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Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 165

1959 Lotus ‘Le Mans’ Elite 'Ex-Dickie Stoop’

Auction 18.05.2019
18.05.2019
Schätzpreis
45.000 £ - 55.000 £
ca. 57.230 $ - 69.948 $
Zuschlagspreis:
56.000 £
ca. 71.220 $
Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 165

1959 Lotus ‘Le Mans’ Elite 'Ex-Dickie Stoop’

Auction 18.05.2019
18.05.2019
Schätzpreis
45.000 £ - 55.000 £
ca. 57.230 $ - 69.948 $
Zuschlagspreis:
56.000 £
ca. 71.220 $
Beschreibung:

1959 Lotus ‘Le Mans’ Elite 'Ex-Dickie Stoop’ Lot Number165 RegistrationOKX 84D Chassis Number1037 Estimate£45,000 - £55,000 ResultSold - £56,000 Print details Send this to a friend 4 more images Ex Dickie Stoop Car number 58 - 1959 Le Mans entrant Every once in a while a special motor car makes an appearance, quite out of the blue, very much under the radar. And with that, it gives us much pleasure to offer this 1959 Lotus Elite that was to race at Le Sarthe that same year. Most Le Mans motor cars are well known and accounted for but this particular entrant has an interesting history, both with its Le Mans sojourn and for its characterful racing driver and owner. Dickie Stoop: Flight Lieutenant James Richard Stoop (Dickie as he was always known) joined the Royal Air Force during the Second World War and was flying Spitfires with 610 Squadron out of RAF Westhampnett (today, part of the Goodwood estate) along with his friend, Squadron Leader Tony Gaze. Dickie Stoop and Tony Gaze were often seen tearing their MGs around the tarmac perimeter track of Westhampnett, perhaps these japes led to Dickie becoming an accomplished post-war racing driver? His first race was at Silverstone in 1948 and over the next 20 years he campaigned many types of car and competed at Le Mans no fewer than ten times. Perhaps somewhat fittingly this larger than life character passed away whilst at the wheel during a club race at Croft in May 1968 having suffered a heart attack. Lotus Elites & the 1959 Le Mans: With the Elite, Colin Chapman had built a genuine race car for the road. He understood that if the car did well at race meetings in pretty much standard form, it would go on and sell well. It is little wonder then that the first page of the Elite records is a who’s who of the racing fraternity at the time. In 1959, Lotus were under pressure with orders for road and racing cars and as much as Colin Chapman wanted to, he did not have the resources to enter a ‘works’ Elite team for Le Mans that year; their efforts going into the three Lotus Fifteens entered the same year. It was left to the privateers in the Frost car number 41 driven by Peter Lumsden and Peter Riley, car number 42, entered by Border Reivers and driven by Jim Clark and John Whitmore and car number 38, Equip Los Amigos, driven by the French pairing of Jean-Claude Vidilles and Jean Francois Malle; and all running in the 1101cc to 1500cc GT class. The Elites were up against the three new Porsche RSKs and an older RS. Not many gave Lotus a chance against them, however, with the Elites applying constant pressure, the German cars, one by one, broke. Clark and Whitmore, although putting in constant fast laps were hampered by mechanical problems resulting with them having to pit with unscheduled stops but eventually finishing and achieving a credible tenth overall. The French Elite of Vidilles and Malle were out on the 105thlap having suffered an exhaust problem that led to the car completely burning out. It was the pair of Lumsden and Riley that went on to finish first in class and a fabulous eighth overall. But perhaps what is less known was a fourth Lotus Elite was due to run in the 1959 24-hour endurance race……. Lotus Elite chassis number 1037: As recorded within the recognised Lotus Elite production records, Dickie Stoop purchased the Lotus Elite, chassis number 1037, on 10th June 1959, just eleven days before Le Mans that year and entered it with British drivers Douglas Graham and Mike McKee. Dickie registered the Elite with one of his other private number plates, OU 4 and at Le Mans, was scrutineered, practiced but unfortunately, suffered a road accident and that led to it being withdrawn from the race and recorded, within the official Le Mans records, as DNS (did not start). An extract from Autosport, June 26th1959, reported, 'The Dick Stoop Lotus Elite, was wrecked in an accident returning from the circuit, Jack Britt the mechanic being injured'. A further examination records show tha

Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 165
Auktion:
Datum:
18.05.2019
Auktionshaus:
Historics at Brooklands Museum Trust Ltd
Thorney Lane North
Iver, SL0 9HF
Großbritannien und Nordirland
auctions@historics.co.uk
+44 (0)1753 639170
+44 (0)1522 262177
Beschreibung:

1959 Lotus ‘Le Mans’ Elite 'Ex-Dickie Stoop’ Lot Number165 RegistrationOKX 84D Chassis Number1037 Estimate£45,000 - £55,000 ResultSold - £56,000 Print details Send this to a friend 4 more images Ex Dickie Stoop Car number 58 - 1959 Le Mans entrant Every once in a while a special motor car makes an appearance, quite out of the blue, very much under the radar. And with that, it gives us much pleasure to offer this 1959 Lotus Elite that was to race at Le Sarthe that same year. Most Le Mans motor cars are well known and accounted for but this particular entrant has an interesting history, both with its Le Mans sojourn and for its characterful racing driver and owner. Dickie Stoop: Flight Lieutenant James Richard Stoop (Dickie as he was always known) joined the Royal Air Force during the Second World War and was flying Spitfires with 610 Squadron out of RAF Westhampnett (today, part of the Goodwood estate) along with his friend, Squadron Leader Tony Gaze. Dickie Stoop and Tony Gaze were often seen tearing their MGs around the tarmac perimeter track of Westhampnett, perhaps these japes led to Dickie becoming an accomplished post-war racing driver? His first race was at Silverstone in 1948 and over the next 20 years he campaigned many types of car and competed at Le Mans no fewer than ten times. Perhaps somewhat fittingly this larger than life character passed away whilst at the wheel during a club race at Croft in May 1968 having suffered a heart attack. Lotus Elites & the 1959 Le Mans: With the Elite, Colin Chapman had built a genuine race car for the road. He understood that if the car did well at race meetings in pretty much standard form, it would go on and sell well. It is little wonder then that the first page of the Elite records is a who’s who of the racing fraternity at the time. In 1959, Lotus were under pressure with orders for road and racing cars and as much as Colin Chapman wanted to, he did not have the resources to enter a ‘works’ Elite team for Le Mans that year; their efforts going into the three Lotus Fifteens entered the same year. It was left to the privateers in the Frost car number 41 driven by Peter Lumsden and Peter Riley, car number 42, entered by Border Reivers and driven by Jim Clark and John Whitmore and car number 38, Equip Los Amigos, driven by the French pairing of Jean-Claude Vidilles and Jean Francois Malle; and all running in the 1101cc to 1500cc GT class. The Elites were up against the three new Porsche RSKs and an older RS. Not many gave Lotus a chance against them, however, with the Elites applying constant pressure, the German cars, one by one, broke. Clark and Whitmore, although putting in constant fast laps were hampered by mechanical problems resulting with them having to pit with unscheduled stops but eventually finishing and achieving a credible tenth overall. The French Elite of Vidilles and Malle were out on the 105thlap having suffered an exhaust problem that led to the car completely burning out. It was the pair of Lumsden and Riley that went on to finish first in class and a fabulous eighth overall. But perhaps what is less known was a fourth Lotus Elite was due to run in the 1959 24-hour endurance race……. Lotus Elite chassis number 1037: As recorded within the recognised Lotus Elite production records, Dickie Stoop purchased the Lotus Elite, chassis number 1037, on 10th June 1959, just eleven days before Le Mans that year and entered it with British drivers Douglas Graham and Mike McKee. Dickie registered the Elite with one of his other private number plates, OU 4 and at Le Mans, was scrutineered, practiced but unfortunately, suffered a road accident and that led to it being withdrawn from the race and recorded, within the official Le Mans records, as DNS (did not start). An extract from Autosport, June 26th1959, reported, 'The Dick Stoop Lotus Elite, was wrecked in an accident returning from the circuit, Jack Britt the mechanic being injured'. A further examination records show tha

Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 165
Auktion:
Datum:
18.05.2019
Auktionshaus:
Historics at Brooklands Museum Trust Ltd
Thorney Lane North
Iver, SL0 9HF
Großbritannien und Nordirland
auctions@historics.co.uk
+44 (0)1753 639170
+44 (0)1522 262177
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