Sunday, November 11, 2007

Racing After the War

Racing restarted in Europe in 1946 with the few cars that managed to survive the war, these were mostly Maserati’s and several Alfa Romeo 158’s that were hidden in a cheese factory during the war. The first race was called the “Robert Benoist Trophy” in honor of a prewar Bugatti driver who was murdered by the Gestapo. The first top caliber races were held in 1946, some drivers that participated were Louis Chiron, Achille Varzi, Tazio Nuvolari, and Giuseppe Farina. This year saw the creation of the Federation Internationale d’Automobiles (FIA) and the first use of the term Formula One. The FIA created new rules for the 1947 season, 1.5 liter supercharged and 4.5 liter unsupercharged engines were allowed. Alfa Romeo won every race that year. 1948 proved to be a very historic year for grand prix racing. Enzo Ferrari fielded a car of his own construction for the first time and Juan-Manuel Fangio made his debut in a Simca-Gordini. While the Ferrari and Alfa Romeo team were free to race after the war any German team was banned from racing into the 1950’s and Mercedes and Auto Union were busy reconstructing their bombed out factories to resume road car production. With Alfa Romeo having to pull out of grand prix racing in 1948 the spoils were left for Maserati and Ferrari of Italy and Talbot of France.

The racing cars of Auto Union took a very odd trip after the war was over and almost raced again for the Soviet Union! The Germans gave up the town of Zwickau early in 1945, saving the town from any increased destruction from the coming Allied and Red armies. The Allied army swept through the town, set up a provisional government, and continued towards Chemnitz were the Auto Union headquarters were located. Marching from the east was the Red Army of the Soviet Union who took the town of Chemnitz on May 8, per an agreement between the two armies. One of the more privileged soldiers of the Red Army was Vasiliy Stalin, son of Joseph, and as the Red Army set up shop in Eastern Europe after the Allied withdrawal in July they begin to search the area around Zwickau. Vasiliy was beside himself when he got word that the Red Army had discovered the Auto Union’s hidden in some mines around Zwickau. Vasiliy had a love of all things fast and mechanical, and being the son of Joseph Stalin helped him feed that love. On his request the Auto Union’s were loaded on a train by the Red Army and shipped back to Moscow. You see Vasiliy had a dream, to a create a Soviet racing car that could compete against the might of the western teams, with the captured Auto Union’s he had the technological starting point. But Vasiliy had to tread a fine line; he could not just slap a red star on the Auto Union and call it Soviet. The technology in the car had to be developed into a new, fully Soviet car. Help for this problem came from the very same research and development department in Chemnitz that the cars originated from, except now the department was structured to funnel their work into the Soviet Union. The department was working on such projects as creating new cars for Eastern Germany and various projects that would be used in the Soviet Union, and with the start of 1947 they were charged with creating a new racing car from the captured Auto Unions, the project was named Typ 650. Just how much of the Auto Union went into the Typ 650 is unknown, though some parts, perhaps leftovers found their way directly onto the car while other parts were completely new having used the Auto Union design as a blueprint to start. Two Typ 650 cars were completed by April 1952, Vasiliy now a Major General ordered a plane to take the cars from Germany and bring them to Moscow. When they got to Moscow the cars were unable to be started, but they were entered in a race outside of the city in 1952 where they broke down. About this time the cars developed a nickname, Sokol, which is the Russian word for falcon. The term “Stalin Falcons” was a propaganda term applied to Soviet pilots and Vasiliy wanted the same name to be applied to his racing drivers. But it was not to be, by 1952 Joseph Stalin had grown tired of the unreliability of the cars and ordered them to be sent back to Chemnitz so the research team could look over the came, and that’s where the project stopped. Stalin was dead the next year and the new Soviet leader, Nikita Khrushchev did not want to continue funding the program and needed to distance him from any project that was connected to his predecessor.

