Thousand Islands Rally, 11-12 October 1952, 37 starters
(Also 1000 Islands)
First run in 1952 as a navigational type event, with driving tests — Thanksgiving week-end:
"Shortly after noon on Saturday, October 11th, competitors began leaving Ottawa, Toronto and Montreal on the navigational portion of the Rally. Each route was approximately 210 miles in length. The Ottawa contingent took what was described as the scenic route, while the Montreal boys went south of the Border, into New York State, then West to the Thousand Islands Bridge, to Kingston. The Toronto competitors played hide and seek with #7 highway. This made a total of 37 starters. In the meantime, the St. Lawrence Automobile Club were getting things rolling at Kingston in readiness for the influx."
The rally converged on Kingston, Ontario — concluding on Sunday 12th October. This event was organised by C.A.S.C., (later run by St. Lawrence Automobile Club, continued up into the 1970s).
"An SCCA (Buffalo Region) man, Jim Ottman was the first arrival at
6.40pm. That started the rush as competitors checked in, picked up
accommodations, got supper etc. They were allowed an hour and a half
for all this before setting out on the Night Section. On this, each
competitor was handed a map which showed nothing but the route to be
followed. Some people are still trying to figure out the scale!"
"After the Night section, the cars were lined up in the Market
Square "Parc Ferme" overnight. While competitors and some officials
partook of refreshments and such at the Frontenac Hotel some of the
hardier officials began to inspect the cars for defects such as
leaking mufflers, poor lights, no hand brakes, bad tires and like items.
Some of these cheerful persons even changed a flat tire on a Toronto
competitor's car. The idea was to break up any ties but it didn't work!
(how can three people end up with 105.9 points each?)
The third section, Driving Skill, was held on Sunday afternoon on
Railway St. This consisted of acceleration, gear-changing, braking,
parking and manoeuvring in close quarters. All these tended to even
up any differences due to type or class; the results prove this.
After all this the cars returned to the Square so that officials
and competitors could take part in the Banquet at 7.00pm.
Each section of the Rally was scored separately and competitors
had a chance of winning a section as well as the whole Rally. The
overall winner was the man who had lost the lowest number of points
in all sections. This left Bill Cooper of the SCC.Toronto the winner.
His performance was remarkable and it was a well deserved win."
Results
Overall
1st. William 'Bill' Cooper, Toronto, "accompanied by his three daughters and wife" — Austin A40, Sports Car Club (Toronto) — 36.7 points
Kingston Whig-Standard Trophy awarded by Mr. Arthur Davies, publisher, at the British-American Hotel.
2nd. C. F. 'Frank' Rolland/Mrs. Rolland, Montreal — Jaguar XK120, S.C.C.A. (Quebec) — 59.2 points
3rd. Paul O'Reilly, Ottawa — M.G. TC, gold colour, O.L.C.C. — 65.6 points
4th. L. G. Polack, Ottawa — M.G. TD, O.L.C.C. — 82.9 points
5th. W. Cole, — Ford Prefect, S.M.C.C. (Montreal) — 93.3 points
Joint 6th — 105.9 points:
Jack Carrothers, Ottawa — M.G. Y-type tourer, O.L.C.C.
M. Grinstead (thought to be Michael Grinstead), — Tatra, Sports Car Club (Toronto)
J. A. James 'Jim' Ottman, Tonawanda, NY, — Singer 1500, red colour, S.C.C.A. (N.Y.)
Night Section (40 miles)
1. C. Cole — Singer 1100, S.M.C.C. (Montreal) — 0 points
2. {C. F. 'Frank' Rolland, Montreal — Jaguar XK120, S.C.C.A. (Quebec) — 10 points
2. {M. Grinstead — Tatra, Sports Car Club (Toronto) — 10 points
4. E. F. Patmore (thought to be Eric Patmore) — M.G. TC, Sports Car Club (Toronto) — 15 points
Day Section
1. W. E. Cooper, Austin A40, Sports Car Club (Toronto) — 7 points
2. C. F. Rolland, Jaguar XK120, S.C.C.A. (Quebec) — 23.5 points
3. Paul Lee, Sunbeam-Talbot, Sports Car Club (Toronto) — 24 points
Driving Skill Tests — Railway Street, Kingston
1. Bernard S. van Marken — Standard "8", Sports Car Club (Toronto) — 9.1 points
2. W. E. 'Bill' Cooper — Austin A40, Sports Car Club (Toronto) — 9.7 points
3. F. 'Fred' Strutt — Fiat 500 wagon, Ottawa, O.L.C.C. — 9.9 points
Entries included:
Allard (no data)
Austin A30, A40 x2, A40 Bermuda, A90 Atlantic;
Austin fibreglass sports car, built and driven by Walter Wenninga, Quebec, S.M.C.C.
"It is entirely hand-built on an A-40 chassis and weighs only 1400 lbs."
For photograph see National Post (Toronto, Ontario, Canada) Sat 27 June 1953, Page 40.
A contender for the first fibreglass car built in Canada.
Bugatti Type 57, John Colenbrander, Ontario, Sports Car Club (Toronto)
Fiat 500 wagon, Fred Strutt, Ottawa, O.L.C.C.
Ford Prefect (see above)
Hillman Minx x2;
Hudson;
Jaguar XK120 convertible and coupe;
Jowett Javelin (Ontario registered);
M.G. TC, TD, Y-type, custom-built Tickford M.G.;
Monarch;
Morris Minor, "Slim" Manson, S.M.C.C. (Montreal)
Morris Oxford;
Porsche coupe, Marshall Green, S.C.C.A. (Quebec Region)
Renault;
Riley;
Singer Roadster x2 (see above);
Standard Vanguard estate (thought to be Wing Commander Harold Pearce);
Standard "8" — Bernard S. van Marken, seen in a Skoda at St Eugene in 1958, also 1960 (Skoda Octavia Super); at Mosport in 1961 in a Formula Junior Witton or Whitton; Shell 4000 Rally
Sunbeam-Talbot convertible, Paul Lee
Tatra (see above)
Volkswagen.
See The Link, journal of the Ottawa Light Car Club, Vol 2, No 10, November 1952 — with thanks to Mike Nilson.
Also:
The Kingston Whig-Standard (Kingston, Ontario, Canada) Thursday 9 Oct 1952, Page 17
The Kingston Whig-Standard (Kingston, Ontario, Canada) Tuesday 14 Oct 1952, Page 15
RGDS RLT
Edited by Rupertlt1, 14 March 2022 - 11:43.