fbpx
Wikipedia

1900 Gordon Bennett Cup

The 1900 Gordon Bennett Cup, formally titled the I Coupe Internationale, was a motor race held on 14 June 1900, on public roads between Paris and Lyon in France. It was staged to decide the inaugural holder of the Gordon Bennett Cup, which was the first prize to be awarded for motorsport on an international level. The 568.66 km (353.35 mi) route started at Paris and headed south-west as far as Châteaudun. The route then took the competitors south-easterly, passing through Orléans, Nevers, and Roanne before reaching the finish at Lyon.

1900 Gordon Bennett Cup
Pre-1906 Grand Prix seasons
Race details
Date 14 June 1900
Official name I Coupe Internationale
Location Paris to Lyon, France
Course Public roads
Course length 568.66 km (353.35 miles)
Podium
First Panhard
Second Panhard

The race was won by Fernand Charron, who represented France and drove a car manufactured by Panhard. Léonce Girardot, also representing France on a Panhard, was the only other driver to finish. Five drivers had entered the race; three representing France, the maximum number any one country were permitted, one from Belgium, and one from the United States of America.

Background

Prior to 1900, automobile racing consisted of city-to-city races, organised by various national automobile clubs. The Gordon Bennett Cup was established by American millionaire James Gordon Bennett, Jr. with the intention of encouraging automobile industries internationally through sport. Bennett had moved to Paris in 1887 and came up with the idea of an international competition between representatives of national motoring clubs. Among the principles of the competition were that each country was limited to three entries, that the race to determine the winner of the cup would be between 550 and 650 kilometres and that the race would be held annually between 15 May and 15 August. Bennett commissioned a trophy, which he offered to the custody of the Automobile Club de France (ACF) who he also entrusted to draft the technical rules for the competition, and to arrange the inaugural event. The latter responsibility would then be bestowed on the motoring club whose representative won the previous year's race.

In April 1900, a race for motor-tricycles was held from Paris-Roubaix. It was marred by many incidents, including a collision between two competitors which left two spectators injured, one of whom was the wife of the Deputy for the Department of the Seine. Soon after, motor racing was banned within the Department of the Seine, which was then extended by the Ministry of the Interior to all of France. Any exception to the law was required to be made through the central government, who had the choice of whether to grant a permit to allow a race to go ahead.[1]

Despite rumours of building a purpose-built race track or moving the race to Italy, the race was eventually given permission to take place on public roads over the route between Paris and Lyons. However, the final decision on whether the race should take place was not made until the afternoon of 12 June, less than two days before it was due to start, as the ACF had to persuade local authorities to allow the race to travel through their area.[2]

Route

 

The Autocar magazine had suggested that the route should take the competitors in a straight-line, so as to minimize the chance of foreign entrants getting lost.[1] The initial route proposed by the ACF in January 1900 would take the competitors from Paris to Lyon by the most direct route, heading south through Étampes, Pithiviers, and Montargis before reaching Nevers and going on to Lyon. However, this proved too short a distance to be permitted under the regulations, and a diversion was added that saw the cars initially head south-west from Paris towards Chartres and to Châteaudun. From there, they'd turn to head south-easterly towards Orléans, passing through Gien and Briare before rejoining the originally planned route at Nevers. They would then proceed towards Moulins, Roanne, and l'Arbresle before reaching the finish at Lyons.[1] The total distance to be covered was 353.35 miles (568.66 km).[3]

The late confirmation of the race taking place meant that route was, in places at least, lacking in terms of both signposting and crowd control.[1] In addition, complaints were made that no map detailing the exact route was supplied to the competitors.[4] Livestock and animals encroaching onto the road would prove to be a considerable hazard during the race.

