THE EARLY YEARS
The first Clee Hill Trial was run on Sunday 2nd
February 1947 by the Hagley & District Light Car Club. CAN May in
his post war book 'More Wheelspin' tells of the fierce rumours prior to
the event that the hills were to be very severe. It was planned to use a
'figure-of-eight' course, with the two loops meeting in Cleobury
Mortimer. However the weather was to put paid to all of the best laid
plans. It began to snow heavily the previous weekend. An emergency
committee meeting on the Wednesday decided to carry on and by Saturday
this was judged to have been a good decision, as the roads were clear.
However it began to snow again and during the night strong winds built
up heavy drifts. Despite the fact that a "full-scale blizzard was
in progress" at the time of the start 34 of the 54 entrants managed
to struggle there, one driver suggested that medals should be awarded
for getting that far.
It was only possible to run 3 of the planned 8
sections, and "in addition a section of the main road (actually a
bus route) was used for a restart test". It is reported that
several competitors even failed this. The Autocar reports 'considerable'
confusion over a second lap of the course, such that only 6 or so
competitors completed it. CAN May was able to shed light on the
situation. There was "serious trouble" on the descent from Ron
Hill back to the village. A Morris Eight had slid out of control,
without its driver but with its passenger and hit another vehicle. There
was not much damage to either car, but it was decided that the approach
was dangerous and the section was cancelled. A messenger was dispatched
but he was not able to stop all competitors, thus causing the confusion.
F K C Wharton won the Club Cup and by the time the competitors reached
the finish at Tenbury the snow had stopped and "even a little weak
sunshine filtered through". CAN May also reports that "the
full story of all the incidents which befell competitors that day, both
getting to and competing in the trial, would nearly fill a book by
themselves".
After such an eventful beginning H&DLCC had to
wait until 1949 to run the Clee again. In the autumn of 1947 the basic
petrol ration was withdrawn and as the Motor of 26th November says the
"great sport of reliability trials driving must cease". The
ban was to run for about 6 months and was abolished on the 1st June
1948. The 1949 event was on the 6th February, when "trials champion
K Wharton, newly returned from the Monte Carlo Rally was narrowly beaten
by L J Oliver". There were 47 starters and no clean sheets; the
hills were mostly grass on frozen ground.
The weather continued to influence the Clee during
the '50s. In 1950, on the 5th February the weather was "almost a
trial organizer's dream, a brilliant, sunny morning following a week of
storms". However an overnight frost misled the organisers into
thinking the hills would be easier than they eventually were when the
frost thawed. Nordibank 1 and the Yeld proved unclimbable and only two
competitors, including the eventual winner, Ken Wharton, climbed Long
Lane. To top it all the afternoon was wet and the last hill - Meadowley
Wood - looked as if it too would be unclimbable and indeed stopped all
but 6 drivers. H&DLCC were commended by The Motor for producing the
results, at the finish, by 7.30pm.
1951 was a year of torrential rain and gale force
winds, probably accounting for the 12 non starters, but 62 crews braved
the weather. The rain was so bad at the first hill - Short Longville -
that the marshals feared no one would even get to the start. After the
lunch halt Harton Wood was said to have played "the dual role of
trial's hill and mountain stream", but being rocky caused little
problem. Not so for the Yeld which again stopped everyone, despite the
fact that "tyres were let down till many cars seemed to be right
down on the wheel rims".
For the 1952 Clee the RAC included the trial in the
BTDA Trials Championship for the first time and it "provided all
the hazards that the most hardened mud-plugger could wish for".
Again the weather played its part with snow and frozen mud, thawing in
the afternoon. The course was a figure of eight, based on Bridgnorth, so
the hills were worse for the people tackling them in the afternoon -
Meadowley was climbed by 9 drivers in the morning, but none after lunch.
There were only 48 entries and maybe this would have been more if the
announcement of championship status had been made earlier than the day
that entries closed !
1953 seemed to be a year of 'bumps', firstly on two
of the new hills round the Golf Course, the Rough and the Bunker, which
the Autocar thought "were probably the most amusing to watch, but
were very tricky indeed and demanding almost limitless power. Two
whacking bumps started the Rough, followed by a bank on which car after
car failed within feet of the top, and on the Bunker, which was almost a
continuation, scarcely a car got more than a third of the
distance". That the eventual winner, B J Bodenham (supercharged
Dellow), alone lost no marks on the whole trial was seen as "a most
remarkable piece of driving". Later in the trial "Meadowley
provided a study in expressions as cars made a real flying start from
the road over a 2ft bump before landing in sticky mud".
