Forum Activity for @dave-fulton

Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
11/11/13 11:03:17AM
9,138 posts

Racing History Minute - November 11, 1951


Stock Car Racing History

Just answered the question of what happened to Fonty Flock at Lakewood.

He traveled acoss the country with a Frank Christian Oldsmobile to the NASCAR Grand National race at J.C. Agajanian's Carrell Speedway in Gardena, California on November 11, 1951, where he earned the pole position and led the first 71 laps before fading to an 11th place finish in the event won by Bill Norton. 1950 Southern 500 winner, Johnny Mantz would place 7th in the Gardena race and Marvin Panch 16th. Sam Hawks placed 26th in a second Marvin Panch entry.

NASCAR Grand National race number 40 of 41
Sunday, November 11, 1951 at Carrell Speedway , Gardena, CA
200 laps on a .500 mile dirt track (100.0 miles)

Attendance: 6,100
Lead changes: 5
Fin St # Driver Sponsor / Owner Car Laps Money Status Led
1 10 48 Bill Norton Larry Bettinger '50 Mercury 200 1,000 running 19
2 3 9 Dick Meyer Grant Sniffen '50 Mercury 700 running 82
3 20 25 Erick Erickson Packer ( Erick Erickson ) '51 Pontiac 450 running 0
4 4 33 Lou Figaro Jack Gaynor '51 Hudson 350 running 0
5 2 Danny Weinberg Tony Sampo '51 Studebaker 200 running 0
6 7 6 Bill Ledbetter Bill Ledbetter 150 0
7 22 77 Burt Jackson 125 0
8 8 98 Johnny Mantz Johnny Mantz '51 Nash 100 28
9 9 36 Danny Letner Bert Letner '51 Hudson 75 0
10 29 Walt Davis 50 0
11 1 14 Fonty Flock Red Devil ( Frank Christian ) '51 Oldsmobile 25 71
12 5 99 Ben Gregory Cos Cancilla 25 0
13 6 35 Fuzzy Anderson Bert Letner 25 0
14 11 76 Don McLeish 25 0
15 12 27 George Seeger George Hicks 25 0
16 13 56 Marvin Panch Marvin Panch '50 Mercury 25 0
17 14 66 Bud Riley Northeast Motors ( Joe Beccue ) '51 Hudson 25 0
18 15 10 Tommy Melvin 25 crash 0
19 16 84 Robert Caswell Lou Mangini '50 Plymouth 25 crash 0
20 17 95 Freddie Farmer Freddie Farmer '51 Nash 25 0
21 18 12 Bill Stammer Bill Stammer 25 0
22 19 7 Fred Bince Speedway Auto Sales ( Cliff Caldwell ) '49 Plymouth 98 25 0
23 21 54 Andy Pierce '49 Plymouth 25 0
24 23 97 Jack Gaynor Jack Gaynor Hudson 25 lf wheel 0
25 24 3 Allen Heath Allen Heath 25 overheating 0
26 25 55 Sam Hawks Marvin Panch '50 Plymouth 25 0
27 26 11 Chuck Meekins 25 0
28 27 31 Lloyd Porter Stan Noble 25 0
29 28 16 Fred Steinbroner Bob Carpenter '48 Ford 25 0
Lap leader breakdown:
Leader From
Lap
To
Lap
# Of
Laps
Fonty Flock 1 71 71
Dick Meyer 72 104 33
Johnny Mantz 105 108 4
Dick Meyer 109 157 49
Johnny Mantz 158 181 24
Bill Norton 182 200

19

Results from Racing Reference.

Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
11/11/13 10:45:40AM
9,138 posts

Racing History Minute - November 11, 1951


Stock Car Racing History


On Tuesday, November 6, 1951, the Wilmington (NC) Morning Star carried this preview of the upcoming Lakewood race, datelined Atlanta - November 5. Wonder what happened to Fonty Flock? He isn't shown in the race rundown.

And, for your listening pleasure that Tuesday morning of November 6, 1951, Wilmington radio stations offered the following fare:

Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
11/12/13 02:42:37PM
9,138 posts

Never, Ever, doubt the impact of RR on NASCAR or the popularity of TMC Chase


Administrative

Sounds like ole TMC-Chase went out west and hit the MOTHER LODE!!! Can't wait for the blow-by-blow!

Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
11/11/13 05:06:08PM
9,138 posts

Never, Ever, doubt the impact of RR on NASCAR or the popularity of TMC Chase


Administrative

Not to take any credit at all away from TMC-Chase, but I suspect that he and his group were too busy using the Shaefer product in a medicinal manner to ward off the effect of potential rattlesnake bites in the desert to worry about how many fannies were in seats.

By the way... Phoenix is another locale that has reduced its seating capacity and only claims only 51,000 grandstand seats, i.e. below excerpt from coverage in Charlotte Observer:

While Phoenix International Raceway has reduced its seating capacity during recent years, that the track still sold out its 51,000 grandstand seats was impressive, as was the championship-like atmosphere that surrounded Sundays race. If the track could upgrade some facilities which it would like to do it would make an excellent location to host the season finale.

Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
11/10/13 12:44:08PM
9,138 posts

A Day for Veterans


General

I wrote the article below for our RacersReunion home page exactly a year ago. I received many comments afterwards and think it is appropriate to share with those who may not have seen it.

Thank you to all veterans past, present and future and a special thank you to our RR member veterans and those with family members who are, were or will be veterans.

A Day For Veterans

by: Dave Fulton

The temperature had reached 92 degrees on the sunny afternoon of September 13, 1981 at the dowdy old Richmond Fairgrounds Raceway. Thirty-two cars were lined up on pit road for the start of the Wrangler SanforSet 400 NASCAR Winston Cup Series stock car race on the ragged half-mile. A young rookie named Mark Martin, whose boyish face resembled that of a choir boy, was parked at the head of the pack, having bested all the big name teams in qualifying for the pole position.

The former dirt track had been paved by promoter, Paul Sawyer in 1968, but it ranked as one of the ugly duckling stops on the Winston Cup tour, nothing like the magnificent three-quarter mile speed palace Sawyer would open on the same site in 1988. It mattered little to the sellout crowd of 27,000. Always a racing hotbed, the Richmond track had sold out for years. With so many military bases in close proximity, the Richmond grandstands were always filled with many service personnel and veterans.

The old Richmond Fairgrounds Raceway in the 1980s. Photo by Joan Roue.

What did matter to the crowd was that it was now race time and no engines had been cranked. Flamboyant P.A. announcer, Ray Melton tried to quell the anxiety of the overflow crowd by making commercial pitches for Virginia Beach dental clinics and Norfolk restaurants like the El Toro, located on Military Highway. Interspersed between his P.A. commercials were Rays colorful descriptions of the men making up the field. But you could tell Ray was also antsy for the Command to be given to start engines.

Nobody knew what the holdup was and no explanation had been given to the crowd. Some began a chorus of boos. Well, two people did know the reason promoter, Paul Sawyer and his son, Billy. But, theywerenttelling. Theywouldnteven tell NASCAR why they wanted the race held up. There was no television scheduled that day, but Barney Hall and his Motor Racing Network radio crew were on the air killing time.

I am a Richmond native, but I was at the track that day not as a fan, but in my capacity as Manager of Wrangler NASCAR Special Events. On this day, not only would Wrangler sponsor the Dale Earnhardt #3 Pontiac owned by Richard Childress, wed also be sponsoring our very first race.

The Cluett Peabody Company was one of our suppliers at Wrangler. They owned chemical processes named Sanforizing and SanforSet that prevented fabric shrinkage and wrinkling. With no consumer end market, those good folks gave Wrangler $40,000 to sponsor the Richmond race and highlight their processes used in the manufacture of the denim used to make Wrangler Jeans.

With hundreds of guests and many things to monitor that go along with an event sponsorship, my mind was more occupied that day with the race sponsorship than the car sponsorship of Dale Earnhardt. Our guests were all in their seats, having depleted most of the supplies in a large Wrangler hospitality tent pitched behind the main grandstand. I, too, was antsy for the race to begin.