Entries and cars

Each country was limited to a maximum of three entries for the race. The cars were required to be manufactured in their entirety in the country they represented, including the tyres. The ACF racing regulations imposed a minimum weight limit—excluding fuel, tools, upholstery, wings, lights and light fittings—of 400 kilograms (880 pounds) upon each car. Each car also had to be occupied by two people at all times: a driver and a riding mechanic. In the event the combined weight of the two occupants was less than 120 kilograms (260 pounds), ballast was to be added to the car to make up the difference.[5]

The ACF decided to choose its three drivers by balloting their representatives, the result of which was that Rene de Knyff, Fernand Charron, and Léonce Girardot were chosen as the three French entries for the event. Accusations of bias were made, due to de Knyff being a director of Panhard, and Charron and Giradot both being in the business of selling Panhard cars. Nevertheless, the result of the ballot stood and the three would drive a Panhard, powered by a 5.3-litre (325 cu in) four-cylinder engine producing 24 brake horsepower (18 kW). The Belgian automobile club originally indicated they would also enter the maximum complement of three cars, however in the end only Camille Jenatzy was entered for the race. His car was listed as a Snoeck-Bolide, and was effectively a French-designed Lefebvre-Bolide car built under licence in Belgium by Etablissements Mathias Snoeck, in order to meet the requirement that all parts of the car be produced in the country that it represents.[6]

Germany were also due to compete in the race; Eugen Benz was entered in a car manufactured by his father Karl Benz.[7] It was powered by a two-cylinder engine which produced 15 bhp (11 kW). However, the entry was withdrawn shortly before the start, Eugen Benz citing the short notice given of the race taking place as his reason, although he had already travelled to Paris. The final entries came from the US, Alexander Winton and Anthony L. Riker who were to drive cars bearing Winton's name.[8] Although both arrived in Paris, only one car was designed as a racer, and Riker did not start the race.[9] Winton's car was underpowered compared to its competitors, with a one-cylinder 3.7-litre (226 cu in) engine producing 16 bhp (12 kW). Uniquely amongst the cars, the Winton featured tiller steering rather than a steering wheel.[10] The four nations were each allocated a colour, which their representatives' cars would be painted. These were blue for France, yellow for Belgium, white for Germany, and red for the USA.[9]

Race

Competitors gathered at the start line in Ville-d'Avray on the outskirts of Paris in the early hours of the morning of 14 June 1900. The race began at 3.14 am, at the drop of the starter's flag,[11] with all five cars setting off together. Over the first five miles (8.0 km) of the race, to Versailles, there was one minute between the leader Giradot and fifth-place Winton. Giradot continued to extend his lead, and by the time the competitors reached Limours, approximately 30 km into the race, Giradot had extended his lead to three minutes over Charron in second place, de Knyff was in third, Belgium's Jenatzy in fourth, and Winton, the American, was fifth.[12]

The next part of the race took the competitors from Chartres, through Bonneval to Châteaudun, a 44 km stretch of road that was largely straight. Unofficial timings yielded average speeds over this section, with the leader Giradot averaging 35.3 mph. Charron was the fastest, averaging 41.1 mph and Jenatzy averaged 36.7 mph. Top gear had failed on de Knyff's Panhard, and this slowed his speed down to an average of around 30 mph. However, Winton was by far the slowest of the five cars over this section, with an average speed of just 20 mph.[12]

From Châteaudun, the route headed south-easterly towards Orléans. Along this section, at Saint-Jean-de-la-Ruelle, Charron hit a gutter that ran across the road whilst travelling at speeds in excess of 50 mph, bending the back axle of his Panhard. Spectators warned the cars that followed of the hazard, by holding a green flag 30 yards in advance to give the cars time to slow down before reaching the danger.[13] Winton became the first driver to retire from the race, stopping at Orleans with a buckled wheel. The race order at Orléans, 173 km from the start, was Giradot leading by 17 minutes from Charron, with de Knyff third and a further 39 minutes behind, and Jenatzy fourth and three minutes further back.[13]

As Giradot was leaving Orléans, he swerved to avoid a horse that was in the road, and in doing so collided with a kerb stone, which damaged his Panhard's steering and broke one of the back wheels. The repairs to his back wheel took around 80 minutes, which meant that Charron assumed the race lead. de Knyff retired from the race at Glen, leaving two French cars and one Belgian car in the race.[13]

Charron and Giradot ran at a similar pace as they covered the 93 km distance between Gien and Nevers, the difference between the two over the section being just two minutes in Charron's favour. Charron gained slightly more of an advantage between Nevers and Moulins, completing the section in a time approximately four minutes faster than Giradot.[14] At Moulins, with 376 of the 569 km of the race completed, Jenatzy retired from the race, his car suffered from issues with its gears and ignition, and sustained damage after colliding with five or six dogs along the route.[15]

