1950 24 Hours of Le Mans


The 1950 24 Hours of Le Mans was the 18th Grand Prix of Endurance, and took place on 24 and 25 June 1950. It was won by the French father-and-son pairing of Louis and Jean-Louis Rosier driving a privately entered Talbot-Lago.

Regulations

The revival of motor-racing post-war was now in full swing – the FIA had published its new rules for single-seater racing and inaugurated the new Formula 1 World Championship. Its Appendix C addressed two-seater sportscar racing, giving some definition for racing prototypes. The same categories were kept, although the Automobile Club de l'Ouest added an extra class at the top end – for over 5.0L up to 8.0L.
After last year’s issues with the hybrid ‘ternary’ fuel, the ACO now supplied 80-octane gasoline as standard, thereby removing the need. The track was widened except for the run from Mulsanne to Indianapolis, and the re-surfacing completed, thus promising to give faster times and be a quicker race. Finally, the iconic Dunlop bridge was rebuilt – a footbridge over the circuit just after the first corner.

Entries

A record 112 entries were received by the ACO, and they accepted 60 for the start – another record. This year there were 24 entries in the S3000, S5000 and S8000 classes. The biggest car this year carrying the #1, was a MAP Diesel that was the first car to race at Le Mans with a mid-mounted engine, with veteran racer and 1939 winner Pierre Veyron.
The first Americans to race at Le Mans in 21 years arrived - Briggs Cunningham bought across two 5.4L Cadillacs, one a standard Series 61 sedan and the other with an ugly aerodynamic bodyshell refined in the Grumman Aircraft wind tunnel. They were soon nicknamed ‘’Petit Petaud ’’ and ‘’Le Monstre’’ respectively by the French, but Briggs saw the joke and had the names written on the bonnets beside the American flags. Both were fitted with pit-to-car radios.
But this year, the big news was the first appearance of Jaguar – with three new 3.4L XK120s. Factory-prepared, they were released to select private entrants to test the waters. Other British entries included an Allard with the big 5.4L Cadillac engine, co-driven by Sydney Allard himself; the Bentley saloon from last year returned, along with a second, even older, car to represent the marque. This year Aston Martin came with three 2.6L DB2 works entries.
After their spectacular success last year, Ferrari arrived with three 166 MM cars, as well as a new model: a pair of 195 S cars, with a bigger 2.4L V12, entered by last year’s winner Luigi Chinetti. This year Chinetti drove with Dreyfus, and was able to convince the great French driver Raymond Sommer to postpone his retirement to drive his other car.
The French defended their home turf with a pair of fast privately-entered Talbot-Lago T26 and the urbane SS coupe. Too heavy to be competitive in the new World Championship, their speed and durability made them ideal for Le Mans. Charles Pozzi returned with two Delahaye 175 S in his new ‘’Ecurie Lutetia’’ team, the Delettrez brothers had their diesel special back, and two old Delage D6s returned including that of Henri Louveau who had staged such a spirited chase the year before. Also, with better preparation time, Amédée Gordini entered a big team of his new T15 cars, including two fitted with superchargers to take on the Ferraris. His regular Grand Prix drivers, Maurice Trintignant and Robert Manzon drove one and two new Argentinians Juan-Manuel Fangio and José Froilán González the other – all Le Mans debutants along with Jean Behra in a 1500 Gordini.
In the mid-size S2000 and S1500 classes, aside from the Ferraris and the two mid-size Gordinis, was an assortment of makes including Frazer-Nash, Jowett, Peugeot, Fiat and MG. If the French were under-represented in the big classes, they made up for it in the S1100 and S750 small-car categories, with 20 of the 25 entries, including works entries from Gordini, Monopole, Panhard, DB, Renault and Simca. The Aero-Minors from Czechoslovakia were back, and were joined by a Škoda in the S1100 class

Practice

In practice, Raymond Sommer showed that the new Ferraris were fastest, with a five-minute lap exactly – ahead of the Talbot-Lagos. Auguste Veuillet crashed and rolled his Delahaye, but after overnight repairs, it was ready for the race the next day, only for the car to refuse to start with a flat battery.

Race

Start

Lined up, as was Le Mans tradition, according to effective engine capacity, it was Tom Cole in the Allard who was the first to get going. Last to get away was Fangio’s Gordini with an engine misfire. Sommer overtook a dozen cars to lead at the end of the first lap, ahead of Cole, Meyrat’s Talbot, Peter Whitehead in the new Jaguar and Trintignant in the supercharged Gordini. On lap 2 Cunningham slid “Le Monstre” into the Mulsanne sandbank and had to spend 15 minutes digging it out By the fifth lap, Rosier had his Talbot up to third and Chinetti had the other big Ferrari up to fifth.
It stayed pretty much like that for the first few hours with Sommer putting in some very fast laps, averaging just under 99 mph to extend his lead. But then the pressure of that pace told and he lost a cylinder and had to pit with electrical problems from a dislodged alternator, dropping him to fifth. That let Rosier into the lead in the 3rd hour, and he then put in some blistering laps to break up the pursuing pack. As the sun set and in the cooler air he broke Sommer’s new lap record by almost ten secords with Le Mans’ first race lap averaging over. At the end of four hours, it was Rosier, Chinetti, Sommer, Meyrat - Talbot, Ferrari, Ferrari, Talbot - then the Allard and the first Jaguar.

