RIP PADDY HOPKIRK 1933-2022

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RIP PADDY HOPKIRK 1933-2022

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Post by Everso Biggyballies »

Originally posted in "Remembering the fallen but felt a legend such as Hopkirk was deserved an exclusive thread.

RIP PADDY HOPKIRK 1933-2022

Sad to report that Rally legend Paddy Hopkirk, famous for winning the 1964 Monte Carlo Rally, has died aged 89.


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Probably the Stirling Moss of Rallying.... the one name everyone, certainly in the UK, knew back in the day. Wasn the guy who put the Mini on the map with that Monte Carlo win. Actually he also raced one at Bathurst in the then 500 mile race paired with Timo Makinen..He raced there in 1967 also.

Hopkirk shot to British celebrity overnight with his win on the Monte,
being sent messages of congratulations by Prime Minister Sir Alec Douglas-Home and The Beatles, awarded the Freedom of Belfast and invited as a guest on Bruce Forsyth’s Sunday Night at the London Palladium, complete with his Mini.

After garnering more success throughout the ’60s before retiring, Hopkirk remained indelibly linked with the small, nimble Mini Cooper and images of it sliding through snowy mountain passes.

Was a very funny man.... told great stories


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Hopkirk became synonymous with the Mini brand after teaming up with the British Motor Corporation in the 1960s, resulting in success in 1964.

The Belfast-born driver began his professional career competing in circuit racing and hillclimbs in 1955, before going on to win the Hewison Trophy, awarded to the most successful Irish rally driver, in three consecutive years.

His first big break came in 1956 when the Standard Motor Company offered him a factory drive at the prestigious RAC Rally, that he would lead briefly before suffering mechanical issues.

After a spell with the Rootes Group driving a Hillman Husky and Sunbeam Rapier, Hopkirk joined BMC, where he would become famous for driving the Mini Cooper S, which helped make the car into an icon.

Arguably Hopkirk’s finest moment of his career was victory in the 1964 Monte Carlo Rally, driving alongside Henry Liddon, piloting the now iconic #37 red and white roofed Mini Cooper S. The win came exactly a year after first driving the car at the famous alpine rally event. The win made him a household name, receiving a telegram from then UK Prime Minister Alec Douglas-Home.

Hopkirk would also conquer the iconic Acropolis Rally in Greece, driving for Mini in 1967.


In 2010 Hopkirk was among Timo Makinen, Rauno Aaltonen and Erik Carlsson as the first inductees of the Rally Hall of Fame, an exhibition that opened in Finland where new inductees are announced at each Rally Finland.

He was elected as a life member of the British Racing Drivers Club in 1967. He would remain prominent in the motorsport industry, becoming vice president of the BRDC, before becoming president from 2017-2019.

“It is with great sadness that we share the news of the death of BRDC Vice President and former President (2017-19) Paddy Hopkirk MBE,” read a statement from the BRDC.

“We thank Paddy for his dedication & love for the Club.

“On behalf of the Club we send our love & thoughts to his family at this difficult time.”

Aside from rallying, Hopkirk also competed in circuit racing as part of BMC’s assault on the then Bathurst 500 touring car race at Mount Panorama, before it morphed into today’s 1000 kilometre enduro. He achieved a best result of sixth outright and third in class, driving a Mini Cooper S alongside fellow rally driver Makinen.

The FIA marked Hopkirk’s passing with a post saying: “The FIA pays tribute to former Rally driver Paddy Hopkirk, who passed away at the age of 89.

“Starting his career in 1955, he won 5 Circuit of Ireland & the Rallye Monte Carlo in 1964. He was member of the BRDC since 1967. Our thoughts are with his family and friends.”

Outside of motorsport, Hopkirk has become an idol amongst the Mini car owners community that has resulted in the Northern Irishman putting his name to automotive aftermarket products for the famous British car.

Such was his association with the manufacturer, Hopkirk was also enlisted by BMW as a consultant for the re-launch of the Mini brand in 2001. In 2016 his career achievements were honoured with an MBE.

He is survived by his wife Jennifer and children Katie, Patrick and William, and six grandchildren.
https://www.autosport.com/wrc/news/rall ... /10341599/


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Paddy Hopkirk, Max Stahl & Timo Makinen photographed at Bathurst in 1966.


This was Paddy at Bathurst in 1967!

