Gus Kuhn

Gus Kuhn
Born 17 October 1898
Birmingham, England
Died 30 August 1966(1966-08-30) (aged 67)
Nationality  England
Current club information
Career status Retired
Career history
1929-1932 Stamford Bridge Pensioners
1933-1937 Wimbledon Dons
1937 Wembley Lions
1938 Lea Bridge
1939 Southampton Saints
Team honours
1929 Southern League Champion
1932 National Association Trophy Winner
Motorcycle racing career statistics
Isle of Man TT career
TTs contested5 (1920, 1922, 1924-1926)
TT wins0
Podiums0

Gus Kuhn (17 October 1898 30 August 1966) was a successful British TT and motorcycle speedway rider during the 1920s and 1930s.

He was born in Birmingham, England, and served in the Royal Naval Air Service in World War I.[1]

Speedway

Kuhn captained the Stamford Bridge team to victory in the 1929 Southern League Championship, and after Stamford Bridge closed in 1932, he spent nearly five years racing for the Wimbledon Dons.[1] In 1937 he moved to the Wembley Lions and then Lea Bridge Speedway Team in 1938, where he was captain. He retired from speedway in 1939 after a season with the Southampton Saints.

“A wily master of track-craft, a brilliant mechanic, a darned hard man to get past (and not only because of his portly figure), and above all a thorough sportsman and a jolly good fellow.” - Speedway News 16 May 1936

Kuhn made his first appearance for England during the first international test match against Australia (1930) and went on to have a number of international appearances throughout the decade.[1]

Isle of Man TT

As a rider in the TT, Kuhn's greatest success came in the 1926 Isle of Man TT in the Junior TT division.

Isle of Man TT results summary

Position 5 7 12 DNF
No of times 1 1 1 4

Off track

In 1932 Kuhn founded Gus Kuhn Motors in Clapham Road, London.[1] The company dealt in Triumphs, BSA and Nortons, its reputation for racing success was not to come until a few years later. After Kuhn's death in 1966, the Gus Kuhn name lived on, the firm now being run by his son-in-law, Vincent Davey. The team focused primarily on racing modifications to Norton Motorcycles and by 1969 they had won the British 500cc Championship, Castrol Championship, Duckhams Trophy, Grovewood Award and Redex Trophy. For a number of years, Norton racing kits and parts were produced for practically every part of the Norton. Over the years these racing machines supplied a number of notable riders including Mick Andrew, Charlie Sanby and Dave Potter.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 Sandys, Leonard (1948) Broadside to Fame! The Drama of the Speedways, Findon, p. 21

External links

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