June 12, 1955 – Tragedy occurred at one of the racing world’s greatest spectacles, the Le Mans automobile race. 83 spectators ended up dying as a result of a flaming race car that rampaged off of the track after an accident at the highly attended 24-hour endurance race in France.
One of the deaths was the car’s pilot, French driver Pierre Bouillin, who raced under the name Pierre Levegh. The French government investigation reported that spectators were protected by a 5-foot-high earthen embankment but the driver Levegh was racing for the lead near the pit-stop area, he swerved to avoid fellow racer Mike Hawthorn’s Jaguar as it moved toward the pits.
Levegh’s car, going about 150 miles per hour, came up too fast on Lance Macklin’s Austin-Healey as it was catapulted upward, and seemingly exploded allowing over 60% of the vehicle’s debris to spray into the crowd of onlookers in the grandstands.
Besides the deaths, there were also nearly 180 more people reported as injured from the wreck. Levegh complained that the course was too narrow near the pit-stop area and the grandstand. Eerily he was correct in his proclamation.
The race continued on despite the tragic accident as ironically Hawthorn ended up winning the endurance race in record time.
To find more great daily sports history make sure to check out the Sports Jersey Dispatch and Pigskin Dispatch.
More From Sports History Network

December 24, 1947: NFL Cinderella Finalists
They called them “Cinderellas”—a couple of previously woebegone National Football League teams that had

Have a Bobby Heenan Christmas!
I was shaving my face a few weeks ago, listening to old Jean Shepherd

Greatest Comebacks In NBA Playoff History
The NBA playoffs are where the real action begins. Forget about the regular season

December 21, 1947: Just One Beer?
It was a long week—and a long wait—for the Chicago Cardinals as the club

50 Years of ‘Coexistence’ Between the Islanders and Rangers
Sports rivalries have existed ever since organized sports began to be played. The numbers

My Top 15 NFL Quarterbacks of the 1970s
My top 15 quarterbacks of the 1970s are based partly on statistics and my

The Harlem Globetrotters Very First Game
Figuring out how the Harlem Globetrotters started is a complicated story because there are

December 18, 1947: Holidays Don’t Mean Us!
How does a team adequately prepare for an NFL title game? Even more, so,