The first Formula Three championship to take place in the
UK was the
Autosport F3 championship held in 1951, which was won by
Eric Brandon. By 1954, it had evolved into a national-level series and was organised by the British Racing and Sports Car Club (BRSCC). This was the 500cc period of Formula Three, which was active in the UK and other countries until 1959, at which point Formula Three was adapted into Formula Junior. In this period, there were often two or three series running concurrently and a single national series had yet to be firmly established. The
FIA reintroduced Formula Three in 1964 using a one-litre engine formula, and there were two F3 championships held in the UK that year. This was not the last occasion of two or more F3 championships running concurrently in the post-1964 era: from 1970 to 1973, there were three regional series (the
Lombard North,
John Player, and
Forward Trust championships) and there were normally two series between then and 1978, with many drivers running in both. However, rising costs in the late 2000s as a result of the arrival of big-spending engine manufacturers such as
Mercedes-Benz and
Volkswagen and hosting rounds abroad, combined with the revival of an FIA-backed
European Formula 3 Championship in 2012, starved the British series of grid numbers, which were down to the mid-teens by 2012. Facing a shortfall of entries in 2013, the calendar was cut from 10 to just four meetings in a bid to save the series. The following year saw the calendar back up to seven meetings, but grids remained small, with some races attracting as few as five cars. In October 2014, it was announced that the 2014 season would be the final season of the British Formula Three Championship after a planned merger with the
German Formula Three Championship fell through. ==Equipment==