Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
geography/france

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

1921 French Grand Prix

1921 French Grand Prix

FieldValue
TypeGP
Grand PrixFrench
ImageCircuit de la Sarthe Le Mans 1921-1928.png
Date25 July
Year1921
Official nameXV Grand Prix de l'Automobile Club de France
CountryFrance
LocationLe Mans, France
CourseCircuit de la Sarthe
Course_mi10.72
Course_km17.26
Distance_laps30
Distance_mi321.75
Distance_km517.80
Grid_from_numberTrue
Fast_DriverJimmy Murphy
Fast_TeamDuesenberg
Fast_Time7:43.0
Fast_CountryUSA
Fast_flag_suffix1912
First_DriverJimmy Murphy
First_TeamDuesenberg
First_CountryUSA
First_flag_suffix1912
Second_DriverRalph DePalma
Second_TeamBallot
Second_CountryUSA
Second_flag_suffix1912
Third_DriverJules Goux
Third_TeamBallot
Third_CountryFrance

The 1921 French Grand Prix (formally the XV Grand Prix de l'Automobile Club de France) was a Grand Prix motor race held at Le Mans on 25 July 1921. The race was held over 30 laps of the 17.26 km circuit for a total distance of 517.8 km and was won by Jimmy Murphy driving a Duesenberg. This was the last victory for an American constructor in a major European race until the Ford GT40's triumph at the 1966 24 Hours of Le Mans as well as in a Grand Prix race until the Dan Gurney's win with the Eagle car at the 1967 Belgian Grand Prix. The race did not feature a massed start, with cars released in pairs at one-minute intervals instead.

Report

[[Jean Chassagne
Jimmy Murphy crossing the finish line to win the race

Although this was the first French Grand Prix since the end of the first World War, the initial entry featured entries from four countries (entries from Germany were not allowed). The US was represented by eventual winner Duesenberg, and France by Ballot and Mathis, the latter of which was based in Strasbourg, which was part of Germany before World War I. The three Italian Fiats entered did not materialise due to labour issues. The newly formed British-French Sunbeam-Talbot-Darracq (S.T.D.) originally entered 7 nearly identical cars as 3 makes, Sunbeam, Talbot and Talbot-Darracq, however due to a lack of preparation, the two Sunbeams were withdrawn, while André Dubonnet - originally entered in a Talbot-Darracq - replaced the injured Inghilbert in the fourth Duesenberg and was not himself replaced by Talbot-Darracq for the race.

As the first major Grand Prix since the War, it was decided that engine regulations should match those of the Indianapolis 500 with a 3-litre maximum.

The race started at 9 am (on a Monday due to a motorcycle race the previous day) under threatening clouds, with the first pair away being Émile Mathis and Ralph DePalma (in a Ballot), with DePalma making a considerably better start. The other cars followed in pairs at one-minute intervals (the original starting intervals of 30 seconds having been changed at the last minute), with Andre Dubonnet last to start on his own in a Duesenberg. Fastest on the first lap were both DePalma and Joe Boyer in a Duesenberg, equal with 8 minutes 16, with the third-place also a tie, between Murphy in a Duesenberg and Jean Chassagne in a Ballot.

By the end of the second lap, the order was more established, with Murphy leading Boyer, Chassagne, and DePalma.

The battle was close between the Duesenbergs, with their superior brakes, and the Ballots, with their superior cornering, whilst the S.T.D.s struggled with tire and road-holding problems (Lee Guinness stopping a remarkably 15 times in the 30 lap race), with Andre Boillot the only S.T.D. to drive consistently, holding sixth place in the early laps.

The order changed little near the front, with Murphy pulling nearly a two-minute lead by lap 7. Chassagne overtook Boyer for second on the ninth lap. Murphy made a pitstop at the end of lap 10 but didn't lose the lead, however, Chassagne was now close behind and was able to take the lead during lap 11. By half distance, Chassagne leads Boyer who had also overtaken Murphy, now third. Guyot was not far behind in fourth, then a much larger gap to the lower positions, lead by DePalma.

On lap 17, Chassagne made a pitstop to refuel but his fuel tank had burst and was beyond repair. On the very next lap, Boyer who had just inherited the lead suffered a mechanical failure, giving the lead back to Murphy ahead of a slowing Guyot. Murphy would hold onto this lead until the end, but behind him, the fight for second place was more dramatic. Guyot had a large gap back to third place, but when he stopped for fuel and water on lap 28, he was unable to restart. His mechanic became very tired trying to push-start the car and was replaced by Arthur Duray who was at the race as a spectator. They were able to restart but this had damaged the clutch forcing another stop and they ended up in sixth place. DePalma then took second, but he too had considerable difficulty restarting but was still able to finish ahead of third-placed Jules Goux in a 2-litre Ballot who finished the race without stopping.

Classification

PosNoDriverCarLapsTime/Retired123456789RetRetRetRetDNSDNSDNADNADNADNADNASources:
12USA **Jimmy Murphy****Duesenberg**304:07:11.4
1USA **Ralph DePalma****Ballot 3L**30+14:59.2
18France **Jules Goux****Ballot 2LS**30+21:26.8
19France **André Dubonnet****Duesenberg**30+23:07.8
5France **Andre Boillot**nowrap**Talbot-Darracq (S.T.D.)**30+28:36.0
6France **Albert Guyot****Duesenberg**30+36:01.6
14France **Louis Wagner****Ballot 3L**30+40:50.4
4nowrapUK **Kenelm Lee Guinness****Talbot (S.T.D.)**30+59:32.4
10UK **Henry Segrave****Talbot (S.T.D.)**30+1:00:54.6
11France **René Thomas****Talbot-Darracq (S.T.D.)**23Oil tank
16USA **Joe Boyer****Duesenberg**17Engine
8France **Jean Chassagne****Ballot 3L**17Fuel tank
3France **Émile Mathis****Mathis**5Engine
15France **André Dubonnet****Talbot-Darracq (S.T.D.)**nowrapOriginally entered in Talbot-Darracq team.
Replaced injured Inghilbert in Duesenberg for race
2UK **Louis Zborowski****Sunbeam (S.T.D.)**Car not ready
9UK **Dario Resta****Sunbeam (S.T.D.)**Car not ready
7Italy **Ugo Sivocci****Fiat 802**Car not ready due to labour difficulties
13Italy **Pietro Bordino****Fiat 802**Car not ready due to labour difficulties
17**Unknown****Fiat 802**Third Fiat entry; car not ready due to labour difficulties
19France **Louis Inghilbert****Duesenberg**Injured in practice; replaced by Dubonnet for race

References

|Previous_year's_race = 1914 French Grand Prix |Next_year's_race = 1922 French Grand Prix

References

  1. Hodges, David. (1967). "The French Grand Prix".
  2. (26 July 1921). "Le Grand Prix de l'ACF 1921 - Avant le Départ". L'Auto.
  3. (19 July 1921). "Le Grand Prix de l'ACF - A.Dubonnet pilotera la 4e. Duesenberg". L'Auto.
  4. (24 July 1921). "Le Grand Prix de l'Automobile Club de France - Les heures, l'ordre des departs et les numéros". L'Auto.
  5. (29 July 1921). "Automobile Club de France - Communiqué official - Grand Prix de 'ACF 1921". L'Auto.
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about 1921 French Grand Prix — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report