Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
geography/united-kingdom

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Trevor Taylor (racing driver)

British racing driver (1936{{ndash}}2010)

Trevor Taylor (racing driver)

Summary

British racing driver (1936{{ndash}}2010)

FieldValue
nameTrevor Taylor
nationalityGBR British
birth_date
birth_placeGleadless, Sheffield, England
death_date
death_placeWickersley, Rotherham, England
years, –,
teamsLotus (incl. non-works), BRP, Shannon, non-works Cooper
races29 (27 starts)
championships0
wins0
podiums1
points8
poles0
fastest_laps0
first_race1959 British Grand Prix
last_race1966 British Grand Prix

Trevor Patrick Taylor (26 December 1936 – 27 September 2010) was a British motor racing driver from England.

Early career

Trevor Taylor was born in Sheffield, the son of a garage owner from Rotherham. He began his racing career in 500 cc Formula Three racing, initially in a Staride and later a Cooper-Norton. Ten victories in 1958 earned him the British Formula Three Championship. After a frustrating year in 1959 spent with his own Formula Two Cooper, he received an invitation to run his Lotus 18 as a second works car for 1960. He finished equal first in the Formula Junior championship with Jim Clark, although he competed in two more races that counted towards the championship than Clark who was already driving regularly for Team Lotus in Formula One. Taylor went on to win the title on his own account in 1961. At the end of 1961, Taylor got a regular Formula One drive with Team Lotus and proved competitive with Clark and Moss in the South African series in December 1961.

Formula One career

Lotus]] at the [[1962 Dutch Grand Prix]].
Lotus]] at the [[1963 Dutch Grand Prix]].

Taylor participated in 29 World Championship Formula One Grands Prix, qualifying for 27 of them. He made his debut on 18 July 1959, in the British Grand Prix held that year at Aintree, driving a privately entered 1.5-litre Cooper T51 but did not qualify. In 1961, he was thirteenth at that year's Dutch Grand Prix, his only World Championship drive that year. He was second in the 1962 Formula One season opening Dutch Grand Prix, his only World Championship podium finish. He led early in the Belgian Grand Prix at Spa and after his team leader Clark passed he engaged in a duel with Willy Mairesse who was driving before his home crowd. Following in Taylor's slip steam, Mairesse clipped the extension of Taylor's gearbox going uphill from Stavelot, the Ferrari 156 having more power uphill, and while neither suffered serious injury both were lucky to survive the high speed encounter. Taylor said that, while Mairesse generally tried too hard and was over-eager for Championship honours, on this occasion, Mairesse was driving well and with precision and it was not his fault.

At the end of 1962, Taylor shared with Jim Clark the car and victory in the non-championship Mexican Grand Prix had a win and a second place at two non-championship events in South Africa confirming his place with Team Lotus in 1963. However, after a handful of top-three-finishes in non-championship events, his best World Championship result was sixth place in the opening race at Monaco, and thereafter he was rarely competitive, although on the fast Reims circuit, in the French Grand Prix, he was running second when he retired at two-thirds distance. Taylor admitted his confidence was shaken by two serious accidents at Spa and Enna-Pergusa. Team owner Colin Chapman suggested Taylor take a sabbatical after the end of the 1963 season and then return to Lotus. Taylor differed and attempted to continue as an F1 driver. After an unsuccessful season with the British Racing Partnership in 1964, Taylor withdrew from Formula One competition.

During his career, Taylor achieved one podium finish, and scored a total of eight championship points. He also participated in numerous non-Championship Formula One races during this time and won three, including one shared with Clark, in 1962 and 1963. Taylor is credited with inventing the yellow stripe that ran down the middle of Team Lotus cars during the 1960s.

After 1964, Taylor enjoyed lesser forms of racing, and tested a Cosworth Formula One car in 1969 which was entered for Grands Prix but did not race. In that, the opening year of F5000, Taylor was a strong contestant in the Guards Championship, winning F5000 rounds in a Surtees TS5 in the Netherlands, Denmark, Germany and Ireland and finished runner up to Peter Gethin in the 1969 F5000 series.

