Wednesday, January 27, 2010

RIP, Gentleman Driver

Today’s racing driver isn’t what he used to be. Post-stint massage therapy and victory lanes drenched in Pepsi instead of Taittinger have rendered the true “gentleman racer” a thing of the past. Gone are the 240-mph speeds on the Mulsanne Straight at Le Mans. Gone are the coachbuilt Ferraris that were driven from their baronial estates to the Tour de France, raced through the countryside and driven right back home. Gone are men like the Bentley Boys, Wolfgang Graf Berghe von Trips, Lance Reventlow and, most upsetting of all, Briggs Swift Cunningham II.

Cunningham wasn’t a “sportsman” in the way that Jeff Gordon races AND plays in charity golf tournaments. No, Mr. Cunningham was a Yale man and college friend of the Collier Brothers (think Collier Country, FL), with whom he founded the Sports Car Club of America. He not only raced Jaguars, Ferraris, Corvettes and Listers on his own dime and all around the world, but also built his own eponymous series of racing cars in West Palm Beach, in the hopes of taking outright victory at Le Mans.


As if that weren’t sufficient, he also skippered the Columbia to successfully defend the 1958 America’s Cup, patented the “Cunningham” device of the same sport and assembled a world-class collection of motor cars that included a Bugatti Royale – Ettore’s tour de force, the most valuable car in the world, then and perhaps even now.

So the next time you listen to NBC moderators tell you how many G’s Helio Castroneves' poor body is enduring in the turns or how taxing a two-hour Formula 1 race must be, just remember...Giovanni Bracco wasn’t feeling so well in the 1952 Mille Miglia either. The endless cigarettes and brandy his Ferrari co-driver was passing him must have mixed very poorly with the 1,000 miles of switchbacks and elevation changes...


*Courtesy of Aggressively Shabby's MotorSport Correspondant: Arthur Wild

Tuesday, January 19, 2010

Election Day


Countless Patriots Died & Bled to earn you the right. If you live in Massachusetts Don't forget to Vote !

Monday, January 18, 2010

Noblesse Oblige: Countess Von Moltke

This January, Countess Freya Von-Moltke, a paragon of the little-known Kreisau Circle of aristocrats and intellectuals who openly opposed the Nazi regime during World War II, died at the ripe age of 98. She courageously played host to the circle at her estate in Kreisau Poland and supported her husband, The Count, in his endeavor to reveal Nazi war crimes as they occurred.

Combined, the couple made up a kind of real life Victor Lazlo and Ilsa Lund of Casablanca fame.
Count Von Moltke worked in the Abwehr and attempted to publicize violations of the Geneva Convention as well as the horrible violations occuring in the concentration camps. He also attempted to extradite hundreds of Jews to countries which resisted Germany. For his work, he was arrested by the Gestapo and eventually executed for his seditious actions. In a final letter to his two sons he wrote " Since National Socialism came to power, I have striven to make its consequences milder for its victims and to prepare the way for a change. In that my conscience drove me - and in the end that is a man's duty."

Shortly before the execution the Countess fled to South Africa with her children where she continued to lecture about the inherent evils of National Socialism. The Kreisau Circle, the Von Moltkes, Admiral Wilhem Canaris and the Von Stauffenberg plot are just a handful of examples of Bourgeoisie and Aristocratic opposition to Hitler and the Nazis. It remains unfortunate that the lives of these brave patriots has gone largely unrecognized in academia & the popular media. Contrary to what many unsophisticated historical texts will tell you, many powerful Germans were not in Cahoots with Hitler, Himmler or any of their goons.



There's special providence in the fall of a sparrow

The tragic life of Edie Sedgwick has been done ad nauseum in film & other media - but the question remains as to why we are so fascinated by the confluence of beauty, wealth & tragedy. Often it seems as if we are particularly drawn to larger than life characters because we enjoy watching the brinksmanship required to achieve success. As Bill Buckley famously said, 'great men sail with too much canvas up.' Successful mediocrity is easy, it requires nothing more than following the rules, paying your taxes, eating reasonably and exercising regularly. At its worst the public would seem to take secret delight in the downfall of the interesting & the great because they would prefer everyone to live a humble & timid existence. Equality in achievement is relative. Don't make the mistake of watching the trainwrecks that happen to others to the extent that you miss punching your own ticket.

Clingstone

Clingstone is a 105 years-old mansion, built in 1895 for (one-imagines) a particularly eccentric Wharton (yes the family that founded UPenn's august business school). It sits in the middle of the Narangasett Bay of Jamestown, R.I. - close to the more touristy Newport. Wharton contumaciously built the property after the government seized the property for his original summer house in Jamestown so that it could enlarge Fort Whetherill. Wharton is said to have dryly remarked "I'm going to build where no one can bother me." And so he did.



One of Philadelphia's tabloids later said that Wharton wouldn't last a season in his new house, and that it wouldn't last through the first Nor'Easter it would inevitably face. He summered there every year therafter until his death in 1938. Well done you eccentric Proper Philadelphian.




Dictator Chic: Pinochet

Of the 20th Century's Tin-Pot Dictators Augosto Pinochet clearly ranks at or near the top in terms of his sartorial sensibilities. Hell, you can almost understand why the CIA backed him: capes, double-breasted suits, a healthy dose of embroidery. He comes off more like your well-appointed grandfather who was Commodore of the Yacht Club than as a brutal dictator.










Lion of the Senate

With Ted Kennedy's old seat being contested tomorrow between Martha Coakely & Scott Brown we thought it might be an appropriate day to spend a moment reflecting one last time on Ted Kennedy. Say what you will about the man for good or ill, he did have style.




Hullo!


Hullo & Welcome to Aggressively Shabby! Unique among digital photo memoirs (hopefully) for its decidedly old school approach to all things Anglo-American and perhaps a bit shabby. We like our things knicked up a bit, lived in , and enjoy the new only when it adequately compliments the old. So sit back, peruse, comment if you're inclined. We'll see you in the field.
Regards,
Jack
photo credit:
www.crappytaxidermy.com