John Harvey (racing driver)

John Francis Harvey OAM (21 February 1938 – 5 December 2020) was an Australian racing driver. He was a top Speedcar driver for many years in the 1950s and 1960s, winning many championship races including the NSW Championship for three successive years and the Victorian Championship twice before turning his skills to road racing where he had a long and successful career until his retirement at the end of 1988. In 1987 John made history driving the General Motors Sunraycer to victory in the inaugural World Solar Challenge from Darwin to Adelaide, the first international race for purely solar powered cars.

John Harvey
NationalityAustralian
Born(1938-02-21)21 February 1938
Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
Died5 December 2020(2020-12-05) (aged 82)
Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
Retired1988
Australian Touring Car Championship
Years active1965–1986
TeamsHolden Dealer Team
Wins2
Best finish3rd in 1979 Australian Touring Car Championship
Previous series
1965–70
1966
1966–72
1969–72
Australian Drivers' Champ.
Australian 1½ Litre Champ.
Tasman Series
Australian Sports Car Champ.
Championship titles
1966
1971
1972
1983
Australian 1½ Litre Champ.
Australian Sports Car Champ.
Australian Sports Car Champ.
Bathurst 1000
Awards
Medal of the Order of Australia, 2020

Career

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Despite being regarded as one of the best Speedcar drivers in Australia, Harvey switched from speedway to road racing in 1964 following the deaths of a few friends in Speedcar racing, as well as a contentious 6-month suspension received from the Sydney-based National Speedcar Club officials after he was alleged to spin fellow driver Al Staples in a scratch race at the Sydney Showground Speedway. Although this decision was later reverted to no suspension at the drivers' meeting, Harvey decided to opt-out of Speedway to go road racing. He would make a short-lived comeback to racing speedcars in 1974 at the Liverpool Speedway in western Sydney after the track promoters changed the 440-metre (480 yd) D-shaped oval from a dirt track to a bitumen track, once again racing for the same car owner he had in the 1960s, Ronald Mackay.

Harvey drove cars such as the Austin Cooper S and Brabham BT14 Ford 1.5 litre. Harvey won the 1966 Australian 1½ Litre Championship in the Brabham and in the same year finished runner up in the Australian Drivers' Championship for 2.5 litre Australian National Formula cars in the same car, competing against much more powerful machinery, also winning the NSW 1.5 litre Road Racing Championship. He began involvement with Bob Jane's racing team in 1967 and moved to Melbourne. Harvey won the 1971 and 1972 Australian Sports Car Championships driving the McLaren M6B Repco V8 for Bob Jane. He drove Jane's Repco V8 powered Holden Torana in Sports Sedan racing in the early 1970s, winning both the Toby Lee Series at Oran Park and the Marlboro Series at Calder Park Raceway in 1973.

Reproduction of the 1976 Bathurst Bond/Harvey Torana

In 1976, Harvey won the first round of the Australian Touring Car Championship in a one-off drive in a B&D Autos-sponsored Torana L34 at Symmons Plains. Later in the year Harvey was signed up to co-drive with Colin Bond in the Holden Dealer Team Torana L34 which finished a close second in the Bathurst 1000.

The race-winning #7 Holden was accidentally credited with an extra lap, putting it ahead of the #1 Holden. The error was picked up after the race and the relevant race official offered the Holden Dealer Team, the official factory team, the right to appeal. However, the #7 car was entered by Ron Hodgson Motors, one of Holden's biggest dealerships. The Holden hierarchy decided it would be good 'politic' to let Bob Morris and British sportscar racer John Fitzpatrick keep the win. Holden apologised to John Harvey for this at a testimonial dinner in 2002.

With Bond leaving the Holden team at the end of 1976, Harvey then became the lead driver for the 1977 season.

