Jean Chassagne
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Jean Chassagne (26 July 1881, in
La Croisille-sur-Briance La Croisille-sur-Briance (, literally ''La Croisille on Briance''; oc, La Crosilha) is a commune in the Haute-Vienne department in the Nouvelle-Aquitaine region in western France. Geography The river Briance has its source in the commune. See ...
– 13 April 1947) was a pioneer submariner, aviator and
French French (french: français(e), link=no) may refer to: * Something of, from, or related to France ** French language, which originated in France, and its various dialects and accents ** French people, a nation and ethnic group identified with Franc ...
racecar driver Auto racing (also known as car racing, motor racing, or automobile racing) is a motorsport involving the racing of automobiles for competition. Auto racing has existed since the invention of the automobile. Races of various sorts were organis ...
active 1906-1930. Chassagne finished third in the
1913 French Grand Prix The 1913 French Grand Prix was a Grand Prix motor race held at Amiens on 12 July 1913. The race The restriction on Grand Prix cars for 1913 included an minimum weight and an maximum weight, as well as a fuel consumption limit. The buildup t ...
; won the 1922 Tourist Trophy and finished second in the 1925 Le Mans Grand Prix d'Endurance - all in Sunbeam motorcars. He was second in the
1921 Italian Grand Prix The 1921 Italian Grand Prix was a Grand Prix motor race held on the Circuito della Fascia d’Oro at Montichiari, near Brescia, on 4 September 1921. Classification References {{Grand Prix race report , Name_of_race = Italian Gr ...
with a
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, and set speed records and won races at
Brooklands Brooklands was a motor racing circuit and aerodrome built near Weybridge in Surrey, England, United Kingdom. It opened in 1907 and was the world's first purpose-built 'banked' motor racing circuit as well as one of Britain's first airfields ...
and hill climbs internationally. Chassagne was also associated with the
Bentley Boys The Bentley Boys were a group of wealthy British motorists who drove Bentley sports cars to victory in the 1920s and kept the marque's reputation for high performance alive. In 1925, as the marque foundered, Bentley Boy Woolf Barnato bought the ...
, who are described as having captured the spirit of the times, partying as hard as they worked. Larger than life, their restless and often reckless love of speed and adventure complemented the big green Bentleys from Cricklewood perfectly. As a result of his association with
Bentley Motors Bentley Motors Limited is a British designer, manufacturer and marketer of luxury cars and SUVs. Headquartered in Crewe, England, the company was founded as Bentley Motors Limited by W. O. Bentley (1888–1971) in 1919 in Cricklewood, Nort ...
, Chassagne Square in
Crewe Crewe () is a railway town and civil parish in the unitary authority of Cheshire East in Cheshire, England. The Crewe built-up area had a total population of 75,556 in 2011, which also covers parts of the adjacent civil parishes of Willaston ...
was named in his honour. Chassagne applied to serve as a pilot during the Great War but under the request of the
British Admiralty The Admiralty was a department of the Government of the United Kingdom responsible for the command of the Royal Navy until 1964, historically under its titular head, the Lord High Admiral – one of the Great Officers of State. For much of i ...
he joined Sunbeam to advise, develop and test aero engines for the war effort.


Career overview

Chassagne’s long career spans the early heroic road races as riding mechanic on
Darracq A Darracq and Company Limited owned a French manufacturer of motor vehicles and aero engines in Suresnes, near Paris. The French enterprise, known at first as A. Darracq et Cie, was founded in 1896 by Alexandre Darracq after he sold his Gladi ...
,
Clément-Bayard Clément-Bayard, Bayard-Clément, was a French manufacturer of automobiles, aeroplanes and airships founded in 1903 by entrepreneur Gustave Adolphe Clément. Clément obtained consent from the Conseil d'Etat to change his name to that of his b ...
and
Hispano-Suiza Hispano-Suiza () is a Spanish automotive–engineering company. It was founded in 1904 by Marc Birkigt and Damian Mateu as an automobile manufacturer and eventually had several factories in Spain and France that produced luxury cars, aircraft en ...
before he joined Sunbeam (later to become S.T.D.), where he achieved his most notable success as a racing driver, including winning the 1922 Tourist Trophy. Chassagne raced well into his forties with
Bentley Bentley Motors Limited is a British designer, manufacturer and marketer of luxury cars and SUVs. Headquartered in Crewe, England, the company was founded as Bentley Motors Limited by W. O. Bentley (1888–1971) in 1919 in Cricklewood, Nort ...
and others in
Le Mans Le Mans (, ) is a city in northwestern France on the Sarthe River where it meets the Huisne. Traditionally the capital of the province of Maine, it is now the capital of the Sarthe department and the seat of the Roman Catholic diocese of Le ...
and elsewhere. His first Grand Prix was the very first French Grand Prix in Le Mans 1906. His last was in 1930, during which period he also was responsible for numerous speed records. His mechanical knowledge, gained early in his education and augmented during his service with the French Navy on early submarines, stood him in good stead both in racing and the development and testing of the latest technology in early aviation for Demoiselles Santons-Dumont monoplanes, the first Hanriot monoplanes and Clément-Bayard. He was also involved in the development and testing of racing cars, namely Grand Prix Sunbeams and the
Bugatti type 35 The Bugatti Type 35 was the most successful of the Bugatti racing models. Its version of the Bugatti arch-shaped radiator that had evolved from the more architectural one of the Bugatti Type 13 Brescia, was to become the one that the marque is ...
. Jean Chassagne was not born into wealth, and competing at the cutting edge of technology could not have been easy. Despite this (or perhaps because of it), he retained a "twinkle in his eye and un air fortement sympathique" throughout his life. Meticulous, resilient, calm with a delicate driving touch and mechanical sympathy ‘Chass’ was held with the utmost regard and affection by his friends and colleagues, the finest engineers and drivers of their time; surely a testimony to his amiable, loyal and easy nature.


