I've noticed quite a few odd things about the 1948 season and it's so frustrating that NASCAR, or even racing historians, have skipped over that first year like it didn't even count or exist. I can't even count how many times I've read on supposedly reputable websites that NASCAR's first race was June 19, 1949.The whole lack of knowledge and clarity of the very first season of this massive racing organization so many follow and enjoy is completely pathetic and miserably inadequate.
* The first oddity I've noticed is the multiple races on the same day. Nothing strange for that time to have a "Double Feature", two points races on the same day at the same track, but I'm talking about multiple races on the same day in different states. Sometimes as many as 3 races in different states on a single day. I don'treally understand how that worked when everyone couldn't be at the same race.
* Another oddity is Johnny Rogers' win at Dover N.J.. I know he was mostly a northern driver who raced in different sanctioning bodies in that region, but he doesn't show up in the points standings. Maybe just a typographical error? I don't know.
* Another oddityI've heard mention isthat NASCAR sanctioned many more races than the historically mentioned 52. I've seen people mention this in various discussions on the internet over the past few years. Here is one comment from memoryI was able to track down from a blog post on NCpedia.com-
The notion that NASCAR
The notion that NASCAR sanctioned only 52 races in 1948, although perpetuated ad nauseum all over the net and in various books, is total fiction. Besides the 52 1948 mostly Southern races reported in the 1949 NASCAR Yearbook, NASCAR also sanctioned about 30 other modified events in the Northeast at Allentown, Pa., Dover, NJ. Lewiston ME, Kingston RI, Fonda NY, and Palmyra NY.
updated by @robert-mitchell: 08/10/18 08:38:36PM