Paris–Rouen (motor race)

Horseless Carriages Contest
VenueRoad from Paris to Rouen
LocationFrance
Corporate sponsorLe Petit Journal
Pierre Giffard
First race22 July 1894 (unique race)
102 entrants
21 qualified
4 stopped
Distance126 kilometres (78 mi)
Photo d'Albert de Dion, vainqueur de l'épreuve.
Jules-Albert de Dion finished first in a steam powered De Dion tractor towing a caléche carriage, but was not eligible for the prize. Among the passengers are de Dion, Étienne van Zuylen van Nyevelt-Rothschild, and writer Émile Driant.
Photo de Albert Lemaître, deuxième de l'épreuve.
Albert Lemaître (pictured on left) finished second in a 3 hp Peugeot but was judged the winner. Bicycle and tyre manufacturer Adolphe Clément-Bayard was the front passenger.

Paris–Rouen, Le Petit Journal Horseless Carriages Contest (Concours du 'Petit Journal' Les Voitures sans Chevaux), was a pioneering city-to-city motoring competition in 1894 which is sometimes described as the world's first competitive motor race.

The contest was organised by the newspaper Le Petit Journal and ran from Paris to Rouen in France on 22 July 1894. It was preceded by four days of vehicle exhibition and qualifying events that created great crowds and excitement. The eight 50 km (31 mi) qualifying events started near the Bois de Boulogne and comprised interwoven routes around Paris to select the entrants for the main 126 km (78 mi) event.[1]

The first driver across the finishing line at Rouen was Jules-Albert de Dion, but he did not win the main prize because his steam vehicle needed a stoker and was thus ineligible. The fastest petrol-powered car was a 3 hp (2.2 kW; 3.0 PS) Peugeot driven by Albert Lemaître. The premier prize, the 5,000 franc Prix du Petit Journal, for "the competitor whose car comes closest to the ideal", was shared equally by manufacturers Panhard et Levassor and Les fils de Peugeot frères ('The sons of Peugeot brothers'), with vehicles that were "easy to use".[2][3][4][5]

1894 – Paris to Rouen

Pierre Giffard
Photo d'Auguste Doriot, troisième de l'épreuve.
Auguste Doriot, finished third in a Vis a vis (Face to face) 3 hp Peugeot.[6]
Panhard-Levassor (1890–1895), similar to Hippolyte Panhard's fourth-place finisher.
Émile Kraeutler finished 6th in a 3 hp Peugeot "break".
Gratien Michaux finished 9th in the 3 hp Peugeot phaeton.
Michaux passes through a busy street in Mantes-la-Jolie, racing amongst horses and pedestrians, en route to Rouen where he finished 9th in the 3 hp Peugeot phaeton.
1894 Paris-Rouen Serpollet Steamer No 44 DNF (Leon Serpollet is 3rd from left)

Organisation

In 1894, Pierre Giffard, editor of Le Petit Journal, organised the world's first motoring competition from Paris to Rouen to publicise his newspaper, to stimulate interest in motoring and to develop French motor manufacturing. Sporting events were a tried and tested form of publicity stunt and circulation booster. The paper promoted it as "Le Petit Journal Competition for Horseless Carriages" (Le Petit Journal Concours des Voitures sans Chevaux) that were "not dangerous, easy to drive, and cheap during the journey", the main prize being for "the competitor whose car comes closest to the ideal". The "easy to drive" clause effectively precluded from the prizes (but not the event) any vehicles needing a travelling mechanic or technical assistant such as a stoker (i.e. steam powered vehicles).[2][7]

Le Petit Journal announced prize money totalling 10,000 gold francs – 5,000 for first place, 2,000 for second, 1,500 for third, 1,000 for fourth, and 500 for fifth. The main prize was for the first eligible vehicle across the finish line in Rouen.[7]