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RIP Paddy Hopkirk
Last edited by Everso Biggyballies 1 year ago, edited 1 time in total.

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#2

Post by Everso Biggyballies »

I found an interesting article in Motor Sport Mag regarding the Monte Carlo Rally of 1964, that put both the Mini and Hopkirk on the World Rallying 'map'..... the Mini's victory on the Monte Carlo Rally laid the foundations of its iconic status and changed rallying forever. And with it, although already famous, it elevated Hopkirk's status in World Rallying circles.

This article is that years Monte Carlo, relived by others involved in the Mini success.

How Paddy Hopkirk won the 1964 Monte Carlo Rally: key figures relive epic victory


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Paddy Hopkirk, grand prix driver, throws 33 EJB around the Monaco GP circuit as part of the rally.

It was the last weekend of January, 1964. Bruce Forsyth and Tommy Cooper flanked Joan Regan on the revolving stage that marked the finale of Britain’s most popular televised show, Sunday Night at the London Palladium. The glamorous Tiller Girls stood alongside them, but for once only two of the long-legged high kickers were on the stage’s central podium. And they were sharing it with two nervous-looking gentlemen in dark suits and ties and a little red car with a white roof. The men were Paddy Hopkirk and Henry Liddon and the car was their 1071cc Mini Cooper S, which days earlier had won the Monte Carlo Rally. Just like that!

To us, now, a Mini winning the Monte doesn’t seem such a strange idea. Back then, it was simply amazing. That such a small car—an innovative piece of engineering from a British company and driven by a British crew — could triumph on the world’s most prestigious rally was something to marvel at. And to celebrate.

The victory was not just on the front page of every British newspaper, but was in the nation’s living rooms at peak viewing time. The amazing Mini had already taken wins on the track, but it was this display of endurance that truly captured the imagination, in Britain and beyond, and propelled the car towards becoming an icon of the ‘Swinging Sixties’. The car would, of course, be immortalised on celluloid in The Italian Job five years later, but Hopkirk’s win was a major marker in helping to establish a legend.

The 1964 Monte was not the first competition appearance for the Mini Cooper registered 33 EJB. Built in the summer of ’63, the car’s maiden outing had been the Tour de France, crewed by Hopkirk and Liddon. It was one of four of the new 1071cc Cooper S models entered by the factory, and Hopkirk came a creditable third overall in the Touring category, which he also won on handicap. Having developed a liking for French roads, it was decided to use the car as Paddy’s mount for the Monte.

Mini of Paddy Hopkirk on the Col de Turini in the 1964 Monte Carlo Rally

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Top of the Turini, where the Mini’s abilities crucially extended its lead


Cliff Humphries
BMC development engineer

“In those days we would get one mechanic to build the whole car. That included the engine and gearbox. The cylinder heads were done by Weslake, but our guys would have to grind in the valves, fit the springs and camshaft and deck the cylinder block to get the right compression ratio. We never used an engine twice. When it came back from a rally it would be sold off to a private owner and we would build a new one for the next rally. The whole process could take nine weeks, or more if the mechanic was building a car from scratch.”



The BMC entries were shipped from the Port of London to Gdansk in Poland. On the boat were two more Mini Coopers, a works car for Raymond Baxter/Ernie McMillen and a private car for Dr Shelagh Aldersmith/Liz Jones. They were accompanied by mechanics from the Abingdon works, plus the redoubtable Dr Aldersmith. On arrival at Gdansk they were faced with a 250-mile drive to Warsaw, where they met up with the crews who had flown in and were to drive the cars on to Minsk, a further 370 miles up the road.

Paddy Hopkirk
Winning driver

I flew out to Warsaw and a welcoming committee took me to be reunited with Henry and the rally car. They also tried to reunite me with a month’s production of Polish vodka. The local police had dreamt up this reception for us, which was very nice, but we had to drive the Mini up to Minsk the following day. I guess they knew how cold it would be and were just making sure that we had adequate anti:freeze inside us.

“And boy, it was cold. Alec Issigonis deserves full marks for designing such a super little car, but he had not given much thought to the survival of the occupants in a Russian winter. A Mini heater is a contradiction in terms. We were soon equipped with fur hats and fur boots. In fact, we probably, looked a lot like those Russian policemen that we all made fun of —they looked like tea cosies carrying guns.”