The gap between Charron and Giradot, now the only two drivers left in the race, stayed around an hour-and-a-half for most of the remainder of the race. 12 km from the finish in Lyons, a St. Bernard dog ran into the road in front of Charron's Panhard, which was travelling at nearly 100 km/h and the two collided. The body of the dog wedged itself between the steering gear and the springs of the Panhard, causing Charron to lose control and the car to veer off to the left.[13] It passed through two trees at the side of the road, fell into a ditch and then went through a field before rejoining the road, again narrowly avoiding more trees. Despite the excursion, the only major damage to the Panhard was that a water pump had fallen loose. Charron therefore continued with his riding mechanic, Fournier, holding the pump in place for the remaining 12 km to the finish in Lyons.[14]

Charron arrived at the finish control point, where a small crowd waited,[nb 1] at 12:23 pm, completing the race in nine hours and nine minutes, meaning he had averaged a speed of 38.6 mph. Giradot was the only other car to reach the finish, arriving at 2:00 pm having taken one hour, thirty-six minutes and twenty-three seconds longer than Charron to complete the course.[13]

Post-race

Charron's victory representing the ACF meant that France were the winners of the inaugural Gordon Bennett cup race, and the country would again host the contest the following year.

The race was not viewed as a successful event. The large gap between the only two cars to reach the end had made the finish an anticlimax. The limited number of entrants, that only two of them were from outside France and that the only two cars to finish were French also led to the race failing to make much of an impression internationally.[18] American periodical The Horseless Age wrote at the time "it is the impression (in the USA) that the race was very badly organized, that insufficient preparations had been made for it and that it must be looked upon as a failure".[15]

In a bid to address these concerns, the next two Gordon Bennett Cup races would be run in conjunction with another city-to-city event, which allowed the Gordon Bennett race to share resources with another race which didn't have limits on entry and hence had a much larger field of cars. The cup wouldn't be competed for in a standalone race again until the 1903 edition.

Classification

Pos Driver Constructor Time/Retired
1   Fernand Charron (FRA) Panhard 9:09:00
2   Léonce Girardot (FRA) Panhard 10:36:23
Ret   Camille Jenatzy (BEL) Snoeck-Bolide Accident
Ret   René de Knyff (FRA) Panhard Transmission
Ret   Alexander Winton (USA) Winton Wheel
DNS   Eugen Benz (GER) Benz Withdrew
DNS   Anthony L. Riker (USA) Winton Withdrew
Source:[3]

References

Notes
  1. ^ Sources range from a "mere dozen"[16] to "a hundred"[17] spectators waiting at the finish.
Footnotes
  1. ^ a b c d Beaulieu (1963), p.18
  2. ^ Beaulieu (1963), p.19
  3. ^ a b Beaulieu (1963), p.201
  4. ^ Beaulieu (1963), p.7
  5. ^ Beaulieu (1963), p 12
  6. ^ Beaulieu (1963), pp. 13-15
  7. ^ Rendall (1993), p. 52
  8. ^ "Another Automobile Run". The New York Times. 1900-03-25.
  9. ^ a b Beaulieu (1963), p 16
  10. ^ Beaulieu (1963), p. 15
  11. ^ "La Coupe Bennett", La Petit Parisien (in French), Paris, no. 8631, p. 3, 1900-06-15
  12. ^ a b Beaulieu (1963), p.20
  13. ^ a b c d e "More about the race". The Horseless Age. 6 (14): 22. 1900-07-04.
  14. ^ a b Beaulieu (1963), p. 21
  15. ^ a b P. M. Heldt (1900-07-04). "The Gordon Bennett International Cup Race". The Horseless Age. 6 (14): 14.
  16. ^ Smith (1980), p. 163
  17. ^ Beaulieu (1963), p. 22
  18. ^ "Autos Death to Dogs". Boston Evening Transcript: 24. 1900-07-14.
Bibliography
  • Douglas-Scott-Montagu, Edward John Barrington, 3rd Baron Montagu of Beaulieu (1963), The Gordon Bennett Races, London: Cassell & Company Ltd.
  • Rendall, Ivan (1991), The Power and the Glory: A Century of Motor Racing, London: BBC Books, ISBN 978-0-563-36093-3
  • Smith, Maurice (1980) [1979], The Car, London: Sundial Publications Ltd., ISBN 0-904230-86-4

