
Grand Prix winners of the 1960s
#1
Posted 23 July 2022 - 16:25
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#2
Posted 23 July 2022 - 16:37
1960ies GP Winners (not including Indy 500)
- Clark
- Hill
- Brabham
- Stewart
- Surtees
- Hulme
- Moss
- Gurney
- Hill
- Mclaren
- Ickx
- Von Trips
- Baghetti
- Ireland
- Bandini
- Ginther
- Scarfiotti
- Rodriguez
- Siffert
- Rindt
#3
Posted 23 July 2022 - 16:59
Yep, Ickx and Stewart.
#4
Posted 23 July 2022 - 17:54
What is even more of a sobering thought is that of the 20 GP winners 8 later died at the wheel of a racing car.
#5
Posted 23 July 2022 - 18:31
#6
Posted 23 July 2022 - 18:33
Ickx is younger than seventies winners Andretti, Jabouille and Lafitte, though.
#7
Posted 23 July 2022 - 18:53
Hans Hermann - winner of the 1960 Sebring GP. There are likely more in sports car racing, given multi-driver wins.
#8
Posted 23 July 2022 - 19:36
There are likely more in sports car racing, given multi-driver wins.
Yes, a quick scan found 13 winners of major sports car races in the 1960s who I believe are still around:-
Herrmann
Andretti
Foyt
Ickx
Oliver
Hobbs
Redman
Guichet
Hall
Schutz
Buzzetta
Neerpasch
Ahrens Jr
#9
Posted 23 July 2022 - 19:38
#10
Posted 23 July 2022 - 20:19
Yes and the list of podium finishers is not much longer either: Attwood, Oliver and Redman are all that I can think of with a single podium each.
Hans Herrmann is the only podium finisher left from the 1950's and there are not many drivers in general, sadly: McAlpine, da Silva Ramos, Milhoux, Piper, Ashdown I think is the complete list if they are indeed all alive still. John Rhodes is actually the third oldest living Grand Prix driver but his sole entry was in 1965.
#11
Posted 23 July 2022 - 22:38
Yes and the list of podium finishers is not much longer either: Attwood, Oliver and Redman are all that I can think of with a single podium each.
Hans Herrmann is the only podium finisher left from the 1950's and there are not many drivers in general, sadly: McAlpine, da Silva Ramos, Milhoux, Piper, Ashdown I think is the complete list if they are indeed all alive still. John Rhodes is actually the third oldest living Grand Prix driver but his sole entry was in 1965.
If including non-qualifiers, Ecclestone and Kessler.
My last notes said 29 1960's Grand Prix drivers are still alive, with an additional three non-qualifiers.
#12
Posted 23 July 2022 - 23:03
My last notes said 29 1960's Grand Prix drivers are still alive, with an additional three non-qualifiers.
All of whom must have already comfortably exceeded the Biblical three score years and ten.
A number which I'm rapidly approaching ...
#13
Posted 23 July 2022 - 23:04
Hans Herrmann is the only podium finisher left from the 1950's and there are not many drivers in general, sadly: McAlpine, da Silva Ramos, Milhoux, Piper, Ashdown I think is the complete list if they are indeed all alive still. John Rhodes is actually the third oldest living Grand Prix driver but his sole entry was in 1965.
Is da Silva Ramos the only one on this list whose career began in the 1940s?
#14
Posted 24 July 2022 - 00:29
All of whom must have already comfortably exceeded the Biblical three score years and ten.
A number which I'm rapidly approaching ...
Relax - the view in the rear vision mirror is fine once you're past.
#15
Posted 24 July 2022 - 10:40
I was in contact with John on the 1st March and he was doing pretty well, I'm glad to sayJohn Rhodes is actually the third oldest living Grand Prix driver but his sole entry was in 1965.
8th and 11th oldest (if you take Paul Goldsmith out of the equation) are two 70's drivers: Alex Soler-Roig and George Follmer.
But let's think about this. 1969 is 53 years ago. Anyone still alive who raced from then is a bonus. One, because of the nature of the sport, but two, it wasn't overly a young man's sport (or F1 wasn't) for another good ten years or so.
Edited by Richard Jenkins, 24 July 2022 - 11:36.
#16
Posted 24 July 2022 - 12:41
Is there any other driver apart from Kenneth McAlpine that lived to be 100 years old ?
#17
Posted 24 July 2022 - 12:58
#18
Posted 24 July 2022 - 13:02
Is there any other driver apart from Kenneth McAlpine that lived to be 100 years old ?
Paul Pietsch
Louis Gerard
#19
Posted 24 July 2022 - 13:07
Ah yes right Pietsch ! Didn't know Dutton and Gérard also made it, thanks.
Edited by Frank Verplanken, 24 July 2022 - 18:31.
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#20
Posted 24 July 2022 - 16:54
If including non-qualifiers, Ecclestone and Kessler.
My last notes said 29 1960's Grand Prix drivers are still alive, with an additional three non-qualifiers.
Thank you for the correction!
Kessler indeed, I'm not sure though whether Ecclestone should be counted, he may have driven during practice but I really wouldn't think he was entered, there are multiple things wrong with the 1958 Monaco results. Two Connaughts feature on the list while in reality only one was there, Ken Kavanagh is credited with a laptime, which is no mean achievement considering his entry was refused and he didn't even travel to Monaco. All the 10-15 photos and some video footage I have seen of the Connaught show Emery in the car, nothing of Ecclestone, nothing of Kessler. I don't doubt Kessler drove and he once told me he was faster than Emery and that he has never seen a picture of himself in the car either.
