The Worst Motorsports Crash Ever | 1955 Le Mans

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  • Опубликовано: 29 сен 2024
  • On the morning of June 11th, 1955, a crowd of nearly 300,000 spectators flocked to Le Mans to watch quite literally one of the most anticipated races of all time. A titanic battle of three great manufacturers was on the horizon, and everyone knew it. However an awful, terrible tragedy occurred only three hours into the event, resulting in the deaths of a driver and an astounding 83 spectators. The 1955 Le Mans disaster will forever be known as the greatest tragedy in motorsports history, and as one of the worst sporting disasters in human history.
    The Worst Motorsports Crash Ever | 1955 Le Mans
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Комментарии • 83

  • @grondhole73
    @grondhole73 Год назад +74

    My father and my aunt went to that Le Mans race and were right where the car crashed. The only thing that saved them was that my aunt had to go to the bathroom, my dad reluctantly surrendered his front row spot next to the fence. I wouldn't be here writing this almost 70 years later if it wasn't for a full bladder.

    • @The3289691
      @The3289691 9 месяцев назад +10

      Wow. Fate is a mysterious thing. I knew a man, a dear old friend who lived well into his late eighties. His father was supposed to be on the Titanic. Something messed up, he missed the boat. Bill got his life and touched many lives, including mine. ❤ life is twisty.

    • @wagahagwa6978
      @wagahagwa6978 5 месяцев назад

      @@The3289691 ​my dad was working on piper alpha before he was transferred out a day before it blew up, this was way before he met my mom and i thank his transfer for my existance fate is a weird thing for sure

    • @aanchalbudhiraja1742
      @aanchalbudhiraja1742 3 месяца назад +2

      And that kids, is why sometimes the bathroom is important

    • @callumdeezfuckingballs6188
      @callumdeezfuckingballs6188 25 дней назад

      Crazy how one small event like that can change so much.

    • @DEE-o4v
      @DEE-o4v 7 дней назад

      It's amazing how taking a piss or a shit....can save a life. I mean that very SERIOUSLY by the way. Your father should have thanked your aunt....everyday for the rest of his and her life.

  • @greencamper8092
    @greencamper8092 11 месяцев назад +16

    I hate hawthorn for blaming the other drivers for his mistake and drinking champagne after winning it.

  • @fernandoueno8668
    @fernandoueno8668 Год назад +50

    One thing that made this accident even worse was that the cars were made of Magnesium - very light but also super flammable. Thats the reason the fire caused by Levegh's car took so long to get put out

    • @msspi764
      @msspi764 Год назад +7

      Worse yet hot magnesium reacts when water is applied to it. There is film of the French firefighters spraying water on the burning Mercedes only to have sparks fly off of it because of the reaction. It looks almost like a Sodium/water reaction.

    • @FrankWebber-n4b
      @FrankWebber-n4b 28 дней назад

      The MBZ was magnesium bodied, not any of the other cars, to my knowledge.

    • @DEE-o4v
      @DEE-o4v 7 дней назад

      I work in the engineering world of "hazardous locations".....there are specific specs and standards which DO NOT ALLOW the use of Magnesium in various equipment except in very, very, very tiny amounts and it MUST be mixed with other materials. In general, people have no idea just how dangerous magnesium IS.

