I know this is a bit like saying "apart from that Mrs Lincoln, how was the play?", but notwithstanding the accident, the '55 race was shaping up to be a classic. Hawth and Fangio were trading lap records for a couple of hours. The Merc was more the powerful but only had drum brakes and a ruddy great hydrayulic air brake which lifted up out of the back of the car. But the Jag was more aerodynamic and had all round discs. Hawth reckonned the Jag could pull 6100rpm on the Mulsanne, equally 190+mph!
The crash was IMO (not that I know Jack) probably caused mainly by a very fired up Hawth, who overtook Lance Macklin just before the pit lane, when he was about to hand over to Bueb, a man about to drive in his first major sportscar race. So Hawth, I reckon was working on the assumption that every second counted against the great JM Fangio.
Here are some of the things Fangio had to say -
"Hawthonrn crossed the track to the pits, Macklin seemed to be stopping also, and Leveghs car climbed onto the back of Macklins." So was Macklin to blame? The establishment tried to push some of it onto him afterwards, something he resisted to his dying day, which was only last year.
"Levegh was already an old man, perhaps his car was too fast for him and the track was too narrow." Is this JMF trying to assuage the guilt of Hawth and Macklin?
"Hawthorn came to me and he was crying, saying it was all his fault. I told him it wasn't and these things can happen, things are like that". No one is going to turn round at the time and say sorry Mike, your fault.
So where does this leave us? God knows, and Steve you answer my question correctly on how it happened, but I guess we'll never know for sure. Like most tradgedies it is a freak meeting of circumstances.
In Hawthorns book Challenge me the Race, he seems strangely detatched, although clearly very upset about matters. But he does make some fairly crass comments, notably, "One ray of brightness among the desolation was the action of the insurers - mainly British - who promptly accepted liability and paid out about 1/2 million pounds..." I knowthis is taken massively out of context but even so, is scraping the barrel a bit in my opinion. But he was a lovely bloke, Hawth, by all accounts so I won't be too hard on him.
Last word to Fangio - "I was lucky to escape that crash, it was by pure chance, by destiny if you like, and after I had passed through the crashing cars, without touching anything or anyone, I started to tremble and shake, for at that moment I had been waiting for the blow. Instead the way had opened and I passed through.. The Directors of Mercedes said that night we had to stop as there were too many deaths. Even though we had more than one lap lead we stopped and I was pleased with that, because you know with so many dead and suffering I felt no wish to win. What does it mean to win a race when so many people are suffering?"
Lucky? No, the man was touched by the hand of God.