1900, gordon, bennett, formally, titled, coupe, internationale, motor, race, held, june, 1900, public, roads, between, paris, lyon, france, staged, decide, inaugural, holder, gordon, bennett, which, first, prize, awarded, motorsport, international, level, rout. The 1900 Gordon Bennett Cup formally titled the I Coupe Internationale was a motor race held on 14 June 1900 on public roads between Paris and Lyon in France It was staged to decide the inaugural holder of the Gordon Bennett Cup which was the first prize to be awarded for motorsport on an international level The 568 66 km 353 35 mi route started at Paris and headed south west as far as Chateaudun The route then took the competitors south easterly passing through Orleans Nevers and Roanne before reaching the finish at Lyon 1900 Gordon Bennett CupPre 1906 Grand Prix seasonsRace detailsDate14 June 1900Official nameI Coupe InternationaleLocationParis to Lyon FranceCoursePublic roadsCourse length568 66 km 353 35 miles PodiumFirstFernand Charron FRA PanhardSecondLeonce Girardot FRA Panhard The race was won by Fernand Charron who represented France and drove a car manufactured by Panhard Leonce Girardot also representing France on a Panhard was the only other driver to finish Five drivers had entered the race three representing France the maximum number any one country were permitted one from Belgium and one from the United States of America Contents 1 Background 2 Route 3 Entries and cars 4 Race 5 Post race 6 Classification 7 ReferencesBackground EditPrior to 1900 automobile racing consisted of city to city races organised by various national automobile clubs The Gordon Bennett Cup was established by American millionaire James Gordon Bennett Jr with the intention of encouraging automobile industries internationally through sport Bennett had moved to Paris in 1887 and came up with the idea of an international competition between representatives of national motoring clubs Among the principles of the competition were that each country was limited to three entries that the race to determine the winner of the cup would be between 550 and 650 kilometres and that the race would be held annually between 15 May and 15 August Bennett commissioned a trophy which he offered to the custody of the Automobile Club de France ACF who he also entrusted to draft the technical rules for the competition and to arrange the inaugural event The latter responsibility would then be bestowed on the motoring club whose representative won the previous year s race In April 1900 a race for motor tricycles was held from Paris Roubaix It was marred by many incidents including a collision between two competitors which left two spectators injured one of whom was the wife of the Deputy for the Department of the Seine Soon after motor racing was banned within the Department of the Seine which was then extended by the Ministry of the Interior to all of France Any exception to the law was required to be made through the central government who had the choice of whether to grant a permit to allow a race to go ahead 1 Despite rumours of building a purpose built race track or moving the race to Italy the race was eventually given permission to take place on public roads over the route between Paris and Lyons However the final decision on whether the race should take place was not made until the afternoon of 12 June less than two days before it was due to start as the ACF had to persuade local authorities to allow the race to travel through their area 2 Route Edit The Autocar magazine had suggested that the route should take the competitors in a straight line so as to minimize the chance of foreign entrants getting lost 1 The initial route proposed by the ACF in January 1900 would take the competitors from Paris to Lyon by the most direct route heading south through Etampes Pithiviers and Montargis before reaching Nevers and going on to Lyon However this proved too short a distance to be permitted under the regulations and a diversion was added that saw the cars initially head south west from Paris towards Chartres and to Chateaudun From there they d turn to head south easterly towards Orleans passing through Gien and Briare before rejoining the originally planned route at Nevers They would then proceed towards Moulins Roanne and l Arbresle before reaching the finish at Lyons 1 The total distance to be covered was 353 35 miles 568 66 km 3 The late confirmation of the race taking place meant that route was in places at least lacking in terms of both signposting and crowd control 1 In addition complaints were made that no map detailing the exact route was supplied to the competitors 4 Livestock and animals encroaching