Segrave Trophy
The Segrave Trophy is awarded to the British national who accomplishes the most outstanding demonstration of the possibilities of transport by land, sea, air, or water.
History and background
The trophy is named in honour of Sir Henry Segrave, and has been awarded in most years since 1930.
A subsidiary award, the Segrave Medal, may also be given. Additionally, the Segrave Certificate of Achievement may be awarded to a person who is not a British national, but would otherwise qualify for recognition.
The trophy is awarded by the Royal Automobile Club. Past sponsors include Aston Martin.
List of recipients
- 1930 Charles Kingsford Smith
- 1931 Bert Hinkler
- 1932 Amy Johnson
- 1933 Malcolm Campbell
- 1934 Ken Waller
- 1935 George Eyston
- 1936 Jean Batten
- 1937 A.E. Clouston
- 1938 A.T. Goldie Gardner
- 1939 Sir Malcolm Donald Campbell (Segrave Medal: Peter Du Cane)
- 1940 - 1945. No awards due to World War II
- 1946 Geoffrey Raoul de Havilland (posthumous)
- 1947 John Rhodes Cobb
- 1948 John Douglas Derry
- 1949 No award
- 1950 No award
- 1951 Geoffrey Duke
- 1952 No award
- 1953 Neville Duke
- 1954 No award
- 1955 Donald Malcolm Campbell
- 1956 Peter Twiss
- 1957 Stirling Moss
- 1958 Donald Malcolm Campbell
- 1959 No award
- 1960 Tom Brooke-Smith
- 1961 No award
- 1962 A. W. Bedford
- 1963 No award
- 1964 Donald Malcolm Campbell
- 1965 No award
- 1966 Donald Malcolm Campbell (posthumous)
- 1967 No award
- 1968 Ken Wallis
- 1969 Bruce McLaren (posthumous)
- 1970 Brian Trubshaw
- 1971 No award
- 1972 No award
- 1973 Jackie Stewart
- 1974 John Blashford-Snell
- 1975 Roger Clark and Jim Porter
- 1976 Peter Collins
- 1977 Barry Sheene
- 1978 John Cunningham
- 1979 Mike Hailwood
- 1980 Fiona Gore, Countess of Arran
- 1981 No award
- 1982 Sandy Woodward
- 1983 Richard Noble
- 1984 Barry Sheene
- 1985 Ken Wallis
- 1986 Richard Branson
- 1987 Eve Jackson
- 1988 Martin Brundle
- 1989 Bob Ives and Joe Ives
- 1990 Louise Aitken-Walker[1]
- 1991 Steve Webster
- 1992 Frank Williams and Nigel Mansell
- 1993 Nigel Mansell and (Segrave Medal: Eric Broadley)
- 1994 Carl Fogarty
- 1995 Colin McRae
- 1996 Damon Hill
- 1997 Andy Green
- 1998 Brian Milton (Segrave Medal: Dr. William Brooks)
- 1999 Jackie Stewart
- 2000 Joey Dunlop (posthumous)
- 2001 Tim Ellison (Segrave Medal: Mark Wilkinson)
- 2002 Steve Curtis (Segrave Certificate of Achievement: Bjørn Rune Gjelsten)
- 2003 Brian Lecomber[2]
- 2004 No award
- 2005 Sir Stirling Moss (Segrave Medal: Lady Moss)
- 2007 Lewis Hamilton [3]
- 2008 Allan McNish [4]
- 2009 Paul Bonhomme[5]
- 2010 Adrian Newey[6]
- 2011 Dave Sykes [7]
- 2012 No Award
- 2013 John Surtees
- 2014 Allan McNish[8]
- 2015 John McGuinness[9]
References
- ↑
- ↑
- ↑ "Formula 1 champion meets our own 'fast lady'". The Berwickshire News. 2008-12-17. Retrieved 14 July 2009.
- ↑ Simon, Strang (2009-07-14). "McNish 'honoured' by Segrave Trophy". Autosport.com. Retrieved 14 July 2009.
- ↑ "Paul Bonhomme Receives Segrave Trophy". Life magazine. 28 June 2010. Retrieved 2 July 2010.
- ↑ Yalla - Formula 1 News, March 31 2011, Adrian Newey - the brains behind some of F1's most winning cars
- ↑ SoloFlightGlobal
- ↑ "Allan McNish awarded prestigious Seagrave Trophy". Crash.net. 15 April 2014.
- ↑ RAC awards John McGuinness prestigious Segrave Trophy, IoM TT.com Retrieved 7 April 2016
Further reading
- Phil Drackett - They Call It Courage: the Story of the Segrave Trophy (Robert Hale, London, 1990) ISBN 0-7090-4028-8
External links
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Thursday, April 07, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.