
Hugh Hamilton
#1
Posted 25 August 2006 - 19:35
Let me start with my source. My info is coming from the article "Why Hugh Hamilton was given a state funeral in Berne" by Sammy Hamill, published in the Northern Ireland Motor Racing Year 1981/1982 on pp. 43-49. Hamill is also the editor of this yearbook published in Belfast; the original research on the Hamilton, however, was done by Mike Wylie.
In short: his full name was Hugh Caulfield Hamillton, and he was born in Omagh, Tyrone on July 18, 1905. His mother was English but his father, Claude C. Hamilton was a solicitor, and secretary of the Tyrone County Council. It was a well established family with his uncle also a solicitor in Aughnacloy and his grandfather rector in nearby Sixmilecross.
Given this background, the pending question of his nationality, I would think, is solved - surely an Irishman, he was definitely "British" in the Imperial sense ...
His racing activities are well recorded, so I will leave these out in this post. His death is a different matter: As it is known, Hugh suffered a very serious accident in the Masaryk Okruh on September 17, 1933. According to the Hamill article, he was racing an MG Midget in order to promote bussiness for the recently opened Prague MG dealership. Hugh suffered three broken ribs and severe internal injuries. It was several days before he was removed from the danger list and he was later taken to England for further treatment. He then went to India to reconvalesce on his brother Arthur's tea plantation.
For the 1934 season Hamilton was back in Britain, and shortly later at the Continent - there is no need here to give details of this. In August 1934 Hugh went to Switzerland to race with Whitney Straight's team at the Berne circuit in the scheduled Voiturette race and also the Grand Prix proper. In the junior race, his car suffered from chronic misfire and he had to retire. Then came the Grand Prix race, his last race. Hans Stuck won comfortably but on the last lap Hugh crashed. He was dead when the rescue teams reached him, killed it was thought by the head-on collision with a tree.
Later the post mortem discovered, although it was not revealed for a long time, that his heart had stopped before the crash. Hugh Hamilton died BEFORE the crash. It is believed the lung and heart injuries he had sustained a year earlier in Czechoslovakia may have have played a part.
Hugh Caulfield Hamilton died on August 26, 1934. His body lay "in state" for two day; he was buried at Berne after a funeral arranged by the British Consul and his buddy Dick Seaman.
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#2
Posted 25 August 2006 - 20:40

The British/Irish question is always a vexing one - ultimately it would really depend on whether he opted for an Irish Free State passport or retained a British one. I'd call him Anglo-Irish, but that's really fudging it.
Thanks for the post-mortem information: it's not something I'd come across before. Very interesting.
#3
Posted 25 August 2006 - 21:21
DCN
#4
Posted 25 August 2006 - 21:36
#5
Posted 25 August 2006 - 21:53

#6
Posted 25 August 2006 - 22:06
Originally posted by Vitesse2
Er, Doug, far be it from me and all that ..... but you're mixing the two crashes. The rain cape problem was at Brno in 1933 - the loss of vision meant that his car left the road and rolled several times. He certainly hit a tree at Bern though. There's a picture of the remains of the Maserati in Cimarosti's Swiss GP book - a sad and sorry mess.
Oh.

DCN
#7
Posted 25 August 2006 - 22:21
#8
Posted 26 August 2006 - 09:06
Duh! Re-reading this I realised that if he was born in County Tyrone that makes him an Ulsterman, so ignore my comment about the Free State.Originally posted by Vitesse2
The British/Irish question is always a vexing one - ultimately it would really depend on whether he opted for an Irish Free State passport or retained a British one. I'd call him Anglo-Irish, but that's really fudging it.

#9
Posted 26 August 2006 - 09:28
Ho hum just tittle tattle.
Mike Wylie's article on Hugh Hamilton was a great piece of research at the time in 1972, and he even tracked down and spoke with his mother, born in 1880.
#10
Posted 26 August 2006 - 09:42
Not at all ... it all goes to confirm what others - who might not have known him - have written about 'Hammy'. Most describe him as "popular", but that can sometimes be damning with faint praise! Personal testimony is always the best source ;)Originally posted by Squire Straker
Ho hum just tittle tattle.
