Initially it was predominantly British riders who would – following the First World War – join the ‘Continental Circus’, the name for the racing family which criss-crossed Europe at that time.
Fast-forward some 30 years to the mid-1950s, and the British contingent had been joined by more riders from the Commonwealth, notably Australia, New Zealand, South Africa and Rhodesia, including, in 1955, the man who was soon to become one of the top privateers: Australia’s Bob Brown.
Brown was born in Little Plains, near Inverell, New South Wales, but grew up in Sydney, where he drove taxis and worked as a motor mechanic. He began racing on the Australian dirt tracks using a KTT Velocette, and quickly attracted support, firstly from Ron Kessing then from the local AJS and Velocette…