  • @JRB22144
    @JRB22144 3 месяца назад +5

    John Fitch, Pierre Levegh's co-driver for the 3rd Mercedes team, was a true American hero. Born in 1917, he enlisted in the Army Air Corps in 1942 and flew P-51 Mustang's until the end of the war. He was the first American fighter pilot to shoot down a German ME 262 Messerschmitt twin engine jet fighter near the end of the war. Consistent with John's self deprecating demeanor, he downplayed the incident, remarking that, in a sortie over German territory, he encountered one on takeoff roll and simply strafed it before it became airborne. John was later shot down and spent the final days of the war in a German concentration camp. In the hours immediately after the 1955 24 Heures du Mans disaster, still the worst tragedy in motor racing history, the race carried on, he contacted Alfred Neubauer, the head of the German Mercedes racing team late into the night, and eventually convinced them to withdraw from the race. Following his successful racing career, and clearly inspired by not only the tragedy of 1955, but with all the too frequent deaths endemic to auto racing at the time, he went on to design and develop the now ubiquitous Fitch Inertial barriers across the U.S. highways which have saved thousands of lives across the decades. John lived near his beloved Lime Rock Park race track for many years and was a frequent presence there. I had the great pleasure of dining with him and a few friends a few years before his death in his 94th year. In a classic example of government ineptitude, he was besieged in his last few years of having to spend $250,000 to remediate property on his residence for potential oil contamination even though none was ever found. Typical governmental ineptitude. They didn't even know who he was nor did they take the time to find out.
    He has a book, RACING WITH MERCEDES which vividly describes the 1955 Heures du Mans as well as the rest of his racing exploits. It is a great read.

    • @GregBrownsWorldORacing
      @GregBrownsWorldORacing Месяц назад

      Fitch was a legend, but not well known to the greater American racing culture. It's a real shame he had to put up with that nonsense near the end of his life. The Fitch Inertial Safety Barrier has saved thousands of lives.

  • @kelsimorrison1222
    @kelsimorrison1222 Год назад +8

    Rip to all 83 spectators and driver Pierre

  • @KellieLeigh48
    @KellieLeigh48 Год назад +17

    RIP to Pierre Levegh and all the lost 🙏🏻

  • @allansbullet
    @allansbullet 10 месяцев назад +8

    Edit and proofread better! At 0:29 Mike Hawthorn was NOT driving a Ferrari - he drove a Jaguar D-Type and won the race!! He only ever raced Formula 1 for Ferrari, not sportscars. The fault, even though everyone tried to blame Hawthorn, wasn't the drivers or the cars - it was, as you say, the complete lack of safety measures on the track to prevent a car from flying into the crowd! The track basically hadn't been altered or upgraded worth a damn since 1923 and 60 mph cars - that's a far cry from 32 years later and 170 mph cars!

    • @elpatudo3670
      @elpatudo3670 2 месяца назад

      Relax ya 💩

    • @Hithere-ek4qt
      @Hithere-ek4qt Месяц назад

      Takes one to know one

    • @robin-kq7un
      @robin-kq7un 17 дней назад

      You are correct, of course, about the criminal lack of safety measures at the track; but the accident would never have happened in the first place had Hawthorn not recklessly cut across and braked in front of Macklin's Austin Healey.

  • @GregBrownsWorldORacing
    @GregBrownsWorldORacing Год назад +5

    I believe it was totally Mike Hawthorne's fault, based on my own research.

    • @Hithere-ek4qt
      @Hithere-ek4qt Месяц назад

      🤣

    • @robin-kq7un
      @robin-kq7un 17 дней назад +1

      Oh indeed, you are correct. The entire accident would never have happened but for Hawthorn's reckless manoeuvre in cutting sharply across Macklin's Austin Healey and braking. However, as usual there were other factors involved in the disaster for which Hawthorn could not be blamed; the narrowness of the pits straight, the ludicrous lack of protection for the spectators there, the speed differential between the fastest and slowest cars and Macklin's inexperience.

    • @GregBrownsWorldORacing
      @GregBrownsWorldORacing 17 дней назад

      @@robin-kq7un I guess we are agreeing here? It's my belief The Gay Cavalier intentionally break checked Macklin in hopes of using Macklin as a pick to impede Fangio. Of course that involves mind reading from before I was born. I agree all those aggravating factors you mention certainly played a role in how tragic this accident was.
      I'm inclined to believe what John Fitch said regarding Hawthorne entering the pits in tears and saying his career as a racing car driver was over. Did Hawthorn want to kill anybody, of course not. Mike could obviously see the some of the aftermath but had no idea how badly the fans had fared in his attempt to gain maybe two seconds in a 24 hour race.

