Description
The Jaguar D-type helped to establish the Coventry marque’s place in Le Mans 24 Hours folklore, thanks to three successive victories between 1955 and 1957. With its long, elegantly sculptured bonnet and distinctive tail fin, the D-type quickly became
one of the world’s most recognisable sports racers – as well as one of the most successful in period. This book focuses on the fascinating history of XKD 526, one of only three D-types registered new in Australia. While its competition pedigree was
forged at some internationally celebrated circuits – Bathurst and Longford, for instance – it also raced at delightfully named bygones such as Gnoo Blas and Catalina Park. This is a comprehensive history of its distinguished track record.
Key content
• Having been brought into Australia by a Brisbane-based Jaguar dealer with an active interest in motorsport, XKD 526 was campaigned extensively in the country from 1956 until the dawn of the 1970s. Author John Elmgreen chronicles each of its competition appearances, complete with details of drivers, race results and the main opposition.
• XKD 526 was used by some of the most notable figures in Australian motorsport, including future racing car builder Frank Matich and expatriate Scot Doris ‘Geordie’ Anderson. Career profiles of both are included.
• Due to a controversial quirk in the regulations, the D-type was converted into a hard-top in 1961 – and Matich raced it in that configuration to win the Australian GT Championship at Warwick Farm.
• Of the three D-types that went to Australia as new cars, XKD 526 remained there for the longest period. The book logs its ownership history and full details of all modifications, repairs and restorations.
• The car’s evolution is illustrated with a sumptuous array of period photographs from some of Australia’s most comprehensive archives and elsewhere.
The author
John Elmgreen, born in Australia in 1948, has been a Jaguar XK enthusiast since his university days where he bought
his first Jaguar, an XK 120 DHC, to restore. A lawyer by profession, in the early 1970s he started collecting information on XKs throughout Australia, before leaving for England in 1975 and living in London for six years. In 1980, having taken his XK 120 to see the Le Mans 24-Hour race, he decided, together with Terry McGrath from Perth, to turn their collective research efforts into a book. Several years later The Jaguar XK in Australia was published in 1985. As the internet became an ever more productive source, he expanded his collection of historical XK information to the histories of every XK ever made (all 30,000 of them). Today, he is one of the leading authorities on ’50s Jaguar sports cars in Australia.