F1 personalities remember motoring journalist Alan Henry

F1 personalities remember motoring journalist Alan Henry

Published Mar. 7, 2016 9:48 a.m. ET

Veteran F1 journalist Alan Henry, who served as a consultant to Speedvision/SPEED's TV coverage for many years, died at the age of 68 on Saturday.

Known to his friends as ‘AH,’ Henry was respected by colleagues, drivers and other F1 insiders, and he was regarded one of the sport’s most influential writers for over four decades.

Bob Varsha wrote on Twitter on Saturday: “RIP Alan Henry, a great writer and source of information, advice and counsel to our team in the days of F1 on Speedvision/SPEED.”

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A motor sport fan in his youth, Alan got his start as a freelancer in British club racing in 1968, while still working for Barclays International. He gave up the security of a regular 9-5 job to become a fulltime writer when he joined Motoring News in 1970.

In 1973 he became the publication’s full time F1 correspondent, and in 1978 he was appointed editor. Later he became the Grand Prix editor of Autocar as well as correspondent for The Guardian, and he also wrote for F1 Racing magazine.

In addition to day-to-day reporting duties he also became a prolific author, and was for many years the editor of the Autocourse annual.

One of his first works was a biography of his close friend Ronnie Peterson, originally published in 1975, which remains the definitive story of the “Superswede.” Later he wrote books with the likes of Derek Bell and John Surtees, as well as histories of marques such as McLaren, Ferrari, Williams, March and Brabham.

Access to drivers and team personalities was much easier in the past than it is now, but even by the standards of the time Alan had extraordinary close relationships with many of the sport’s biggest players. He could count Niki Lauda as a personal friend – as with Peterson they met in F2 days – and from the early years was close to the likes of Bernie Ecclestone, Max Mosley, Ron Dennis and Frank Williams.

Dennis paid tribute on Saturday: “I have known Alan Henry for more than 40 years, and, as the decades rolled by, he and I became good friends. As a journalist he was knowledgeable, accurate, intrepid yet fair-minded, and as a man he was warm, kind, loyal and always funny.”

All these guys trusted and respected him, even when he was critical of them in print. That special bond ensured that he always got to the bottom of any story. In the years before internet sound bites Alan’s words and opinions always had authority, and they will continue to do so for anyone reading about the past.

As well as being a brilliant writer he was also a superb raconteur, always ready with an amusing anecdote about a driver, team owner or colleague that could never make it to the printed page.

Illness forced Alan to stop travelling to races a few years ago, but he remained in touch with the sport, and he still came to the British GP. He was a member of the BRDC, and at one point served on the organization’s board.

We send our sincere condolences to Alan’s family and to his many close friends and colleagues in the F1 world.

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