Holding Out on Us About Toccoa

Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
11 years ago
9,137 posts

I was just noticing that the Ultimate Super Late Model dirt series lists some 2013 events at Toccoa (Georgia) Speedway, which has been staging stock car races since 1953.

When I saw that, my first thought was ... "whoa, our own RacersReunion member, Pkl used to live there and I never heard her mention Toccoa Speedway."

I did see a reference once by Cody Dinsmore who thought he was gonna get to Toccoa, but then didn't.

Looks like pretty good dirt action on what is billed as a 5/16th-mile semi-banked dirt oval.

Any of our members been to Toccoa?




--
"Any Day is Good for Stock Car Racing"

updated by @dave-fulton: 12/05/16 04:09:31PM
Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
11 years ago
9,137 posts

Thanks. I somehow have missed (or have forgotten - "oldtimers" you know) your mentions and had never heard of the facility.




--
"Any Day is Good for Stock Car Racing"
Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
11 years ago
9,137 posts

A LOOK AT OLD TRACKS OF NORTHEAST GEORGIA

Mike Bell

By Mike Bell
Posted in Columns 4/16/10

Last year, I met Heather Rhodes, the publisher and editor of Slingin Dirt Magazine at Hartwell Speedway while the Carolina Clash was stirring up the red clay?

Could you do something on history for publication in the paper? was her request. Heres what I shared with her.

Looking at Slingin Dirt, you notice that it covers mostly North Georgia. Back in 1956, racing was so different and took on a bigger look. East Park Speedway ran on Friday night to packed crowds with sportsman and jalopy racing. Toccoa Speedway ran the same classes on Saturday night for their second year of operation (yeah, I know they claim to be the oldest track in Georgia but Oglethorpe opened in 1951 with Waycross and Boyds opened in 1952. The oldest contiguously operating race track in Georgia Yeah!).

Rufus Tribble, who ran East Park, had a traveling group of strictly stock late models under a scantioning body he ran called Dixie Auto Racing Enterprises (DARE). These two tracks ran every weekend except for East Park closing for a nearby Eureka Baptist Churchs revival.

Then the famous (or is it infamous) Golden Strip Speedway opened in Fountain Inn, South Carolina running the same type of cars sportsman and jalopy.

An ad from an Anderson area newspaper promoting a DARE event at Toccoa Speedway. Clipping courtesy Mike Bell.

Then Rufus Tribble made the announcement that another new track would be running DARE races. Hollywood Speedway in the Hollywood community south of Toccoa opened on May 13, 1956.

The track was operated and owned by the late Tom Fountain who lived on the adjoining property. Mr. Fountains son-in-law told us recently that Tom was involved in racing as a car owner before building the track. He loved the sport so much he dedicated a portion of his own property to the track. That first race featured the strictly stock cars of DARE. These were 1954, 1955 and 1956 new model cars just like they came off the showroom floor. Remind you of some other group?

Anyway, Roswell Roz Howard of then Macon, Georgia (now living on the lake outside of Milledgeville) drove his 1956 Chevy to victory. The next Sunday, Roz won the big race again but this week it was the sportsman class of DARE. The sportsman class was pre-World War II coupes and sedans with flathead engines with limited modifications. Im sure the jalopy class ran also but there wasnt anything in the Anderson papers on that class. (I should come clean here and tell you my information comes from looking at the microfilms of the old Anderson papers. There may be something in the Toccoa papers but my research hasnt gone that far).

A church which still serves the community to this day complained to Tom about the dust, the noise and the fact that they ran on Sunday which at that time was against the law in South Carolina but not Georgia. It was just frowned upon strongly.

Tom, being a good family man and a good neighbor, closed Hollywood Speedway after only two races. We were told he built chicken houses on the property to try and supplement his policemans salary. You can just barely see any notion that there ever was a race track on the property. But in reality nothing but memories remain of that track.

Advertisement for the opening event at the Hollywood Speedway from the May 13, 1956 edition of the Anderson Independent Newspaper. Clipping courtesy Mike Bell.

