Everything about Ecurie Ecosse totally explained
Ecurie Ecosse was a motor racing team from
Scotland. Founded in 1952 by Edinburgh businessman and racing driver
David Murray and mechanic
Wilkie Wilkinson, its most notable achievement was winning the
1956 24 Hours of Le Mans and
1957 24 Hours of Le Mans. Ecurie Ecosse were based at Merchiston Mews in Edinburgh; their cars were always distinctive in their Flag Blue Metallic paint.
The team had four
Formula One Grand Prix entries, over three seasons. The first was by David Murray himself, driving a
Cooper T20 in the
1952 British Grand Prix. Unfortunately he retired with engine trouble early in the race. For the
1953 event the team entered a pair of cars: the Cooper, this time driven by
Jimmy Stewart; and a new
Connaught A Type for
Ian Stewart. Again, neither finished the race; Jimmy spinning off, and Ian retiring with engine problems. The team's final F1 outing came in the
1954 British Grand Prix, where the Connaught was again entered, this time driven by
Leslie Thorne. Sadly, although this time the car did take the finish, it came in twelve laps down on the leaders and wasn't classified in the results.
(External Link
) From this point onward the team concentrated on sportcar events.
In the
1956 24 Hours of Le Mans Ron Flockhart and
Ninian Sanderson were the winning drivers in a
Jaguar D-Type. Ron Flockhart won again with a D-Type in
the 1957 event, partnered this time by
Ivor Bueb. As if to emphasise that their 1956 victory hadn't been a fluke, the team's second D-Type - driven by Sanderson and his new partner
John Lawrence - finished second, a rare
privateer 1-2 finish. Unfortunately the
1958 Le Mans race would prove to be a great anticlimax. Both of the Ecurie Ecosse D-Types, this time with
Masten Gregory and
Jack Fairman added to the driver line-up, suffered engine failure within a few laps of the start.
(External Link
) The team would again field a D-Type at
Le Mans in 1959, alongside a newly acquired
Tojeiro-
Jaguar. Once again, neither car made it to the final flag, the D-Type suffering engine failure after 70 laps, and the Tojeiro a fire after 137.
(External Link
) Things went from bad to worse for the team in the
1960 running. The, by now much modified, D-Type was again entered, and lasted until the 168th lap before being forced out with a broken crankshaft. Ecurie Ecosse's second car for this year, a
Cooper T49 Monaco, didn't even make it to the start line.
(External Link
) The
1961 entrants - a
Cooper T57 Monaco and an
Austin-Healey Sebring Sprite - retired after accidents in their 32nd and 40th laps respectively.
(External Link
) 1962 saw Ecurie Ecosse moving on to a
Tojeiro EE, but this too failed to finish after gearbox problems. This would be the last time that the original Ecurie Ecosse team would enter a car for the greatest endurance race in the world. Financial troubles and the self-imposed tax exile of founder David Murray had effectively ended the team's competitive era by the mid-1960s.
Other notable people who drove for the team on occasion were:
Jimmy Stewart; his younger brother, three-time
F1 World Champion
Jackie Stewart(External Link
); fellow F1 driver
Innes Ireland; and
CanAm legend and eventual
Le Mans winner Masten Gregory.
The original team ceased operating in 1971, but the team name was revived in the 1980s by enthusiast and driver Hugh McCaig. In 1986 the team won the C2 class of the
World Sportscar Championship; they'd been runners-up the previous year. They also entered
Vauxhall Cavaliers in the
British Touring Car Championship with some success in 1992 and 1993.
Team car transporter
The Team was accompanied by a 2-axle double-deck car transporter capable of carrying three cars (one inside and two on top) together with a support crew, and with mobile workshop facilities.
The transporter was built by coachbuilders Alexander, of Falkirk, Scotland. Based on a Commer chassis it's powered by a three cylinder horizontally-opposed supercharged 2 stroke diesel engine, originally designed by Dornier as an aircraft engine.
The transporter has been restored and is still in use.
Model
The Le Mans wins captured the public's imagination and British die-cast model manufacturer
Corgi brought out a 1/48th scale model in its Corgi Major series, which proved very popular. A number of sets were produced with differing vehicles; for example Gift Set No 16 issued in 1965 included three racing cars in individual boxes; a #151A Lotus X1, a #152S BRM and a #154 Ferrari. Although out of production, the Corgi sets have remained popular among collectors.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Ecurie Ecosse'.
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