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PARIS-BORDEAUX!
The very name conjures up old memories of struggles, grim and fierce,
and thrilling fights amongst those whose names are now almost forgotten, but
who, on the old Paris-Bordeaux road, struggled in years past for the title
of 'King of the Road'.
It all began in the
days before motors were thought of and when the cycle held its own as the most rapid form
of road vehicle. Mills, Holbein, Huret, Lesna, Linton - great riders of their day -
struggled hard to win the great road race of the year, Paris to Bordeaux. Later, De
Knyff, Charron, Girardot, Farman, Fournier and others whose names are quite forgotten, fought the
same battles over the same long, straight stretches. Their course was fleet and the pace
was fierce, but it was all on the same old fascinating road, and, as a grand finale, Paris
to Bordeaux was the first, and, as it eventually turned out, the last stage of the last
great inter-country race, Paris to Madrid.
What do I remember of
that race?
Long avenues of trees,
top-heavy with foliage and gaunt in their very nakedness of trunk; a long, never-ending
white ribbon, stretching away to the horizon; the holding of a bullet directed to that
spot on the sky-line where earth and heaven met; fleeting glimpses of towns and dense
masses of people - mad people, insane and reckless, holding themselves in front of the
bullet to be ploughed and cut and maimed to extinction, evading the inevitable at the last
moment in frantic haste; overpowering relief, as each mass was passed and each chance of
catastrophe escaped; and beyond all, the horrible feeling of being hunted. Hundreds of
cars behind, of all sizes and powers, and all of them at my heels, traveling
over the
same road, perhaps faster than I, and all striving to overtake me, pour dust on me, and
leave me behind as they sped on to the distant goal of Bordeaux.
Even at the start, the
remembrance of the gigantic line of vehicles at Versailles, all awaiting to receive the
signal to dash after me, weighed me down and as we sped on and on and they came not, the
strain became worse and worse. I have sympathy now with the hunted animal, for once in my
life I was hunted; and of all the impressions of that wild rush to Bordeaux that awful
feeling of being hunted was the vivid and lasting, and having experienced it, I do not
wonder that Number One has seldom won a race.
Then that long lapse at
Bordeaux after my arrival, and the ominous rumours that trickled through as the cars began
to arrive. Stories of death and fearful accidents, drivers killed and spectators maimed.
Then, as the confirmation of these rumours came along, the realization that the inevitable
had at last happened; that the last chapter had been written of the great sport and that
inter-country races could be held no more; the longing for news of friends in the race;
anxiety at their non-arrival; grief at the realization that of the many sufferers one of
my best friends was terribly injured! I live it all over again, and I think it impossible
for anyone to have gone through in one day more varied sensations than I experienced on
that eventful day when we started from Paris to go to Bordeaux.
Hundreds of cars of all
sorts, shapes and sizes. Some un-safe, unsuitable and impossible. Some driven by men with
every qualification as racing drivers; others with drivers having no qualifications-all
let loose over that long, broad road to 'Get there!'
I went back over the
road after the race and I marveled, not that several had been killed but that so many had
escaped. Cars in fragments, cars in fields, some upside down, others with no wheels. The
sufferers were not all in-experienced and two of the old brigade, Marcel Renault an
Lorraine Barrow, handled the steering wheel for the last time, drove their last race and
paid the extreme penalty.
'The Race to Death!' It
need not have been so, but by an unfortunate combination of circumstances the leveling up
of the penalties payable for the risk of motor racing took place in one event. Before, and
since, what escapes many drivers have had! The same terrible smashes were experienced but
no penalty was exacted.
My old love had been
forsaken. For the first time I was discarding the Panhard for the De Dietrich. Since my
previous victory in the Circuit of the Ardennes I had started my own business in London
and selected the De Dietrich firm as the most progressive of all the French manufacturers.
I hoisted their colors and accepted the leading position in their team for the
Paris-Madrid race in the year 1903.
De Dietrich et Cie had
in the years gone by occupied a prominent position in the French industry and the racing
cars they were building for the Paris-Madrid race were not the first vehicles of the kind
made by them. The brains of Turcat and Méry, the well-known French engineers, had,
however, been brought to the assistance of the De Dietrich house and although the racing
programme was not new, the cars themselves were of a power and type entirely novel and I,
as driving one of these cars, had to stand or fall by its capabilities and behavior in the
actual race.
