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Showing posts with label Southport. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Southport. Show all posts

Monday, 28 March 2016

Southport finally pays tribute to Sir Henry Segrave

MARCH 16, 1926 was a good day for speed.

For starters a physicist called Robert H.Goddard launched the world’s first liquid-fuelled rocket from a farm in Massachusetts – the very technology that made everything from putting a chap on the Moon to watching episodes of The Simpsons beamed in from satellites possible. It’s also why you no longer need an angry partner and a crumpled road atlas to get anywhere – sat nav isn’t perfect, but it’s still wonderful.

The same day, 3,153 miles away on the other side of the Atlantic, an Eton-educated racing driver decided to go out for a drive – along Southport’s beach at 152mph, setting a world land speed record in the process. Sir Henry Segrave’s stint as the fastest man on four wheels may have lasted barely a month but it’s still an epic bit of driving, because it involved having to get a supercharged V12 monster with skinny tyres and no traction control to behave itself while doing more than twice the national speed limit. On sand.

I’ve long bemoaned the lack of any sort of proper tribute to Sir Henry’s achievement – other than the name of the town’s branch of JD Wetherspoon – but the other day the car’s current owner kindly brought it back for another run. Exactly nine decades on the 1925 Sunbeam Tiger was back in Southport!

To get the actual car – which usually resides in Utah - back on the beach was an incredible achievement, but nothing quite like actually hearing that 4.0-litre supercharged engine at full chat. In an age of instant gratification where you download today’s entire Champion to your smartphone in about three seconds I listened to several people grumbling because it took two hours to get the methanol-fuelled beast up and running; in fact a few actually got bored and went home!

Yet two hours is worth the wait when you consider it’s been 90 years since the mighty Tiger last roared in anger here – and the spectacle of actually seeing the thing being given the beans and the driver fighting a twitchy rear end on the sands was definitely worth it. It was the sort of unforgettable moment I’m sure I’ll one day bore my grandchildren with – and doubtless plenty of you will too, given the size of the crowds that turned out to see it.

Good news, by the way. I’ve spoken to the driver and he tells me the Tiger’s owner is more than up for a centenary re-run in 2026 – maybe we could honour Robert H Goddard too and have a simultaneous rocket launch. Go on Sefton Council, you know you want to…

Tuesday, 26 January 2016

This Southport motoring event is one you won't want to miss

SOUTHPORT is finally getting its moment in the motoring spotlight.

Anyone up on their local history will know the town actually does pretty well on automotive heritage – and that Red Rum isn’t the only sort of horsepower our part of the world can be proud of. A century ago we were building Vulcan cars here, followed by Corgi scooters well into the 1950s, and when the beach wasn’t being used to hone future Grand National winners it was being used as a race circuit for blokes in Minis and Hillman Imps. We’re also home to the oldest Morgan dealership in the world (which has been selling Malvern’s finest since 1926) and just up the road in Banks there’s a chap who’s made more than 400 re-creations of the Lotus Europa.

Yet our finest automotive hour has been all but forgotten. Five years ago I remember writing for The Champion that the day Sir Henry Segrave set the world land speed record right here in the North West – March 16, 1926 – was marked only by the name of the town’s branch of JD Wetherspoon. The resort’s stint as the fastest place on earth had been all but forgotten - until now.

Organisers The Atkinson and Aintree Circuit Club – the people behind the Ormskirk MotorFest – have vowed to mark the 90th anniversary in style. I’ve seen the plans for the event and it’s exciting stuff; they could have parked some classic cars outside The Atkinson and left it at that, but they haven’t. They’re planning an entire week of events, topped off by a re-creation of the actual run on 16 March using a Sunbeam Tiger (the V12-engined vintage monster, not the 1960s roadster) just like Sir Henry did.

That means it’ll be the second land speed record re-enactment in a year, following the return of Sir Malcolm Campbell’s Blue Bird to Pendine Sands in Wales. To have something like that happen right on my doorstep is hugely exciting, which is why I can’t wait to see this event getting off the ground and witnessing a 1920s racer capable of more than 150mph fire into action on the very beach it wowed the world.

The event’s called The Southport Festival of Speed and I’m sure there’ll be plenty more on it The Champion in the coming weeks. See you there!

Tuesday, 15 July 2014

New classic car show planned for Southport

CLASSIC car owners in and around Southport are being urged to get involved with a new charity event being held in the resort next month.

The event, which is being held at the newly-refurbished Kings Gardens near the Promenade, will take place on Saturday, 23 August and raise funds to help treat Merseyside residents with neurological disorders.

