Issue 262. Unmissable.
857 S: rare symbol of the Ferrari Sports cars that enchanted the world.
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1955 857 S s/n 0203 M, our issue 262 cover car, has an amazing racing history, receiving three chassis numbers during its life as a Scuderia Ferrari works car (originally 0584 M, then 0578 M, and finally its current 0203 M). Its huge historical importance is confirmed, among other things, by the list of top drivers that raced, and won, in it: Umberto Maglioli, Maurice Trintignant, Eugenio Castellotti, Alfonso de Portago, Phil Hill, and Peter Collins. In 1957, through Luigi Chinetti, it was sold to its first private owner, Gene Greenspun of New York, who entered it in the inaugural Sports Car Club of America Grand Prix Sports Car Races at the, then new, Virginia International Raceway, near Danville, VA, close to the North Carolina state border, on August 3-4, 1957. Since 2005 it has been back in Italy, where it was perfectly restored before entering its current ownership in 2010. Despite never racing in the MM, the car sports a Mille Miglia racing number — the one it was assigned for its appearance, just weeks before our shoot, in Michael Mann’s movie Ferrari.
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1934 Scuderia Ferrari Alfa Romeo 8C 2300 “Monza” s/n SF 28
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Enzo Ferrari founded Ferrari Automobili in 1947. Up until that point, apart from his Auto Avio Costruzioni, which he opened in 1940, his racing world had revolved around Scuderia Ferrari, which competed with Alfa Romeos. From 1929 to 1939, the Scuderia Ferrari Alfas enjoyed an incredible spate of successes, laying the foundations of the Ferrari legend so familiar to us today. Unfortunately, many of the pre-war racing Alfas, amazingly advanced technological artifacts, were lost during the war and the early post-war years, with parts getting separated from the cars and often being lost or run into the ground. The Monza featured in Cavallino was purchased new by Scuderia Ferrari in early 1933 and raced throughout the season. Unfortunately, all the books containing data linking its chassis numbers/drivers/races were lost or destroyed, and so it is almost impossible to accredit specific race results. The car profiled here is known to have been driven to victory by Antonio Brivio in the Swedish GP on August 6, 1933, before being modified by Ferrari. On that occasion, then, it still bore its original Alfa Romeo serial number, 2211120 (with its Modena registration plate, MO 6608). Subsequently, after being modified and assigned s/n SF 28, it was entrusted, by Scuderia Ferrari, to the duo Pietro Ghersi and Gugliemo Carraroli, and assigned MM race number 58. They retired from the MM on the leg to Venice when running sixth, after being second fastest on the 226-km Siena-to-Rome leg. Several races followed, including a Targa Florio, before the car was sold and transformed into a fast road car. It ended up in South Africa, where it kept on club racing, and was also used as a sort of daily runaround for several years, miraculously surviving a crash in 1968. Back in Europe it was meticulously restored, before entering a Swiss collection in 2020 where it still remains. It is often used by its current owner. |
An idea and a name that have become the symbols of a great story
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The issue includes an article devoted to the short and happy life of Scuderia Ferrari from 1929 to 1939: it describes the origins and the most crucial strategies and people (from managers to racers) from what proved to be truly amazing years for Enzo Ferrari and his newly established company. Over a period of eight racing years, Scuderia Ferrari took part in 225 races with a total of 715 cars, recording 144 victories and another 171 podium finishes. The people of that period were instrumental in the success of the Scuderia, but most of them remained very important in the post-war years, too, with many of them entering Ferrari Automobili. One name above all? Tazio Nuvolari…
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