Extract from the sale catalogue published by
Bonhams of London
Just study the above list of works racing
team drivers, and the subsequent ledger of owners and drivers,
and we hope that you as a potential owner of this wonderfully
evocative and historically most important racing car will
instantly appreciate how much its career has been woven into
the very fabric of British and European road racing lore.
During its 74 year life this prototype ERA ‘R1A’ has been
celebrated as the first of the iconic English Racing
Automobiles – the classical ‘Old English Upright’ ERA.
English Racing Automobiles Limited came into being on November
6, 1933, when the business was first registered at Companies
House in London. It had been created to manufacture and
campaign a team of single-seater racing cars capable of
upholding British prestige in Continental European road
racing. By modern standards the reason might seem a little
overblown, but in the early 1930s the combination of extreme
patriotism and intense frustration had fired the imagination
of a wealthy British racing enthusiast who had been unable to
buy a competitive British car in which to go motor racing
Internationally.
His name was Humphrey Cook. He had been competing at amateur
level since before the First World War when he had first
driven a 10.6-litre Isotta-Fraschini at Brooklands. He had
inherited a fortune at the age of just 12 when his father had
died, leaving him the thriving wholesale drapery firm of Cook
Son & Co, of St Paul’s Churchyard, London.
Burly, shy and an intensely private man, Humphrey Cook became
a confirmed motor racing enthusiast. He became a prominent
competitor in sprint and hill climb events, notably with his
TT Vauxhall ‘Rouge et Noir 2’, and in that category during the
1920s into the early ‘30s his main rival in British events was
Raymond Mays, the extrovert Bugatti-driving son of an upper
middle-class businessman from Bourne, in rural Lincolnshire.
While the cost of aspiring to contemporary Grand Prix class
racing was prohibitive, the subsidiary or ‘schoolroom’ class
of 1500cc supercharged ‘Voiturette’ racing – the Formula 2 or
GP2 category of the period - seemed within reach. Humphrey
Cook had toyed with the idea of creating his own racing car
factory and team for several years, until in 1933 he was
immensely impressed by the sheer power and speed of Raymond
Mays’s latest hill climb mount – ‘The White Riley’ – tuned and
developed by his engineer friend Peter Berthon, working with
Austin racing designer Tom Murray Jamieson and design
draughtsman Aubrey Barratt.
‘The White Riley’ shone in its class through 1933, and it was
at the end of that year that Humphrey Cook offered to back its
creators and driver in founding the first British company ever
to manufacture pure-bred centreline single-seat racing cars in
series for customer sale. In this aim, ERA was the first to
follow the established lead of Harry Miller in the USA, and of
the Maserati brothers in Italy. What a level to aspire to!
To finalise the prototype English Racing Automobile – or ERA –
in time for the 1934 racing season required immense effort in
a very brief period. The great Reid A. Railton of Brooklands-based
racing specialists Thomson & Taylor Ltd agreed to design a
thoroughbred open-wheeled single-seat racing chassis around
the 6-cylinder essentially ‘White Riley’-based engine.
Railton’s assistant Ralph Beauchamp actually penned the first
design drawing on October 23, 1933, before the new ERA company
had been formalized. The drawing is identified as the ‘R.M.
Project’ – for ‘Raymond Mays’.
Meanwhile Mays oversaw conversion of an old Maltings building
adjoining his home at Eastgate House, Bourne, while a new
purpose-built factory was erected in his former orchard there.
Staff members were engaged, and on December 23, 1933, five
sets of chassis side members were ordered by Thomson & Taylor
from specialist manufacturer John Thompson. Elegant H-section
front axles were forged by Hadfield’s together with steering
components while final machining was undertaken by T&T’s at
Brooklands. Both Reid Railton and Raymond Mays set extremely
demanding standards of workmanship and finish. The brand-new
chassis members were delivered to T&T on February 16, 1934,
and in April the first rolling chassis – then numbered just
‘R1’ but effectively that now offered here as ‘R1A’ – was
ready with Armstrong-Siddeley 4-speed pre-selector gearbox
installed but less engine. It was immediately transported for
completion to the new factory in Bourne.
The panel-beating brothers George and Jack Gray hand-fashioned
the new car’s slipper bodywork there, to a design credited to
a Mr Piercy who had previously designed the bodywork for
Malcolm Campbell’s ‘Bluebird’ record breaker. Freddie
Gordon-Crosby – artist to ‘The Autocar’ – was also involved,
designing perhaps the radiator cowl and certainly ‘R1’s first
badge, which combined the initials ‘ERA’ with a rising sun
motif – perhaps signifying the dawn of a new ERA?
