Women Drivers Association
The Women Drivers Association is the governing body of the Women's GT World Championship and the Women's GT Junior Cup. Its origins can be traced back to the early years of Grand Prix history.
Early beginnings (1905 - 1914)
Bertha Benz founded the Bertha Benz Stiftung für Motorsportlerinnen (Bertha Benz Foundation for female racing drivers) in 1902, when Grand Prix racing became more and more popular and the first female pioneers in motorsports had entered the scene. At first, the foundation focussed on signing only german female drivers to race Benz cars in several European motorsport events.
Soon the Daimler Motoren-Gesellschaft (DMG), rival firm of Benz & Cie. at that time, got the upper hand in motorsports with their Mercedes 35hp, and they even wanted to sign famous French racing lady Camille du Gast to drive such a car in the 1904 Gordon Bennett Cup, because her performance in the 1903 Paris-Madrid trial (the "Race of Death", as it was later called) had impressed the chairmen of the DMG very much. But then the French Government barred women from competing in motorsports altogether, and du Gast had to decline the offer.
Another notable driver was Countess Elsa d'Albrizzi, who finished ninth in the 1899 Padua-Vicenza-Thiene-Bassano-Trevisio-Padua trial, driving a Benz lightcar. The Countess became good friends with Bertha Benz and helped her finance the Bertha Benz Foundation and female drivers in general to enable them to partake in major motorsport events, even when they weren't driving a factory Benz car.
Finally, Camille du Gast was able to sign a contract with the Daimler Motoren-Gesellschaft to race one of their Mercedes 35hp in the inaugural Brighton Speed Trials in 1905, only to be beaten by British rising star Dorothy Levitt in a Napier 80hp. Although Bertha Benz felt sorry for du Gast, she was delighted to see the Mercedes 35hp lose at this major event.
Bertha Benz herself travelled to Brooklands several times during 1909 and 1913, but her husband refused to let her finance promising female drivers like Muriel Thompson and Christobel Ellis, because he feared, the increasing political tensions between Germany and Great Britain at that time could cause immense trouble for Benz & Cie., if German authorities could get the impression, that the company financed British racing drivers on behalf of Bertha Benz.
Bertha was disappointed, but found herself agreeing with her husband's fears. So she cancelled her already scheduled trip to Indianapolis in the spring of 1912 and focussed solely on running the company, before the war broke out in August 1914.
The Golden Age of Grand Prix Racing (1928 - 1937)
During these years Bertha Benz donated Ladies' Cups in major racing events. One of these was the German Klausenbergrennen (Klausen hillclimb), and despite her age, Bertha still presented the trophy to the winning lady personally until 1928. That year, Beatrice Else Frieda Margarethe "Margot" Gilka-Bötzow, Countess of Einsiedel, who raced under the name Margot Einsiedel, became the new president of the Bertha Benz Foundation. Einsiedel had won the Klausen hillclimb Ladies' Cup from 1926 to 1931 and even supported the Bertha Benz Foundation with her own money in all these years.
The ambitious Countess soon set her eyes on the male dominated Grand Prix scene in order to prove what female racing drivers were capable of outside the often ridiculed Ladies' Cups. Therefore she purchased several Alfa Romeo Monzas and founded the Deutsches Alfa Romeo Damenteam (German Alfa Romeo Ladies Team) in 1931. Notable female racing drivers driving for the very first exclusive ladies team in the history of motorsports were Anne-Cecile Rose-Itier, Mariette Helene Delangle (better known as Mlle. Helle-Nice), Vittoria Orsini and Eileen Ellison.
The ladies participated in Grand Prix all over Europe and even in South America until 1936. By that time, the Daimler Benz AG and Auto Union were utterly dominating the scene, so Margot Einsiedel and British rising star Kay Petre, who was a very good friend of German Auto Union driver Bernd Rosemeyer, tried several times to purchase a couple of Auto Union C types or at least the next best thing, upgraded Auto Union B types. This should have helped the ladies to be more competitive, but the company itself as well as Nazi authorities refused such a deal. It was obvious, that the Nazis didn't approve of female racing drivers at all, because it was highly contradictory to how they saw "modern" women.
Helle-Nice also crashed heavily during the Sao Paulo Grand Prix of 1936 and retired from Grand Prix racing altogether afterwards, which ultimately led to the decline of the German Alfa Romeo Ladies Team. Margot Einsiedel financed Anne-Cecile Rose-Itier's private entries in the smaller voiturette class until 1939, when World War 2 broke out. By then, the financial situation of the Bertha Benz Foundation was already hopeless.