  • @saragrant9749
    @saragrant9749 9 месяцев назад +5

    While the decision to continue the race was highly controversial, the reasoning to keep things going to prevent spectators from leaving en mass was actually very likely true.

    • @robin-kq7un
      @robin-kq7un 17 дней назад

      But that was not the REAL reason why the race was allowed to continue. There were hundreds of gendarmes on duty at Le Mans that day; they could have shut the roads around the circuit to all but ambulances and other emergency traffic, thus keeping the crowds from leaving the circuit until all the dead and wounded had been removed to hospital. I'm afraid the real reason for keeping the race going was the same old thing - money. The organisers knew that if the race was stopped they would lose millions in revenue if all the spectators left.

    • @saragrant9749
      @saragrant9749 17 дней назад

      @@robin-kq7un you really believe that a couple hundred gendarmes could have held back the several hundred thousand spectators? You have a great deal more faith in humanity than most. By keeping things going they obviously did save money- but they also kept the roads clear that would have definitely clogged up- gendarmes be damned.

  • @benwalter4842
    @benwalter4842 Год назад +24

    You should do the 1957 Mille Miglia next. That race had a brutal crash that brutally killed both drivers and 10 spectators.

    • @MichaelGreen-vn7dr
      @MichaelGreen-vn7dr Год назад

      not ta this to show. My dad was at Mille Miglia in 1953/4

    • @MichaelGreen-vn7dr
      @MichaelGreen-vn7dr 10 месяцев назад

      My dad was at all these races, at LeMans he was on the pit counter whehit happened

  • @johnvandeventer8668
    @johnvandeventer8668 Год назад +5

    It was almost the end of motorsports

  • @TomLehockySVK
    @TomLehockySVK Год назад +10

    I believe it was the right decision to not cause any immediate panic and cancel the race until ambulances got to everyone and got them out, but after everyone who could have been treated and saved already was, they should have done the right thing and ended the race then and there. It is also sad that history has always shown that until a big tragedy happens safety never improves because race organizer will always think "that is safe enough".

    • @unionmaster
      @unionmaster 2 месяца назад

      I honestly agree. I just wish he didn't give those 3 other sorry ass excuses.

  • @patrickracer43
    @patrickracer43 Год назад +2

    The hype surrounding this race going in was Jaguar vs Mercedes, England vs Germany in the french countryside, but just like the last time it was England vs Germany in the French countryside, it ended up leaving many French bodies piled up

  • @OE_Racing
    @OE_Racing Год назад +7

    Tragic, but fascinating and interesting, great video. 😎👍

  • @kennywilkinson913
    @kennywilkinson913 4 месяца назад +1

    100% Hawthorne fault, was pulling into the non existent pit lane so overtaking macklin was completely pointless and a pos move as left him nowhere to go but infront of leveigh

    • @yesman2755
      @yesman2755 2 месяца назад +1

      And he braked hard in front of him too. Reckless is too kind a word. Died 4 years later driving recklessly on the highway. Poetic justice ?

  • @saltbombcreations8336
    @saltbombcreations8336 Год назад +2

    One of 3 super iconic races I’m watching this year, I already watched the Daytona 500, now I have the Indy 500 and the 24 Hour Le Mans, I’m pretty hyped for both especially since I watched the 24 Hour Daytona, and the Indy 500 is on the same weekend as the Coke 600

  • @ricksaunders3889
    @ricksaunders3889 Год назад +3

    Good video. We can see you put a lot of effort in to this. Thanks for posting.

  • @DEE-o4v
    @DEE-o4v 7 дней назад

    NEVER, EVER, EVER mess with Magnesium. When that shit burns.....you CANNOT put it out. I heard that the car pretty much burned for 3 days...which not surprising...

