The home of the Historic Marathon Rally Group. The Historic Marathon Rally Group (HMRG) is a friendly UK-based network of enthusiasts dedicated to reuniting historic rally cars, competitors, service crews, and supporters from around the world. Our mission is to celebrate and promote the legendary Marathon Rallies and Classic Car Endurance events of the past while fostering a shared passion for motorsport history.
After we put out a request for people to share photos with us we were very pleased at the response. Guido Devreker posted a collection of images to our facebook group which you can now see here in this post. All these images appear to all be of the start of the 1970 World Cup Rally.
My contribution from Belgium : Some original photos from the start made by a Belgian Photographer !!! Please ENJOY !!!
Guido Devreker 19 April 2020.
Volvo reg LPY 158F Car 58 in the World Cup Rally 1970
BMC 1800 car 55 at the start of the World Cup Rally 1970
Ford Escort car 14 reg number FTW 48H in the 1970 World Cup Rally
Mini Cooper S car 89 at the start of the 1970 World Cup Rally
VW Beach Buggy car 50 at start of the World Cup Rally 1970
Ford Escort car 18 reg number FEV 1H in the 1970 World Cup Rally
Datsun 1600SS car number 79 at the start of the 1970 World Cup Rally
Mosvitch 412 at start of the 1970 World Cup Rally from Wembley stadium London
BMC 1800 car 41 at the start of the World Cup Rally 1970
Mercedes Benz 280SE car 24 at start of the 1970 World Cup Rally
Porsche 911S car 56 at the start of the 1970 World Cup Rally
Triumph 2.5PI car 98 reg number XJB 302H at start of the 1970 World Cup Rally
Citroen DS21 car 100 at the start of the 1970 World Cup Rally
Peugeot 504 car number 6 at start of the 1970 World Cup Rally
Ford Escort car 65 reg number FEV 3H at start of the 1970 World Cup Rally
Alfa Romeo Giulia 1600 Super car 22 at start of the 1970 World Cup Rally
Mercedes Benz 280SE car 38 at start of the 1970 World Cup Rally
Austin Maxi car 20 at the start of the World Cup Rally 1970
Seat 1430 car 62 at start of 1970 World Cup Rally
Peugeot 404, car 63 at the start of the World Cup Rally 1970
Citroen DS21 car 47 at the start of the 1970 World Cup Rally
Triumph 2.5PI car 43 reg number XJB 304H at start of the 1970 World Cup Rally
Toyota Corolla car 77 at start of the 1970 World Cup Rally
Citroen DS21 car 101 at the start of the 1970 World Cup Rally
Lotus Cortina car 9 at the start of the 1970 World Cup Rally
Fiat 2300 estate car 80 at start of the 1970 World Cup Rally
Vauxhall Victor Estate car 37 reg number SDC 109H at the start of the 1970 World Cup Rally
Ford Cortina Savage car 99 at start of the 1970 World Cup Rally
Citroen DS21 that was car 12 at the start of the 1970 World Cup Rally
BMC 1800 car 3 at the start of the World Cup Rally 1970
Hillman Hunter car 83 at start of the 1970 World Cup Rally
Mini 1275GT car 59 at the start of the 1970 World Cup Rally. reg XJB 308H
Porsche 911S car 27 at the start of the 1970 World Cup Rally
Porsche 911 – Car 2 – (Hunter/Mabbs) London-Mexico Rally 1970
Mosvitch 412 car 84 at the start of the 1970 World Cup Rally
BMW 2002 til car 36 at the start of the 1970 World Cup Rally
Rolls Royce Silver Cloud car 13 reg number MCX 695 at start of 1970 World Cup Rally
Austin 1800 car 32 at the start of the World Cup Rally 1970
Citroen DS21 car 25 at the start of the 1970 World Cup Rally
Ford Escort car 103 reg number FEV 4H in the 1970 World Cup Rally
Ford Cortina GT car 48 in the 1970 World Cup Rally
BMC 1800 car 95 at the start of the World Cup Rally 1970
Saab V4 reg number NKX 8H car 51 at the start of the 1970 World Cup Rally
VW Beetle car 19 at start of the World Cup Rally 1970
Triumph 2.5PI from the 1970 World Cup Rally
Ford Escort Elba Motor Caravan car 16 reg number RKK 820G at the start of the 1970 World Cup Rally
BMC 1800 car 34 at the start of the World Cup Rally 1970
Ford Escort car 103 reg number FEV 4H in the 1970 World Cup Rally
Vauxhall Ventora car 10 reg number NOV 153G at the start of the 1970 London to Mexico World Cup Rally
Mercedes Benz 280SE car 49 at start of the 1970 World Cup Rally
Citroen DS21 car 93 at the start of the 1970 World Cup Rally
Car 45 Ford Escort CMF 730H
Jeep Wagoneer car 44 at start of World Cup Rally 1970
Austin Maxi car 74 at the start of the World Cup Rally 1970
Peugeot 504, car 87 at the start of the World Cup Rally 1970
Triumph 2.5PI reg number UKV 701H Brian Englefield at the wheel, Lloyd Hirst sat beside him and in the rear is navigator, Keith Baker
BMC 1800 car 73 at the start of the World Cup Rally 1970
Ford Escort car 85 reg number FTW 47H in the 1970 World Cup Rally
Mosvitch car 40 at start of the 1970 World Cup Rally
Ford Escort car 26 reg number FEV 2H in the 1970 World Cup Rally
Peugeot 504, car 67 at the start of the World Cup Rally 1970
Austin Maxi car 96 at the start of the World Cup Rally 1970. Crewed by Terry Kingsley, Peter Evans and Michael Scarlett.