Entrants

One hundred two people paid the ten franc entrance fee. They ranged from practical manufacturers like Peugeot, Panhard, de Dion-Bouton, and Serpollet to amateur owners and "over-ambitious concepts." Seventy-eight entrants did not show up for qualifying on 18 July, which included some 25 powered by unfamiliar and improbable technologies such as: gravity (nine); compressed air (five); "automatic" (three); electricity (three); gas (three); hydraulics (two); and one each for liquid, pedals, propellers, and levers. Additionally, 19 petrol-powered designs and 26 steam-powered cars, quadricycles, and tricycles did not show up at the qualifying event.[2][3][8]

Qualifying

Qualifying was held from 19 to 21 July 1894, and was preceded by a public exhibition of 26 cars to Neuilly-sur-Seine on 18 July. Journalists reported great crowds and excitement throughout the routes, and at Précy-sur-Oise they finished through a triumphal arch. On 19 July, 26 cars lined the side of the Boulevard Maillot, stretching to the Bois de Boulogne, each parked 10 m (33 ft) apart until, at 8:00 am, the first car led off, followed at 15-second intervals by the others. The 50 km (31 mi) qualifying event had to be completed in under three hours to be eligible to start the main event, the 126 km (78 mi) race from Paris to Rouen; 21 were selected for the main event.[2][8][9]

Qualifying was used as a major publicity tool for both the event and the newspaper: "for our readers who want to see the cars on the roads around Paris". The 22 vehicles were split into five groups who completed complex interwoven tours of Paris and its environs, including Mantes-la-Jolie, Château de Saint-Germain-en-Laye, Flins-sur-Seine, Poissy, Triel-sur-Seine, Rambouillet, Versailles, Dampierre-en-Yvelines, Corbeil-Essonnes, Palaiseau, Précy-sur-Oise, Gennevilliers and L'Isle-Adam, Val-d'Oise. The groups were carefully balanced to ensure each included petrol and steam, a Peugeot, a Panhard & Levassor, and different seating. Le Petit Journal, on the morning of the event, still officially expected Lemoigne and his gravity-powered vehicle to participate, although he was included as an additional member of group five.[8]

The groups that set off from Porte Maillot on Thursday 19 July were:[8]

  • Itinerary one – Paris to Mantes-la-Jolie via Château de Saint-Germain-en-Laye and Flins-sur-Seine:
    • No. 3 de Dion, Bouton et Cie, break, six seats, steam. – Did not qualify for Paris-Rouen.
    • No. 13 Panhard et Levassor, four seats, petrol – qualified
    • No. 21 Letar, four seats, steam – did not qualify
    • No. 30 Les fils de Peugeot frères, three seats, petrol – qualified
  • Itinerary two – Paris to Mantes-la-Jolie via Poissy and Triel-sur-Seine:
    • No. 10 Scotte, 8–10 seats, steam – qualified
    • No. 15 Panhard et Levassor, two seats, petrol – qualified
    • No. 25 Coqatrix, four seats, steam – qualified
    • No. 28 Les fils de Peugeot frères, four seats, petrol – qualified
    • No. 44 de Prandieres, six seats, system Serpollet and petrol combined[a] – qualified
(Note – Le Petit Journal does not show an itinerary three, presumably either a misprint or changed plan)
  • Itinerary four – Paris to Rambouillet via Versailles and Dampierre-en-Yvelines:
    • No. 7 Gautier, four seats, steam – qualified
    • No. 18 Archdeacon, six or seven seats, steam – qualified
    • No. 19 Le Blant, eight to ten seats, steam – qualified
    • No. 42 Le Brun, four seats, petrol – qualified
  • Itinerary five – Paris to Corbeil-Essonnes via Versailles and Palaiseau:
    • No. 4 de Dion, Victoria, four people, steam – qualified
    • No. 16 Quantin, six seats, petrol – did not qualify
    • No. 27 Les fils de Peugeot frères, two seats, petrol – qualified
    • No. 29 Les fils de Peugeot frères, four seats, petrol – did not qualify
    • No. 40 Lemoigne, four seats, 'gravity powered'. Note – did not show or was eliminated.
(Sources show three or five vehicles on this route and variance over qualification)
  • Itinerary six – Paris to Précy-sur-Oise via Gennevilliers and L'Isle-Adam, Val-d'Oise:
    • No. 12 Tenting, four seats, petrol. Note – did not qualify for Paris-Rouen.
    • No. 14 Panhard et Levassor, four seats, (new type) petrol – qualified
    • No. 24 Alfred Vacheron, two seats, petrol – did not qualify until Saturday 21st
    • No. 31 Les fils de Peugeot frères, break, five seats, petrol – qualified

