Racing History Minute - July 20, 1952

Tim Leeming
@tim-leeming
11 years ago
3,119 posts

Playland Park Speedway. Sounds sort of like a name for a go-kart track to me. But, in this instance, it is the name of a half-mile dirt track located in South Bend, Indiana, where the NASCAR Grand National Cars would race on July 20, 1952. The teams will be back in Indiana in a week or so but it won't be at Playland Speedway.

Nineteen cars would enter the race which was 200 laps/100 miles and was the 22nd race of the 1952 season. Herb Thomas put that FABULOUS Hudson Hornet on the pole with a speed of 58.120 mph. Tim Flock, in another Hudson, would start second.

Tommy Thompson lined up third, Buck Sager fourth, and Bub King fifth, giving Hudson all five top starting spots. How well I remember those Hudson Hornets seemingly "floating" around the track back in those days!

Herb Thomas would storm into the lead on the green, but he could not shake Tim Flock. Flock was on his bumper, then to the outside, then inside, working on Thomas' Hudson with determined effort. Finally, on lap 41, Thomas and Flock, banged together putting Thomas into a long slide which allowed Flock to go out front. By the time Herb regained complete control of his Hornet, Flock had a substantial lead, but not insurrmountable. He gave chase to Flock to retake the lead. On lap 64, while still chasing Flock, Herb lost control and his Hudson flipped, putting an end to the run in that car. Herb jumped out of the FABULOUS Hudson Hornet and stepped in to relief drive for Bub King. Herb would finish third in the substitute ride, 11 laps down, but in those days, drivers were given a percentage of the points earned by a car in which he relieved.

When the race was over, only 8 cars of the 19 starters were running. Three crashed out, including Herb Thomas as stated. Only the top two finished on the same lap.

Top five finishers were:

1. Tim Flock, Ted Chester Hudson, winning $1,000.00

2. Lee Petty, Petty Engineering Chrysler, winning $700.00

3. Bub King (with Herb Thomas in relief) King Hudson, winning $450.00

4. Herschell Buchanan, Air Lift Oldsmobile, winning$350.00

5. Dick Passwater, Fred Arford DeSoto, winning $200.00

I am listing the remainder of the field, along with the car makes for this race, to show some of the diversity in makes of cars racing in the event.

6. Gene Comstock, Hudson Hornet

7. Glen Larson, Ford

8. Joe Staton, Ford

9. Bucky Sager, Hudson

10. Red Duvall, Packard

11. Jim Clark, Ford

12. Paul Wensink, Willys

13. Marion Leach, Studebaker

14. Zane Howell, Studebaker

15.Fonty Flock, Oldsmobile

16. Ray Duhigg, Julian Petty Plymouth

17. Tommy Thompson, Hudson

18. Herb Thomas, Hudson

19. Gene Darrah, Ford

Chrysler and Ford are the only two makes still around these days. Looking through the makes in this race, I realize I have ridden in each one of these makes when I was a kid. Some like the Oldsmobile and Plymouth I actually got to drive but they have all faded away. Sort of brings home the fact of today's news where Detroit, the city, filed bankruptcy. Somehow that does seem right. But seeing those Hudson win races sure seemed right back in the day. Oh how I love those memories.

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
TMC Chase
@tmc-chase
11 years ago
4,073 posts



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Schaefer: It's not just for racing anymore.
TMC Chase
@tmc-chase
11 years ago
4,073 posts

Article from South Bend Tribune

When NASCAR ran in South Bend

July 19, 2012 | By DAVE STEPHENS - Follow me @MrDaveStephens | South Bend Tribune Staff Writer

SOUTH BEND -- Fourteen-year-old Fred Hoekstra was sitting in the Playland Park raceway stands that day, when a man came down the walkway looking for volunteers.

"He was looking for guys to be timers," said Hoekstra, who is now 74. "So me and my buddy jumped up."

The date was July 20, 1952 -- 60 years ago today -- and Hoekstra, just a teenager still too young to drive, was assigned to be an official timekeeper for the area's first, and only, NASCAR race.

The 200-lap, 100-mile, dirt track race took place in front of the 3,700 fans who filled the concrete stands at Playland Park -- an early amusement park and carnival grounds situated between Lincoln Way East and the St. Joseph River in South Bend, on the current site of IUSB's student housing complex.

"The starting flag will drop at 3 o'clock this afternoon in Playland Park as 30 of the nation's best racing pilots ready their mounts for the 100-mile NASCAR sanctioned grand national tournament stock car race," began a July 20 story in The Tribune.

Pioneers

Only 4 years old in 1952, the National Association for Stock Car Auto Racing was still known mostly as a regional organization based in the South.

But car races had long been popular in the North and Midwest, especially in cities like South Bend where automobiles were manufactured. In fact, Playland Park had hosted regular races at its quarter-mile and half-mile dirt tracks since at least the 1920s, if not earlier.

