It seems it has rained in Columbia, SC, every two or three days since January. Finally, our local weather people have stopped telling us what the deficit in rainfall is because there is no longer a deficit. However, once the surplus reached an inch about a month ago, they quit telling us what the surplus is. They don't want us to know the good news, rather only the negative reports that we needed to conserve water. I have seem places in this area flooded that I've never seen even with high water in my 67 years here.
What does all that have to do with the Racing History Minute for today? Well, how about 18 inches of rain in a five day period in Pensacola, FL where today's History Minute takes us. The race we will cover today was originally scheduled for May 31st, but those 18 inches of liquid Florida sunshine caused a postponement for two weeks.
There were 18 cars entered (one for every inch of rain maybe?)in the 100 mile/200 lap event on the half-mile dirt track known as Five Flags Speedway. Records from my source are sketchy, at best, with only the pole position listed in the starting order. The man on the pole was Dick Rathman in a Hudson.
The record does note that it was a very overcast afternoon when the race started and I am guessing Herb Thomas started on the outside front row as it is indicated that he jumped into the lead early with Rathmann and Tim Flock running right with him. Tim had an extended pit stop which dropped him off the lead lap but Rathmann continued to pressure Thomas.
On lap 140 of the 200, NASCAR determined that the track was just too wet and muddy to safely continue. It had started to rain again at that point but apparently only enough to muddy the track substanially. Whatever the reasoning, the race was red flagged and declared "official" at the end of 140 laps with Herb Thomas out front. Interestingly, the average speed for the race was 61.80 mph which I think is pretty good for 140 laps on a half-mile dirt track.
Top five finishers were:
1. Herb Thomas, FABULOUS Hudon Hornet, winning $1,000.00
2. Dick Rathmann, Walt Chapman Hudson, winning $900.00
3. Lee Petty, Petty Engineering Dodge, winning $450.00
4. Buck Baker, Griffin Motors Oldsmobile, winning $350.00
5. Tim Flock, Ted Chester Hudson, winning $200.00
Sixth through tenth were Dick Passwater, Joe Eubanks, Slick Smith, Gober Sosebee, and Fred Moore. Remaining finishers, in order, were, Lamar Crabtree, Frank Arford, Elbert Allen, Gordon Bracken, Leonard Lawrence, Gene Tapia, Jim Paschal and Gwyn Staley.
Honor the past, embrace the present, dream for the future
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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.
updated by @tim-leeming: 12/05/16 04:00:58PM