On Friday 20 July a second qualifying event was run over two routes.[10]

  • Itinerary one – Paris to Mantes-la-Jolie via Bezons, Houilles and Maisons-Laffitte.
    • No. 44 de Prandieres, six seats, system Serpollet and petrol combined – qualified
    • No. 60 Le Blant, Serpollet, nine seats, steam – qualified
    • No. 64 Émile Mayade, Panhard et Levassor, four seats, petrol – qualified
    • No. 65 Albert Lemaître, Les fils de Peugeot frères, four seats, petrol – qualified
  • Itinerary two – Paris to Corbeil-Essonnes
    • No. 61 Roger de Montais, De Montais, two seat tricycle, petrol – qualified
    • No. 85 Émile Roger, Benz, two seats, petrol – qualified

On Saturday 21 July a third qualifying event was run from Paris to Poissy.

  • No. 53 de Bourmont (de Bourmont, four seats, petrol) – qualified
  • No. 24 Alfred Vacheron, two seats, petrol – qualified

Race

At 8:00 am on Sunday 22 July, twenty-one qualifiers started from Porte Maillot and went via the Bois de Boulogne, Neuilly-sur-Seine, Courbevoie, Nanterre, Chatou, Le Pecq, Poissy, Triel-sur-Seine, Vaux-sur-Seine, and Meulan, to Mantes where they stopped for lunch from noon until 1:30 pm, whence they set off to Vernon, Gaillon, Pont-de-l'Arche, and the 'Champ de Mars' at Rouen.

Count de Dion was the first to arrive in Rouen after 6 hours 48 minutes at an average speed of 19 km/h (12 mph). He finished 3 min 30 sec ahead of Albert Lemaître (Peugeot), Auguste Doriot (Peugeot) (16 min 30 sec back), Hippolyte Panhard (Panhard) (33 min 30 sec) and Émile Levassor (Panhard) (55 min 30 sec).[2][4][9] The winner's average speed was 17 km/h (11 mph).[11]

Prizes

On Tuesday 24 July Le Petit Journal announced the prizes :[5]

  • First prize, the Prix du Petit Journal for "the competitor whose car comes closest to the ideal" (5,000 francs) was shared equally between Panhard et Levassor and 'Les fils de Peugeot Frères'.
  • Second prize, the Prix Marinoni (Owner of Le Petit Journal) (2,000 francs) was awarded to de Dion, Bouton et Cie for their "interesting steam tractor that works like a horse and gives both absolute speed and pulling power up hills".
  • Third prize, the Prix Marinoni (1,500 francs) was awarded to Maurice Le Blant for his nine-seater vehicle powered by the 'systeme Serpollet'.
  • Fourth prize, the Prix Marinoni (1,000 francs) was shared between two manufacturers, Alfred Vacheron (No. 24) and Le Brun (No. 42).
  • Fifth prize, the Prix Marinoni (500 francs) was awarded to Roger (No. 85)