onto the road would prove to be a considerable hazard during the race Entries and cars EditEach country was limited to a maximum of three entries for the race The cars were required to be manufactured in their entirety in the country they represented including the tyres The ACF racing regulations imposed a minimum weight limit excluding fuel tools upholstery wings lights and light fittings of 400 kilograms 880 pounds upon each car Each car also had to be occupied by two people at all times a driver and a riding mechanic In the event the combined weight of the two occupants was less than 120 kilograms 260 pounds ballast was to be added to the car to make up the difference 5 The ACF decided to choose its three drivers by balloting their representatives the result of which was that Rene de Knyff Fernand Charron and Leonce Girardot were chosen as the three French entries for the event Accusations of bias were made due to de Knyff being a director of Panhard and Charron and Giradot both being in the business of selling Panhard cars Nevertheless the result of the ballot stood and the three would drive a Panhard powered by a 5 3 litre 325 cu in four cylinder engine producing 24 brake horsepower 18 kW The Belgian automobile club originally indicated they would also enter the maximum complement of three cars however in the end only Camille Jenatzy was entered for the race His car was listed as a Snoeck Bolide and was effectively a French designed Lefebvre Bolide car built under licence in Belgium by Etablissements Mathias Snoeck in order to meet the requirement that all parts of the car be produced in the country that it represents 6 Germany were also due to compete in the race Eugen Benz was entered in a car manufactured by his father Karl Benz 7 It was powered by a two cylinder engine which produced 15 bhp 11 kW However the entry was withdrawn shortly before the start Eugen Benz citing the short notice given of the race taking place as his reason although he had already travelled to Paris The final entries came from the US Alexander Winton and Anthony L Riker who were to drive cars bearing Winton s name 8 Although both arrived in Paris only one car was designed as a racer and Riker did not start the race 9 Winton s car was underpowered compared to its competitors with a one cylinder 3 7 litre 226 cu in engine producing 16 bhp 12 kW Uniquely amongst the cars the Winton featured tiller steering rather than a steering wheel 10 The four nations were each allocated a colour which their representatives cars would be painted These were blue for France yellow for Belgium white for Germany and red for the USA 9 Race EditCompetitors gathered at the start line in Ville d Avray on the outskirts of Paris in the early hours of the morning of 14 June 1900 The race began at 3 14 am at the drop of the starter s flag 11 with all five cars setting off together Over the first five miles 8 0 km of the race to Versailles there was one minute between the leader Giradot and fifth place Winton Giradot continued to extend his lead and by the time the competitors reached Limours approximately 30 km into the race Giradot had extended his lead to three minutes over Charron in second place de Knyff was in third Belgium s Jenatzy in fourth and Winton the American was fifth 12 The next part of the race took the competitors from Chartres through Bonneval to Chateaudun a 44 km stretch of road that was largely straight Unofficial timings yielded average speeds over this section with the leader Giradot averaging 35 3 mph Charron was the fastest averaging 41 1 mph and Jenatzy averaged 36 7 mph Top gear had failed on de Knyff s Panhard and this slowed his speed down to an average of around 30 mph However Winton was by far the slowest of the five cars over this section with an average speed of just 20 mph 12 From Chateaudun the route headed south easterly towards Orleans Along this section at Saint Jean de la Ruelle Charron hit a gutter that ran across the road whilst travelling at speeds in excess of 50 mph bending the back axle of his Panhard Spectators warned the cars that followed of the hazard by holding a green flag 30 yards in advance to give the cars time to slow down before reaching the danger 13 Winton became the first driver to retire from the race stopping at Orleans with a buckled wheel The race order at Orleans 173 km from the start was Giradot leading by 17 minutes from Charron with de Knyff third and a further 39 minutes behind and Jenatzy fourth and three minutes further back 13 As Giradot was leaving Orleans he swerved to avoid a horse that was in the road and in doing so collided with a kerb stone which damaged his Panhard s steering and broke