Early life 1881-1900

Born 1881 July 26 and was brought up at La Croisille-sur-Briance, Haute-Vienne, Limoges, France and later in Burgundy, France in modest circumstances. His father, a horse trainer, was killed in a riding accident when Jean Chassagne was still young. He attended L’Ecole Professionnelle de St Leonard de Noblat followed by the highly regarded L’Ecole des Arts et Métiers which was formative in his later life at the cutting edge of motorised racing.


French Navy and submarines 1900-1905

In November 1900, the 29-year-old Jean Chassagne joined the French Navy. He was trained as a mechanic, working in 1901 at the Flotte Workshops as a mechanic and then in 1903 as a Torpedo Boat Mechanic (first in class). He volunteered to serve on the ''Montcalm'' for two years, based in Saigon, as well as sailing to America, Africa, China and Japan. In 1905, he volunteered as a submariner and was stationed for ten months on three different Submarines. Firstly, on ''Espadon'' a ''Sirène'' class, 157 tons with 13 crew; then on ''
Gymnote ''Gymnote'' was one of the world's first all-electric submarines and the first functional submarine equipped with torpedoes. Launched on 24 September 1888, she was developed in France following early experiments by Henri Dupuy de Lôme, and, ...
'' which was the world first all-electric submarine and finally on ''Gustave Zédé'', which was the second submarine to be introduced to the French Navy.


Pioneering motorcar racing and aviation 1906-1912

In 26–27 June 1906 the first French Grand Prix de l’ACF was held in Le Mans; Rene Hanriot driving a Darracq was joined by his longtime friend Jean Chassagne as a riding mechanic but had to retire due to engine trouble. Chassagne continued working at Darracq as a mechanic for two years until 1908 acting as riding mechanic during the heroic pioneering age of racing to Hanriot, Hautvost and Demogeot. In 1908 Chassagne travelled to the USA for the
American Grand Prize American(s) may refer to: * American, something of, from, or related to the United States of America, commonly known as the "United States" or "America" ** Americans, citizens and nationals of the United States of America ** American ancestry, pe ...
, Savannah, where he was again a riding mechanic to Hautvost on a Clément-Bayard. During this period, Chassagne was also working at Clément-Bayard, Senat workshops for airships and race-car engines on the development, assembly and testing of the experimental Demoiselles Santons-Dumont monoplanes. Development, assembly and testing of the first Hanriot Monoplanes, Reims followed and in August 1910 Chassagne received his pilot licence certificate no. 160. He subsequently participated in various events including the ‘Baie de Seine’ estuary crossing; winning the Liege altitude & speed prizes. Chassagne crashed in Deauville due to engine problem but escaped with only a few splinters from the wooden frame in his thighs. He was then appointed Chief Pilot to Hanriot Flying School where he trained many of the early pioneering aviators and in 1911 he became Director of the Algeciras Flying School, Spain where he was responsible for the training of Spanish officers. In 1912 Chassagne was again flying with Clément-Bayard where he was responsible for the testing and development of the new aero engines in long-distance flights such as Paris to Reims, Paris to Mourmelon to Reims to Soissons and to Paris, as well as, remarkably Issy to Reims. That year Jean Chassagne met
Louis Coatalen Louis Hervé Coatalen (11 September 1879 – 23 May 1962) was an automobile engineer and racing driver born in Brittany who spent much of his adult life in Britain and took British nationality. He was a pioneer of the design and development of inte ...
, joined the Sunbeam racing team and withdrew from flying. Throughout this period, Chassagne combined his aviation activities with racing and with the Hispano Suiza Racing Team in 1910 he competed at Coupe des Voiturettes, Bolougne gaining second place and in the Catalan Cup Race a fourth; later taking part in the famous Mont Ventoux Hillclimb. It is at Hispano Suiza that Chassagne was acquainted with Works drivers Pilleverdier and Zucarelli the latter becoming with Georges Boillot,
Jules Goux Jules Goux (6 April 1885 - 6 March 1965) was a French racing driver and Grand Prix motor racing champion. He was also notable for being the first Frenchman, and the first European driver, to win the Indianapolis 500. Biography Influenced by the G ...
& Ernest Henry the Peugeot ‘Les Charlatans’ who revolutionized racing with the twin cam over head, four valve per cylinder engine design.


