Racing Ferraris don’t come more original than this ex-works Testa Rossa. Mick Walsh marvels at the remarkable chassis 0704
The Henry Ford Museum in Dearborn was a surprising place to discover one of the most historic Ferraris, but on my first visit in the 1990s it was a timewarp 250 Testa Rossa that upstaged all of the other mechanical greats. Still carrying the Gothic-style race number 38 from its final competitive SCCA outing in October 1963 at Pacific Raceways in Kent, Washington, this wonderful tatty Ferrari kept drawing me back. The dents, burnished paint, dried-out seats and chipped interior captivated me as few restored cars can.
This outdated 10-year-old exotic had been donated to the Henry Ford Museum by the Seattle-based family of its last racer, Arthur True, after his death aged just 35 from liver cancer. For the next three decades, chassis 0704 remained untouched, right down to the lattice of tape over the headlamp cowls.
Back home, I dug out a prized copy of Joel Finn’s superb history of the Testa Rossa, and discovered the preserved beauty’s fantastic race log. Before it was sold to America to join John von Neumann’s glamorous team in California, 0704 had been gunned by the greatest Ferrari works drivers, and scored key championship wins in the 1958 Buenos Aires 1000km and Sebring 12 Hours.
Then, in 1997, rumours started to filter through that 0704 had been traded for a famous Edwardian racing car. Following the death of the renowned American automotive artist Peter Helck, his family was left with his treasured Locomobile, the 1906 Vanderbilt Cup-winning racer best known as ‘Old Number 16’. The Ford Museum had turned down many offers to buy the Testa Rossa, but Connecticut dealer Manny Dragone hit upon the idea of swapping the famous early racer for the Ferrari. The Locomobile’s significant American race history, original condition and links to illustrator Helck swayed the museum’s directors to agree to the deal with a cash adjustment. With spiralling values of Maranello’s finest, the Dearborn staff have no doubt been kicking themselves ever since. Dragone quickly sold the Testa Rossa to Brazilian collector Abba Kogan, and for the next six years 0704 vanished into private storage.