one of the back wheels The repairs to his back wheel took around 80 minutes which meant that Charron assumed the race lead de Knyff retired from the race at Glen leaving two French cars and one Belgian car in the race 13 Charron and Giradot ran at a similar pace as they covered the 93 km distance between Gien and Nevers the difference between the two over the section being just two minutes in Charron s favour Charron gained slightly more of an advantage between Nevers and Moulins completing the section in a time approximately four minutes faster than Giradot 14 At Moulins with 376 of the 569 km of the race completed Jenatzy retired from the race his car suffered from issues with its gears and ignition and sustained damage after colliding with five or six dogs along the route 15 The gap between Charron and Giradot now the only two drivers left in the race stayed around an hour and a half for most of the remainder of the race 12 km from the finish in Lyons a St Bernard dog ran into the road in front of Charron s Panhard which was travelling at nearly 100 km h and the two collided The body of the dog wedged itself between the steering gear and the springs of the Panhard causing Charron to lose control and the car to veer off to the left 13 It passed through two trees at the side of the road fell into a ditch and then went through a field before rejoining the road again narrowly avoiding more trees Despite the excursion the only major damage to the Panhard was that a water pump had fallen loose Charron therefore continued with his riding mechanic Fournier holding the pump in place for the remaining 12 km to the finish in Lyons 14 Charron arrived at the finish control point where a small crowd waited nb 1 at 12 23 pm completing the race in nine hours and nine minutes meaning he had averaged a speed of 38 6 mph Giradot was the only other car to reach the finish arriving at 2 00 pm having taken one hour thirty six minutes and twenty three seconds longer than Charron to complete the course 13 Post race EditCharron s victory representing the ACF meant that France were the winners of the inaugural Gordon Bennett cup race and the country would again host the contest the following year The race was not viewed as a successful event The large gap between the only two cars to reach the end had made the finish an anticlimax The limited number of entrants that only two of them were from outside France and that the only two cars to finish were French also led to the race failing to make much of an impression internationally 18 American periodical The Horseless Age wrote at the time it is the impression in the USA that the race was very badly organized that insufficient preparations had been made for it and that it must be looked upon as a failure 15 In a bid to address these concerns the next two Gordon Bennett Cup races would be run in conjunction with another city to city event which allowed the Gordon Bennett race to share resources with another race which didn t have limits on entry and hence had a much larger field of cars The cup wouldn t be competed for in a standalone race again until the 1903 edition Classification EditPos Driver Constructor Time Retired1 Fernand Charron FRA Panhard 9 09 002 Leonce Girardot FRA Panhard 10 36 23Ret Camille Jenatzy BEL Snoeck Bolide AccidentRet Rene de Knyff FRA Panhard TransmissionRet Alexander Winton USA Winton WheelDNS Eugen Benz GER Benz WithdrewDNS Anthony L Riker USA Winton WithdrewSource 3 References EditNotes Sources range from a mere dozen 16 to a hundred 17 spectators waiting at the finish Footnotes a b c d Beaulieu 1963 p 18 Beaulieu 1963 p 19 a b Beaulieu 1963 p 201 Beaulieu 1963 p 7 Beaulieu 1963 p 12 Beaulieu 1963 pp 13 15 Rendall 1993 p 52 Another Automobile Run The New York Times 1900 03 25 a b Beaulieu 1963 p 16 Beaulieu 1963 p 15 La Coupe Bennett La Petit Parisien in French Paris no 8631 p 3 1900 06 15 a b Beaulieu 1963 p 20 a b c d e More about the race The Horseless Age 6 14 22 1900 07 04 a b Beaulieu 1963 p 21 a b P M Heldt 1900 07 04 The Gordon Bennett International Cup Race The Horseless Age 6 14 14 Smith 1980 p 163 Beaulieu 1963 p 22 Autos Death to Dogs Boston Evening Transcript 24 1900 07 14 BibliographyDouglas Scott Montagu Edward John Barrington 3rd Baron Montagu of Beaulieu 1963 The Gordon Bennett Races London Cassell amp Company Ltd Rendall Ivan 1991 The Power and the Glory A Century of Motor Racing London BBC Books ISBN 978 0 563 36093 3 Smith Maurice 1980 1979 The Car London Sundial Publications Ltd ISBN 0 904230 86 4 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 1900 Gordon Bennett Cup amp oldid 1135280342, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.