For Grand Prix Centenary Celebration
• A 100th birthday homecoming for an illustrious Brooklands icon
• Restored racer to perform for the first time in more than 80 years
• One of the highlights in a massive gathering of 100 Grand Prix cars
• Tickets for exhilarating and historic milestone event selling out fast
The return of a true Brooklands favourite will be one of the major highlights of this summer’s special centenary celebration marking 100 years since Britain’s first Grand Prix, held at the famous banked Surrey circuit in 1926.
Designed and built at Brooklands by eminent Welsh engineer and pioneering racing driver John Godfrey Parry Thomas, the Thomas ‘Flatiron’ Special (photo above with Thomas at the wheel) made its debut in 1926 and quickly became a regular and successful competitor at the circuit in the years that followed.
Now, a century on, a Thomas Special will relive those glory days, running in public at Brooklands for the first time since before the Second World War.
Although best known for his Land Speed Record exploits in the mighty 27-litre Babs – a pursuit that tragically cost him his life on Pendine Sands in 1927 – Parry Thomas was also responsible for designing and building two far more advanced racing cars in his Brooklands workshop (photo below bottom: Thomas with Babs, Leyland-Thomas and Thomas 'Flatiron' Special).
With a low centre of gravity and bespoke 1.5-litre straight-eight engines, the pair of Thomas Specials were purpose-built for circuit racing. Both were expected to compete in Britain’s first-ever Grand Prix staged at Brooklands in August 1926, although neither ultimately took part.
Their potential was soon proven. Parry Thomas went on to win a 50-mile handicap race at Brooklands in October and later set new class speed and distance records, covering an impressive 112.77 miles in an hour to set a new world record.
Following Parry Thomas’s death, the cars continued to demonstrate their competitiveness in private hands. Both started the 1927 Brooklands Grand Prix, retiring early, but remained active – and successful – competitors at the circuit until the outbreak of the Second World War in 1939.
With Brooklands’ closure as a racing circuit after the war and the arrival of a new generation of machinery, the Thomas Specials’ competitive era came to an end. One chassis was later scrapped in Canada, but the other survived – and has now been painstakingly and passionately restored over the past decade.
The surviving car has been bought back to life (photos below) by Geraint Owen, whose father, Owen Wyn Owen, famously rebuilt Parry Thomas’s Babs.
“Emotionally, it is incredibly special to take the Thomas Special back to Brooklands,” said Geraint Owen. “It’s the first time the car has returned since 1958, and back then it was not even complete with an engine. To see it running again at its birthplace, in its 100th year, is something truly remarkable.”
Alex Paterson, Chief Executive of Brooklands Museum, added: “The return of the Thomas Special is a deeply significant moment for Brooklands. This is not just a car coming home – it is a living piece of our engineering heritage. To see it take its place among 100 years of Grand Prix history, alongside modern Formula 1 technology, perfectly captures the spirit of this centenary celebration.”
The reappearance of the Thomas Special will form part of an extraordinary display of 100 Grand Prix cars spanning the entire history of motor sport, celebrating the centenary of Britain’s very first Grand Prix at Brooklands in August.
Pioneers such as the Thomas Special will represent the earliest days of racing innovation, while reigning World Champion McLaren Racing will showcase the very latest in Formula 1 technology.
Tickets for the Brooklands Grand Prix Celebration are now available via the official website: www.brooklandsmuseum.com. Adult admission is priced at £39.95 in advance, with tickets for accompanied children aged 4 to 17 (under 4s are free) available at £19.95. Brooklands Members can purchase tickets to an exclusive VIP Preview evening on the Friday. They are also offered Saturday admission for £19.95 (child £9.95)—a special price that includes an official programme.
Early booking is strongly advised, as record numbers of tickets have already been purchased for what is expected to be a truly outstanding – and sell-out – occasion.