1955 Formula One season explained

The 1955 Formula One season was the ninth season of FIA Formula One motor racing. It featured the sixth World Championship of Drivers, which was contested over seven races between 16 January and 11 September 1955. The season also included several non-championship races for Formula One cars.

Juan Manuel Fangio won his second consecutive World Championship title.[1] It was his third in total, a record that would not be beaten until Alain Prost in 1993. This was the last championship for a Mercedes driver until 2014.

The season was coloured by tragedy. Two drivers were killed during the 1955 Indianapolis 500: Manny Ayulo and Bill Vukovich, winner of the two previous editions.[2] Italian Mario Alborghetti died at the non-championship Pau Grand Prix. Alberto Ascari, World Champion of and, was killed while testing a Ferrari 750 Monza at Monza.[3] [4] [5] And ex-Formula One driver Pierre Levegh was killed in the 1955 Le Mans disaster, along with 83 spectators. This would lead to the cancellation of four F1 Grands Prix.

Teams and drivers

The following teams and drivers competed in the 1955 FIA World Championship. The list does not include those who only contested the Indianapolis 500.

EntrantConstructorChassisEngineTyreDriverRounds
Daimler Benz AGMercedesW196Mercedes M196 2.5 L8 Juan Manuel Fangio1–2, 4–7
Karl Kling1, 4–7
Stirling Moss1–2, 4–7
Hans Herrmann1–2
André Simon2
Piero Taruffi6–7
Scuderia FerrariFerrari625
555
Umberto Maglioli1, 7
José Froilán González1
Maurice Trintignant1–2, 4–7
Harry Schell2, 4
Piero Taruffi2, 4
Paul Frère2, 4
Mike Hawthorn5–7
Eugenio Castellotti5–7
Giuseppe Farina1–2, 4
LanciaD50Lancia DS50 2.5 V87
Officine Alfieri MaseratiMaserati250FMaserati 250F1 2.5 L6 Jean Behra1–2, 4–7
Roberto Mieres1–2, 4–7
Sergio Mantovani1
Luigi Musso1–2, 4–7
Carlos Menditeguy1, 7
Clemar Bucci1
Harry Schell1
Cesare Perdisa2, 4
André Simon6
Peter Collins7
Horace Gould7
Alberto UriaMaseratiA6GCMMaserati 250F1 2.5 L6 Alberto Uria1
Scuderia LanciaLanciaD50Lancia DS50 2.5 V8 Alberto Ascari1–2
Luigi Villoresi1–2, 7
Eugenio Castellotti1–2, 4
Louis Chiron2
Equipe GordiniGordiniT16Gordini 23 2.5 L6 Élie Bayol1–2
Pablo Birger1
Jesús Iglesias1
Robert Manzon2, 5–6
Jacques Pollet2, 5, 7
Hermano da Silva Ramos5–7
Mike Sparken6
Jean Lucas7
Ecurie RosierMaserati250FMaserati 250F1 2.5 L6 Louis Rosier2, 4–5
Vandervell ProductsVanwallVW 55Vanwall 254 2.5 L4 Mike Hawthorn2, 4
Ken Wharton6–7
Harry Schell6–7
Stirling Moss LtdMaserati250FMaserati 250F1 2.5 L6 Lance Macklin2, 6
Johnny Claes4
Peter Walker5
John Fitch7
E.N. WhiteawayHWM-Alta53Alta GP 2.5 L4 Ted Whiteaway2
Equipe Nationale BelgeFerrari625Ferrari 625 2.5 L4 Johnny Claes5
Gould's Garage (Bristol)Maserati250FMaserati 250F1 2.5 L6 Horace Gould5–6
Connaught EngineeringConnaught-AltaBAlta GP 2.5 L4 Kenneth McAlpine6
Jack Fairman6
R.R.C. Walker Racing TeamConnaught-AltaBAlta GP 2.5 L4 Tony Rolt6
Peter Walker6
Leslie MarrConnaught-AltaBAlta GP 2.5 L4 Leslie Marr6
Cooper Car CompanyCooper-BristolT40Bristol BS1 2.0 L6 Jack Brabham6
Owen Racing OrganisationMaserati250FMaserati 250F1 2.5 L6 Peter Collins6
Gilby EngineeringMaserati250FMaserati 250F1 2.5 L6 Roy Salvadori6
Scuderia VolpiniArzani-Volpini-MaseratiF1Maserati 4CLT 2.5 L4 Luigi Piotti7