Results for Paris–Rouen

Position
overall
Number Driver / entrant Make Power People Time
overall
Position
at Mantes
Time
Paris-Mantes
circa 50 km
Time
Mantes-Rouen
circa 80 km
1 4 Jules-Albert, Count de Dion, Bouton De Dion-Bouton Steam 4 6 h 48 m 00 s or
5 h 40 m[12]
2 2 h 38 m 4 h 10 m
2 65 Albert Lemaître – 'Les fils de Peugeot Frères' Peugeot Petrol
(Daimler)
4 6 h 51 m 30 s or
5 h 45 m[12]
1 2 h 36 m 4 h 15 m
3 28 Auguste Doriot – 'Les fils de Peugeot Frères' Peugeot Petrol
(Daimler)
4 7 h 04 m 30 s or
5 h 50 m[12]
4 2 h 44 m 4 h 20 m
4 13 Hippolyte Panhard – Panhard et Levassor Panhard et Levassor Petrol
(Daimler)
4 7 h 21 m 30 s or
6 h 3 m[12]
5 2 h 48 m 4 h 33 m
5 or 7[12] 15 Émile Levassor – Panhard et Levassor Panhard et Levassor Petrol
(Daimler)
2 7 h 43 m 30 s or
6 h 30 m[12]
3 2 h 43 m 5 h 0 m
6 or 5[12] 31 Émile Kraeutler – 'Les fils de Peugeot Frères' Peugeot Petrol
(Daimler)
4 7 h 46 m 30 s or
6 h 7 m[12]
10 3 h 9 m 4 h 37 m
7 or 8[12] 64 Émile Mayade Panhard et Levassor Petrol
(Daimler)
4 8 h 09 m 00 s or
6 h 49 m[12]
6 2 h 50 m 5 h 19 m
8 or 6[12] 42 A. Le Brun Le Brun Petrol
(Daimler)
4 8 h 12 m 00 s or
6 h 24 m[12]
13 3 h 18 m 4 h 54 m
9 or 10[12] 30 Gratien Michaux – 'Les fils de Peugeot Frères' Peugeot Petrol
(Daimler)
3 8 h 25 m 00 s or
7 h 2 m[12]
7 2 h 53 m 5 h 32 m
10 or 13[12] 14 "Dubois" – Panhard et Levassor Panhard et Levassor Petrol
(Daimler)
4 8 h 38 m 00 s or
7 h 10 m[12]
8 2 h 58 5 h 40 m
11 or 12[12] 27 Louis Rigoulot – 'Les fils de Peugeot Frères' Peugeot Type 5 Petrol
(Daimler)
2 8 h 41 m 00 s or
7 h 5 m[12]
12 3 h 16 m 5 h 35 m
12 or 11[12] 24 Alfred Vacheron Vacheron / Panhard Petrol
(Daimler)
2 8 h 42 m 30 s or
7 h 3 m[12]
11 3 h 9 m 5 h 33 m
13 or 9[12] 53 "De Bourmont" de Bourmont Steam[13] 4 8 h 51 m 00 s or
7 h 1 m[12]
15 3 h 21 m 5 h 31 m
14 85 Émile Roger Benz Petrol
(Benz)
10 h 01 m 00 s or
8 h 9 m[12]
16 3 h 22 m 6 h 39 m
15 60 Maurice Le Blant Serpollet Steam 8 10 h 43 m 00 s or
8 h 50 m[12]
17 3 h 23 m 7 h 20 m
16 7 Pierre Gautier Gautier–Wehrlé Steam 4 12 h 24 m 30 s 19 4 h 17 m 8 h 7 m
17 18 Ernest Archdeacon Serpollet Steam 6 13 h 00 m 00 s 14 3 h 20 m 9 h 40 m
Stopped 44 "De Prandiéres" Serpollet Steam 4 Nanterre
– broken wheel[12]
retired out
Stopped 19 Étienne le Blant Serpollet Steam 10 Motor 20 4 h 39 m retired
Stopped 10 "J. Scotte" Scotte Steam 8 Motor 9 3 h 8 m retired
Stopped 61 Roger de Montais De Montais Steam[5] 2 Motor 18 4 h 0 m retired
Sources:[4][12][13][5][14][15]