Racing with Sunbeam 1912-1919

In 1909 the British Sunbeam firm engaged the energetic and ambitious Breton Louis Hervé Coatalen, (1879–1962) as a Chief Engineer. Racing enthusiast Coatalen was to transform the Wolverhampton firm to become the foremost British exponents of motor racing internationally at the highest echelons. It was Coatalen who in 1912 engaged his countryman Jean Chassagne as part of his winning racing team. In 1912 Coatalen entered a team of four race modified 12/16 Sunbeam cars to compete in the Coupe de l'Auto which was run concurrently with the historic 1912 French Grand Prix de l’ACF at Dieppe.
Victor Rigal Victor Rigal (22 September 1879 – June 1941) was a French racing driver. Biography He began his career in motorsport at the Critérium des Coeurs in 1898, on a tricycle made by De Dion-Bouton. He won the Levassor Prize for Motorcycles in 190 ...
with Jean Chassagne as riding mechanic not only won the Coupe de l’Auto outright but was placed third in the Grand Prix against the large Grand Prix cars with engines three and five times the capacity of the Sunbeam. Motorboat racing in Monaco was a convenient test bed for engine technology and in 1913 Coatalen and Chassagne in a Sunbeam powered boat took part in the event. That same year, Jean Chassagne was promoted to a Sunbeam Works Team driver and in the French Grand Prix at Amiens Chassagne came 1st of the Sunbeams and 3rd overall. Later that year at the Coupe de l’Auto at Boulogne Jean Chassagne with his riding mechanic A P Mitchell retired on the seventh lap when lying 3rd with a rear axle failure. On 2 October 1913 at
Brooklands Brooklands was a motor racing circuit and aerodrome built near Weybridge in Surrey, England, United Kingdom. It opened in 1907 and was the world's first purpose-built 'banked' motor racing circuit as well as one of Britain's first airfields ...
Jean Chassagne alternating in 2-hour spells with Dario Resta & K. Lee Guinness of the eponymous Stout dynasty, set up a series of long distance World Records with a Sunbeam Grand Prix fitted with a Single- Seater body. Two days later again at Brooklands, Jean Chassagne with the Sunbeam Toodles V, won an event against Lambert’s Land Speed Record holder Talbot. On the same day and with the same car Chassagne made the fastest Brooklands race lap to that date. A few days later, Chassagne and Toodles V set up further long distance World Records. In 1914 Chassagne continued to set up World Records for Sunbeam at Brooklands with Toodles V. Chassagne took part in the Monaco Motor boat races with ‘Toto’ a 2.5L dohc four valve per cylinder Sunbeam powered racing boat; this may have been a test run for this new engine design; similar designed engines, built in the manner of the Pegueot ‘Charlatans’, from which the design was derived, were used in that year’s Grand Prix Sunbeam racing motorcars. Travelling to the USA for the 1914 Indianapolis 500 Mile, Chassagne with his riding mechanic A P Mitchell in ‘Spotty’ a 1913 Sunbeam G.P. car, qualified at 88.310 mph but crashed on the twentieth lap due to burst tyre. Shortly after in the historic French Grand Prix in the newly designed 4cyl 4.5L dohc Sunbeam, Chassagne made fastest lap but retired on the thirteenth lap due to big-end failure. The Great War was looming and on commencement, Chassagne enlisted in the Artillery Corp despite several requests to join the Flying Corp; shortly after in 1915, under the request of the British Admiralty he joined Sunbeam to advise, develop and test aero engines for the war effort.


