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John Brise was a pig farmer who, at the age of 19 acquired
a Jaguar SS100 and scored third places at Goodwood in May and June 1950
in 5 lap BARC Member's races. He then moved to the 500s and, in 1952, he made
his debut in a Kieft at
Castle Combe finishing fourth in the third heat
to Stirling Moss and
Andre Loens.
In 1953, after buying a
Cooper Mk IV, he was consistently a frontrunner. He
finished second in the second and final heats at
Orleans on 31 May
to Stuart Lewis-Evans and
second in the second heat at
Amiens on 9 June,
to Eric Brandon but went on to win the final. At Brands Hatch in a
Martin,
he finished sixth in the
Easter
Handicap race and in May, he finished second
to Bernie Ecclestone in the
Consolation Race in the Cooper. An impressed
Daphne Arnott offered
him a works drive alongside Ivor Bueb. The car was difficult to drive but
Brise was able to achieve a fourth place in the production car race at the
Commander Yorke meeting at the Silverstone in August. In the streamlined
Arnott, he set class records at
Montlhéry in October.
Early in 1954, John sold his Cooper to George Dardenne.
When stock car racing arrived in Britain, John built a car based upon a
Massey-Ferguson tractor gearbox, a Mercedes chassis, a Jeep rear-axle and
Oldsmobile Rocket 88 V8 engine bored out to 7.5 litres. Described as a car
that "changed the game" in stock-car racing, Brise won the 1956 World Stock
Car Championship and the British Trophy the following year. He was double
world champion in 1959 and 1960.
His engineering abilities would be used again in 1960 when karting came
about. He drove for Getkart and developed his own machine, the Brisekart. In
1961, he was Class 1 champion and in 1967, he won the Bouley Bay hill-climb
in Jersey in a 200 cc Montessa. As his sons Tony and Tim
progressed through karting, John retired.
John Brise died of cancer on 29 November 1980, five years to the day his son
Tony and the core of the Hill Team died in the plane crash at Arkley golf
course, near Barnett. If anyone has more details, please get in touch. |