Team and driver changes

Mid-season changes

Calendar

RoundGrand PrixCircuitDate
1 Argentine Grand PrixAutódromo Oscar Alfredo Gálvez, Buenos Aires16 January
2 Monaco Grand PrixCircuit de Monaco, Monte Carlo22 May
3 Indianapolis 500Indianapolis Motor Speedway, Speedway30 May
4 Belgian Grand PrixCircuit de Spa-Francorchamps, Stavelot5 June
5 Dutch Grand PrixCircuit Zandvoort, Zandvoort19 June
6 British Grand PrixAintree Motor Racing Circuit, Merseyside16 July
7 Italian Grand PrixAutodromo Nazionale di Monza, Monza11 September

Calendar changes

Cancelled rounds

In the aftermath of the 1955 Le Mans disaster, it was decided to reschedule the French Grand Prix from 3 July to 25 September.[12] It was later cancelled, along with the German, Swiss and Spanish rounds.[13] [14]

Grand PrixCircuitOriginal date
French Grand PrixReims-Gueux, Gueux3 July
German Grand PrixNürburgring, Nürburg31 July
Swiss Grand PrixCircuit Bremgarten, Bern21 August
Spanish Grand PrixPedralbes Circuit, Barcelona23 October

The circuits at Pedralbes and Bremgarten were never used again for racing. Motor racing was banned altogether in Switzerland until the 2018 Zürich ePrix.

Championship report

Rounds 1 to 3

For the third year in a row, the championship opened with the Argentine Grand Prix. José Froilan González started on pole position. The Argentine had been a full-time Ferrari driver in, but it would be his only race this year. Next to him on the front row started two double World Champions: Alberto Ascari in the Lancia and Juan Manuel Fangio in the Mercedes. Fangio took the lead at the start, but lost it to Ascari on lap 3. Teammate Stirling Moss went from eighth to third, while behind them, drivers and cars were beginning to succumb to the heat of . On lap 21, Ascari crashed out by himself, leaving González in the lead. However, he was still recovering from his accident in the 1954 RAC Tourist Trophy and got exhausted. Fearing he could not hold Fangio behind, he pitted to hand the car to teammate and 1950 World Champion Nino Farina. Fangio pitted as well, for new tyres and to cool off, while Moss retired due to a vapor lock in the fuel pump. This left another local driver, Roberto Mieres in the Maserati, in the lead after starting sixteenth. Sadly, his fuel pump faltered as well and he spent 10 minutes in the pits, coming home in fifth. Besides Mieres, Fangio would be the only classified driver not to have switched cars during the race, and went on to win. Two Ferraris completed the podium, but each had seen three different drivers behind the wheel, so Fangio had an immediate lead in the championship.[15] [16]

The Monaco Grand Prix returned to the calendar after three years and was given the honorary title of European Grand Prix. A new rule to qualifying had been added: only the times recorded in the first practice session on Thursday afternoon would count for the front row of the grid and, thus, for pole position. The rest of the starting places would be decided by the remaining sessions on Friday and Saturday morning. This was done to entice spectators to come and watch every session, but it was an unpopular idea with the drivers. Fangio set the fastest time, ahead of Ascari and Moss, so they could relax and use the remaining sessions to try out car set-ups for the race. At the start of the race, Fangio held on to the lead, but Ascari fell back. Moss took second place after a few laps and was slowly closing up to his teammate in front. After the two drivers behind Moss pitted, Ascari was left in a lonely third place until, at half-distance, Fangio stopped on track with a broken transmission and, on lap 81, Moss's engine blew up. Ascari took the unexpected lead of the race, but mere seconds later, crashed coming out of the harbour chicane and plunged into the water. He was lucky to escape with just a cut on the nose. Maurice Trintignant took the win for Ferrari, the first of his career, ahead of Eugenio Castellotti for Lancia and Cesare Perdisa in Jean Behra's Maserati.[17]

The Indianapolis 500 was included in the Formula One championship, but no F1 drivers attended. Bob Sweikert won the race.

In the Drivers' Championship, Maurice Trintignant (Ferrari) was leading with 11

\tfrac{1}{3}

points, ahead of Juan Manuel Fangio (Mercedes) with 10 and Bob Sweikert (Kurtis Kraft) with 8. Sweikert would not compete in any other rounds.