The further-developed 6-cylinder Riley engine with its
custom-made Murray Jamieson 100mm Roots-type supercharger was
tested at Riley’s Coventry factory before being mated with
this prototype chassis. Mays and Cook had planned to enter
both the 1500cc ‘R1’ and an 1100cc sister car for themselves
to drive in the Isle of Man races in May that year, but it
rapidly became evident that only ‘R1’ would be available in
time. On Tuesday, May 22, this ERA was unveiled to the public
at Brooklands Motor Course near Weybridge in Surrey.
Unsuspected by its audience, ‘R1’s new engine ran a bearing as
Mays demonstrated it…
Within a week the car was repaired and running at Douglas,
Isle of Man. The engine performed well, but the new car
handled appallingly badly. Reid Railton was summoned from T&T
with a range of replacement road springs. But none suited, and
the car was retrieved amidst considerable embarrassment to
Brooklands. On June 23 ‘R1’ was finally ready for its first
race, the 300-mile British Empire Trophy there. An oil pipe
broke while the engine was being warmed-up immediately before
the start. Time was lost replacing it, followed by another 20
minutes delay due to a puncture and a hole in the mandatory
Brooklands silencer. But Mays and Cook still co-drove their
new car to the finish.
This car ‘R1’ was then loaded into the team’s ERA-lettered
Leyland van and shipped to the Dieppe Grand Prix in France on
July 22, 1934. Its vivid acceleration matched that of the full
Grand Prix cars, but its handling still demanded improvement.
Mays’ race ended in rocker failure. At Dieppe ‘R1’ wore a new
badge, copied from that designed by Mays’ friend
Squadron-Leader ‘Pingo’ Lester for the Leyland van – now
famous as the interlinked circles with E R A lettering. Not
long after Dieppe the second ERA – then numbered ‘R2’ – was
completed as an 1100cc class contender. In August at
Brooklands Humphrey Cook actually scored his new marque’s
maiden race win in ‘R2’ – winning the 6-mile Second Esher
Handicap event. Mays then finished second to Aubrey Esson-Scott’s
Bugatti driving ‘R1’ in the Second Esher Mountain Handicap. He
also broke the Brooklands Mountain circuit lap record for
Class F (1500cc) cars leaving it at 76.31mph. Thus encouraged,
Mays and Cook then attacked the International standing-start
kilometre and mile records at Brooklands on August 28 – and
both were successful, Mays in ‘R1’ now offered here raising
the Class F records to 85.35 and 96.08mph.
A third ERA – chassis ‘R3’ – became May’s sprint and
hill-climb contender, powered by an enlarged 2-litre version
of the 6-cylinder Riley-based engine. And then at Donington
Park on October 6, 1934, Raymond Mays scored ‘R1’s first race
victory, winning the 100-mile Nuffield Trophy event in
arduously wet conditions. Not only was this to become the
famous marque’s first-ever victory in a long-distance event,
it also proved that the basic ERA design had all the stamina,
reliability and pace its creators had expected of it.
The magazine ‘The Light Car’ then carried an announcement in
its November 2 issue that “a limited number of E.R.A. cars is
to be made available to owners who know how to handle a car of
this kind and will race it”. Provisional prices were quoted as
£1,500 for an 1100cc version, £1,700 for a 1500 and £1,850 for
a 2-litre. The first customer to step up to the plate was
South African newcomer Pat Fairfield, closely followed by
Richard John Beattie-Seaman – the legendary Dick Seaman – who
would become the greatest British driver of the era, shine in
his new ERA, eventually join the Mercedes-Benz factory team
and win the 1938 German Grand Prix for them.
For 1936 the original ERA chassis design was modified by
Thomson & Taylor. The forward pair of rear spring mountings
were lowered and reinforced and the chassis frame was
stiffened by addition of diagonal cross-bracing beneath the
driver’s seat, and a revised cross-member design, permitting
the seat to be mounted lower. Ten-leaf rear springs, bound
with twine, replaced the nine-leaf type fitted after ‘R1’s
abortive Isle of Man debut. The steering box mounting was
stiffened and the gearbox, radiator and fuel tankage improved.
