
How the Bath Motor Club began – by Mike Perkins.
“At the
end of the ‘50s I made a sports car using a glass-fibre body-shell from the
fledgling Ginetta company. It concealed a pre-war Morris 8 engine and
chassis. Around 1962 I saw that the
Yeovil Motor Club were to stage a night rally.
They would let me have a go. I
enlisted the help of a cyclist friend as my navigator. He knew about maps. We genned up on
references and away we went. The rally
started using tulip diagrams. What were
they? We followed the next car away, but
soon got well and truly lost. I entered
their next rally but took one of their members as nav. We did a bit better, but was not fast enough.
But the
bug had bitten me. I bought one or two
local OS maps and started to plan routes around Bath. At that time I worked for a TV firm called
Bristol Wireless, as manager of a repair workshop in Julian Road, Bath. We had a field engineer called Graham
Dixon. We thought it would be fun to
have our own car club. We combined our
names and we had the Perdix Light Car Club, eureka.
Having
essentially a Morris car, I was well in with some of the workshop staff at Bath
Garages in James St. West. I soon had
some potential entries for the night rallies that I was planning. Graham, with my brother and one or two
others, would be marshals.
At this time we were friendly with Les Hukins. He had a hardware shop along the road from
ours. He was keen to be in with our
rallying plans. He marshalled, and entered some with his daughter as nav. The routes were about 50 miles long, with as
many controls as we could muster.
Some of the Bath Garages lot were, shall I say good
fun, but a bit irresponsible. More and
more people were hearing about us and wanted to join in. Graham was a good helper, but didn’t want any
responsibility. Things were beginning to
get out of hand. For a start, the route
sheets I printed by ball-pen and lots of sheets of carbon- paper. It was time to go public. I told Les of my plans, placed an ad in the Chronicle, printed
a number of posters calling anyone interested in forming a Motor Club to attend
a meeting at the pub at the bottom of St James Parade. It was June ‘63.
Wow! Some fifty people turned up. They were raring to go. We decided to call ourselves The Bath Motor
Club. We immediately formed a
committee. Les was made Chairman. I was Secretary. Ivan Holmes was Competitions
Sec. We immediately got down to
business, started
to promote driving tests and rallies, both for novices, and tougher ones for
the ‘experts’. Of necessity, the rally
route sheets had to be secret. I had
located a charming lady,
Miss Weir, who ran a tiny concern called ‘We’ll Do It’ in Broad
Street. She typed and copied all
required by the Gestetner process. All at minimal cost.
The rest is history as they say.”
Bath Motor Club Autocross – by Mike Patton
In 1990 Bath
Motor Club Autocross was voted the best in the UK. This resulted in us hosting
the prestigious British Championship Autocross Finals at Great Cumberwell Farm (used for many of our championship rounds
of this popular form of grass roots
motor sport and now a Golf Club, North of Bradford on Avon) the
following year. The event was sadly dropped from our calendar in
1994 due to lack of entries, with a subsequent downturn in competitors.
However, as I write there seems to be a revival in certain local areas.
In the 70s,
before the advent of the more lucrative Rallycross,
which attracted TV companies to get involved (thus
reaching a wider audience than Autocross ever could) Bath Motor Club had probably
the greatest exponents of Autocross, with Peter Gould (Mini) Peter Maslen (Mini) and Roger Brunt (mini). Roger, who after a
long lay off has recently made a comeback with a home
built Vauxhall Corsa Special, has supported his son
Marcus over the last couple of years in the ASWMC Autocross Championship.
Also making
a comeback in recent years, not in grass roots sport, but in the highest level
of F1 (as father of Jenson), is John Button.

John
campaigned very successfully in a VW Beetle sponsored by Autoconti,
a VW tuning company which John ran from a garage near Trowbridge, Wiltshire.
And when rallycross came on the scene John moved on
to a VW Golf, sponsored by Bose Hi-Fi. The Beetle is
still to be seen competing at most local events by the Hoare Family from
Bournemouth, still very competitively.