Peculiarly enough, the three big
cars made by De Dietrich for the race were all to be driven by Englishmen - Stead, a
sturdy Yorkshireman, acclimatized to France by many years of residence, one of the very
oldest of the old racing crowd; Lorraine Barrow, an Englishman resident at Biarritz and
one of the experts of the Continent; and myself. De Dietrich cars of smaller power were
being driven by several other drivers, including Madame de Gast, but the real hopes of De
Dietrich lay in one of the three big cars.
I have already explained that the
racing cars were of a new type, and I realized this when for one long, long week before
the start I watched my car being built and rebuilt. The first trouble that happened was
that through a miscalculation the car was considerably over the 19-½ cwt. limit.
Everything was done to bring the weight down, but unsuccessfully, and at the last moment
an engine of considerably less horsepower had to be fitted. I may say that this new engine
had been put through as a safeguard in the case of the car weighing too heavy. The
additional advantages obtained here, however, were that much stronger axles and much
stronger springs were fitted, as the weight saved through the use of the smaller motor was
very considerable, and we decided that in view of the bad roads of Spain it might be
better policy to build the carriage to stand the fearful roads it would have to travel
over in Spain, than merely to construct it with a view to speed.
Innumerable troubles presented
themselves one after the other and we almost despaired that the car would be ready in time
for the race. As for it being properly tried prior to the start, this was an absolute
impossibility. My one great consolation lay in the fact that Stead's and Barrow's machines
were giving as much, or nearly as much, trouble as mine.
At last all was ready. The slipping
clutch, which had been giving all the trouble, had been arranged with a long lever to
which a strap was attached and I was informed that, if I had trouble with my clutch, I was
to hang on to the strap and force it to hold. How I was to do this and drive a racing car
at eighty miles an hour at the same time was not explained. However, the mechanics had
been working on my car for three nights running, with the keenest possible enthusiasm, and
for their sakes I determined at least to start and see how far I could get before disaster
overtook me.
So off I dashed to Versailles for
food and sleep and the last preparations for the race on the morrow.
Number One was my starting position
on the following morning and, as I slipped over the ground out of Paris I thought that an
appropriate place for me would have been at the end instead of the beginning of the
procession. To my astonishment, however, the car was going well. Untried as it was, I
nevertheless quickly realized that it was capable of traveling quite fast; but as for
Madrid, why, of course it was an impossibility and this knowledge made my expression very
gloomy as I walked into the Hotel des Reservoirs, at Versailles on my arrival.
At two o'clock on the following
morning Barrow came into my bedroom and roused me from a very sound slumber. From some
inexplicable cause, my car, which had taken an hour to start on the previous evening,
started up immediately. Perhaps Bianchi, who was my mechanic and was accompanying me for
the first time in a big race, had, during the night, coaxed it into a submissive mood. But
try as we would, Barrow's car would not start. Eventually, with a shake of the hand, I had
to leave him to his task as, being first, I had to be in my position early.
Never did I wish a friend good luck
more sincerely than I did Lorraine Barrow on that eventful morning, and never did a wish
go more awry. It was the last time I ever saw him, and the memory of that handgrip in the
darkness, in the hotel yard at Versailles is one of my few sad recollections in connection
with motor racing.
Picking my way carefully through the
thousands of sightseers in Versailles, I arrived at the Park from which the start was to
take place and got to the front of the long line already formed. The thousands assembled
to see the start had availed themselves of every possible point of vantage, and a dense,
living mass filled the road right through the Park. The rising of the curtain on the last
great act of road racing of the old style was dramatic and inspiring, with a vast
concourse, assembled to witness it, and unhappy as I was when I considered my own chance
of winning the race, it was never the less a thrilling moment when taking my place, the
very first car to start, with hundreds to follow me to Madrid.
De Knyff was Number Two and Louis
Renault Number Three. Those of us in front decided that it was too dark at three-thirty -
the time fixed for the start - and so a respite of a further fifteen minutes was granted
before dispatching me.
I asked what would happen to the
swaying mass of people blocking the road when I started and the only answer I received was
a shrug of the shoulders and a reply that they would clear soon enough when once I got
going. The soldiers intended for keeping the course clear were swallowed up in the huge
concourse of spectators and disorder reigned supreme.
Three forty-five at last. On with
the switch and away went the motor. A hundred handshakes and a mighty roar from the crowd
and I was off. It seemed impossible that my swaying, bounding car could miss the reckless
spectators. A wedge shaped space opened out in the crowd as I approached and so fine was
the calculation made that at times it seemed impossible for the car not to overtake the
apex of the human triangle and deal death and destruction. I tried slowing down, but
quickly realized that the danger was as great at forty miles an hour as at eighty. It
merely meant that the crowd waited a longer time on the road; and the remembrance of those
hundreds of cars behind me and the realization that the hunt had commenced made me put on
top speed and hope that Providence would be kind to the weak intellects which allowed
their possessors to run such risks so callously.