In 1978, Peter Brock re-joined the Holden Dealer Team and became No.1 driver with Harvey driving the No.2 car. This established the pattern for almost a decade. The Harvey car effectively became Brock's backup, notably winning the 1978 Rothmans 500 event at Oran Park teamed with Charlie O'Brien. In 1980 Peter Brock took over the Holden Dealer Team, deciding John Harvey would not contest the ATCC races and contest only the endurance races at the end of the year. Peter Brock teamed with John Harvey (1980, 1981) for the CRC 300, winning both. This arrangement continued until the advent of Group A in Australia in 1985, though Harvey did run in rounds of the 1984 ATCC, driving Brock's #05 when Brock and Perkins were attempting to win Le Mans. Harvey would then run selected rounds in the 1985 ATCC, as well as rounds of the 1986 ATCC.

Harvey's biggest win came with the HDT at the 1983 James Hardie 1000. Originally to be partnered with Brock's brother Phil, Harvey qualified his #25 Holden VH Commodore (the car in which Brock and Perkins had won the 1982 race) in 5th place (Brock claimed pole in #05). After just eight laps, Brock's car blew its engine, seemingly putting him and Perkins out of the race. However, due to the pair being cross-entered in #25, Brock and Perkins then took over from Harvey for the rest of the race (leaving Phil Brock without a drive). The race win was controversial at the time as many felt Brock and Perkins should not have been allowed to move into the HDT's second car after theirs retired. Under race rules at the time, however, cross-entering was allowed and had actually been used in previous 1000s, though this was the first time drivers had moved from one car to another and had gone on to win the race.

Harvey would go on to finish second at Bathurst the following year in the last race for the Group C touring cars in what was a 1-2 form finish for the Dealer Team with Brock/Perkins bringing in their VK Commodore home first in front of Harvey's co-driver, 25-year-old Tasmanian David “Skippy” Parsons. Harvey would finish second again two years later for the HDT. Driving a VK Commodore SS Group A, he teamed with HDT driver/engineer Neal Lowe to finish second behind the Commodore of Allan Grice and Graeme Bailey.

Harvey won the 1986 Pukekohe 500 with Neal Lowe in their new Group A SS VK Commodore, and the pair finished second to HDT teammates Brock and Allan Moffat at the 1987 Nissan 500 Wellington.

Harvey split with Brock by 1987, being unhappy with Brock's flirtation with ‘New Age’ ideas like his ‘Energy Polariser’. Harvey told his side of the story of the split in Bill Tuckey's 1987 book The Rise and Fall of Peter Brock.

In March 1987, Harvey teamed up with Allan Moffat to drive their HDT built (and covertly bought by Moffat) Holden VL Commodore SS Group A to victory in the first round of the 1987 World Touring Car Championship at the famous Monza circuit in Italy. After finishing seventh, the pair were promoted as the first six BMW Motorsport backed BMW M3's were disqualified from the race for being some 50–80  kg underweight (after a protest from a privateer M3 team, the works M3's were found to have been fitted with lightweight carbon-fibre and kevlar body panels). Later at the Spa, 24 Hours in August, Moffat, and Harvey achieved a class win and finished 4th outright behind the works BMW Team M3's. Sydney driver Tony Mulvihill had also been listed to drive the #5 Rothmans sponsored Commodore at Spa, though he was caught out by the notorious Ardennes weather in qualifying and failed to qualify for the race. This forced Moffat and Harvey to drive the 24 hours with just the two of them while most other teams used at least 3 drivers.

After Moffat abandoned the Commodore in favor of Andy Rouse's Ford Sierra RS500, Harvey missed the 1987 James Hardie 1000 which was a round of the WTCC. It was the first Bathurst race Harvey had missed since 1972. The race was also the 9th and last Bathurst 1000 win for his longtime teammate Peter Brock.

Shortly after the Brock breakup John was appointed lead driver of the GM Sunraycer team and made two trips to the US for testing and race team preparation. He was recommended for his professionalism and discipline by Ray Borrett (Holden's reliability and “skunkworks” motor sport engineer). Ray was involved in  the development of Sunraycer in the US and became the race team manager.

