Last Alfa Romeo Le Mans racer leads Bonhams’ Goodwood auction

The last Alfa Romeo to race in the 24 Hours of Le Mans, a 1972 Alfa Romeo Tipo 33 TT3, will be among the highlights of the Bonhams collector car auction held July 9 during the Goodwood Festival of Speed in Chichester, UK.

The Tipo 33 was one of three Alfa Romeos run by the Autodelta team and, driven by Andrea De Adamich and Nino Vaccarella, finished fourth overall in the 1972 endurance race.

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The Alfa Romeo Tipo 33 in the pits at Le Mans | Archive photo

The Alfa is one of the premium selections among Bonhams’ auction docket of historic racers, ranging back to the 1920s, and high-performance sports and GT cars.

The Alfa Tipo 33 was built from a new all-steel spaceframe tubular chassis, according to Bonhams, with a potent quad-cam, 36-valve V8 engine producing 440 horsepower, a new five-speed gearbox and newly minted safety fuel tanks.  Its estimated value is £1.8 million to £2.2 million ($2.48 million $3.03 million).

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The Alfa has a 440-horsrepower V8 engine

“The Alfa duo (De Adamich and Vaccarella) in car number 18 overcame various incidents over the 307 laps, including a clutch issue and a spin which required the fitting of a new nose cone,” Bonhams says in a news release.

“Although Alfa Romeo retired from Le Mans, this car campaigned selected events with subsequent private owners, who included Steven O’Rourke, manager of British rock band Pink Floyd, himself a Le Mans racer, and three important Japanese collections: Hayashi Collection, Yamaguchi and finally Takeshi Fujita.

“Continually maintained and restored by Tipo 33/3 specialists, this Tipo is eligible for the world’s greatest historic races and concours events, including the Le Mans Classic race which it last contested in 2018.”

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1928 Maserati Tipo 26B two-seat race car

Another “Tipo” from an earlier era is also on the Bonhams auction docket, a 1928 Maserati Tipo 26B 2.1-litre Sports, Gran Premio and Formule Libre racing two-seater, with an estimated value of £900,000 to £1.3 million ($1.234 million to $1.79 million).  

“This example’s bright red livery and 150bhp performance is matched by its exotic provenance,” Bonhams said. “It was the first Maserati to be imported into Argentina by its first owner, rancher and weekend racing driver Juan Augusto (John) Malcolm, an Argentinian of Scottish descent, whose career overlapped with the great Juan Manuel Fangio.

“Malcolm ordered number 35, while racing in northern Italy, and the car was originally finished in blue and white – Scotland’s sporting colors – rather than the blue and yellow Argentine racing livery. Campaigned by Malcolm for the next decade, it was later converted for more comfortable road use and was kept by the family until the late 1980s.”

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The 1957-type Ferrari Dino is a purpose-built historic race car

The third Italian motorsports brand at Bonhams is represented by a 1957-type Ferrari Dino 246/60 Historic Racing Formula 1 single-seater with an estimated value of £900,000 to £1.3 million ($1.234 million to $1.79 million). 

“This well-presented front-engine 2.4-litre V6 Dino was campaigned in historic racing, including the Monaco Historic Grand Prix, during the 1980s by leading Italian classic car dealer Corrado Cupellini,” Bonhams states.

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1964 Aston Martin DB4 convertible has celebrity provenance

Among the sports and GT cars consigned for the Bonhams sale are a pair of Aston Martins, including a 1964 DB4 convertible that counts among its past owners Peter Sellers, The Earl of Snowdon and HRH Princess Margaret, and has an estimated value of £1.3 million to £1.7 million ($1.79 million to $2.34 million).

The other Aston Martin is a 1966 DB5 Sport Saloon, restored in the 1980s and driven just 6,700 miles since, with an estimated value of £500,000 to £600,000 ($688,000 to $825,000).

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The 1966 Aston Martin DB5 Sport Saloon is like the famed James Bond car

Road-going Ferraris on the Bonhams docket include a 1990 Ferrari F40 Berlinetta, with an estimated value of £800,000 £1.2 million ($1.1 million to $1.65 million).

“Ferrari’s 40th birthday gift to itself was the last motor car to be personally approved by Enzo Ferrari and the first production passenger car with a top speed of more than 200 mph,” Bonhams notes in its release. “The Pininfarina-penned mid-engine sports car was also one of the last ‘analogue’ supercars, devoid of electronic aids such as paddle-shift automatic transmission.