Regarding that portion of the
Paris-Bordeaux road to Chartres I was ignorant. After Chartres I remembered it well, but
the first corner after leaving the Park at Versailles nearly led to my undoing. As a
matter of instinct, in motor racing, when traveling over a strange road and being in
doubt as to the direction, one always took the road on which most people happened to be
congregated and on this occasion, coming to a fork, I decided to take the road to the
right when, suddenly, as I arrived at the corner, I perceived the left-hand road was the
correct one. Although traveling at eighty miles an hour I perceived that I could just
make the turn and as we swung round we missed the curbstone by inches.
I previously mentioned that my
engine had had no running on the road and now, as I began to press her, she began to clank
in an ominous manner. It was obvious that she required very gentle handling and I
slackened down a little while Bianchi slaved at the lubricating pump and poured oil into
the base chamber.
My great trouble was with my clutch,
which persisted in slipping. I had, however, the long metal lever and strap and by pulling
on the strap we could do what the clutch spring refused to do, namely, make the clutch
hold. Until Bianchi had to start pumping oil, he of course hung on to the strap and
prevented the clutch slipping, but he required two hands pump and even then it was
terribly hard work. Hence I had to hold on to the strap with one hand and steer with the
other. And still we were pegging away on to Rambouillet, and Chartres.
It was not unexpected, however, when
before Rambouillet was reached, Bianchi told me by gesticulations that De Knyff was just
behind. We must have been traveling well in spite of my having reduced speed, for it took
him some time before he got by and dropped us. And then Louis Renault came along very fast
and was soon away, and immediately afterwards we reached Rambouillet control and found
both cars there. De Knyff, however, was in trouble with his ignition and, he being
delayed, I followed Louis Renault out of the control. Soon after, De Knyff came along
again, but stopped immediately and this was the last time I saw him. Renault was
traveling magnificently but, we also were going well and I had hopes that I should pull
back the lead he had gained. I was delighted with the way in which my De Dietrich was
behaving. Practically its first trial on the road and it was running like an old,
well-tried car. And then, suddenly, with a sob, the motor stopped.
If there was one particular trouble
in racing from which I suffered most, it was stoppages in the fuel pipe and this was the
cause of my stoppage on this occasion. As I drew up on the grass on the right-hand side of
the road I wondered how many cars would pass me before I got going again. We quickly
located the trouble and started to disconnect the pipe from the tank and carburetor to
clear it. The sensation I have mentioned of being hunted had overpowered me from the very
start, and as we worked away it was almost with a sense of relief that I expected the
other cars to come up and thus enable me to join in the chase instead of being chased
myself.
It was a glorious morning, not then
six o'clock, the sun shining and the air so clean and fresh; and after the roar and rush
of the wind when the car had been traveling, everything seemed so still. Not a sound
could be heard except our own labored breathing as we toiled on the car. In vain I
listened for the well-known hum in the distance betokening the approach of another car. It
seemed incredible. We appeared to have stopped hours and yet no cars had overtaken us.
Where was De Knyff? Where were the go 90 h.p. Mercedes which were to have overwhelmed us
at the very start? Where were the big Panhards? Had some terrible catastrophe happened and
the road become blocked in some manner or other? It seemed impossible that we could have
traveled at a speed sufficient to have gained so much time on all the rest. And then we
finished our work, the motor started up again, Bianchi resumed his pumping and we were off
en route for Tours.
It was almost with a sickening
feeling that I realized I was still the goal which the struggling multitude behind were
endeavoring to overtake. As a race of sheer enjoyment I only appreciated that portion
after Tours. The worries of the engine and the clutch, and the dense masses of people at
every town made the experience anything but pleasurable, keen as I was on the sport. In
addition to this, in every control I was by myself. I might have been endeavoring to
create a great record entirely alone, instead of being one of hundreds of cars rushing to
Bordeaux, for I saw none of them. Louis Renault was in front but so far in front that he
had left each control before I arrived.