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1964 Monte Carlo Rally route

The night-time temperature dropped to below -40°C and the rally cars had to be tow-started in the morning. That came as a bit of a shock to the locals, who had imagined that the superior technology available in the West would have bypassed such primitive methods.

Stuart Turner
BMC team manager

“Why Minsk? I tried not to choose starting points for the drivers but let them pick their own. I was keen for there to be a good spread so that if one starting point had bad weather, the others would be okay. But Minsk was an obvious choice because it was the first time in 52 years that there had been a starting point in Russia, and so there was bound to be a lot of press coverage.”


For the Minsk starters, the flag dropped at 00:34am on Saturday January 18. Facing them was a nine-hour run (back!) to Warsaw on roads that, while not free of ice, at least had no new snow. That was a big relief because snowploughs in the area were few and far between. The biggest difficulties came at the borders, where even special arrangements for the little convoy could not avoid the inevitable bureaucratic delays. Hopkirk had a very worrying experience when he took a wrong turning and encountered a brace of ‘tea cosies’ waving their guns in his general direction.

By 10pm on Saturday evening they were in Prague —and Sunday breakfast was taken in downtown Frankfurt. The day was spent in a foggy tour of the Low Countries, returning in the early hours of Monday morning through the Ardennes and Luxembourg to arrive at Reims just after 8pm.

Bill Price
BMC Competition Dept co-ordinator

“I had a rather short involvement with the rally. My first task was to go with Den Green and Johnny Lay in a car to Frankfurt to service the cars as they came in from the East. It was about six o’clock in the morning and the chosen place was a frozen car park. The temperature was -10°C. There was no problem with the Minis, but we diagnosed a leaking radiator on the MorI9, brothers’ MGB and phoned home to get a replacement shipped out to meet them at the Oostende control.

“While the rally went off to the Nürburgring, we drove to our next service at Arnhem. We picked up the BBC on the radio and it was saying that two British girls in a a Mini Cooper had been taken to hospital in Maastricht after an accident. We guessed that it must be Pauline Mayman and Val Domleo. We headed towards Maastricht and, by the most amazing luck, a chap pulled up alongside us at a traffic light — he had seen the Monte service plates — and asked if wanted him to show us the hospital. We found the girls, left Pauline in bed and took Val back to the scene of the accident for her to retrieve their kit. We then pressed on to Arnhem, where we were happy that there were still no problems with the other Minis.

“The plan now was for us to drive to Paris, leave our car with the Austin dealer, catch a flight to Nice and integrate with the rally service. Sadly, the airport was completely fogged in and likely to stay that way for some time. I rang Stuart Turner, and he said that it was best for us to go home when it finally cleared — which is what we did.”



Monte Carlo Rally winning Mini Cooper of Paddy Hopkirk on the streets of Monaco
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Hopkirk heads for victory


Stuart Turner

“My role was largely completed & before the rally started it was my task to work out the service arrangements and make sure that all the kit and spares would be in the right place at the right time, and that the teams of mechanics would find their way to the right spot. I remember my wife Margaret insisting that I clear all the maps and paperwork away from the dining room table as we had guests coming for Boxing Day!

“To me, doing the service plan was the most challenging job in rallying — and I loved it. On the event, I would jump into a car with a driver and go round to see the rally at various points. There were no mobile phones or radio so there was no chance to exercise any tactical control. In any case, the rally went straight from Reims to Monte Carlo so we only saw it a few times. I didn’t even make it to the finish ramp in time to see them arrive.”



Reims was the central point where all the routes converged, at a large Elf garage on the outskirts of the city. Thirty or so French motorcycle cops were waiting to escort the tired crews to the service park and control in the town centre, in the shadow of the famous cathedral. Their method was to gather a group of three rally cars together, then switch on every available flashing light and siren and head for the centre oblivious of traffic lights, other mad users or the speed limit. For drivers who had already been on the road for 56 hours, this was definitely a wake-up call.

The first cars left Reims at just after 9am. These were the Warsaw starters; the Minsk cars followed them. (If you were an Athens starter, you were not on the road south until 2.30pm.) As Monday night approached, the roads became smaller and more mountainous, while the time controls got closer and closer together. Crews had been arriving with 20 min or more in hand; now they were scrabbling in with just the odd minute to spare.


