Stewart had already clinched his third World Driver's Championship when the teams came to Watkins Glen, and he intended the final Grand Prix of 1973 to be his swan song.
"I had decided in April that I would retire at the end of the season, win or lose," Stewart recalled. "Watkins Glen was going to be my last race in a Formula One car. François Cevert was going to be number one in the team for 1974, although he never knew it. Ken Tyrrell and I had kept it a secret that I was going to retire after that race. In fact, not even my wife, Helen, who was with me that weekend, knew."
With just a few minutes left in the Saturday morning qualifying session, however, the track suddenly fell quiet. Cevert had crashed violently in the uphill Esses heading onto the back of the circuit, between Turns Three and Four. Fighting the car as he went up the hill, Cevert ran too high on the kerbs and slid into the right hand guardrail. The car then lashed sideways across the track and struck the Armco on the left side of the track at 150 mph at an almost 90 degree angle. The nose of the car submarined into the ground, causing the car to flip upwards on over the barrier, coming to rest upside down on top of the Armco. Jody Scheckter's McLaren was close behind, and he stopped and rushed over to help Cevert out of the car, but Cevert had died instantly. Ken Tyrrell had lost a great driver and Jackie Stewart an outstanding teammate at the circuit where Cevert had taken his only Grand Prix win. "It was a horrendous accident which took the life of a wonderfully charming, personable, handsome young man, who was a tremendous friend to both Helen and me," Stewart said.
The Tyrrells of Stewart and Chris Amon had earned the fifth and twelfth spots on the grid, but the team decided to withdraw in tribute to Cevert, and Stewart's driving career was over after 99 races and an all-time record 27 Grand Prix wins.
Thanks for sharing. I was there on race day. You inspired me to go dig up my slides I took that day and get them transferred to digital.
eickmeyer28 2 weeks ago
my dad was there hes got photos of the greyhound bus they burned and when they blew up the shit house
The1989chevyguy 4 weeks ago
I was there in 73 and 74. I was 18, and about 7 or 8 of us rented a camper and went for the weekend. What a great time. I saw the Bud Man ride in on the amphibious vehicle. It had NY plates! I remember the PA guy on Sat. morning telling people not to panic, but there was a leopard walking down the main strait away. I remember some guy driving through the bog, he beeped his horn and his car was instantly distroyed by cans and bottles. Thanks for the pictures, great to actually see these things.
2wentpostal 1 month ago
I was there as well that weekend. I was 13 yrs old. Remember it very well. Your pictures bring back alot of memories. The Armco is still there.
JimKzx141 1 month ago
great photos thanks for sharing. I love old cameras. I have my grandfather's old Minolta xe7 which is an amazing camera.
underbird 3 months ago
Thanks for sharing your memories my friend. :)
windsock777 3 months ago