Night

Going into the night, Sommer/Serafini’s ongoing electrical problems continued to plague them, taking them out of the running then finally leading to retirement after midnight – with no lights! Further excitement in the night happened when the Pozzi Delahaye had an engine-fire while refuelling, right in front of the second-placed Mairesse Talbot in at the same time. But once the flames were out, Flahault jumped in and drove out without even checking for damage
Early on Sunday morning while running second, the Allard’s 3-speed gearbox lost its two lowest gears. It could not be repaired, so the mechanics jammed it into 3rd and sent it back out again, having dropped down to 8th. Around a similar time the differential on Chinetti’s Ferrari started playing up, after also running in the top 3 for first half of the race; they eventually retired mid-morning.
At the halfway point after 12 hours, it was the two Talbots of Rosier and Meyrat/Mairesse, then a lap back to the Johnson/Hadley Jaguar, the Rolt/Hamilton Nash-Healey and the struggling Allard.

Morning

At 5am the leader came into the pits with a 7-lap lead, and Rosier personally replaced the rocker-shaft. His son then took the car out for just 2 laps while Louis cleaned up and ate some bananas. Then Rosier Sr got back in, resuming in 3rd, and drove on for the rest of the race. With Rosier in the pits, the second Talbot took the lead and held it for three hours, with the Jaguar of Johnson/Hadley in second. But Rosier was a man on a mission and before 9am, he had overtaken both and was back in the lead. He had to pit later in the morning when he struck an owl, smashing the windscreen and giving him a black eye.
At 8am Jean Lucas, running sixth, crashed and rolled Lord Selsdon’s Ferrari, getting minor injuries and taking the last of the prancing horses out of the race. The Anglo-American Nash-Healey prototype of Rolt/Hamilton had been in the top-5 since halfway and was 3rd when it was punted off the track by Louveau’s Delage. The 45 minutes spent on repairs dropped it a position. Pozzi’s Delahaye had run as high was 5th through the night, but then the fire and subsequent overheating dropped it down. Late in the morning at a pit-stop, pent-up pressure blew off the radiator cap, which the officious stewards deemed an illegal breakage of the security seals and controversially disqualified him.
By midday the old order was restored: the two Talbots, now only a lap apart, three laps back to the Jaguar and a further lap to the Nash-Healey. Rosier eased off, conserving his car, but keeping a solid lead. Then the Jaguar of Johnson/Hadley had to retire with less than 3 hours to go when the clutch finally let go, after the drivers had had to use engine-breaking because of a lack of brakes. But it was Tim Cole who was lapping fastest of all in fourth, even though he still only had top gear, and caught Rolt with 30 minutes to go.

Finish and post-race

In the end, Louis Rosier cruised to the win, and with Guy Mairesse and Pierre Meyrat, gave one of Talbot-Lago’s greatest days – coming 1st & 2nd, and a record distance covered All the first five finishers beat the 1939 distance record
It was also a great race for the British cars with 14 of 16 entered finishing, taking the 8.0L, 3.0L, 2.0L and 1.5L class wins. The Allard finished third, the Nash-Healey was fourth ahead of two of John Wyer’s Aston Martins that had run like clockwork. They were comfortably ahead of Louveau’s Delage in seventh, that had finished 2nd the year before but this year never had the pace, despite running trouble-free. The new Frazer-Nash took the S2000 class and the lightened works Jowett Javelin roadster easily won the S1500 class by 12 laps, driven by the coincidentally-named Wise and Wisdom.
By contrast all five Ferraris retired, as did all nine Simca-engined cars, including the six works Gordinis. Both the Bentleys finished – though Louis Rosier did a herculean job driving for all but 2 laps, Eddie Hall in the TT finished 8th and became the only driver to finish a Le Mans going solo the whole distance. Likewise both Cadillacs finished even though ‘’Le Monstre’’, like the Allard, had been stuck in top gear for most of the race The little Czech Aero repeated its win from 1949 in the smallest class, beating the French contingent it went up against.
The Abecassis/Macklin Aston Martin had taken the lead in the Index of Performance in the morning, but a strong drive in their little Monopole-Panhard #52 by company owners Pierre Hérnard & Jean de Montrémy meant they exceeded their designated distance by exactly the same margin thereby sharing the Index victory.
The Jaguar management were satisfied with the performance of their cars – two finished, and the other had run as high as second before retiring, but resolved to fix the brake problems that had troubled all three cars through the race
Tragically, the great French racer, Raymond Sommer would not get to enjoy his retirement – he was killed later in the year, at a Formula 2 race at Cadours.

