| Citroen's 1933 Rosalie records honoured at Montlhery |
| European Desk | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Written by Bill Hunter | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Thursday, 18 October 2007 03:05 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Photos and text by Bill Hunter
Display of Classic Citroens at Montlhery
Three quarters of a century ago Citroen and the oil company Yacco joined forces in a series of events at the then newly-constructed Montlhery Autodrome. The facilities were impressive, with a 2.5 km oval saucer with an adjoining 12.5 km track. Included in the facilities were administration buildings, laboratories, machine shops, and sections of track for a variety of testing including waterproofing, suspension refinement, road holding, and safety.
The Montlhery celebration this year could well be the last motorsport event to be held at the famous old Autodrome - land prices and the demands of nearby military establishments look set to encroach on the valuable real estate.
In its glory days, the Autodrome and its Administration buildings, spectator stands, testing laboratories, and workshops, hosted both automobile and motorcycle racing until WWII, when track and buildings were severely damaged. It served a s a prison for a while, and then as an American military base. Enough repairs were done to enable the 1948 Paris Grand Prix to be held there, but it has never returned to its old status and popularity.
During the course of the day, Motormarques co-director, John Sutton, arrived from Britain, creating a sensation in his giant 30-98 Vauxhall.
The gentleman from Tours who drove me around the Autodrome in his 1928/29 Citroen B14 passed on his pleasure in shaing the enthusiasm for classic car revival with like-minded people from Europe, France, Britain, Australia, and wherever else in the world they get together.
For John Sutton and Allan Calder's video of this event - Click here
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| Last Updated on Tuesday, 27 November 2007 17:25 |