The organisers had banked on using a special stage at Mont Revard, before Chambéry, followed by the classic stages of Chartreuse and Chamrousse. However, Revard was closed because of road works and the authorities of Isère wanted to charge too much for use of the latter two. Thus the rally shot past all this prime mileage, and it was not until sometime after midnight that it arrived at the first special stage, 14.3 miles of hoar frost over the Col du Festre. Slow up and very fast down is the best description, and here, as on all five stages, it was the Ford Falcon of Bo Ljungfeldt that set the fastest time.

Actually, that’s possibly not true. The times of those who retired never arrived in Monte Carlo, much like their owners, and so were never published. And rumour has it that a Chrysler Valiant driven by Esko Keinanen set fastest time on the first three tests before a driveshaft broke…

The next special stage, taking in three cols between La Madeleine and Pellautier, followed immediately. At 28.6 miles this was the rally’s longest stage and featured a mix of fast and twisty sections, many with spectacular drops. (It was here that Sam Nordell, the Vauxhall driver, was killed during the recce.) Ljungfeldt again had the fastest recorded time. But Hopkirk was only 19sec slower on scratch — and led the rally by 30 points on handicap.

Mini of Paddy Hopkirk on a snowy mountain pass on the 1964 Monte Carlo Rally

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Minis were in pretty standard spec, with no rollcage or harness


When Hopkirk equalled Ljungfeldt’s time on the icy Chorges-to-Savines stage after Gap, he was 44 points clear. Not that he knew it; Ljungfeldt and Carlsson may have learned of Hopkirk’s times, but Paddy could not have known theirs. He was ahead of them on the road, and since the stages were not started on whole minutes, no outside observer could be sure of any times. The drivers just had to get on with it Go as fast as they could.

As dawn broke, the Minsk runners were coming to the last two stages in the Alps overlooking Nice. The first of these was St-Martin-Vésubie, the infamous ‘Ford Falcon Autobahn’, so dubbed by Pat Moss and Liz Nystrom. But even here, with a 28sec second advantage over Hopkirk, Ljungfeldt could not stop the Mini gaining more points on handicap, while the twistier Col du Turini provided another huge leap forward for the little car.

The scoring
This was the penultimate Monte to use the factor of comparison on stage times. This was a formula designed to reduce the benefits of tuning and engine capacity. The basic bit was the square root of a figure arrived at by dividing the cylinder capacity in litres by eight times the cylinder capacity plus one. A further fixed coefficient (zero for Group 1, 1.04 for Group 2 and 1.05 for Group 3) was added depending in which group your car was entered. This gave you your particular ‘factor’.

The times over the five special stages were added together and multiplied by your ‘factor’. Then, a day after the ‘finish’, there was a series of races on the Monaco GP circuit, each lasting four laps. The scratch time there was added to the adjusted stage times to give your final result.

Simple!




Erik Carlsson
Saab works driver

“The weather was a bit too good for Saab: cold, but not much ice and snow. What there was came on the three stages around Gap, where we could keep up with the Minis. But the ‘Ford Falcon Autobahn’ was impossible for us. It was dry Tarmac most of the way. I lost 48sec to Paddy — even Pat [Moss, in another Saab] beat me. She went like hell in those conditions. It was much better on the Turini, where there was proper snow and I was second fastest behind Ljungfeldt.

Part of the problem in such good conditions was that we did not use racing tyres like the Minis. We had a Dunlop contract, but to cover all the possibilities, from full snow to dry Tarmac, we also had to carry some studded BF Goodrich snow tyres and Pirelli wet road tyres. With two service cars and a supervision car to look after two rally cars, the tyre choice was never going to be optimised for every stage. The BMC boys did a fantastic job to look after all those cars they had and get the right tyres on them.”



Paddy Hopkirk drives through the snow in his Mini Cooper on the 1964 Monte Carlo Rally

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Twisty, snowy sections let agile Mini gain on huge V8 Ford Falcon

Thus, with the rallying over, Hopkirk led from Carlsson, Moss and Timo Mäkinen, with Ljungfeldt only fifth. But the crucial seconds on the four-lap circuit test were not subject to the coefficient, and counted as points. So Ljungfeldt could gain considerably — and the gap to Hopkirk was only 64 points.

