The date is 2 July, 1907, and the location the French coastal town of Dieppe. After some rainfall, the air has cleared and the weather has turned rather fine. It would be an ordinary Sabbath for all the labourers in the surrounding fields, except that the local roads have been closed and taken over by 37 smoking, snorting, devilish contraptions, charging about and raising dust, in the name of the Automobile Club de France’s second Grand Prix. The cream of France’s motor industry is there, including Renault, Brasier, De Dietrich, Darracq and Clément-Bayard, but despite their best efforts, the eventual victor, the one car which could go the 477.4 miles faster than all the rest, was a product of Italian soil. Its driver was a strapping 25-year-old named Felice Nazzaro,…