Rounds 4 to 6

Four days after the Monaco Grand Prix, double World Champion Alberto Ascari was tragically killed in a test session at Monza. Further burdened by financial troubles, the Lancia team was left with two cars and just one driver. Soon, all assets would be merged into the Ferrari team, but this did not stop Eugenio Castellotti from scoring his first career pole position in the Belgian Grand Prix. The Mercedes cars of Juan Manuel Fangio and Stirling Moss started beside him on the front row. Championship leader Maurice Trintignant started down in eleventh out of thirteen. At the start, Fangio and Moss quickly took the lead and never looked back. Castellotti retired on lap 16, allowing 1950 World Champion Nino Farina to finish third for Ferrari.[18]

On 11 June, the 24 Hours of Le Mans took place and many F1 drivers participated. During the race, Pierre Levegh crashed into the spectator area, killing 83 people and injuring at least 120 others. This led the FIA to postpone the French Grand Prix.[12] However, the Dutch Grand Prix was next on the F1 championship and went on undisturbed. Mercedes managed to occupy the front row with Fangio, Moss and Karl Kling. At the start, Luigi Musso put his Maserati into second position, but was outbraved by Moss. Kling tried his best to keep up with the leading trio but, on lap 21, spun off and retired. Fangio and Moss scored another one-two finish, a minute ahead of Musso. This was the first race since the 1950 French Grand Prix that none of the cars on the podium were powered by a Ferrari engine.[19]

For the British Grand Prix, Stirling Moss scored his first career pole position in front of his home crowd. Fangio started second, Jean Behra third for Maserati. The second row was filled by two more Mercedes: Karl Kling and Piero Taruffi. Fangio had the best start, but Moss regained the lead on lap 3, his car set up with a lower top speed but better acceleration out of the corners. Behra retired on lap 10, handing the top four positions to Mercedes, with Fangio once again in front. A couple of laps later, Moss retook the lead, grew his advantage to ten seconds and set a new lap record. Unused to having the team leader behind him, Moss looked back on the last lap and hesitated. But Fangio hang back, two tenths behind, leaving the home hero to take the win.[20]

In the Drivers' Championship, Juan Manuel Fangio (Mercedes) led with 33 points, ahead of Stirling Moss (Mercedes) with 22 and Maurice Trintignant (Ferrari) with 11

\tfrac{1}{3}

points. After the British Grand Prix, the German, Swiss, French and Spanish Grand Prix were cancelled, in the aftermath of the 1955 Le Mans disaster. This left just one race in the championship and effectively handed the title to Fangio.

Round 7

The Italian Grand Prix was run on the Monza layout including a new steep banking. Nino Farina crashed in practice when his rear tyre came apart under the load of the banked turn and the heat of the sun. He escaped unhurt but his Ferrari-run Lancia was written off, and although Sunday was substantially cooler, the other Lancia was withdrawn as a precaution. Like in Zandvoort, Mercedes-Benz in Formula One#Mercedes occupied the front row in the order of Fangio, Moss, Kling. Moss took the lead at the start, but gave way to his Argentinian team leader before the first lap was run. The fourth Mercedes of Taruffi went from ninth to fourth, the team repeating their procession run from last race. However, Moss pitted on lap 19 for a new windscreen and subsequently retired on lap 28 when his engine cut out. Kling's gearbox broke and he retired as well, leaving the German team worried, but Fangio and Taruffi finished the race untroubled, scoring another Mercedes 1-2, ahead of Eugenio Castellotti for Ferrari.[21]

Juan Manuel Fangio (Mercedes) had collected 40 points and won his third Drivers' Championship, his second in a row. Teammate Stirling Moss was second with 23 points and Eugenio Castellotti third with 12. Mercedes withdrew from F1 after this season, marking it the final race until the team's revival in 2010, their final win until the 2012 Chinese Grand Prix and final championship title until .

Results and standings

Grands Prix

RoundGrand PrixPole positionFastest lapWinning driverWinning constructorTyreReport
1 Argentine Grand Prix José Froilán González Juan Manuel Fangio Juan Manuel Fangio MercedesReport
2 Monaco Grand Prix Juan Manuel Fangio Juan Manuel Fangio Maurice Trintignant FerrariReport
3 Indianapolis 500 Jerry Hoyt Bill Vukovich Bob Sweikert Kurtis Kraft-OffenhauserReport
4 Belgian Grand Prix Eugenio Castellotti Juan Manuel Fangio Juan Manuel Fangio MercedesReport
5 Dutch Grand Prix Juan Manuel Fangio Roberto Mieres Juan Manuel Fangio MercedesReport
6 British Grand Prix Stirling Moss Stirling Moss Stirling Moss MercedesReport
7 Italian Grand Prix Juan Manuel Fangio Stirling Moss Juan Manuel Fangio MercedesReport

