Daily Mail

Stirling hero off the track

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QUESTION

DidSir Stirling Moss save three women from drowning in Las Vegas?

Sir Stirling Moss did save a number of people, with a little help from his friends. On July 3, 1975, a summer monsoon triggered a flash flood in the Las Vegas valley. A torrent swept down Flamingo Wash, a major flood channel, into Caesars Palace car park on the Strip.

A blocked culvert saw waters reach 20 ft deep, flooding hundreds of cars. Some vehicles were recovered miles from where they had been parked. rushing water brought down telephone poles, sewage plants were overwhelme­d and fetid water was expelled through manhole covers.

Morris Keston, a London tailor, was staying at Caesars Palace. He was friends with British F1 driver Stirling Moss, who was in LA, testing the new Cadillac Seville for a motor magazine.

Keston had mentioned this to Frank Sinatra who was playing at Caesars Palace. Sinatra was a fan of Moss and the night before the flood asked Keston to invite him over. Moss duly showed up with his then girlfriend Sue randall.

Sinatra performed with Moss and Keston as guests of honour.

On taking his final bow, Sinatra had the spotlight fixed on Moss and introduced him to the audience as ‘probably the greatest driver there has ever been’, much to his embarrassm­ent.

The next day, when the flood hit, the party were standing on the steps of Caesars Palace when Sue randall was almost washed away. Moss grabbed her arm and dragged her to safety.

Moss, Keston and another friend, the boxing promoter Mickey Duff, saw half a dozen cars with people stuck inside. They waded in waist-high water to pull them out. The British Press proclaimed them to be The Three Heroes of Las Vegas.

Keston was a well-loved figure in North London, known as the first Spurs superfan who never missed a game. He died in 2019, aged 87.

Stirling Moss, the best driver never to win an F1 championsh­ip, died on April 12, this year, aged 90.

Mickey Duff was born Monek Prager in Poland in 1929. His family fled the Nazis and came to London where he became a boxer and later promoter for the likes of Frank Bruno, Joe Calzaghe and Lloyd Honeyghan. He died in 2014, aged 84.

Brian Cullen, Dukinfield, Cheshire.

QUESTION From where do we get the phrase harbinger of doom?

THiS ominous phrase comes to us from the word harbour, via a member of the royal Household and the imaginatio­n of William Shakespear­e. Harbour is derived from the Teutonic

heri and beorg, meaning shelter for a host. Early forms in English were

herberwe and harborow. The French auberge, an inn, derived through heberger, is the same word for a place of refuge or shelter. Safe harbour thus became an asylum for criminals and particular­ly a place of shelter for ships.

Harbour was enlarged to include any place where travellers could be lodged or entertaine­d, to the person who provided lodgings and the harbinger, one who goes on before a party to secure lodgings.

From the 13th century, large royal itinerarie­s had the right to quarter soldiers, servants and agents wherever they wished to rest.

The Knight Harbinger oversaw the process for the royal Household. Sir Henry rycroft was the last Knight Harbinger from 1816 until his death in 1846. Like all other trades and crafts of the Middle Ages, the Harbourers had their own guild and patron saint. in AD313, St Julian ‘le Herberger’ was martyred at Antinopoli­s, Egypt, where he had piously received and cared for sick people in his lodgings.

A harbinger appears in The Man Of Law’s Tale in Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales: ‘ The fame anon through toun is born, How Alla kyng shal comen on pilgrymage, By herbergeou­rs that wenten hym biforn’ (The news through all the town was carried,/How King Alla would come on pilgrimage,/By harbingers that went before him). Shakespear­e used the term in portentous fashion in his poem The Phoenix And The Turtle: ‘But thou shrieking harbinger, Foul precurrer of the fiend, Augur of the fever’s end, To this troop come thou not near!’

By the 18th century, the term was almost always used in this way.

The phrase harbinger of doom can be found in richard Coeur De Lion: An Historical romance, a 1786 operetta.

richard The Lionheart says: ‘He had scarcely spoken, when the wind, which had lulled for some time, again blew with violence; a dark and fiery red illumined the horizon, and all seemed to portend the dread simoom, the fearful harbinger of doom and death.’

Esther Louis, Oxford.

QUESTION What is the origin of the three legs on the Isle of Man crest?

FurTHEr to the earlier answer, i have a book The romance Of Heraldry dated 1929, that states the fact the arms of Man are legs is a heraldic paradox.

it adds that looking at the island, you will appreciate the saying: ‘The isle of Man kneels to England, kicks at Scotland and spurns ireland!’

John Hockey, Edlesborou­gh, Bucks. YEArS ago, while working for a brewery, we were producing an advertisin­g leaflet for the isle of Man but could not decipher the Latin motto on the sample sketch.

An elderly gentleman in accounts had been a classics scholar and told us ‘ Quocunque Jeceris Stabit’ translated as: ‘Wherever you throw it, it will stand.’

Keith Sandars, Medbourne, Leics.

IS THERE a question to which you want to know the answer? Or do you know the answer to a question here? Write to: Charles Legge, Answers To Correspond­ents, Daily Mail, 2 Derry Street, London W8 5TT; or email charles.legge@dailymail.co.uk. A selection is published, but we’re unable to enter into individual correspond­ence. Visit mailplus.co.uk to hear the Answers To Correspond­ents podcast

 ??  ?? Flood: Submerged cars in Las Vegas
Flood: Submerged cars in Las Vegas

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