Ken Rush

Randy Myers2
@randy-myers2
13 years ago
219 posts
Just got off the phone with Mike Sykes. Ken Rush passed away today. Arrangements are incomplete at this time. More as it becomes available.
updated by @randy-myers2: 03/03/19 10:07:01PM
Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
13 years ago
9,137 posts
Sad news. I remember seeing Ken several times in Grand American races.


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

The Racing Career of Ken Rush - Test Your Trivia
Pit Stop
From the May, 2002 issue of Stock Car Racing
By Benny Phillips
Photography by High Point Enterprise


What driver won the first NASCAR-sanctioned races at Talladega, Michigan and Dover?

After two days of begging, and a Mounds candy bar thrown in as a bonus, you might tell them it was Ken Rush.

At the brand new Talladega Superspeedway in '69, on the Saturday afternoon before the first Grand National race (which would become Winston Cup), NASCAR's Grand Touring cars staged a 200-mile event. Rush, driving a yellow Camaro, won by nearly a lap.

A few weeks later, Michigan Speedway opened. Again, NASCAR ran its Grand Touring cars on Saturday. Rush won by more than a lap.

In the summer of 1970, Dover signed its first NASCAR sanction. Once again, Rush streaked to victory on Saturday. Richard Petty won the race on Sunday.

Rush also won at South Boston, Virginia, that year. Then came a horrifying accident at Flemington, New Jersey, which led to the end of his career.

"It was a half-mile dirt track," Rush recalls. "After the first few laps, you couldn't see out the windshield for all the mud. I was coming wide-open, and Stan Styers spun in the middle of Turns 3 and 4. I didn't see him until I hit him, and I drove straight into him, head-on."

Rush lost 12 teeth and suffered a broken sternum and a broken jaw.

"They worked on me in the emergency room until about 3 or 4 o'clock in the morning," Rush says. "Finally, they rolled me into a hospital room. I smoked back then, so I reached over and got a cigarette. I lit it and puffed, but nothing happened. I threw it away and got another one. Same thing happened, and then I realized my lip was cut all the way through and when I puffed, the air was going through my lip. I had to hold my lower lip together in order to puff the cigarette."

Today Rush, 70, and wife Patsy live in High Point, North Carolina. How did it all begin?

"Bob Welborn and I became friends in 1950. He was already racing, and helped me get started. Then Jim Paschal helped me get into the Late Model division."

Rush started racing in 1955 and won track championships at Bowman Gray Stadium and the Greensboro Fairgrounds. In 1964, he won the Modified championship at Bowman Gray.

"We were a wild bunch, sometimes about half human, especially at Daytona," Rush says. "In 1957, crew chief Paul McDuffie, Red Jones, myself, and two other guys, I can't remember their names, were down on the beach in this new Chevrolet station wagon. It belonged to Chevrolet.

"I was driving. We'd go down the beach at 70 or 80 mph and cut the steering wheel. On the hard sand the vehicle would spin around and around like it was on ice. Somebody said, "Let's try it at 100." I pegged the needle out of sight and cut the steering wheel. The station wagon didn't go 40 feet until it threw the right rear tire off. When that happened, here we go turning over and over. We ended up way out in the ocean. I was the only one who got hurt. It about knocked a hole in my head, and I nearly drown.

"Red Jones had a bottle of whiskey. He said the law is coming, and he stood on the roof of the car and threw the bottle as far out in the ocean as he could.

"They pulled me to shore as the police arrived. I looked back at the ocean, and in the moonlight you could see this bottle of whiskey bobbing up and down with the waves, following us ashore.

"The policeman asked if we'd been drinking. He was standing at the edge of the water. Somebody was trying to persuade him we hadn't had a drop. Then the whiskey bottle hit his boot."

Welborn heard about what happened and went to the hospital to check on Rush. The nurse told him he couldn't stay but a minute. "This man has a serious brain concussion," she said.

Rush said Welborn told the nurse, "Lady, he may have a head concussion, but he ain't got a brain."

Looking back on his career, Rush says there is one thing he would change if he had control over such matters. "I would have been born in 1971 instead of 1931. That way, I believe I would have something to show for my racing career. I won a lot of races that paid $200 or less for first place. Sixty percent of that would go to the team owner.

"Race drivers today make a lot of money," he says, "but I don't believe they have the fun we did."



Read more: http://www.stockcarracing.com/featurestories/scrp_0205_racing_career_ken_rush_stock_car_driver/viewall.html#ixzz1b9aNL7dh

Ken Rush in 2002

Ken Rush and his NASCAR Grand American #44


--
"Any Day is Good for Stock Car Racing"
Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
13 years ago
9,137 posts
From the Kevin Andrews photo collection as posted on RR's "Grand American" site, Wayne Andrews in the #15 Mercury Cougar and Ken Rush in the #44 Chevy Camaro battle for the lead in the first race ever held at Talladega, the 1969 'Bama 400 Grand American race, won by Rush, NASCAR's 1957 Grand National Rookie of the Year.


--
"Any Day is Good for Stock Car Racing"
Jim Streeter
@jim-streeter
13 years ago
242 posts

I can remember when Ken got started in Raclng.

It was in the Winter and they were holding races indoor in an old Tabaco Warehouse.

The races were 3/4 Midgets and Ken ended up in the 3rd row of the Grandstands.

We also ran Mini Stocks (Crosleys) Indoors.

Back then I weighed around 160# and that gave me an atvantage.

Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
13 years ago
9,137 posts
Ken Rush #44 at Jackson International Speedway - Jackson, Mississippi - 1970 as posted on the MissChicken.com website photo contribution attributed to John Gorday.


--
"Any Day is Good for Stock Car Racing"
Tim Leeming
@tim-leeming
13 years ago
3,119 posts
Ann and I send our thoughts, prayers and condolences to the Rush Family and to all the friends of this man who led such a remarkable life. God speed Ken.


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What a change! It's been awhile since I've checked in and I'm quite surprised. It may take me awhile to figure it our but first look it's really great.

Mike Sykes
@mike-sykes
13 years ago
308 posts

Funeral Arrangements for Ken Rush is as follows.

Thursday 6:00 to 8:00 pm visitation

Friday 2:00 pm Funeral service both will be held at Cumby Family Funeral Service on Eastchester Dive in High Point NC. The family thanks the friends and race fans for their thoughts and prayers during this sorrowfull time.

Dennis Andrews
@dennis-andrews
13 years ago
835 posts
Very sad news. Last time I saw Ken was at Jim Paschal's visitation. Thoughts and prayers go out to his family.
TMC Chase
@tmc-chase
13 years ago
4,073 posts
When I saw this post, I paused for a second. The name was vaguely familiar, but I wasn't sure why. After reading through some of the nice comments about Ken Rush, I went to Racing Reference to see if anything re-kindled my thought. Sure enough, there it was. Ken drove over half his 50 convertible series starts and about a third of his 56 Grand National starts for Julian 'J.H.' Petty. Like PKL, I wasn't familiar with Ken's career beyond the Petty racing connection. But its still time to grieve when another one of his era passes.


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Schaefer: It's not just for racing anymore.