David Bruce-Brown

Ask anyone who was the first American to win a Grand Prix and chances are they will say Phil Hill or Dan Gurney, heroes of the โ€™60s. But it was, in fact, much earlier than that. The first was David Bruce-Brown, a strikingly handsome young New Yorker and son of a fabulously wealthy family, who won the 1910 American Grand Prizeโ€”same thing, different languageโ€”on November 12, 1910, over a century ago. He was 23 years old at the time and had proved himself to be a towering natural talent with a glittering career in front of him. Yet he hardly had a career at all, because it was cut pitifully short on October 1, 1912, when he crashed and was fatally injured during practice for that yearโ€™s Grand Prize at Milwaukee.

At 18, the lantern-jawed David loved anything to do with the relatively new sport of motor racing, and wrangled himself a job as a junior mechanic with the Fiat team at Daytona. After the professionals had had their fun, the amateurs were allowed to compete in a one-mile event, for which Bruce-Brown was loaned one of the racing Fiatsโ€”and he won.

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