The Falcons were the quickest on the circuit: Ljungfeldt did the fastest time ahead of Jo Schlesser, followed by Günther Klass (Porsche Carrera), the two Mercedes 300SEs of Eugen Böhringer and Dieter Glemser, and then Anne Hall in a third Falcon. But Hopkirk drove quickly and sensibly to drop just 34sec to Ljungfeldt The Swede did manage to leap ahead of Makinen’s Cooper S and the two Saabs —but Hopkirk remained just out of his reach.

Ljungfeldfs drive in the big 4.7-litre machine must be reckoned one of the best in modem rallying. And yet there was someone else able to go one better. Hopkirk and Liddon’s tenacity and planning paid dividends; they had put in a lot of time practising the stages, helped by the fact that three of the stages were around Gap, the other two around La Bollène.

Mini on hairpin at Monaco in the 1964 Monte Carlo Rally

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Hopkirk retained his lead over a four-lap dash around Monaco


Paddy Hopkirk
“I don’t remember much of the rally and the stages. You were so tired you only thought of driving as fast as you could. I do remember seeing Stuart Turner at the roadside coming away from the Turini. He stopped us and asked how it had gone. We could only say that it was okay because we didn’t know how we compared with anyone else. He wanted to chat more, but we would have been late to the finish.

“Even then, after arriving in Monaco, we did not know how things were. It took a long time in those days to get all the printing clock records in from the controls and do the calculations. I went to bed on the Tuesday afternoon. At about four o’clock on Wednesday morning, the telephone woke me. It was Bernard Cahier, the French journalist. He wanted to know how it felt to be the winner. I thought he was kidding and told him it was a bad joke. But he finally convinced me.



Paddy Hopkirk and Henry Liddon with 1964 Monte Carlo Rally trophies on their Mini Cooper

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BMC’s haul: outright win, team prize and GT class


People often speculate as to how Hopkirk was able to so convincingly beat his Finnish team-mates Makinen and Rauno Aakonen on an event and in conditions that should have suited them well. What one has to remember is that Hopkirk was, at that point, more experienced than they were, as well as being at the peak of his career. Sprinkle in a dose of hard work and you have the recipe for his success.

Stuart Turner
“After the rally, Tony Dawson, BMC’s PR dynamo, was simply fantastic. Before we knew where we were, there were telegrams from The Beatles (we had organised a lift for Ringo from Paris airport in a rally car before the start, when he had arrived after the rest of the group), a lunch with Juan Manuel Fangio, Graham Hill, Jo Bonnier and other luminaries, and then a celebration dinner, with Alec Issigonis as the star guest.

“Tony’s final stroke of genius was to get the winning car, together with Paddy and Henry,flown back by the Channel air ferry so that it could appear live on ‘Sunday Night at the London Palladium’, which was at the time by far the most-watched programme on TV. To add to the joy of the success, Tommy Cooper was on the bill.”



Just like that!

What happened next…
The Monte Carlo of 1964 seemed to open some kind of tap. The Mini’s win captured the imagination — and not just in Britain. Even America heard about it, since (the losing) Ford America had brought a pack of journalists with it. And, throughout the boardrooms of the car world, it seemed to pluck nationalist heart strings and generally set them thinking on how to win rallies, the Monte Carlo in particular. This victory triggered 20 years of growth within the sport.


To start with, the others did not have it easy. Waiting in the wings was a 1275cc version of the Mini Cooper, which was racking up outright wins by mid-1964. It didn’t matter that rallies were starting to ditch their capacity coefficients. With its bigger engine, the Cooper S had a sufficient power-to-weight ratio to win without handicaps. Famously, it did just that three more times on the Monte. First Mäkinen defeated Böhringer in a works Porsche 904 in the snows of ’65. He won again in ’66, only to be thrown out with all the other British-entered cars for an alleged lighting infringement. And finally Aaltonen won in ’67, finishing just 13sec ahead of Ove Andersson’s Lancia Fulvia. By ’67, Lancia, Alpine, Porsche, Ford, Sunbeam and Opel were snapping at the heels of the Mini and, sure enough, on their last appearance as a works team, on the Monte of ’68, they were swept aside by Porsche.

But they had had their effect. Rallying was on the up, and would stay that way. Carlsson may have bought the firework, but Hopkirk had lit the blue touchpaper.
https://www.motorsportmagazine.com/arch ... l-wonder-3

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As somebody who used to be very active in the Mini scene, this is sad news. I know my family have met him on more than one occasion, and have numerous awards and paintings signed by him.
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Obituary to Paddy from the British Racing Drivers Club

Paddy was a passionate member of the BRDC from 1965, and which he served after his driving retirement as both a Director and Vice-President before ultimately becoming President.

