Baltimore Area's Dorsey Speedway Moonshine Still Pre-Dated Middle Georgia's Still By 14 Years

Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
12 years ago
9,138 posts

I know we have several wonderful RR Cracker members on our site down in the fine state of Georgia who think stock car racing and moonshine stills at stock car race tracks were both invented in Georgia.

With this Saturday's upcoming Middle Georgia reunion, I gotta tell y'all good folks that you are wrong on both counts.

14 years before the revenooers discovered untaxed spirits being distilled at Middle Georgia, a still was found to be operating at Baltimore's Dorsey Speedway back in 1953. I'd like to find out more information about the still at the former race track in the "land of pleasant living" if anyone has details.

While looking for information about 1950s era stock car tracks operating around the Baltimore area I came across a Baltimore Sun article blasting the upcoming 2010 Indy Car race in the streets of Babe Ruth's birthplace. The article went on to point out that the Baltimore area used to have several perfectly good stock car tracks that didn't require taxpayer money like the Indy car street race.

One such track, the article proclaimed, was the Friday night Dorsey Speedway on U.S. Highway 1which used to draw 10,000 weekly fans. It's where a moonshine still was discovered in 1953. Don't know any more yet, but that was 14 years before Middle Georgia's still was uncovered in 1967 and 13 years before Middle Georgia even opened in 1966.

Here's the article:

Old Dorsey Speedway, not downtown, was once the site of auto races

Elkridge track used to be one place to find racing thrills

August 14, 2010
By Frederick N. Rasmussen
The Baltimore Sun

It's one of the more crackpot civic katzenjammers in recent years: How come the so-called cash-strapped city can find the $5.5 million needed to prepare streets for the Grand Prix next August, while officials resort to tambourine rattling to keep public swimming pools from closing?

The three-day Grand Prix event to be held on a 2.4-mile course around the Inner Harbor and Camden Yards promises, the mayor and other officials say, to bring more than 100,000 people to the city and keep cash registers ringing. The bonanza has been estimated as high as $70 million for various services, from food and lodging to whatever else visitors can find to waste their money on.

Wouldn't it be a lot easier and a lot less expensive to close the Jones Falls Expressway for a portion of a couple of days and run the race out to the Ruxton Road exit or clear up I-83 all the way to York, Pa.?

While not quite Le Mans, the JFX has a lot of wonderful twists and turns to excite even the most seasoned turbo-charged driver, not to mention the spectators who could line the right-of-way to watch them pass.

As far as I'm concerned, it's already a racetrack and sure seems like it when I traverse its length twice a day, so why not make it an official Grand Prix course?

Maybe the city could save that $5.5 million and put it toward improving city schools. Wow, now there's an idea!

It used to be that Baltimoreans seeking automotive thrills and chills hopped into the car on Friday nights and drove south on U.S. 1 until joining long lines of other motorists waiting to get onto Dorsey Road, where they gathered at Dorsey Speedway for an evening of stock-car and motorcycle racing.

It wasn't uncommon for 10,000 racing fans to jam the stands to see such legendary drivers as Bill Brown and Ronnie McBee, "Dizzy" Dean Renro and Old Don compete in souped-up Hudson Hornets, Mercurys, Chevys, Pontiacs, Fords and Oldsmobiles.

The original Dorsey Speedway was built in 1950 at the intersection of Dorsey Road, Route 176 and U.S. 1, and was a fifth of a mile long.

It lasted for one 25-car race before drainage problems forced the construction of a second track at the same site. It was a bit longer, at a quarter-mile.

The second track saw its first crowd on April 18, 1951. Visitors took seats in a cinderblock grandstand.

Dorsey featured a Friday night, seven-race card. Fans went to the old Westport Speedway in Baltimore on Saturday nights. Westport closed in 1960.

Speeds never topped 60 mph or 80 mph, Bruce Ehlers, an auto mechanic, told The Baltimore Sun in a 1985 interview, "so you could never get a big fireball type of accident."

Spectators who went looking for thrills were seldom disappointed. Spin-outs in races were common, and the highlight was the demolition derby, where drivers kept ramming one another until only one car was left operable.

