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Louis Rosier
French racing driver

Louis Rosier

The basics

Quick Facts

Intro
French racing driver
From
Work field
Gender
Male
Place of birth
Chapdes-Beaufort
Place of death
Neuilly-sur-Seine
Age
51 years
Family
Children:
Jean-Louis Rosier
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

Louis Rosier (5 November 1905 in Chapdes-Beaufort – 29 October 1956 in Neuilly-sur-Seine) was a racing driver from France.

Career highlights

He participated in 38 Formula One World Championship Grands Prix, debuting on 13 May 1950. He achieved 2 podiums, and scored a total of 18 championship points. He won the Dutch Grand Prix twice in consecutive years between 1950 and 1951, the Circuit d'Albi, Grand-Prix de l'Albigeois and the 24 Hours of Le Mans with his son Jean-Louis Rosier. Rosier owned the Renault dealership of Clermont-Ferrand.

Formula One and sports car competition

Rosier finished 4th at Silverstone in a Talbot, in October 1948. The event was the RAC International Grand Prix, the first grand prix to be held in England since 1927. He drove a 4.5-liter, unsupercharged Talbot-Lago to 3rd place at the 1949 British Grand Prix at Silverstone. He was a lap behind the winner with a speed of 76.21 miles per hour (122.65 km/h). Rosier won an International Grand Prix at Spa-Francorchamps in June 1949. He piloted a Talbot in the 500-kilometre (310 mi), 32-lap event, achieving a time of 3 hours, 15 minutes, and 17 seconds. He assumed the lead after 23 laps, coming across the finish line ahead of Luigi Villoresi. Rosier won the 1950 24 Hours of Le Mans in a blue Talbot. He teamed up with his son Jean-Louis Rosier who only drove two laps during the race, which means Louis won the race practically by himself. He finished one lap ahead of Pierre Meyrat who drove a car of the same marque. The Rosiers covered 256 laps, 2,163 miles (3,481 km), in 23:54:2.2. Rosier captured the Grand Prix d'Albi in Albi, France in May 1953. He drove a Ferrari, covering the 18 laps of the finals, 160 kilometres (99 mi), in 56:36:8. He averaged 160 kilometres per hour (99.42 mph). Rosier placed second in a Ferrari at

a Grand Prix in Aix-Les-Bains, in July 1953. His time was 2:24:48.1. In April 1956 Rosier finished 4th in a Maserati, in a 201-mile race at Aintree. Stirling Moss drove a blue Maserati to victory in the 67-lap event for Formula One cars, with an average speed of 84.24 miles per hour (135.57 km/h). Rosier finished 5th at the 1956 German Grand Prix behind the wheel of a Maserati.

Écurie Rosier

Louis Rosier was the owner and manager of a racing team, the "Ecurie Rosier". Originally set up to run Rosier's Talbot-Lago T26 (for either Rosier or a guest driver), and later evolved to an actual team running 250Fs and finally Ferrari 500s simultaneously for Rosier and another driver. Throughout the 1950s, Écurie Rosier provided drives in Formula One for Henri Louveau, Georges Grignard, Louis Chiron, Maurice Trintignant, André Simon and Robert Manzon.

Circuit Louis Rosier

Louis Rosier was one of the key sponsors of the Charade race track. After World War II, Jean Auchatraire (president of the racing section of the local Automobile Club) and Louis Rosier promoted the idea of a race track around Clermont-Ferrand.

A set of preliminary designs were drawn up for a circuit of a length between 4 and 6 km, meeting the latest safety regulations with large parking capacity at a location just outside the city limits on a hilly landscape.

The Le Mans disaster (death toll: 84 lives) on 11 June 1955 brought the project to a halt. All race events were postponed. No further events were allowed to take place on temporary urban tracks. Racing events were only to be allowed on dedicated race-tracks, providing that they met a new set of rules. In Clermont-Ferrand, as was the case for many other new race tracks, new safety devices were being imagined and discussed, reviewed and assessed. But the concept of a "mountain race track" moved forward. It would be the only one of its kind in France.

Auchatraire, Rosier and Raymond Roche (the manager of Reims-Gueux race track) worked together to get the project accepted by the political community before searching for funding. But Rosier was killed at Montlhéry on 26 October 1956 and would not witness his project come to fruition. The racetrack was opened on 27 July 1958, with the name of its famous founder "Circuit de Charade Louis Rosier". Soon after, several champions participated in racing events on the track, each of them, including Stirling Moss, making very positive statements about the track and its surrounding.

Car manufacturer

Rosier's Renault dealership in Clermont-Ferrand was one of the largest Renault dealerships in France. Rosier's dealership also sold other industrial and farming equipment. The building housing this important business has been destroyed.

In 1951, Louis Rosier designed a prototype based on the 4CV Renault.

In 1953, using the concept of a barchetta that he raced at Le Mans, Rosier, together with Italian coachbuilder Rocco Motto, designed a cabriolet, still using 4CV Renault sub assemblies. This model was built in a quantity of about 200 units by Brissonneau. It was even introduced at a car show in New York.

Some time later he designed a roadster using Renault Frégate elements with an aluminum body developed by Rocco Motto, on a multi-tubular frame. The engine was seriously revised, the body was lightened, the results was an interesting 950 kg for 80 hp.

Death

Louis Rosier died of injuries he sustained in a crash at the Montlhéry track, south of Paris, France, on 7 October 1956.

Complete Formula One World Championship results

(key)

YearEntrantChassisEngine123456789WDCPoints
1950Automobiles Talbot-DarracqTalbot-Lago T26CTalbot-Lago Straight-6GBR
5
4th13
Ecurie RosierMON
Ret
500ITA
4
Automobiles Talbot-DarracqTalbot-Lago T26C-DASUI
3
BEL
3
FRA
Ret
Charles PozziTalbot-Lago T26CFRA
6*
1951Ecurie RosierTalbot-Lago T26C-DATalbot-Lago Straight-6SUI
9
500BEL
4
FRA
Ret
GBR
10
GER
8
ITA
7
ESP
7
13th3
1952Ecurie RosierFerrari 500Ferrari Straight-4SUI
Ret
500BEL
Ret
FRA
Ret
GBR
DNA
GERNEDITA
10
NC0
1953Ecurie RosierFerrari 500Ferrari Straight-4ARG500NED
7
BEL
8
FRA
8
GBR
10
GER
10
SUI
Ret
ITA
16
NC0
1954Ecurie RosierFerrari 500/625Ferrari Straight-4ARG
Ret
500BELFRA
Ret
GBR
Ret
GER
8
SUINC0
Maserati 250FMaserati Straight-6ESP
7
Officine Alfieri MaseratiITA
8
1955Ecurie RosierMaserati 250FMaserati Straight-6ARGMON
Ret
500BEL
9
NED
9
GBRITANC0
1956Ecurie RosierMaserati 250FMaserati Straight-6ARGMON
Ret
500BEL
8
FRA
6
GBR
Ret
GER
5
ITA19th2
* Indicates shared drive with Charles Pozzi

The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
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