In the end did the Third Reich reach the goals they had set for their involvement in Grand Prix racing? First one as to ask what their goals were, similar to the 1936 Olympics their main goals were to show the rest of the world what Nazi Germany could accomplish. They clearly did that. Between the 1935 and 1939 either Mercedes-Benz or Auto Union won every drivers championship and nearly every race. Their main rivals were the Italian cars from Maserati and Alfa Romeo, but they were so technologically inferior that the only chance they had at winning was when one of the German cars had a mechanical breakdown. With the help of the Nazi party money the two Germany companies advanced grand prix technology so far into the future, both companies made advances that are still being used today in the racing world such as the first use of ground effects. As with the 1936 Olympics the Nazi’s wanted to increase the respectability of Germany in the world and show off their vision for a “new Germany.” That was accomplished as well, the infrastructure that was put in place to build the very advanced racing cars was highly admired and even Dick Seaman had said that he hoped that British teams would use the Germans as an example and raise their game in order to compete on the grand prix circuit. Also, at least temporarily, the efforts of the Silver Arrows may have hid the fact that Hitler and Nazi Germany were planning for world domination. Dick Seaman after signing for Mercedes and meeting Hitler wrote home waxing poetically about how Hitler didn’t “muck about” and just wanted to improve Germany. Seaman even wrote that Hitler should take over more of Europe. When Seaman did start questioning his move to Germany friends back home in England wrote to Dick that it was important for him as an Englishman to maintain friendly relations with the Germans. But the involvement of the Germans would also forever affect the grand prix world. WWII brought an end to the careers of most drivers involved in the era of the Silver Arrows. After war resumed in the 1940’s a new breed of drivers had come along to replace the now veterans from the 30’s. Both the German manufacturers were banned from racing until the 1950’s had rolled around. By the time Mercedes-Benz rejoined grand prix racing in 1954 it had formed into the FIA Formula One World Championship, which now saw newly formed British teams and Ferrari fighting for championships. Mercedes started right were they left off when they returned grand prix racing, but then Pierre Lavegh crashed his Mercedes at the 24 Hours of Le Mans in 1955 killing over eighty spectators and the company withdrew from racing for decades. Auto Union would become Audi AG and have never competed in grand prix racing again. Mercedes-Benz re-entered grand prix racing in 1993 and formed a partnership with the English McLaren team in 1995 and have 2 World Drivers Championships to their name and are currently fighting for race victories against familiar rivals Ferrari. Despite that they have never entered grand prix racing again Audi have continued to push the envelope in racing technology. They revolutionized the World Rally Championship with their introduction of Quattro all-wheel drive technology, something every winning car as had since then. An Audi, or Audi based design has won the 24 Hours of Le Mans since 2000. In 2006 Audi became the first racing team to win the race using a diesel engine, trying to use the victory to push for wider application of diesel engines in road cars. The use of grand prix racing as propaganda is still apparent today, but the ways it is done have changed. In 2004 the country of Bahrain sponsored a series of political messages on the side of the Jordan EJ14. They promoted such issues as peace, racial equality, nuclear disarmament, and African debt forgiveness. In 2001 only days of the September 11 terrorist attacks in the U.S. Ferrari ran their car with a black nose completely sponsor-less saying that they did not want to “benefit commercially” from the race weekend. After the death of Pope John Paul II Ferrari again ran their car with a black nose while racing in the Muslim country of Bahrain. But the most apparent use of grand prix racing as a form of propaganda in present day are the races themselves. Formula One is leaving the tracks of their past in Europe behind to race in newly emerging countries such as Turkey, Singapore, Bahrain, United Arab Emirates, and China. These races are being held at facilities designed, created, and paid for by the respective governments of their countries. They are pouring money into grand prix races to get tourists into their country and to show a positive picture of their country to the entire globe. Just as Nazi Germany saw the benefits to be gained from being involved in the multi-national world of grand prix racing manufacturers and entire countries still see benefits to be gained from being a part of the Formula One World Championship.

Effects of Nazi Germany on Grand Prix Racing

What influence did the involvement of the Germany and the Third Reich have over the grand prix world? The drivers of Mercedes-Benz and Auto Union split the driving championships between them from 1934 to the end of racing in 1939. Any driver that was not in one of the silver cars from Germany had to be content with the very occasional race victory when mechanical unreliability hit the Silver Arrows.

The drivers from the Silver Arrows era had their lives and careers greatly shaped by being a part of the grand prix world during the 1930’s. Bernd Rosemeyer, the focal point of the Auto Union driving talent was dead by 1938. Dick Seaman, the only Englishman to drive the Mercedes was dead by 1938. Caracciola sat out the war in Switzerland, but due to increasing effects of bone disease his prewar success was never matched and he lost his battle in 1958. Fagioli would race again in the early years of the Formula One championship after the war, but he was soon pushed aside by younger driving talent, he perished in a minor racing accident in 1952. Hermann Lang lost any chance at prolonged racing success due to World War II, he could not be beaten in 1939 but by the time the war was over time had past him by. Manfred Von Brauchitsch saw his life collapse around him after the war, being a part of a German military family he was even arrested by West Germany on rumors that he was spying for the communist East Germans. Tazio Nuvolari spent much of the 1930’s chasing the Silver Arrows in inferior equipment. He would manage one win in the Auto Union before war stopped racing across Europe and never to saw the same success again. Achille Varzi saw himself dominate grand prix racing in 1934 winning nine times in an Alfa Romeo, while the Silver Arrows were still formulating their challenge. He would switch to Auto Union in 1935 but the pairing never come to fruition for Varzi due to questionable personal relationships and an addiction to morphine that would take him years to overcome which was in part caused by Nazi race fixing.

The French drivers from the era faired better then those involved with the cars from the Axis Powers. Louis Chiron was in active military service for France during World War II. Chiron found the draw of racing too much to avoid and was racing again after the war where he crossed paths with former rival Achille Varzi, now clean and trying to rebuild his reputation. The “Wily Fox” as he was known by the Germans finally hung up his helmet at the age of sixty. A French driver of Jewish origin Rene Dreyfus saw the writing on the wall and knew he could never drive either of the German machines. Like Chiron he joined the French military at the onset of war, but he was given a chance to race in the 1940 Indianapolis 500 and found himself in America when Paris fell to the Nazi’s. He then proceeded to sign up for the U.S. military and found himself back in Europe. After the war was over he went back to America, became a citizen and opened a famous restaurant in New York City.

