(D Watson-B King)

A Roseborough, perhaps, Bob King thinks the driver may be Doug Whiteford racing under a pseudonym, from unknown, and Norman Hamilton or Les Murphy, MG P-Type during the early laps of the Benalla Centenary 100, Easter Monday, April 13, 1936.

Teaser for the little-known Benalla Centenary Hundred to be held by the Victorian Sporting Car Club.

The centenary being celebrated, was the European-settler establishment of the township of Benalla 210km northeast of Melbourne. There is bugger-all in the way of photographs of this meeting, I’m not helping solve the problem here either, but the firsthand report of the meeting is a start; photo contributions invited!

Jack O’Dea’s MG P-Type ahead of a Riley (E Trevithick-SLV)
Bob Lea-Wright, Terraplane at Benalla. Nathan Tasca, ‘The car was borrowed from a mate, driven to the event, stripped of all the luxuries, raced, and then returned to standard, driven back to Melbourne, and returned to his mate, who apparently was none-the-wiser!’ (N Taska Arc)

The correct name of the winner is Vincent Aloysius Moloney, born 1902, later in life a resident of Murrumbeena, Melbourne, while the winning car is an MG Magna L-Type chassis #L0658.

The car was imported by Lanes Motors and lobbed at Port Melbourne in December 1933. It was locally bodied by Chas Aspinall, a common practice at the time to minimise the exposure to import duties levied by The Fiscal Fiend. Vin raced the car mainly in Victoria until 1936, after which the car was sold to a South Australian owner. The car has lived in New Zealand since 2014, click here for an interesting, comprehensive history of the car, scroll down to #L0658:https://www.mgclub.org.nz/download/167741/L%20Types%2C%2007%20October%202024%20V2.%20PDF.pdf

MG Historians are certain the VA Maloney (sic) who competed in four Australian Grands Prix: Nuiootpa 1950, Narrogin 1951, Bathurst 1952 and Albert Park in 1953 aboard a Head Brothers, Murrumbeena, Melbourne built MG TC Monoposto Special is our boy.

MG Magna L0658 in Adelaide in the 1940s, probably still with the Aspinall body. L0657 behind has an Aspinall pointed tail body (MG Register Australia)
(SLV)

Jack Day punches his Ford V8-powered Day Special – Bugatti T39 Ford – out of one of the right-handers. That water tower will be a tip for a local as to the precise locale.

Etcetera…

Bob King on the first photograph, which he posted on Greg Smith’s ‘Pre 1960 Historic Racing in Australasia’ Facebook site. ‘I know very little about the Benalla road races of 1936, said to be the first Victorian mainland races on public roads. This photo given to me by David Watson in 1975, shows an unlicensed (too young) Doug Whiteford driving the ex-Beith Chrysler followed by Reg Nutt in the Day Special (painted purple) and either Norman Hamilton or Les Murphy in a P Type MG – they were both in the race.’

John Medley, ‘Just a glance at my records of this event offends the historian in me. So many mis-spellings, obvious errors, outright mistakes and fabrications, earnest over-amplifications and over-simplifications (not unlike Australian or USA or world politics 2025!). And of course officials and more who couldn’t count, so results were changed overnight…. One thing veteran competitors in any sport learn is calmness under pressure– so the competitor in me is offended by what I see in my records of this event. This is and was a mess, and extended by people 2025 trying to re create from snippets of information what we think may have happened in 1936, from the work of 1936 scribblers who didn’t know all that they didn’t know…. One needs at least a PhD in Philosophy to unravel the thinking.’

On Norman Hamilton – of later Porsche Cars Australia fame – ‘Distant memory, but I’m pretty sure that Norman told me that he drove at that meeting. He was old enough and was a friend of Jack Day who owned the Day Special,’ Bob King.

So what does this all mean? Who knows who really won the race.

Credits…

The Car March 1936 via the Bob King Collection, Edward Trevithick-State Library of Victoria, Nathan Taska Archive

Finito…

Comments
  1. r7eb2339c739912's avatar r7eb2339c739912 says:

    Two pics are coming out of Kilfeera Road into Samaria Road, the water
    towers are at the corner of Riverview and Tower, SSW of this corner.

    Ray

  2. Rob's avatar Rob says:

    Mark,

    The caption for the leading photo reads “Harry Beith Chrysler, from Jack Day, Day Special etc”

    It would seem that Beith actually drove a Terraplane as this is stated in the race reports in “The Car” (see above), The Referee and The Argus.

    There was a Chrysler in the race, driven by R. T. Rosborough.

    Cheers,

    Rob B.

  3. Rob's avatar Rob says:

    Mark,

    Looking again at the image with the caption “Harry Beith Chrysler, from Jack Day, Day Special and Norm Hamilton or Les Murphy, MG P-Type during the early laps of the Benalla Centenary 100, Easter Monday, April 13, 1936.” I would say that:

    the second car is not the Day Special as it does not look like the Bugatti-based special shown in the final image.

    the third car is unlikely to be driven by Norman Hamilton as he is not listed in the race results published in The Car.

    Cheers,

    Rob B.

    • markbisset's avatar markbisset says:

      Cheers Rob,
      I’d forgotten that Bob King thinks the driver of leading Chrysler was perhaps Doug Whiteford racing under a pseudonym. Type ‘Benalla Road Races 1936’ into Google and see the discussion between Messrs King, Medley and others.
      Mark

Leave a reply to Rob Cancel reply