top of page

Competizione California Ferrari Heads to Auction


On Wednesday, December 6, 2017, at RM Sotheby’s “New York - Icons 2017” Event, will be offered a truly rare racing California with an enviable record.

A California Spyder More Equal Than Others

Within the hierarchy of the LWB California Spyders, 1959 Ferrari 250 GT LWB California Spyder by Scaglietti, chassis number 1451 GT sits at the very top of the pyramid. Built to full “Competizione” specifications, it was the second of eight California Spyders bodied in aluminum and bore the first outside-plug, Tipo 128F engine, topped with high lift camshafts, triple 40 DCL6 carburetors, and a competition-spec fuel tank with an external fuel filter. Horsepower was quoted at an exceptional 262.5 bhp at 7,300 rpm. For Le Mans, its pilot and owner would be Bob Grossman, a successful sports car dealer based in Nyack, a village in Rockland County, New York.

1451 GT at Le Mans

Bob Grossman was no stranger to Ferrari’s California Spyder, as he had owned and raced one earlier that season. As evidenced in this car’s specifications, however, not all California Spyders were created equal, and Grossman was about to find out the difference between a “standard” California Spyder and a proper factory-tuned and race-prepared macchina. Nonetheless, the car was very much fresh from the factory and barely turned out in time for the big race with the date of completion marked on the factory build sheets as 15 June, just five days before the race!

Of course, in the end, the California Spyder was on their side, and the car did not disappoint. Grossman proved to be a consistent driver and with Fernand Tavano on his side, the pair made an excellent team. The pair covered 294 laps over the course of 24 hours, landing them in 5th place overall and 3rd in their class. This was a very impressive finish for the team, especially considering that this was Grossman’s debut at the Circuit de la Sarthe!

1451 GT in the Northeast and the Bahamas

After Le Mans, 1451 GT returned to the factory to be properly finished in metallic silver, before being shipped to its new home in New York and being reunited with Grossman. In the meantime, Grossman had sold his other California Spyder, and when 1451 GT arrived, he immediately took to the track.

Grossman raced his California Spyder at SCCA events at Thompson, Bridgehampton, and at the Watkins Glen Grand Prix before 1451 GT was put on a boat and shipped to Nassau, where it took part in the Nassau Speed Week races. There, its most notable finish was taking 1st overall in the Memorial trophy race. The 1960 season saw Grossman and his California Spyder race at a variety of tracks in the Northeast, and it accrued 1st in class finishes at Marlboro on two separate occasions, Roosevelt and a 1st overall finish at Virginia International Raceway.

1451 GT on the Concours Circuit

After its racing career came to a close at the end of the 1960 season, the California Spyder left Grossman’s ownership and passed between owners in Maryland and Florida before being purchased by noted collector Gerry Sutterfield of Palm Beach Gardens. Sutterfield kept the car until around 1975 when he sold it to Sidney V. Stoldt of Ridgewood, New Jersey. Finally, the car was sold in 1981 to Jon Masterson of Long Beach, California, who immediately commissioned a complete restoration, refinishing the car in Rosso Corsa over a beige interior, but keeping its competition features intact. The restoration was completed in August of 1983 and the car’s first event on the show circuit was the Pebble Beach Concours d'Elegance. The car’s significance was not lost on the judges of the world’s most prestigious Concours, and 1451 GT came away with 1st in Class honors.

A string of both Concours and vintage racing events followed, and the car did exceptionally well both on the lawn and on the track. The car returned to Pebble Beach in 1994, raced at the Monterey Historics on four separate occasions, ran the Colorado Grand in 1990, and appeared in numerous other events around California and elsewhere in the United States, traveling as far away as France, where it was shown at the 1990 Bagatelle Concours in Paris.

Masterson finally decided to part ways with his beloved California Spyder when the current owner purchased it from him in 2007. Chassis number 1451 GT was not kept out of sight for long, and it appeared at the Cavallino Classic in 2008. Later that year, 1451 GT was granted Ferrari Classiche certification, confirming that it still boasts its original chassis, engine (complying with its original competition specifications), gearbox, and a rear differential of the correct type. In 2009, the car was driven in the Copperstate rally and shown at the Ferrari Club of America national meet a few months later and at the 5th Annual Masterpiece Concours in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.

Return to Le Mans Livery

After attending the historic races at Moroso during the Cavallino Classic in 2010, the owner decided that it was time for another full restoration. This time, the car would be returned to its proper Le Mans livery. The Ferrari specialists at Motion Products Inc. were chosen to undertake the restoration, which was completed in 2011, at which time the car promptly returned to the show circuit. Shown for the first time in its proper, period-livery at the Cavallino Classic in 2011, 1451 GT received a Platinum award. Since then, the car has only been shown at a handful of select events. Driven by its current owner on the highly exclusive Le 250 Tornano A Casa tour in France and Italy in 2014, it returned to the United States where it was put on display at the 60 Years of Ferrari in America celebration on Rodeo Drive in Beverley Hills, California. The California Spyder returned to Pebble Beach in 2015 where it earned 3rd in Class honors. The next year, it was shown at the Ferrari Club of America Annual Meet in Columbus, Ohio, where it fittingly won the N.A.R.T Award!

For the next owner, a number of tantalizing possibilities await, including continued entry to the world’s finest Concours events and vintage races, and it would surely be welcomed at next year’s Le Mans Classic. Thanks to its powerful engine and tall gearing fitted for Le Mans, the current owner comments that this is an absolute pleasure to drive, as evidenced by its numerous entries in vintage races and rallies with not only its current custodian, but also with Jon Masterson as well. Few Ferraris campaigned at Le Mans can eclipse its significance and purity, and it can be argued that 1451 GT is one of the most significant Ferraris in existence, a high point for both Grossman and N.A.R.T.’s career during one of the most celebrated eras in motorsport.

1451 GT will be auctioned on December 6, 2017 at the “New York - Icons” affair by RM Sotheby’s, at Sotheby’s 10th Floor Galleries, New York City. For more information, visit www.rmsothebys.com.

Salon images by Diana Varga and Simon Taylor, courtesy of RM Sotheby’s.

Historical images from the Maurice Louche Archives and The Klemantaski Collection.

21-3-29_ON00_CavallinoBanner.jpg
Featured from Our Store

No product

Like What You're Reading?

Subscribe, or collect rare back issues of Cavallino.

Never Miss a New Item!
Recent Posts
bottom of page