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Richard Dynely Caesar was born in Kent in 1906 and
graduated from Cambridge University, at this time he owned a Morgan
3-wheeler and became closely associated with RR ‘Robin’ Jackson. Settled in
Bristol, Caesar’s enthusiasm for motor racing for fun but at little cost,
surfaced with the creation of CAPA, a private racing organisation. Caesar
and friends began racing stripped down Austin 7-based specials, initially
using a track around the woods at his 12-acre home at Clapton-in-Gordano in
northern Somerset, but in the later 1930s CAPA moved to a better grass track
on Joe Fry’s estate nearby at Lulsgate. A prominent member of the Bristol
MC& LCC, he was also heavily involved in the organisation of local
hillclimbs and speed trials, and also invented a new event, the Mendip Grand
Prix de Tourisme, intended to mimic the Le Mans 24 hour race, using a 5-mile
course on public roads on top of the Mendip Hills.
During the war he worked in the Service Department of the Bristol Aeroplane
Company at Filton, using his own cine-camera for making instructional films.
At war’s end, as a member of the Bristol Aeroplane Company Motor Sports
Club, his enthusiasm for affordable motor racing came to the fore once more,
and he was the driving force behind the creation of the new
500 Club. Also in 1945, Caesar’s
desire to create a high-performance sporting road car had emerged with his
design for the Gordano. Using a relatively conventional chassis, the Gordano
was originally intended to be fitted with a new air-cooled rotary-valve
engine. They produced a pair of prototypes, but this project also folded, in
1950.
In
1946, to encourage the construction of racing cars to the new formula, he
drew up a simple chassis and suspension design, the
Iota, which was sold as a kit for budding
constructors to complete. An updated Iota 500 was later offered as a
complete car by Iota Racing Cars operating out of premises in Alma Vale Road
in Clifton, Bristol. In 1951 Caesar then produced a novel design for a small
sports car for the road, using a 350cc Douglas engine in a lightweight
monocoque chassis. Although prototypes were completed, this car never
reached production.
Through the 1950s, and until retirement around 1964, Caesar worked in the
Press Office of Bristol Aero Engines Ltd. In 1969 with William Mayne he
wrote a motoring novel for children “The Gobbling Billy”. Set in Ireland,
his engineering and motor sporting knowledge clearly showed throughout this
story about the restoration and racing of an old racing car, a “1908
16-litre 6-cylinder Gobelin-Billet”.4
Dick Caesar died suddenly on 2nd December 1974, aged 68.
Our thanks to Peter Stowe for this article. If you would
like to know more about Dick Caesar or motorsport in the Bristol area, visit
Peter's website at
http://website.lineone.net/~pete.stowe/Dick_Caesar.htm
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