List of entrants

Result No. Entrant
manufacturer
City Seats Engine type
No show 1 Rousselet Paris 4 gravity
No show 2 Edouard Pellorce Neuilly-sur-Seine petrol
Did not qualify 3 De Dion-Bouton et Co Puteaux 4 steam
Started 4 De Dion-Bouton et Co Puteaux 6 steam
No show 5 Le Maitre Paris 4 steam
No show 6 Roussat Paris 4 hydraulic
Started 7 Gautier P Paris 4 steam
No show 8 Hidien Châteauroux 4 steam
No show 9 Victor Popp Paris 4 air compressor
Started 10 Scotte J Épernay 8 steam
No show 11 Klaus Th Lyon 4 petrol
Did not qualify 12 Tenting Paris 4 petrol
Started 13 Panhard & Levassor Paris 4 petrol
Started 14 Panhard & Levassor Paris 4 petrol
Started 15 Panhard & Levassor Paris 4 petrol
No show 16 Quantio Roubaix 6 petrol
No show 17 Rodier, Roche et Sabatier Bagnols-sur-Cèze petrol
Started 18 Archdeacon M E
(or Serpollet)
Paris 7 petrol
(or steam)
Started 19 Le Blant Paris 10 steam
No show 20 Paraire G Château-Thierry steam
No show 21 Letar Alexandre Paris 4 steam
No show 22 Gaillardet Petit Gennevilliers 4 steam
No show 23 Varennes Paris 3 steam
Started 24 Vacheron Alfred Monthermé 2 petrol
No show 25 Coquatrix Paris 4 steam
No show 26 Leval Paris 4 baricycle?
Started 27 Peugeot Fils et frères Valentigney 4 petrol
Started 28 Peugeot Fils et frères Valentigney 4 petrol
Did not qualify 29 Peugeot Fils et frères Valentigney 4 petrol
Started 30 Peugeot Fils et frères Valentigney 4 petrol
Started 31 Peugeot Fils et frères Valentigney 4 petrol
No show 32 Darras L Bruay tricycle steam
No show 33 Geoffroy M P steam
No show 34 Geoffroy M P steam
No show 35 Geoffroy M P steam
No show 36 Gillot Jules Maubeuge 4 petrol
No show 37 Loubiere Albert La Ferté-sous-Jouarre 6 gravity
No show 38 Duchemin A Paris 4
No show 39 Ponsot Paris 4 Oil?
No show 40 Lemoigne Louis Fougères 4 gravity
No show 41 Bargogli Paris 4 petrol
Started 42 Le Brun A Rouen 4 petrol
No show 43 Spanoghe Antwerp, Belgium 6 steam
Started 44 de Prandieres M Lyon 6 Serpollet steam
No show 45 Cornequet Paris 8 automatic
No show 46 Matin-Cudrez F Paris 2 steam
No show 47 Barthelemy Cesar Yèbles 3 gravity
No show 48 Leblanc Ay, Marne 6 steam
No show 49 Valentin J M Bruyères 3 gravity
No show 50 Werstein Paris 3 pedals
Result No. Entrant City Seats Engine type
No show 51 Lepape Paris 4 petrol
No show 52 Société Parisienne de
constructions Velo
Paris 4 air compressor
Started 53 de Bourmont M Arcachon 4 petrol
No show 54 Froger Elie Feneu 4 petrol
No show 55 De Dion-Bouton et Co Puteaux 4 petrol
No show 56 Lebrun M Roches-Bettaincourt 4 automatic
No show 57 Seunier M 4 petrol
No show 58 Barbier et Marcillet Paris 3 steam
No show 59 Bezamat Colombes 4 steam
Started 60 Le Blant Maurice Paris 9 steam
Started 61 de Montais Roger Beauvroit 2 petrol
No show 62 Mallarme Gentilly steam
No show 63 Tissandier et Lacombe Agen petrol
Started 64 Panhard & Levassor Paris petrol
Started 65 Peugeot Fils et frères Valentigney 4 petrol
No show 66 Museur L et Cordonnier E Masnières 4 steam
No show 67 Lebesgue Paris petrol
No show 68 Garnier E et Delannoy G Beauvois 4 combination
No show 69 de Malapert et Barriere Paris 4 liquid
No show 70 Fays – Poisson Gigny 6 gravity
No show 71 Klaus Th Lyon 2 tricycle petrol
No show 72 Tamarelle – Capeyron Bergerac 5 steam
No show 73 Pretot Paris 4 petrol
No show 74 Mayer Raoul Chevanceaux 2 quadracycle steam
No show 75 Dessaux Charles Paris 2 tricycle gravity
No show 76 Tirant Georges Baissy steam
No show 77 Reverseau Paris 4 automatic
No show 78 Berthaud Lyon 8 air compressor
No show 79 Baudet A Paris 4 steam
No show 80 Quantin Boulogne 6 steam
No show 81 Becherel Paris 2 tricycle steam
No show 82 Monges Paris 4 electric
No show 83 Suodais Fontenay 6 electric
No show 84 Plantard Paris 4 air compressor
Started 85 Roger Paris 2 petrol
No show 86 Garrard
Garrard & Blumfield
Birmingham
Great Britain
electric
No show 87 Landry & Beyroux G 4 petrol
No show 88 Jeantaud Paris 3 petrol
No show 89 Demont Paris 4 steam
No show 90 Mansart Beauvais 4 gravity
No show 91 Carli le comte Italy 2 electric
No show 92 de Farcy Angers 2 petrol
No show 93 Gantry Orléans 2 gas
No show 94 Morelleras H Angoulême gravity
No show 95 Roze – Andrillon Marseille 4 air compressor
No show 96 Canis Maulan 4 propeller
No show 97 Deutsch M Germany 2 petrol (Benz Car)
No show 98 Deutsch M Germany 2 petrol (Benz Car)
No show 99 Bonnefils Valence 2 petrol
No show 100 Bellanger Le Mans 4 system
No show 101 Mary Jean Paris 4 gas
No show 102 Barriquand M 4 hydraulic
Result No. Entrant City Seats Engine type

