbone for touring car variants, and its V8 engines roared across Bathurst.
Motorsport as Brand DNA : The Monaro and Commodore Era
Chuck Chapman saw motorsport as a marketing weapon. Under his watch, Holden embraced Group C and later Group A racing, with the Commodore becoming a fixture on the grid. The Monaro’s rebirth in the early 2000s—thanks to Peter Hanenberger—was more than nostalgia. It was a technical triumph, blending heritage with modern performance. Hanenberger’s engineering-first ethos revived Holden’s credibility among enthusiasts and racers alike.
The VE Commodore, launched during Hanenberger’s tenure and refined under Denny Mooney, was Holden’s magnum opus. It was the first car developed on GM’s global Zeta platform, but it was engineered entirely in Australia. Its success in V8 Supercars and export markets (like the Pontiac G8 in the U.S.) proved that Holden could punch above its weight.
Strategic Shifts and Motorsport Legacy
As Holden’s global integration deepened under Mark Reuss and Alan Batey, motorsport remained a cultural anchor. Even as manufacturing wound down, Holden’s presence in Supercars endured—until Kristian Aquilina oversaw its final race at Bathurst in 2020, where Shane van Gisbergen gave Holden a fitting farewell victory.
Mark Bernhard, the last Australian MD, understood the emotional gravity of Holden’s motorsport legacy. His leadership ensured that Holden’s final years weren’t just about winding down—they were about honoring a legacy built on grit, speed, and national pride.
Holden’s story isn’t just about cars—it’s about the people who led it, the engineers who built it, and the racers who drove it into legend. From Bagshaw’s HQ to Hanenberger’s Monaro and Bernhard’s final Bathurst, each chapter reflects a tension between global strategy and local soul.’
This Autocourse piece written by Robin Herd – March co-founder amongst many other credits – in late 1968 about the use of wings on racing cars is of great interest and matter of record by one of the best qualified engineers of the day.
These super shots of Bob Jane Racing cars contributed (mainly) by Russell Martin and James Semple to Bob Williamson’s Australian Motor Racing Photographs Facebook page are too good not to share more widely.
The machine above is the Can-Am McLaren M6B Repco 740 5-litre V8 in which John Harvey won the 1971-72 Australian Sports Car Championships. See here: https://primotipo.com/2018/09/09/sandown-sunrise/
(R Martin)
Many of Russell Martin’s shots were taken at what appears to have been a press day at Calder, perhaps in late 1970, given the cars present and their livery.
Jane’s Chevrolet Camaro ZL-1 is a Top 25 all-time Australian Touring Car, winner of the 1971-72 Australian Touring Car Championships, powered by an aluminium Can-Am 427 big block in ’71 and a tiddly 350 cast iron small block in ’72. CAMS did a parity pirouette at the end of ’71 and banned the 7-litre engine despite it being homologated, not that it made any difference to the ATCC results. What a car…
A list of all of the cars Bob owned and raced would be a mighty impressive one! There were a couple of Series Production cars in this era, the Holden LC Torana GTR XU-1 shown above and a Monaro GTS 350. Southern Motors was Bob’s Holden dealership. I wonder what the Bob Jane Racing headcount was in that 1970-72 period? More here, including my attempt at a list of Bob’s racing cars: https://primotipo.com/2020/01/03/jano/
(J Semple)
John Harvey on the way to winning the RAC Tourist Trophy at Wawrick Farm on April 30, 1972, the third round of the Australian Sports Car Championship
Harves was the primary driver of this car but Bob had the occasional gallop as well. At the end of 1972 the car was parked, Castrol – if I remember the story rightly – wanted the focus to be on the team’s taxis not its single-seaters and sports car so the Brabham BT36 Waggott, Bowin P8 Repco-Holden and the McLaren were set aside in the workshop. The BT36 was sold to Ian Cook and Denis Lupton, the Bowin P8 chassis went to John Leffler and its Repco-Holden F5000 V8 engine was lent to Ron Harrop to use in his Holden EH sports sedan.
Two Australian sports car star-cars were parked for commercial reasons in this era while still in their prime: Frank Matich’s Matich SR4 Repco 860 5-litre in 1970 and the Bob Jane McLaren, both could have won the ASCC for years had they raced on…
The M6B’s life from then on was as a display machine at Bob Jane T-Marts throughout the land, the family still own it.
(R Martin)
The following excerpt from Tony McGirr’s book, ‘Gentleman John Harvey : Memories of How it Was’ related Harvey’s recollections of the McLaren M6B Repco.
‘I would rate the McLaren and my 76 Offy (speedcar) as the best cars I have ever driven in terms of driver satisfaction. I enjoyed driving them. More, I loved driving them. I was always relaxed and felt part of each car. Obviously, I won a lot of races in each, they were just sensational.
With a car such as the McLaren, it was a purpose built racing car. The engine was in the correct position. The weight distribution was perfect. Now, I’m talking about the late 1960s and early 1970s, and this was simply a fabulous motor car.
Not only that, but being a sports car, with a full enveloping body, it had style. It was a stunning looking car. When we rolled it out of the back of the transporter, people would come for miles to look at it. They would just stand there with their mouths open. They had never seen anything like it.
So, that was an added element to its appeal. By that stage too, Repco had the 5-litre V8 engines working properly. In the early days of the Repco V8 2.5-litre engines, they had lots of problems. By the time of the McLaren, they had the engines working properly. The engine we had was very reliable and very powerful.
Another thing in favour of the McLaren was the fact that it had a full monocoque chassis. Most of the sports cars I was racing against at the time, including the Elfins and Frank Matich’s early cars, were all of tube-frame construction and subject to a bit of frame-flex and twist. In the later period of Frank’s development of his cars, the SR4 was the quickest car by far. It had a 5-litre twin-cam engine. The engine we were using was a 5-litre single cam version.
Now, I’m not making excuses here, I am simply outlining the relevant technical differences. Frank’s car had another hundred horsepower, and was much faster in a straight line. However, when we came to braking, and going through the twisty bits, the McLaren would catch up every metre he had gained on the straight. In a couple of cases, he could do the fastest lap of the race, and I could match it a little later, when my fuel load went down, and we had a bit better power-to-weight ratio.
But, the final word on the McLaren – fantastic. Plus, Bob Jane had a very deep affection for Bruce. They had known one another for some years. Bob also knew Pat, Bruce’s wife. As a tragic irony, Bob and I were with Bruce the night before he died. In fact, we were in London on business, mainly to see how the McLaren was being finished off.
Now, Bruce had made that car as ‘a special’ for Bob, and the Repco engine. Because, at the time Bruce was using the 7-litre Chevy engine as a stressed member of the car’s structure, and was hanging the rear suspension off the transmission. Because the Repco engine was not robust enough (more correctly, the engines weren’t designed to be used as stress-bearing members) to be used this way, Bruce built a couple of chassis members, or pontoons, off the back of the bulkhead, to accommodate the Repco engine. He got Ron Tauranac to bring around a spare engine block so he could use that as a dummy to set up the engine in the redesigned chassis.
So, in that way, Bob’s McLaren was a specially built one-off car. Anyway, we were with Bruce on his last night. We were heading off, and back to Australia. At that time, Bruce was the recipient of the Grovewood Award, and had to go to the function that evening to receive the award. This was a very prestigious award in those days. Anyway, Bruce had forgotten to bring his best suit, and it was too far to go home to get it. Bruce and Bob were about the same size. Both were short, stocky types, with solid shoulders.
Bruce was inclined to brush the whole thing off and said, ‘Ah well, it’s only a suit’. Bob insisted that he be able to lend Bruce his own new suit that he had in his bags. So, off went Bruce to collect the award in Bob’s new suit. He thought that was terrific.’