It’s free for owners of classic car and motorbikes to show off their prized vehicles, but anyone keen to get involved must request an application form by sending an email to info@lot21.co.uk.

Saturday, 16 March 2013

Henry Segrave was a Southport hero of speed


Sculptures, plaques, statues and artworks. These are just some of the things which haven’t been commissioned for what surely ranks as the most awe-inspiring spectacle in Southport’s history.

On this day 87 years ago the world land speed record was set on the town’s beach yet there's barely anything in the resort in the way of pomp or ceremony to celebrate. In fact, the only lasting tribute to the day the seaside resort became the fastest place on Earth is The Henry Segrave, a JD Wetherspoon pub named in honour of the dashing chap who dared to push the edges of what’s possible at the driving seat of a car.

It seems hard to believe, all these years, that it’s physically possible to drive along the beach at 152mph, a speed that’s more than twice what you can legally do on the motorway. The fastest I’ve ever driven was 130mph on a banked racing circuit at the helm of a V8-powered Vauxhall, and even on smooth tarmac in a modern car designed to cope, it was mildly terrifying. I can’t even begin to imagine what it would have been like going faster still on sand, driving a racing monster with no airbags, traction control or ABS - things which weren’t invented until decades later - and surviving to tell the tale.

In 1926, when most people’s experience of motoring was a bumble down the backroads in an Austin Seven, seeing Henry Segrave screaming down the sands in his Sunbeam Tiger must have been an epic sight. Record-breakingly epic, in fact.

Sir Henry O’Neil de Hane Segrave was, to borrow the cliché, a chap cast of the right stuff. Eton-educated, a First World War fighter pilot and a Grand Prix winner, he was exactly the sort of stiff-upper-lip yet heroic character you’d likely encounter in a Biggles adventure story, and as such ideally qualified for the risky business of breaking land speed records. To this day he’s the only person who’s ever held the land and water speed records simultaneously, and was actually killed at just 33 setting his final water speed record on Lake Windermere. After hitting a log at 98mph and crashing, he was recovered from the lake while still unconscious, and awoke in hospital to ask of the state of “his men” who’d helped him in the attempt.

He stayed conscious just long enough to be informed he’d broken the record, dying of lung haemorrhages less than half an hour later. You couldn’t make it up.

Yet it’s always his first record, the one he set on March 16, 1926 that sticks out in the mind. It wasn’t an easy record to break - on his third run, Segrave hit a gulley, sending his Sunbeam into the air for 49 feet - but he managed to eake 152.33mph out of the V12-engined, twin-supercharged Tiger, which he’d christened Ladybird on account of its red paint. Despite it being the fastest anybody had ever driven, it was an event which attracted few spectators.

The car, which is now part of a private collection of classic cars owned by an American enthusiast, was also the last land speed record contender to also be a competitive machine on the nation’s racing circuits, and owed its speed not only to the driver but also the immense punch offered up by its 350bhp V12 engine.


Journalist Wille Green, one of the few lucky enough to drive the machine, said: “This is one of the gutsiest, most torquey and powerful engines I’ve ever sat behind and even when you throw in the Alfa P3 and the Napier Railton for comparison, with big superchargers, you can sometimes get surge in a corner but the Tiger’s throttle response is impeccable in this respect. There is just instant, solid, vast power on tap.”

Even though the Southport record was smashed a month later, when John Parry-Thomas pounded along Pendine Sands in Wales at 171mph, it took more than 60 years before someone was able to make the Sunbeam go any faster, when the late John Baker-Courtenay took it to 157.44mph on the runway at RAF Elvington in Yorkshire. It’s his run, which attracted the attention of the world’s press back in 1990, which is likely to remain the ultimate tribute to Segrave and his incredible antics in Southport.
It is one of the most daring things ever to be done in the north west, yet in 2011 the only reminder you’re likely to find of Sir Segrave’s speed record is in the name of The Henry Segrave, a pub on Lord Street. With no museum exhibits, statues or plaques to commemorate the resort’s brief claim to being the fastest place on Earth, it is a record that’s almost slipped from memory entirely.

As records go it’s one that deserves more recognition than it has right now, and it’s high time that we in the north west did something to remember this brief but brave, bold and ultimately successful attempt to nab the world land speed record on Southport beach.

Statue, anyone?
A version of this feature originally appeared in the Autumn 2011 issue of GR8Life magazine. Life On Cars would like to thank Edwina Gibney, John Baker-Courtenay’s daughter, for her help with information on the Sunbeam Tiger and the Southport land speed record.