With the start of war in 1939 many people involved with racing in Germany and Italy turned their efforts from building and running racing cars to fighting the Allied Powers of the world. Italo Balbo was one of the first Axis bureaucrats to meet his demise. Balbo was against the Nazi regime and its increased power over Italy along with the direction that Mussolini was taking the country. The idyllic life that he had created for himself came to an end on June 28, 1940 when he was shot down by Italian anti-aircraft guns. Many people believe that this was a direct order from Mussolini who viewed Balbo as a serious contender to his power in Italy. With the end of the war and the death of Hitler in 1945 Germany and the Nazi’s were defeated. Most of Hitler’s henchmen were either dead or facing criminal prosecution for war crimes. Adolf Huhnlein was dead by 1942, under strange circumstances. The official cause of death was “a long illness” but many believe that he was a victim of a Hitler purge of bureaucrats that were felt to have come under suspicion of disloyalty. Huhnlein was not well remembered by anyone who knew him; he was considered a weak leader who did not have the qualifications to adequately do his job. Professor Ferdinand Porsche, head of the Auto Union team continued life in the automotive world after the war, having already designed one of the most iconic cars of all time, the Volkswagen Beetle, he went on to create another legendary design, the Porsche 911. A design that almost fifty years later continues to be produced largely unchanged. Alfred Neubauer would stay loyal to Mercedes-Benz and would continue to head their racing programs when they eventually resumed years after the war. Neubauer is also credited with devising a system of flags and hand signals to communicate with drivers during the race, telling them position, speed, and race distance.

Drivers of the Era

Bernd Rosemeyer is the driver most associated with the Silver Arrows, and it would lead him to a tragic end. Rosemeyer was born in Lingen, Germany on October 14, 1909. His father had owned a car and motorcycle garage where Rosemeyer learned how to work on both, and started racing motorcycles. Rosemeyer joined Auto Union with hardly any experience in racing cars typical of the era, which was considered a good thing seeing how hard the mid-engined Auto Union was to drive. He won his first grand prix at the Brno-Masaryk Circuit in Czechoslovakia in 1935 and shot to super stardom in Germany and around the world. It was at this race that he was to meet German flying ace Elly Beinhorn which was a match made in Nazi Party heaven. Elly was already a star in Germany, having flown herself all over the world. To the Nazi’s they were the perfect Aryan couple and became the toast of Berlin.

All German drivers were required to be a part of the “Nationalsozialistisches Kraftfaher Korps” basically the racing drivers wing of the Nazi Party which was headed by Korpsfuhrer Adolf Huhnlein who reported directly to Hitler. But Rosemeyer, due to his international stardom and his marriage to Elly Beinhorn, another German hero, he was given the “honor” of membership in the SS. Despite his fairly well-known dislike of the Nazi Party Rosemeyer knew that was something he could not refuse, though he did manage never to be seen in the uniform. Evidence of this dislike was apparent at the 1937 German Grand Prix at the Nurburgring. Korpsfuhrer Huhnlein, who was a humorless man was looked upon as nothing more then a Nazi bureaucrat asked all drivers that they not kiss their girlfriends before the race, stating it was not Aryan behavior. Before the race began all the Silver Arrows drivers made a point to kiss their significant others. Rosemeyer would finish third behind winner Caracciola. Korpsfuhrer Huhnlein was there to congratulate them and awarded the winners trophy depicting the Goddess of Speed to Caracciola. Rosemeyer placed a lit cigarette between the statues lips while Huhnlein had his back turned, when alerted by the crowd Rosemeyer feigned innocence.

In November of 1937 Bernd and Elly Rosemeyer had a son, Bernd Jr, ten weeks after that Bernd was to take to the autobahn to try and take the land speed record away from German rivals Mercedes-Benz. This was not the first time that the German companies took to the autobahn for record runs. Speeds were ever increasing and reaching the limit of human reaction and all drivers hated the runs. Some people even say that Rosemeyers involvement was a punishment for his disapproval of the Nazi regime. Rosemeyer had already collapsed once after a run in October of 1937 and had to be lifted out of his Auto Union. But he was back at it on the morning of January 28, 1938. Mercedes Director Alfred Neubauer had seen a weather report that stated the day would be ideal but winds would increase after 9am. At 8am Rudolf Caracciola set off first in his Mercedes on the autobahn between Frankfurt and Darmstadt, he set a record of 268 miles per hour and a flying mile time of 13.38 seconds, and the record belonged to Mercedes. The Auto Union had been completely rebuilt by Professor Eberan-Eberhorst, manager of Research and Development at the company, after several wind tunnel tests. Still a black art to this day Eberhorst had created the first ever aerodynamic “ground effects” car, highly sensitive to wind changes. At 11am Rosemeyer took off on his first run; making a fairly slow first attempt. On his second run he crossed the one kilometer line at over 270 miles per hour when a strong gust of wind caught his car and pushed it into the grass. The car slid and rolled over and disintegrated after a series of somersaults. The Mercedes team stood there “unmoving like statues” according to Caracciola, the record runs were over. Rosemeyer was found over 100 meters away from his car, with his heart still beating, but he was soon pronounced dead by a doctor. The open road speed record still belongs to Rudolf Caracciola at 268 miles per hour. Rosemeyer was buried in Germany with full military honors with Hitler consoling a grief stricken nation with the words “May the thought that he fell fighting for Germany’s reputation lessen your grief.” Despite these words his widow Elly demanded that the funeral for her husband be conducted by a priest with no political stance taken or attempts to justify the record attempts that Bernd died taking part in.