Repco-Brabham – Repco from 1969 – the RB740 all aluminium, SOHC, two-valve, Lucas injected 5-litre V8 is quoted by Repco as having 460bhp @ 7500 rpm and weighed 360 pounds (R Martin)
‘With the international time difference, and the time it took our flight to get back to Sydney airport, there on the front page of the Sydney Morning Herald were the words, ‘Bruce McLaren killed’. We couldn’t believe it. We had been with him just the night before.
So, that was a really sad end to our trip. After that, the McLaren became an extra special car for Bob. Particularly so because he was the one who owned it. It became special for me for the period in which I drove it. I think Bob drove it a couple of times, but basically, that was my car for the whole period of its racing career.
We retired the car at the end of the ’72 championship, and the car has never been raced since. They have restored it twice. When I say ‘twice’, I mean the first restoration was pretty good, but the second was exceptional. The only person who has driven it since, was when Denny Hulme drove it at the ’85 Grand Prix in a parade lap (below). Bob wanted me to drive it last year, or the year before, at the Grand Prix at Albert Park. I was really looking forward to that, except that the engine had traces of water in the oil, and the whole thing was cancelled.’
(Bob Jane Racing Heritage)M6B sales chick. Bob Jane T-Mart, Parramatta Road, Granville in June 1976, with the nose of Jane’s Maserati 300S, which had been restored by Jim Shepherd (spelling? not John Sheppard) not long before (Cummins Archive)
‘Bob is probably the only person in the whole world who was an original owner of a McLaren race car, and who still owns it. It has never changed hands, and while ever Bob lives, it will never change hands.
Was the McLaren finicky’ to set up? I ask this in reference to modern Formula One cars, which they fool around with all the time. There are so may adjustments on modern cars, it seems to take them forever to set them up properly.
We didn’t have the same range of adjustments on the McLaren. Today, on almost everything, they have electronics. They have sensors all over the cars. The driver now has nowhere near the input we had in those days.
Mechanically, things are still somewhat similar. They still have suspensions with wishbones, springs, shock absorbers, roll-bars, and brake adjustments. The major difference is that we didn’t have any aerodynamic features to worry about, and we were on treaded tyres.
My first response when I sat in the McLaren was to say that the arches on the front mudguards were too high. Bruce had been using a much taller tyre. Technology was changing, and the result was we were using a smaller diameter tyre. We had the tyre sitting low down, and the crown of the mudguard up high. This made it pretty difficult to see your proper racing line.
We finally lopped the top off the big, tall radius of the front mudguards. We had a stylist do it, and I still think it was all for the better for the aesthetics of the car. It looked more balanced. It looked much nicer. Certainly, the newer rubber worked to enhance the performance of the car.
But, apart from that cosmetic change, we changed very little. Things like springs, we never had to change. Bruce had the springs made from this fantastic spring steel, and that meant that the springs never sagged. On other cars that I had raced with locally made springs, you had to be checking them all the time. You had to check them for installed height, static height, and compressed height. You had to take dimensions of these things all the time, because the springs would sag. This could lower your ride height, and all sorts of adverse things could happen as a result.
The springs in the McLaren – and the Brabham – we never had to touch. From that point of view, it was just shock absorber adjustments and wheel alignment. This was very important for the geometry of the front end. Adjustment of the rear ride height was also critical. Other than that, it was pretty much trouble-free. And as I said, by that time the engines were pretty reliable, so we had a good finish rate. It was a lovely car to drive. I just enjoyed driving it so much.’
Allan Moffat organised the purchase of a Shelby Mustang (car #3 above) for John Sawyer and Bob Jane in late 1968. Jane’s car was one car raced by Horst to victory at Riverside. VIN#8RO1J118XXX was the very last of the 1968 K-K/Shelby cars built and had only raced three times in the hands of Dan Gurney, Peter Revson and Horst.
Happily for both Jane and Moffat, it was soon on its way to Australia with Moffat expecting to race the hand-me-down Mustang GT390 in 1969 whilst his team-owner raced the near-new car, on the face of it the pair were a strong combination for the ensuing year…This story is told in the piece linked above.
Bob Jane, Ford Mustang 390, Phillip Island paddock circa- 1968 (R Martin)(R Martin)
The Jane V8 Repco was one of the few short-lived Bob Jane Racing cars.
The Bob Britton/Rennmax Engineering-built machine was campaigned by Harvey in the 1970 Australian Gold Star Championship, the last ‘Tasman 2.5 Era’ Gold Star.
When Harvey was first recruited by Bob after Spencer Martin’s retirement at the end of 1967, Harves inherited the Brabham BT23E Repco-Brabham 2.5 V8 Jane acquired from Jack Brabham at the end of the ’68 Tasman Cup.
John was nearly killed in it at Bathurst during that year’s first Gold Star round over the Easter long weekend. Harvey then raced it throughout 1969 and into early 1970 as related in this article:
John Harvey being looked after on the Oran Park 1970 grid by John Sawyer, Jane Repco V8. That’s Max Stewart alongside in Alec Mildren’s Mildren Waggott TC-4V
The Jane Repco V8 used the same pair of ex-Jack Brabham 295bhp @ 9000 rpm Repco 2.5-litre 830 V8s fitted to the BT23E, but the chassis – built on Britton’s BT23 jig – had revised suspension geometry to suit the latest generation of ever-evolving and widening tyres and other changes including the bodywork. As the story below relates, John could, woulda, shoulda won that Gold Star…The car has lived on, in ANF2 form, for many years in a WA museum I think.
Jane in the Jaguar E-Type Lwt at Calder, and the Elfin 400 Repco-Brabham 620 4.4-litre V8, perhaps on the same day below circa-1967, again with Bob at the wheel. See here for a piece on Bob’s E-Types: https://primotipo.com/2018/04/15/perk-and-pert/
(R Simmonds)
Elfin 400 Repco 620 620 4.4-litre V8 in Bob Jane’s hands at Calder circa 1967, above as I say, and in the Phillip Island paddock below, a little later 1968’ish; note the more substantial roll bar and rear spoiler in the shot below.
Bob Jane – yep, I know it’s Harves number – in one of his favourite cars, the John Sheppard built Holden Torana GTR XU-1 Repco-Brabham 620 4.4-litre V8 at Warwick Farm in 1972.
The Total and Castrol Bob Jane Racing thing seems to be a 1972-73 commercial relationship. I’m not sure how the two oil companies co-existed on the cars, but doubtless one of you taxi-fans will know the answer.
The Torana was born as a consequence of the growth in interest in. sports sedans and the availability of the Repco-Brabham 620 4.4 V8 in Janes workshop. After Bevan Gibson’s fatal Easter Bathurst 1969 crash in Bob’s Elfin 400 Repco 4.4, the remains, sans engine, were sold to Victorian Ken Hastings. Less than a year later the engine was put back into work…
Jane on the bonnet of the XU1-Repco (J Semple)(J Semple)
Harvey’s Torana sports sedan (above and below) leads Allan Moffat’s Mustang Trans-Am 302 and Bob Janes Holden Monaro HQ GTS 350 – both improved tourers – at Warwick Farm in 1972. The Monaro was another Sheppo build of course.
Ray Bell tells me that it’s the ‘November 5, ’72 meeting, Moffat won. Harvey retired after two laps in the early race, but not before he had pointedly moved over off the grid to block Moffat. In the second race Pete had diff troubles after forcing his way to second and dropped back so it was Moffat, then Harvey and Jane at the finish. This was when Moffat did a 1:37.5.’
(J Semple)(J Semple)
Beauty and The Beast Torana sports sedans.