Tuesday, 26 February 2013

Bikers urged to join Southport Cruisers on charity run

Members of Southport Cruisers on their last Christmas run to Clumber Lodge

A GROUP of motorbike riders from Southport are revving up plans to bring a bit of Easter excitement to the residents of a children's home in Formby.

Southport Cruisers said plans are underway for a ride across the West Lancashire countryside on Sunday, March 24 to the Clumber Lodge Children's Home in Formby, where they will donate gifts and Easter eggs to the young residents there along with the cash donations for the home itself.

Club spokesman Rob Myall said: "Southport Cruisers Motorcycle Club was formed in 2005 and have been doing the Christmas and Easter runs ever since. We meet at the Ring ‘o' Bells public house every Wednesday at 8pm.

"Anyone on a motorcycle, trike or scooter wishing to join us and give the children something to smile about would be made more than welcome."

If you'd like to join the cruisers on their run to Formby, meet them at 11am on the morning of Sunday, March 24 at the Ring ‘o' Bells pub in Lathom, where the run will start.

Monday, 5 November 2012

The Southport brothers who built a camper van for less than a grand


TWO brothers from Southport have used their technical know-how to write a book on their bid to build a camper van on a budget.

Matthew and Stuart Ball, of Fylde Road said this week that they have used their technical skills to convert an LDV van into a camper van for less than £1,000, and detailed how they did it in a book which has just been launched by publishing firm Veloce.

Co-author Matthew Ball said: “We've always dreamed of having our own camper. We love being able to go anywhere at the drop of a hat, and being able to afford it. The Lakes, The Cotswolds, Scotland, Cornwall - heck, the whole world is there waiting for you!

"We used to think that one day, once we'd got enough money together, we'd get our dream machine, but we never seemed to have the money and that's the problem - dream machines seem to cost so much. Isn't the idea of a camper van to get away, anytime you want, cheaply. That was certainly our plan anyway."


The pair, having been put off by both the prices of brand new campervans and the quality of secondhand machines available, decided to use Matt's experience as a resistant materials tutor to convert a secondhand van into a campervan to keep costs down, and have chronicled the project in a book to help spur others on to follow suit.

The project, which took place over ten weeks last summer, saw the brothers convert the van into a fully-functioned camper van for a total of £996, including the cost of buying the van itself. It also marks their debut into the publishing world, with the finished title being their first book.


Stuart Ball said: "Inspiration came from Ron Champion's book, Build a Sports Car for Less Than £250. I knew through converting another van into a camper that costs can easily run out of control, so a great deal of thought and preparation was required to achieve such a low cost.

“We have also developed a basic website showing pictures which didn't make it into the book, and a gallery page for fellow camper van enthusiasts to upload their camper van builds.”

The book, entitled Build Your Own Dream Camper Van For Less Than £1,000 is available to buy now both in bookstores and online, costing £19.99. For more information visit the brothers' website.

Pictures courtesy of Matthew and Stuart Ball

Thursday, 23 February 2012

Electric Mia gets green light for Government grants


IF YOU liked the little Mia electric van Life On Cars tested a couple of weeks ago then the Governnment have got some good news for you.

The secretary of state for transport confirmed this week that the French-made zero emissions vehicle - which is unusual because it only comes in middle-hand-drive - is eligible for both the ‘Plug-In Car’ and ‘Plug-In Van’ Grants, and confirmed that Mia's offerings meet all the safety, reliability, performance and warranty standards necessary for the UK market.

As a result the standard short wheelbase model (mia-U) will retail at approximately £21,000 and the two extended models, the mia L and the mia box van, will both retail at approximately £22,000.

Last month Life On Cars reported on the Mia's local connection - a Southport man is helping UK companies to test the car for possible fleet use in the future.

Friday, 23 December 2011

Honda Goldwing parade planned for Southport in 2012


THE region's car connoisseurs have already had an early Christmas treat - now it's the turn of the bikers to get a bit of seasonal good news.

I've just had word from a group of Honda Gullwing enthusiasts that they're planning a Light Parade - a gathering of the giant Japanese machines with plenty of strobe lighting - to help raise funds for Queenscourt Hospice, with plans to ride scores of their machines through Southport town centre during a closed parade next September.

Jeff Thornton of Goldwings North West, who will be organising the event, said:

"Following a hugely successful event in Llandudno this year, it has just been announced by the Federation of UK GoldWing Clubs that their premier Light Parade will move to Southport for 2012.

"All the fundamentals for a great Light Parade Weekend are already in place with a keen and cooperative Town Council, excellent cooperation from Merseyside Police and a cracking venue, the 154 bedroom Prince of Wales Hotel on Lord Street, the Town’s main street, in Southport."