Mosvitch 412 car at the start of the 1970 World Cup Rally
Trident Venturer car 30 at the start of the World Cup Rally 1970
Volvo 144 car 42 at the start of the 1970 World Cup Rally
Peugeot 404 car 97 reg MC0 311H at start of the 1970 World Cup Rally
Peugeot 504, car 78 at the start of the World Cup Rally 1970
Ford Mustang car 86 at start of the 1970 World Cup Rally
Hillman Hunter car 81 at start of the World Cup Rally reg number CMC 946H
As you will already know we have had to postpone the planned WCR50 event until next year. Sunday 19 April 2020 would have seen us celebrate the 50th anniversary of the start of the London to Mexico Daily Mirror World Cup Rally.
To mark the occasion we have invited people to contribute photographs. Here are some of those photos that we have received so far.
Thanks very much to John Hemsley for sending us this article about the 1970 World Cup Rally Peugeot 504 car 6.
BeforeAfter
Car No 6 became a mobile write-off following a simultaneous collision with a landslide and lorry in Colombia, but still managed to qualify as a finisher by clocking in to Buonaventura. The car made it to Costa Rica where it finally expired having consumed eighty four pints of gearbox oil (running a total loss system!) RUNNING
Running repairs at Buonaventura 01Running repairs at Buonaventura 02
From Lima we crossed the Northern Peruvian Desert into Ecuador and on into Columbia. Those competitors who reached the port of Buenaventura qualified as finishers in the Rally, as there is no road from Bogota north to Panama and the cars had to be carried by ship. Driving down a mountainside through the jungle, some two hundred miles from the finish,we rounded a corner in drizzling rain at dawn to find a landslide actually in progress. This was in the process of blocking the road with huge boulders, augmented by a large articulated lorry carrying out complicated avoiding manoeuvres on the wrong side of the road. After that, events happened with great rapidity as, in a last desperate attempt to dive underneath the trailer, we came to a dramatic halt underneath a pile of ironmongery. The BBC would have envied the sound effects! I clambered out through the hole where the windscreen had been and hauled Wally out from under the wreckage. He was looking a little battered with blood pouring down his face, and tottered off to the verge of the road to pick pieces of glass out of his shoulder, whilst I went back to inspect the wreckage. It didn’t look too promising: the roof at the front end of the car was squashed down to the level of the bonnet which had disappeared altogether. The front of the car had been completely demolished and all the electrical relays were squashed and emitting dangerous-looking sparks as the wiring was short-circuited by the crushed metalwork. The front left-hand suspension had been folded right back under the passenger seat and the battery had been thrown through the windscreen. There didn’t seem to be any glass left in the front of the car, and quite a lot of the body had disappeared as well. It was bad. Nevertheless we got two wire hawsers out from the back of the car and tied them round the front and rear sub-frames respectively, attaching each end to a couple of lorries which were then started up to pull in different directions. With a certain amount of grinding metalwork the car straightened itself from its rather bowed posture. Another hawser round the front suspension strut straightened that out to some semblance of vertical normality. This was better, but we had no steering wheel and still two hundred miles to go to qualify. Time was running out. Nevertheless with the aid of a hammer kindly loaned to us by a Russian Service Crew, and some perfunctory first aid on a rather second-hand looking co-driver, we managed to get going again, steering with the spokes of what remained of the wheel and refilling our highly modified cooling system at frequent intervals from jungle streams along the route. We crawled into Buenaventura with this mobile write-off in time to qualify as finishers, and then set about beating the car into a slightly more conventional Peugeot shape so as to be able to continue when we arrived at Panama. A piece of railway line was arc-welded into the side of the car to support the front section, and the tops of the Macpherson telescopic struts were joined by two parallel metal bars to hold the track constant. The frame was so distorted that it was impossible to open the doors that were left, so we had to climb in and out of the windows. A nineteen-inch steering wheel requisitioned from a local lorry completed our repairs and we were all set for Mexico.
A two-day boat trip allowed us to recover from our fairly hefty headaches and we left Panama City with high hopes of arriving in Mexico in time. Unfortunately having struggled on some eight hundred miles into Costa Rica our gearbox finally let us down again, and having used twenty-one gallons of oil in a four-pint capacity gearbox to cover two hundred kilometres, we finally exhausted what must have been the total supply of gear oil in Costa Rica and seized the forward bearing of the prop shaft; at which point everything came to a juddering halt. Both of us had been very keen to arrive in Mexico on all four wheels. However it was not to be and we had had a most enjoyable run, officially qualified as finishers, and had the unforgettable experience of seeing so many countries in a Continent which one is rarely privileged to visit.