1959 RAC Tourist Trophy

The 1959 RAC Tourist Trophy was contested on 5 September at the Goodwood Circuit, England. It was the fifth and final round of the 1959 World Sportscar Championship, and was the 24th RAC Tourist Trophy. The race was the title-decider in a three-way contest between Aston Martin, Ferrari and Porsche.

Goodwood Circuit

Report edit

Entry edit

A grand total 31 racing cars were registered for this event, of which all 31 arrived for practice and qualifying. The entrant for championship leaders, Scuderia Ferrari, entered four cars for the event. Among their squad include Phil Hill, Tony Brooks and Olivier Gendebien, and they were placed in two cars, spreading the Italian marques options.[1] As for David Brown’s Aston Martins, they had actually ruled against racing in the championship due to the cost, but with a chance of the title, entered three DBR1/300s for Stirling Moss/Roy Salvadori, Carroll Shelby/Jack Fairman and Maurice Trintignant/Paul Frère.[1][2] The third manufacturer in the title race, Porsche, also brought three cars, led by Jo Bonnier and Wolfgang von Trips.[1]

Qualifying edit

The Aston Martin DBR1/300 of Stirling Moss took pole position, averaging a speed of 94.737 mph around the 2.4 mile circuit.[3]

Race edit

The race was run in typically Goodwood Indian summer sun,[2] which saw Aston Martin triumph again, retain the Tourist Trophy, when the combination of Shelby/Fairman, joined late in the race by Moss brought their DBR1/300 home in first place,[4] but Bonnier/von Trips were second for Porsche from Gendebien/Hill/Brooks/Cliff Allison.[5]

This does not tell the full story for at Salvadori’s first fuel stop, the car caught fire during refuelling, destroying it along with the pit et al. Graham Whitehead sportingly withdrew his privately entered Aston Martin so that the David Brown’s work cars would have a home, and Moss was transferred to the Shelby/Fairman motor; as a result of this win Aston Martin became the 1959 World Champions.[4]

The winning trio of Sheby/Fairman/Moss won in a time of 6hr 00:46.8 mins., averaging a speed of 89.406 mph. They covered a distance of 537.6 miles. One lap adrift was the Bonnier/van Trips’s Porsche, with the first Ferrari home also one lap behind.[3][6]

Official Classification edit

Class Winners are in Bold text.