Official results

PosClassNoTeamDriversChassisEngineLaps
1S
5.0
5 Louis Rosier
'
Louis Rosier
Jean-Louis Rosier
Talbot-Lago T26 GS BiplaceTalbot-Lago 4.5L S6256
2S
5.0
7 Pierre Meyrat
'
Pierre Meyrat
Guy Mairesse
Talbot-Lago T26
Monoplace Decalee
Talbot-Lago 4.5L S6255
3S
8.0
4 S.H. Allard Sydney Allard
Tom Cole Jr.
Allard J2Cadillac 5.4L V8251
4S
5.0
14 Healey Motors Ltd. Tony Rolt
Duncan Hamilton
Nash-Healey ENash 3.8L S6250
5S
3.0
19 Aston Martin Ltd. George Abecassis
Lance Macklin
Aston Martin DB2Aston Martin 2.6L S6249
6S
3.0
21 Aston Martin Ltd. Reg Parnell
Charles Brackenbury
Aston Martin DB2Aston Martin 2.6L S6244
7S
3.0
18 Henri Louveau
'
Henri Louveau
Jean Estager
Delage D6-3LDelage 3.0L S6241
8S
5.0
11 E.R. Hall
'
Eddie Hall
Tom Clarke
Bentley Corniche TT CoupéBentley 4.3L S6236
9S
2.0
30 H.J. Aldington
'
Richard "Dickie" Stoop
T.A.S.O. "Donald" Mathieson
Frazer Nash Milla MigliaBristol 2.0L S6235
10S
8.0
3 Briggs Cunningham
'
Miles Collier
Sam Collier
Cadillac Coupe de VilleCadillac 5.4L V8233
11S
8.0
2 Briggs Cunningham
'
Briggs Cunningham
Phil Walters
Cadillac SpiderCadillac 5.4L V8232
12S
5.0
15 P.T.C. Clark
'
Peter Clark
Nick Haines
Jaguar XK120SJaguar 3.4L S6230
13S
5.0
6 André Chambas
'
André Chambas
André Morel
Talbot-Lago Gran Sport CoupeTalbot-Lago 4.5L S6228
14S
5.0
12 H.S.F. Hay
'
Jack 'Zoltan' Hay
Hugh Hunter
Bentley 4¼ PaulinBentley 4.3L S6225
15S
5.0
16 P.C.D. Walker
'
Peter Whitehead
John Marshall
Jaguar XK120SJaguar 3.4L S6225
16S
1.5
36 Jowett Cars Ltd. Tommy Wisdom
Tommy Wise
Jowett Jupiter JavelinJowett 1486cc Flat-4220
17S
3.0
22 R. Lawrie
'
Rob Lawrie
Geoffrey Beetson
Riley RMCRiley 2.5L S4213
18S
1.5
39 G.E. Phillips
'
George Phillips
Eric Winterbottom
MG TC SpecialMG 1244cc S4208
19S
3.0
23 N.H. Mann
'
Nigel Mann
Mortimer Morris-Goodall
Healey ElliottRiley 2.4L S4203
20S
2.0
31 N.R. Culpan
'
Norman Culpan
Lt. Cdr. Peter Wilson
Frazer Nash High Speed
Le Mans Replica
Bristol 2.0L S6201
21S
750
51 Rudý Letov Letnany Maurice Gatsonides
Henk Hoogeven
Aero Minor 750Aero 744cc Flat-2
184
22S
750
52 Établissements Monopole Jean de Montrémy
Jean Hémard
Monopole X84Panhard 611cc Flat-2180
23S
750
58 Automobiles Deutsch et Bonnet René Bonnet
Élie Bayol
DB SportPanhard 611cc Flat-2175
24S
1.1
46 J.L.V. Sandt
'
Jean Sandt
Hervé Coatalen
Renault 4CVRenault 760cc S4171
25S
1.1
48 L. Pons
'
Jacques Lecat
Louis Pons
Renault 4CVRenault 760cc S4170
26S
750
55 A. Lachaize
'
Auguste Lachaize
Albert Debille
Panhard Dyna X84 SportPanhard 611cc Flat-2168
27S
1.1
45 J.-E. Vernet
'
Just-Emile Vernet
Roger Eckerlein
Renault 4CVRenault 760cc S4158
28S
750
56 R. Gaillard
'
Raymond Gaillard
Pierre Chancel
Callista RAN D120Panhard 611cc Flat-2153
29S
750
57 L. Eggen
Louis Eggen
"Escale"
Panhard Dyna X84Panhard 611cc Flat-2151

Did Not Finish

16th Rudge-Whitworth Biennial Cup (1949/1950)

Statistics