First Motor Race: Paris to Rouen Ignites Auto Era
The first organized automobile competition ran from Paris to Rouen on July 22, 1894, covering 79 miles. Twenty-one vehicles started; seventeen finished. The fastest was Count Jules-Albert de Dion, who arrived in six hours and 48 minutes driving a steam-powered De Dion-Bouton tractor. But the judges disqualified him, awarding the prize instead to Albert Lemaitre in a 3-horsepower Peugeot, because the rules favored reliability, economy, and ease of use over raw speed. This controversial decision shaped the early automotive industry by signaling that practical engineering mattered more than brute power. The event attracted massive press coverage and proved to skeptics that horseless carriages could maintain sustained speeds over real roads.
July 22, 1894
132 years ago
Key Figures & Places
France
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Paris
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Rouen
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Peugeot
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first ever motor race
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Albert Lemaître
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Jules-Albert de Dion
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Paris–Rouen (motor race)
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Jules-Albert de Dion
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Albert Lemaître
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Peugeot
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Kilómetro por hora
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1894 en sport
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Compétition automobile avant 1906
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Panhard
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Motorsportjahr 1894
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Automovilismo
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Rouen
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