The snow returned for 1954, this time it was thawing
and "turned most of the observed hills into a mixture of slush, mud
and ice". Many competitors had difficulty in getting to the start
and "the sight of specials being unloaded from trailers because the
towing vehicles could not cope on the icy main roads was a common one on
the routes leading to Ludlow" The tie deciding test was "held
on an ice-bound car park, with entertaining results". For the first
time a ladies award, The Angel's Award, donated by the Angel Hotel,
Ludlow, was presented to Mrs M Lowe (1172cc Dellow S). The event
finished at this hostelry and the Motor thought that H&DLCC
"set the seal on its organization by handing out full cyclo-style
results within an hour and a half of the last man checking in".
In 1955 the weather was quite different, being
spring-like, dry and sunny, which brought out many spectators. However
there was still plenty of mud and "all the hills were tricky and
called for good driving".
By 1958 the Clee was becoming much more like a
Sporting Trial of today. The trial had always attracted a large number
of 'specials', such that in 1953 The Motor felt it necessary to comment
that it was refreshing "to see a 'real' car amid the customary
assembly of specials" (the car referred to was a 1924 Riley
Redwing). The 1958 trial was "on a static site and 30 sections were
observed". At this time the cars still had to be road legal, as in
1959 when the Clee started from the Stewponey Inn, Kinver at 10.30am and
"drove to a static site about 3 miles from the start".
In 1963 it is claimed that 'history repeated itself'
with the trial being held on 3rd February in spite of the freeze up.
Enthusiastic marshals spent the day before clearing snow off the
sections and H&DLCC were 'to be congratulated on its press-on spirit
in managing to hold the event'.
By 1964, it appears that the transition to a sporting
trial was complete, a feature in the Autosport clearly shows the cars
with 'fiddle' brakes and cycle type front wheels. By this time the trial
was held on a single site in Wales, near Presteigne. Later the Clee Hill
Trial was renamed the Geoff Taylor Sporting Trial, in honour of one of
H&DLCC's personalities, and this trial is still run today by the
club.
THE VW YEARS
The VWOC reinstated the Clee Hill Trial in 1980 as a
classic reliability trial, organised by Simon Woodall and Ken Green.
Motorsport for VWOC was going through a lull at the time, "the
death of the Beetle in road rallies" meant that a new sporting
outlet was required. The fact that Simon had spent a lot of time in the
past wandering the Clee Hills with a copy of 'Wheelspin' and a map in
his hand, had classic trialling in the genes; and that Beetles are
ideally suited to trialling meant that the decision to run a classic
trial was an obvious one.
The event was promoted in conjunction with the MCC,
Chester MC, Stroud & District MC, the SODC and H&DLCC and was a
round of the David Paull Trophy Trials Championship. The start was from
the Running Horse Pub west of Bewdley and the finish was at the Acton
Arms, Morville. Meadowley was in fine form, as usual, and there were no
cleans. According to VW archives several of the competitors on
the 1980 event had also entered in 1950.
For 1981 there was "misty rain at times"
and the famous CAN May was one of the Stewards. The name was changed to
the Clee Hills Trial, it had been Simon's intention to use the
plural in 1980, but a typist's misunderstanding kept it in the singular.
The following year the trial was a round of the VWOC's Classic Trials
Championship. The event was not run in 1983 - the trial had been awarded
championship status by the recently formed Association of Classic Trials
Clubs' (ACTC) and this was the ideal opportunity to return the Clee to
its traditional time of year January/February.
For this first ACTC championship year (1984)
"snow made conditions interesting" and the overall winner Tim
Maynard in his Dellow was the only driver to clear Farlow. For this
event the ACTC Trial of the Year Award was won, 'rightly' so according
to David Alderson, but he goes on to say that in 1985 weather conditions
were against the organisers. They were "frustrated by the sharp
frost and a couple of over enthusiastic adaptations of already naturally
difficult sections". A thaw later in the day caused quagmires at
Munslow Dean and Turners's Hill. The club was congratulated for showing
"an excellent video of the day's proceedings" at the finish.
Mac Hazlewood (1489cc Dellow) was first overall and David Alderson
(1258cc Beetle) best VWOC.