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1990 Ferrari F40 Berlinetta

“This example was first owned by gentleman racer Sir Paul Vestey, who travelled to Italy to collect it.”

Also among the Ferraris is a 1958 250 GT Berlinetta with coachwork by Carrozzeria Ellena. It’s one of just 50 examples built by the Turin, Italy, coachbuilder.  Estimated value for this restored coupe is £700,000 to £900,000 ($963,000 to $1.238 million).

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The 1958 250 GT Berlinetta has coachwork by Carrozzeria Ellena

For more information about the Goodwood auction, visit the Bonhams website.

Lincoln limousines among Kennedy items in Bonhams presidential auction

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The Lincoln convertible was the last car Kennedy rode in before going to Dallas and his assassination | Bonhams photos

Two historically important Lincoln limousines that carried President John F. Kennedy – one of which he rode in on day that he was assassinated – will be offered during Bonhams’ live/online American Presidential Experience Auction in New York on October 14, just three weeks ahead of the presidential election.

The white 1963 Lincoln Continental convertible that was designated “Limo One,” and which carried the President and first lady on the morning of November 22, 1963, in Fort Worth with Texas Governor John Connally, has a pre-auction estimated value of $300,000 to $500,000.

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President Kennedy, the First Lady and Texas Governor John Connally being driven in the 1963 Lincoln | Archive photo

The Lincoln, which was on loan from Bill Golightly of Golightly Auto Sales for the Fort Worth tour, carried the Kennedys and Connally to the Hotel Texas Ballroom, where Kennedy delivered his last speech, and then to Carswell Air Force Base where they boarded the flight to Dallas.

The other Lincoln is a 1960 Lincoln Continental Mark V Executive Limousine used by President Kennedy for personal trips in Washington, DC. The Mark V was specially outfitted by Hess and Eisenhardt for presidential use with bulletproof doors, divider window, passenger air controls and a two-way telephone in the back seat, which was an uncommon luxury for the period.

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The 1960 Lincoln Continental used by Kennedy in Washington, DC

The car was sold in March 1964 to James C. Walsh, a doctor who had known John Kennedy.  Walsh confirmed in a letter that “He [President Kennedy] did use this car for his own personal uses in contrast to the official use of the larger White House limousine.”

Valued at $200,000 to $300,000, the ’60 Lincoln has had its body restored but the interior is original, according to Bonhams.  

Several unusual collector’s items from the Kennedy years also be auctioned, including two mockups that provided a glimpse into the President’s life.

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The display mockup of the Boeing 707 Air Force One

Kennedy was known as the first jet-age president, when Air Force One became a Boeing 707, and a full-scale replica of the plane that was used as an exhibition piece for the public will be among the auction offerings.

“The replica includes the full cockpit, crew officers’ workstations, the state room where Lyndon B. Johnson was sworn in as President and the President’s quarters,” Bonhams says in a news release. “It recreates in minute detail the original designs by Raymond Loewy, who created the distinct blue livery which has been used for all Air Force One airplanes since.”  

The display piece is valued at $200,000 to $300,000.

The replica Oval Office has been used as a television prop

Just as evocative is a full-scale mockup of the White House Oval Office, “complete with wooden panels, a fireplace and furniture including a scale fine-wood reproduction of the Resolute Desk,” Bonhams says.

The replica, which has been used on such TV programs as Saturday Night Live and The Today Show, is valued at $40,000 to $60,000.

A more-personal item from the Kennedy pieces is the leather Air Force One bomber jacket originally owned by the president.  The government-issue G-1 flight jacket with the presidential seal sewn on was given by Kennedy to his close friend and “special assistant” David Powers during Kennedy’s term in office.

The presidential flight jacket is valued at $200,000 to $300,000.

Kennedy gave the leather flight jacket to close friend David Power

Bonhams will conduct the Presidential Experience Auction, which also includes a number of other historic presidential items, with a live auctioneer on the rostrum at the Bonhams’ showroom on Madison Avenue and live streamed on the Bonhams website, with bids accepted online, by phone or by absentee bidding.

The Kennedy limousines will be available for viewing at the Simeone Foundation Automotive Museum in Philadelphia from October 9 through 11, then by appointment at Motor Car Manor in Ramsey, New Jersey.

For more information, visit the Bonhams website.

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