Andrew Hedges

Biographical information

RolesCompeted in Olympic Games
SexMale
Full nameAndrew Peter•Hedges
Used nameAndrew•Hedges
Born16 September 1935 in South Moreton, England (GBR)
Died1 October 2005 in Al-Manamah, Al-Asimah (BRN)
Measurements180 cm / 85 kg
NOC Great Britain

Biography

Andrew Hedges was born in Oxfordshire and came from a family of farmers which also owned a string of butcher’s shops in West London. He attended Radley College and Cambridge University before being commissioned into the British Army and serving in the Household Cavalry. He briefly relocated to Switzerland and later joined the British bobsleigh team before his selection to the 1964 Olympic team to compete at Innsbruck. There, he competed in the two-man event alongside fellow Radley classmate Bill McCowen and the four-man event alongside McCowen, Robin Seel and Robin Widdows.

Hedges later became a noted race car driver in the 1960s, competing at six editions of the 24 Hours of Le Mans between 1964 and 1970. His finest achievement as a racing driver was in winning the gruelling 84-hour race, Marathon de la Route, with Belgian co-driver Julien Vernaeve, over the old Nürburgring circuit in 1966. Hedges was also an avid powerboat racer and took part in the Cowes-Torquay race. In 1966, he competed in the Miami to Nassau race with his partner, the infamous Lord Lucan. Their boat “Migrant” was the first single-engine boat to finish. He later moved to Bahrain to pursue business interests and remained there until his death in 2005.

Results

Games Discipline (Sport) / Event NOC / Team Pos Medal As
1964 Winter Olympics Bobsleigh (Bobsleigh) GBR Andrew Hedges
Two, Men (Olympic) Bill McCowen 16
Four, Men (Olympic) Great Britain 2 13