1948 South American Grand Prix

The 1948 South American Grand Prix (Spanish: Gran Premio de la América del Sur del Turismo Carretera), also known as Buenos Aires–Caracas, was a motor race held as part of the 1948 Turismo Carretera championship.[1]

1948 South American Grand Prix
Gran Premio de la América del Sur del Turismo Carretera
Round 8 of 9 in the 1948 Turismo Carretera
Race route
Host country Argentina
 Bolivia
 Colombia
 Ecuador
 Peru
 Venezuela
Dates run20 October – 8 November
Start locationBuenos Aires, Argentina
Finish locationCaracas, Venezuela
Stages14 (9,576 km; 5,950 miles)
Stage surfaceAsphalt, Dirt/Gravel
Statistics
Crews registered141
Crews138 at start, 44 at finish
Overall results
Overall winnerArgentina Domingo Marimón
Argentina Pedro Duhalde
Chevrolet Master
118 hours, 37 minutes, 18 seconds

Entry list edit

No. Driver Co-Driver Marque
1   Juan Manuel Fangio   Daniel Urrutia Chevrolet
2   Héctor Suppici Sedes   Silvestre Calache Ford
3   Oscar Alfredo Gálvez   Federico Herrero Ford
4   Ernesto Hilario Blanco   Atilio Plini Ford
5   Arturo Kruuse   Juan J. Otero Plymouth
6   Ricardo Leopoldo Risatti   F. Hugerza Chevrolet
7   Emilio Karstulović   Raúl Cestac Ford
8   Pablo Guille   Juan Stroppiana Chevrolet
9   Juan Gálvez   Desiderio Avila Ford
10   Daniel Musso   Ricardo Grattier Ford
11   Arnaldo Alvarado Degregori   G. Rivadeneira Ford
12   Domingo Marimón   Pedro Duhalde Chevrolet
13   Luciano Murro   Enrique Costa Chevrolet
14   Eusebio Marcilla   Miguel Salem Chevrolet
15   Tadeo Taddía   Cayetano Cosimano Chevrolet
16   Fernando Nery   D.J. Renaud Chevrolet
17   Victor García   Hilario Martínez Ford
18   Henry Bradley   Roberto Gómez Nash
19   Ricardo López   R.J. Fernández Ford
20   Rosendo Hernández   Juan A. Grillo Chevrolet
21   Angel Luis Pascuali   E. Callegari Ford
22   Jorge Rodrigo Daly   Juan Tenaglia Dodge
23   Alberto del Caprio   R. Argandona Lincoln
24   Lorenzo G. Varoli   Lorenzo Carlos Varoli Ford
25   Luis Astengo A.   J. Salinas Vera Ford
26   Félix A. Peduzzi   Alberto Gómez Chevrolet
27   Jordán Senes   Humberto Senes Ford
28   Miguel Beltrame   V. Rodríguez Ford
29   Vicente Tirabasso   A. Matías Ford
30   M. Beltrán Soulé   J. Vilarino Chevrolet
31   Antonio Gauthier   Juan A. Tenor Chevrolet
32   Atilio Patrignani   G. Patrigani Chevrolet
33   Eduardo Della Magiora   A. Etchegoyen Ford
34   Luis F. González   A. Panatti Ford
35   Francisco Neumayer   J.T. Fasci Ford
36   José Froilán González   Bernardo Pérez Chevrolet
37   José F. Cafiero   Alberto Luchesi Ford
38   Carlos Lagorio   M. Bonacorsi Chevrolet
39   José Muñiz   Gabino García Ford
40   Aurelio Spinetto   José A. Petrone Nash
41   Manuel Merino   Remo Gamalero Ford
42   Adolfo F. Fernández   H. Gutíerrez Ford
43   Román Balta A.   Román Balta A. Chevrolet
44   Benedicto Campos   Andres Papaleo Ford
45   Mercurio Guiliano   José R. Pereira Ford
46   Eduardo Orcola   Guido Aggazani Chevrolet
47   Raúl Jauregui   F.A. Quiroga Mercury
48   Atilio Cagnasso   G. Gelardi Buick
49   Esteban Sokol   E. Cimardi Chevrolet
50   E. Sabbione Daly   J.C. Mijailides Lincoln
51   Octavio Moretti   G.E. González Chevrolet
52   M.C. de Vasconcellos   José Arias Ford
53   Joaquín Salas F.   Jorge Sosa V. Ford
54   Rene Nicolás Faure   Max E. Metzler Chevrolet
55   Ramón A. Gallo   ? Chevrolet
56   Julián Q. Elguea   Heriberto Román Ford
57   Guillermo Martín   Carlos Jacobs Chevrolet
58   Hermo Orihuela   Alberto Orihuela Ford
59   Eduardo de Lelis   E. Guerrero Plymouth
60   Américo Giménez   Luis Tollerutti Ford
61   Enrique Forno   Víctor Cornejo Ford
