Ivor Bueb was hardly a household name when he sprang to prominence in the summer of 1955. He was a useful driver at National level, and had been reasonably successful in 500cc F3 and small capacity sports cars when he "got the call". It was time for the annual 24-heures du Mans and Jaguar faced their annual problem - Mercedes-Benz, Ferrari and Maserati, even Gordini, could call on their roll of GP drivers to fill the seats of their sports cars. Jaguar didn't compete in single-seater racing, and indeed their main interest was Le Mans, a "proper" race as far as they were concerned, for it could show the worth of their production-based cars. The D-type had been designed for one race, and one race only, and could be a real handful on other bumpy and twisty circuits. Mike Hawthorn once said it was like driving an armchair round the Sarthe.
Jaguar had Mike Hawthorn under contract for sports car racing, and they also had the old and wise pairing of Hamilton and Rolt, but they were getting past their prime. All top-line drivers having been taken, Jaguar called up Norman Dewis, their factory test driver who had limited experience at this level, and then offered drives to Don Beauman, a very promising young racer who tragically was killed later in the season, and could never fulfil his talent, and to Ivor the Driver. Bear in mind that he had never driven a Jaguar before, had never driven at Le Mans, had never driven a long-distance race , and probably never raced at night.
His lap times were perfectly reasonable for a rookie, and he was paired with Hawthorn who was capable of making up any time lost by Bueb. Mercedes went for the jugular, and paired Fangio with Moss (the mind boggles.....) and the opening of the race saw Hawthorn and Fangio race like a couple of nutcases - we're used to flat-out endurance racing these days, but back then the cars were far less reliable. Why they did it is anyone's guess. Of course we all know what happened next. When Hawthorn pulled in to refuel, Ivor Bueb must have been on the pit counter. It would have been standard procedure. He must have witnessed the whole thing - goodness knows what went through his mind. His great chance to prove himself was just thrown down the pan, along with the lives of 80+ innocent people.
He took over the car when asked, drove steadily and safely, got passed but plugged on, and when the Mercedes team was withdrawn and the Italian cars fell by the wayside, his car was victorious. Mike Hawthorn had a personal nightmare and only the wise head of Lofty England prevented him from walking away. I rate Ivor for that race - he stood up and was counted. Top man. Celebrations at the end were muted out of respect,
Bueb's career never really took off. He continued to be a rated driver in the UK, and known on the Continent, but never reached the top. In 1959 he was racing in an F2 Cooper at the rugged and dangerous Charade circuit near Clemont-Ferrand, crashed at a corner, and was thrown out, severely injured. If you want to see what happened next, the aftermath is available on a video clip on a very well-known video-streaming site. The gendarmes and track officials decide his body (remember - injured and still alive) was in the way, and simply drag it to the side of the track. It's horrendously callous, but things were different in those days. It took so long to get him to hospital that he didn't stand a chance - he lived for a few days but his medical treatment was inadequate. That's the way it was so often, back then.