OBITUARY - PADDY HOPKIRK MBE (14 APRIL 1933 - 21 JULY 2022)

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Paddy Hopkirk passed away peacefully in Stoke Mandeville Hospital last Thursday. He was 89 years of age and had been suffering from cancer. Before and after his two years as President of the BRDC from 2017 to 2019, Paddy was a director of the Club between 1995 and 2002 and a Vice President. He was passionate about the BRDC, insistent that Members should wear the Club’s badge proudly and as often as possible. Because of his great fame as a rally driver, the fact that he had also been a successful racing driver and was a fully qualified Life Member of the Club, to which he had been first elected in 1965, tended to be overlooked.

Born in Belfast, the youngest of five children to survive childbirth, Paddy gained a place at Trinity College, Dublin to study for an Engineering degree. However, he soon discovered the joys of motoring, first with motor-cycles before acquiring an Austin Seven Chummy with which he entered his first rally, a much gentler affair than those which he would encounter a few years later. In the 1950s it was common for motor sport competitors to use their road cars in a variety of disciplines by the simple expedient of removing the hubcaps and taping over the headlights. Fortuitously for Paddy, a fellow student at Trinity College was the son of the Volkswagen importer in Dublin. Attracted by the versatility of the VW Beetle, then the only model manufactured by the company, Paddy took a job as a salesman with the retail outlet of the importers and was soon at the wheel of a Beetle in rallies, trials, driving tests (autotests), hillclimbs and any other form of motorised competition in which a Beetle could be used. In 1952 Paddy’s passion for motoring competition led to him dropping out of university and pursuing his career as a car salesman to enable him to spend as much time as possible rallying.

VW Beetles saw Paddy through 1953/54 with some successes along the way but they had their limitations so a Triumph TR2 took their place in 1955 and provided Paddy with his first race win, in a heat at the Phoenix Park road circuit. Added to this were overall wins with the TR2 in other Irish events such as the Irish 900 mile Rally and several trials, news of which reached Ken Richardson, then competitions manager for Standard-Triumph in Coventry. The opportunity to drive a factory Standard Vanguard in the Monte Carlo Rally fell through but a Standard Ten was at Paddy’s disposal for the 1956 RAC Rally. Back then the RAC Rally started with a series of driving (auto) tests at the seaside town starting point. In 1956 Blackpool was the chosen venue where Paddy deployed his full repertoire of handbrake turns and other auto gymnastics to emerge as initial leader of the Rally, much to Richardson’s surprise and delight. Paddy was on his way as a works driver and celebrated by finishing third overall on the Tulip Rally in a Standard Eight.

The Suez Crisis severely curtailed international rallying in 1957 and Paddy only contested the Tulip and Midnight Sun Rallies for Standard-Triumph, the latter in a Standard Eight badged as a Standard Vanguard Junior which provided Paddy for the first time with the experience of an underpowered car on loose surfaces. The highlight of 1958 was Paddy’s first win in the Circuit of Ireland at the wheel of a factory Triumph TR3A but, after he had been forced to retire from the following Alpine Rally with an overheated engine, he was not invited to drive for Standard-Triumph again.

After sharing a Riley One-Point-Five with Les Leston in the 1959 Monte Carlo Rally, Paddy was invited by Norman Garrad, the Rootes Group competition manager, to drive a Hillman Husky of all things in the East African Safari Rally. Although unsurprisingly Paddy failed to finish, his next outing for Rootes in the Alpine Rally with a Sunbeam Rapier Series III ended with third place overall, first in class, a Coupe awarded for an unpenalized run, and The Autocar Trophy for first British car. Outside his international rallying for Standard-Triumph and latterly Rootes, Paddy kept his hand in with the smorgasbord of Irish events in a Speedwell Austin A35 and then a Mk 1 Austin-Healey Sprite ‘Frogeye’, continuing to enjoy considerable success. Paddy’s first notable race outside the island of Ireland came in the touring car event supporting the 1960 British Grand Prix at Silverstone. In a race famous for the brilliant battle for the lead between Colin Chapman and Jack Sears in Jaguar 3.8 Mk 2s, Paddy in his Sunbeam Rapier finished seventh overall behind the Jaguars but ahead of all the 1600 cc class regulars.

