Louis Zborowski

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Count Louis Zborowski
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Louis Zborowski
Champ Car career
1 race run over 1 year
First race1923 Indianapolis 500 (Indianapolis)
Wins Podiums Poles
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Louis Vorow Zborowski (20 February 1895 – 19 October 1924) was a British

racing driver and automobile engineer, best known for creating a series of aero-engined racing cars known as the "Chitty-Bang-Bangs", which provided the inspiration for Ian Fleming's children's story, Chitty Chitty Bang Bang and culminated in the "Higham Special" which, much modified in the hands of John Godfrey Parry Thomas, broke the World Land Speed Record 18 months after the death of its creator.[1]

Background

Zborowski was born in 1895 in London to American parents, who had moved to England nine years earlier. His father, Elliott Zborowski, was also a racing driver, and died in a racing crash, in 1903 at La Turbie Hillclimb in Nice, France. His mother was a wealthy American heiress, born Margaret Laura Astor Carey, a granddaughter of William Backhouse Astor Sr. and Margaret Rebecca Armstrong of the prominent Astor family. She had been Madame de Stuers before her divorce and marriage in 1892 to Elliott Zborowski. On arriving in England, Elliott had styled himself with the title "Count" and was known generally as "Count Zborowski", although there is no firm evidence that he had any legitimate claim to any such title. Following Elliott's death, Louis assumed his father's fictitious title.[1]

Early life

Louis Zborowski as child (Julian Russell Story, 1898)

After the death of Zborowski's father in 1903, in 1910 his mother bought the Higham Park estate at Bridge near Canterbury in Kent. Paying £17,500 to the executors of the estate of London banker William Gay, the sale included a farm, 225 acres (91 ha) and twelve houses.[2] Mrs. Zborowski immediately commissioned a £50,000 refurbishment of the house from the architect Joseph Sawyer.[2]

Upon her death in 1911, 16-year-old Zborowski became the fourth richest under-21-year-old in the world, with cash of £11 million and real estate in the United States, including 7 acres (2.8 ha) of Manhattan and several blocks on Fifth Avenue, New York.[2]

Early driving career

Zborowski's career as an amateur racing driver encompassed a wide experience of marques and events. He was an early patron of Aston Martin, and raced for them at Brooklands and in the 1922 French Grand Prix. In 1921 Zborowski was to drive one of the 1921 Grand Prix Sunbeams representing Britain at Le Mans but this did not transpire and instead he raced the car at the International Shelsley Walsh - England’s foremost Speed Hill-Climb.[3]

Car designs

Louis Zborowski in the driving seat of Chitty Bang Bang 1 at Brooklands

Zborowski designed and built four of his own racing cars in the stables at Higham Park, assisted by his engineer and co-driver Captain Clive Gallop, who was later racing engineer to the "Bentley Boys".

The first car was powered by a 23,093 cc six-cylinder Maybach aero engine and called "Chitty Bang Bang".[4] A second "Chitty Bang Bang" was powered by 18,825 cc Benz aero engine. A third car was based on a Mercedes 28/95, but fitted with a 14,778 cc 6-cylinder Mercedes aero engine and was referred to as the White Mercedes. These cars achieved some success at Brooklands.

Another car, also built at Higham Park with a huge 27-litre American

Babs" has been restored and can be seen either at the Pendine Sands museum of speed in the summer months or in the Brooklands Museum
during other months of the year.

In January 1922 Zborowski, his wife Vi, Clive Gallop and Pixi Marix together with a couple of mechanics took Chitty Bang Bang 2 and the White Mercedes across the Mediterranean for a drive into the Sahara Desert, in the tracks of Citroën's Kégresse-track-equipped expedition.

Later career and death

The grave of Louis Zborowski in the churchyard of St James, Burton Lazars

In the 1923

Harry Miller
, the single-seat "American Miller 122".

Zborowski joined the Mercedes team in 1924. He died in one of their cars while competing at the 1924 Italian Grand Prix at Monza, after his car skidded on a curve and turned over twice.[5][6]

Legacy

Zborowski was a railway enthusiast and a 15 in (381 mm) gauge railway circuit, the Higham Railway, was built around his estate in Kent. This line was part of the inspiration behind the joint decision by Zborowski and his racing friend Captain J. E. P. Howey to construct a long-distance passenger-carrying railway line in the same gauge. Many locations were investigated, but this eventually led to the founding of the 14-mile (23 km) long

Davey Paxman & Co. of Essex
. The order (and the project) was continued by Capt Howey alone, following Zborowski's death.

The children's book by

musical film, were inspired by the romance of Zborowski's exploits. Fleming had watched Zborowski race at Brooklands as a school boy, and later visited Higham Park (then known as Highland Court) as a friend of its later owner, Walter Whigham the chairman of Robert Fleming & Co. merchant bank founded by Ian's grandfather.[2]
In the third book, Zborowski is a major character, where his relationship to Chitty is explored and his future deadly crash is alluded to.

Motorsports career results

Indianapolis 500 results

References

  1. ^ .
  2. ^ a b c d "57 rooms down, 30 more to go..." The Daily Telegraph. 28 August 2004. Archived from the original on 22 April 2014. Retrieved 5 March 2012.
  3. ^ May, C.A.N. (1945). Shelsley Walsh, England’s International Speed Hill-Climb. P25, 28
  4. ^ David Paine (August 2008). "The Zborowski Inheritance". Archived from the original on 6 February 2005.
  5. ^ "Racing Count Killed. Double Somersault In Motor Grand Prix", Birmingham (England) Gazette, October 20, 1924, p.1
  6. ^ "Driver Killed in Grand Prix", Los Angeles Times, October 20, 1924, p.I-9

External links