The first known existence of a club for the motor sports enthusiasts of
the Bristol Aeroplane Company at Filton is towards the end of World War
2. During the war years the local BAC workforce had been swelled by engineers
from around the country, many of who had been actively involved in car
and motor cycle sport before the war. In late 1944, with the prospect of
a resumption of motor sport in view, the BAC Motor Sports Club was formed.
In addition to catering for cars and 'bikes sections for motor boating
and light aircraft flying were also envisaged, although these never actually
materialised.
By July 1945 membership had reached 200, and early activities included
meetings and lectures, with guest speakers such as John Bolster, Laurence
Pomeroy and Raymond Mays. Events included a gymkhana for cars and motor-cycles
and a grasstrack motorcycle meeting, but the most significant was a Sprint
for cars and 'bikes on Filton Airfield. The first British speed event to
follow the end of the war in Europe had been the Bristol MC&LCC's loose
surface Naish hillclimb in August 1945, the second, and the first to be
held on a tarmac course was the BAC MSC's "Bristol Sprint" on 28th
October. The course was half a mile long, with a single fast, right hand
bend with awkward camber, and there was an entry of around 100 cars and
motor-cycles. Fastest time of the day was set by Bob Gerard's ERA, from
John Bolster in "Bloody Mary", while best of the motorcyclists was St.
John Horsfall on a 998cc Vincent.
Among the Club membership were some who were very keen to see some form
of low cost formula that would allow the average enthusiast to go motor
racing. Dick Caesar was one, having been involved in a local cheap racing
activity pre-war known as CAPA. In December 1945 the Club arranged a meeting
to sound out interest, a 500cc single-seater formula was agreed and the
conclusions widely publicised. The ideas found favour throughout the country
and the Club arranged a further meeting on 25th March 1946 when
delegates from all over Britain attended to finalise the "National 500cc
Racing Car Formula".
With a low cost racing formula successfully devised and launched it
soon became more appropriate for it to be administered by a dedicated national
club, so in August 1946 the 500 Club was formed to take over from the BAC
MSC - the 500 Club eventually becoming today's well known British Racing
& Sports Car Club. By the early 1950's the formula had received international
recognition and become an acknowledged training ground for future Grand
Prix stars such as Stirling Moss and Peter Collins, while it also set Cooper
on the road to two World Championships in 1959 and 1960. With many of the
leading lights of the BAC MSC - Dick Caesar, John Siddall and Jack Harding
- now heavily involved with the new formula there was less interest and
time for general motor club activities and midway through 1946 the original
Club was wound up.
In 1955 enthusiasm for motor sport at the Bristol Aeroplane Company
was sparked once more when employees of the Car Division ran a "Night Navigation
Training Rally" and by August the BAC MC had been re-formed. During the
late 'fifties the Club regularly ran autotests and autocross and held regular
club nights and film shows at the Railway Inn at Patchway. The monthly
magazine "Backfire" was introduced in 1959, while a "Racing Section" had
purchased a 500cc JAP-engined Iota Formula 3 racing car. Intended for use
in sprints and hill-climbs, the Iota was tested a few times on Filton airfield,
but was apparently never used in competition and was sold after a couple
of years.
However, with the club having been formed by mainly rallying enthusiasts,
the central activity for the next ten years was rallying. The initial closed
to club events led to a major invitation event in 1957, the Cross Trophy
Rally, among those to collect awards in coming years were Geoff Mabbs,
Tony Nash and Henry Liddon, all later to become works team members. By
the end of the 1950's the Club were running seven rallies a year, but in
1960 the RAC introduced a limit of four per club. To compensate agreement
was reached with the Weston-super-Mare MC for the series of WesBac Rallies
with each club running alternate monthly events, the first in February
1960 being followed by a further 37 over the next seven years. These events
featured three grades of route to cater for crews differing abilities,
while the cars used by WesBac winners perhaps reflect the development of
production cars and of rallying in the early sixties, the Austin A40's
and Triumph Heralds of 1960 giving way to Mini-Coopers and Cortina GT's
by 1964 - with one WesBac going to the works Hillman Imp of Tiny Lewis
and Robin Turvey that year.
By the mid-sixties changes in the law and rally rules led to a general
disenchantment with rallying, but this was countered with an upsurge in
production car trials. By 1966 a club trials championship had replaced
the rally championship and the Cross Trophy had become a major, multi venue,
PCT. During this time the club acquired another car, a left hand drive
1951 VW Beetle, for use on club events. In 1967 the ACES Motor Club, which
had existed for several years for the apprentices at the Company Technical
College, was absorbed, while changes in the British Aerospace industry
led to the disappearance of the Bristol Aeroplane Company, the Filton factories
eventually emerging under British Aerospace and Rolls-Royce ownership.
The mixed program of events continued into the early 'seventies, when
BAC MC teams dominated the local opposition for several years in Castrol's
popular national inter-club motor sport quiz, being area winners four times,
progressing to the National finals in 1969 and 1974. However Club membership
had declined from its peak of 240 in 1960, as had interest in competitions,
and a low point was reached in 1974 when no events at all were run. A meeting
in January 1975 considered winding the Club up, but the fourteen present
decided to continue, and competitions were restarted with autotests, trials,
and a series of Friday evening navigation exercises was started in 1976
and has continued ever since. A more ambitious road event was introduced
with the HorseBac Rally (co-promoted with the White Horse MC) in 1979 and
80, before reverting to the more navigational March Hare Scatter as the
major road event the following year.
With several members being active in speed events the Club joined forces
with the Bristol MC&LCC for the Bristol Two Clubs Sprint at Wroughton
airfield in 1976 and what initially set out to be a clubbie event ended
up as a round of the RAC National Championship, a status it has held to
the present day. In 1978 Wroughton became unavailable and a new venue was
found at Colerne airfield near Bath. The first Colerne sprint was rained
off part way through, but the original course, widely regarded as a superb
drivers course, fast, demanding and enjoyable, was used for the next ten
years with a second event, the Wessex Sprint (and additional promoters
in the MG Car Club), being added in 1983. Changes at the airfield, still
a military base, rendered the original course unusable in 1989, a couple
of different layouts then being used before the basis of the present course
was adopted six years ago. Since 1983 a track day at Castle Combe has been
a regular July fixture, and while the idea of a sprint at the circuit had
occasionally been considered, it was only in 1991 that a way around the
circuit's noise restrictions was devised with the proposal of an event
solely for road-silenced cars. Successful negotiations resulted in the
inaugural Pegasus Sprint in October that year and regular sprints meetings
were thus re-introduced to Castle Combe after a break of thirty years.
by Pete Stowe
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