Right after Tom Fountain closed Hollywood, Tommie Irvin opened Banks County Speedway between Homer and Baldwin. Again the same type of cars would run weekly at Banks County but they opened with strictly stocks of the Southern Racing Enterprises (SRE) out of Atlanta with everybodys Little Biddy Buddy Jimmy Mosteller on the microphone.

A lot of the same drivers ran both santioning bodies as they did in the two races run at Toccoa on April 18, 2009 with the OReilly Southern All-Stars and Hartwell on April 25, just a week later with the Carolina Clash.

By the Fourth of July, another track opened for the fans as well as the racers. It was located about five miles from the intersection in downtown Lavonia. Thus it was called Lavonia Speedway. In doing research, I found nothing but advertisements in the local paper as well as Anderson. I went to a source that has not failed me on racing in the area Wendel Roach. We met Wendel at his house, which is only four and a half miles out of Lavonia. Yeah, Wendel lives within walking distance of the site.

The track was built and owned by Henry Martin Ford and was where Ford Road (the name now but it was just another dirt road then) ends at Georgia Highway 59 less than a half-mile from Wendels house. As you turn off the highway there is a brick house about a quarter-mile after you turn. Wendel assured me that that house did not exist when the track was built. In fact, the edge of the track was quite near the front door of the house. The next house was Mr. Fords home a white house that honestly looks younger than its fifty plus years. A nephew of Mr. Fords lives in the white house.

The track opened to the same kind of racing everyone else was having sportsman and jalopy. The track itself was according to Wendel longer than a quarter mile. Wendel said the problem was the track surface. Mr. Ford didnt put down any clay and as the races progressed during the nights events the surface became a series of ruts and potholes, some big enough to swallow a car. The drivers complained to Mr. Ford but to no avail. Thus the track died after only about 6 races. He even tried Wednesday night races.

So the next time you are riding around the area, remember these and other tracks that started out in the days when the majority of the roads were dirt and the cars were home built.

Mike Bell is the CEO and historian for the Georgia Auto Racing Hall of Fame Association, Inc. (GARHOFA)




--
"Any Day is Good for Stock Car Racing"
Jeff Gilder
@jeff-gilder
11 years ago
1,783 posts

I'm thinking it was some sort of conspiracy, Dave. I can't recall a single discussion about racing in Toccoa...while on the other hand, I remember moonshinin,deliverance, and geographical discussions.




--
Founder/Creator - RacersReunion®
Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
11 years ago
9,137 posts

Prayers for your grandchild.




--
"Any Day is Good for Stock Car Racing"
Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
11 years ago
9,137 posts



--
"Any Day is Good for Stock Car Racing"
Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
11 years ago
9,137 posts

Good news to hear.




--
"Any Day is Good for Stock Car Racing"
Jeff Gilder
@jeff-gilder
11 years ago
1,783 posts



--
Founder/Creator - RacersReunion®
Patsy Thompkins ~ Keisler
@patsy-thompkins-keisler
11 years ago
559 posts

LOL!!!!!!!!!!!

Johnny Mallonee
@johnny-mallonee
11 years ago
3,259 posts

Been there many times with my dad and his cars. It was part of the weekend swing through N ga. Elberton--Toccoa--Banks County-- I remember going to a track out of Athens too but these were in the early to middle 50's. Another swing was Augusta-- New Ellington SC--Anderson and on occasion Fountain Inn SC.

Im going to attach a photo of my dad, he had grey hair since he was 19 when he got deathly sick. He was about 5'8" built like a Bull... People used to cuss when they saw those two cars come in, they called them those Damned Sedans from middle Ga.

Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
11 years ago
9,137 posts

What a wonderful photo to treasure.




--
"Any Day is Good for Stock Car Racing"
Johnny Mallonee
@johnny-mallonee
11 years ago
3,259 posts
Here is one of me and one of his cars from Augusta Ga Speedway back in early 50s
Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
11 years ago
9,137 posts

Awesome! I have always loved those 8-ball car numbers.




--
"Any Day is Good for Stock Car Racing"
Slick
@slick
11 years ago
36 posts

I have been to 148 tracks in 27 states. My friend Richard Pearson aka "Paperman" posts/pr's for Toccoa, Westminster and Lavonia on various forums. I am sure he peruses this forum from time to time. He is a gold mine of pictures and history.