  • @Estydrom
    @Estydrom Год назад +2

    Did the author say on 0:29 that Hawthorn raced for Ferrari that day???

    • @allansbullet
      @allansbullet 10 месяцев назад +1

      Yeah, he did - dumb mistake and poor research - see my other comment above!

  • @highoctanecards
    @highoctanecards Год назад +6

    Very well put together video. Lots of great information here, I've read bits and pieces from different sources over the years.
    Well done.

  • @officialAtticusDuty
    @officialAtticusDuty Год назад +1

    NFJJ should do an ARCA wreckfest video on the last seven Daytona 500s. They all had big wrecks, and several big wrecks at that.

  • @DragonStar524
    @DragonStar524 Год назад +5

    Finally. Someone blames no one for this. It was what we all know: an accident. Bad timing and where it happened were the main causes.

  • @scotturbanski740
    @scotturbanski740 29 дней назад

    Supposedly there was a crash relatively recently (2003) that could've surpassed this had it actually happened on race day (Tony Renna). To this day the footage still has not been released to the public.

  • @Hithere-ek4qt
    @Hithere-ek4qt Месяц назад

    I will never understand why interesting videos choose to put some automated computer voice narrating. The pronunciation is abysmal and definitely takes away from viewing

  • @gregscally5119
    @gregscally5119 3 месяца назад

    NFJJ, I think you are evaluating this tragedy using 21 century values and perceptions. You even use that absurd word "passing" in lieu of died. 1955 was only 10 years after end WW2 during which many millions died. People in the 50s had a more fatalistic view about life than now and therefore safety was not generally considered a high priority. There was also a carry on regardless of disasters and setbacks attitude. This is the real reason the race was continued. It was nothing to do with money. That is a 2020 twee notion. You are correct that the fundamental reason for the crash was the inadequate design of the race circuit as applicable to the pits and pit entry. Mike Hawthorn did make an error in passing then cutting in on Lance Macklin who in turn made a mistake in pulling out to wide. He did not have to come so far over to his left to avoid Hawthorn. Poor old Pierre Levegh had no chance. A good outcome of this crash was Mercedes Benz subsequent devotion to raod car safety which pioneered to transition to the very safe cars we have today.

  • @NeverUkraine
    @NeverUkraine Год назад +1

    The Don MacTavish fatal crash at a Daytona sportsman event (what eventually became Busch series)

    • @roydrink
      @roydrink Год назад +1

      That is the most horrific fatal crash ever!

  • @Nill83
    @Nill83 Год назад +2

    Finally a video about this tragedy

    • @Nill83
      @Nill83 Год назад +1

      @@Ghostmaker36 I was really talking about black flags matter or the iceberg making a video on it.

  • @48nascarfan
    @48nascarfan Год назад +1

    I am a racing fan in general nascar Indy car formula one and endurance racing I have been watching for years as well and this moment in history was tragic but had good positive and the end for the better they made changes. The moment that changed everything

  • @yesman2755
    @yesman2755 2 месяца назад

    Hawthorn was plain reckless, on the track and the road.

  • @djpalindrome
    @djpalindrome 5 месяцев назад

    Mike Hawthorne did NOT drive a Ferrari! He drove a Jaguar D-type to “victory” after triggering this horrendous accident

  • @efishone1
    @efishone1 8 месяцев назад

    Love the pic of the Indy Champ dirt car pilot exchanging hand signals whilst in a 100mph broadslide!

  • @GodzillaLegendary-kf8vn
    @GodzillaLegendary-kf8vn Год назад +1

    5:54 such a legend

  • @stonemanson4884
    @stonemanson4884 Год назад

    👍

  • @TheInkPitOx
    @TheInkPitOx Год назад +1

    Thank god we have fences now

  • @julianneale6128
    @julianneale6128 Год назад +1

    @ 07:39 I'm not sure of the statement regarding Fitch flying a jet and being shot down. That would mean it had to be a Gloster Meteor? I didn't think any Meteors were shot down?

