Ian Gunn's motorcycle racing career spanned 50 years, from 1950 to 2000, in the UK and US, during which time he raced with such greats as
Geoff Duke,
Phil Read,
Mike Hailwood,
Eddie Lawson,
Colin Edwards, and
Scott Russell. His career included two Grand Prix, but mostly he raced in the "club races". He started riding motorcycles at Cambridge in 1945, and started racing in 1950. He married Freda Pilcher (1924–1975) on the Saturday of August Bank holiday, raced his
International Norton at
Blandford, Dorset, on the Monday, before continuing on to their honeymoon. By 1951 it had evolved to a
Manx/Inter hybrid, which he raced at one of the few motorcycle races at
Goodwood, and then in the
1951 Isle of Man Senior TT, finishing 37th out of 80 starters. He put motorcycle racing aside while at RRE, but continued to ride on the street. Before leaving for Canada in 1956 he sold all his motorcycles, including a 1928
CS1 Norton, named "Father William" after
Lewis Carroll's You Are Old, Father William for its reliability in spite of its age. He had no bikes while at UBC, but bought a Ducati 200 shortly after moving to IBM, and started racing with Association of American Motorcycle Road Racers (AAMRR). Initially his race transport was a
VW Beetle with the passenger and rear seats removed. In 1964 it was replaced by a
VW bus, and the 200 was replaced by a
Ducati Mach 1S 250. On that bike he won his first race, at one of the few motorcycle races at Watkins Glen. He also raced it in the
FIM 1965
US Grand Prix at Daytona. He qualified in the front half of the field, and ran as high as 10th, but retired with a minor mechanical failure. By 1967, it was clear that
2-strokes were dominating the sport, so he bought a Kawasaki A1R (250cc), which he raced through the end of the decade. From 1971 to 1976 he took a break from motorcycling. In the first part of this break he acquired a vintage Ferrari 375MM, which he raced in vintage races, including one at Watkins Glen. In 1974 and 1975 he tended to his wife, who died in August 1975. By 1976, road racing had adopted the "formula" structure, which allowed 2-strokes and 4-strokes to compete on a more even basis. He acquired a
Ducati 750 SS which he raced successfully through 1990. In 1991 he bought a 1990
Ducati 888 SP2. With its electronic ignition and electronic fuel injection, this brought his professional expertise to the race track. He was one of the first privateers with his own chip writer. In parallel with racing modern bikes, he also raced vintage bikes, mostly English and Italian bikes from the 1950s and 1960s. He raced both new and old bikes through 2000, saying "I’ll keep at it as long as it is fun". Regretting the bikes he sold when he left England, and determined not to make the same mistake again, he kept all but two of the bikes he bought in the US, and bought back "Father William" in 1993, ending up with 40 motorcycles, which he kept in a milking parlour and hay barn attached to the house. Gunn also owned a few classic cars, including a 1930 supercharged 1750 SS
Alfa, originally raced at
Brooklands by
George Eyston and a 1971
Datsun 240Z. In April 1972, Gunn paid $10,000 for
Ferrari 375 MM chassis No. s/n 0382 AM, the ninth and last of the 1953 4.5litre V12 spyder series cars built for racing in 1954. Built originally for American semi-professional racer Bill Spear, after competing in SCAA events in the hands of various owner/drivers, Gunn competed in the car for the 1972 and 1973 events, before retiring the by then non-working car to his collection. After Gunn's death in 2008, his three daughters sold the car to noted Ferrari collector Andreas Mohringer of
Austria. After refurbishment and then display at the
Pebble Beach concourse event, it was shipped back to Paul Russell's shop in New England. == Notes ==