Richard Seaman is perhaps the most intriguing of any driver of the 1930’s; he was the only Englishman to ever driver the Silver Arrows. The only other non-German drivers to race for the Silver Arrows were from Axis power countries. Seaman was born to wealthy parents on February 4, 1913. He always had a love of cars throughout elementary school and eventually enrolled in Cambridge University. But in 1934, to the dismay of his parents he returned from school and announced that he was not going back, he had bought a racing car and set off for mainland Europe and in August of that year he won his first race. After Seaman’s father died in 1935 he convinced his mother to buy him a works ERA. It was a poor car, but he asked his mother for more money and set up a shop at his home with another ERA racing car. Seaman went on to win a trio of races on mainland Europe in 1935 and the RAC International Light Car Race on the Isle of Man in 1936 and had fully caught the attention of Mercedes Director Alfred Neubauer. After Dick’s victory at the 1936 Grand Prix at Donington Neubauer knew that Seaman was someone his team needed. Neubauer sent Seaman a telegram, which his mother initially tried to hide, and Seaman was off to a Mercedes trial at Monza, a track outside of Milan. The main concern of Dick’s mother was the political implications of her son racing for a German team, but most of his friends said that he could just resign if things got worse. In 1937 Adolf Hitler gave approval to Mercedes-Benz to sign Seaman to a contract.

At a party held in Munich Dick Seaman met a young Erica Popp, who was the daughter of president and co-founder of BMW. At first Lillian, Dick’s mother was entranced by Erica, partly due to her family roots. On June 15, 1938 Dick was to have the highpoint of his career. He flung his Mercedes 154 to a victory in the German Grand Prix, beating more established Silver Arrows drivers Caracciola, and Brauchitsch. Germany had Dick Seaman in its grasp, with Seaman writing “Hitler stands no nonsense…Consequently he has remade and reorganized the country, and that is why they believe and rally around him…It’s about time that Hitler took over Austria too.” Lillian, Dick’s mother, had also briefly forgotten her reservations about her son’s choice of career. She was amazed by newsreels of her son’s victory in Germany, receiving the winner’s laurels and having portraits taken with Hitler and King George VI. But things changed when Lillian learned that Dick had proposed to eighteen year old Erica. She had begun to realize that Hitler meant war, how could her son marry a German she thought? What would her neighbors say when they learned that she would have German grandchildren? Despite her objections the couple got married on December 7 1938 and Dick was to never see his mother again. Dick did not see the political implications of his actions; he was a career obsessed man who had no difficulty treading on the toes of anyone who would stand in the way of the goals he had set for himself, including his own mother. The most talented drivers of the era found themselves drawn to Germany because they simply had the best equipment. No grand prix machinery in England could even come close to the Mercedes-Benz that Dick would drive in Germany; Dick had hoped that the success of the Germans might even spur the English to form a challenge, saying “England is becoming a pretty good joke…especially in the Fascist countries.” As time went on Dick finally came to grips with the political atmosphere in Europe, writing to his friend Lord Howe to see if he should return to Britain. Howe’s response was that Dick was doing everyone a favor by keeping a friendly relationship with Germany. Dick even joked to wife Erica that at the Berlin Motor Show in 1939 that he was going to kill Hitler and that she needed to tell the Home Office to send a million pounds to Erica. Dick Seaman’s career and life was cut altogether short when he crashed at La Source hairpin at the Spa-Francorchamps circuit on June 25, 1939. Two Belgian police officers pulled him out of the burning car alive, but he was later to succumb to his burns telling Erica “I’m afraid you must go to the cinema alone after all.” Seaman was the only driver of the Silver Arrows to die at the wheel of his car, and to show their affection for Dick all Mercedes showroom displays were taken down and replaced with a memorial for Dick Seaman. A devastated Erica fled Germany before the war and would die in 1990 an American citizen. Being the only Englishmen to compete in grand prix racing in the 1930’s with the swastika behind his head will forever cloud Dick Seaman’s legacy, he was a flawed individual who put his career aspirations in front of all else.

The two most prominent French drivers of the era were greatly effected by the influence of the Nazi Party in grand prix racing and their eventually build up to war. Louis Chiron was born of French parents in the principality of Monaco in August of 1899, and would go on to hold dual citizenship. He sign up for the French military before his eighteenth birthday and served as an artilleryman during World War I. After Chiron left the military he started his racing career in and around France. At the insistence of Rudolf Caracciola Chiron was added to the Mercedes-Benz team for the 1936 season, the year that belonged to the Auto Union team with their driver, Bernd Rosemeyer taking the title. Later that year he was to crash during the race at the Nurburgring and his career would never fully recover; Mercedes released him from his contract. Before the outbreak of war he was given some tests with the Auto Union team but that came to naught and he witnessed his girlfriend go on to marry his friend Rudolf Caracciola. With the outbreak of World War II throughout Europe Chiron entered active duty again. When France surrendered to Germany he escaped to the free Vichy France…when that too was overrun he escaped to Switzerland. While in Switzerland he helped smuggle a downed Allied airman out of Switzerland, into occupied France, across the Pyrenees to Spain and then eventually back to England.