The aluminium SOHC, Lucas injected 4.4-litre 400 bhp @ 7000 rpm, 360 pounds, Repco RB620 V8 powered, John Harvey driven, Bob Jane Racing Holden Torana GTR XU-1 chased by the cast iron, pushrod, Lucas injected 5-litre 475 bhp @ 7000 rpm, 485 pounds, Repco-Holden F5000 powered, Colin Bond driven, Holden Dealer Team Holden Torana GTR XU-1 at Oran Park. Ray advises that Harvey won both these encounters during the May 1973 meeting.
John Sheppard was prolific when he joined Bob Jane Racing, there were some seriously fast racing cars run by Bob in the Sheppo era including the Chev Camaro ZL-1, Holden Monaro HQ GTS 350, Holden Torana GTR XU-1 Repco, McLaren M6B Repco, Brabham BT36 Waggott TC-4V and Bowin P8 Repco-Holden. Sheppo scratch builds are the Monaro and Torana.
(J Semple)
Jane in the Monaro from Pete Geoghegan’s Ford GTHO Super Falcon 351 in its definitive, post-John Joyce-Bowin Designs rebuilt form at Warwick Farm in 1972. Probably the same race as three pics back, touring cars were sooooo fuckin’ good back then! Totally unlike the bullshit parity-sameness dog’s bollocks of today. Bob on the WF grid below on the same day.
(J Semple)(I Smith)
Calder March 1979, it looks like Janey is wearing the same Bell Magnum open-face helmet he was using a decade before – same Monaro but wilder sports-sedan specs – it was an improved tourer when first built way back in 1972.
(I Smith)
Bob Jane’s Pat Purcell built Chev Monza 350 at Dandenong Road, Sandown in December 1980. Amazing car, time to do an Auto Action under the skin piece on it with the unpublished shots we have…
Credits…
James Semple, Russell Martin, Ian Smith, Murray Thomas, Australian Muscle Car, Cummins Archive, ‘Gentleman John Harvey : Memories of How It Was’ Tony McGirr, Ray Bell
Every now and again I dip into Australia’s intercity record breaking era of crazy speeds over vast distances on incredibly poor unmade ‘roads’ and could never find a summary of these adventures until now!
I tripped over H.O. Balfe’s article about 25 years of Melbourne-Sydney record-breaking, published in the Sydney newspaper The Referee on April 26, 1933, while doing research on Harry Beith. It was somewhat laborious to digitise, but it’s great ‘document of record’ stuff.
‘Melbourne to Sydney by motorcar in in 25 hours! Just a little over one day 572 miles ! What a speed!
Yes, they said that a quarter of a century ago when Harry James and Charlie Kellow first set figures for a speed run between Melbourne and Sydney by motor car.
That was in January 1907. Both James and Kellow are still on deck, and there in nothing more interesting than to get Harry James talking about that pioneer journey in their 26 h.p. Talbot. The roads were just bush tracks, mainly, and on the New South Wales side the heat was so terrific that at Yass the petrol containers they carried were distorted into egg shape.
“It’s plain hell further on,” said the country folk. That was an accurate description. For miles, James and Kellow and the gallant Talbot fought their way through bushfires in blinding, choking smoke, striving desperately not to think of what would happen were it to spark to lodge on a splash of petrol.
But James and Kellow won through, compared with that nightmare drive, present-day assaults on the record are mere joy rides.
Sydney was reached after 23 hours and 40 minutes. James and Kellow held that record for nearly two years, and lost it in December 1909, when C.G. Day and S Custance, likewise aboard a Talbot 25, in December got through in 21 hours 19 minutes.
And now the desire to capture that record was a fever in the veins of motorists. Only a few months elapsed, and then Syd Day and Will Whithourn, driving a 20 h.p. Vinot, a make that is never heard of now, sped across the 565 miles in 20 hours 10 minutes.
That was not bad going, in three years, 5 1/2 hours had been lopped off the original record, and still the roads were so bad as to give the daredevils of those days a thorough gruelling. It was not an uncommon thing to lose hours through having to stop to open gates and railway level crossings.
Before the pioneers did their Job and faded out of the picture, the record was to be smashed once again. That was in April 1910 – a month after the Day-Whitbourn effort – when White and Custance in their 25 h.p Talbot reduced the time to 19 hours 47 minutes. That was only 23 minutes better than Day and Whitbourn’s time, but it set a new record on the books, for it was the first time that the one driver had ever held the honours on two occasions.’
AV Turner takes a gulp of beer during Sydney-Melbourne trials in 1914 (C Blundell Collection)
‘Then appeared one of the finest racing motorists who ever held a steering wheel – the late Arthur F Turner (actually Albert Valentine Turner) victim of a hill climb crash in N.S.W. some years ago.
In his first attack on the record, in May 1913, Turner had the most powerful car that had ever been tried out on the Sydney-Melbourne road – a 50 h.p. American Underslung. In spite of road surface difficulties and a good deal of tyre trouble, Turner reached Melbourne in 19 hours 2 minutes. But he was very disappointed, he expected to reduce the previous best time by at least two hours.
The outbreak of War put an end to record-breaking feats until March 1919, when Boyd Edkins, another whose name and fame as a racing driver will not readily be forgotten, drove a Vauxhall (1914 Vauxhall A-Type Prince Henry chassis A210 aka ’50 Bob’; in our pre-decimal currency days 50 bob was two-pounds, 10 shillings – the chassis number) between the two capitals in what was then the remarkable time of 16 hours 55 minutes. Edkins was content with his one smack at the record. He never did it again.’
Boyd Edkins aboard Vauxhall ’50-Bob’ in March 1916; the Prince Henry four cylinder 16-20 h.p. Vauxhall Type-A lives on. Not only did Edkins beat AV Turner’s time on this run, but also the Melbourne-Sydney Express Train time by 15 minutes (T Shellshear Archive)
Five years elapsed before Edkin’s record was broken, and it was the redoubtable A.V. Turner who did the breaking. Incidentally, Turner ushered in one of the most hectic periods in the history of the inter-capital dash. In his sports model Delage he flung the 565 miles behind him in 16 hours 47 minutes.
Two weeks later, Norman Smith appeared on the scene for the first time, and with Earle Croyadill, a clever mechanic beside him, cut the figures to 15.38, driving an Essex with a much higher compression ratio than was usual in those days.
The roads, particularly on the Victorian side, were better now than ever they had been, and the attacks on the record lost their one-time aspect of reliability trials and became furious races against time.
In a 30 h.p. Vauxhall, S.C. Ottaway, a Sydney owner-driver, was responsible for a remarkable piece of driving which brought the record down to 14.43. That was in January 1923. But the new time stood for only a fortnight before it crumbled to 14.28 under the onslaught of Smith and Earle Croyadill. The Essex came through without trouble or incident of any kind, but hardly had time to cool off before A.V. Turner, in a Delage owned by R Kirton, of Sydney, reduced the time to 13.47.
AV Turner reduced the record to 13.47 in February 1923 aboard this 25 h.p. Delage (C Blundell)
Smith, in the meantime, had taken the Essex to Tasmania, where, with Bert Henthorn as passenger, he drove from Launceston to Hobart and return (242 miles) in 4 hours 18 minutes. With Tasmanian dust still in his overalls, so to speak, Smith and L Emmerson, on Monday, December 24, 1923, burned up the Sydney-Melbourne road once again, and now the record was down to 12 hours 59 minutes.
Turner waited three months and then renewed the duel that had been of absorbing interest to motorists all over Australia. In March 1924, after completing the Dunlop 1,000 miles reliability trial, with a 20 h.p. Itala, determined to have another shot at the record in this car. He was successful, 25 minutes being chopped off Smith and Emmerson’s time. Arthur O’Connor was Turner’s mechanic on this occasion.