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Systeme Serpollet was a form of steam engine. The car evidently had both a steam and a petrol motor, but details have been lost to time.

References

Citations

  1. ^ Le petit journal, publication of 20 December, column 1, Article 8 Gallica, Online Archive, Le Petit Journal
  2. ^ a b c d e Forix, Autosport, 8W – Welcome to Who? What? Where? When? Why? on the World Wide Web. The cradle of motorsport Rémi Paolozzi, May 28, 2003
  3. ^ a b Cent Ans, Concours du Petit Journal Les voitures sans chevaux. cent.ans.free.fr
  4. ^ a b c Le Petit Journal Gallica, Online Archive of France. 22 July 1894.
  5. ^ a b c d Prizes Gallica, Online Archive, Le Petit Journal Tuesday 24 July 1894
  6. ^ 22 July 1894 – Race day Gallica, Online Archive, Le Petit Journal
  7. ^ a b 19 December 1893 – Announcement Gallica, Online Archive, Le Petit Journal
  8. ^ a b c d 18 July 1894 – Selection around Paris Gallica, Online Archive, Le Petit Journal
  9. ^ a b CC Organisation – Course Paris-Rouen www.cc-organisation.com
  10. ^ Sat 21 July 1894 – Selection II Gallica, Online Archive, Le Petit Journal
  11. ^ Grand Prix History – Organized Racing & The First Grand Prix 1 November 2010 Grand Prix History.org (accessed 11 June 2017)
  12. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z Race report. Gallica, Online Archive of France. Mon 23 July 1894. Le Petit Journal
  13. ^ a b Richard J. Evans: Steam Cars (Shire Album), Shire Publications Ltd (1985) ISBN 978-0852637746, p. 15
  14. ^ The Early History of Motoring by Claude Johnson, extracted by Graces Guide
  15. ^ Provisional results it.wikipedia.org

Other sources