Deploying all of the engineering expertise and industrial might at his disposal, Vandervell achieved his goal in 1957, when the Vanwall of Tony Brooks and Stirling Moss won the British Grand Prix at Aintree.
By the end of 1958, Vanwall had won a total of nine World Championship Grands Prix and claimed that year’s inaugural Constructors’ Championship, building the foundation for the considerable success that would subsequently be enjoyed by British-built Formula One cars.
First published in 1975, this book offers a unique insight into Tony Vandervell and the rise of his Grand Prix team and has been extensively expanded for this new edition from Porter Press International with the inclusion of hundreds of official factory documents from the archives of ‘Jenks’ and the GP Library – from telegrams and letters to lap charts and technical records. With a superb collection of period photographs and detailed captions written by Doug Nye, the result is the definitive history of this ground-breaking British Formula One team.
- The full story of Tony Vandervell’s rise to Grand Prix glory, from the ThinWall Specials to the Vanwall success of 1957 and 1958.
- New foreword written by Vanwall driver and six-times Grand Prix winner Tony Brooks.
- Hundreds of never-seen-before Vanwall documents from the GP Library archive, from correspondence with Enzo Ferrari to driver contracts and technical data sheets.
- 200 superb archive photographs in colour and black and white, with detailed captions written by Doug Nye.
- A complete race record of the ThinWall Specials and Vanwall Grand Prix cars – painstakingly updated using official factory documents.
The Authors
Denis Jenkinson was born in London in 1920 and was first attracted by motor racing in 1932; it became an all-absorbing passion from then on. Having won the 1949 World Championship for sidecar racing as passenger to Eric Oliver, he joined Motor Sport in 1953 and became its Continental Correspondent. Jenkinson famously navigated Stirling Moss to victory in the 1955 Mille Miglia, and never considered himself a professional journalist. Instead, he wrote in order to enjoy all aspects of motor racing. He died in 1996.
Cyril Posthumus was born near Brooklands in 1918 and worked for Hawker Aircraft, AC Cars and Lammas Ltd before joining the Royal Artillery at the outbreak of World War Two. He turned to journalism in 1950, working for Autosport and Motoring News, among others. A keen and highly respected motor-racing historian, he also wrote a number of books. Posthumus died in 1992.
Doug Nye worked for Motor Racing, Motoring News and Motor Sport before going freelance in 1968. He has written more than 70 books, is historical consultant to Goodwood Motorsport, and co-curates the GP Library collection of racing photography with Sir Paul Vestey. A close friend of both Jenks and Cyril, Doug is recognised as one of the world’s foremost motor racing historians.
more information: porterpress.co.uk