F1 champion killed amid eerie echoes of father's death
Alberto Ascari (centre), pictured a few weeks before his fatal crash with his friends Luigi Villoresi (left), Eugenio Castellotti (right) and the famous engineer Vittorio Jano. |
A hugely popular driver, his death shocked Italy and motor
racing fans in particular.
What many found particularly chilling was a series of
uncanny parallels with the death of his father, Antonio Ascari, who was also a
racing driver, 30 years previously.
Alberto had gone to Monza to watch his friend, Eugenio
Castellotti, test a Ferrari 750 Monza sports car, which they were to co-drive
the car in the 1000 km Monza race.
Contracted to Lancia at the time, although he had been given
dispensation to drive for Ferrari in the race, Ascari was not supposed to test drive
the car, yet he could not resist trying a few laps, even though he was dressed
in a jacket and tie, in part to ensure he had not lost his nerve after a serious accident a few days earlier.
Ascari on the cover of a magazine in Argentina, where he was very popular |
There were several eerie similarities between the deaths of
Alberto and his father.
Alberto Ascari died on May 26, 1955, at the age of 36, the
same age as his father, Antonio, who was killed in the French Grand Prix, on July 26,
1925. Alberto was only four days older than his father had been.
That both should die on the 26th of the month at
the same age was a strange coincidence, yet it did not end there.
Even more weirdly, both were killed four days after
surviving serious accidents, Antonio having crashed while practising ahead of
the Grand Prix in which he died, Alberto having lost control of his car during
the Monaco Grand Prix and gone into the harbour.
Both suffered fatal crashes at the exit of fast left-hand
corners, both had won 13 championship Grand Prix events and both left behind a
wife and two children.
Alberto’s accident occurred on the Curva del Vialone, one of
the Monza track's most challenging high-speed corners. The corner was renamed
in his honour but has subsequently been replaced with a chicane, now called
Variante Ascari.
He was laid to rest next to the grave of his father in the
Cimitero Monumentale in Milan. His death was considered to be a factor in the
withdrawal of Lancia from motor racing in 1955, just three days after his
funeral, although it was also a fact that the company was in financial trouble.
Ascari, in his Lancia, chases the legendary Argentina Juan Manuel Fangio, in a Mercedes, in a 1954 race |
He was one of the best drivers around when Formula One
launched in 1950, with a string of victories in Grand Prix events over 1948 and
1949. His success continued in 1950, although his nine race wins did not include
any in the inaugural Formula One series, won by another Italian, Giuseppe Farina.
The 1951 season brought seven more victories and this time
two of them counted as he finished second to the legendary Argentinian Juan
Manuel Fangio.
He went one better and won the drivers’ championship in
1952, winning the final six rounds after Fangio dropped out midway through the
season, and defended his title successfully in 1953.
After his death, a street in Rome was named in his honour,
while both the Autodromo Nazionale Monza and Autodromo Oscar Alfredo Gálvez in
Buenos Aires, which staged the Argentine Grand Prix between 1953 and 1998, have
chicanes named after him.
Monza's Duomo, the striking Basilica of San Giovanni Battista |
Travel tip:
Apart from the motor racing circuit, Monza is notable for
its 13th century Basilica of San Giovanni Battista, often known as Monza
Cathedral, which contains the famous Corona Ferrea or Iron Crown, bearing
precious stones. According to tradition,
the crown was found on Jesus's Cross. Note
also the Villa Reale, built in the neoclassical style by Piermarini at the end
of the 18th Century, which has a sumptuous interior and a court theatre.
Travel tip:
The Cimitero Monumentale is one of the two largest
cemeteries in Milan, the other one being the Cimitero Maggiore. Designed by the
architect Carlo Maciachini (1818–1899), it was planned to consolidate a number
of small cemeteries that used to be scattered around the city into a single
location. It can be found in the
northern part of the city, adjacent to Chinatown and Porta Volta. As well as Ascari and his father, it is the
resting place of the tenor Franco Corelli, the conductor Arturo Toscanini, the
poet Filippo Tommaso Marinetti – who founded the futurist movement - the
novelist and writer Alessandro Manzoni, and the founder of AC Milan football
club, the Englishman Herbert Kilpin.
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