I know this column's called Life On Cars but if it's a motoring event - and especially one to help good causes in the north west - we at The Champion are only too happy to give it a boost, so I'll keep you posted with any more details as soon as I get them.

Watch this space...

Friday, 12 November 2010

What do you know about the DUKW?

A SOUTHPORT man hoping to tell the tale of these mighty vehicles from the resort's past - and he's looking to hear from residents who remember them.

Peter Dyer, of Longacre, told Life On Cars he is working on a book covering the history of the amphibious DUKW vehicles, which were once a common sight along the region's coastline when they were used as rescue vehicles by the Sefton Lifeguards.

“The red and cream DUKWs, workhorses of the Southport and then Sefton Lifeguards, patrolled our shores for nearly four decades,” he explained.

“They were responsible for saving the lives of some 600 people, but started out here as pleasure ride vehicles. Now their story has come full circle, with some of them being used on the Liverpool and London yellow Duck Tours.”

The DUKW, popularly pronounced “duck”, is a six-wheel-drive amphibious truck designed for the American military to use in amphibious attacks during the Second World War, and among other operations was used in the D-Day Landings in 1944.

Mr Dyer is requesting that Champion readers who remember the vehicles should get in touch with him with their stories, along with any additional photos, film footage or information. He is particularly looking for more information about the company Thompson and Doxey Export, which was involved with the vehicles, the use of the Canning Road bus sheds to store them, and any photos from the late 1940s, when they were first introduced.

To get in touch with your stories contact 01704 231685 or by email at peter@peterdyer.wanadoo.co.uk

Tuesday, 12 January 2010

The Ford Mondeo that doesn't exist



A SOUTHPORT motorist who was hoping to get into gear for the New Year has been told he can't - because the DVLA says his car doesn't exist.

Birkdale resident Howard Skelton has been trying to register a vehicle he bought from his son but so far his efforts have failed, because the Driver Vehicle Licensing Agency, responsible for keeping track of the country's cars, have issued a Certificate of Destruction by mistake.

“It's incredibly frustrating when you try to do something by the book and get embroiled in this sort of nightmare,” he told Life On Cars.

“It should not be up to me to sort out their inefficiency. Hopefully they will see sense soon.”

Mr Skelton wanted to register the Ford Mondeo as his own but when he contacted the agency, based in Swansea, he was told the car no longer existed because it had been issued with a Certificate of Destruction, meaning it cannot be legally driven on the road.

He said that the DVLA have instructed him to take the car to one of its assessment centres, based in Preston, to rectify the mistake, but due to the car no longer being officially recognised it would be illegal to drive it there.

Mr Skelton has since got in touch with Southport MP and Life On Cars reader John Pugh to take the case further, who described the DVLA's stance on the issue as “Kafkaesque bureaucracy”.

“We wrote several letters on Mr Skelton's behalf to try and sort the situation out. We were told that Certificates of Destruction are issued by Authorised Treatment Facilities, and that the error was probably down to mistaken paperwork. Amazingly the DVLA showed no interest in getting to the bottom of what had happened,” he said.

“This exposes shocking bureaucracy, and a complete absence of common sense at the heart of this department. That the certificate had clearly been issued in error, yet expect a pensioner to have a car towed to Preston to verify its existence is beyond crazy. There is also a complete lack of communication between bodies that is inexcusable,” he said.

The DVLA responded by saying it could not it could not comment on individual cases, but a spokesman for the organisation did say:

“A Certificate of Destruction (CoD) is issued when a vehicle is presented to an Authorised Treatment Facility (ATF) for destruction. It is proof that the vehicle has, or will be, destroyed to strict environmental standards and it is a legal requirement that once a CoD has been issued no further changes of keeper can be recorded.

"In rare cases where a CoD may have been issued in error, DVLA will investigate further. In exceptional circumstances we will allow the car to be taxed to enable the car to be driven for an inspection. If the inspection is satisfactory, a V5C can then be issued.”

Have you had any motoring mishaps? Share your motoring stories with me by emailing david.simister@champnews.com

Tuesday, 3 November 2009

A Champion of classic cars



SOUTHPORT'S MP has spoken this week of his bid to help save some of the town's most cherished classic cars from the UK-wide scrappage scheme.

John Pugh said on Monday (November 2) that although he could see the benefits of the scheme, which was extended in September in an effort to boost new car sales, he believed many classic cars were being unfairly destroyed.

"The other day I was lobbied as Lib Dem Treasury spokesman by representatives of the motor trade to back an extension of the 'successful' car scrappage scheme, and yes I saw the arguments for keeping the wheels of industry going, employment up etc but I have to say there were speaking to the wrong guy," he told Life On Cars.