A sensational off-track event in 1953 was the discovery by revenuers of a still that was pumping out moonshine.

For female fans, a "powder-puff derby," featuring cars driven by women , was an absolute delight.

The evening's finale was the figure-8 race, in which drivers shot through the intersection at speeds more than 70 mph, coming within inches of one another.

Oddly enough, in this competition of competitions, collisions were rare, which says something about the prowess and skill of the drivers.

"I like to set a fast pace if I can, especially in heavy traffic. When I get out in front, I like to stay there and let them try and catch me," McBee told The Sun in a 1985 interview.

Dorsey Speedway was sold In 1984, and its last racing event, held on Sept. 28, 1985, was fittingly a demolition derby.

Less than a year later, the old speedway was well on its way to becoming a memory as an industrial park rose on the former racetrack site.

fred.rasmussen@baltsun.com

Best wishes for a great reunion at Middle Georgia with Richard Petty and all you others this Saturday!




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

updated by @dave-fulton: 12/05/16 04:00:58PM
Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
12 years ago
9,138 posts

The Baltimore Sun writer of the article above received so many e-mails and calls from old race fans and former racers about the Baltimore tracks of the 50s / 60s that he wrote another column the following week:

Speedways are gone but not forgotten
Fans recall long ago races at Westport Stadium and Dorsey Speedway in e-mails, letters and phone calls
August 21, 2010

By Frederick N. Rasmussen

The Baltimore Sun

Last week's column on the now-demolished Dorsey Speedway brought out the stock car racing fans en masse, who e-mailed, sent letters or called over the past week.

Even though the checkered flag has long been furled at these legendary tracks, readers recalled their fondness for the evening races at the Dorsey Speedway and Westport Stadium, where the racetrack atmosphere always reeked of exhaust, hot oil and grease, burnt rubber and the sounds of throaty, coughing engines barking into the early evening air, in anticipation of a possible win.

All of this was mixed with the aroma of grilled hot dogs, kettles of corn-on-the-cob and chilled soft drinks, which anxious fans devoured during the evening's motorized thrills and chills.

Joe Wagner, director of marketing for the Whitmore Group, recalled in an e-mail driving with his family from Randallstown during the 1950s to attend the races at Westport Stadium and the Dorsey Speedway, and always "going home covered in what appeared to be red clay" that had been kicked up into the air by the speeding cars.

Westport Stadium, which was on Old Annapolis Road between the Baltimore-Washington Parkway and Patapsco Avenue, had been a baseball park for the old Baltimore Elite Giants of the Negro Leagues.

After the Elite Giants moved to Nashville, Tenn., in 1951, owners converted the baseball field into a 1/5-mile dirt oval track where racing prevailed until 1963, when it closed and the old stadium was torn down.

In two handwritten letters, Joe Smith recalled that he "spent many evenings at Dorsey, Westport and the Beltsville tracks and also went to the Pennsylvania tracks." He listed a few local fan favorites at Dorsey and Westport during those years.

"There was Reds Kagle, who went to the big-time races and lost a leg in a crackup," Smith wrote. "Another was Ace Canupp, who drove for Kahler's Crab House in Rosedale."

He added: "They were the good old days. Sorry the young people of today do not know real fun and enjoyment."

Ted Lingelbach, a retired WFBR news writer and a 1958 City College graduate who compiles the school's necrology, watched the races from the comfort of his parent's Hamilton living room.

"When I was a kid growing up in the 1950s, we always looked forward to Saturday nights on TV because we had the stock car races from Westport followed closely by 'The Jimmy Dean Show' live from Washington sponsored by Gunther Beer," he wrote in an e-mail.

In a subsequent telephone interview, Lingelbach said he thought the races "aired over Channel 13."

"We watched them every week because in those days, there wasn't much on TV to watch," he said.

Joseph B. Ross Jr., a retired Anne Arundel County firefighter whose book, "Arundel Burning: The Maryland Oyster Roast Fire of 1956," was published last year and who is completing a book on the 1968 Baltimore riots, wrote to say his first "stock car race experience was at the Westport Stadium in the early 1960s."