Humphrey Cook in ‘R1’ commenced ERA’s 1935 season with victory
in the 5-lap New Haw Mountain Handicap race at Brooklands’
opening meeting of the season on March 16, and then won the
1500cc class in the Inter-Varsity Speed Trials at Syston Park,
Grantham, on March 23. On April 13 at Donington Park Pat
Fairfield made his debut in his new ERA ‘R4’ while Dick Seaman
– impatient that the car he had ordered was not yet ready –
was provided with ‘R1’ to drive, finishing 2nd in a 10-lap,
23-mile, handicap race.
Back at Brooklands on April 22, Humphrey Cook took another 2nd
place for ‘R1’ in a 5-lap Mountain circuit race. He drove this
car again in the major 261-mile JCC International Trophy at
Brooklands on May 6, finishing 12th after being troubled by
grabbing brakes. Then at the important Shelsley Walsh
hill-climb on May 18, Raymond Mays not only set a fantastic
FTD of 39.6secs in 2-litre ERA ‘R3’ he also set 2nd fastest
time of 39.8secs in the 1.5-litre ‘R1’.
New customer Pat Fairfield then won the 202-mile Mannin Beg
race at Douglas, Isle of Man, in his works-run 1100cc customer
car ‘R4’, although Cook was forced to retire ‘R1’ after 30
laps of the 1500cc Mannin Moar race there after scavenge pump
failure. Dick Seaman’s new customer car was finally completed
upon the team’s return from the Isle of Man. It was then
decided to classify that car ‘R1B’ as the first of the T&T
re-designed ‘B-Type’ models, whereupon the four earlier
machines were retrospectively entitled ‘A-Type’. It was at
this stage that the additional suffix letter ‘A’ was added to
their chassis number stampings on the front and rear
dumb-irons. Thus this car offered here became ‘R1A’ and its
three sisters ‘R2A’, ‘R3A’ and ‘R4A’. The Dick Seaman car
emerged as ‘R1B’ – and it is NOT to be confused with ‘R1A’.
The A-Type cars were – as time passed – much improved in line
with B-Type modifications and experience, and would prove
equally competitive, while one – Mays’s ‘R4A’ was developed
through subsequent C-Type spec to become the unique ERA D-Type
‘R4D’..
When the works team took the battle to the strongest
International opposition in the 1500cc Eifel Rennen at the
Nurburgring, Germany, on June 16, 1935, Tim Rose-Richards
drove ‘R1A’ home into a fine 3rd place, while Mays actually
won outright in ‘R3A’, Seaman placed 4th in ‘R1B’ and Cook
finished 5th in ‘R2A’.
Back home, ‘The Autocar’ enthused “What a thrill to see the
green of England leading the red of Italy, the blue of France,
and the white of Germany….!”. This was what Cook and Mays had
created English Racing Automobiles to achieve. Mays would
later recall “When I realised that all four ERAs had finished
in the first five places my joy was unbounded!”.
The German Prinz zu Leiningen then co-drove ‘R1A’ in the
300-mile British Empire Trophy race at Brooklands on July 6,
1935, sharing it with Oliver Bertram to finish 12th. The
Siamese Prince ‘Bira’ received the latest new ERA – chassis
‘R2B’ – as a 21st birthday present from his cousin, guardian
and mentor Prince Chula. He would achieve enormous success
with it and two sister ERAs which were later added to their
‘White Mouse Stable’ team.
Raymond Mays drove ‘R1A’ again at Brooklands on August 5,
finishing 2nd in the Siam Trophy race, before Prinz zu
Leiningen took over for the Prix de Berne on the demanding
Bremgarten circuit in Switzerland, misfiring his way home
again in 12th place. Mays then drove the car in the Freiburg
mountain climb, setting 3rd FTD while customer Seaman beat him
into second place.
‘Motor Sport’ magazine reported of ERA: “The most remarkable
feature…has been the sudden rise to supremacy of a British
racing car in the 1½-litre class. Continental organisers are
ordering new gramophone records of the British National Anthem
to play at the end of their races, for the ERA is regarded as
unbeatable. Maserati and Bugatti – names to conjure with –
have been subdued”.
Shelsley Walsh on September 28 proved another Raymond Mays
benefit, FTD overall in his 2-litre ‘R4B’ and 2nd FTD in
1500cc ‘R1A’. Seven firm orders were received for 1500cc
Voiturette-class ERAs for the 1936 season. ‘R1A’ was retained
by the works team but competed only twice; once at Brooklands
on May 2 when it was entrusted to the dazzlingly pretty and
extremely capable Mrs Kay Petre in the JCC International
Trophy race – from which it retired – after which it was
shipped to Long Island, New York, for the Vanderbilt Cup race
on October 6 – in which it was driven by the Honourable Brian
Lewis, another outstanding British racing driver of the
period, and the future Lord Essendon. But ‘R1A’ was not on
good form and he finished 15th.