Rene Dreyfus was born in Nice France in 1895. His brother Maurice owned a paper company, and he eventually took a job as a salesman. He had convinced his mother that he would be able to see more customers if she was to get him a Bugatti, and that his how Rene got his first race car. In 1931 Dreyfus found himself at the second running of the Grand Prix of Monaco, in his privately entered Bugatti. The favorites for the race were native Monegasque Louis Chiron and the winner of the first running who is recorded simply as “Williams.” Dreyfus had convinced his team to fit an extra fuel tank on his car, though they thought he would need to stop due to exhaustion. At the start of the race Chiron shot into the lead and Dreyfus was seventh. On lap fifteen Dreyfus was third, and by lap forty he was second behind Dreyfus. By this time Chiron needed to pit, though he still came out in front Dreyfus who was right on his tail. Shortly after the pitstop Dreyfus had passed and went on to win the second running of the Grand Prix of Monaco by twenty-two seconds.

By the mid-30’s France, the birthplace of motor racing now saw itself behind the Italians and Germans in the grand prix world. In an attempt to reverse this the French government created the Prix du Million to encourage French manufacturers to build new cars. The prize of a million French francs would be awarded to the driver and car that won a race against the clock at the Montilhery Circuit with an average speed of 146kmh over a two hundred kilometer distance. Despite some stiff competition from Bugatti Dreyfus and Delahaye won the day and the prize money. Despite the prize the fortunes of the French grand prix teams did not change, except for a stellar victory by Dreyfus in his Delahaye at the Pau circuit in 1938 where he beat the best the German teams had to offer. A Frenchman of Jewish descent beating the Mercedes of Caracciola in France caused a world sensation. But it was his Jewish last name that would prevent him from ever having a chance to drive either the Mercedes-Benz or the Auto Union, and Dreyfus knew this. He is quoted saying “Things were changing cataclysmically, but it seemed as if we were trying to pretend they weren’t…Certainly we saw the swastikas, we heard the fascist songs, we were neither blind nor deaf. And during the last year past we were often on the road to events in Germany, we could see the movement of troops and we could sense the military buildup. But as drivers we were simply French, Germans, Italians, and British, and we were all friends…Still it was apparent to me that I was being treated preferentially, by German drivers, by the officials, by everyone at the Nurburgring. A Frenchman with a Jewish name on German soil. I was perhaps a reminder, an omen of what lay ahead. Maybe we all wanted to postpone thinking about it. I was given every courtesy.” In his pocket Dreyfus held documents ordering him to report to the military after the race. With the start of World War II Dreyfus was in the French Army, but they had arranged for him to race in the Indianapolis 500 in 1940, but with little preparation the race went poorly for Dreyfus and while he was in the U.S. word got back that Paris was conquered by the Nazi’s. Dreyfus stayed in the U.S. and when they entered the war he joined the U.S. military and was sent overseas where he was reunited with his brother and sister. When the war was over he returned to the U.S. and opened the famous restaurant “Le Chanteclair” in New York, which would go on to serve many of Rene’s racing contemporaries such as Varzi and Caracciola.

Hans Stuck, the driver credited with getting Nazi Germany to split their subsidy of German auto racing between two teams was born sometime around the year 1900 in Poland. Stuck was a part of an artillery regiment on the western front during WWI. He began racing locally in 1923 and by chance would come to meet Adolf Hitler on a hunting trip in 1925. In 1932 Hans married a Jewish woman, Paula von Reznicek, something that would come to affect his career later in the decade. With the help of 250,000 reichmarks from the Nazi Party Auto Union set forth on creating their first ever car, which was built at the Horch factory in Zwickau. Stuck first tested the Auto Union on March 6, 1934. The year was to be his best ever, having won the German, Swiss, and Czech Grands Prix. If there had been an organized championship that year, he would have won. Hans Stuck cut his racing teeth doing hillclimbs throughout Germany and he continued to participate in them. At a hillclimb in 1935 he was harassed by the Gestapo and had to drive through a valley of anti-Stuck banners lining the track. Though accounts differ it seems that depending on who gave the orders Stuck was either protected or attacked by the Nazi’s, all for marrying a Jewish woman. With the entrance of Bernd Rosemeyer into the team in 1936 Stuck saw his star begin to fade. He was fired at the end of 1937, some say because he disclosed the terms of his contract to Rosemeyer, while others say it was due to the lingering affects of his marriage. Only several months later Stuck was rehired by Auto Union, partly due to the death of Rosemeyer and also to some of his friends within the Nazi Party interceding on his behalf. But that still did not stop him from being harassed, and he worked tirelessly to defend his wife, though it did little to stop her being discriminated against. Stuck’s last major auto racing victory before the war was winning a third European Mountain Championship in 1938. After the war the German’s were banned from auto racing until 1950, so Stuck acquired Austrian citizenship and took to the hillclimb circuit again. He switched to BMW in 1957 and at the age of sixty he became German Hillclimb champion for the final time. Stuck divorced his wife Paula in 1948 and married Christa Thielmann, who at one point was engaged to Paula’s youngest brother. In 1951 they had a son, Hans-Joachim Stuck who would go on to become a Formula One driver and a world renowned sports car driver in the 70’s, 80’s, and 90’s.

