Hugh’s greatest dream was to own a racetrack, and a few years before his nephew’s departure for Africa he had made a considerable dent in his fortune by building Brooklands racetrack, the first motor-racing course in Britain. A vast concrete bowl with a three-mile-long track so steeply banked that one could reach great speeds of 120 miles per hour, it had opened on a glorious July day in 1907, attracting a crowd of more than 13,000. More than forty cars had taken part in the procession. Ethel, resplendent in a wide turquoise flowered hat, had led, triumphant at the wheel of their car Bamba as the only woman driver, while Hugh sat alongside her, content to play passenger, wearing his habitual cloth cap and puffing his pipe.
Source:
Lamb, Christina. “Part One: 1914-1927, Chapter 3.” The Africa House: The True Story of An English Gentleman and His African Dream. Harper Collins Publishers, 2004. 31-2. Print.
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