62   Esteban Zamora   Juan del Regno Chevrolet
63   Oreste C. Casaroli   Florián Ujhelyi Chevrolet
64   Darío D. Ramonda   E.P. Suárez Chevrolet
65   Juan Carlos Copello   J. Mario Mungari Ford
66   A. Zarantonello   E. Martínez Ford
67   "Ampacama"   A. Spampinato Chevrolet
68   Juan Carlos Gómez   R.J. Morega Chevrolet
69   Domingo D'Angelo   Salvador Figlioli Chevrolet
70   Daimo Bojanich   H.H. Piassalle Ford
71   Luis Santos   Pascual Bosio Ford
72   Herminio Magaracci   José Racchumi Ford
73   José A. Rapetti   José P. Morelli Ford
74   Félix Palacios   Ruben Adámoli Mercury
75   Manuel Cobas   Rafael Melen Ford
76   Alberto Fouiloux   A.M. Fernández Ford
77   José L. Rodríguez   M.C. Ortiz Ford
78   Rafael Leizán   F.J. Leizán Chevrolet
79   M. Vinardell Molinero   ? Ford
80   Carlos R. Alisal   Jacinto Manso Ford
81   Vicente Alfonsaro   Rodolfo Carro Chevrolet
82   Salvador V. Turano   Balbino Roldán Chevrolet
83   Angel R. Castano   Angel Molinari Ford
84   José Rubiol Roca   ? Ford
85   José R. Naves   Emilio Tabares DeSoto
86   Ernesto Baronio   Dionisio Castelo Ford
87   José Laberguere   Oscar Carrero Plymouth
88   Pablo Trincavelli   Carlos Grosso Chevrolet
89   Florentino Castellani   Ernesto Segura Ford
90   Julio Huasasquiche   A. Samaniego Chevrolet
91   Alberto Provera   Pablo Arata Chevrolet
92   Alberto Mascarell   M. Somerville Chevrolet
93   "Mumiteite"   "Teitemumi" Chevrolet
94   Adolfo Mujica   Angel Bertello Ford
95   Carlos Benedetti   E. San Pietro ?
96   Hugo Lanteri   Humberto Jofre Chevrolet
97   F. Fernández Walker   Luis A. Ferraris Ford
98   Domingo Sanguinetti   Donato Panza Chevrolet
99   Almendor Maiharro   José Francia Chevrolet
100   Juacinto Moss   Domingo Fancio Ford
101   Domingo Candela   Antonio Magoia Chevrolet
102   Hugo de Simone   Ernesto Morales Chevrolet
103   Guido A. Maineri   E. Giovanini Ford
104   Eugenio Bría   Pedro Collazos Ford
105   Enrique Quaglia   Rafael Espejo Chevrolet
106   Alfredo Denita   Alfredo Rozón Ford
107   Germán Rivera   Enzo O. Ferro Chevrolet
108   "Paradavalla"   "Mañaz" Ford
109   Jose Manuel López   A. Talavera Chevrolet
110   Juan Rodríguez Vera   Silvano Ojalvo Chevrolet
111   José Sciarpelletti   Manuel Arrouge Chevrolet
112   Eleuterio Schvemier   José A. Sanari Chevrolet
113   Italo V. Bizio   Luis Repossi Chevrolet
114   Américo Berta   E. Bioderbost Chevrolet
115   José Lorenzetti   Juan H. Hermida Ford
116   Manuel Cubillos   "Tito" Cubillos Chevrolet
117   Juan Marchini   Hernando Gallo Ford
118   C. Solveyra Tomkinson   ? Chevrolet
119   Bartolomé Ortiz Sanz   Julio Castellani Ford
120   René Roux   Oscar Otermín Ford
121   Roberto Matassi   Marcos Ciani Chevrolet
122   Alberto T. Palacios   N. Giachetta Ford
123   José Balcarce   V.P. Quevedo Chevrolet
124   Manuel Montes   Raúl Márquez Chevrolet
125   Rafael Staccioli   D. Zappacosta Ford
126   Pablo Mesples   D.A. Braga Ford
127   Martín Berasategui   J. Schnarwiller Buick
128   Alberto Fava   Gaitán Morello Ford
129   René Nelly Pfister   René Barbani Chevrolet
130   Francisco Hernández   Juan R. Lucca Ford
131   Salvador Ataguile   P.M. Gutierrez Ford
132   Victor O. Roudé   Pedro Mazzoni Ford
133   Manuel Balta A.   R. Gutierrez Chevrolet
134   Francisco Remondino   Luis Zamora Ford
135   Manuel R. Lastra   Ernesto Cáceres Chevrolet
136   Eduardo de Lusarreta   José Dema Chevrolet
137   Ricardo Harriague   M.J. Bergeretti Ford
138   Adolfo Perazzo   M. García Rey Chevrolet
139   Ernesto Petrini   Jesús Henry Ford
140   Luis Echevarría   Carlos Rancales Chevrolet
141   Guillermo Marenghini   E. Semperena Chevrolet
Source:[2]