For 1961 Paddy continued with Rootes for the major international rallies in a Sunbeam Rapier, again finishing third overall on the Alpine Rally and winning the Circuit of Ireland for a second time, whilst also sharing a Sunbeam Alpine with Peter Jopp in the Le Mans 24 Hours and Sebring 12 Hours. Adding another string to his racing bow, Paddy acquired a Formula Junior Elva 200 of which he had no fond memories, describing it as ‘a dangerous pig’ although he did wrestle it to a third place in a formule libre race at Kirkistown. A much better proposition was the Lotus 18, which he borrowed from the Rootes distributor for Northern Ireland Charles Eyre-Maunsell, with which Paddy finished third in an international Formula Junior race at behind the Ken Tyrrell Cooper T59s of Peter Procter and John Love on the Dunboyne road circuit in 1962. Uncle Ken was sufficiently impressed by Paddy’s performance to offer him a place in his Formula Junior team which he turned down.

By now Paddy’s status as one of the UK’s top rally drivers was undisputed. Having finished third overall in the 1962 Monte Carlo Rally behind Erik Carlsson’s SAAB 96 and Eugen Bohringer’s Mercedes-Benz 220SE, followed by his third Circuit of Ireland victory, Paddy left Rootes for the British Motor Corporation where the competition manager was the newly appointed Stuart Turner, and the Austin-Healey 3000 was at the peak of its powers. Little did Paddy think that it would not be the Big Healey so much as the diminutive Mini with which his fame and legendary status would be forged over the coming years. Paddy’s first outing in a Healey 3000 was the Liege-Rome-Liege Marathon de la Route from which he retired but the RAC Rally, now in the forests of course, went much better, Paddy finishing second overall behind the one and only Erik Carlsson.

Paddy would rarely rally the Big Healey again. In 1963 he took one to sixth overall in the Liege-Sofia-Liege and the following year won the Austrian Alpine Rally with ARX91B but retired from what had become the Spa-Sofia-Liege. For the next six years it would be mainly Minis. In a foretaste of what was to come, Paddy finished sixth in the 1963 Monte Carlo Rally with a Mini-Cooper before spending much of the year racing a Mini-Cooper and later a 1071 cc Mini-Cooper S in the British Saloon Car Championship, finishing the season sixth overall and second in class to John Whitmore in a similar combination of cars. In the Tour de France, with Henry Liddon as his-co-driver in a 1071 cc Cooper S – 33EJB - Paddy finished third overall in the Touring Car division behind a couple of Jaguar 3.8 Mk 2s.

With the same car - 33EJB - Paddy then began the 1964 season with one of the victories for which he will forever be best remembered - the Monte Carlo Rally. Starting from Minsk in the Soviet Union, Paddy and Henry Liddon battled through ice, snow, fog, and freezing conditions to emerge triumphant ahead of the Ford Falcon of Bo Ljungfeldt. A measure of the achievement is the list of famous rallying names who finished behind Paddy. Ljungfeldt was followed by Erik Carlsson in third place then Timo Makinen in another works Cooper S, Pat Moss-Carlsson, Tom Trana, Rauno Aaltonen, Carl-Magnus Skogh, Eugen Bohringer and Pauli Toivonen. It was the first win of many for the Mini in a major international rally. Paddy received telegrams of congratulation from amongst others the Prime Minister, Sir Alec Douglas-Home, from the Beatles and appeared with 33EJB live on stage for Sunday Night at the London Palladium with Bruce Forsyth, at the time one of the most-viewed programmes on television. When asked by the host what had been the most difficult part of the whole event, Paddy’s typically quick-witted response was to say ‘getting the Mini through the stage door’.

Over the next few years Paddy stayed loyal to BMC, mainly competing in Mini-Cooper Ss. His major victories included the 1966 Austrian Alpine, the 1967 Circuit of Ireland, the 1967 Acropolis and the 1967 Alpine Rallies while featuring prominently in the overall and class results in many other events. In 1969, with the Mini-Cooper S coming to the end of its time as a front-line car for the major events, Paddy had one final outing in the Circuit of Ireland but had to settle for second place behind the state-of-the-art Ford Escort Twin Cam of Roger Clark. In racing, Paddy continued to enjoy class success in the Bruitish Saloon Car championship and shared a 970 Mini-Cooper S with Julian Vernaeve to win the 851 to 1000 cc class in the 1964 Spa 24 Hours. This was not the end of Paddy’s Mini successes, however. In 1982 he came out of retirement to share a Cooper S with Brian Culcheth and win the RAC Golden 50 Rally and he was back again in 1990 to share a Cooper S with his great friend Alec Poole on the Pirelli Classic Marathon which they won.