#11
Posted 27 August 2006 - 16:12
Just short of the distance board of 6 KM, Hamilton arrived at a speed far above 150 km/h, when it was clearly visible that the left front wheel had lost its air and had become flat. Then the car changed into a zigzag course, while the driver tried to correct with the steering. He could not prevent that the momentum of car carried it from the course, when a 7-8 inch thick fir tree was broken off at its foot, after which the car rushed on a further 20 m where it was stopped by a mighty tree at which the car literally disintegrated. So, the front axle with both wheels but without left tire rested a few meter away. The radiator was completely pushed in and like the rest of the body pushed towards the back, the seat and steering wheel severely bent. At this heavy impact the driver received chest contusions and inner injuries, which must have resulted in his immediate death.
This showed clearly that Hamilton encountered a tire failure when he lost control of the car at high speed. This accident involved also a spectator who seriously injured was brought to the Inselspital.
The funeral for Hugh Caufield Hamilton, born 1905 in Omagh, England, was held in Bern. Present from his family were his mother, stepfather and his fiancée.
#12
Posted 27 August 2006 - 18:52
Vitesse and Doug - the question of his nationality and the raindress seems to have been settled: British and the raindress a possible reason for the 1933 Brno accident.
Hugo - I didn't mention it, but the Hamill article also says that the German press reported Hamilton dead after the 1933 accident.
Straker - very interesting to hear about Wylie's researches in the early 1970s . Where any results of it published at the time? Where? Or why do you know about them?
Hans - surely a very detailled description of the Berne accident. However, the Hamill article stresses the pointthat the results of the post mortem were made public only much later? Any mention of it in the Swiss mags?
Again, many thanks for the responses!!!
#13
Posted 27 August 2006 - 20:39
found nothing yet.Originally posted by O Volante
...the results of the post mortem were made public only much later? Any mention of it in the Swiss mags?...
#14
Posted 27 August 2006 - 22:42
Northern Ireland, not England.Originally posted by Hans Etzrodt
The funeral for Hugh Caufield Hamilton, born 1905 in Omagh, England,
#15
Posted 27 August 2006 - 23:15
#16
Posted 27 August 2006 - 23:17
Originally posted by Roger Clark
Northern Ireland, not England.
Ireland.
#17
Posted 27 August 2006 - 23:59
Without getting into the politics too much .....;)Originally posted by Geoff E
Ireland.
When Hamilton was born, Omagh was within the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland. When he died, it was within the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland. Therefore he was, as I said, an Ulsterman (which is a whole other question, but we'll ignore that!) and, unless he opted for the Free State, a British subject. In addition, until 1937, what is now the Republic of Ireland was known as the Irish Free State. It had Dominion status within the Empire and still acknowledged the King as head of state. So, any citizen of the Irish Free State was as much a subject of the British Crown as an Australian, New Zealander, Canadian, South African or Newfoundlander.
#18
Posted 28 February 2016 - 16:49
This caught my eye:
American Killed at Berne
BERNE, Switzerland, Aug. 26 - (A. P.) - H. C. Hamilton, identified as an American automobile racing driver living in London, was killed today when his car left the track and hit a tree on the sixty-fifth lap of the Swiss Grand Prix. One spectator was injured in the crash.
The Detroit Free Press, Monday, August 27, 1934.
Throwing a spanner into the works?
#19
Posted 28 February 2016 - 21:54
This caught my eye:
The Detroit Free Press, Monday, August 27, 1934.
Throwing a spanner into the works?
I doubt it. Probably someone looking at an entry list with Whitney Straight's nationality listed as American and assuming that Hamilton was as well.
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#20
Posted 15 May 2020 - 12:06
It was actually the Swiss press that got this wrong. Both the Journal de Genève and the Gazette de Lausanne described Hamilton as American in their race reports.
Reports of some other events state that - rather than London - his home in 1934 was in Great Bookham in Surrey.
#21
Posted 31 October 2020 - 13:22
I don't know if this is of any interest but Cimarosti's photos of Hamilton's car after its accident (five in total plus two shots of his grave) are being offered for sale by Automobilia Ladenburg in its current online auction. The preview photos show a front wheel missing its tyre and a tyre alongside the wreckage. Although the negatives show it to be the right front of course they could have been reversed so could have been left front as described above by Hans. Lot 6347 to save wading through 15 pages of lots, although I would recommend doing so as there are tons of negs/photos on offer from the 30s Berne races. I have no connection with the auction house, just to be clear!
#22
Posted 12 November 2020 - 16:57
Hugh Caufield Hamilton's grave is still at the Bremgarten cemetry (grave #9007-00-0509) and taken care of by the city of Berne since 1994, sixty years after his death.
