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Walt Hansgen

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Nationality
  
American

Championships
  
0

Died
  
April 7, 1966, France

Entries
  
2

Role
  
Racing driver

Teams
  
Name
  
Walt Hansgen

Active years
  
1961, 1964

Wins
  
0


Walt Hansgen wwwstatsf1compilotesphotoshansgenpng

Born
  
October 28, 1919 (
1919-10-28
)

Similar People
  
Hap Sharp, Roger Penske, Olivier Gendebien, Peter Ryan, Tony Brooks

Watkins Glen 1959


Walt Hansgen's Jaguar Special Race Car


Walter Edwin Hansgen (October 28, 1919 in Westfield, New Jersey – April 7, 1966 in Orléans, France) was a racecar driver from the United States. His racing career began as a road racing driver. He was aged forty-one at the time of his Grand Prix debut and forty-six when he died, several days after crashing during testing for the 1966 24 Hours of Le Mans.

Contents

Walt Hansgen httpsassetshemmingscomstoryimage133173500

Racing career

Walt Hansgen Argetsinger Michael Walt Hansgen His Life and the History of

A four-time SCCA Road Racing Champ, Hansgen participated in two Formula One Grands Prix, debuting on October 8, 1961, at Watkins Glen, New York. He scored a total of two championship points. In 1964 he raced the MG Liquid Suspension Special, an Offenhauser-powered car, for Kjell Qvale, at the Indianapolis 500. He finished 13th in that race. He raced there again in 1965, in the MG-Huffaker-Offenhauser, when he finished 14th.

Walt Hansgen WALT HANSGEN

In addition to Formula One, Walt Hansgen was a dominant road racer from the early 1950s and 1960s, winning numerous races at VIR, the famed course at Bridgehampton, and Watkins Glen through to his death at Le Mans in France in 1966.

Walt Hansgen WALT HANSGEN

He drove for Briggs Cunningham and John Mecom. Hansgen won the Formula Junior race at the inaugural United States Grand Prix meeting at Sebring, Florida, on December 12, 1959, driving a Stanguellini. Hansgen won the Monterey Grand Prix, at Laguna Seca Raceway, on October 17, 1965, driving John Mecom's Lola T70-Ford. He participated in several races of the 24 Hours of Daytona and Le Mans as well as the 12 Hours of Sebring endurance races. He also was notable for introducing Mark Donohue to professional road racing.

Walt Hansgen Walt Hansgen Throttleback Thursday accomplished racer

Hansgen was killed when he crashed a 7-liter Holman & Moody Ford GT 40 Mk2 sports car while driving in the rain during the Le Mans tests on April 3, 1966. "A Ford spokesman said Hansgen's car appeared to have been aquaplaning on the wet track leaving no way for the driver to control it." Ford crew members later said that Hansgen had continued to push hard in the damp weather, although he had been warned by team manager Carroll Smith to take it easy. In Mark Donohue's book, The Unfair Advantage it is said that Hansgen tried to drive onto an escape road only to find out too late that a barrier had been built across it for spectator safety.

Complete Formula One World Championship results

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Books

  • Michael Argetsinger, Walt Hansgen, His Life and the History of Post-War American Road Racing, David Bull Publishing, 2006, ISBN 1-893618-54-4
  • References

    Walt Hansgen Wikipedia