- Tom Delaney
Cyril Terence "Tom" Delaney (
8 January 1911 -31 August 2006 ) was a Britishsportsman andindustrialist , perhaps best known in his later years for being the oldest licensedracing driver in the world, having competed in the sameLea-Francis car for more than three-quarters of a century from 1930 until just a few months before his death.Delaney's father was a pioneer in
motorsport , having competed in the 1903Paris -Madrid road race , and in 1910, having become the agent for the French manufacturerDelaunay Belleville he built a factory inMaida Vale , northLondon . AfterWorld War I he became managing director of Lea Francis, and in 1928 the young Tom accompanied the team's cars toBrooklands for testing and tuning in preparation for the first everArds Tourist Trophy race inIreland . Tom later joined the team in Ireland as a young pit manager and was thrilled to witnessKaye Don winning the TT in the Lea Francis, a car which Tom then acquired.cite web
title=1928 Lea-Francis Hyper
url=http://www.brooklands.org.uk/Goodwood/goodwood.htm]In 1930, Delaney he won two trophies in his first year of competition, and quite a number thereafter, at venues such as Brooklands (he later became Vice-President of the
Brooklands Society ),Brighton Speed Trials , Shelsley Walsh,Chalfont , Prescott andPhoenix Park (leading the Irish GP for most of the way). He raced at many well-known circuits including Donington (he competed both in the inaugural meeting in 1933 and in 2005!),Castle Combe , Rockingham, Goodwood and Silverstone.Apart from motor cars and aeroplanes (he was one of the first men to gain a pilot's licence at Brooklands), Delaney took over and greatly expanded his father's business, Delaney Gallay Ltd. They had five factories and employed 2,000 people. They were
heat exchange engineers who supplied advanced heating and cooling systems for both aircraft and vehicles. They were the first to introduce car heaters,air-conditioning andseat belt s for cars in the UK. Fact|date=February 2007 Delaney Gallay components flew on Spitfires, Lancasters, Typhoons and many modern civil and military aircraft, includingConcorde .In 2004 Delaney suffered a serious accident while racing at Silverstone where he was thrown out of his car, which then bounced off a barrier running him over. In hospital that evening he was told he had only injured his wrist, whereupon Delaney telephoned his mechanic to see if the car could be repaired for the next race.
In late 2005, Delaney received the
Motor Sports Association 's first ever "Lifetime Achievement" award to mark his 75 years of motor racing. His last race, at the age of 95, came at a VSCC meeting at Silverstone in April 2006; he had been invited to the Goodwood Revival meeting in early September, but died, after a short illness, just a few days before it was held.Tom Delaney was featured in the
BBC ONE Life documentary "The Oldest Drivers in Britain", which was broadcast onBBC1 on 18 October 2006.Tom Delaney was survived by his five sons, one of whom, Geoffrey, along with a granddaughter, Lucy, are following in his footsteps.
References
*Obituary. "
Autosport " p101,7 September 2006 . ISSN 0269-946X
* [http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2006/09/23/db2302.xml Daily Telegraph obituary - 23 September 2006]
* [http://www.bbc.co.uk/pressoffice/proginfo/tv/wk42/wed.shtml#wed_onelife BBC press release about ONE Life documentary "The Oldest Drivers In Britain"]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.