Ross, who was 12 at the time, said he had begged his father, who was not a stock car racing enthusiast, for weeks before he finally agreed to take him to the races.

"The Westport track was not your standard racetrack with straightaways and four turns it was somewhat oval. Since the stadium was set up for baseball, the clay track followed the inside perimeter of the outfield fence and grandstands," Ross remembered in a lengthy e-mail.

"It was a weird oval with the tightest turn located at home plate. The race announcer would say, 'So and so or car number so and so slides through home plate,'" he wrote.

Ross said he was surprised that his father knew all about Johnny Roberts when the announcer called his name and his car, which was adorned with a No. 7.

"Apparently, Roberts' family was from Brooklyn and they owned a two-story building at the corner of 11th Avenue and Ritchie Highway, caddy corner from the fire station," he wrote. "The first floor was a restaurant and apartments were located on the second floor. I think the building was torn down in the late 1950s."

In 1965, Roberts lost his life two days after hitting a wall during the first lap at Lincoln Speedway in Abbottstown, Pa. He was 41.

As a volunteer firefighter with the Linthicum Volunteer Fire Department, Ross would join other firefighters from the Jessup Fire Department and an ambulance from the Laurel Rescue Squad. They parked their vehicles in the middle of the Dorsey Speedway.

The firefighters and ambulance crew watched the races from a makeshift perch on top of several railroad ties and dirt.

"Because we were high up and wearing our firefighting gear, we believed we were protected from an accident, but if a wheel or engine part would have gone airborne, I have my doubts," Ross wrote.

Whenever there was a wreck, the firefighters would run over with their CO2 fire extinguishers.
"Sometimes the dust from the clay track was so bad we could barely see the race cars, but the sound of the revved up modified engines gave you a kind of scary excited rush!" he wrote.
Ross remembered a particular performance of one of the fearless Walker Brothers.
One of the brothers' cars flipped "higher than I have ever seen a car in the air" recalled Ross, who expected the driver to be dead, as he and his fellow firefighters raced over with their extinguishers.

"He just climbed out of the upside-down car, laughed, and was in next week's race in a new car," he wrote. "I was 17 at the time and if my mom and dad knew what I was doing and where I was on Friday nights they would have killed me."

I mentioned in my column the name of legendary driver Bill Brown, which elicited an e-mail response from Jim Crocker, who is director of the Classic Racing Series.

"Where are they now? Well, I know where Bill Brown is, he is still turning left and taking the checkers," he wrote.
"He currently leads the point standing in the Classic Racing Series. Bill has six feature wins this year and is on his way to yet another championship," Crocker wrote. "He is as tough as ever and we call him 'The Professor.'"
fred.rasmussen@baltsun.com




--
"Any Day is Good for Stock Car Racing"
Johnny Mallonee
@johnny-mallonee
12 years ago
3,259 posts

but Dave all thats hearsay--we got proof,yup you bring your body down here and you can see first hand where it was at over in the beginning of turn 3. if you could come up to the entrance when the wind is calm you can get a whiff of something that smells like corn rotting. dont think i saw any such mention of any part still around, see we got the track and the hole where Mr Brown descended the stairs and the great state ofv ga documented it as being indeed there, in pictures no less

Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
12 years ago
9,138 posts

Maybe they moved that still down to Georgia from Dorsey Speedway... kinda like in that song about the devil going down to Georgia!

Hope you good folks have wonderful weather. I know there'll be great memories to share.




--
"Any Day is Good for Stock Car Racing"
Johnny Mallonee
@johnny-mallonee
12 years ago
3,259 posts

Dave I really really wish you could be there-- you would be speechless for a week and probably have cramps from grinning and trying to see everything,oh yeah you could sample the wares too...

Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
12 years ago
9,138 posts

Maybe I can join you good folks one year. Sure sounds like a great group.




--
"Any Day is Good for Stock Car Racing"
Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
12 years ago
9,138 posts

Our RR member, Roy Martin some years back posted this 1976 photo taken at Dorsey Speedway showing Eddie Owings in the #7 and an unidentified driver in the #2.




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