Post-war racing 1919-1922

Armistice was signed on 11 November 1918, ending the Great War. Soon after, in 1919, the first postwar Indianapolis 500 was held. However, postwar conditions in France were less amenable and the first Grand Prix was not staged until 1921. In 1920 Sunbeam merged with Talbot and
Darracq A Darracq and Company Limited owned a French manufacturer of motor vehicles and aero engines in Suresnes, near Paris. The French enterprise, known at first as A. Darracq et Cie, was founded in 1896 by Alexandre Darracq after he sold his Gladi ...
to form the S.T.D. combine headed by Louis Coatalen as a managing director. During the war in 1916 Sunbeam designed a 4.9L engine in the Ernest Henry manner which performed well in that year's Indianapolis 500; J Christiaens finishing 4th; this engine type was fitted in 1919 in two shorter 1914 Sunbeam T.T. chassis and entered for Jean Chassagne and Dario Resta for the 1919 Indianapolis 500. The cars were shipped to the USA but were not submitted for scrutineering and withdrawn for unknown reason. Jean Chassagne was consequently recruited by the newly formed
Ballot A ballot is a device used to cast votes in an election and may be found as a piece of paper or a small ball used in secret voting. It was originally a small ball (see blackballing) used to record decisions made by voters in Italy around the 16 ...
Racing Team to drive one of their newly designed Ernest Henry straight eight 4.9L cars; accident on the 63rd lap due to steering problem resulted in what became Chassagne’s most serious accident in his entire career but despite having ejected some 150 yards from his car he was largely unhurt. Chassagne remind with the Ballot team and in 1921 became their top driver. A year later, in the 1920 Indianapolis 500 capacity limit was reduced to 183 cu (3-litre). The design of the Ballot entry was similar to the year before but scaled down to 3-litre; Jean Chassagne was running in the first five places throughout the race but damaged steering dropped him to 7th place winning $1,900. Back in Brooklands in the larger 4.9L Ballot and with riding mechanic Robert Laly who was to become a lifelong friend, Chassagne made the fastest BARC lap of the year and finished second in the three handicap races. In the Gaillon Hillclimb, he made 22.6sec at 99 mph. Back in Indianapolis in 1921 with a private entry Peugeot 4cyl, Chassagne lost his bonnet and was forced by the regulations to retire. The long-awaited French Grand Prix took place at Le Mans, on a circuit that was to become known as the Le Mans ‘24 hours Endurance’; Chassagne on the 3-litre Ballot thrilled the crowds with a neck to neck duel with Jimmy Murphy on his Dusenberg; on lap 17 Chassagne was leading but he was forced to retire with punctured petrol tank. Chassagne had his break in the 1921 Italian Grand Prix with the Ballot where he came second and the Gaillon Hillclimb where he made 3rd fastest time of the day. In November 1921 Chassagne, married the half English, half French Emma; over the years, Emma escorted her husband on some racing events and they remained married until Chasssagne died in 1947. 1922 was a successful and busy year for Jean Chassagne with S.T.D. and at 41 years of age, his greatest victory in the
Isle of Man Tourist Trophy The Isle of Man TT or Tourist Trophy races are an annual motorcycle racing event run on the Isle of Man in May/June of most years since its inaugural race in 1907. The event is often called one of the most dangerous racing events in the world ...
. The year started with a win at Brooklands Easter Meeting with the now legendary aero engined Sunbeam 350 hp which proceeded to break numerous Speed Records including the first car to set a new World Speed Record over the magic 150 mph mark. In 22 June after 5:24:50hr in what he famously described as "a nightmare in sea of mud" Chassagne won the first postwar Tourist Trophy and the last motorcar Tourist Trophy to be run on the Isle of Man with Sunbeam III a 1921 Sunbeam Grand Prix straight eight 3-litre modified for the event; Chassagne ordinarily a measured and meticulous driver was fazed by the atrocious weather conditions on the island that day but it remained "one of the greatest victories of his career". Chassagne was entered in several voiturette racing for S.T.D. with the invincible 1921 1.5L Talbot Darracqs, in effect a half sized engine of Chassagne’s winning Tourist Trophy car, but none gained him success. Responding to the formula change of the 1922 French Grand Prix held in Strasbourg Coatalen engaged Ernest Henry, then at his peak, to design the new 2-litre Grand Prix Sunbeam engine. Pre Great War Henry, together with ‘Les Charlatans’ was responsible for the development of the game changing Peugeot race engines with double
overhead cam An overhead camshaft (OHC) engine is a piston engine where the camshaft is located in the cylinder head above the combustion chamber. This contrasts with earlier overhead valve engines (OHV), where the camshaft is located below the combustion cha ...
and four valve per cylinder. Postwar he was acclaimed for the highly influential Ballot engines. Jean Chassagne knew Henry for many years and he acted as liaison between Henry in S.T.D. Surenes near Paris and the S.T.D. Wolverhampton Experimental Department, ultimately testing the prototype car in Brooklands and helping to develop the Sunbeam Grand Prix team entry. In the event, Chassagne drove Sunbeam I but the three cars retired after being the second fastest behind the winning Fiats. The cars were entered at the subsequent Grand Premio d’Italia Monza but did not appear. Instead, Sunbeam competed in the 1922 November 19 Coppa Florio in Sicily where Chassagne after holing the oil tank of his dreadnought grey 4.9L 1922 Tourist Trophy Sunbeam with a stone on the rough Madonia Mountains track, and having replenished with olive oil locally purchased, finished fourth but was unplaced.