Pos No Class Driver Entrant Chassis Laps Reason Out
1st 2 S3.0   Carroll Shelby
  Stirling Moss
  Jack Fairman David Brown Aston Martin DBR1/300 6hrs 00:46.8, 224
2nd 22 S2.0   Wolfgang von Trips   Jo Bonnier Dr. Porsche Porsche 718 RSK 223
3rd 10 S3.0   Olivier Gendebien
  Cliff Allison
  Phil Hill
  Tony Brooks
Scuderia Ferrari Ferrari 250 TR 59 223
4th 3 S3.0   Maurice Trintignant   Paul Frère David Brown Aston Martin DBR1/300 221
5th 9 S3.0   Tony Brooks   Dan Gurney Scuderia Ferrari Ferrari 250 TR 59 220
6th 33 S1.1   Peter Ashdown   Alan Ross Lola Cars Lola-Climax Mk.1 210
7th 7 S3.0   Ron Flockhart   John Bekaert Ecurie Ecosse Jaguar D-Type 209
8th 34 S1.1   Bob Hicks   Dick Prior Lola Cars Lola-Climax Mk.1 208
9th 36 S1.1   Mike McKee   J. Cedric Brierley Elva Racing Team Elva-Climax Mk V 208
10th 35 S1.1   Bernard Cox   Colin Escott Lola Cars Lola-Climax Mk.1 202
11th 31 S1.1   Keith Greene   Tony Marsh Team Lotus Lotus-Climax 17 199
12th 23 S2.0   Edgar Barth   Umberto Maglioli Dr. Porsche Porsche 718 RSK 197
13th 38 S1.1   John Brown   Chris Steele Elva Racing Team Elva-Climax Mk IV 171
14th 39 S1.1   John Campbell-Jones   John Horridge John Campbell-Jones Lotus-Climax Eleven 154
DNF 6 S3.0   Jim Clark   Masten Gregory Ecurie Ecosse Tojeiro-Jaguar Accident
DNF 5 S3.0   John Dalton   David Shale John Dalton Aston Martin DB3S Gearbox
DNF 29 S2.0   Graham Hill   Alan Stacey Team Lotus Lotus-Climax 15 Accident
DNF 24 S2.0   Hans Herrmann   Chris Bristow Dr. Porsche Porsche 718 RSK Accident
DNF 8 S3.0   Peter Blond   Jonathan Sieff Taylor & Crawley Lister-Jaguar Oil leak
DNF 40 S1.1   Peter Arundell   Jack Westcott Cranham Service Station Lotus-Climax Eleven Accident
DNF 4 S3.0   Graham Whitehead   Henry Taylor A.G. Whitehead Aston Martin DBR1/300 Withdrawn
DNF 1 S3.0   Stirling Moss   Roy Salvadori David Brown Aston Martin DBR1/300 Pit fire
DNF 21 S2.0   Giorgio Scarlatti   Ludovico Scarfiotti Scuderia Ferrari Dino 196 S Rear suspension
DNF 27 S2.0   Tom Dickson   Jim Mackay Dickson Motors Lotus-Climax 15 Gearbox
DNF 28 S2.0   David Piper   Bruce Halford Dorchester Service Station Lotus-Climax 15 Accident
DNF 25 S2.0   Jack Brabham   Bruce McLaren John Coombs Racing Organisation Cooper-Climax Monaco T49 Steering arm
DNF 32 S1.1   Innes Ireland   Jay Chamberlain Team Lotus Lotus-Climax 17 Axle
DNF 37 S1.1   Chris Threlfall   Tom Threlfall Elva Racing Team Elva-Climax Mk V Camshaft
DNF 26 S2.0   Mike Taylor   Christopher Martyn Taylor & Crawley Lotus-Climax 15 Head gasket
DNF 11 S3.0   Phil Hill   Cliff Allison Scuderia Ferrari Ferrari 250 TR 59 Rocker

[6][7]

Class Winners edit

Class Winners
Sports 3000 2 Aston Martin DBR1/300 Shelby / Fairman / Moss
Sports 2000 22 Porsche 718 RSK von Trips / Bonnier
Sports 1100 33 Lola-Climax Mk.1 Ashdown / Ross

[8]

Standings after the race edit

Pos Championship Points
1   Aston Martin 24
2   Ferrari 18 (22)
3   Porsche 18 (21)
4   Maserati 2
5=   Alfa Romeo 1
  Lola 1

Championship points were awarded for the first six places in each race in the order of 8-6-4-3-2-1. Manufacturers were only awarded points for their highest finishing car with no points awarded for positions filled by additional cars. Only the best 3 results out of the 5 races could be retained by each manufacturer. Points earned but not counted towards the championship totals are listed within brackets in the above table.

References edit

  1. ^ a b c "Tourist Trophy 1959 - Entry List - Racing Sports Cars".
  2. ^ a b "1959 RAC Tourist Trophy, Goodwood June 2009 - Motor Sport Magazine".
  3. ^ a b c "Tourist Trophy 1959 - Racing Sports Cars".
  4. ^ a b Peter Swinger, “Motor Racing Circuits in England" (Ian Allan Publishing, ISBN 978 0 7110 3104 3, 2005)
  5. ^ "Reference at www.racingsportscars.com".
  6. ^ a b c "Reference at www.teamdan.com". Archived from the original on 2016-03-09. Retrieved 2016-03-13.
  7. ^ "Tourist Trophy 1959 - Photo Gallery - Racing Sports Cars".
  8. ^ "Tourist Trophy 1958 - Racing Sports Cars".


World Sportscar Championship
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24 Hours of Le Mans
1959 season Next race:
1960 1000 km Buenos Aires