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10/31/12 - John Fitch was an incredible man— it’s that simple. He was a WWII pilot, highly accomplished racer, first manager of Chevrolet’s Corvette racing team, and designed and sold some stunning Corvair variants. When he was 87, he even tried to break some speed records at Bonneville in a 50 year-old Mercedes-Benz Gullwing. On top of all that, the man was a safety pioneer as well, inventing the Fitch Barrier, those yellow barrels full of sand we’ve all seen on highways and along tracks.
Fitch was born in 1917, and had a stepdad who was an executive for the Stutz Motor Company. This provided his introduction to cars and racing. When WWII broke out, Fitch became a pilot, and could boast shooting down a Messerschmitt Me 262 jet, which was usually considered too fast to effectively shoot down. Fitch caught one on takeoff, a lucky break. His luck ran out later in the war, when he was shot down and spent the remainder of the war as a POW. After the war, Fitch opened an MG dealership and started racing MG-TCs, of which he said “My first racecar was an MG TC. It was horrible. Solid axle up front, solid axle at the rear, and a very loose body. But it did look good.” Later, he was given a wrecked Allard to race, which required a bit of adjustment: "I was given an Allard early on as a racecar, but it was wrecked. We didn’t have any frame-pulling machines then, so I chained the damaged corner to a tree and gently pulled that corner back into place. That’s how we did things then." A mere seven years after being a POW in Germany, Fitch was the first (and I believe still only) American to be part of the Mercedes-Benz racing team— he was the first American to professionally race in Europe post-WWII as well. After racking up class wins in the Mille Miglia and other races, Fitch returned from Europe in 1956 to head the Chevrolet Corvette racing team. Despite the early ‘Vette’s less-than-stellar racing reputation, he set a land speed record for production cars, and then some class and team wins at Sebring. Fitch also designed and modified cars, focusing special attention on the Corvair. He wanted to turn the already Porsche-like Corvair into something even more Porsche-y, and made special versions of Corvairs called the Corvair Sprint that bumped HP from 100 to 155 and added handling improvements, capped with a great-looking fastback/flying buttress body modification. The real jewel here was the Fitch Phoenix, a striking looking Corvair-based two-seater that never made it past the prototype stage. That’s a shame, because it’s about as close to an American 911 as you could imagine. That would have been an amazing rivalry to follow. Any 95 year old man who loves to go as fast as John Cooper Fitch must also love not dying, and as such Fitch came up with a number of safety innovations. The most known are the Fitch Barriers mentioned earlier, but he also came up with displaceable guardrail designs and protective driver’s capsules for racing cars. John Fitch was a remarkable man and driver, and he’ll be missed. [img]<<GRAEMLIN_URL>>/frown.gif[/img] ![]()
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1959-1980 Pontiac Window Sticker Reproductions : PontiacWindowStickers.com DVD's for Musclecar fans! MusclecarFilms.com |
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Mike,
Very nice tribute. RIP Mr. Fitch. The Fitch Phoenix is stunning. Dan
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69 300 Deluxe Post Sedan Frost Green 69 SS396 300 Deluxe Post Sedan Lemans Blue SOLD 70 Buick Skylark Post Sedan Gulfstream Blue 70 Buick Skylark Post Sedan Burnished Saddle http://m.youtube.com/watch?v=PM3DE8qI2NY https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=Yn4xEmGypUw |
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Well I can't take credit for the write-up, it was from Jalopnik. I just thought it was a nice tribute.
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1959-1980 Pontiac Window Sticker Reproductions : PontiacWindowStickers.com DVD's for Musclecar fans! MusclecarFilms.com |
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Sad to hear he's gone but WOW, what a life!!!
RIP John. ~ Pete [img]<<GRAEMLIN_URL>>/ ![]()
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I like real cars best...especially the REAL real ones! |
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![]() While restoring my Fitch Firebird I would talk to him on and off, he'd answer any question I had, always made time. True gentleman. When I'd see him at Lime Rock (even in his 90's) it was amazing the ideas he was still dreaming up, and to hear his perspective on thing going on in the automotive world. An inspiration to me. Well done John, Gods speed... Autoweek story
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Rick ------------ 1967 Fitch Firebird |
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I was surprised when I read that Fitch claimed an Me262 shot down in WWII. He was flying a P-51D Mustang at the time, and while German aircraft were outnumbered about 10 to 1 by 1945, claiming an Me262 is still remarkable. More than likely, he shot down and Me262 while it landing or taking off, which was the only time the German jet was vulnerable.
Unless of course you see the movie "Red Tails", where they were knocking Me262's out of the sky like mosquitoes. [img]<<GRAEMLIN_URL>>/rolleyes.gif[/img] What a great life John Fitch led, and he will always be remembered for his military service, as well as his great contributions to the automotive industry. [img]<<GRAEMLIN_URL>>/flag.gif[/img]
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1959-1980 Pontiac Window Sticker Reproductions : PontiacWindowStickers.com DVD's for Musclecar fans! MusclecarFilms.com |
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I believe one article said the ME262 was taking off when shot down.
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While air to air kills were not entirely uncommon Red Tails did take certain liberties. The P51 cannot maintain inverted flight and the statement that "no bombers under Red Tail protection were lost" is inaccurate. My son is the research specialist at the CAF Air Power Museum. I had the privilage of attending the American Combat Airman Hall of Fame Induction last month and spending the evening with medal of Honor recipient, Bruce Crandall and other American heros. A moving experience to say the least.
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1969 Hugger Orange RS COPO (Sold) 1969 Garnet Red Z28 1969 Super Bee (Sold) 1965 Pontiac Lemans |
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A friend I worked with was a waist-gunner in a B-17 and among the first to encounter an ME262 - said he thought it was a fighter w/a belly tank at first; then discovered it hauled-ass, couldn't hit it and couldn't hear it until it had gone by making a racket he'd never heard until just then - tactically, it was used to fly through and break-up their formation, exposing them to the conventional fighters.
RIP John Fitch (and my pal Ed in the B-17). [img]<<GRAEMLIN_URL>>/flag.gif[/img] |
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Here's a video just posted on YouTube. John talks about his WWII experience in an interview from 2010.
John Fitch Video Tribute Another interview from 4 years ago with Jay Leno John Fitch with Leno
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Rick ------------ 1967 Fitch Firebird |
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