#23
Posted 12 November 2020 - 17:17
Edit: I think I’ve found the answer to my own question. His gravestone shows his middle name as Caulfield:

https://www.findagra...9/hugh-hamilton
#24
Posted 12 November 2020 - 17:34
Definitely Caulfield. Sources (via Ancestry) various Surrey electoral rolls, Ireland Civil Registration Births Index, Ireland Census 1911, English and Scottish Probate Indexes. Plus The Times, as above.
His address in Great Bookham is given in the probate documents and electoral rolls as 'Dolwaenydd', Great Bookham. This seems to have been his stepfather's home.
https://www.triple-m...e&TOPIC_ID=6903
#25
Posted 13 November 2020 - 08:56
Its nice that we remember him.
#26
Posted 02 December 2021 - 13:17
May I return to the question of Hamilton's post-mortem? This is now widely reported on a number of web sites, but does anyone know a primary source for it?
Thanks
Paul
#27
Posted 02 December 2021 - 13:55
May I return to the question of Hamilton's post-mortem? This is now widely reported on a number of web sites, but does anyone know a primary source for it?
Thanks
Paul
I tried digging into this a while ago, Paul. Nothing - as far as I can see - in the Swiss press. I couldn't even find a library which held a copy of the cited yearbook, which leads me to think it was some sort of private publication with a limited circulation. Maybe the RIAC's Guinness Segrave Library might have one?
#28
Posted 02 December 2021 - 14:20
The Swiss newspaper Bund, August 30th 1934
"At the request of the relatives of the racing driver Hugh Caulfield Hamilton, who died in an accident at the Grand Prix on Sunday, the funeral of this young representative of British motoring took place in Bern on Wednesday. The automobile club had also invited to the funeral service, which was scheduled for 1.30 p.m. in the chapel of the "Inselspital" (ed. hospital in Bern). The large mourning community and the extremely rich flower donations showed the sympathy of wide circles. Among the people present, we noticed, in addition to the parents of the victim, the representatives of the Swiss Automobile Club and the Organizing Committee, and also a member of the English legation and stable companion, Seaman, who was victorious in the small car race. After the English clergyman, Dr. Mende delivered the word of a last greeting from the A.C.S. and the "Royal Automobile Club of England" to the deceased sportsman and sketched a brief life picture of him who passed away too early. After this ceremony, the funeral procession set off for the Bremgarten cemetery and was overflown by a squadron called up for the funeral service by "Oberstkorps" commander Biberstein, who, wanted or unwanted, brought the last thundering salute from engines to the deceased. At the grave, Dr. Perlet on behalf of the Organizing Committee of the Grand Prix and described Hamilton's rise as a racing driver. This year the victim started for the first time in Switzerland in Montreux and then at Klausen. He was generally considered to be a very safe driver, which makes the tragic racing fate that befell him all the more sad for those who knew him as an extremely amiable person. Not far from where he had to sacrifice his young life for his beloved sport, he now lies in peaceful earth."
Edited by Arjan de Roos, 02 December 2021 - 14:24.
#29
Posted 02 December 2021 - 14:22
Same newspaper, August 29th 1934
#30
Posted 02 December 2021 - 15:24
I tried digging into this a while ago, Paul. Nothing - as far as I can see - in the Swiss press. I couldn't even find a library which held a copy of the cited yearbook, which leads me to think it was some sort of private publication with a limited circulation. Maybe the RIAC's Guinness Segrave Library might have one?
Always nice to learn about a new source, Vitesse, and if you don't ask you don't get, so I will give that a go, thanks.
I have a copy of a five page article by Michael Wylie, 'The Wild Man of Ards', published in a magazine called Wheels. I can't see a date, but the covering letter which I didn't copy appears to be from late 1978. It doesn't mention the post-mortem.
#31
Posted 02 December 2021 - 15:25
The Swiss newspaper Bund, August 30th 1934
"At the request of the relatives of the racing driver Hugh Caulfield Hamilton, who died in an accident at the Grand Prix on Sunday, the funeral of this young representative of British motoring took place in Bern on Wednesday. The automobile club had also invited to the funeral service, which was scheduled for 1.30 p.m. in the chapel of the "Inselspital" (ed. hospital in Bern). The large mourning community and the extremely rich flower donations showed the sympathy of wide circles. Among the people present, we noticed, in addition to the parents of the victim, the representatives of the Swiss Automobile Club and the Organizing Committee, and also a member of the English legation and stable companion, Seaman, who was victorious in the small car race. After the English clergyman, Dr. Mende delivered the word of a last greeting from the A.C.S. and the "Royal Automobile Club of England" to the deceased sportsman and sketched a brief life picture of him who passed away too early. After this ceremony, the funeral procession set off for the Bremgarten cemetery and was overflown by a squadron called up for the funeral service by "Oberstkorps" commander Biberstein, who, wanted or unwanted, brought the last thundering salute from engines to the deceased. At the grave, Dr. Perlet on behalf of the Organizing Committee of the Grand Prix and described Hamilton's rise as a racing driver. This year the victim started for the first time in Switzerland in Montreux and then at Klausen. He was generally considered to be a very safe driver, which makes the tragic racing fate that befell him all the more sad for those who knew him as an extremely amiable person. Not far from where he had to sacrifice his young life for his beloved sport, he now lies in peaceful earth."
