Jimmie Guthrie

Jimmie Guthrie
NationalityBritish
Born(1897-05-23)23 May 1897
Hawick, Scotland
Died8 August 1937(1937-08-08) (aged 40)
Sachsenring road racing course, near Hohenstein-Ernstthal village, Germany
Motorcycle racing career statistics
Grand Prix motorcycle racing
Active years1927-1937
First race1928 German Grand Prix 350 cc
Last race1937 German Grand Prix 500 cc
First win1930 German Grand Prix 350 cc
Last win1937 Belgium Grand Prix 500 cc
Team(s)AJS, Norton
Championships4
Starts Wins Podiums Poles F. laps Points
0 19 0 0 0 0
Isle of Man TT career
TTs contested12 (1923, 1927-1937)
TT wins6
First TT win1930 Lightweight TT
Last TT win1937 Junior TT
TT podiums12

James Guthrie (23 May 1897 – 8 August 1937) was a Scottish motorcycle racer.

A motorcycle garage proprietor and professional motorcycle racer from Hawick Roxburghshire, Jimmie Guthrie was known as the “Flying Scotsman,”[1] with a hard-charging motor-cycle racing style winning 14 European Continental Grand Prix in a three-year period 1934–1937 out of a total of 19 European Grand Prix victories .[2]

While racing with the works Norton motorcycle team, Jimmie Guthrie won the 500cc FICM 500cc European motor-cycle championship for three consecutive years 1934–1937 and the 350cc category in 1937. During the 1930s, Jimmie Guthrie won the North West 200 races on three occasions and a further six wins at the Isle of Man TT races.

While leading on the last lap of the 1937 German Motorcycle Grand Prix, Jimmie Guthrie crashed for reasons that are still not entirely clear, speculated to be an incident with another competitor, or a mechanical issue. [3] [4] He later died later in hospital from the injuries.[5]

  1. ^ The Scotsman page 16 SENIOR T.T. RAGE Continental Challenge to • British Machines, WOODS GUTHRIE DUEL GREAT RACE OF EUROPE Friday 21 June 1935
  2. ^ Motorcycle Racing with the Continental Circus 1920 to 1970 page 10 Chris Pereira (2018) Veloce Publishing Ltd ISBN 9781787112742
  3. ^ Jimmie G.- The extraordinary life and tragic death of a Scottish motorcycle racing champion. Paul W. Guthrie 2019, ISBN 978-3982087207
  4. ^ "JIMMIE GUTHRIE". Australian Motorcycle News. Retrieved 26 December 2023.
  5. ^ Daily Express page 1 Monday 9 August 1937

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