London to Brighton (2016) – Highlights

As Londonโ€™s Hyde Park patiently awaited sunrise last Sunday, nearly 400 crews were scurrying through the pre-dawn chill, getting ready to begin their annual trek from the capital to the coast as part of the 2016 Bonhams Veteran Car Run, otherwise known as the London to Brighton Run.

A number of significant anniversaries were marked at this yearโ€™s event as itโ€™s been 120 years since the first โ€œEmancipation Runโ€ in celebration of Englandโ€™s Locomotive on the Highway Act, and 130 years since Karl Benz revealed his โ€œPatent Motorwagen,โ€ the three-wheeled, gasoline-powered vehicle that is regarded as the worldโ€™s first automobile. As part of the latter celebration, Daimler Benz entered a number of early Benz and Mercedes cars from its museum

One of them was a 1901 Benz Spider driven by ex-F1 team owner turned TV pundit Eddie Jordan. A London to Brighton novice, Jordan quickly adapted to the somewhat slower pace of Benz, and hailed the day as right up there alongside anything he had savored in his motor sport career.

โ€œWhat a fabulous experience, it surpassed all my expectations ten fold,โ€ Jordan enthused. โ€œThis equals the best day Iโ€™ve ever had in F1. You canโ€™t describe it. Everybody should make the effort to come out and see the Run, or try to participate if they can.โ€

Another F1 โ€œnameโ€ taking part was former team owner Ross Brawn, who completed the course in his 1904 Wilson Pilcher

Following the ceremonial tearing of the red flag by Jordan, the cars set off alongside Buckingham Palace and down the Mall before heading past Big Ben and over Westminster Bridge to begin the journey to the coast.

Of the 392 starters, 351 made it to Brighton ahead of the 4:30 p.m. deadline to claim a coveted finishersโ€™ medal. Appropriately in a year celebrating German cars, the first car home was the 1903 racing Mercedes (above) driven by Chris Scott from Jersey that arrived in the sunny seaside resort shortly after 10 a.m. With its mighty 9.2-liter engine delivering an impressive 60bhp, perhaps that was no surprise.

The Royal Automobile Clubโ€™s Peter Read, Chairman of the Motoring Committee, said: โ€œOnce again this remarkable event โ€” the worldโ€™s largest gathering of veteran cars and the globeโ€™s biggest free-to-view motoring event โ€” was a huge success, a fitting tribute to the men and machines who first put the world on wheels.โ€

The Run marked the end of the Royal Automobile Clubโ€™s London Motor Week โ€“ a seven-day celebration of motoring that included an art exhibition, lectures, a motoring forum and book awards. For more details of the event visit www.veterancarrun.com.