Chinetti was born in
Jerago con Orago, a little north of
Milan. The son of a gunsmith, he apprenticed in his father's workshop where he earned a lathe operator's certificate at age 12 and qualified as a mechanic at age 14. In 1917, at age 16, he went to work for
Alfa Romeo as a mechanic, where he met another young hire named
Enzo Ferrari. The rise to power of
Benito Mussolini's
National Fascist Party in his native country prompted a move to
Paris where he worked for Alfa Romeo as a salesman. Chinetti also began to race sports cars as a driver, earning a reputation in endurance events, the
24 Hours of Le Mans in particular. Driving cars from Alfa Romeo,
Talbot, and Ferrari, Chinetti competed in every Le Mans race held between 1932 and 1953. He entered a car in the 1954 race, but as sponsor rather than driver. Following the outbreak of World War II in Europe, Chinetti went to the United States of America. He traveled as part of the
Lucy O'Reilly Schell Écurie Bleue team, that also included driver
René Dreyfus, for an appearance at the 1940
Indianapolis 500. Chinetti remained in New York, getting approval to work at
Pratt and Whitney and then supporting the Allied war effort at J. S. Inskip, working on Rolls-Royce engines in the same shop as Italian master mechanic Alfred Momo. Chinetti applied for American citizenship in 1947, and took the oath of allegiance on 6 March 1950. His naturalization was sponsored by
Zora Arkus-Duntov. When the war ended, Chinetti returned to Europe in late 1949. He first went to Paris, only to find that his property had been lost in the war. From there he carried on to Modena for a meeting with Enzo Ferrari, whose car factory had been converted to making machine tools for wartime production. The two men met on Christmas Eve in Ferrari's office. Some accounts of this evening describe a highly dramatic meeting between an uncertain and somewhat despondent Ferrari considering abandoning the making of sports cars, and a confident and enthusiastic Chinetti countering that Ferrari must stop making machine tools and resume building racing cars; that the race cars would be paid for by building road cars that Chinetti would sell in America; and placing an order then and there for 25 cars. Other sources point out that in June of that year, Ferrari had already begun building a new racing car; the
125. This new car would use an engine designed by
Gioacchino Colombo in August 1945 and first fired on a test bench in September 1946, and that one month after that Ferrari issued a brochure outlining the types of cars he planned to build. It is also pointed out that, while Chinetti had been selling cars such as pre-war Alfas and Talbots to American customers from as early as 1946, he would not have then been in a position to commit to an order of the rumored magnitude. In either case, it seems that Chinetti left the meeting with an agreement to be Ferrari's agent in France and the United States. As both an individual team owner and through N.A.R.T., Chinetti not only left a legacy of fielding some of the best drivers of the era, but of cultivating some of the highest quality up-and-coming talent, the two groups including names such as
Stirling Moss,
Mario Andretti,
Phil Hill,
Pedro and
Ricardo Rodríguez,
Graham Hill, and
Jean-Pierre Jarier. One driver that Chinetti tried to promote was journalist
Denise McCluggage. The three-time Le Mans winner submitted McCluggage's name as one of his drivers for Le Mans, but the application was denied. Chinetti was able to sponsor
Yvonne Simon in the
1950 24 Hours of Le Mans partnered with Michel Kasse, and fielded the all-female team of Simon and
Betty Haig at the
1951 24 Hours of Le Mans. Chinetti Sr. sold his business in 1977. He remained in
Greenwich, Connecticut after his retirement and died on 17 August 1994 at the age of ninety-three.
Ferrari Enzo Ferrari appointed Chinetti as his Ferrari factory agent in the United States. Chinetti opened the first—and for a while the only—Ferrari dealership in the country. Later his territory became all areas east of the Mississippi River. Chinetti's reputation continued to draw clients from across the country throughout his career. In addition to handling Ferrari, Chinetti Motors was also U.S. agent for
Automobili OSCA of Bologna until 1967. The original showroom of his
Greenwich, Connecticut business has been demolished but the business with new location remains open, owned by Miller Motorcars, a Ferrari-
Maserati dealership. The first Ferrari sold by Chinetti to the US was a Tipo 166 MM Touring Barchetta, chassis 0002 M, sold to Tommy Lee in Los Angeles in the first three months of 1949. The second car sold, and the first sold through the dealership, was a
Ferrari Tipo 166 Spyder Corsa, chassis 016-I, to
Briggs Cunningham. Cunningham drove it to second place at Watkins Glen in 1949. That car ultimately ended up in Cunningham's motorcar museum. The third car was Tipo 166 MM Barchetta 0010 M sold to Kimberly-Clark tissue-paper fortune heir Jim Kimberly. Kimberly and the Ferrari appeared at some eastern events, but on 1 April 1951 with Marshall Lewis behind the wheel it would be the first Ferrari to race and win west of the Mississippi. In 1952 Chinetti sold 1951 Ferrari 212 Export Barchetta 0078E to Phil Hill near the beginning of the future World Champion's career. Chinetti would later hire Hill as a driver, and later still recommend him to Ferrari, who at first put him in
sports-racing cars and later added Hill to their
Formula One (F1) team. Most of Chinetti's other sales were kept secret to protect the privacy of his wealthy clients.
N.A.R.T. Chinetti founded the privateer North American Racing Team (N.A.R.T.) with financial support from George Arents and Jan de Vroom. Chinetti's reputation and existing relationship with Ferrari guaranteed a supply of former works cars and support for many years. The team ran very successful endurance racing programs both at Sebring and Le Mans right into the 1970s. Ferrari's F1
158s raced in N.A.R.T. blue and white for two races at the end of the 1964 season. When the FIA refused to homologate the
Ferrari 250 LM for international sports car racing, Enzo Ferrari returned his competition license and vowed to never race in Ferrari Red again. With the championship on the line, Ferrari's cars appeared in N.A.R.T. colors for the 1964
United States Grand Prix at Watkins Glen, and again at the
1964 Mexican Grand Prix. By the start of the 1965 season the dispute was resolved, and the cars were painted red once again. In addition to the racing cars, the team commissioned limited-run special variants of Ferrari road cars. One such project was the
275 GTS/4 NART Spyder. Left without a convertible model after production of the
250 GT California ended in 1962, Chinetti obtained factory permission to have coachbuilder
Scaglietti convert a series of 4-cam 275GTB/4 coupés into open-top cars. Of a planned run of 25, only 10 are believed to have been built. In the mid-1970s, Chinetti commissioned
Giovanni Michelotti to begin a series of
Ferrari Daytonas with heavily customized bodywork that would be called the Ferrari 365 GTB/4 Daytona NART Spider. The first was shown at the 1974
Turin Auto Show. The second conversion was chassis number 15965, and was built up as a racing car in anticipation of an appearance at the 1975 24 Hours of Le Mans, although the car was withdrawn before the race. In 1975 Chinetti ordered three more Michelotti conversions built to road car specifications. One of these three, chassis 14299, was completed in 1977 and then specially customized by Chinetti as a gift for his wife. ==Personal life==