Endurance racing 1923-1927

The shift to endurance racing was neither sudden for Chassagne nor complete and arguably does not reflect a change in Chassagne but the shift in interests in international racing from Grand Prix racing to Endurance racing during the second half of the vintage decade. Throughout the period, Chassagne remained at the cutting edge of racing technology as he always has been and continued to exhibit the traits that made him the respected master of racing which he was notably, unwavering steadfastness, assurance, resilience, inventiveness, mechanical knowledge and cheer all eminently appropriate to both endurance racing and the long and harsh road racing Grand Prix of the period. Chassagne took a sabbatical in 1923 and his only recorded entry was a 1st in class in the Circuit des Routes Pavees, with a Citroen B Type Two-Seater. In 1924 Chassagne was involved together with Bugatti himself with the preparation, development and tuning of the iconic type 35 Bugatti in advance of its inaugural French Grand Prix at Lyon; the tyres were insufficiently vulcanised and after changing 15 deflated tyres himself, Chassagne finished seventh – the highest placed Bugatti; the situation was not dissimilar at the Spanish Grand Prix at San Sebastian; a race which saw some particularly harsh accidents, injuries and fatality due to poor road preparation. In 1925 the third Le Mans Grand Prix d’Endurance took place and S.T.D. entered two Sunbeam Super Sport one for Jean Chassagne and Sammy C H Davis, the other for H.O.D. Segrave and G Duller. It is said that the Sunbeam 3-litre Super Sport was designed by Vincenso Bertarione and produced by Sunbeam under instruction of Louis Coatalen mainly to beat Bentley in endurance racing and this Chassagne and Davis did coming 2nd overall to a Lorraine-Dietrich in their ailing Sunbeam after a hotly contested race with the Bentley team. With the new Bertarione/ Becchia 1923 S.T.D. Talbot Darracq 1.5L voiturette, Jean Chassagne had good success in 1925 obtaining fastest time of the day at the Gometz le Chatel Hillclimb and second fastest at the famous Gaillon Hillclimb but he ran out of fuel on the last lap in the Touring Car Grand Prix,
Montlhéry Montlhéry () is a commune in the Essonne department in Île-de-France in northern France. It is located from Paris. History Montlhéry lay on the strategically important road from Paris to Orléans. Under the Merovingians, it was owned by the ...
which was run on distance, ballast & fuel formula. Further speed events with the Talbot Darracq Works Team yielded in 1926 success but also a serious accident in a rainy Avus whilst he was lying third. For the 1926 Le Mans Grand Prix d’Endurance Chassagne was entered with an Aries Surbaissée 2L car; further races with Aries Surbaissée continued in 1927 achieving excellent results in endurance racing in Belgium, France and Spain.