World Championship of Drivers standings

Points were awarded to the top five classified finishers, with an additional point awarded for setting the fastest lap, regardless of finishing position or even classification. Only the best five results counted towards the championship. Shared drives result in shared points for each driver if they finished in a points-scoring position. If more than one driver set the same fastest lap time, the fastest lap point would be divided equally between the drivers. Numbers without parentheses are championship points; numbers in parentheses are total points scored. Points were awarded in the following system:

Pos.DriverARG
MON
500
BEL
NED
GBR
ITA
Pts.
1 Juan Manuel Fangio1(Ret)112140 (41)
2 Stirling Moss4† / Ret9221Ret23
3 Eugenio CastellottiRet†2Ret56† / Ret312
4 Maurice Trintignant2† / 3† / Ret16RetRet811
5 Nino Farina2† / 3†43DNS10
6 Piero Taruffi8†DNS429
7 Bob Sweikert18
8 Roberto Mieres5Ret5†4Ret77
9 Jean Behra6† / Ret† / Ret3† / Ret†5† / Ret6Ret46
10 Luigi Musso7† / Ret†Ret735Ret6
11 Karl Kling4† / RetRetRet3Ret5
12 Jimmy Davies34
13 Tony Bettenhausen2†3
14 Paul Russo2†3
15 Paul Frère8†43
16 Johnny Thomson43
17 José Froilán González22
18 Cesare Perdisa3† / Ret†82
19 Luigi VilloresiRet† / Ret5DNS2
20 Carlos MenditeguyRet† / Ret52
21 Umberto Maglioli3†61
22 Hans Herrmann4†DNQ1
23 Walt Faulkner5†1
24 Bill Homeier5†1
25 Bill VukovichRet1
Mike HawthornRetRet76†100
Harry Schell6† / 7† / Ret†RetDNS9† / RetRet0
Louis Chiron60
Andy Linden60
Jacques Pollet710Ret0
Al Herman70
Mike Sparken70
Sergio Mantovani7† / Ret†0
Hermano da Silva Ramos8RetRet0
Lance MacklinDNQ80
Pat O'Connor80
Louis RosierRet990
Ken Wharton9†Ret0
Jimmy Daywalt90
John Fitch90
Pat Flaherty100
Duane Carter110
Johnny ClaesDNS110
Chuck Weyant120
Eddie Johnson130
Jim Rathmann140
Robert ManzonRetRetRet0
Horace GouldRetRetRet0
Alberto AscariRetRet0
Élie BayolRetRet0
André SimonRetRet0
Peter CollinsRetRet0
Peter WalkerRetRet†0
Jesus IglesiasRet0
Pablo BirgerRet0
Alberto UriaRet0
Don FreelandRet0
Cal NidayRet0
Art CrossRet0
Shorty TemplemanRet0
Sam HanksRet0
Keith AndrewsRet0
Johnnie ParsonsRet0
Eddie RussoRet0
Ray CrawfordRet0
Jimmy BryanRet0
Jack McGrathRet0
Al KellerRet0
Johnny BoydRet0
Ed ElisianRet0
Rodger WardRet0
Jerry HoytRet0
Jimmy ReeceRet0
Fred AgabashianRet0
Kenneth McAlpineRet0
Jack BrabhamRet0
Roy SalvadoriRet0
Leslie MarrRet0
Jean LucasRet0
Clemar BucciRet†0
Tony RoltRet†0
Ted WhiteawayDNQ0
Jack FairmanDNS0
Luigi PiottiDNS0
Pos.DriverARG
MON
500
BEL
NED
GBR
ITA
Pts.

Non-championship races

Other Formula One races were also held in 1955, which did not count towards the World Championship.

Race nameCircuitDateWinning driverConstructorReport
VII Gran Premio del ValentinoValentino Park27 March Alberto Ascari LanciaReport
XVI Pau Grand PrixPau11 April Jean Behra MaseratiReport
III Glover TrophyGoodwood11 April Roy Salvadori MaseratiReport
IV Grand Prix de BordeauxBordeaux25 April Jean Behra MaseratiReport
VII BRDC International TrophySilverstone7 May Peter Collins MaseratiReport
VIII Gran Premio di NapoliPosillipo8 May Alberto Ascari LanciaReport
XVII Grand Prix d'AlbiAlbi (Les Planques)29 May André Simon MaseratiReport
III Curtis TrophySnetterton29 May Roy Salvadori MaseratiReport
III Cornwall MRC Formula 1 RaceDavidstow30 May Leslie Marr Connaught-AltaReport
III London TrophyCrystal Palace30 July Mike Hawthorn MaseratiReport
III Daily Record TrophyCharterhall6 August Bob Gerard MaseratiReport
III RedeX TrophySnetterton13 August Harry Schell VanwallReport
II Daily Telegraph TrophyAintree3 September Roy Salvadori MaseratiReport
II International Gold CupOulton Park24 September Stirling Moss MaseratiReport
I Avon TrophyCastle Combe1 October Harry Schell VanwallReport
V Gran Premio di SiracusaSyracuse23 October Tony Brooks Connaught-AltaReport

