C-Type | Dark Green | ||||
Open Two Seater | |||||
Right Hand Drive | |||||
24 November 1952 | |||||
E1024-8 | |||||
K1024 | |||||
JH11672 | |||||
3 October 1952 | United States | ||||
1952 | British Racing Green | ||||
2023 | Green | ||||
Rest: Nice | |||||
Other Jaguar | |||||
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878FUF | 464R |
52 more photos below ↓
Record Creation: Entered on 13 July 2023.
Record Changes
Changes to the database entry on this car are below; they do not necessarily mean the car itself changed (hide this).
2008-10-24 02:07:16 | Coventry Racers writes:
The record was updated:
2008-10-30 20:43:18 | Coventry Racers writes:
The record was updated:
Heritage Notes
Registered 878 FUF
Photos of XKC024
Click slide for larger image. This car has 53 photos. (Dates are when image was uploaded.)
Exterior Photos (11)
Uploaded July 2023:
Uploaded August 2011:
Action Photos (1)
Uploaded August 2011:
Details Photos: Exterior (19)
Uploaded July 2023:
Detail Photos: Interior (10)
Uploaded July 2023:
Detail Photos: Engine (8)
Uploaded July 2023:
Detail Photos: Other (4)
Uploaded July 2023:
Comments
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2023-07-13 07:36:06 | pauls writes:
Car to be at auction 8/23
rmsothebys.com/en/auctions/mo23/monterey/lots/r0111-1952-jaguar-c-type/1361439
Auction description:
Monterey 17 - 19 August 2023
Lot 249
1952 Jaguar C-Type
$3,500,000 - $4,250,000 USD
Chassis No. XKC 024
Documents US Title
One of just 53 genuine Jaguar C-Types produced
Raced by Phil Hill at the Lone Star 200 in Austin, Texas, finishing 2nd overall
Placed 1st overall at the six-hour Torrey Pines endurance race in 1955, driven by Pearson ‘Pete’ Woods
Well-known in the C-Type community, with documented ownership from new
Restored in the late 1980s by marque experts in the United Kingdom
Presented in its factory-correct color of British Racing Green
Offered for the first time in nearly three decades; accompanied by a generous file and copies of period racing photos
One of the 53 genuine cars is offered for sale here for the first time in nearly three decades and possesses a well-documented chain of ownership from new.
After completing assembly 3 October 1952, chassis XKC 024 left the factory just as it presents today in quintessential British Racing Green. Before being dispatched to the United States, the car was subjected to a 90-mile road test through the hills of Lindley, United Kingdom by revered Jaguar factory test driver Norman Dewis. Accompanying the sale is a copy of the incredibly detailed road test report prepared by Dewis on 31 October 1952.
After receiving Dewis’ feedback, Jaguar’s Experimental Department fine-tuned the XKC, and it was dispatched 24 November 1952 for delivery to the pivotal Jaguar dealer, Charles Hornburg of Los Angeles, California. Hornburg sold the car to its first owner, Alex Thompson of Denver, Colorado, who immediately set about racing the car. XKC 024’s first recorded race is perhaps its most famous. On 12 April 1953, Phil Hill piloted it to a reportedly spectacular 2nd overall finish in the Lone Star 200 at Bergstrom Air Force Base in Austin, Texas. Alex Thompson himself also piloted it to 13th overall in a race later that day.
Thompson would sell the XKC mere months later to Jaguar dealer James Harrison of Colorado Springs, Nevada who raced the car at the East vs. West Meeting at March Air Force Base in Riverside, California on 8 November 1953. Driving under #122, Harrison finished 48th in the novice race and was participating in the main race when he and XKC 024 suffered a serious crash. Per the Jaguar C-Type Registry, the car was repaired using a new tub, center body section, and bonnet.
After its refurbishment, curation of the car passed to Bob Downey and Pearce “Pete” Woods. XKC 024 is known to have returned to the track in 1955, most successfully at Torrey Pines on 22 October where Woods won the six-hour endurance competition, coming in 1st overall after driving the entirety of the race “ironman-style” without a relief driver. Harold Erb also piloted the car in September 1955 at Goleta Airport in Santa Barbara, California. Accompanying the sale are copies of period photos showing Pearce winning Torrey Pines, racing under #70, and Erb at Goleta Airport, racing under #155.
Following the 1955 season, XKC 024 passed through a series of documented owners before landing in the possession of Jim Kirk of Pacific Palisades, California sometime in the 1970s. Copies of period photos showing the car at Kirk’s property wearing black California license plates numbered “899 BNB” accompany the sale. In 1980 the car made its way home to the United Kingdom after being purchased by Peter Agg of Surrey. From Agg, ownership passed to Robert Reed, an American living in Geneva, Switzerland who used the car in the then relatively new Mille Miglia Storica in the mid-1980s.
In late 1988, XKC 024 received a full restoration by marque experts John Pearson of Forge Garage in conjunction with RS Panels, both of the United Kingdom and considered to be best in their respective fields at the time. Upon the restoration’s completion, the car was sold to Jim Wallis, then to Dalle Carbonare of Italy who sold the car to the consignor in the mid-1990s. Under the consignor’s decades of care, XKC 024 has regularly participated in many C-Type rallies, events, concours displays and has even been pressed into service as a daily driver.
It is important to note that, while stamped to match the factory-fitted block, the engine presently installed in the car is not the original unit. Swapped out sometime during its racing days, what is understood to be the car’s original, numbers-matching (but unserviceable) engine block was sourced by the consignor from a prior owner and is included in the sale. The block is now built up into an impressive-looking display engine, though without internals; it is complete with head, cam covers, and even has a pair of correct-specification, sand-cast SU carburetors.
A genuine C-Type with period racing history, including time under the control of the legendary Phil Hill, XKC 024 is a striking example of Jaguar’s revered Le Mans-winner. A true supercar of the period, it should provide exhilarating road use, entry to vintage motoring events worldwide, as well as making for a fine addition to even the most accomplished collections.