The Bentley years 1928-1930

By the time Jean Chassagne joined the ranks of the ‘Bentley boys’ (age 47), Bentley’s reputation in endurance racing was unequalled and his successes in Le Mans legendary. It is therefore interesting to contemplate the implication of this union between Chassagne the old racing master with his erstwhile competitors. That Chassagne was not ‘past it’ was made abundantly clear in the first Le Mans he took part in for Bentley sharing a car with another racing legend Henry Tim Birkin. The fifth overall achieved whilst no doubt respectable tells little of the heroic performance Chassagne exhibited in this race, which to a very large extent exemplify the man. Birkin having suffered a rim collapse at Arnage abandoned the car which was not equipped with a jack and returned to the pits where "Old Chassagne" took two jacks under his arms famously commenting "Maintenant, c’est a moi" "he ran the 3 miles to the ditched Bentley, jacked the car up, changed the wheel and drove on". W. O. Bentley awarded Chassagne with a silver Trophy in recognition of this extraordinary feat. In 1929 Le Mans Chassagne was sharing a Bentley with Francis Clement; the Bentley team holding virtually from the beginning the first four positions. Back with a Ballot at the Grand Prix Chassagne retired with a mechanical problem. W. O. Bentley was against supercharging his 4.5 – litre cars and it was left to Henry Tim Birkin sponsored by the Hon. Dorothy Paget to initiate the construction of a team of Blower Bentleys designed by
Amherst Villiers Amherst Villiers (1900–1991) was an English automotive, aeronautical and astronautic engineer and portrait painter. He designed a land speed record-breaking car for Malcolm Campbell, and developed the supercharged "Blower Bentley", driven b ...
and built at the Birkin’s Works, Welwyn Garden City. At the 1930 Brooklands Double Twelve Chassagne shared Birkin’s favourite Blower Bentley but the Mechan’s frame broke and the car retired at 4.30 pm of the first day's racing. Again sharing a car with Birkin at the Le Mans Grand Prix d’Endurance, the car put up the fastest lap at 89.69 mph overtaking Caracciola at nearly 120 mph but retired on lap 138 with a broken valve. The Bentley Works Team was retired but the Birkin Blowers were entered in the 1930 Phoenix Park Irish Grand Prix where they had a close race with the Mercedes 7 litre supercharged; Chasssagne car suffered from lubrication problem. This was to be his last recorded race.


Retirement and death 1931-1947

Feeling he was slowing down Jean Chassagne retired from racing at the end of 1930 age 49 after a long career racing with some of the finest teams and in 1931 he took a position as representative of Castrol Oils for the Aircraft Industry; he also ran the Bentley Motors Sales & Servicing Department at Neuilly. He was made Chevalier de la Legion d’Honneur in 1935 in recognition of his achievements in motorsport. After the Nazi occupation of France in 1939 Chassagne moved from his Paris home Maison Lafitte back to La Croisille -sur-Briance, Limoges his birthplace. He died age 65 on 13 April 1947. He was posthumously honoured - a square in Crewe was named after him in commemoration of his association with Bentley Motors racing; in Limoges, France there is the Rue de Chassagne and in La Croisille sur Briance the Chassagne stadium keeps his memory alive.


