If you’re reading this on Friday then today would have been the 100th birthday of one of the most remarkable men ever to sit in a racing car. Not only did he win at the top level in sportscar racing as works Mercedes-Benz driver and teammate to Stirling Moss, he also did more to encourage safety on road and track than any other driver in history. Yet you’d be entirely forgiven for never having heard of John Fitch.
Fitch was an American and first came to any kind of public prominence when as a US Air Force fighter pilot in 1945 he took on a twin jet Messerschmitt Me262 in his single prop P51 Mustang and shot it down. Shortly thereafter he was shot down himself and sat out the last few months of hostilities as a prisoner of war.
After the war he became part of the Palm Springs set, hanging out with Joe Kennedy’s sons including Jack and Bobby, and dating his daughter. But he was increasingly interested in racing and by the 1950s had started to devote more and more time to the sport. He won the SCCA National Sports Car Championship in 1951 driving a variety of cars and falling in with Briggs Cunningham. And it was in Cunninghams that he would win his class at Le Mans in both 1951 and 1953, on the latter occasion coming third overall, the same year in which he’d win the Sebring 12 Hours outright.
By then however he’d become noticed by the Mercedes-Benz team and become friends with its legendary chief engineer Rudi Uhlenhaut. For the 1952 Carrera Panamericana they agreed to enter Fitch in an experimental roadster version of their famous W194 300SL prototype. Lighter but less aerodynamic than the coupes of Karl Kling and Hermann Lang, Fitch was plagued by tyre trouble, struggled to stay the pace and was eventually disqualified for a technical infringement, though not before setting the fastest time on the fastest stage of the race.
Sadly however Fitch is probably best remembered as being the team-mate to poor Pierre Levegh at Le Mans in 1955, who’d lose his life along with those of over 80 others in the worst accident in racing history. It was Fitch who had to break the news to Levegh’s wife. Three more people were to die at the next race, the RAC Tourist Trophy at Dundrod, a circuit Fitch considered just plain dangerous. Not that this stopped him winning in a 300SLR, though he was the first to point out he played ‘a minor, peripheral role’ compared to his team-mate Stirling Moss who did the lion’s share of the driving.
Although Fitch would race on into the 1960s, after his awful experiences in 1955 he began to focus his considerable mental and physical energies on improving safety, not just for race car drivers, but everyone on the road. His most famous and greatest achievement was the Fitch barrier, a system of sand-filled barrels designed to protect drivers from impact with the end of guard rail or the pit wall. With considerable bravery Fitch conducted multiple crash tests with himself at the wheel, and filmed by high speed cameras to perfect his theory. Affordable, easy to replace and remarkably effective, Fitch barriers soon became common sights all over North America.
I met Fitch just once, in Mexico in 2002, to celebrate the 50th anniversary of Mercedes winning the Carrera Panamerica. At the time he was a disgustingly fit 84 year old, who drove the W194 Mercedes had brought with them beautifully and at speeds that totally belied his age. I shouldn’t have been too surprised however, as he was still racing historics.
One last story about Fitch, one that I think reveals more about the man and the driver he was than any other. I think most of us will remember that Stirling won the 1955 Mille Miglia in a record time that would never be beaten, and that he did so aided not only by Denis Jenkinson but the scrollable roll of pace notes he brought with him. Less well known is that it was Fitch who was meant to be driving Jenks and it was Fitch who had the idea for the pace notes. But it was also Fitch who recognised that he had no chance of winning in a standard 300SL road car, but that the notes might enable Moss in his 300SLR racer to beat the Italians on home soil, something that had only been done twice in the history of the race and not since the war. It was Fitch who leant Moss both Jenks and the idea for the magic role of notes and I think his role in that victory is too often overlooked. As for his own performance in the race, with a German reporter with no knowledge of the thousand mile lap for a passenger, Fitch still came fifth overall in a standard road car, beaten only by factory prototypes.
John Fitch died in 2012 aged 95, but his memory lives on in those who loved sportscar racing from his era, and his innovations continue to save lives to this day.
Photography courtesy of LAT Images
andrew frankel
John Fitch