Throughout the period of racing before the war many other drivers of note would race for and against the Silver Arrows. Rudolf Caracciola, along with countryman Bernd Rosemeyer would split the racing championships between them. He would win the drivers title in 1935, 1937, and 1938 racing for the Mercedes-Benz team. He spent WWII in exile in Lugano Switzerland and then tried to make a return to racing after the war, with little success. He crashed while practicing for the 1940 Indianapolis 500 and a fourth place finish in the Mille Miglia was to be his last major auto race. He still holds the record for the fastest speed ever recorded on a public road. Caracciola died at the age of 59 of bone disease.

Luigi Fagioli came to the attention of the Mercedes-Benz team and director Alfred Neubauer while driving Alfa Romeo’s for Enzo Ferrari. He was signed by the team in 1934 but the relationship never really saw its full potential due to the fiery temper of Fagioli. The Italian once pulled his car into the pits and walked away when Neubauer ordered him to stay behind teammate Von Brauchitsch and let him when the race, a physical confrontation with Neubauer was barely avoided. Fagioli went on to win several races in 1935, so his temperament was briefly forgotten about. After a disappointing year in 1936 Fagioli switched to the Auto Union team and fared little better, the low point of the year happened at the Tripoli Grand Prix when he felt that Caracciola was purposely holding him and up and Fagioli went on to attack him with a hammer after the race. His career went on a steep decline after that, he did race for several years after WWII only to be replaced by one Juan Manuel Fangio in the Alfa Romeo team. Fagioli would perish in a sports car accident at Monte Carlo in 1952.

Hermann Lang was an extremely gifted driver with bad timing. Lang began life with the Mercedes team as a racing mechanic for Luigi Fagioli. One day after testing the brakes on the Mercedes he was called into Neubauer’s office, where he was given a chance to drive the car more regularly. The other drivers in the team did not take kindly to one of their mechanics driving their cars. Arguments between Lang and the more seasoned Caracciola were commonplace within the team. These arguments occurred because Lang was an excellent driver, and Caracciola and Von Brauchitsch felt challenged by this relative rookie. Lang fully joined the team as a driver in 1937, with fellow junior driver Dick Seaman. The team would be highly divided between the two junior drivers and Caracciola and Von Brauchitsch. In the coming years Lang would record more and more victories and 1939 was his career year. He won the European Championship along with the German Hillclimb Championship. In his championship year he won five out of the eight races contested, but it was also to be the last year of racing before the outbreak of war. Lang was now at the peak of his driving abilities and unable to race. He continued racing after that war until 1954, the highpoint being a victory at the 24 Hours of Leman in 1952 at the age of 43.

Tazio Nuvolari was born in Italy in 1892, like so many of his contemporaries he began racing on motorcycles when he was 28, after serving in the Italian Army during WWI. At the Monza Grand Prix that year he broke both his legs during practice and they had to be placed in casts. The doctors told him it would be at least a month before he would be able to walk again. The next day Nuvolari was racing tied to his motorcycle; his legend was born when he went on to win the race. In 1924 Nuvolari began racing cars as well as motorcycles, his legend continued to grow with events like the 1930 Mille Miglia. He caught up to Achille Varzi, who was in the lead, without using his headlights. When Nuvolari pulled up to Varzi he flicked on his headlights and swept past Varzi for victory. After Nuvolari won the Targa Florio in Sicily in 1931 and 1932 he dedicated himself to racing cars dominating the grand prix circuit in 1932 with victories at the Monaco, French, and Italian Grands prix. His greatest victory; and perhaps the greatest grand prix victory ever came at the 1935 German Grand Prix in front of over 300,000 people and countless Nazi officials driving an outdated Alfa Romeo. His incredible drive pushed the Mercedes to their breaking point causing them to burst a tire. The Nazi officials in attendance were so furious that they could not find the Italian anthem to play for Nuvolari’s celebration. Tazio happily supplied the German officials with a record of the anthem that he carried with him for good luck. After the death of Rosemeyer in 1938 Auto Union needed a replacement to master the difficult handling mid-engined car. Dr. Porsche himself insisted on Nuvolari who would go on to win the British Grand Prix that year at Donington Park. The coming of WWII would see fit to spoil any further success for Nuvolari in the Auto Union. He participated in some minor races after the war and one more Mille Miglia in 1948. After suffering a massive stroke he past away in 1953, he was buried in his racing overalls as he had wished.

Like so many other drivers from his time Achille Varzi started racing motorcycles as a young man in Italy. Varzi spent the first half of the 1930’s driving various Italian cars, winning 6 grands prix in an Alfa Romeo during the 1934 season. Varzi joined the Auto Union team for the 1935 season, and his life would take a steep downturn. After winning the 1936 Tripoli Grand Prix Varzi found out that the result was organized by the Nazi party as a gift to the Italians, who held a lot of power within Libya. Varzi was furious and began having serious personal problems, including an addiction to morphine. When Bernd Rosemeyer joined the Auto Union team Varzi was quickly overshadowed and by 1938 he had disappeared from the grand prix world. While racing was stopped during the war Varzi overcame his drug addiction and settled down with a new wife. He continued racing after WWII, while practicing for the 1948 Swiss Grand Prix at Bremgarten his car skidded off of a wet track and was crushed by his car. Varzi’s coffin stood for three days at a church in the town of Galliate, over fifteen thousand people attended his funeral with his farewell address noting “and you too, Achille, were destroyed when you sought to cross the frontiers of man-made speed.”

