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Stirling Moss wins in Mercedes Benz |
Before the Monaco Grand Prix, Max Verstappen described it as the most boring race in the calendar. He was right although there is fierce competition from other race tracks in the Formula One multi-million-pound climate change extravaganza. As a small boy, I had been obsessed with racing cars when Grand Prix racing was rooted in mechanical speculation and fearless men with moustaches. Dinky Toys provided my generation with models of garage-built cars from the 1950s, including Ferraris, Alfa Romeos, Maseratis, Coopers, Talbots, and Vanwalls. I had them all, mainly birthday gifts or as recompense from my parents following hospital visits from several childhood accidents when I was stitched up after jumping out of trees or bike crashes.
As a treat, my father took me to the 1955 British Grand Prix at Aintree in Liverpool it was the first time that Aintree had hosted the event. He worked on Saturday mornings so we cycled 8 miles to his work at the Lostock Hall gasworks. I was on my new bicycle received a few months earlier on my seventh birthday. I had fitted a cyclometer and was cycling up to 200 miles a week mainly around the housing estate but occasionally taking longer rides that were supposedly out of bounds. Dad arranged a lift with Alf Brierly, a burley lorry driver, who was delivering coke from the gas works to Ormskirk, where he dropped us at the station.
My dad arranged with the station master to leave our bikes in the station waiting room. They had been carried to the station on top of the coke in the lorry. A steam locomotive pulled us to the Aintree Station. The Grand Prix circuit was at the same location as the Grand National horse racing circuit owned by the formidable Mirabel Topping, who wanted to capitalise on the large crowd capacity at Aintree to generate more income. Entry was cheap to sit on the grass banks and we found a spot on a sunny afternoon within 20 metres of the race track. We were in time to watch the warm-up laps when the cars seemed to cough and splutter around the 3-mile circuit and mechanics were fiddling under the bonnets of the cars to tune the carburetters and pouring in petrol from large jerry cans, safety was a concept yet to be acknowledged in motor racing.
Fangio, the five-time world champion, and Stirling Moss were driving the works Mercedes Benz cars and taking on the Maseratis and Ferraris that had dominated events in recent years. The silver Mercedes looked sleeker and bigger, it was German technology versus Italian flair as the remarkable video Aintree British Grand Prix that I discovered on YouTube shows.
It was the first time that a British driver, Stirling Moss, had won a British Grand Prix, although Fangio was within a couple of cars' length for the whole race. It was alleged that he allowed Moss to win, they were on good terms, unlike today's drivers. The next two cars were also Mercedes. Mercedes gave up Grand Prix racing at the end of the season following fatal crashes at Le Mans. Given the number of breakdowns and pit stops for repairs of the other cars, there was plenty to watch and Dad had brought along his ex-army haversack with a water canteen and aluminium sandwich box with some meat paste sandwiches to keep us fed. The whole day out must have cost less than 10/-(50p) for both of us and that included the entrance, the train fare from Ormskirk and back as well as the meat paste sandwiches. The ordinary public was there in their thousands and could walk over and see the cars at the finish of the event. A far cry from the cheapest tickets in Monaco that cost €2350 on the Monaco Ticket website and that would not get you within shouting distance of Lewis Hamilton and the other drivers.
There were no parking charges required, and the stationmaster had kept our bikes in the waiting room, so just a 21-mile cycle home on main roads. It was more excitement of being passed by speeding vehicles for a 7-year-old. The next day my dinky toys were lapping around the patterned carpet before breakfast. I didn't have a Mercedes, dimk toys had not yet made a die-cast so I let the Aston Martin (22) sports car win, beating the Maserati, the Ferrari and the Cooper. The Grand Prix had been a grand day out but the ride in the lorry, the steam train and the long cycle home were a part of that. And I am sure that I got nearer the cars and drivers than anyone paying for the cheapest ticket in Monaco would manage.
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Stirling Moss in Mercedes Benz |
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My Maserati Dinky Toy |