Ulster Trophy
Dundrod, 12 Aug 1950
Results | Laps | Time/Speed | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Peter Whitehead | Ferrari 125 [10C] - s/c V12 #14 P N Whitehead (see note 1) |
15 | 1h 19m 09s |
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2 | Bob Gerard | ERA B Type [R14B] - s/c 6 #1 F R Gerard (see note 2) |
15 | 1h 19m 25s |
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3 | Cuth Harrison | ERA C Type [R8C] - s/c 6 #2 T C Harrison (see note 3) |
15 | 1h 20m 24s |
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4 | Joe Kelly | Alta GP [No 3] - s/c 4 #8 J Kelly (see note 4) |
14 | ||||||
5 | Torrie Large | Maserati 6CM [1547] - s/c 6 #9 J Kelly (see note 5) |
14 | ||||||
R | Sydney Allard | (4.5 F1) 3.7-litre Allard Special - Steyr V8 #3 Allard Motors (see note 6) |
9 | Gasket | |||||
R | Bobby Baird | (4.5 F1) 1.1-litre MG K3 Special [3006] - Rapier s/c 4 #4 W R Baird (see note 7) |
7 | Accident | |||||
R | Brian Shawe-Taylor | ERA B Type [R9B] - s/c 6 #12 B N Shawe-Taylor (see note 8) |
5 | Magneto | |||||
R | Geoffrey Crossley | Alta GP [No 2] - s/c 4 #6 G Crossley (see note 9) |
5 | Magneto | |||||
DNP | Henry Kyle | (F?) 1.1-litre Cooper Mk IV 'T12' - JAP twin #7 H Graham |
Did not take part in official practice (Alternative driver) |
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DNP | Henry Kyle | Maserati 6CM [1547] - s/c 6 #9 J Kelly (see note 10) |
Did not take part in official practice (Alternative driver) |
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DNP | Leonard Gill | Maserati 6CM [1547] - s/c 6 #9 J Kelly (see note 11) |
Did not take part in official practice (Alternative driver) |
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DNP | Geoff McCrea | (4.5 F1) 0.75-litre MG R [RA0259] - s/c 4 #11 G W McCrea |
Did not take part in official practice (Driver failed eye test) |
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DNA | Archie Butterworth | AJB - Steyr V8† #5 A J Butterworth |
Did not arrive | ||||||
DNA | Hector Graham | (F?) 1.1-litre Cooper Mk IV 'T12' - JAP twin #7 H Graham |
Did not arrive | ||||||
DNA | David Murray | Maserati 4CLT-48 [1593] - s/c 4 #10 Scuderia Ambrosiana (see note 12) |
Did not arrive |
All cars are 1.5-litre s/c F1 or 4.5-litre F1† unless noted.
Qualifying | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Brian Shawe-Taylor | (4.5 F1) 1.5-litre ERA B Type [R9B] - ERA s/c 6 | |||
2 | Peter Whitehead | (4.5 F1) 1.5-litre Ferrari 125 [10C] - Ferrari s/c V12 | |||
3 | Cuth Harrison | (4.5 F1) 1.5-litre ERA C Type [R8C] - ERA s/c 6 | |||
4 | Bob Gerard | (4.5 F1) 1.5-litre ERA B Type [R14B] - ERA s/c 6 | |||
5 | Joe Kelly | (4.5 F1) 1.5-litre Alta GP [No 3] - Alta s/c 4 | |||
6 | Torrie Large | (4.5 F1) 1.5-litre Maserati 6CM [1547] - Maserati s/c 6 | |||
7 | Sydney Allard | (4.5 F1) 3.7-litre Allard Special - Steyr V8 | |||
8 | Geoffrey Crossley | (4.5 F1) 1.5-litre Alta GP [No 2] - Alta s/c 4 | |||
9 | Bobby Baird | (4.5 F1) 1.1-litre MG K3 Special [3006] - Rapier s/c 4 |
Notes on the cars:
- Ferrari 125 [10C] (Peter Whitehead): Peter Whitehead bought 10C new for 1949 and used it through 1949 and 1950 before buying a newer ex-works 125. This car was raced by Dobson in 1951 and later sold to David Murray. Whitehead later bought a 1949/50 LWB Tipo 125 renumbered 0114; it is this latter car that spent many years in the Donington Collection.
- ERA B Type [R14B] (Bob Gerard): Johnny Wakefield 1938-39 and then Bob Gerard's main ERA from 1946 to 1953. Then via Jimmy Stuart to Donald Day in 1959. Apart from a short period, Day has owned it ever since. Recent drivers include Ted Rollason, Goff Tidball and Paul Richardson. Retained 2007.
- ERA C Type [R8C] (Cuth Harrison): Built in 1938 using mechanical parts from R8B and raced by Earl Howe 1938 and until a crash in the 1939 International Trophy. Then to Reg Parnell for 1946, Cuth Harrison from 1947 to 1951, Brian Shawe-Taylor 1951 and 1952; then a chain of other owners until acquired in 1977 by Bruce Spollon. Rebuilt to correct C-type specs and raced from 1981 to 2003.
