Grossglockner

The Nazis intended Grossglockner to be the ultimate mountain race. But safety and weather worries put paid to that. Damien Smith dodges the clouds to rediscover the Austrian Alpine course. Photography by Lorenzo Bellanca

Just minutes after picking up the mountain pass we come to the first hairpin. I look at my photographs of behemoth Mercedes and Auto Unions scrabbling around tight Alpine bends and stop at one that I know must definitely be the site of this picture. The jaw-dropping backdrop, the contours of the road: it all matches. Yes! I knew that I couldn’t go too far wrong in finding the right locations. The Grossglockner Hochalpenstrasse is just one road over a mountain, after all.

Straightforward? No. Oh no. Not with my sense of geography.

After a good hour photographing the Boxster retracing the lines of Stuck, Lang and von Brauchitsch we take a break. I wander over to browse at a roadside map to doublecheck exactly how far we have come up the pass. My heart skips a beat — and then sinks with realisation and dread: we’re on the wrong side of the mountain. Idiot!

Time is now against us if we are to shoot the right corners and return Porsche’s new baby to Klagenfurt before our flight departs. We tear up the mountain road through more hairpin bends (they all look like the ones in our old photos — groan), then notice the stunning scenery has faded behind a dense fog and drizzling rain. Through a couple of eerie tunnels, the road then rises, briefly falls and climbs once more. Patches of snow remind us of our altitude and the onset of winter; the road will close for the season three days after our visit, the pass impassable until the spring.

We reach Fuschertörl, at 7965ft the highest point of the road. From here it is said that 37 mountain peaks are visible. But not today. A short pointed tower familiar from our pictures gives us reason to cheer and we begin to descend, going against the direction of the competition course. These are the right bends, the right landmarks, so we back-track and this time really do retrace the lines of the Silver Arrows.

We might be facing our own race against time, but it doesn’t stop me reflecting: how on earth would you control a monstrous V16 6-litre Auto Union over these narrow, treacherous roads, especially on loose surfaces and cobblestones as they were in the 1930s? One mistake and you’re facing a long drop into oblivion. It’s no wonder Hermann Lang needed time to catch his breath and pull himself together after his winning run in 1939. Grossglockner is awe-inspiring— and terrifying too.

The Hochalpenstrasse was opened with great fanfare by Austrian president Wilhelm Miklas on August 3 1935. The outburst of national pride was understandable: it had taken five years to build this 21-mile road over Austria’s highest mountain (the peak stands at 12,460ft), providing a vital physical — and political — link between Germany and the north of Italy. Among the ceremonies was the unveiling of a chapel at Fuschertöhl, built in memory of chancellor Engelbert Dollfuss, who had visited the site just a few days before his assassination at the hands of Austrian Nazis in July 1934.

The day after the official opening, the Austrian Automobile Club gave the new road a proper baptism: a mountain climb for motorbikes, sports and racing cars. It was run over a 12-mile stretch, finishing at Fuschertöhl. Only the Italian Stelvio climb hit a higher altitude.

A healthy international entry had been attracted, although the rolled-sand road surface kept the German racing giants away. In the absence of Merc and Auto Union, Scuderia Ferrari’s Alfas claimed a double win, Carlo Pintacuda securing the sportscar spoils and Mario Tadini the racing car event at a speed of 49.45mph. Hot on Tadini’s heels was Richard Seaman, who put in a brilliant performance to surprise the locals and take second place in his ERA. A month later the Briton would top his Grossglockner showing in the German Mountain Grand Prix at Freiburg. He finished second again, but this time to the king of the mountains, Hans Stuck. That the Auto Union star won by a scant 1 sec left some wondering if a little German face-saving had been at work.

Mountain climbing had an extremely high profile back then, attracting the cream of drivers and teams. The initial European Mountain Championship was held in 1930 and was made up of 10 events, including one at Britain’s Shelsley Walsh — hardly Alpine, but popular nonetheless. Stuck claimed that first title in an Austro-Daimler, while other champions included Rudolf Caracciola in 1932.

By the mid-1930s the German championship had displaced the European, centring on events at Freiburg, Feldberg and Kesselberg. But in 1938 the major German mountain climb of the season was held in Austria, at Grossglockner. Hitler’s troops had stormed unopposed into Vienna in March and Austria was now part of the Reich. A major sporting event running under the title of the Deutsche Bergmeisterschaft would only remind the world that Austria’s national identity had been swamped by an irresistible force.

