'Ninian Sanderson' (b.
14 May 1925,
Glasgow,
Scotland - d.
1 October 1985) was a car dealer,
sports car racing driver, and winner of the
1956 24 Hours of Le Mans.
In common with many drivers of his era, Sanderson cut his racing teeth in the highly competitive 500cc
Formula 3 class in the early 1950s. He is best known for winning the
1956 24 Hours of Le Mans for the
Ecurie Ecosse team, together with
Ron Flockhart in an ex-works
Jaguar D-Type. The following year Sanderson again competed for Ecurie Ecosse, finishing second with co-driver
John "Jock" Lawrence, only beaten by the other Ecurie Ecosse D-Type driven by Flockhart and
Ivor Bueb.
Although reputedly not the easiest of men to get along with, Ninian Sanderson was well known in racing circles for his lively sense of humour. Fond of practical jokes he was not averse to putting firecrackers up exhaust pipes and ribbing members of the public with his race-bred black humour.
[1] The contrast in personalities within the Ecurie Ecosse team was stark; down-to-Earth, Glaswegian Sanderson, and refined, Edinburgh-born Flockhart were "like chalk an cheese"
[2].
He died of cancer in 1985.
External links
Brief biography at historicracing.com