#21
Posted 24 July 2022 - 16:55
#22
Posted 24 July 2022 - 17:14
Is da Silva Ramos the only one on this list whose career began in the 1940s?
Interesting question! McAlpine was competing in hillclimbs in the 1940s, Milhoux was Moto Cross of Nations champion in 1948.
Glad to hear Richard that you spoke to Rhodes and he is well! David Piper was at Goodwood a month ago, he also seemed fine. I'm not absolutely sure Milhoux and Ashdown are still with us but certainly hope so, I haven't heard of them for a few years, which of course doesn't mean anything wrong.
#23
Posted 24 July 2022 - 17:20
But let's think about this. 1969 is 53 years ago. Anyone still alive who raced from then is a bonus. One, because of the nature of the sport, but two, it wasn't overly a young man's sport (or F1 wasn't) for another good ten years or so.
Richard makes a great point here. It was similar in the U.S., as most did not make their debuts at Indianapolis, or in Championship racing, until they were nearing - or past - their 30th birthday.
I'll add Frank Burany as a racer that lived to 100. He never made the field at Indianapolis, but did make two Championship starts, and raced midgets and stock cars for many years.
I believe there are two drivers still alive that made starts in the Indianapolis 500 in the 1950s, and there are 6 U.S. Championship race winners from the 1960s still with us.
#24
Posted 24 July 2022 - 17:32
Paul Pietsch
Louis Gerard
Also Ernst Henne (101), Ciro Basadonna (103) and Manoel de Oliveira (106).
#25
Posted 24 July 2022 - 17:47
In this thread of mine at the moment there are 36 deceased people (of course not all of them drivers, let alone GP winners) who reached 100 years and more when they passed away:
Mariano de la Fuente 1885 - 1986
Reeves Dutton 1887 - 1988
Louis Gérard 1899 - 2000
Edgar Kehoe 1903 - 2004
Ernst Henne 1904 - 2005
Ciro Basadonna 1906 - 2009
Pierre Louis-Dreyfus 1908 - 2011
Manoel de Oliveira 1908 - 2015
Yutaka Katayama 1909 - 2015
Tom Clarke 1911 - 2015
Bill Milliken 1911 - 2012
Paul Pietsch 1911 - 2012
Eduard von Falz-Fein 1912 - 2018
Louisette Texier 1913 - 2021
Jean Panhard 1913 - 2014
Laura Lipari 1914 - 2018
Orlando Lizzi 1914 - 2018
Guido Scagliarini 1914 - 2017
Frank Burany 1915 - 2016
Gilberte Stempert née Contamine 1915 - 2019
Doug Lawrence 1916 - 2016
Ron Easton 1916 - 2018
Níkos Chrissikopoulos c.1917 - 2017
Bob Donker 1917 - 2017
Otto Linton 1917 - 2018
Dave Sullivan 1917 - 2021
Giovanni Alberti 1917 - 2019
Dorothy Caldwell 1918 - 2021
Neal Charge 1918 - 2020
Marin Dumitrescu 1919 - 2021
Renée Guillon née Wagner 1919 - 2019
Vicki Wood 1919 - 2020
Wayne Adams 1919 - 2021
Gody Naef 1919 - 2019
Bill Snyder 1919 - 2020
Bob Fletcher 1920 - 2020
EDITED in order to include Marin Dumitrescu
Edited by ReWind, 31 October 2022 - 18:25.
#26
Posted 24 July 2022 - 18:48
I had missed your thread ReWind, great work that
I guess Louisette Texier is the Jeanne Calment of racing drivers then !
Louis Gérard came a few months short of becoming the first driver to live in three different centuries. Maybe one of the drivers active today will eventually achieve that in 79 years.
#27
Posted 27 July 2022 - 00:20
Hi all ,
Not being sure if he qualifies by Motorcycle racer Jim Davis a member of the AMA Hall Of Fame was born March 23 1896 and Died Feb 5 2000 at 103 .
So does he qualify as a 3 century racer?
Plus on another thread Robert Hill AMA national champ in 1951 & 1952 and the 1954 Daytona 200 winner Turned 100 early in July 2022
Paul
Edited by Lemnpiper, 27 July 2022 - 00:21.
#28
Posted 27 July 2022 - 05:47
Interesting question! McAlpine was competing in hillclimbs in the 1940s, Milhoux was Moto Cross of Nations champion in 1948.
Glad to hear Richard that you spoke to Rhodes and he is well! David Piper was at Goodwood a month ago, he also seemed fine. I'm not absolutely sure Milhoux and Ashdown are still with us but certainly hope so, I haven't heard of them for a few years, which of course doesn't mean anything wrong.
For updates on Andre Milhoux, you could try contacting his son(?) at https://www.facebook.com/milhoux
Email address and website here, but neither appear to be active: https://www.facebook.com/MilhouxMR/
#29
Posted 31 October 2022 - 18:27
I just learned that Romanian driver Marin Dumitrescu died 18 months ago at the age of 102 years.
Therefore I edited my posting from 24 July 2022.