Report edit

Stage 1 edit

Two entrants withdrew prior to the race starting – Ernesto Hilario Blanco with illness, and Esteban Sokol having crashed his car before the departure.

The first stage was also the longest; just over 1,000 mi from Buenos Aires to Salta. José Froilán González took the start in a Chevrolet, but withdrew not long after as he allegedly didn't realise the race was going all the way to Caracas and didn't believe such a journey could be done – calling his rivals "crazy". Oscar Alfredo Gálvez and Juan Manuel Fangio led the way, but Fangio's charge was halted with differential problems and the Balcarceño lost four hours repairing it. Gálvez thereafter remained unchallenged to the stage finish, with Fangio's Chevrolet stablemate Domingo Marimón finishing second and Gálvez' brother Juan third.

As soon as the race had started however, problems were already emerging. Large crowds thronged the roads outside of Buenos Aires, resulting in two spectator fatalities – one when Octavio Moretti lost control of his Chevrolet and ran over a group of bystanders, and another when an allegedly drunken man crossed the road in front of Daniel Musso's Ford. A distressed Musso abandoned the race at the end of the stage.

Stage 2 edit

Stage 2 took the crews from Salta to the Argentine border town of La Quiaca. Oscar Gálvez claimed his second successive stage victory on the gravel country roads, but Uruguayan star Héctor Suppici Sedes crashed in Maimará and immediately withdrew – returning home to Montevideo.

Stage 3 edit

94 crews crossed the La Quiaca River into Bolivia to recommence the race from Villazón. The 460 km route to Potosí was treacherous at over 3,000m above sea level, and ultimately claimed the lives of Ford team Julián Elguea and Heriberto Román – they failed to negotiate a hairpin outside the town of Culpina and fell 200m into a ravine. Elguea's brother-in-law Domingo Fancio was competing as co-driver to Juancito Moss and the crew immediately withdrew from the race. Oscar Gálvez extended his lead with a third-straight stage win, ahead of Pablo Gulle in second and Marimón third.

Stage 4 edit

Juan Gálvez claimed his first stage win on the road from Potosí to the Bolivian capital La Paz as his brother Oscar struck trouble. The #3 Ford hit a rock and required repairs to the steering rack, but he retained the overall lead heading into a rest day.

Stage 5 edit

Fangio had recovered to 40th after his first stage woes, and went on the attack on the fifth stage over the Peruvian border into Arequipa. The Gálvez brothers consolidated the pace across the Altiplano, but Fangio passed 30 cars over the Andes to claim his first stage win and the first for Chevrolet.

Stage 6 edit

The second-longest stage of the race saw competitors descend to the Pacific coast into the Peruvian capital Lima. Fangio – now inside the top-30 overall – continued to press on until a rollover near Nazca forced him to back off, finishing the stage 23rd and still sitting over 6 hours behind leader Oscar Gálvez, who claimed his fourth stage win. The 25,000-strong crowd that gathered in the capital to see the spectacle were rewarded for their support when local driver Arnaldo Alvarado Degregori came home third.

