Charlie dies

East London grand prix circuit in 1960) and also won his last (a charity celebrity race at Zwartkops Raceway in 1990). He competed in 13 World Championship Formula One Grands Prix and was South Africa’s champion driver for six successive years, from 1970 to 1975.

David William Charlton – or Charlie, as he was affectionately known by his friends – was born in Yorkshire, England, and emigrated to South Africa with his parents when he was 10. He was brought up in Springs, a town he was proud to associate himself with, although he did not have fond memories of his schooling there.

“I hated school. I don’t like being told what to do. Still don’t!” he once said.
A loyal friend, who in turn had many loyal friends, Charlie was known for his definite opinions, no nonsense approach to life and a famous fastidiousness that used to know no boundaries. He loved cats, at one time owning as many as 21, and several were named after people he knew, including one of his motor racing rivals.

He won his first race at the age of 24, a late start for a racing driver, at the wheel of his own Austin Healey 100/6 in a supporting race for the 1960 South African Grand Prix at East London. He went on to take over from his great rival, Zimbabwean John Love, as South African champion racing driver in the days when the championship was contested by Formula One cars. He won the first of his six successive titles (emulating Love’s performance between 1963 and 1969) in an ex-Jo Bonnier Lotus 49C.

The same year he finished 12th in the SA GP at Kyalami in the same car. His first world championship GP (he is one of 20 South Africans to race in Formula One) was at the wheel of an Ecurie Tomahawk Lotus 20 in South Africa in 1965 and thereafter he competed in the South African round of the world championship on another six occasions in an ex-Jack Brabham Brabham BT 11 (1967 and 1968), the Lotus 49C (1970), a works Brabham BT33 (1971) and the Scuderia Scribante Lotus 72D (1972 and 1973) and McLaren M23 (1974 and 1975). He also competed in the British GP in 1971 in the ex-Reine Wissell works Lotus 72D, which was subsequently bought by his patron, Aldo Scribante, for him to race.

It was in the Scribante Lotus 72D, sponsored by Lucky Strike and Sasol (the oil company’s first venture into motor sport), that Charlie, as the reigning South African champion, contested the French, German and British rounds of the 1972 F1 world championship.

A mysterious inner ear infection prevented him from performing at his best, but he will always be remembered for not only bringing his own car to Europe, but also his own petrol as well as his own mechanics and media officers (this writer and Robin Emslie). – iol.

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