Harvey's last Bathurst 1000 was in 1988 where he teamed with Kevin Bartlett in a Holden VL Commodore SS Group A SV to finish in 14th after qualifying 22nd. Early in the race, Harvey had been dicing with Brock, now racing a BMW M3. Harvey almost didn't get to drive in the 1988 race. At the time he was working for the Tom Walkinshaw owned Holden Special Vehicles and Walkinshaw had a rule that barring himself, senior management could not participate in dangerous activities such as being a race driver. Walkinshaw finally relented and let Harvey race at Bathurst, originally offering him the lead driver role in the HSV team's 3rd car, something which Harvey turned down stating that "I had been the number two behind Brock for eight years and I wasn't about to become the number three".

During Round 7 of the 1988 Australian Touring Car Championship at Sandown, and despite being part of the management team at HSV, Harvey was on hand to be part of Allan Moffat's team for the weekend (complete with a Moffat team ANZ Bank jacket). From 1988 Moffat was racing a Ford Sierra RS500 built by Swiss ace Ruedi Eggenberger. Ironically, Harvey's old HDT teammate Larry Perkins through his Perkins Engineering was running the factory-backed Holden team in the 1988 ATCC under the name of Holden Special Vehicles.

In February 1988, Harvey drove the new VL Commodore SS Group A SV which was the pace car driver for the first-ever NASCAR race held outside of North America, the Goodyear NASCAR 500 held at the then-new, A$54 million Calder Park Thunderdome in Melbourne.

Following the 1988 Tooheys 1000, Harvey retired from competitive motorsport to concentrate on his work with Holden and HSV.

In 2018, CAMS awarded Harvey a place in the Motor Sport Hall of Fame.

In the 2020 Australia Day Honours, Harvey was awarded the Medal of the Order of Australia for service to motor sports.[1]

Death

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Harvey died on 5 December 2020, aged 82, from a battle with lung cancer.[2]

Career results

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SeasonSeriesPositionCarTeam
1965Australian Drivers' Championship10thBrabham BT14 FordRC Phillips Sports Cars
Australian Touring Car Championship7thAustin Cooper S
1966Australian Drivers' Championship2ndBrabham BT14 FordRC Phillips Sports Cars
Australian 1½ Litre Championship1st
Australian Touring Car Championship4thAustin Cooper S
1967Tasman Series10thBrabham BT14 Ford
Australian Drivers' Championship4thBrabham BT14 Ford
Brabham BT11 Climax
1969Australian Drivers' Championship4thBrabham BT23E Repco
1970Tasman Series12thBrabham BT23E Repco
Australian Drivers' Championship3rdBrabham BT23E Repco
1971Australian Sports Car Championship1stMcLaren M6B RepcoBob Jane Racing
1972Australian Sports Car Championship1stMcLaren M6B RepcoBob Jane Racing
Australian Touring Car Championship9thHolden HQ Monaro GTS 350
1973Toby Lee Series1stHolden LJ Torana-RepcoBob Jane Racing
1976Australian Touring Car Championship11thHolden LH Torana SL/R 5000 L34B&D Autos
Holden Dealer Team
1977Australian Touring Car Championship6thHolden LH Torana SL/R 5000 L34
Holden LX Torana SS A9X
Holden Dealer Team
1978Australian Touring Car Championship8thHolden LX Torana SS A9XHolden Dealer Team
1979Australian Touring Car Championship3rdHolden LX Torana SS A9XHolden Dealer Team
1982Australian Endurance Championship24thHolden VH Commodore SSMarlboro Holden Dealer Team
1983Australian Endurance Championship11thHolden VH Commodore SSMarlboro Holden Dealer Team
1984Australian Touring Car Championship33rdHolden VH Commodore SSMarlboro Holden Dealer Team
Australian Endurance Championship4th
1985Australian Touring Car Championship19thHolden VK CommodoreMobil Holden Dealer Team
Australian Endurance ChampionshipNC
1986Australian Touring Car Championship11thHolden VK Commodore SS Group AMobil Holden Dealer Team
Australian Endurance Championship8th
South Pacific Touring Car Championship15th
1987World Touring Car ChampionshipNCHolden VL Commodore SS Group AAllan Moffat Racing
1987World Solar Challenge1stGM SunraycerGeneral Motors
1988Asia-Pacific Touring Car ChampionshipNCHolden VL Commodore SS Group A SVBob Forbes Racing

