Alfa Romeo Automobiles S.p.A. is an Italian automaker founded in 1910. Alfa Romeo has been
a part of the Fiat Group since 1986. The company was originally known as A.L.F.A., which is
an acronym for Anonima Lombarda Fabbrica Automobili.
The company that became Alfa Romeo was founded as Società Anonima Italiana Darracq (SAID)
in 1906 by the French automobile firm of Alexandre Darracq, with some Italian investors.
One of them, Cavaliere Ugo Stella, an aristocrat from Milan, became chairman of the SAID in 1909.
The firm's initial location was in Naples, but even before the construction of the planned factory
had started, Darracq decided late 1906 that Milan would be a more suitable location and accordingly
a tract of land was acquired in the Milan suburb of Portello, where a new factory of 6,700 square
metres (8,000 sq yd) was erected. Late 1909, the Italian Darracq cars were selling slowly and Stella,
with the other Italian co-investors, founded a new company named A.L.F.A. (Anonima Lombarda Fabbrica
Automobili), initially still in partnership with Darracq. The first non-Darracq car produced by
company was the 1910 24 HP, designed by Giuseppe Merosi, hired in 1909 for designing new cars
more suitable to the Italian market. Merosi would go on to design a series of new A.L.F.A. cars
with more powerful engines (40-60 HP). A.L.F.A. also ventured into motor racing, drivers Franchini
and Ronzoni competing in the 1911 Targa Florio with two 24 HP models. In 1914, an advanced Grand
Prix car was designed and built, the GP1914 which featured a four cylinder, double overhead
camshafts, four valves per cylinder and twin ignition.[2] However, the onset of World War I
halted automobile production at ALFA for three years.
Once motorsports resumed after World War II, Alfa Romeo proved to be the car to beat in Grand
Prix events. The introduction of the new formula (Formula One) for single-seat racing cars
provided an ideal setting for Alfa Romeo's tipo 158 Alfetta, adapted from a pre-war voiturette,
and Giuseppe Farina won the first Formula One World Championship in 1950 in the 158. Juan Manuel
Fangio secured Alfa's second consecutive championship in 1951. During the 1960s, Alfa concentrated
on competition using production-based cars, including the GTA (standing for Gran Turismo Allegerita),
an aluminium-bodied version of the Bertone-designed coupe with a powerful twin-plug engine. Among
other victories, the GTA won the inaugural Sports Car Club of America's Trans-Am championship in 1966.
In the 1970s, Alfa concentrated on prototype sports car racing with the Tipo 33, with early victories
in 1971. Eventually the Tipo 33TT12 gained the World Championship for Makes for Alfa Romeo in 1975 and
the Tipo 33SC12 won the World Championship for Sports Cars in 1977...