Taylor died at the age of 73 after contracting cancer.

Complete Formula One World Championship results

(key)

YearEntrantChassisEngine12345678910WDCPointsAce Garage (Rotherham)Cooper T51Climax Straight-4NC0Team LotusLotus 18Climax Straight-4NC0Team LotusLotus 24Climax V810th6Lotus 25Team LotusLotus 25Climax V817th1British Racing PartnershipBRP 1BRM V822nd1BRP 2Lotus 24Aiden Jones / Paul EmeryShannonClimax V8NC0
1959MON500NEDFRAGBR
DNQGERPORITAUSA
1961MONNED
13BELFRAGBRGERITAUSA
1962NED
2MON
RetBEL
RetGBR
8GER
Ret
FRA
8ITA
RetUSA
12RSA
Ret
1963MON
6BEL
RetNED
10FRA
13GBR
RetGER
8ITAUSA
RetMEX
RetRSA
8
1964MON
RetNEDAUT
RetITA
DNQ
BEL
7FRA
RetUSA
6MEX
Ret
GBR
RetGER
1966MONBELFRAGBR
RetNEDGERITAUSAMEX

Non-Championship results

(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position) (Races in italics indicate fastest lap)

YearEntrantChassisEngine123456789101112131415161718192021Ace Garage (Rotherham)Cooper T51 F2Climax Straight-4Team LotusLotus 18Climax Straight-4Lotus 21Team LotusLotus 21Climax Straight-4Lotus 24Climax V8Lotus 25Team LotusLotus 25Climax V8British Racing PartnershipLotus 24BRM V8BRP 1Ken ShepperdMcLaren M2BClimax V8Team SurteesSurtees TS5 F5000Chevrolet V8Team SurteesSurtees TS5 F5000Chevrolet V8Doug HardwickLola T190 F5000Malaya GaragesLeda LT25 F5000Chevrolet V8Leda EngineeringLeda LT27 F5000Chevrolet V8
1959GLVAIN
NCINTOULSIL
9
1961LOMGLVPAU
RetBRX
RetVIEAIN
19SYRNAPLONSIL
9SOL
9KANDANMODFLGOUL
RetLEWVAL
RAN
2NAT
RetRSA
Ret
1962CAP
1BRX
10LOM
RetLAVGLV
PAU
11AIN
5INT
10NAPMALCLP
RetRMS
RetSOL
3KANMED
DAN
6OUL
RetMEX
1RAN
2NAT
1
1963LOM
DNAGLVPAU
2IMO
9SYR
WDAIN
3INT
3ROMSOL
RetKAN
2MED
RetAUTOUL
RetRAN
10
1964DMT
RetNWT
3SYR
AIN
RetINT
RetSOLMED
RetRAN
1968ROCINT
WDOUL
1969ROCINTMADOUL
4
1970ROCINT
12
OUL
5
1971ARGROCQUESPRINT
RetRINOUL
RetVIC
Ret
1972ROCBRAINT
RetOULREPVIC

Win shared with Jim Clark, who took over the car after being disqualified for a push start.

References

References

  1. Steve Small. "The Guinness Complete Grand Prix Who's Who".
  2. Tremayne, David. (24 November 2010). "Trevor Taylor: Racing driver who overcame bad luck on the track to forge a successful career".
  3. (1 November 2011). "Trevor Taylor obituary".
  4. (December 2010). "TrevorTaylor".
  5. (April 1981). "Trevor Taylor Remembers".
  6. [http://www.autosport.com/news/report.php/id/87070 Trevor Taylor dies aged 73] Autosport.com
  7. Small, Steve. (1994). "The Guinness Complete Grand Prix Who's Who". Guinness.
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about Trevor Taylor (racing driver) — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report