Complete Australian Touring Car Championship results

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(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position) (Races in italics indicate fastest lap)

YearTeamCar1234567891011DCPoints
1965Austin Cooper SSAN
7
7th-
1966Austin Cooper SBAT
4
4th-
1972Bob Jane RacingHolden HQ Monaro GTS 350SYMCALBAT
4
SANAIRWARSURORA9th9
1976B&D AutosHolden LH Torana SL/R 5000 L34SYM
1
CALORA11th23
Holden Dealer TeamSAN
4
AMA
4
AIR
3
LAKSANAIRSURPHI
Ret
1977Holden Dealer TeamHolden LH Torana SL/R 5000 L34
Holden LX Torana SS A9X
SYM
8
CAL
4
ORA
2
AMA
Ret
SAN
3
AIR
5
LAK
3
SAN
Ret
AIR
3
SURPHI
4
6th40
1978Holden Dealer TeamHolden LX Torana SS A9XSYM
3
ORA
Ret
AMASAN
4
WAN
2
CALLAK
Ret
AIR8th19
1979Holden Dealer TeamHolden LX Torana SS A9XSYM
1
CAL
3
ORA
4
SAN
6
WAN
2
SUR
3
LAK
2
AIR
3
3rd54
1984Marlboro Holden Dealer TeamHolden VH Commodore SSSANSYMWANSUR
Ret
ORALAK
9
AIR33rd9
1985Mobil Holden Dealer TeamHolden VK CommodoreWINSANSYMWANAIRCAL
5
SURLAKAMAORA
5
19th30
1986Mobil Holden Dealer TeamHolden VK Commodore SS Group AAMA
Ret
SYM
3
SAN
6
AIR
5
WAN
Ret
SURCAL
6
LAKWINORA11th61

Complete FIA European Touring Car Championship results

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(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position) (Races in italics indicate fastest lap)

YearTeamCar1234567891011121314DCPoints
1986 Mobil Holden Dealer TeamHolden VK Commodore SS Group AMNZDONHOCMISANDBNOZELNURSPA
22
SILNOGZOLJARESTNC0

Complete World Touring Car Championship results

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(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position) (Races in italics indicate fastest lap)

YearTeamCar1234567891011DCPoints
1987 Allan Moffat RacingHolden VL Commodore SS Group AMNZ
1
JAR
Ret
DIJ
Ret
NURSPA
ovr:4
cls:1
BNOSILBATCLDWELFJINC0

† Not registered for series & points

Complete Asia-Pacific Touring Car Championship results

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(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position) (Races in italics indicate fastest lap)

YearTeamCar1234DCPoints
1988 Bob Forbes RacingHolden VL Commodore SS Group A SVBAT
14
WELPUKFJINC0