ERA was by this time a much-admired – and feared – force in
International motor racing at Voiturette level, just one step
below full Grand Prix competition. Norwegian Alfa Romeo driver
Eugen Bjornstad first saw an ERA when he raced against Ian
Connell’s ‘R6B’ in the 1937 Swedish Winter GP on Lake Flaten,
Stockholm, that February. He asked Connell to buy him such a
car, and the Englishman negotiated purchase of ‘R1A’ on
Bjornstad’s behalf. Fellow owner/driver Reggie Tongue recalled
Bjornstad as “a most dangerous but very pleasant driver. He
did three laps with his shock absorbers slacked right off and
went faster than anyone. Two classic statements of his are ‘I
always have 7,000 revs, no more, no less’ and ‘Every race I
run off the road, once, no more’…”. These ERA owners –
whatever their true individual driving capability – was a
sporting gentleman, and the ERAs had become very much “the
motor racing gentleman’s weapon of choice”.
Eugen Bjornstad made his debut in ‘R1A’ in the major Turin
Vetturetta race in Italy on April 18, 1937, and he won. He
humbled Rene Dreyfus’s works Maserati on Italian home soil.
Tongue recalled watching Bjornstad open-mouthed as he drove
“shooting from side to side of the road, cannoning off
everything”. But ‘R1A’ became the winner of this major
International-Formula road race.
Bjornstad and his now red-painted ‘R1A’ then went on to finish
3rd in both the Naples Vetturetta race and in the
unpronounceable Elaintarharnajo-Djurgaardsloppet event in
Helsinki’s Djurgaard Park, Finland. He also finished 7th in
the AVUSRennen Voiturette event in Berlin, Germany.
He then sold ‘R1A’ to British enthusiast W.E. Humphries in
1938 and the car was not raced again until after World War 2.
It had in fact been acquired by John Heath and George
Abecassis in 1942, and emerged as one of their joint stable of
racing cars to be campaigned upon the return of peace in 1946,
under the banner of their joint business – HW Motors Limited
of Walton-on-Thames, Surrey. Their company’s initials would
become famous as HWM.
John Heath set 3rd fastest time in this car in the VSCC Speed
Trial at Elstree on April 22, 1946, and Ken Hawkes then took
3rd in class with it at Finchampstead on September 15 that
year. The car was then re-sold by Heath and Abecassis to the
man who would prove himself Britain’s leading racing driver of
the immediate postwar period, Derbyshire haulier-cum-farmer
Reg Parnell. He drove ‘R1A’ in competition three times,
winning the 1947 Swedish Winter GP at Rommehed and the
follow-up Lake Vallentuna event – both in snow and ice – and
setting FTD in the much more parochial Cofton Hackett Speed
Trial back home; three outings, three wins.
The car was then taken over by Parnell’s business associates,
the brothers Fred and Joe Ashmore, who ran ‘R1A’ eight times
through 1947 and accumulated 3rd in the Nice Grand Prix,
France, 4th in the Jersey Road Race, 5th at Marseilles and 7th
at Nimes. For this season’s racing the car had been modified
by the legendary mechanic ‘Wilkie’ Wilkinson who reduced
radiator and cockpit bulkhead height by some 2 inches,
lowering the bonnet and cutting-down the original body panels
to suit. He had also rebuilt the engine.
Fred Ashmore crashed the car at St Gaudens in France during
the Comminges GP, and after repair ‘R1A’ was then acquired by
another British owner/driver, David Hampshire, for 1948. He
won his class at Bo’ness hill-climb in Scotland, finished a
fine 2nd in the British Empire Trophy classic at Douglas, Isle
of Man, 3rd in the Goodwood Trophy race and 7th in the
Zandvoort GP in Holland.
He reappeared in this prototype ERA twice in 1949, placing
10th in the Dutch GP back at Zandvoort, before another of this
happy touring band of British motor racing and business
brothers, Joe Ashmore returned to ‘R1A’ driving duties through
1950 – competing in the car in Jersey and at Goodwood. David
Hampshire returned to ‘R1A’s driving seat in 1951, competing
at Gamston, Goodwood and Winfield – all British aerodrome
circuits – and at the Berwick, Lothian & Hawick Motor Club’s
Winfield meeting negotiations began which saw the car sold to
Edinburgh racing enthusiasts Alastair Birrell and Ron
Flockhart.
