Automotive Art – Chris Phillips’ “British Bulldog”

Jaguar D-Type Artwork

Artist Chris Phillips paints a patriotic portrait of Duncan Hamilton and the Jaguar D-Type.

James Duncan Hamilton was the epitome of the 1950s racing driver, fast and full of joie de vivre. A fighter pilot during the second World War, Hamilton joined the Jaguarโ€‚factory team in 1952 and successfully drove both C-types and D-types. In 1953, teamed with Tony Rolt, Hamilton won the Le Mans 24 hours race in a C-typeโ€‚and almost repeated the feat the following year, finishing a close 2nd in the brand new D-type. After winning the Reims 12-hours race in a works D-type in 1956, poor Duncan was sacked by team manager โ€œLoftyโ€ England for disobeying team orders to โ€œmaintain position.โ€ When the Jaguar factory retired from racing at the end of 1956 Hamilton purchased one of the long-nose works D-types (XKD 601) and raced it with his usual verve registered as 2 CPG. Part bon vivant, part hell-raiser, Duncan Hamilton was a true โ€œBritish Bulldog.โ€

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