Jean Trévoux

Jean Claude Marie Trévoux (born February 27, 1905 in Petit Quevilly (Seine-Inférieure) and died on October 29, 1981 in Mexico City) was a French rally and racing driver and winner of four editions of the Monte Carlo Rally.

Jean Trévoux
Jean Trévoux (1939).
NationalityFrench
BornJean Claude Marie Trévoux
(1905-02-27)27 February 1905
Le Petit-Quevilly
Died29 October 1981(1981-10-29) (aged 76)
Mexico City

Biography

Born in Le Petit-Quevilly, Trévoux began his racing career in early 1932 driving a Bugatti and winning the Criterium Paris to Nice race. He also drove a Bentley Blower at the Le Mans 24 Hours that year but crashed out on the first lap.

In 1934 Jean took the first of his four wins at Monte-Carlo, as co-driver to Louis Gas. In 1939 he took a joint win with Joseph Paul. After racing returned following World War II, he claimed two other wins, driving a Hotchkiss and Delahaye 175 respectively.

Also success in Rallye du Maroc 1935 and 1937, and Criterium International de Tourisme Paris-Nice 1934.

He later settled in Mexico during the late 1940s, marrying a Mexican woman and opening a restaurant in Mexico City called Restaurant Bar La Cucaracha.[1]

gollark: That *would* have been helpful for some of my plans, yes.
gollark: Now, LyricLy *bad*, but LyricLy deserves to exist as a helper eternally.
gollark: No, those are not your main mistakes.
gollark: https://discord.gg/bUJsVqRen4
gollark: (from esolangs 2)

References

  1. "Jean Trevoux". Archived from the original on 2016-06-23. Retrieved 2017-04-15.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.