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London To Peking Motor Challenge

The London to Peking Motor Challenge was a one-time car rally organized by the Jules Verne Society in the Spring of 1990.

As the name implied, the rally consisted of a drive from London England to Peking, China. Peking is now officially known as Beijing, but the old name was used as the rally traced the course driven by Prince Scipione Borghese , mechanic Ettore Guizzardi , and journalist Luigi Barzini in 1907 (before the name change). The 1990 rally ran in the opposite direction as the 1907 course, heading west-to-east.

Contents

Origins

In March 1907, the Parisian newspaper Le Matin issued a challenge for anyone to drive from Peking to Paris by motor-car. Five teams; four French, and one Italian took up the challenge. Thus began the first, and most famous international car rally in early motoring history.

Barzini had written a popular book about his adventure, being the first to arrive in Paris, but a decade later, the Soviet Union closed off the route used by Barzini. With the glasnost and perestroika of the final days of the Soviet Union, the time seemed right for a new journey.

1990

The 1990 course went from west-to-east along a different course than Barzini and his team took in 1907.

Starting at the Marble Arch in London, the drivers were given a sendoff by Luigi Barzini's grandson. The drivers heading across the "Chunnel" to Paris. From there, the drivers could take any course they chose across Europe before reuniting in Istanbul, Turkey. Afterward, the route ran across Turkey to the border with the Soviet Union in present day Georgia, becoming the first time in Soviet history that western civilians were permitted to drive their own vehicles into the country. A ferry across the Caspian Sea took the drivers to present day Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, and Kyrgyzstan, before entering China, crossing the Gobi Desert and arriving in Beijing on June 4, 1990, coincidentally the one-year anniversary of the crackdown on demonstrators in Tian'anmen Square.

The 1907 event was not intended to be a race or competition, but quickly became one due to the pioneering nature of it and the technical superiority of the Italians' car, a 40-HP Itala . The 1990 event was a goodwill tour, and no drivers were in competition

Among the entrants in 1990, were vintage and antique vehicles, several motorcycles with and without sidecars, and modern four wheel drive vehicles, and amazingly all but one of the over 20 teams completed the journey. A 60-minute highlights broadcast was hosted and narrated by actor Cliff Robertson and shown on ESPN in the United States.

Legacy

  • With the opening of the borders in both the former Soviet Union and China, transcontinental rallies are feasible once again, though rarely attempted due to the costs and time involved. One such eventhave run, including a 1997 motor rally that roughly duplicated the 1908 course. (Website offline, archived at Internet Archive)
  • The Great Race, an American club rally competition for antique automobiles planned a world wide race for 1992 but later shelved the idea.
  • LTV Corporation, manufacturers of the US military Humvee used the 1990 London to Peking Motor Challenge to test out two matching prototypes of a civilian version of the vehicle. Passing the test with ease, and stopping along the way to perform stunts for local villagers, the vehicles would later enter production (after even greater media exposure in Operation Desert Storm) as the Hummer H1.

External Links

Neil Collins, the sole Australian driver in the LTPMC describes his journey behind the wheel of a 1912 Rolls-Royce Silver Ghost .

Details of Barzini's 1907 journey

Details of the car used by the 1907 winners

Last updated: 06-05-2005 03:37:19
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