And then, just before Tours, Werner,
on one of the huge Mercedes racers, came along and after a tussle, was by and at last I
had company. We had done so well that the fact that no other cars had caught us pleased me
beyond measure, and as we trundled through Tours to the outward control, little Bianchi's
face, greasy and oily, was one broad grin of approval; and whether I was having a good
time or not, it was perfectly clear that he was glorying in his first experience of a big
road-race. Never was any engineer keener over his engines than Bianchi was over any car
which I was driving in any race, and even his lack of knowledge of the French language did
not prevent him from capturing from under the noses of the guardian mechanics on the road
- whether they belonged to De Dietrich or not - all and everything necessary for the good
running and health of the car. I think his unadulterated enjoyment had something to do
with the sheer abandon with which I drove the remainder of the race to Bordeaux.
On going back over the times, I find
that all my time was lost over the first half of the journey and that from Tours on, our
times were not touched by any other competitor.
While waiting at the outward control at
Tours, another car rolled up and I was delighted to find it was Stead on his De Dietrich,
starting Number Five. Halfway to Bordeaux and out of the first four cars two were
Dietrich-this seemed a good record for the marquee. However, for some reason or other,
Stead was very gloomy. He grumbled at his car and abused his mechanician for some fault or
other in a splendid combination of English and French. I enquired for news of Lorraine
Barrow, and learned that he had arrived at the start alright and, moreover, Stead had seen
him at a control a distance back, when he was going very well. In the middle of my
conversation with Stead, Werner's time expired and he was dispatched, and a gasp went out
from the crowd as they saw the manner in which his car rushed up the winding road out of
Tours.
One minute after, I was off and soon
into his dust. Five kilometers farther on, with a wrench of the wheel, I just missed the
fragments of his car in the road, smashed to bits, and in the same second I saw both
Werner and his man standing by the car, obviously unhurt and the former sufficiently
unconcerned as to be occupied in lighting a cigarette before even he could have known the
cause of the accident. It appeared that his back axle had broken when traveling
at top
speed, and his escape must have been miraculous; but nothing could shake the phlegmatism,
characteristic not only of the Fatherland, but also of most of the best drivers of racing
cars. It does not do to have nerves if engaged in driving a racing car, but Werner's
stolidity was out of the ordinary and his smash occurred so suddenly that he could have
had no warning.
Louis Renault was thirty-five
minutes ahead but we were now utilizing the full power of the motor and the car was
traveling grandly. Corners did not exist. Hills disappeared and on the long, straight
stretches it was merely a question of holding on.
Ruffec at last and here we were in
trouble. More delay, in the changing of an ignition plate, red hot from the heat of the
engine. How long it took us I know not. I remember a blazing hot sun, a crowd of
spectators who crowded on us regardless of our warnings that other cars were coming along
the road, and the handling of the red hot pieces of metal with our bare hands, not
noticing in our feverish haste to be off again that every time we took hold of those fiery
parts the touch blistered, white and hot.
A welcome glass of champagne and we
were off and away once more, on to Angoulême. Talking of champagne reminds me of the
manner and method of taking food on those road events. Of course, it was possible in the
controls to obtain almost anything in the way of refreshments. I seldom arrived in a town
without finding a friend ready with some form of food and drink, but the difficulty was
that if trouble was being experienced it was seldom possible to eat or drink. I remember
seeing Bianchi, suddenly attacked by hunger munching a roll of bread which had received in
some unhappy manner a bath of lubricating oil, but, as he explained to me afterwards, so
intent was he on our engine that he had not noticed what he was eating.
Faster and still faster, until we
seemed to be merely skimming over the ground and a savage joy possessed me when I realized
that we were holding our own with the hunters. The game was probably escaping; anyhow, we
had not been caught. The reckless crowds, assembled in the road at the entrance to each
village and town, now had no terror. We slackened for nothing. Bordeaux 120 kilometers
away (75 miles) and we had not been caught and overwhelmed by that long line I had seen as
I made my way to the start in the morning. Renault was in front but he was not in our
class and we were now gaining even on him. Then, away in the distance, on the hill,
Angoulême appeared in sight and another stage had been completed.
Here the inhabitants and spectators
were frantic with excitement and congratulations; flowers and fruit were showered on us.
Then an excited official at the control rushed up and said that Jenatzy, on a 90 Mercedes,
had left the last control and was hard on my heels and he implored me, for the sake of La
Belle France to beat the German car into Bordeaux. And I rose to the occasion and swore
that, come what might, my De Dietrich would finish first before any German car should be
allowed to enter Bordeaux. I was also informed that Renault was still thirty-five minutes
ahead, so that any hope of beating him was gone unless he broke down before Bordeaux.