Motorcar, motorboat and aircraft racing

1906 * 26/27 June French Grand Prix de l’ACF, Le Mans, Darracq race no. 4C riding mechanic to Rene Hanriot; retired due to engine trouble. 1908 * American Grand Prize, Savannah, Clément-Bayard car no.13 riding mechanic to Hautvost 1910 * ‘Baie de Seine’ estuary airplane crossing * Liege altitude & speed prizes 1st. * Coupe des Voiturettes, Bolougne, Hispano Suiza 60 bhp, 2nd *Catalan Cup Race, Hispano Suiza 60 bhp, 4th * Mont Ventoux Hillclimb 1912 * ‘Endurance’ Flights: Paris – Reims; Paris - Mourmelon – Reims - Soissons – Paris; Issy- Reims. * 25/26 June, Coupe de l'Auto & French Grand Prix de l’ACF Dieppe, Sunbeam 4cyl 3L, Car no. 3, riding mechanic to Victor Rigal, 1st in Coupe de l’Auto & 3rd in the concurrent Grand Prix 1913 * April, Monaco, ‘Sunbeam’ Racing Boat powered with two eight cylinders Sunbeam engines with L Coatalen * 13 June, French Grand Prix de l’ACF, Amiens, Sunbeam 6cyl 4.5L, car no. 15, timed 88.07 mph, average 70.3 mph over 570miles (29laps), 3rd (and 1st of the Sunbeams) * 21 September, Coupe de l’Auto Boulogne, Sunbeam 4cyl 3L, Car no. 4, Jean Chassagne & A P Mitchell, retired 7th lap when lying 3rd, rear axle * 2 October, Brooklands, ‘World’s Record’, Sunbeam Grand Prix 6cyl 4.5L with Single- Seater body, 2-hour spells with D Resta & K. Lee Guinness, 2–12 hours records at 89.85-97.55 mph * 4 October, Brooklands, Autumn Meeting 13th 100 mph Short Handicap, 1913 Sunbeam V12 Toodles V 9L, distance 8.5mile lapped 114.49 mph. On scratch with Lambert’s Talbot. 1st * 4 October, Brooklands, Autumn Meeting 13th 100 mph Long Handicap, 1913 Sunbeam V12 Toodles V lapped at 118.58 mph – fastest Brooklands race lap to date. * 10 October, Brooklands ‘World’s Records’, 1913 V12 Toodles V 9L, 50-150miles at 105.57-108.38 mph. ‘The Hour’ at 107.95 mph. 1914 * 16 March, Brooklands, Class H Records, 1913 V12 Toodles V 9L, 0.5-5mile records at 114.08-119.76 mph. 120.73 mph over the mile. * Monaco ‘Toto’ Sunbeam racing boat 2.5L doch * 30 May, Indianapolis 500 Mile, 1913 Sunbeam G.P. (Spotty) 6cyl 4.5L, car no. 12, qualifying speed 88.310 mph, with A P Mitchell, crashed, tyre burst on 20th lap * 4 July, French Grand Prix de l’ACF, Lyons, Sunbeam 4cyl 4.5L dohc, Car no. 10, Jean Chassagne & A P Mitchell, fastest lap at 65.03 mph, retired 13th lap, big end run 1919 * 31 May, Indianapolis 500-Mile, With Dario Resta to drive 4.9L Sunbeam – withdrawn and instead drove the Henry designed Ballot 8cyl 4.9L, accident 63rd lap (steering) 1920 * 30 May, Indianapolis 500 Mile, Ballot 8cyl 3L, car no 26, qualifying speed 95.450 mph, averaged 79.94 mph 7th, winning $1,900 * September Brooklands BARC Autumn Race, Ballot 4.9L with Robert Laly 112.17 mph – fastest BARC lap of the year. 2nd (in three handicap races) * October Gaillon Hillclimb, Ballot 22.6sec 99 mph 1921 * 30 May, Indianapolis 500 Mile, Peugeot 4cyl (private entry), car no. 19, qualifying speed 91.100 mph, lost hood, 18th and retired * 26 July, French Grand Prix de l’ACF, Ballot 3L 8cyl no. 8 (with Robert Laly) punctured petrol tank on lap 17 while leading – retired. * 4 September, Italian Grand Prix Brescia, Ballot 8cyl 3L, car no. 8(with Robert Laly), 3:40:52 hours 519 km (30 laps), 2nd * Gaillon Hillclimb Ballot 3rd fastest time 1922 * 17 April, Brooklands, Easter Meeting 13th Lightning Short Handicap, Sunbeam 350 hp V12 18.3L, 5.75 miles 103.83 mph, lapped at 114 mph. 1st. * 17 April, Brooklands, Easter Meeting 13th Lightning Long Handicap, Sunbeam 350 hp 12cyl 18.3L, retired, Tread of offside front tyre stripped * 17 April, Brooklands, Easter Meeting, Light Car Scratch, Talbot Darracq 1.5L 4cyl lapped 89.74 mph * 22 June, Isle of Man Tourist Trophy, Sunbeam III 8cyl 3L car, no. 7, Jean Chassagne & Robert Laly, 302 miles (8 laps) 5:24:50 hours, 55.76 mph, 1st * 15 July, French Grand Prix de l’ACF, Strasbourg, Sunbeam 4cyl 2L (which he helped Ernest Henry to develop), Car no. 9, Jean Chassagne & R. Laly, retired 5th lap, broken inlet valve * 19 August Brooklands, JCC 200 Mile Race, Talbot Darracq no.5 1.5L 4cyl (with Paul Dutoit) accident on lap 44 –tyre deflation * 10 September, Il Gran Premio d’Italia, Monza 800 km (80 laps), Sunbeam – did not appear * 18 September Coupe des Voiturettes, Le Mans Talbot Darracq 1.5L 4cyl, reserve driver * 5 November, Penya Rhin Voiturette Grand Prix, Spain, 517.65 km (35 lapps) Talbot Darracq 1.5L 4cyl, dnf 1st lap – valve * 19 November, Coppa Florio, Sicily, Sunbeam 6cyl 4.9L 6cyl, car no. 1, 268.5 miles (4 laps), 4th 1923 * Circuit des Routes Pavees, Citroen B Type Two-Seater, 1st in class 1924 * 4 August, French Grand Prix de l’ACF, Lyons, Bugatti Type 35 2L 8cyl (inaugural race), 7:46:25.06 hrs, 7th tyre problems (changed 15 covers). * San Sebastian Grand Prix, Spain, Bugatti Type 35 2L 8cyl, 6:46:30hrs 6th tyre problems 1925 * 20/21 June, Le Mans Grand Prix d’Endurance, Sunbeam SS 6cyl 3L, car no. 16 (with S C H Davis), 1343 miles average 55.9 mph, 1st in class 2nd overall * July Touring Car Grand Prix, Montlhéry, distance, ballast & fuel formula, Talbot-Darracq 1.5L, run out of fuel on last lap * Gaillon Hillclimb, Talbot-Darracq 1.5L, 4cyl, 2nd fastest * Gometz le Chatel Hillclimb, Talbot-Darracq 1.5L, 4cyl, 1st fastest 1926 * Val Suzon Hillclimb, Talbot-Darracq 1.5L, 4cyl, 2nd fastest & fastest in sportscar class * Inaugural Grosser Preis von Deutschland, Avus, Berlin, Talbot-Darracq 1.5L, 4cyl, accident when lying 3rd * 12/13 June, Le Mans Grand Prix d’Endurance, Aries Surbaissée 2L, car no 10, with Robert Laly, retired lap 65 1927 * 24 hours de Belgique, Spa, Aries Surbaissée 3L, (with R. Laly), 1st in class 2nd overall * 18/19 June, Le Mans Grand Prix d’Endurance, Aries Surbaissée 3L, car no 4 (with R. Laly), retired lap 122 (comfortably in the lead for 17 hours when a seized camshaft drive put them out of running) * San Sebastian 12 - hours, Spain, Aries Surbaissée 3L, (with Duray), 2nd 1928 * 16/17 June, Le Mans Grand Prix d’Endurance, Bentley Motors Ltd Team, Bentley 4.5L, car no. 3 (with Henry Tim Birkin), 5th in class 5th overall (heroically rescuing the damaged car) 1929 * 15/16 June, Le Mans Grand Prix d’Endurance, Bentley Motors Ltd Team, Bentley 4.5L, car no. 8 (with Francis Clement), 3rd in class 4th overall * 30 June, French Grand Prix de l’ACF, Le Mans, Ballot 8cyl, no. 4, retired 8th lap -mechanical 1930 * Brooklands Double Twelve, Hon Miss Dorothy Paget Team, Bentley Blower C, with Tim Birkin, retired- broken chassis * 21/22 June, Le Mans Grand Prix d’Endurance, Hon Miss Dorothy Paget Team, Bentley Blower C, car no. 9, with Tim Birkin, DNF * July Irish Grand Prix, Phoenix Park, Dublin, Ireland, Hon Miss Dorothy Paget Team, Bentley Blower C car no.7