By 1952, NASCAR's Grand National racing series, which later evolved into the Winston Cup, and currently the Sprint Cup, was hosting races across the country -- both in places like Daytona Beach, Fla., and Hillsboro, N.C., which would become synonymous with the sport, and in places like South Bend and Oswego, N.Y., which became tiny footnotes in the sport's history.

And the sport's earlier pioneers were heroes to racing fans everywhere.

"Those guys coming to town was a pretty big deal," remembers Hoekstra.

Today, many of "those guys" are listed among NASCAR's early greats.

Herb Thomas, the 1951 and 1953 Grand National champion, was in the pole position. Lee Petty, father of Richard Petty, finished the race in second place.

Tim Flock -- who raced at Playland against his brothers Fonty and Bob -- would eventually win the race, and go on to win the series championship in 1952 and again in 1955.

Thomas, Petty and Flock would all be named as one of NASCAR's 50 greatest racers of all time.

Different kind of race

But despite the NASCAR name, the 1952 race looked almost nothing like the races of today.

The half-mile oval track was made up of dirt and gravel, covered with oil to keep the dust down. The back straightaway ran along the St. Joseph River, and drivers unable to make it out of the second turn were known to occasionally make a splash.

Because of the short straightaways and tight curves, Flock won the race with an average speed of 56.46 miles per hour -- slower than the posted speed limit on most highways today.

Safety rules also were nearly nonexistent.

It wasn't until 1952 that drivers were required to put rollbars on top of their cars, and many of the original modifications were homemade and prone to breaking.

According to the next day's article in The Tribune, 10 different makes of cars competed in the 30-car race, including a Nash, two Studebakers, a Willys, an Oldsmobile and several Hudson Hornets.

One driver, after crashing his Hudson on the 64th lap of the race, climbed behind the wheel of another driver's car, and finished the race in third place.

Hoekstra said he remembers a Studebaker flipping over "for no apparent reason that I could see." A Tribune photograph from the race shows spectators pushing the car off of its sides and back onto its wheels and off the track.

Maybe more noticeably, no one was seriously injured during the NASCAR race of 1952, although other races at the park had claimed lives over the years.

On July 4, 1936, one driver was killed in a holiday race, after his car slid out of a turn. Exactly a year later, Tribune photographer Gerald Toms was struck in the head by a wheel that had broken loose in a turn. Toms wouldn't regain consciousness and died a week later.

Hoekstra said he doesn't remember a lot about the specifics of the NASCAR race because he spent most of the race watching a clock.

When he volunteered to be a timer, Hoekstra was basically volunteering to stare at a large dial-clock and calculate how long it took for a certain driver to complete a lap.

"I remember it was hot," Hoekstra said. "I gave up my seat in the shade to stand out in the sun."

Legacy

Sixty years later, it's hard to imagine how different both NASCAR and Playland Park have become.

The sport of stock car racing, of course, has become a billion-dollar industry, with its own celebrities, fanatics and critics.

Playland Park, in contrast, has all but disappeared from the public consciousness.

Today, the only remnant of the park grounds are the concrete bleachers still built into the hillside just south of the IUSB student housing complex.

The park, which also had roller coasters, amusement rides and baseball games, closed in the early 1960s, after years of declining revenue, and much of the land sat vacant for years. Racing fans in South Bend took their sport elsewhere, building the South Bend Speedway west of town, and a drag racing strip in Osceola.

Still, the legacy of that day lingers.

Mishawaka's Don Woolley was a teenager in the stands that day -- one of many days he spent watching races at tracks throughout the area.

Today, Woolley is still a racing fan and runs a website -- mvrcp.return.to/ -- that showcases photos of classic race cars and racetracks from across the region.

Hoekstra too remembers the races at Playland fondly.

A year or two after the NASCAR race, Hoekstra said he and his older brother attended a modified car race at the park.

When the race was over, the not-yet-licensed-to-drive Hoekstra decided he wanted to try out his skills in his father's metallic blue Chrysler Imperial.

Hoekstra said he got the car up on the oiled down gravel and was flying pretty fast when he hit the back stretch along the river.

"I went into turn three, and the car just started to drift," said Hoekstra. "I remember thinking, 'I'm going to die,' -- not from the wreck, but when I get home."

Luckily, Hoekstra pulled out of the turn and the car, and his hide, were unharmed.

Like the NASCAR racers themselves, he never tried driving on the Playland Park track again.

Staff writer Dave Stephens:
dstephens@sbtinfo.com
574-235-6209




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Schaefer: It's not just for racing anymore.
TMC Chase
@tmc-chase
11 years ago
4,073 posts




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Schaefer: It's not just for racing anymore.
Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
11 years ago
9,137 posts

Thanks, Tim & Chase.

That St. Joseph River sure looked close for drivers losing it off turn two.




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

Nice history lesson.




--
"Any Day is Good for Stock Car Racing"
Sandeep Banerjee
@sandeep-banerjee
11 years ago
360 posts

And a nice rendition of the Wabash Cannonball too!