Turner and Arthur O’Connor after his March 1924 run (SLV)
Neither Smith nor Turner ever attacked the Sydney-Melbourne record again. As a matter of fact, times were being cut down to such an extent, and speeds were creeping up so high, that the Victorian Police and municipal authorities commenced to frown severely on record-breaking attempts, and even the Royal Automobile Club of Victoria issued a statement that no good purpose was being served by them.
Despite the text, this photograph suggests Wizard Smith set another record in December 1926. Car make folks, ditto the shot below? (SLV)First prize goes to the person who can cite the date, make, time and mechanics name…(SLV)
There was a lull, therefore, until March 1927, when E.J. Buckley and Harry J. Beith began another duel. Accompanied by C.E. Cooper, and driving a stock model Hudson, Buckley dashed over the route in 11.51. A great drive, but it was eclipsed a month later by Harry Beith’s 11.14 in a Chrysler 70.
Right on the heels of this came Buckley again, with a 10.51, also in January 1928, and two months later Buckley and Cooper reached an average of 53 m.p.h. in registering 10 hours 51 minutes. Beith did not wait longer than a week before dashing off again, and this time, in February 1928, he regained the record with 10.42.
The Buckley/Cooper Hudson Super Six in March March 1927 perhaps, slight discrepancy in times between this caption and the text (SLV)
Not to outdone, Buckley and Cooper pushed off again on April 10, 1929. They still had their stock model Hudson, but in the interim, it had been further “hotted up”, and an average of 55 miles an hour carved out the journey in 10.24.
In October 1929, the Chrysler 70 was brought out again. Beith set out from the Melbourne G.P.O. and, until after the Victorian border was reached, looked as though he was going to be the first to break 10 hours. He was well inside his schedule until Gundagai was reached, and there a broken fan belt held him up for an hour – a precious hour. His route on this occasion was 575 miles, and it is obvious that but for this mishap, he would have been the first to set single figures for the hour tally.
Harry Beith’s Chrysler 70, by the end of its record breaking career the car had done well over 40,000 miles! (SLV)
Beith and Buckley retired, and in March 1930, there appeared a new Richmond in the field – one Don Robertson of Vaucluse, N.S.W. Robertson, a Graham-Paige owner, was in Melbourne for a holiday, and found his car going so nicely that he determined to attack the inter-capital record. Going back to Sydney, he stripped her and fitted a three-ply chassis.
All went well on the dash from Sydney until after Robertson, past Mittagong. Then he ran into a fog bank that encompassed him for 70 miles. However, he was inside his schedule at Albury, where Harry Beith waited to pilot him through, but at Tallarook, on the Victorian side, a puncture delayed him for some minutes.
Splendid Average
In spite of all of this, Robertson reached Melbourne after 10 hours and 5 minutes – truly a wonderful feat for an amateur driver at his first attempt. He had the splendid average of 57 m.p.h.
Robertson was so fresh on reaching Melbourne that his friends had their work cut out to dissuade him from turning around and racing back to Sydney.
While the records for all-powers cars were steadily being whittled down, the light car drivers had not been inactive. The first to create a light car record was A Vaughan, who, in company with G McKennzie, in December 1923, drove a four-cylinder Citroen from Melbourne to Sydney in 15 hours 20 minutes, averaging 38 m.p.h. Some stretches of the road were very bad, and a 28-mile detour near Gundagai made the full distance 593 miles.
Several years elapsed before H. Drake-Richmond in a 30S Fiat, sped over the route in 14.20, and the next holder of the record was C.R. Dickason, who, with H.D. Burkill as passenger in a stock model Austin 12, drove all the way in top gear, registering 13.20, averaging 43 m.p.h. and reaching 70. The previous Sydney-Melbourne record for a car in top gear all the way was 21 hours.
Happy chaps, Cyril Dickason and Harry Burkill, Austin 12 in Sydney. Mechanic/driver Cec was a period typical elite level professional who could prepare, race, ‘climb and trial all of his employers’ – SA Cheneys – range of products (C Dickason Archive via Tony Johns)(C Dickason Archive via Tony Johns)
W.G. Buckle, in a Sports Triumph ‘super seven’, cut Dickason’s time to 14.16 in March 1930, and two months later J.E. Bray, of Sydney, in a standard sports Morris Minor, recorded 13.9 after experiencing heavy rain and bad road conditions on the N.S.W. side.
Bray held the record for only eight days, when it was wrested from him by previous holders in Dickason and Burkill in their ‘Baby’ Austin, their time being 12.30, after running into heavy gales and rain in places on the N.S.W. side, striking patches on the roads that were litte better than quagmires, and where they had to travel in low gear for many miles, and damaging a back wheel through a puncture at Seymour.
Then came Tragedy. On June 8, 1930, Reg Brearley and Albert Elliott, two of Victoria’s best-known drivers, set out from Sydney in a Bugatti (Bugatti T37.37146 was second in the 1929 AGP driven by Brearley and is now owned by Tom Roberts) to make a secret attempt on the record. While rounding a sharp bend on the approach to Howell’s Creek, nine miles from Gunning (N.S.W.), the car left the road, leapt an embankment and somersaulted. Brearley was killed instantly, and Elliott died in Yass Hospital the same day.
And now the light car record, made a couple of weeks ago by Arthur Beasley in his Singer 9 stands at 11 hours 59 minutes. That the “little fellows” will reach 10 hours is certain.’
Etcetera…
Racing Drivers
Most of the drivers mentioned in this article were professional drivers involved in the burgeoning motor industry as dealers and repairers or as employees of importers, dealers and repairers.
They were also competitors by nature or necessity, where the motorsport events of the day – say circa-1925 – comprised trials, hillclimbs, sprints, more serious stuff on the bankings of Maroubra or Aspendale, at Penrith or perhaps the dusty circuit at Lake Perkolilli. Not to forget intercity or cross-continental record breaking. The first Australian GP wasn’t held until 1927 with circuit racing as we now know it ‘common’ from the mid-1930s.
The roll call here of blokes in these categories includes – in rough order of Melbourne-Sydney appearances – AV Turner, Boyd Edkins, Wizard Smith, EJ ‘Joe’ Buckley, Harry Beith, Harold Drake-Richmond, Cyril Dickason and Reg Brearley.
Chrysler’s and Harry Beith’s Crowning Achievements
On February 4, 1928 The Armidale Chronicle reported that for the second time in one month Beith, lowered the Sydney-Melbourne road record in a Chrysler 70, on the last occasion down to 10 hours 42 minutes, an average speed of 58.88 miles per hour.
At that time, Chrysler, in addition to holding the Australasian 1000 mile speed record, also the 24-hour record, held every Australasian record between adjacent State capitals, an achievement never before attained by any other make of car. ‘Designed to Perform-Built to Endure’ indeed!
Needless to say, the Coroner reporting on the death of Messrs Brearley and Elliott (Mr J.W. Yoe in Yass) found the obvious, that they were killed (fatally injured in the wordy manner of legal folk) while attempting the light car motor record between Sydney and Melbourne, then added the following rider:
‘Immediate representations should be made to the authorities on the extreme urgency of action to bring in regulations to fix a reasonable speed limit and to prohibit absolutely motor car and motor cycle record breaking. Speed records are business propaganda and are of no public use , while they are a great source of danger to those making the attempts and to the travelling public.’
Speed Records and Their Significance : The Newcastle Sun March 31, 1927
The leader writer of The Newcastle Sun had an interesting philosophical and prophetic slant on speed.
‘The breaking of the motor speed record with a pace of 203 miles an hour (Sir Henry Segrave, Sunbeam) , though it may be received glumly by pedestrians, has certain Implications which are worth considering.
Of course until shire and suburban councils build roads equal to those which nature has built on the Florida beach, where the record was made, such speeds will be impracticable in any wheeled vebicles.
Vehicles not supported by wheels but by air, however, have no limit to their possible speed except that imposed by the ratios of structural strength to weight and weight to engine power.
