Mi 12 Nov, 2008 09:12
"Theresa Wallach, first WIMA International Vice-President, pictured here after winning a Brooklands Gold Star. Theresa grew up in London, England and learned to ride much against her parents wishes. She competed in trials, scrambles and road racing. In 1928 she won a scholarship to study engineering at what is now the City University, London. In 1935 she undertook an epic journey from London to Cape Town. She, and her travelling companion Florence Blenkiron, were the first people (male or female) to cross the Sahara on a motorcycle Her story of this amazing adventure has been published recently under the title "The Rugged Road" (full review in the TRAVEL section). In 1939 she won a coveted Brooklands Gold Star. Brooklands was a famous English road race circuit and a Gold Star was awarded to any rider managing a 100mph + lap. In his biography Francis Beart, the ace Norton tuner recalls how Theresa walked into his workshop at Brooklands and asked if she could borrow his 348cc International Norton for the next weekends race meeting. He told her it would cost five pounds, which she didn't have but managed to borrow. When the day came it was pouring with rain but her lap was timed at 101.64mph - much to the annoyance of Beart's top rider, Johnny Lockett, who had never taken the machine to a 3 figure lap! Theresa's was one of the last Gold Stars awarded before Brooklands was closed down at the start of the second World War.