In 1968 Paddy had been accompanied by Alec and by Tony Nash in a BMC Austin/Morris 1800 on the first and most famous transcontinental rally, the London to Sydney Marathon sponsored by the Daily Express. After driving across Europe, through Turkey, Afghanistan, India and from one side of Australia to the other, Paddy, Alec, and Tony in the underpowered ‘Land Crab’ claimed second place overall behind the Hillman Hunter of Andrew Cowan, Brian Coyle and Colin Malkin. This achievement gave Paddy a taste for transcontinental rallies. In 1970 he finished fourth on the London to Mexico World Cup event with a Triumph 2.5Pi and in 1977 he was third overall in a second London-to-Sydney Marathon, this time sponsored by Singapore Airlines. In a factory-supported Citroen CX2400 Paddy, racing driver Michael Taylor and Australian Bob Riley came home third.

Although it was his rally successes which made Paddy a household name in the 1960s, his time with BMC also saw him compete in a number of major sports car races such as the Targa Florio, Sebring 12 Hours and the Le Mans 24 Hours, the last of which he had already contested in 1961 and 1962 in a Sunbeam Alpine. While the Alpines may not have finished their races, the MGB proved to be a much more reliable proposition enabling Paddy and Alan Hutcheson to finish 12th overall and first in their class in 1963. In 1964, this time with Andrew Hedges as team mate their MGB was 19th overall, second in class and winner of The Motor Trophy for the first British car to finish. Paddy and Andrew were second in class again in 1965 and 11th overall with an MGB whilst in his last outing in the Great Race, again with Andrew but this time in an Austin-Healey Sprite, they were forced to retire with head gasket failure while going well only a few hours from the finish. In the Targa Florio in 1965 Paddy and Andrew shared a MG Midget Coupe to 11th overall and second in class, a MGB GTS with Timo Makinen to ninth overall in 1967 and a MGB GT with Andrew Hedges to 12th overall in 1968.

Paddy’s last competitive event came in 1994 when he drove a Mini-Cooper 1.3i in the Monte Carlo Rally to celebrate the 30th anniversary of his 1964 success. With former co-driver Ron Crellin alongside and at 60 years of age Paddy finished fourth in his class. The Mini association never went away for, after his retirement from active competition, Paddy established an association with BMW as an Ambassador for the second-generation MINI brand, overseeing most recently the introduction of a special edition Paddy Hopkirk Cooper S. From his earliest days in motor sport in Ireland Paddy developed commercial interests to help support his activities. Quick to see and seize an opportunity he expanded his car accessory business over time into the Mill Accessory Group based in Peterborough. He gave his time and name freely to several charities including Wheelpower, SKIDZ and the Integrated Education Fund for Northern Ireland. He supported IAM RoadSmart, initiating an event for BRDC SuperStars and Rising Stars at Silverstone which enabled all the participants, after full assessments, to become Advanced Motorists.

In his two years as President of the BRDC, Paddy always took a keen interest in the Club’s activities, making himself available whenever requested and attending as many events as possible. His engaging charm and sense of humour invariably ensured that encountering him in the Clubhouse or wherever else would guarantee an entertaining chat. One of the first to be inducted into the Rally Hall of Fame, along with Erik Carlsson, Timo Makinen and Rauno Aaltonen, Paddy was a legend without any airs and graces. He was comfortable in the limelight but never sought it. Paddy was one of those BRDC Members for whom Membership of the Club meant a very great deal, an honour to be cherished. He will be very much missed.

To Jenny, Paddy’s wife of 55 years, their children Kate, Patrick and William, to their grandchildren and to Paddy’s many friends and colleagues around the world, the BRDC extends its most sincere condolences.

There will be a private family funeral with a memorial at a later date.
http://www.brdc.co.uk/Obituary---Paddy- ... -July-2022

* I started life with nothing, and still have most of it left


“Good drivers have dead flies on the side windows!” (Walter Röhrl)

* I married Miss Right. Just didn't know her first name was Always
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