Thanks Arjan, very powerful.
#32
Posted 08 December 2021 - 16:37
An update on this. Wolfgang (O Volante) has kindly emailed me a scan of Sammy Hamill's article on Hugh Hamilton. It's topped and tailed with the post-mortem story. I've reached out to Mr Hamill on twitter and I hope to ascertain where he picked it up from.
And thanks, too, to Vitesse. The RIAC have got in touch and are digging out their material on Hammy.
In the meantime, are there any medics among us? How can a post-mortem detect heart failure seconds before catastrophic injury?
Thanks
Paul
Edited by P0wderf1nger, 08 December 2021 - 16:38.
#33
Posted 09 December 2021 - 06:55
Always nice to learn about a new source, Vitesse, and if you don't ask you don't get, so I will give that a go, thanks.
I have a copy of a five page article by Michael Wylie, 'The Wild Man of Ards', published in a magazine called Wheels. I can't see a date, but the covering letter which I didn't copy appears to be from late 1978. It doesn't mention the post-mortem.
#34
Posted 09 December 2021 - 06:57
#35
Posted 09 December 2021 - 12:03
That's good of you, Roryswood, as I can be more precise when including it in the bibliography.
I regret if I've misled anyone over the date. Wylie was in correspondence with Whitney In Nov 78, and sent him a copy of the article which now resides in the Beaulieu archives. I accept that doesn't necessarily mean the article was written then.
Anyway, thanks.
Paul
#36
Posted 09 December 2021 - 18:59
Glad to see this topic active once again.
John.
#37
Posted 09 December 2021 - 20:55
Can anyone help find "Why Hugh Hamilton was given a state funeral in Berne" by Sammy Hamill, published in the Northern Ireland Motor Racing Year 1981/1982? I have tried for years to find a copy. Hamilton was the original owner of my car, a 1932 MG J3. The second owner, a British-born German countess, told me many stories of him. She also knew Hamilton's fiancée, who is namelessly mentioned only once in press reports of his funeral.
Glad to see this topic active once again.
John.
Hi John
I'd be happy to help you. Wolfgang, the man who started this thread, emailed me a copy only yesterday. Barring the post-mortem story, it's largely based on a much more detailed article by Michael Wylie, which I can also send you.
Please send me a private message with your email address and I'll get both articles across to you.
Best wishes
Paul
#38
Posted 12 March 2022 - 13:16
An update on this.
I’m told that a 1930s pathologist could certainly have found evidence of a blocked artery, several signs of poor ‘heart health’ or an aortic rupture, and concluded that Hammy’s death caused the accident, as opposed to being caused by it.
Sadly, neither the State Archives nor the Public Prosecutor's Office of the Canton of Bern have a copy of the post mortem.
Sammy Hamill writes that the Maserati ‘appeared to make no attempt to follow the fast sweeping curve. It charged straight across the short grass verge and crashed heavily into a stout tree.’
Whereas Louis Chiron, who was following and witnessed the accident, told Dick Seaman that it happened on a ‘lumpy’ bend where he himself had nearly lost it several times: ‘Hammy got a wheel in the loose stuff on the right-side of the road, the car skidded and hit the trees on the other side of the road.’
That’s from a letter Seaman wrote to Whitney Straight from Bern, contained in Whitney’s papers at Beaulieu. Richard Williams used it in his excellent A Race With Love and Death, and when John Watson read the book and came across Hammy for the first time, Sammy Hamill wrote a piece in the Belfast Telegraph, repeating the claim about Hammy’s heart.
I’ve sent him messages via Facebook and Twitter, and twice asked the sports desk of the Belfast Telegraph to forward emails to him, though I am aware he recently retired from the paper. He may, of course, be completely unaware I’m trying to reach him.
If anyone knows him, could you put me in touch with him?
Thanks, Paul
Edited by P0wderf1nger, 12 March 2022 - 13:18.