    • @nicofolkersma2535
      @nicofolkersma2535 Год назад +2

      According to Wiki, he shot down a Messerschmitt 262 while flying a P-51. Later he got shot down when he strafed a train for the 3rd time.

  • @Chasta1n42
    @Chasta1n42 Год назад +1

    Well that was a less-than-optimal outcome

    • @Hithere-ek4qt
      @Hithere-ek4qt Месяц назад

      Well, that was the less than useful comment

    • @Chasta1n42
      @Chasta1n42 Месяц назад

      @@Hithere-ek4qt you're welcome (how the hell did you find this comment lmao)

  • @MichaelGreen-vn7dr
    @MichaelGreen-vn7dr Год назад +1

    Im gonna take thing aparts here: 1) Learn HOW to promounce "LeMans". 2) Mike Hawthorn was NOT a Ferrari driver, but Jaugur (in fact he won it in a D-Type Jag). 3) the word JAGUAR does not have a "W in it" as my Mum would say. 4) My Dad was there! #2 man with MG/BMC cars (aka EX182 MGs). 5) Lance Macklin caused it, period! My Mum even knew Lance, and spoke to him about it some time afterwards. Mum was the secretary of race shop at ASTON MARTIN.

    • @florianhofer9055
      @florianhofer9055 11 месяцев назад

      How would you pronounce LeMans? 2) True
      3) who cares
      4) who cares
      5) that's right and the other part who cares

    • @Loulovesspeed
      @Loulovesspeed 10 месяцев назад +1

      @MichaelGreen-vn7dr - I only have issue with one of your comments. The British pronunciation is Jag-u-ar. The American pronunciation is Jag-war. BOTH are considered correct by the American Webster Dictionary as well as the British Oxford Dictionary. There is no right or wrong here. As they say, England and America are two countries divided by a common language. I've always loved that statement!

    • @robin-kq7un
      @robin-kq7un 17 дней назад

      Wrong about Macklin causing the accident; it was caused by Hawthorn who cut recklessly across Macklin and braked, causing Macklin to swerve.

  • @andredeketeleastutecomplex
    @andredeketeleastutecomplex Год назад +2

    Those fans were stupid too. Why would you sit that close to giant bullets?

  • @ericjones9487
    @ericjones9487 Год назад

    Stupid is as stupid stands next to a race track watching cars go bye once in a while

  • @elshowdehugo2926
    @elshowdehugo2926 Год назад

    Holy Shit!!! I know that wreck, that wreck was one of the worst wrecks in human history. It looks like a Jewish Nazi Holocaust that Hitler did in the 1940s in Nazi Germany😢😢😢😢😢

    • @oler777
      @oler777 Год назад

      Wouldn’t it be more on the point to say 1944-5 Japanese or 2001 Middle Eastern since they crashed admiral Ackbar style 😢😂

    • @elshowdehugo2926
      @elshowdehugo2926 Год назад

      @@oler777 no, i say that it killed 80 people and I thing this wreck have been like a Nazi masacre and all of were Jews

    • @andredeketeleastutecomplex
      @andredeketeleastutecomplex Год назад

      Proof?

    • @paulcateiii
      @paulcateiii Год назад

      wtf

    • @Poundcakebowler
      @Poundcakebowler Год назад

      That’s dark
      Even as a joke

  • @NASCARFAN93100
    @NASCARFAN93100 Год назад +22

    Great work covering the 1955 Le Mans Disaster

    • @C-WiL
      @C-WiL Год назад +1

      💯

  • @thomashallman5436
    @thomashallman5436 Год назад

    the worst racing accident.....ever and the thing bout is y all it could had been advoided had pierre had better common horse sense that y all is what we call in the states redneck talk r.i.p. pierre and the 84 spectators a i mean that died that day