They would campaign ‘R1A’ between them through 1952, after
which Flockhart would go on to make his name in the ex-Raymond
Mays 2-litre works ERA ‘R4D’ and ultimately graduate into
Mays’s postwar Formula 1 BRM team handling the V16-cylinder
supercharged and 4-cylinder Grand Prix cars. He would also
become a Le Mans-winning star driver for the Ecurie Ecosse
Jaguar team.
Ron Flockhart’s best performances in ‘R1A’ included a class
win at Bo’ness hill-climb and a 2nd at Rest-and-be-Thankful,
while Birrell won a circuit race at Snetterton in 1952,
another in 1954, and a long string of second and third place
finishes in the progressive series of British Formule Libre
races which characterised the early 1950s.
By 1955 these much-loved ‘Old English Upright’ ERAs were
recognised as obsolescent, and enthusiast amateur members of
the Vintage Sports Car Club (VSCC) came to regard them as
affordable, competitive at their level, and the most enormous
fun. In the December 16, 1955, issue of ‘Autosport’ magazine,
Alastair Birrell advertised ‘R1A’ for sale. The asking price
was £400. For 1956 it was bought by Bill Moss of Luton, who
almost immediately won a VSCC event in it at Silverstone.
Having fitted a ZF limited-slip differential, he then
advertised the car (for £600!) that June, and sold it to a Mr
Smith of Wellingborough. By 1958 old ‘R1A’ was being
advertised again for sale, the price now £495. It was
described as being ‘Fitted with Gerard B/C engine” – a
reference to the great post war ERA exponent Bob Gerard –
“…run in one club race since, spare engine, wheels and
trailer”.
After five months the price had been reduced to £395 and it
was acquired by one E. Hammersley. He did not appear publicly
in the car, but entered it for long-term owner A.G. ‘Sandy’
Murray’s first race in it, at VSCC Silverstone, July 25, 1959.
Mr Murray won immediately, and he would retain ownership of
this important Voiturette racing car from then well into the
1980s. As a leading light of the ERA Club, ‘Sandy’ Murray
began entering ‘R1A’ for leading historic car
restorer/preparer Tony Merrick from 1966 forward. In Mr
Merrick’s hands ‘R1A’ became a regular winner at VSCC and
historic racing car level, his record including multiple
victories at Curborough, Silverstone, Prescott, Doune and
elsewhere.
Messrs Murray and Merrick eventually restored the car to its
original successful works team specification, reversing many
of the modifications which had quite disfigured the car during
its long racing career. New bodywork was necessary as the
original had been cut down during ‘Wilkie’ Wilkinson’s
lowering work in 1947-48, and a new dash board was cast since
the original had also been cut down and drilled for extra
instruments during the same conversion. Original-style shock
absorbers were fitted and radius rods which had been added to
the rear axle were dispensed with in the cause of originality.
During this overall period, ‘R1A’ became a regular player on
the phenomenally active ERA scene in British historic racing.
In 1983 the car was acquired by Swiss enthusiast Jost Wildbolz
who maintained it as a regular runner within the historic
racing scene for the next ten years until 1998 when it was
acquired by American-in-England Mr Dean Butler. Driven by the
owner, Martin Walford, Julian Bronson and others, ‘R1A’
continued to see action, including a series of welcome
appearances in the much-admired Goodwood Revival Meeting, from
1998 forward.
This is by some margin one of the most historically
significant – yet still widely useable and potentially very
competitive – single-seater racing cars that we at Bonhams
have ever been asked to offer. It is the progenitor of one of
the motor racing world’s most charismatic pre-war marques, and
thence – by association – of the post war Formula 1 World
Championship-winning BRM (British Racing Motors) saga. Its
racing history includes not only ERA’s very first
long-distance race win (in the 1934 Nuffield Trophy at
Donington Park driven by Raymond Mays), but also maiden
victory in an International Voiturette race by first owner
ex-works Eugen Bjornstad (at Turin, Italy, in 1937). Its
frontline International racing career has then been followed
by more than 50 years of subsequent racing endeavour – almost
always in harness, consistently ‘on the scene’, an historic
motor racing fixture. In an era in which the terms ‘historic’
and ‘classic’ are perhaps over-used and too often exaggerated,
ERA ‘R1A’ offered here is self-evidently a very, very special
racing car indeed. And now it can be yours.
Offered without reserve. |