Stage 7 edit

Thursday October 28 was scheduled as a rest day, however the start of Stage 7 was brought forward from 5am on Friday to 10pm that night due to a coup d'état in Peru that resulted in the installation of Manuel Odría as President. Sleep-deprived crews were ill-prepared for the change of plans, with misty coastal roads adding to the challenge of the last 1,000 km+ stage.

Still recovering lost ground, Fangio was pushing hard – so much so that he and co-driver Daniel Urrutia missed a refuelling point and had to backtrack. Just outside of Huanchaco, on the northern outskirts of Trujillo, Fangio lost control on a left-hand bend and rolled down an embankment at 140kph. Co-driver Urrutia was ejected from the car through the windscreen in the incident, and landed heavily in scrubland. Oscar Gálvez, who had been battling Fangio earlier in the stage, witnessed the accident and stopped to help – much to the objection of Fangio, who wanted the race leader to continue. Having found a badly injured Urrutia, Eusebio Marcilla and Luciano Murro then stopped to help transport Fangio and Urrutia respectively to a hospital in Chocope. Urrutia became the events' fifth fatality having suffered cervical and basal skull fractures, whilst Fangio also suffered neck injuries but these were not life-threatening.

Despite many wanting to withdraw from the race after the incident, Fangio urged his rivals to continue. Juan Gálvez eventually led 53 crews to the end of Stage 7 and the halfway point of the event in the Peruvian border town of Tumbes. Fangio's crash was not the only terminal one in the stage, with four other crews – including the hero of Lima, Arnaldo Alvarado Degregori – forced to retire.

Stage 8 edit

A ship then carried the competitors to the Ecuadorian port of Guayaquil, where the race resumed en route to Quito. Juan Gálvez made it back-to-back stage wins to reduce his brothers' lead to 1h11m. Pablo Gulle retired from 8th overall with a mechanical failure.

Stage 9 edit

Upon arrival in Quito, the field faced significant economic problems. In order to ensure the race continued, Argentine President Juan Perón personally decreed a donation of AR$100,000 to competitors. Oscar Gálvez led brother Juan over the border into the Colombian town of Pasto to finish 1–2 for Ford. There were further spectator problems in the final kilometres – Víctor García crashed into a crowd killing one and injuring four others, whilst a wooden platform overlooking the finish collapsed and seriously injured multiple.

Stage 10 edit

The tenth stage to Cali proved the races' slowest, with stage winner Juan Gálvez traversing the mountainous route at an average of just under 62kph.

Stage 11 edit

The Gálvez brothers continued their dominance of the race into the Colombian capital Bogotá, race leader Oscar this time leading Juan through the low-altitude Andes passes.

Stage 12 edit

Following a rest day in Bogotá, crews travelled through the mountains to Cúcuta on the border with Venezuela – Juan Gálvez claiming his fifth stage win.

Stage 13 edit

The penultimate stage crossed the border into Venezuela and onto the town of Valera. Oscar Gálvez claimed his seventh stage win as brother Juan went off the road and into an embankment, but recovered to finish the stage having lost two hours to be 2h25m behind his brother in the overall classification. Salvador Ataguille finished the stage in a surprise second and consolidated his place inside the top 10, but still sat a long way behind third-placed Domingo Marimón – Marimón remained some 5h off the lead.

Stage 14 edit

The final stage into the Venezuelan capital Caracas proved dramatic. Juan Gálvez, undaunted by the seemingly insurmountable margin to his brother, pushed his way to the lead of the stage. At the halfway mark entering San Rafael de Onoto, Gálvez misjudged his speed over a series of speed humps – crashing into a ditch and breaking his differential. Organisers had put up signs to warn the drivers of the speed humps the day before the race, but spectators had removed them. Marimón was next on the scene and blocked the road in order to force his competitors to help. Víctor García, who had nearly withdrawn after his crash into Pasto about a week earlier, avoided the incident zone and drove on to win the stage – and became only the fourth entry to win a stage.

"There are regulations, and the commissioners say that they were not complied with."

Juan Perón on Oscar Gálvez' disqualification.