This record car speed has again and again been exceeded by airmen. Speeds of between 250 and 300 miles an hour are not uncommon. A practicable speed of 250 miles an hour would girdle the earth in 100 hours, about four days. Within the space of time it now takes to reach New Zealand from Sydney by sea, a man might start at Singapore and flying east over the Phillippines, Panama, the Gold Coast, and India, return along the world’s greatest circumference to Singapore.
Puck’s forty-minute Journey (Puck’s line from A Midsummer Night’s Dream is I’ll put a girdle round the earth in forty minutes”), of course, has not been reached, and never will be reached. Such a speed would exceed the planetary speed, which melts the meteor in the upper atmosphere. But a four-day trip around the globe is as certain in the future as any human certainty can be.
Even now Jules Verne’s hustling traveller who made the circuit an 80 days one seems a leisurely fellow compared to Captain Cobham, who flew to Australia and back recently in six weeks out and a month back, with frequent long stoppages. In a few years this journey will be done without the long stoppages, and Australians will leave Sydney or Melbourne on Friday night and reach London on Tuesday morning.
Despite then the condemnation of the psychologist and the contempt of the philosopher, speed records insofar as they mark higher and higher peaks in mechanical efficiency and control, have a very definite practical meaning in the narrowing of what 25 years ago seemed a very large world indeed.
Whether we will be any happler or better when we can take a three or four day jaunt to London is a matter which may be left to philosophy. Probably we will not. The conveniences of life do not necessarily bring happiness. That, however, does not prevent them from being used.
Speed for the sake of speed seems rather a futile business, but speed harnessed to utility is the whole keystone of modern civilised progress. Old slow processes are continually being replaced by faster ones. The car in ousting the horse and the motor ‘bus the street railway, because of its higher speed of transit. The steam and oil driven vessel has driven the “wind-jammer,” its beauty and its leisurely acceptance of calm and storm, off the seas. Within a very few years, as we count the life of man, the air vessel of the future will make the passenger liner as obsolete as the wool clipper is today.
The Court of Public Opinion
SPEED RECORDS R.A.C.V. ATTITUDE The Age Melbourne June 21, 1930
Strong condemmation is expressed by the Royal Automobile Club of Victoria at attempts to make speed records such as led to the untimely death of Messrs. Reginald Brearly and Albert Elliott when endeavoring to lower the light motor car record between Sydney and Melbourne on 9th inst.
“The R.A.C.V. has always sets its face against such practices,” said a prominent office-bearer of the club yesterday, “and it has taken special pains to warn drivers against them.”
While adopting this attitude, members of the club point to the change of thought that has taken place respecting the enforcement of a general speed limit. This remarkable change of attitude in recent years regarding limitation of motor car speed is strikingly illustrated in a draft bill to regulate road traffic prepared last year for presentation to the British Parliament. The first schedule to the bill, dealing with motor cars and motor cycles used for passengers only, stipulates that if all the wheels are fitted with pneumatic tyres and the vehicle is not drawing a trailer and is constructed to carry not more than eight persons in addition to the driver, “there shall be no speed limit.” Or, “if all the wheels are fitted with pneumatic tyres and the vehicle is not drawing a trailer, and is constructed to carry more than eight persons in addition to the driver,” the speed limit shall be thirty miles an hour. In any other case – of such vehicles – the speed limit in restricted to twenty miles an hour.
On this question of speed limitation the Royal Commission for Transport in Great Britain, in its first report to Parliament in July, 1929, says:-“We have been at great pains to obtain all the relevant evidence possible on the question, and have received statements showing the practice in various countries abroad.”
Every one of the motor organisations (meaning thereby such bodies as the Automobile Association, the Royal Automobile Club, the Royal Scottish Automobile Club and the Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders) strongly advocates the abolition of a general speed limit for motor cars and motor cycles, and also of special speed limits in towns or villnges, holding that for the purpose of checking dangerous driving it is far better to rely on the powers given or to be given in the clauses of the Road Traffic Bill dealing with dangerous driving than on the rigid enforcement of speed limits.
“This,” the report says, “might have been expected, but the same view was put forward by, among others, the Country Councils’ Association, the Urban District Councils’ Association and the Association of Municipal Corporations.
“The police were divided on the question. The Commissioner of Police of the metropolis advocated a general speed limit of thirty-five miles an hour, as did also a majority of city and borough chief con• stables, while on the other hand thirty-seven out of fifty-five county chief constables were opposed to all speed limits other than those mentioned in the first schedule of the Road Traffic Bill.
The report proceeds to say that opponents of speed limits for motor cars and motor cycles put forward the view that the enforcement of speed limits diverts the attention of the police from watching dangerous corners and congested portions of roads and streets by compelling them to set traps on open stretches of road where little or no danger exists; that the psychological effect on motorist: speed limits is bad, in that it causes them to think that If they do not esceed the speed limit prescribed they are driving with safety, whereas forty miles an hour may be quite safe under certain conditions and five miles an hour may be dangerous in other cases; that speed in itself is not dangerous provided the car is under proper control; aud that the proper remedy is to subject the really reckless driver convicted of dangerous driving to very severe penalties which could not be inflicted on a man who had been found guilty of a technical offence only.
Epitomising the results of very careful consideration of all the evidence the commission’s report says:-“We have come to the conclusion that provided all wheels are fitted with pneumatic tyres there should be no general speed limit for motor cars or motor cycles.”
MOTOR SPEED RECORDS The Age, Melbourne June 12, 1930
‘Difficulties of the Police
The difficulties experienced by the police in preventing motor speed records between capitals being attempted over the public roads were seferred to yesterday by the Chief Secretary in commenting on the death of two men who were killed in trying to lower the Sydney-Melbourne record. One of the difficulties, he said, was to prove that the men who participated in the tests drove their car in a manner daugerous to the public, and the fact that two men had been killed during the week end seemed to indicate that the danger was with them.
Of course, high speeds might be dangerous to persons using the roads, but he could not recall a case of any person having been injured by record breakers. Unally the tests were quietly arranged, and the police did not know when they were being held. Even it they did it might be necessary to have policemen stationed all along the route to secure the necessary evidence that the record breakers were driving at a speed dangerous to the public. Instructions had been issued to the police to try to enforce the laws relating to speeding, and he was satisfied that the department was doing all it could to enforce them, but the difficulties were great.’
‘Attitude of the Light Car Club.
The honorary secretary of the Victorian Light Car Club (Mr. O. F. Tough) stated yesterdny that the policy of the Victorian Light Car Club was antagonistic to attempts to break motor car records on public roads, and that the club had always refused to assist, start or check in any of the competitors.
Mr. Tough anid the committee felt it was necessary to make this statement, as some persons thought the club was assiting these attempts owing to the fact that the late Mr. R. Brearley, who was killed while attempting a record, was a member of the club.’
MOTOR RECORDS. VICTORIAN BAN. PROSECUTIONS INSTITUTED. Sydney Morning Herald January 8, 1929
‘Commenting on an announcement that two Englishmen, Messrs. J. E. P. Howey and R.C. Gallop, had arrived in Sydney, and intended to attempt to break the motor car speed record between Sydney and Melbourne, the chief of the Traffic Control Branch, Sub-Inspector Salts, sald today that the proposal was against the law in Victoria, The names of the motorists would be taken. and prosecutions would follow.
Section 18 of the Highways and Vehicles Act expressly forbade the use of motor vehicles on public highways for purposes of racing or trial of speed, and made offenders liable to penalty not exceeding £50.
Sub-Inspector Salts added that the police had taken action against motorists attempting to break records on previous occasions.
Action would shortly be taken against two motorists who had left Melbourne in an attempt to break the record between Melbourne and Perth recently. The names of the motorists had been taken before they left Victoria.’