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 1955 Driver Standings. Formula1.com. 5 June 2024.
  2. Goldstein, Richard (July 7, 2004) Rodger Ward, 83, Two-Time Indianapolis 500 Winner (obituary). New York Times. Retrieved May 26, 2018.
  3. Web site: Alberto Ascari – Biography. Grand Prix History. 10 August 2008. 6 April 2016.
  4. News: Formula 1's greatest drivers. Number 11: Alberto Ascari. BBC Sport. 17 July 2012. 6 April 2016.
  5. Web site: Alberto Ascari | Formula 1®. Formula 1. 2018. 2024-02-17.
  6. Book: Small, Steve. The Guinness Complete Grand Prix Who's Who. Guinness. 1994. 243. 0851127029.
  7. Web site: Italian GP, 1955 Race Report – GP Encyclopedia – F1 History on . Grandprix.com . 2016-08-01.
  8. Web site: Peter Collins F1 Driver Profile ESPN.co.uk . En.espn.co.uk . 2016-08-01 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20151223190534/http://en.espn.co.uk/ferrari/motorsport/driver/567.html . 2015-12-23.
  9. Web site: Formula One timeline . atlasf1.autosport.com . 27 June 2007.
  10. Web site: Lancia D50 . ddavid.com . 27 June 2007 . 2 July 2007 . https://web.archive.org/web/20070702060150/http://www.ddavid.com/formula1/lancia.htm . dead .
  11. Book: Spurring . Quentin . Le Mans: The Official History of the World's Greatest Motor Race 1949-59 . 2011 . Haynes Publishing . Sparkford . 9781844255375 . 225.
  12. Web site: Matters of Moment Motor Sport Magazine Archive. 7 July 2014. Motor Sport Magazine. en. 3 July 2019.
  13. Web site: The Autocar. 22 April 1955. The Autocar. en. 3 July 2019.
  14. Book: Lang, Mike . Grand Prix! Vol 1 . Haynes Publishing Group . 1981 . 0-85429-276-4 . 82.
  15. Web site: Argentine GP, 1955. GrandPrix.com. 16 January 1955. 2 June 2024.
  16. Web site: 1955 Formula 1 Argentine Grand Prix AI-Upscaled. Andrea Colombo. 25 April 2020. 2 June 2024.
  17. Web site: https://web.archive.org/web/20230401070106/https://www.motorsportmagazine.com/archive/article/june-1955/36/xiii-grand-prix-de-monaco/. 1955 Monaco Grand Prix race report: Trintignant triumphs where others fail. Motorsport Magazine. Denis Jenkinson. 22 May 1955. 1 April 2023. 2 June 2024.
  18. Web site: https://web.archive.org/web/20230329063858/https://www.motorsportmagazine.com/archive/article/july-1955/33/grand-prix-de-belgique-5/. 1955 Belgian Grand Prix race report: Silver Arrows dominate. Motorsport Magazine. Denis Jenkinson. 7 July 2014. 29 March 2023. 3 June 2024.
  19. Web site: https://web.archive.org/web/20230603115932/https://www.motorsportmagazine.com/archive/article/july-1955/54/grote-prijs-van-nederland-2/. 1955 Dutch Grand Prix race report: Mercedes march on. Motorsport Magazine. Motor Sport. 19 June 1955. 3 June 2023. 3 June 2024.
  20. Web site: https://web.archive.org/web/20211202130836/https://www.motorsportmagazine.com/articles/single-seaters/f1/1955-british-grand-prix. Stirling Moss' victory at the 1955 British Grand Prix. Motorsport Magazine. Paul Fearnley. 3 July 2018. 2 December 2021. 3 June 2024.
  21. Web site: https://web.archive.org/web/20230419152243/https://www.motorsportmagazine.com/archive/article/october-1955/22/26th-gran-premio-ditala/. 1955 Italian Grand Prix race report: Fangio crowned F1 champion for third time. Motorsport Magazine. Denis Jenkinson. 11 September 1955. 19 April 2023. 3 June 2024.
  22. Web site: 18 January 2019 . World Championship points systems . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20190924032459/http://8w.forix.com/6thgear/points.html . 24 September 2019 . 21 December 2020 . 8W . Forix.