This was one of the competitors in the Richard Seaman Memorial Vintage Trophy Race at the Vintage Sports Car Club's meeting at Oulton Park in June 1971.
It's Keith Schellenberg's 1933 Barnato Hassan Bentley with a 6-cylinder inline 7,983cc engine. Walter Hassan was a mechanic at
Bentley in the 1920s at the time when their 3 litre, 4½ litre and 6.6 litre
cars were a force to be reckoned with, winning the Le Mans 24 Hour race 4 years
in succession from 1927 to 1930. He had been mechanic to Woolf Barnato and when
the Bentley Company went into liquidation and was taken over by Rolls Royce in
1931 he went to work for Barnato. In 1933 he designed a new chassis frame and
built a car round this and the 6½ litre (actually 6,597cc) engine from the
Bentley ‘Old Number One’ Speed Six that won the Le Mans 24 Hour race in 1929
and 1930, and this car became known as the Barnato Hassan Special. It was raced
at Brooklands, but not by Woolf Barnato who didn’t race there following the
death of Clive Dunfee in a race in 1932. After serious damage to the 6½ litre
engine at Brooklands in 1934 it was replaced by an 8 litre (7,983cc) unit and
the car was rebuilt as a single seater in 1936, in which form Oliver Bertram
lapped Brooklands with it at 143.11 mph – just short of John Cobb’s 143.44 mph
in the Napier Railton.
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