"Backers of the scrappage scheme will tell you solemnly that these cars are not that fuel efficient but precisely because these cars are loved and cherished they are not driven much and therefore pollute less.

"They could actually be the green choice. Maybe the owners use public transport or bike a bit more because they clearly are people who think motoring should be an experience not a daily grind."

Dr Pugh, a keen reader of the Life On Cars motoring column in The Champion newspaper, said that he had seen many classic cars while canvassing in the town, including Triumph Stags, Ford Capris and Rover P4s, which he believes could be at risk of being lost forever if scrapped by their owners in order to get discounts on new cars.

A number of petitions and Facebook groups have been started by motorists opposed to the scheme, which gives new car buyers a £2000 discount if they scrap old motors more than a decade old.

However both the Government and the Society of Motor Manufacturers support the scheme, saying it helped boost the automotive industry in a time of recession.

"This is an extremely important decision that will inspire consumer and business confidence," said Paul Eviritt, SMMT's chief executive.

He added: "The additional 100,000 vehicles should help to counter the likely negative impacts of a return to the higher rate of VAT and the introduction of first year VED rates."

Dr Pugh, who drives around in a 1995 Toyota, is not among the 250,000 UK motorists who have taken advantage of the scheme.

Read more in The Southport Champion, published on November 4.

Friday, 25 September 2009

Going clubbing


I BEGIN this week with a confession; I’ve joined a car owners’ club.

It’s not the sort of thing you tell The Champion’s 108,774 readers lightly, because it often seems in 2009 the only thing you’re allowed to be an enthusiast of is football, mobile phones and a spot of light fighting. Admitting to being such a car nut that you’ve actually joined a band of fellow fans is no easy thing.

Part of the problem, I reckon, are the people who join them. I say this as a car person myself, but far too many clubs are filled with people who have far too much time for carburettors and not enough for getting out more.

The problem is that I’ve been brought up with Trainspotting rather than train spotting, so even though I still get slightly giddy whenever a TVR roars up Lord Street, the idea of talking about its cylinder heads for hours on end in a country pub just doesn’t come naturally.

There’s also the trouble of owners feeling they have to play up to whatever image their car projects; Capri owners going all Bodie and Doyle on you, that sort of thing. Naturally, you’d expect any Mini club to just be full of people who’ve seen The Italian Job too many times.

Yet the club I’ve just joined isn’t too bad. Yes, most of the owners do turn up to country pubs in Minis, but the conversation actually covers things that belong at the bar, not the garage.

I also don’t have to make the unmistakable sound of someone pretending to be interested, which I usually have to when I’m forced to watch a football match. I’m sure the FA Cup makes for hours of interesting conversation, but you can’t blast it down a country lane on a sunny evening.

I’ve been to some unbelievably boring car clubs before but having found one with a sense of fun, I’ve realised it’s not the car, it’s the people.
A convert to car clubs? Guilty as charged, I’m afraid.

Sunday, 2 August 2009

A Rally Good Weekend




SPENT most of this weekend getting sunburnt, eating expensive burgers and watching small planes landing and taking off on a windswept airfield. You might think I've been on a Ryanair break to Benidorm but in fact my destination - 2009's Woodvale Rally - is cheaper and slightly more amusing.

The show, which takes place each August within the confines of RAF Woodvale, near Ainsdale, is something I've managed to gatecrash almost every year since the mid '90s but I've always been determined to get the bottom of what it actually is.

Is it a classic car gathering? A model aircraft show? A chance to eat fast food and immediately regurgitate it on one of the nearby fairground rides? Personally, I think it's a strange mish-mash of all three, but it's still a delightfully entertaining draw for car, bike and plane buffs from right across the region.



Naturally, my own classic was being typically uncooperative, getting so excited about going on show that it decided to shed its exhaust pipe. It missed the Saturday but - after lots of swearing, shouting, and sawing - it did eventually get there on the Sunday.

As as all classics break down all the time, I ended up having nightmarish visions of legions of people across the North West all perched underneath Austin Cambridges and Ford Anglias, wetting themselves because their cars are wetting themselves. It's almost enough to make me give up and buy a Nissan Micra.

Admittedly some of the cars which actually made it here - some of which are shown here - were quite nice, and there's always something stirring about seeing a Vulcan bomber fly past. Yet I still can't imagine pitching up a tent and spending two whole days there.



So the Woodvale Rally's still full of expensive food, cars that don't work, and every spare bit known to man (except the one thing you actually need). And I still love it.