The Bentley
Boys were a group of gentlemen racers
who drove Bentley sports cars
to victory in the 1920s. In 1925, as the marque foundered,
Bentley Boy Woolf Barnato bought the company, leading to the
creation of the famous supercharged Bentley
Blower car.
The
Bentley Boys included:
- Woolf
"Babe" Barnato, heir to Kimberley diamond magnate Barney
Barnato
- Dr. J. Dudley "Benjy" Benjafield
- Sir
Henry "Tim" Birkin
- Dale Bourne
- Frank
Clement
- S. C. H. "Sammy" Davis,
automotive journalist, Sports Editor of The Autocar
- John Duff
- George Duller,
steeplechaser
- Clive Dunfee
- Jack Dunfee
- Baron d’Erlanger,
playboy
- Clive Gallop,
engineer
- Glen
Kidston, aviator
- Bertie
Kensington Moir
- Bernard Rubin,
pearl fishery magnate
At one
point, on a bet, Barnato raced Le Train Bleu from Cannes to Calais, then by
ferry to Dover and
finally London,
travelling on public highways with normal traffic, and won; the special-bodied
6.5 L car became known as the Blue Train Bentley.
Thanks
to the dedication of this group to serious racing, the company, located at
Cricklewood, north London,
was noted for its four consecutive victories at the 24 hours of Le Mans from 1927 to 1930. Their greatest competitor at the
time, Ettore Bugatti, whose lightweight, elegant, but
fragile creations contrasted with the Bentley's rugged reliability and
durability, referred to them as "the world's fastest lorries".
A
great deal of Barnato's fortune went to keeping Bentley afloat after he became
chairman in 1925; but the Great
Depression destroyed demand for the company's expensive products, and it
was finally sold off to Rolls-Royce in 1931
The victorious Speed Six team at
By 1930 the 4½ litre supercharged ‘Blower’ cars were running and Birkin entered a team of three for the 1927
In the opening laps of the race Birkin had the time of his life duelling with the Mercedes. Overtaking at nearly 120 mph just before Mulsanne with his off-side wheels on the grass, Birkin caught Caracciola totally by surprise, but in the process threw the tread of his rear tyre. Undaunted, he continued to set the fastest lap of the race, before the tyre finally blew in the following lap.
The chase for Caracciola was taken over by the 6½ litre cars, initially
Thereafter, W O. Bentley slowed the cars to a fast tour. The Blowers kept going until about
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