- Alta GP [No 3] (Joe Kelly): The third GP Alta, 'GP3', was built for Joe Kelly and raced until 1951. Then extensively modified by Kelly as his 'IRA' special. This car was later acquired by Ray Fielding and fitted with a Jaguar engine. (Sources: Directory of Historic Racing Cars, Jenkinson; Powered by Jaguar 2nd Ed 2005, Nye)
- Maserati 6CM [1547] (Torrie Large): Delivered 24 Jun 1937 to Austin Dobson, who raced it during 1937, before passing to the young David Hampshire for 1939. Post-war continued to be campaigned by Hampshire in 1946 before passing via HW Motors to Alister Baring in 1947. Then successively to Joe Kelly and to Noel Hillis in Ireland. Via American and British owners to Steffan Schollwoeck who campaigned it with much success in historic racing until 2007, when it passed to Will Balz (Germany).
- Allard Special (Sydney Allard): Sydney Allard fitted a 3.7-litre Steyr V8 engine to one of his sports car chassis, fitted a single-seater body and ran this special in sprints and hillclimbs, winning the 1949 British Hill Climb Championship. He entered the Ulster Trophy in August 1950 in this car, nominally running as a F1. The Allard-Steyr went to Jack Bassett for 1952 and then to 'Doc' Pinkerton for 1953 and then to Doug Wilcocks. It was bought back by Sydney around 1960 and was then with David Hooper until returned to the Allard family in 1978. In 2003, it was owned by Kerry Horan. (Sources: Uphill Racers, Mason; Australasian Allard Register newsletter Jan 2003)
- MG K3 Special [3006] (Bobby Baird): Bobby Baird had a number of specials and this one was a 1.1 litre based on an MG K3
- ERA B Type [R9B] (Brian Shawe-Taylor): A customer car for Denis Scribbans and then Bob Ansell up to 1949. Guest drivers included Brian Shawe-Taylor, who then bought the car and raced it 1950-51. Then via Irish and UK owners, entering historic racing in 1955. Raced by the Mann brothers from 1976 to 1993, then to Switzerland for four years, back to Peter Mann and then to Rainer Ott (Germany) in 2005. Retained 2007.
- Alta GP [No 2] (Geoffrey Crossley): This car was built for Geoffrey Crossley and raced until 1951. Then broken up to create a special. (Source: Directory of Historic Racing Cars, Jenkinson)
- Maserati 6CM [1547] (Henry Kyle): Delivered 24 Jun 1937 to Austin Dobson, who raced it during 1937, before passing to the young David Hampshire for 1939. Post-war continued to be campaigned by Hampshire in 1946 before passing via HW Motors to Alister Baring in 1947. Then successively to Joe Kelly and to Noel Hillis in Ireland. Via American and British owners to Steffan Schollwoeck who campaigned it with much success in historic racing until 2007, when it passed to Will Balz (Germany).
- Maserati 6CM [1547] (Leonard Gill): Delivered 24 Jun 1937 to Austin Dobson, who raced it during 1937, before passing to the young David Hampshire for 1939. Post-war continued to be campaigned by Hampshire in 1946 before passing via HW Motors to Alister Baring in 1947. Then successively to Joe Kelly and to Noel Hillis in Ireland. Via American and British owners to Steffan Schollwoeck who campaigned it with much success in historic racing until 2007, when it passed to Will Balz (Germany).
- Maserati 4CLT-48 [1593] (David Murray): Shown in Maserati records as Alberto Ascari's early 1948 car. To Reg Parnell 1949 for Fred Ashmore then raced in 1950 by David Hampshire and others as part of Scuderia Ambrosiana. Then David Murray's car for 1951. Crashed in practice at the Nürburgring for the 1951 German GP and not seen again.
Formula 1 events 1948-1953
The results published here were compiled by David McKinney and Adam Ferrington from a range of sources including Autocourse, Motor Sport and Autosport, as well as the F1 Register's A Record of Grand Prix and Voiturette Racing Volume 5 covering 1950 and 1951. Individual car identities were then meticulously checked against their enormous libraries of books and photographs, notably Talbot-Lago de Course by Pierre Abeillon, Les Gordini by Robert Jarraud, Gordini – Un Sorcier, Une Equipe by Christian Huet and The History of English Racing Automobiles by David Weguelin.
David has also contributed extensively from his notes on car identities compiled over 40 years of research, Michael Müller has contributed immaculately researched histories of all the 1948-1950 Ferrari 125s, and Doug Nye, both through his books and his personal assistance on HWM, has also been of great help.
Please note that since David's sad death in 2014, Adam and Allen have agreed that these pages will remain unaltered from now on, as a lasting testimony to David's expertise.