Don Beauman Formula one racer

Donald Bentley Beauman (26 July 1928 – 9 July 1955 in Rathnew, Ireland) was a British Formula One driver who took part in one World Championship Grand Prix.Beauman was born in Farnborough, Hampshire, the only son of Brigadier General Archibald Bentley Beauman CBE DSO and Bar (30 November 1888 – 22 March 1977). He had a career as a hotelier but began motor racing in 1950.Beauman ran a Cooper 500 for two years in Formula Three before switching to sports car racing, and took on Formula One in 1954 with a Connaught A-Type, sponsored by wealthy privateer Sir Jeremy Boles. He finished eleventh in the British Grand Prix at Silverstone. He achieved some success in Formula Two, with several third and fourth place finishes and a second place in the Madgwick Cup at Goodwood. In 1955, the weekend before the British Grand Prix, he was killed when he crashed his Connaught during the Leinster Trophy race in Wicklow. He had set the fastest time of 82.94 mph (133.45 km/h) on his first lap but crashed near the Beehive pub on his second and was killed instantly. Beauman's death plus other fatal racing accidents that year brought an end to motor car racing at the Curragh.

Personal facts

Birth dateJuly 26, 1928
Nationality
United Kingdom
Date of deathJuly 09, 1955

Search

Formula one racer

championships0
fastest lap0
first race
1954 British Grand Prix
last race
1954 British Grand Prix
podiums0
poles0
races1
wins0

Don Beauman on Wikipedia

External resources

  1. http://www.500race.org/Men/Beauman.htm