Teams

Pre-WW1 * Darracq * Clement-Bayard * Hispano–Suiza * Sunbeam Post-WW1 * S.T.D. * Ballot * Citroen * Aries * Bugatti * Bentley


Some team members

* Barnato, Woolf * Benjafield, J. D. * Birkin, Sir Henry * Clement, Francis C. * Constantini, Meo * Davis, Sydney Charles Houghton (Sammy) * De Palma, Ralph * De Viscaya * Guinness, Kenelm Lee * Guyot, Albert * Laly, Robert * Resta, Dario * Rigal, Victor * Segrave, H.O.D. * Thomas, Rene * Wagner, Louis


Honours

* Chevalier de la Legion d’Honneur * Chassagne Square Crewe in commemoration of association with Bentley Motors racing * Rue de Chassagne Limoges France * Chassagne Stadium. La Croisille sur Briance


Indy 500 results


Internet sources

*1922 Strasbourg Grand Prix Sunbeam - YouTube *Sunbeam Talbot Darracq Register *Bibliothèque nationale de France *LAT Photographic Archive *Austin Harris *Art And The French Grand Prix 1921 D Doyle *Grand Prix History *Grand Prix Sunbeams - YouTube *New Zealand Papers Past


References


Further references

* The Classic Twin-Cam Engine Griffith Borgeson 1981 * Sunbeam Racing Cars, Anthony S Heal, 1989 * The History of Brooklands 1906-1940, William Boddy, 1957 * Bentley The Vintage Years 1919-1931 Michael Hay * Le Miroir de la Route, numero 123, 15 Juin 1930, ‘Les "As" du Volant’ - La Brillante Carriere de Jean Chassagne’ by Charles Tardieu * L’automobiliste no. 23 Mai/Juin 1971, Jean Chassagne by Robert Jarraud * VSCC 2002 Bulletin summer & autumn Jean Chassagne & Ernest Henry by Oliver Heal * Mathieson -Taylor Archive * Un Siecle De Grands Pilotes Francais 1895-1995 {{DEFAULTSORT:Chassange, Jean 1881 births 1947 deaths French racing drivers Indianapolis 500 drivers Indianapolis 500 polesitters 24 Hours of Le Mans drivers Grand Prix drivers