1986 was another good year for the Clee. The ACTC
Trial of the Year Award was won again, by 10 points from the Tamar
Trial, with the Chase Clouds Trial coming third. The Four Wheels Out
magazine of February 1987 states that the Clee Hills was a worthy winner
with "its combination of winter weather, unclimbable sections,
historic hills, first class organisation and marshalling". Mac
Hazlewood won the trial outright for the second year running.
For 1987 snow was great threat - "just 7 days
before Shropshire and North Worcestershire were covered in deep, deep
snow". Hungerford was covered with a ten foot snow drift and the
council's snow plough had dumped snow from the road at the top of
Longville onto the section. However Simon's prayed for thaw arrived in
time and the snow bound hills became covered with "welcome
mud", although the drift at Hungerford stopped this section
running. VWOC's novel idea of running ad hoc teams, chosen by the
organisers, was very successful and brought together "unlikely
combinations". This award was won by John Sargeant, Brian Mitchell
and Richard Penhale.
But in 1988 the snow won! It began to fall heavily on
the Saturday while the pegging of sections was in progress and
eventually the VW Pickup truck could not get to the bottom of sections.
The decision was made, at 3pm, to cancel the trial. However as 'luck'
would have it rained during the night. Unfortunately it was too late to
reinstate the event.
MAC TIMES
1991 perhaps heralded another change for the Clee -
Simon Woodall was finding that pressure of work meant less time for
organisation and the trial was not run. There was a 1992 event, but by
this time Simon was actively looking for another club to take on the
responsibility. Brian Cope, a Midland Automobile Club (MAC) member, keen
triallist and ACTC stalwart, suggested to Jonathan Toulmin that the MAC
take over the event. The MAC committee proved keen to add a classic
trial to their range of activities and the club first ran the trial on
18th September 1994; various negotiations and other circumstances meant
that the trial could not be run in 1993. Brian was unable to assist so
Jonathan ran it with a great deal of help from Allin Penhale among
others. The weather was glorious, with hot sunshine, but luckily the
preceding week was very wet, so the hills were challenging and the ford
at Strefford almost unpassable.
The 1994 event was won by Dave Smith in an MG Midget and
the Ladies Award by Adrienne Alderson. A new class, with a shortened
route, leaving out the difficult sections was introduced for MAC members
driving standard road cars. This class was won by Graham Austin in a
Reliant Kitten, with 8 year old son Stuart as bouncer. ACTC championship
status for the Clee Hills Trial was regained, but this meant another
break in 1995 to again return the trial to January.
In 1996 Clee was run on the 21st January and the Fray
Challenge Cup (for Best Performance of the Day) was won by Paul
Bartleman in a Ford Escort. The results were close and three other
drivers could have won it. A little snow at the start was sent as a
reminder of previous years.........…
The MAC were awarded the 1996 Trial of the Year Trophy on 5th January
1997.
THE PEOPLE
Personalities always make events and the Clee is well
endowed. The early days were made by people like CAN May, who not only
wrote such good books, but was a keen competitor and during the famous
1947 Clee "found himself climbing a tree instead of the hill".
Ken Wharton, one of the most versatile of all drivers, who was
successful at every form of motorsport he entered, from trials to
rallies and to F1- he managed a 'clean' sheet on the 1947 event. Pre-war
expert A G Imhof who was a regular entrant in the 1950s. Reg Phillips,
well known to the MAC as a regular competitor at Shelsley Walsh, was
best over 1300cc (in his 1486cc Fairley) on the 1951 Clee, gaining
fastest time on the Short Longville timed test. Mssrs Delingpole and
Lowe, creators of the popular and successful Dellow trials cars, were
also regulars, as were many of their cars.
A 'guest appearance', as bouncer for N Weston (Dellow
1172cc), was made by champion racing motorcyclist Geoff Duke in 1952. He
said he believed he had been "bouncing at the wrong moments".
The Woodall family have long been stalwarts of the
Clee, H B (Bert) Woodall braved the first ever Clee and was not put off
by the weather as he again took part in '49. Brother E V (Victor)
Woodall made a "good effort" at climbing the Yeld in 1951 and
nephew Simon organised the Clee for many years for the VWOC and still
competes today.
MCC stalwart John West won the trial in 1980 in his
Oliver Special, and other MCC organisers, Geoff Margetts and John Hayes,
were entrants during this period, as was ACTC eligibility man Alan
Foster. Many of the regulars of the 1980s still enter today.