Grace's Guide To British Industrial History

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Grace's Guide is the leading source of historical information on industry and manufacturing in Britain. This web publication contains 162,254 pages of information and 244,496 images on early companies, their products and the people who designed and built them.

Grace's Guide is the leading source of historical information on industry and manufacturing in Britain. This web publication contains 147,919 pages of information and 233,587 images on early companies, their products and the people who designed and built them.

Gwenda Stewart

From Graces Guide
(Redirected from Gwenda Janson)

Mrs Gwenda Mary Stewart (1884-1990) aka Gwenda Janson and Gwenda Hawkes

1884 Born Gwenda Glubb in Preston, the daughter of Major General Sir Frederic Manley Glubb and the sister of Glubb Pasha who built up and commanded the Arab Legion between 1930 and 1956.

WWI Coming from an adventurous family she drove ambulances on the Russian and Romanian fronts

1920 Married Sam Janson in Buxted

1921 Under official scrutiny in daily runs of 190 miles in a Ner-A-Car, she survived 1,000 gruelling miles on the fragile machine over icy roads without a spill or breakdown.

1922 Rode a 2-hp Trump-J.A.P. continuously around England's two-mile Brooklands track for 24 hours at an average speed of 44.65 mph.

1924 Married Robert Neil Stewart

Between the two World wars she raced at Brooklands. She competed in the 1933 single seater Duesenberg in the 1936 BRDC 500 miles race sharing the drive with its then owner, Jack Duller.

1930 December. She brought glory to the Derby-Miller with a record for 10 miles, standing start, at 137 mph.

1931 At Monthery she broke the world’s speed record for 100 kilometres, which she herself had set, driving a Derby Miller Special, the property of Mr. W. D. Hawkes.[1]

Married her third husband, Douglas Hawkes, a French motor car manufacturer

1933-34 Set the five-mile and 10-mile records (at 140.17 mph and 138.34 mph)in a Derby-Miller at France's Montlhéry track.

1935 At Brooklands she became the first woman to circle the track at more than 130 mph.

1936 In one of her rare appearances in a race, she teamed with George Duller in a Duesenberg at Brooklands and took an incredible seventh place in the British Racing Drivers 500, an event which is in all respects as torturous and demanding as the U.S.'s own Indianapolis "500."

WWII Served in the London Auxiliary Ambulance Service.

With Douglas she ran the Brooklands Engineering Co in the 1940s.

1976 Detailed article.[2]

Gwenda Hawkes died in 1990 aged 95.

1992 Detailed article.[3]

See Also

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Sources of Information

  1. Leeds Mercury Friday 22 May 1931
  2. Brooklands Society Gazette Vol 1. No 4. 1976
  3. Brooklands Society Gazette Vol 17. No 2/3. 1992