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Early in 1920, nothing, it seemed, was to disturb the usual quietness in the peaceful village of Francorchamps, perched on a hill very close to the Moors. Nothing, except that, on a beautiful summer day, while settled at the Hotel des Bruyères, two people well-know in the car racing wold, the one being Jules de Thier, manager of the newspaper "La Meuse", and the other, Henri Langlois Van Ophem, chairman of the Sports Commission at the RACB (Royal Automobile Club Belgium), had the idea of taking advantage of the triangle drawn by the roads connecting Malmedy, Stavelot and Francorchamps to make a racing track of it. During the period extending from the mid-twenties until the eve of Wold War II, the motorcycles Grand Prix and the prestigious car races like the 24 Hours of Francorchamps and the Belgian Grand Prix were going to be the major track events. As far a the track is concerned, it remained roughly the same as it used to be in the beginning. But something new occured in 1939: Francorchamps was getting an artificial curve, unique in its kind: the "raidillon" or steep rise. That obstacle, intended to be passed at a very high speed, was a forerunner of the orientation its manager wainted to give to the track: to make it on the fastest tracks in Europe, contrasting sharply that way with its German neighbour of the Eifel, which was very spectacular too but much more tortous and therefore one of the slowest. If everything seemed to develop properly, that situation would, however, only last until until 1970, when, for the last time, the Formula I Grand Prix took place along the fourteen-kilometre-long track.
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