Early Grand Prix Racing

The early years of grand prix racing was mainly a battle between French and Italian teams, the Germans had passing interests, mainly holding races. It was not until the AIACR created new rules, called “formula libre” in 1934 that German auto makers decided to get involved in the sport in a big way. These rules included a minimum car weight of seven hundred and fifty kilograms with unlimited engine sizes along with a minimum race length of five hundred kilometers. Nazi Germany had decided that they would subsidize a race team to help demonstrate German technological might to the world. This money was originally allotted to Mercedes-Benz solely, but driver Hans Stuck and Dr. Ferdinand Porsche convinced Hitler to split the subsidy equally between Mercedes-Benz and the newly created Auto Union. This racing car would actually become the first automobile that Auto Union, later to become Audi, would ever create. Each of the two companies split a sum of 500,000 reichmarks annually with bonuses for podium finishes. Obviously this money did little to cover the expenses of either company, with Mercedes spending an estimated four million reichmarks each year. The money would mean much more for fledging industry debutante Auto Union. But this money meant that each company would forever be linked to the Nazi regime and be under the party umbrella during the rise of the Third Reich. Both teams would end up creating the two most advanced cars ever seen at the time. Most other teams in the grand prix world decided on the use of 2 liter engines to power their cars, but with the large amounts of aluminum and other light weight materials used by Mercedes-Benz and Auto Union they were able to use 4 liter engines to power their cars. The Mercedes team decided on a more conventional front engine layout for their car, while Dr. Porsche went radical with his design of the Auto Union. His design was for a 4 liter V16 engine to place in a mid-engine layout (meaning in between the two axles) with the driver being placed lower in the car towards the nose. The supercharged Auto Union also ran on a highly secret formula of gasoline that caused nausea and headaches in the spectators at each race. These cars, through various design modifications and rules changes would dominate racing in Europe from 1934-1939 with Mercedes driver Rudolph Caracciola taking the drivers title in 1935, 1937, and 1938. The Auto Union of Bernd Rosemeyer would take the title in 1936. The cars of the German teams basically split the race victories between each other during these years, except for some stellar drives by Louis Chiron, and Tazio Nuvolari in the aforementioned 1935 German Grand Prix. Then in 1939 the rattle of gun shots would silence the sound of racing engines throughout the world altering forever the lives of everyone involved in the Silver Arrows era of grand prix racing.

Grand Prix Racing as Propaganda

The 1930’s saw the height of the governmental use of grand prix racing. The 1934 Spanish Grand Prix only happened after a freeze in Franco’s build up to civil war allowed racing teams to enter the country. The Enzo Ferrari run Alfa Romeo team of the 30’s relied heavily on French racing drivers, and when Italy invaded Ethiopia in 1935 the French immediately called for an international response. This resulted in the French racing drivers being unable to travel to their racing cars in Italy. In July of 1934 Austrian chancellor Englebert Dolfuss, a supporter of Italian Fascism was assassinated by eight Austrian Nazi’s. At the time Mussolini was so against the Nazi party that he mobilized troops on the Austro-Italian border in defense of Italy. To quell the situation the German government sent the teams of Mercedes-Benz and Auto Union to a minor race in Pescara Italy called the Coppa Acerbo, with this action Germany showed Italy and Mussolini that no action would be taken against any grand prix team and the crisis was avoided with Mussolini even giving support to the German annexation of Austria. The highpoint of 1930’s grand prix racing for the Italians came at the 1935 German Grand Prix at the Nurburgring. In front of more then 300,o00 Germans Tazio Nuvolari won the race from the Silver Arrows despite the 50-100 horsepower disadvantage of his Alfa Romeo. The German people appreciated the stellar drive, but that was lost on the officials of the Nazi party. Korpsfuhrer Adolf Huhnlein, head of German sport, angrily tore up his victory speech as Nuvolari was given the winners laurels. After much searching the Italian flag was found and raised and the Italian anthem, via a record brought by Nuvolari himself was played. The Italians and Germans also got involved in racing in Libya when King Emmanuel III authorized a lottery based on the results of the Tripoli Grand Prix. The effects were tremendous and attracted drivers and teams from around the globe. The 1936 race was won by Achille Varzi, after a late race charge from Hans Stuck in an Auto Union. But Varzi did not know at the time that the race results were arranged by Nazi officials to appease the Italians who wielded much power in the region. Varzi was incensed and things got worse when at the victory dinner Italo Balbo, Italian Governor of Libya raised his glass in the direction of Hans Stuck, whom he declared the real winner. Varzi could take no more and stormed to his room to meet Ilse Pietsch, who had left Varzi’s teammate to be with him. That night Pietsch introduced Varzi to morphine, an addiction that would control his life for years to come. 1939 was to be the last year of grand prix racing before war swept across Europe, again. The last race happened on September 3rd, 1939 in Belgrade Yugoslavia. The very day that England declared war on Germany, and it was to forever alter the life of one driver directly. Mercedes-Benz driver Manfred Von Brauchitsch saw the coming storm clouds and decided to board a plane out of Belgrade to neutral Switzerland. Upon hearing this Mercedes-Benz sporting director Alfred Neubauer went to the airport and literally dragged the reluctant Von Brauchitsch back to the race track, and his life was to go downhill from there. He was the son and nephew of Nazi Party men, not much use in post-war Germany. He had several failed businesses before asking former teammate Rudolf Caracciola to arrange some business contacts for him in Argentina. This attempt at a new life also failed for Von Brauchitsch, and he returned to Germany a bitter man, just who the Communists were looking for. This led to him being investigated by West Germany for allegations of spying and he was soon arrested. While out on bail he defected to East Germany, leaving his wife behind who would later commit suicide. One can only imagine how things would have been different if Von Brauchitsch was allowed to fly to Switzerland. So how did the Germans come to dominate the latter half of 1930’s grand prix racing?