Oscar had helped to retrieve his brother, but put excessive wear on his engine in the process and later broke his crankshaft in the village of Los Guayos just 60 km from the finish. He was pushed to the finish line by a spectator in a Buick, resulting in the disqualification of the race-long leader as he failed to cross the finish line under his own power. Gálvez appealed to none other than Juan Perón to have the decision overturned, but Perón insisted in a telegram that the organisers upheld the regulations. As a result, Domingo Marimón and co-driver Pedro Duhalde – despite having not won a single stage – were crowned the winners, finishing with a time of 118 hours, 37 minutes and 18 seconds. Marimón's team-mate Eusebio Marcilla was classified second just 12 minutes behind, followed by Juan Gálvez in third – who lost 3 hours in his final-day drama to finish half an hour behind Marimón.[3][4]

Results edit

Stage winners edit

Stage Start Finish Date Winning crew Winning car Stage time Distance
1   Buenos Aires   Salta October 20–21   Oscar Alfredo Gálvez
  Federico Herrero
Ford 13h52m47s 1,692 km
2   Salta   La Quiaca October 22   Oscar Alfredo Gálvez
  Federico Herrero
Ford 4h47m21s 380.1 km
3   Villazón   Potosí October 23   Oscar Alfredo Gálvez
  Federico Herrero
Ford 7h12m15s 459.8 km
4   Potosí   La Paz October 24   Juan Gálvez
  Desiderio Avila
Ford 6h44m10s 543.4 km
5   La Paz   Arequipa October 26   Juan Manuel Fangio
  Daniel Urrutia
Chevrolet 7h01m09s 546.2 km
6   Arequipa   Lima October 27   Oscar Alfredo Gálvez
  Federico Herrero
Ford 9h43m36s 1,092 km
7   Lima   Tumbes October 28–29   Juan Gálvez
  Desiderio Avila
Ford 11h49m42s 1,322 km
8   Guayaquil   Quito November 1   Juan Gálvez
  Desiderio Avila
Ford 5h56m14s 421 km
9   Quito   Pasto November 2   Oscar Alfredo Gálvez
  Federico Herrero
Ford 5h56m59s 392 km
10   Pasto   Cali November 3   Juan Gálvez
  Desiderio Avila
Ford 7h06m20s 440 km
11   Cali   Bogotá November 4   Oscar Alfredo Gálvez
  Federico Herrero
Ford 7h26m23s 527 km
12   Bogotá   Cúcuta November 6   Juan Gálvez
  Desiderio Avila
Ford 8h46m53s 599 km
13   Cúcuta   Valera November 7   Oscar Alfredo Gálvez
  Federico Herrero
Ford 8h24m00s 484 km
14   Valera   Caracas November 8   Víctor García
  Hilario Martínez
Ford 7h46m56s 677 km
Source:

Outright edit

Final standings (positions 1–10)
Pos Driver Co-Driver Car Overall time Difference
1   Domingo Marimón   Pedro Duhalde Chevrolet 118h37m18s
2   Eusebio Marcilla   Miguel Salem Chevrolet 118h49m59s +12m41s
3   Juan Gálvez   Desiderio Avila Ford 119h07m59s +30m41s
4   Salvador Ataguille   P.M. Gutierrez Ford 122h21m45s +3h44m27s
5   Daimo Bojanich   H.H. Piassalle Ford 122h30m58s +3h53m40s
6   Manuel Merino   Remo Gamalero Ford 123h58m47s +5h21m29s
7   Víctor García   Hilario Martínez Ford 124h02m00s +5h24m42s
8   Ricardo López   R.J. Fernández Ford 124h14m58s +5h37m40s
9   Guido Maineri   E. Giovanini Ford 125h00m32s +6h23m14s
10   Tadeo Taddía   Cayetano Cosimano Chevrolet 126h01m03s +7h23m45s

References edit

  1. ^ "Buenos Aires-Caracas: La gran aventura del TC" (in Spanish). SportDigital. 17 April 2020.
  2. ^ "Turismo de Carretera Gran Premio de la América del Sur 1948" (in Spanish). F1-web.ar. Retrieved 1 September 2023.
  3. ^ "Daniel Urrutia". Motorsport Memorial. 2 September 2023.
  4. ^ "Crónicas del Automovilismo: Gran Premio de la América del Sur, 1948 (Buenos Aires-Caracas)" (in Spanish). EL LOCO FIERRERO on YouTube. 16 January 2021.