Just as we were off, Bianchi got down and
gave a hurried look around the car to see if everything was all right for our last dash,
and suddenly informed me with horror in his voice that our front wheels were coming to
pieces, the spokes having loosened themselves in the hub. I think I should have got down
and investigated the matter had it not been for the knowledge that Jenatzy was coming up
just behind me and might arrive at any moment. The bystanders saw the trouble also and
were terribly excited when I told Bianchi to jump up. If the wheels held up, a bucket of
water on each at Bordeaux would put them right for the next stage and I could do nothing
but take the risk.
The road after Angoulême is a
series of twists and turns, corners and angles, and it was on this portion of the road
that most of the unfortunate accidents in the race took place. It was here, however, that
we made our biggest gain. At this time I was driving as for my life, Jenatzy behind,
Renault in front, and as corner after corner was negotiated, and nearer and nearer we drew
to the finish with the car going better than ever, I longed for another two hundred
kilometers in which to make up our lost time before Tours. That our wheels might go at any
moment had not entered my head after leaving Angoulême, and when, suddenly in the
distance, a white flag stretched across the road appeared, it seemed almost incredible
that we had arrived at Bordeaux, the ninety kilometers between Angoulême and Bordeaux had
been covered so quickly. We averaged over sixty miles an hour over this stretch and gained
twenty minutes on Louis Renault, finishing fifteen minutes behind him.
No one had expected that there was
any possibility of my finishing in almost the same position as that in which I had
started, but it is the unexpected which always happens in racing, and the De Dietrich car,
regarding which little had been said prior to the event, had provided a sensation of the
race.
I was surprised to see so many
friends at the control in Bordeaux. English and French, they impressed upon me their
gratification and satisfaction at my having got through so successfully. Then, with an
official on my car, I made my way into the town to the closed park where the cars were
locked up until the start of the second stage.
A long interval took place before
any other cars arrived. I made my way to my hotel and afterwards back to the control to
watch other arrivals. One or two cars arrived, but very little information was forthcoming
from their drivers; they all seemed very vague as to what had happened to any cars other
than their own.
Then, in an extraordinary manner it
began to be whispered that terrible accidents had happened, but no one knew from whence
these rumours had come, only everybody was uneasy and fearful. Presently the cars began to
roll in thick and fast and the rumours were confirmed by the various drivers, but instead
of being accurate in detail, everything was exaggerated. Every driver had a different
story until it seemed at last as if the road of passage must have been bestrewed with dead
and dying. Who was killed? Who was hurt? What had happened? A feeling of horror came over
those of us assembled in the control that we had participated in a great carnage and the
lack of reliable information made matters so much worse. Charron eventually arrived,
having driven a touring car in the race with ladies as passengers, as he had not been able
to get his racing car in time, and from him I learned more than from anyone else. There
had undoubtedly been terrible accidents and I was horrified to learn that Lorraine Barrow
and Stead, on their De Dietrichs, were smashed up and seriously injured and not expected
to live, Barrow's mechanician having been killed on the spot. Stead had been cut down by
another car and capsized at eighty miles an hour, while Barrow had struck a dog, deranged
his steering and struck a tree end on at top speed. Marcel Renault had also smashed, and
there had been dozens of other accidents en route. Charron said he had never seen anything
like the scene the road presented.
Other cars came in and other stories
were told. An English car driven by a novice had upset on a corner, and the unfortunate
Englishman accompanying the driver had been pinned under the car, which caught fire and
burned him to death. In Chatellerault, a child had dashed in front of one of the cars and
a soldier had rushed to save it. The driver, endeavoring to avoid both, not only struck
and killed them, but also dashed into the crowd which hemmed the course.
I need not recapitulate the list of
deaths. The English papers of the 25th of May had the details of what they termed 'The
Race to Death'.
Road racing was dead. Never again
would it be possible to suggest a speed event over the open roads and the sport-which,
while it was sport, was in my opinion the best of all sports-was finished. The peculiar
thing about it all was that the outside world had not appreciated up to that moment that
there was an element of danger in motor racing. One or two drivers had certainly been
injured, but accidents were very rare; and then, suddenly, by one of those compensations
which occur with all things in life, the toll was paid in one event, and so heavy was it
that with a shudder and a gasp the world at large realized that motor racing might be
really deadly.
The French Government decided the
matter for every-body concerned. The race was stopped forthwith and all the racing cars
taken possession of by the authorities. Special trains were secured and the cars were
dragged to the railway station behind horses and returned to Paris; not even the motors
were allowed to be started.

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