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Rosemary Smith

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Rosemary Smith
Smith at the Rally de Monte Carlo, 1965
NationalityRepublic of Ireland Irish
Born(1937-08-07)7 August 1937
Dublin, Irish Free State
Died5 December 2023(2023-12-05) (aged 86)
Championship titles
 Winner  1965 Tulip Rally

Rosemary Smith (7 August 1937 – 5 December 2023) was an Irish rally driver from Dublin. She initially trained as a dress designer.

YouTube Encyclopedic

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Transcription

Biography

Smith and navigator, Valerie Domleo, winners of the Tulip Rally, 1965

Smith entered her first rally as a co-driver. After deciding that navigating was not to her liking, she switched to driving. She came to the attention of the Rootes Group's Competition Department, which offered her a works drive.[1]

In 1958, she and Valerie Domleo, a British physicist, won the four-day Dutch Tulip Rally. The duo drove "a factory entered Hillman Imp" as one of 159 cars participating from sixteen countries in the April 1965 rally that covered roughly 1,800 miles (2 900 km).[2]

In 1964, she took the ladies' prize on the Circuit of Ireland Rally driving a Sunbeam Rapier.[3] The following year she won the Tulip Rally outright in a Hillman Imp.[4]

Smith was controversially disqualified from the 1966 Monte Carlo Rally after winning the Coupe des Dames, the ladies' class. Ten cars in total were disqualified. "Rosemary Smith said she would never compete again unless the decision was reversed."[5]

Her other competition successes included an outright win in the 1969 Cork 20 Rally. She won the ladies' prize several times on the Scottish Rally and on the Circuit of Ireland Rally, twice each on the Alpine Rally and on the Canadian Shell 4000, and once on the Acropolis Rally. She also had numerous class wins to her name.[citation needed]

In 1966, she appeared as a guest on an episode of What's My Line. Arlene Francis, Mark Goodson, Ginger Rogers, and Bennett Cerf were on the panel and successfully guessed her "line" as a rally driver.[6]

She established an Irish land speed record of 156.101 mph on the Carrigrohane Straight in Cork in June 1978, driving a seven-litre Jaguar XJ6.[7]

She founded a driving school in the 1990s. On 10 May 2017, she did a test drive with the show car of Renault F1 on the Circuit Paul Ricard as part of a filming day. This made her the oldest person to have driven an 800bhp racing car.[8][9]

Smith died of cancer on 5 December 2023, aged 86.[10]

References

  1. ^ "Rosemary Smith: 7th Aug 1937, Dublin". The Imp Site. Retrieved 26 May 2020.
  2. ^ "Rally win for Valerie Domleo." Derby, England: Derby Evening Telegraph, April 30, 1965, front page (subscription required).
  3. ^ Motor Sport, May 1964, p. 373.
  4. ^ Motor Sport, June 1965, pp. 471–72.
  5. ^ Competition Press & Autoweek, 12 February 1966, pp. 1, 6.
  6. ^ What's My Line?, retrieved 19 September 2018
  7. ^ New Irish land speed record, The Cork Examiner, 1978-06-21.
  8. ^ Moreau, Emer (27 August 2019). "Rosemary Smith: Rally driver as sharp at 82 as she was in 1961". The Irish Times. Retrieved 26 May 2020.
  9. ^ Renault UK, 79 year-old Rosemary Smith takes The Ultimate Test Drive, retrieved 13 July 2017
  10. ^ "Ground-breaking Irish rally driver Rosemary Smith passes away at the age of 86". Irish Independent. 5 December 2023. Retrieved 5 December 2023.

Further reading

  • Mowat-Brown, G. (2003). Imp: The Complete Story. The Crowood Press.
  • Smith, Rosemary (2018). Driven. Harper Collins.

External links

This page was last edited on 13 April 2024, at 18:23
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