You can’t really call beating Lotus, Frazer Nash or Morgan sports cars giant-killing.
In terms of physical dimensions, that seems a bit ridiculous.
However, when amateur racer Peter Gammon won against those famous names in the one-off Special he’d built himself on the chassis of an obsolete MG TC through 1952-’53, pride was hurt enough that Colin Chapman eventually shoved the keys for a Lotus Six into his hands to save further embarrassment.
The Gammon Special not only boasts an enviable record in motorsport of its own, both in period and contemporary historic racing, but also has a role in the founding days of Lotus.
Gammon, a draper from Guildford, wasn’t the first owner of this car, or even the first to campaign it.
One of the last MG TCs built, it had a brief racing career in its original form, with two owners before Gammon bought it in 1951.
By then, the new TD was prevalent and the old TC increasingly uncompetitive, but Gammon saw an opportunity to build a Special for his first full season of racing in 1952.