World Endurance Championship

Vivid colour footage of Le Mans 1955 found

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    From RoadandTrack:

    Pathé News spent 60 years working up newsreels from 1910 to 1970, which meant the company was on hand for some of the last century’s most important moments. The company’s archive, British Pathé, is on YouTube. Be careful, because you can lose a day stumbling through the clips.

    Gabor Vajda found something precious tucked amongst the reels: color footage from the 1955 24 Hours of Le Mans. Pathé was there with then-new Cinemascope cameras and filmed nearly 30 minutes of footage that never went public.

    Now the clips are up for the world to see.

    The 1955 race is known as the darkest day in motorsports history. Pierre Levegh’s Mercedes 300 SLR struck an Austin-Healey from behind and catapulted into the crowd. The disaster killed 84 people, including Levegh, and wounded another 120.

    We’ve all seen footage from the race, but never in color, and never like this:

    (None of the following videos contain footage of the tragic accident that took place during that year’s race)

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