So, it seems clear from this piece that in Victoria at least, intercity record-setting was illegal.
Taking The Piss
LIGHT CAR RECORD Sydney to Melbourne The Argus Melbourne June 19, 1933
‘Driving a Bugatti car, Mr. J. Clements, of Sydney, accompanied by W. Warneford (mechanic), broke the record for a light car from Sydney to Melbourne on Saturday (June 17) by 20 minutes. The time for the journey was 10 hours 53 minutes (The Referee gave the time as 10 hours 50 minutes), giving an average speed of more than 50 miles an hour.
The previous record was established a few weeks ago by Mr. C. Warren.
Messrs. Clements and Warneford left the General Post-Office, Sydney, at half-past 6 o’clock on Saturday morning, and at 23 minutes past 5 o’clock in the afternoon they arrived at the Elizabeth Street, Melbourne post office where they were checked in by officials of the Victorian Junior Light Car Club.
If it had not been for a mishap between Gundagai and Albury, which caused a delay of an hour, the record would have been broken by a much wider margin. The car was ftted with eight P214 Pyrox sparking plugs, which were sealed before the attempt on the record was begun.’
In due course, Jack Clements was hauled before the courts. The Argus report of August 3, 1933, is almost impossible to read, but the gist of it is that he admitted the facts as presented by the wallopers and was fined £5.
The Bugatti Jack Clements used to take the light car Sydney-Melbourne record was Australia’s most famous Bugatti, the ex-AV Turner/Geoff Meredith 1927 Australian Grand Prix winning 2-litre straight-eight Bugatti Type 30 Special, chassis 4087, the very significant core components of which are owned by Melbourne Automobilists the Murdoch family.
Photo and Reference Credits…
The Referee April 26, 1933 article by H.O. Balfe, Col Blundell Collection, The Newcastle Sun, The Age, The Argus, and other multiple newspapers via Trove, Cyril Dickason Archive via Tony Johns, Tim Shellshear Archive, the State Library of Victoria, Robert Robinson
Tailpiece…
Joe Lyons, Devonport 1931 (R Robinson)
WILL PROBABLY BE BROKEN. SYDNEY-CANBERRA SPEED RECORD. Mr Lyon’s New Car. The Evening News, Rockhampton April 14, 1934
‘Records between Sydney and Canberra which are now held by the Prime Minister’s chauffeur, ‘Tracey’, will probably be broken by that driver when a new high speed British car, which has just been purchased for (Prime Minister) Mr. Lyons at a cost of £1000, is delivered.’
How cool is that, the Prime Minister of Oz and his chauffeur held an Australian intercity record!
‘This car has a speed range up to 80 miles an hour and will enable the Prime Minister to cover the distance between Canberra and Sydney in about four hours. A fast car is necessary for Mr. Lyons, who makes frequent official visits to Sydney. The car, which he is now using, enables him to return to Canberra in good time after a day’s work.
The Sydney car used by Federal Ministers in Melbourne is to be replaced by the car now used by Mr. Lyons.’
The question then is, of course, what the make and model of the cars was. The best I could find is the shot of Lyons above with one of his cars in Devonport during 1931, the year before he became PM (January 6 1932-April 7 1939, his date of death).
John Youl, left and Lex Sternberg aboard their Cooper T51 Climax’s at Symmons Plains circa 1961-62…
There were four of the eleven Cooper T51s that had ‘permanent residency’ in Australia, based in Tasmania for a while, this pair and those of Austin Miller. We know it’s before 15 April 1962 as Andrew ‘Slim’ Lamont tells us the Youl car passed to Jack Hobden then.
John Youl accepts the plaudits of the crowd and Tassie Premier, ‘Electric Eric’ Reece. Probably after winning the December 1962 Examiner £1,000 in the Cooper T51 (HRCCTas)Symmons Plains 1961-62 (K Thompson Collection)David Sternberg ascends Penguin hillclimb in the family T51, date unknown, but welcome, where is my copy of that book I wonder? (G Hartley)
Youl’s car history is simple, he says confidently, John acquired F2/9/60 new from the factory whereas Sternberg’s F2/7/59 or F2/9/59 was an ex-works 1959 car brought to Australia for Jack’s 1960 Summer Tour and then sold to Bib Stillwell after Bathurst 1960. Bib bought it to obtain the 2.5 Coventry Climax FPF with which it was fitted; they were as rare as Rocking Horse Poop in the colonies at that stage.
Bib raced it a few times, including Longford’s 1961 meeting before selling it to Burnie’s Lex Sternberg, both he and his son David raced it. The later ownership has the usual twists and turns of many of these cars, which is beyond the scope of this pictorial. Click here for The Nostalgia Forum thread in relation thereto, it’s content rich; https://forums.autosport.com/topic/150838-cooper-t51s-in-tasmania/
(R Lambert)
Jack with T51 F2/7/59 or F2/9/59 at Longford in March 1960.
Brabham consorting with a couple of chaps during practice. Is that Alec Mildren in the straw hat or is my imagination running riot? Look at the monster mouths of those 58DCO Webers.
Jack had a good run with this car that summer winning at Ardmore – the New Zealand GP – and Wigram before shipping the car across the Tasman and was then victorious at Longford and Phillip Island in March, and then Bathurst in October.
Brabham won the March 5 Longford Trophy from Mildren’s Cooper T51 Maserati and Stillwell’s T51 Climax.
(unattributed)
Jack Hobden (30/8/1942-18/9/2022) aboard the ex-Youl F2-9-60 at Baskerville?
The defunct Longford Grand Prix Expo FB page wrote that ‘Jack was requested to represent Tasmania in the 1965 Australian Grand Prix at Longford by then Premier Eric Reece. Upon being told of a lack of finances, he funded Jack’s race.’
Hobden was 12th in the race won by Bruce McLaren’s Cooper T79 Climax from Jack Brabham and Phil Hill.
Etcetera…
(N Barnes)
Noel Barnes was prowling the paddock at about the same time as Ron Lambert!
(N Barnes)(N Barnes)
Credits…
Historic Racing Car Club of Tasmania, Ron Lambert, G Hartley, The Nostalgia Forum, Ellis French, Andrew ‘Slim’ Lamont, oldracingcars.com, Greg Ellis Collection, K Thompson Collection, Noel Barnes
Tailpiece…
(G Ellis Collection)
An early Baskerville grid containing two Youls, #38 Gavin’s Porsche 356 and #55 John’s NSU Prinz, #7 is Ross Larner, #29 David Lewis’ Humpy Holden, the white Morris Minor is Greg Ellis and #51 is Dick Crawford
Graham Harvey, Elfin 400 Chev ahead of Jim Boyd Lola T70 Chev at Bay Park, New Zealand in 1969.
Elfin 400 chassis BB67-4, first owned and raced by Andy Buchanan, has lived all of its life in New Zealand and is now very close to completion, or has it already run? Where are those photos Alastair Grigg sent me!?
BP’s Les Thacker congratulates Larry Perkins after an F3 win at Brands Hatch and Man of The Meeting award.
The F2 Index tells me Larrikins won two races at Brands during his victorious Ralt RT1 Toyota 1975 European F3 Championship campaign, the Polydor Records Trophy on September 7 and the BARC-BP British F3 Championship round a fortnight later on September 21. The shot will have been taken on the latter weekend, Larry won that F3 Championship from Conny Andersson and Renzo Zorzi.
Larry on the Snetterton dummy grid, June 15. A lousy day, 19th. Gunnar Nilsson was up the front in a March 753 Toyota (JI Croft)(G Ruckert)
John Walker, Matich A50-004 Repco-Holden, at Surfers Paradise in 1972 or 1973. I’m not sure if it’s the Gold Star or Tasman rounds.