Nazi Use of Sport for Propaganda

Hitler was not really interested in holding the 1936 Olympics, which were awarded to Germany in 1931 before he came to power. The Olympics were given to Berlin as a consolation for the 1916 Olympics games scheduled for Berlin that were canceled due to the outbreak of WWI. But after some prodding by Goebbels, Hitler saw the potential benefits that the games could bring to Germany. Goebbels was given control of the games by Hitler, and he took full advantage to show the “new Germany” to the world. The Nazi’s hoped also to use the Olympics for a massive influx of foreign currency from tens of thousands of tourists that would travel to Germany for the games. The Nazi administration spent 42 million reichmarks building a 325 acre Olympic complex located on the planned site of the 1916 games. Within Germany an Aryan only policy was quickly established in picking the German Olympic Team, but the Nazi party worked tirelessly to hide any of these policies from the outside world. Formerly omnipresent “Jews Not Welcome” signs had quickly disappeared from Berlin. Nazi storm troopers were ordered to refrain from any actions against German Jews, which was amusing to many in Berlin, including foreign journalists who knew better. Anti-Jewish publications were taken off newsstands. Opposingly, anyone who wanted to interview any Berlin Jews was required to contact the Gestapo first and then they were closely watched until they departed the country. Tourists and athletes entered Berlin in mid-July of 1936. The city had been scrubbed clean, and any undesirable individuals were swept off the streets and ominously sent to detention camps outside of the city. Everywhere people went they saw the Olympic rings hung next to the Swastika. The Olympics accomplished exactly what Goebbels had desired, hundreds of foreign journalists acknowledged that Germany had held the biggest and most lavish Olympics to date. Thousands of tourists also left Germany with fond memories; courtesy from the Nazi’s. People marveled about the fantastic facilities and precise efficiency of the games. The Nazi’s had successfully used the Olympic Games to gain respectability throughout the world. Ironically this was to be the last Olympics for twelve years, due to the outbreak of a war that Hitler was already planning. It was also not the first use of sports as a propaganda tool.

Introduction

The Silver Arrows. The mere mention brings to mind heroic men tossing wildly powerful cars around some of the most storied racing tracks in all of grand prix history. Grand prix racing in the 1930’s is widely accepted as the golden age of the sport. Legendary teams like Auto Union, Mercedes-Benz, and Alfa Romeo fighting it out on the race tracks of Europe and Africa being led by drivers like Rosemeyer, Varzi, Seamon, von Brauchitsch, Chiron, Dreyfus, Caracciola, Nuvolari, Fagioli, and many others. Every person involved in grand prix racing at during the era would forever have their lives altered by the involvment of the Nazi Party in the sport. Grand Prix racing had always been exceptionally nationalistic and has had often suffered because of it. The first organized Grand Prix took place on a course near Le Mans in France, as can be expected the French came to dominate the early years of the sport. Next the Italians, under the guise of Fiat and Isotta-Fraschini took on French and then came the Germans. The depression that swept across Europe and the coming of World War I deeply affected the continent let alone the racing industry. This was apparent when the Americans soundly defeated the French when racing returned to Europe in 1921. But the Europeans quickly learned how to adapt new technology gained during the war to automotive and racing use, with these advances the Europeans quickly regained world racing dominance. History repeated itself after the war; the French were the first to dominant Grand Prix racing after the war, with Bugatti taking the honors under the new “formula libre” rules. Then in 1930 the Italians entered the sport with Alfa Romeo’s run by team boss Enzo Ferrari that would eventually dominate the sport. In 1934 the Association Internationale des Automobile Clubs Reconnus (AIACR) drew up new rules that worked to end Italian dominance caused the rise of the Silver Arrows. But again, after only a few years of peace the political scene in Europe was taking a turn for the worse…with Hitler in Germany, Mussolini in Italy, and Franco in Spain. In January of 1933 Hitler officially took power in Germany. Shortly after this Hitler passed the “enabling act” which simply allowed him to pass laws without approval of the Reichstag. With this, all economic, media, cultural, and political activities were brought under control of the Nazi party. Before taking military action Hitler and the Nazi party wanted to show German and Aryan might though peaceful ventures. Sport was one area that they exploited. The Nazi government had decided that they would subsidize a racing team, that money was to go all to Mercedes-Benz, but Hans Stuck and Ferdinand Porsche convinced the Nazi Party to split that subsidy between Mercedes-Benz and the newly founded conglomeration of four German auto makers that became Auto Union. Hitler was not a great sports fan and had to be convinced by Joseph Goebbels, Minister of Propaganda, that sport could be used to advance their cause of the “New Germany” inside and outside of Germany. This was widely evident in the 1936 Berlin Olympic Games.