History: Huschke von Hanstein
Racing baron Huschke von Hanstein played a key role in the fifties and
sixties at Porsche as Racing Manager and PR Director at Porsche,
Germany, and was an honorary member of the Peachstate Region Porsche
Club of America. He was also a personal friend of Porsche Panorama
magazine editors Betty Jo and Leonard Turner. Being near and dear to
Peachstate, Huschke von Hanstein was affectionaly known here in Atlanta
as "Our Man in Stuggart."
3 January 2011 would have been the 100th birthday of Fritz “Huschke“
von Hanstein, one of the greatest personalities in the company history
of Dr. Ing. h.c. F. Porsche AG, Stuttgart. As Press Director, racing
manager, and a racing driver, from 1952 to 1974 Huschke von Hanstein
helped fashion the unique image of the brand name Porsche. As Sports
President of the AvD, the German Automobile Club, President of the
Supreme National Sports Commission (ONS), and as Vice-President of the
International Automobile Sport Association (FISA), he also represented
German motor sport and the Porsche name to the entire world.
Born in Halle, the son of a nobleman and major entrepreneur, after
passing the final school examination, the Abitur, Huschke von Hanstein
became one of the most successful racing drivers of the pre-war period.
He competed in his first motorcycle event in 1929, the ADAC Time Trials
Event, while he was still a student of business studies in Hamburg. He
pressed ahead with endurance events over the next few years on
motorcycles from FN, Ardie, BSA, and Norton, but soon switched to four
wheels, and scored success after success all over Europe as a works
driver with Hanomag, Adler, and BMW, in endurance events, hill events,
and circuit competitions. From 1936 he was already a regular competitor
in the legendary Le Mans 24-hour race, and two years later became
German hill events champion with a BMW. In 1940 von Hanstein scored a
huge success in the substitute Mille Miglia event, when he led the
German national team to overall victory with a BMW 328.
After the war, he initially continued with his motor sports activities
with own-build VW sports cars, before coming in contact with Porsche in
1950 by way of introduction from the former Auto-Union Racing Manager
Dr. Feuereisen. By September 1951 he was already a member of the
Porsche drivers team, which set 17 world records at Montlhry. A year
after the “Montlhry Adventure“, Huschke von Hanstein took on the dual
role of Racing Manager and PR Director at Porsche. During the ‘fifties
and sixties which followed, the baron played a key part in shaping the
sports style of the still young House of Porsche. As a manager and
driver he not only entered European events such as Le Mans, Targa
Florio, Giro di Sicilia, and the classic Lttich-Rome-Lttich endurance
contest, but also helped boost the image of the young company of
Porsche all over the world by racing appearances in the USA, Mexico,
Venezuela, and in the Bahamas.
With the bearing of a man of the world and self-assured elegance,
matched with a gift for rhetoric and mastery of many languages, Huschke
von Hanstein achieved a great reputation in the automobile world.
Together with his wife Ursula he was renowned as the perfect host, and
the soires at his house in Stuttgart’s Krherwald district were
legendary. As an ambassador for the brand name, he not only represented
Porsche to the international media, he was also an honoured guest at
countless international Porsche Club gatherings.
As a leading sports official, Huschke von Hanstein was closely linked
to Porsche as a company even after his departure, and remained so to
the end of his life. He died on 5 March 1996, and takes his final rest
next to his father Carlo von Hanstein in the cemetery at Wahlhausen. In
homage to this famous member of the company, the Porsche Museum keeps
one of Huschke von Hanstein’s service vehicles on permanent display.
The dark green Porsche 356 A 1600 S Coup with its cream-coloured
interior still bears witness today to the good taste of the legendary
“Racing Baron“.