JW briefly raced an Elfin MR5 then jumped to the Matich which was US L&M Championship compliant – I can’t recall in what respect – doing very well with it in 1973. The Rise and Rise of John Walker really got going on that Stateside trip I reckon. Thoughts folks?
Only seven of 61 crews finished the gruelling 3560 km event out of Port Macquarie between October 9-14, the winners for the third year on the trot was the Mitsubishi Lancer GSR of Andrew Cowan and John Bryson.
Regarded as a sweet-handling big car in the day, she would have been a bit of a handful in the forests, the car didn’t survive, I’m not sure on which stage it stopped.
A rather brave and slow looking, well-nourished photographer shoots Jim Clark on the exit of the Northern Crossing during the Australian Grand Prix at Warwick Farm on February 19, 1967. Lotus 33 Climax FWMV 2-litre V8.
Jim won the Tasman Cup again that summer, but his close mate Jackie Stewart, BRM P261 2.1-litre, won the AGP with Clark 17 seconds behind him, with Frank Gardner third, Brabham BT16 Climax 2.5 FPF.
Geoff Brabham aboard the Jack Brabham Ford Bowin P4X Formula Ford at Warwick Farm in 1972, gimme a date folks it’s gotta be one of Geoff’s first gallops in a racing car.
Bob Beasley was the usual driver of this car, finishing in the fifth in the 1971 Driver to Europe Series and third in 1972. John Davis then won it in a raffle, and finished fourth in the 1975 title race, and then third with support from Grace Bros the following year.
Lank Lex, Stumpy Stan and Tall Timber Tony (unattributed)(R Burnett)
Surely one of Australia’s most evocative sports-racing combos of any era?
John Harvey aboard Bob Jane’s immaculate, John Sheppard prepared McLaren M6B Repco 740 5-litre at Symmons Plains in 1972.
Harves won the 1971-72 Australian Sports Car Championships with it. In 72 he won five of the six rounds, including the final one at Symmons on November 12. Glorious shot of a glorious car, see here: https://primotipo.com/2018/09/09/sandown-sunrise/ At the end of the season, Bob set it aside; the family retain it 50 years later.
Speaking of iconic Sheppo built/prepared cars, here’s another! The Bob Jane owned Holden Torana GTR XU-1 Repco 620 4.4 V8 was built by John in his home garage away from any prying eyes snooping around Bob Jane Racing’s Brunswick HQ.
Here it’s in the Wanneroo paddock in 1971, the A regular race winner in Bob’s, John Harvey’s and Frank Gardner’s hands from 1971-75, then Ian Diffen after that? There’s more Harves here: https://primotipo.com/2021/01/25/harves/
(Harkness & Hillier)
Wizard Smith and Don Harkness with the SWB (sic) Fred H Stewart Enterprise LSR car out front of the Harkness & Hillier factory, Five Dock, Sydney in 1931.
Michael Hickey writes that ‘The Harkness and Hillier background of the Wizard Smith Enterprise photo remains relatively unchanged 94 years later. It’s now Volvo Cars, Parramatta Road, Five Dock, the photo is in William Street.’
(K Starkey)
So disappointed to have missed out on racing or spectating at Catalina Park in New South Wales’ Blue Mountains, but it was well before my time.
Here Norm Beechey and Pete Geoghegan are wrestling their touring cars around the tight layout in January 1967: Chev Nova and Ford Mustang. I’ve got my money on Pete!? See here:https://primotipo.com/2019/09/26/norm-jim-and-pete/
A collection of these would be nice, I wasn’t aware of the publication until Bob Williamson put this up on his Facebook page; the LCCA’s ‘Competition Communicator’ magazine came later.
A decade later Jack was mid-way through his last F1 season, here contesting the July British Grand Prix at Brands Hatch. That front couple of rows from pole is Rindt, Oliver, Brabham, partially obscured papaya Hulme, and Ickx on the right: Lotus, BRM, Brabham, McLaren and Ferrari. V8s and a V12 and Flat-12 or 180 degree V12 if you prefer…
With a bit more luck Brabham could have won tbe World Championship for a third time in 1970. At Brands he was robbed of certain victory on the last lap after on his Brabham BT33 Ford ran out of fuel after the Lucas mixture control of the 3-litre Ford Cosworth DFV was left on the rich setting by mechanic, Nick Goozee. Having passed and driven away from Jochen Rindt’s Lotus 72C, the 1970 posthumous World Champ was gifted the win.
Another member of the small-block Chev family, the fuel injected 283 nestled under the bonnet of Tornado 2, is related to the much modified 305 fitted to WB’s F5000 Lola above.
The new Corvette V8 was supplied to car owner Lou Abrahams via his Holden connections and built locally using the best over the counter US performance parts. Abrahams developed the fuel injection using Hilborn parts.
Ted Gray and Tornado 2 Chev at rest before the start of the 1958 Australian Grand Prix at Bathurst at which point it was arguably the fastest, if not the most reliable, racing car in Australia. That’s Lex Davison’s Ferrari 500/625 and crew at left with Ted Gray looking this way behind the right-rear.
(R Edgerton Archive)
Ted Gray, Lou Abrahams and Bill Mayberry – key Tornado men, the other Mayberry brother is the only one missing – during the 1956 AGP weekend at Albert Park. Ted’s first race in the new Tornado 2 Ford.
Another one from Tony Johns below. Ted – still in Tornado 2 Ford – at Fishermans Bend over the 12-13 October 1957 weekend, where he won a five-lap preliminary and led the 20-lap feature until rear axle failure intervened. Stan Jones’ Maserati 250F won that from Bib Stillwell’s similar car and Doug Whiteford’s 300S.
(D Lowe)
Alec Mildren and Lex Davison during their epic race long dice for victory in the 1960 Australian Grand Prix at Lowood, Queensland on : Alec’s very clever Cooper T51 Maserati 250S and Davo’s wonderfully daft Aston Martin DBR4 3-litre.
Those with an interest in Australia’s Aston Martins should buy the latest copy of Auto Action Premium #1909 on sale since Thursday, August 7. Eight pages and a lot of photos you won’t have seen before. International readers see the website here: https://autoaction.com.au/issues
(I Smith)
Peter Jones Cheetah Clubman Toyota 1.3 was, I think, regarded as the ‘Winningest’ car in Australian motor racing for much of the period Jones raced it, say, 1976-80, when Formula Pacific beckoned Peter.
The Cheetah Racing Triumvirate comprised Cheetah designer/builder/racer Brian Shead, racer Brian Sampson, and Sampson’s motor engineering business, Motor Improvements.
MI built most of the Toyota Corolla 1.3-litre race engines fitted to ANF3 and Clubman cars in this era. Peter Jones was the MI Foreman forever, so when Jonesey suggested to Sheady he build him a Clubman, it was game on!
Shead built two of these cars, a ‘turnkey’ one for Peter and another for Victorian Formula Vee ace, Derek Fry. Fry either had access to the drawings or perhaps Brian sold him the bits for Fry’s Tubeframes business to assemble. If one of you know give me a buzz.
Racer Brendan Jones, Peter’s son, has his old car and memory, again, suggests Fry’s was destroyed and scrapped?
Credits…
Les Thacker, Kevin Lancaster, Graham Ruckert, Jack Quinn Collection, Colin Wade, Rob Burnett, Ken Starkey, Terry Martin, Harkness & Hillier, MotorSport, JI Croft, Victor Oliver, Tim Perrin Archive, Bob Young, Brier Thomas-AMHF Archives, Racing Ron Edgerton Archive, Ian Smith, Roger Herrick, David Lowe
Gaze waved goodbye to both of his cars that weekend upon his retirement from racing having sold them to Lex Davison. Davo wasn’t a big fan of the HWM if my recollection of Graham Howard’s Lex biography is correct, but he loved the ex-Ascari Ferrari 500/625 3-litre and didn’t he make it sing, two AGP victories and the rest.