The original plan was to run the event over the full 21-mile distance of the Grossglockner pass, nearly three times the length of most European climbs. It was too ambitious. Seaman, now established as a Mercedes star, had paid a reconnaissance visit to Grossglockner at the behest of Alfred Neubauer. Although he had competed there before, Seaman was unimpressed — the road was in a poor condition and he considered it dangerous to race through the middle section of the pass, which included the Mittertörl and Hochtor tunnels that we passed through in the opposite direction on our dash to find the right photo matches. He had a point. The steep and twisting climb we made in drizzling rain would have been a daunting downhill plunge — terrifying with 450bhp under your right foot.

By the time the event was run at the end of August the organisers had changed the format to something more acceptable. Instead of one run over 21 miles, they chose two heats, the first starting at Ferleiten and finishing at Fuschertörl, a distance of 7.8 miles. The cars would then drive through the demanding up-and-down eight-mile middle section to the start of the second heat near Guttal. This would be run over 4.9 miles up to Franz Josefs Höhe, an altitude of 7749ft, in sight of Grossglockner’s summit and the great Pasterze glacier.

After his visit Seaman had decided not to compete, even with the change of format. That left Mercedes with Lang and Manfred von Brauchitsch in a pair of W125s facing Stuck in a lone short-chassis Auto Union — Hermann Müller had been due to join him but was out of action following a crash in the Swiss Grand Prix.

Then on race day the organisers were forced into another format change: the weather was awful and the second part of the climb was shrouded in thick cloud. The drivers protested until it was decided to run both heats over the first part of the climb.

In heavy rain Stuck beat Lang by 2.3sec over the first run. The road was dry for the second and Stuck managed to find a full 70sec on his way to the overall win. Von Brauchitsch, who had struggled in the rain, found a minute and a half, but it still wasn’t enough to steal second overall from Lang.

A year later Europe was on the verge of war, but Mercedes and Auto Union turned out in force once again at Grossglockner. To show just how seriously Merc took this arm of the sport, it brought four specially built climbers: two 5.6-litre W125s and two 3-litre W154s from which Lang and von Brauchitsch could choose. Both drivers plumped for the bigger cars, which featured radiators fitted in the rear, cooled by a newly-developed steam system. The layout shifted weight to the back to help traction, while both drivers tried twin wheels during the practice runs. But when it came to the real thing they resorted to single wheels — the twins were not effective on the loose road surface and the extra width only made it harder to place the cars through the tight turns.

Following the format saga of the previous year, the organisers wisely chose to limit the event to the first part of the mountain pass, again over two runs. But this time Stuck’s mountain crown would slip.

His team-mate Müller caused a surprise by outpacing Lang by 1sec over the first run, with Stuck just 0.4sec further back. Then conditions took a turn for the worse for the second run. Lang had practised hard over the Hochalpenstrasse, but his familiarity with the course made little difference. Thick fog hid the landmarks. At the end of his run, which left him shaken to the core, Lang was sure that he had been too slow to win. But everyone else had struggled in the soupy conditions. Stuck was 3.2sec slower at the finish, and the four-time German mountain champion shook Lang’s hand for taking his title.

A month later Hitler’s troops invaded Poland.

In the post-war years, competitive motorsport did return to the mountain pass, but it would always be hard to match the heady days of Mercedes and Auto Union. The road was perfect for motorcycle trials and also formed a stage of the Austrian Alpine Rally — Paddy Hopkirk and Henry Liddon took their works Austin-Healey to victory on this event in 1964. The last test was run over the Grossglockner — at night. It hardly bears thinking about.

In recent years a Silver Arrow has run again on the Hochalpenstrasse — even if it wasn’t a pre-war car: in 1985 Hans Hermann was the star of the road’s 50th anniversary celebrations at the wheel of a Mercedes W196.

Today the pass is a popular tourist destination, and with scenery this breathtaking it’s easy to see why. It must be lovely in the summer — when you can actually see… We take a breather to look out over a precipice, gawping at the endless ridges and stark, overbearing rock faces. Then in a matter of seconds a fog cloud has clawed its way around us and we are blind again. That’s what the brave mountain racers faced 60 years ago. In a sleek, comfortable Porsche Boxster it’s no problem. In a Mercedes W125? No thanks.