Complete Bathurst 1000 results

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YearTeamCo-driversCarClassLapsPos.Class
pos.
1965 BMC John FrenchMorris Cooper SC24DNFDNF
1966 Kevin BartlettVolvo 122SD11815th4th
1971 Bob Jane Racing Team Bob JaneHolden LC Torana GTR XU-1D50DNFDNF
1973 Bob Jane Racing Bob JaneHolden LJ Torana GTR XU-1D1614th4th
1974 Norman G Booth Pty Ltd Jim HunterHolden LH Torana SL/R 50003001 – 6000cc7DNFDNF
1975 Massey Holden Peter JansonHolden LH Torana SL/R 5000 L34D143DNFDNF
1976 Holden Dealer Team Colin BondHolden LH Torana SL/R 5000 L343001cc - 6000cc1632nd2nd
1977 Holden Dealer Team Wayne NegusHolden LX Torana SS A9X Hatchback3001cc - 6000cc91DNFDNF
1978 Holden Dealer Team Charlie O'BrienHolden LX Torana SS A9X HatchbackA13919th9th
1979 Holden Dealer Team Ron HarropHolden LX Torana SS A9X HatchbackA57DNFDNF
1980 Marlboro Holden Dealer Team Ron HarropHolden VC Commodore3001-6000cc78DNFDNF
1981 Marlboro Holden Dealer Team Vern SchuppanHolden VC Commodore8 Cylinder & Over37DNFDNF
1982 Marlboro Holden Dealer Team Gary ScottHolden VH Commodore SSA1623rd3rd
1983 Marlboro Holden Dealer Team Peter Brock
Larry Perkins
Phil Brock
Holden VH Commodore SSA1631st1st
1984 Marlboro Holden Dealer Team David ParsonsHolden VK CommodoreGroup C1612nd2nd
1985 Mobil Holden Dealer Team David ParsonsHolden VK CommodoreC96DNFDNF
1986 Mobil Holden Dealer Team Neal LoweHolden VK Commodore SS Group AC1632nd2nd
1988 Bob Forbes Racing Kevin BartlettHolden VL Commodore SS Group A SVA14014th10th

Complete Sandown Endurance results

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YearTeamCo-driversCarClassLapsPos.Class
pos.
1973 Bob Jane Racingdrove soloHolden LJ Torana GTR XU-1D57DNFDNF
1977 Holden Dealer Teamdrove soloHolden Torana LX SS A9X HatchbackANADNFDNF
1978 Holden Dealer Teamdrove soloHolden Torana LX SS A9X Hatchback6000cc1282nd2nd
1979 Holden Dealer Teamdrove soloHolden Torana LX SS A9X HatchbackA1282nd2nd
1981 Marlboro Holden Dealer Team Vern SchuppanHolden VC CommodoreA1174th4th
1982 Marlboro Holden Dealer Team Gary ScottHolden VH Commodore SSD1084th4th
1983 Marlboro Holden Dealer Team Peter BrockHolden VH Commodore SSOver 3000cc127DSQDSQ
1984 Marlboro Holden Dealer Team David ParsonsHolden VK CommodoreOver 3000cc1273rd3rd
1985 Mobil Holden Dealer Team David ParsonsHolden VK CommodoreA78DNFDNF
1986 Mobil Holden Dealer Team Neal LoweHolden VK Commodore SS Group AB1258th8th

Complete Spa 24 Hours results

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YearTeamCo-driversCarClassLapsPos.Class
pos.
1986 Mobil Holden Dealer Team Peter Brock
Allan Moffat
Holden VK Commodore SS Group ADiv.341222nd10th
1987 Allan Moffat Racing Allan Moffat
Tony Mulvihill
Holden VL Commodore SS Group ADiv.34684th1st

References

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  1. ^ "Medal of the Order of Australia (OAM) entry for Mr John Francis HARVEY". Australian Honours Database. Canberra, Australia: Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet. 26 January 2020. Retrieved 6 December 2020. For service to motor sports.
  2. ^ Savage, Nic (6 December 2020). "Bathurst 1000 champion John Harvey dead at 82". News.com.au. Retrieved 6 December 2020.
  • Australia's Greatest Motor Race 1960-1999 (Chevron) © 2000
  • Australian Competition Yearbook 1974
  • Ten Top Drivers (Forsyth Publications) 1979
  • The Rise and Fall of Peter Brock (Bill Tuckey) 1987
  • Sunraycer Bill Tuckey, Chevron Publishing Group.
Sporting positions
Preceded by Winner of the Bathurst 1000
1983
(with Peter Brock and Larry Perkins)
Succeeded by