Harry Beith – 25/12/1889-26/5/1964 – seems to have done more than most to build and polish the nascent Chrysler brand throughout Australia in the 1920s and 1930s.
Here, he is on the way to victory in his Chrysler 70 in the Victorian Sporting Car Club Trophy, a 35 lap, 116 mile race held at Phillip Island on New Year’s Day, 1936.
17 starters took the flag of this handicap event – hence the competitiveness of a 10 year old car – with W Bullen’s Singer second and Tom Hollindrake’s MG K3 third.
Albury racer, Beith’s time was 1hr 38min 34 sec off a handicap of 2min 20 sec, his average speed was 64.1mph.
(B King Archive)
Harry’s riding mechanic is either pointing the way or at a pretty young lass in the crowd. It’s probably Heaven Corner, given the way the road – Berry’s Beach Road – drops away.
The car below is – perhaps, having wrongly suggested it was the E Buckley driven McIntyre Hudson some years ago – Les Burrows’ fourth-place Terraplane Spl.
(B King Collection)
Phillip Island notes…
The May 6, 1935 Jubilee Handicap meeting was the last held on the Victorian Light Car Club’s (VLCC) 6.5-mile rectangular course used from the two March 31, 1928 100 Mile Road Race(s) – retrospectively named the 1928 Australian Grand Prix by the VLCC – until the April 1, 1935 AGP.
A less dangerous, shorter 3.312-mile triangular course, incorporating some of the old pit straight (Berry’s Beach Road) was then made and promoted by the Australian Racing Drivers Club and the Victorian Sporting Car Club.
It was used until November 1, 1938 for cars, and ‘bikes until January 30, 1940. The Grand Opening Meeting of the modern track we all know and love was held over the December 15, 1956 weekend, it’s closed a couple of times along the way, but has been in continuous use since 1988.
Harry Beith…
Harry James Beith was one of those extraordinary Australians who fought in both the first and second World Wars, it tells you all you need to know about the bloke’s character and grit.
Unsurprisingly! his roles were as a driver and driver mechanic, in 1939-45 he was a Staff Sergeant in the 1 Company Australian Army Service Corps and was one of many who became a POW in Malaya.
The Age newspaper announced the appointment of Beith as chief adviser to the carnival committee of the Interstate Grand Prix meetings at Albury-Wirlinga in February 1938.
That February 10 piece provides a useful summary of his career, describing Beith ‘as one of Australia’s best known racing motorists with a unique career as a competition driver and road-record breaker.’
‘He first competed in a Talbot at Wildwood (near the current Melbourne Airport) in 1912. Aged 16, he won the hillclimb, defeating his employer, CB Kellow! He continued to compete and then in 1927, ‘when becoming associated with the first Australian agency of Chrysler, he set out to break road records.’
Gerringong Beach, NSW Fifty Mile Handicap May 10, 1930: at left is Percy Hunter in the JAS Jones’ Alfa Romeo 6C1750 Zagato, then the obscured Bill Thompson Bugatti T37A and then the two Chryslers of E Patterson and Harry Beith #72/14 (Fairfax)The Beith – Harry at left – Chrysler leading with later Oz-Ace Alf Barrett’s Morris Cowley Spl behind. Phillip Island January 1, 1936 (B King Collection)
Beith set a new Melbourne-Sydney record of less than 11 hours. ‘As cars were improved new records were created by other drivers, but within three days of each new record, Beith set out to beat it.’ He held the Melbourne-Sydney record at the end of 1927, 1928 and 1929. ‘Finally the police authorities of Victoria and New South Wales intervened and put a stop to these speed tests over the inter-State highway.’
Harry’s flathead-straight six Chryslers are variously quoted at 3582 and 3583cc, and 4-litres with his endurance machine still going strong after 43,000 record-breaking miles. That car had a difficult birth being purchased by Beith from an insurer for £80 after it was burned-out!
Harry and team in and around the Chrysler, during the 1936 Australian Tourist Trophy weekend. Nice PR shot, pity about the crop! (B King Collection)There She Blows during the March 30 1936 200-mile Australian Tourist Trophy at Phillip Island. DNF for Beith’s Chrysler in the race won by Jim Fagan’s MG K3 Magnette
Beith held the record for the final meeting held on the RACV’s rectangular, sandy-gravel course at – what is now Safety Beach – Dromana, ‘which had been held for three years by Harold Cooper’ in the Cooper brothers’ fearsome ex-Louis Wagner 4.8-litre ‘Indy’ Ballot 5/8LC.
‘Mr Beith also held the Perth-Sydney record with Dr Manning. Altogether he has won more than fifty motor races in Victoria and New South Wales.’ At the time of publishing he was employed by Neal’s Motors Pty Ltd, Melbourne as country organiser.
Neal’s was a large car assembler with premises in Fishermans Bend. By 1938 their empire encompassed the import and assembly of Hudson, Hudson Terraplane, Diamond T, Fiat, Studebaker cars and trucks, Chrysler, Chrysler Plymouth, Morris cars and trucks, De Soto cars and Fargo trucks…making our Harry a works-driver!
Beith didn’t contest any of the 1927-35 Goulburn-Phillip Island Australian Grands Prix, but raced in the successive 1936 and 1938 AGPs held on the Victor Harbor-Port Elliott, and Mount Panorama, Bathurst road courses. He was ninth and 14th respectively, aboard a Terraplane Special.
The Harry Beith trail runs cold post-war, can anybody advise further about his life in cars and otherwise?
Etcetera…
(B King Collection)
Harry Beith and Terraplane Special during the January 3, 1938 South Australian Grand Prix meeting at Lobethal. DNF in the handicap race won by Noel Campbell’s Singer Bantam.
Harry Beith’s Terraplane Spl at Phillip Island, possibly the 1938 Phillip Island GP on March 31, he was fifth. Car #12 make folks?
Credits…
The Car January 1936 and photos are from Bob King’s collection, various articles via Trove, in particular The Age February 10, 1938, Fairfax, Reg Nutt Archive via Bill Atherton, Greg Smith and David Zeunert, Bob Lea Wright Archive via Nathan Tasca, Mr Rewind for the Australian War Memorial link
The perils of wandering about Mount Panorama during a race meeting are obvious enough, but were a potential problem throughout the first weekend of racing at Australia’s greatest cathedral of speed, hence the sage-like advice of the New South Wales Light Car Club.
Tom Peters, MacKellar Ford V8 Spl aka the ex-Bill Thompson Bugatti T37A #37358, is snatching a look over his shoulder of Bob Lea Wright’s, Terraplane Spl during the April 18, 1938 Australian Grand Prix at Bathurst.
Here’s Ford dealer/racer Ron MacKellar on the debut of his comprehensive rebuild of the ex-Bill Thompson 1930/32 AGP-winning Bugatti Type 37A chassis 37358 at Centennial Park, Sydney in November 1937.
A McCullough supercharged flathead Ford V8 engine and gearbox and general fuglification of Ettore’s finest resulted in a faster car than before. It raced on all the way to 1952 when Bill McLachlan finished 13th in the AGP, at…Bathurst. See here for more about this T37A https://primotipo.com/2015/10/27/motorclassica-melbourne-23-25-october-2015/
To the current custodian, Michael Miller’s credit, his slow restoration/reclamation of 37358 is of the Oily Rag type, and with luck, the car may be finished in advance of Australian Grand Prix Centenary celebrations at Goulburn in January 2027. Keep an eye on the website, folks: https://goulburngrandprix.com.au/
Credits…
Bill Forsyth Collection, State Library of New South Wales, goulburngrandprix.com