The authors father poses with the Earnhardt/Childress Pontiac #3 beside a hospitality tent before the start of the 1981 Wrangler SanforSet 400. Photo by Bryant McMurray

For those not familiar with the late Richmond promoter, Paul Sawyer, who passed in 2005 at age 88, let me give you a brief background. Born in Norfolk, Virginia, the crusty Sawyer had a heart of gold he justdidntwant you to know it. From 1939 until his early retirement in 1965 to devote his full energies to race promoting, Sawyer had been employed at the Norfolk Naval Air Station heading up the unit that salvaged precious metals from wrecked and retired aircraft. He had taken time out to serve his country in the United States Army during World War II.

The late Paul C. Sawyer Richmond International Raceway photo

In the early 1950s, Sawyer teamed with another Norfolk native who became his best friend and business associate. That was when he began building modified race cars for AMA motorcycle champion, Joe Weatherly. So successful was their partnership that they started promoting races together at Princess Anne Speedway and Chinese Corner in the Tidewater area as well as at Wilson, North Carolina and beginning in 1955, at Richmond. When Weatherly got a factory Ford ride, he convinced Sawyer to buy him out.

During a stellar promotional career, Sawyer earned a reputation as a friend of the fan and a friend of the racer. He slipped thousands of dollars to drivers with torn up race cars and no gas money home. During its 50 th Anniversary Season in 1998, NASCAR recognized Sawyer in Hollywood with its NASCAR Founders Award. During his career, Sawyer was also presented with the Buddy Shuman Award and the NASCAR Award of Excellence. His beloved Richmond International Raceway was presented the Myers Brothers Award by the National Motorsports Press Association. Sawyer has been inducted into the National Motorsports Press Association Hall of Fame, the International Motorsports Hall of Fame and the Virginia Sports Hall of Fame.

Paul Sawyer with drivers at Richmond . Associated Press photo

During 1981 Daytona SpeedWeeks, a deal was consummated in Daytona between Sawyer and Wrangler for the first sponsorship of one of his Richmond races the September Winston Cup event. Between February and September I made several trips from Wranglers headquarters in Greensboro, North Carolina to Richmond to work out details of signs to be hung, buildings to be constructed and grandstands to be expanded.

I really got to know Paul well during these trips, making a friend for life. Little did I know that ten years later he would employ me. Once, when we had budget cuts and would be unable to attend the July 4 th Daytona races, Paul sent plane tickets to my family, along with a voucher for a rental car and a note telling where our prepaid hotel room was located. Every Christmas, my daughters looked forward to receiving a UPS shipment containing Papa Sawyers Ham. It arrived every year, a fully cooked Smithfield ham from the peanut fed porkers of Smithfield, Virginia. There is not enough space here to write of all the things that wonderful man did for my family through the years.

The late Paul Sawyer posed in the stands of his new Richmond track. Richmond Times Dispatch photo

During my 1981 trips to Richmond to attend to race sponsorship preparations, I became aware that Pauls younger son, Billy saved all of the various racing periodicals that came weekly to the racetrack. Once a week Billy collected the publications and drove across the city to the McGuires Veterans Administration Medical Center, a 427 bed hospital and rehabilitation center opened in 1946. The hospital serves the men and women who have served our nation. There Billy talked racing with veterans who had sustained terrible injuries protecting our freedom and way of life. The racetrack never publicized the close relationship it had formed with the hospital and our wounded veterans. It was just the right thing to do in the eyes of the Sawyer family.

McGuire Veterans Administration Hospital City of Richmond, Virginia photo

During one of these trips Paul and Billy showed me a new grandstand I had funded named the Wrangler Grandstand. Coming off turn 4, it was located right at the main gate to the racetrack. At the section closest to the gate, the Sawyers proudly showed me a special area designated for individuals with disabilities. Long before the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) tackled sports stadiums to be sure they had appropriate access, the Sawyers were looking after their race fans who were wheelchair bound or otherwise disabled.

Returning to race day just as it seemed that the crowd on that hot 1981 Richmond afternoon might riot from their impatience, the sound of multiple sirens began to be heard over the melodic, sing-song sales pitches of announcer, Ray Melton. The sirens got closer and louder many, many sirens.

Suddenly with lights flashing and engines revving, Henrico County police patrol cars and City of Richmond motorcycle officers led an amazing procession through the gate between the main grandstand and the new section for disabled race patrons. Crew members lined up on pit road and spectators in the stands strained to see what was happening. A line of green Army ambulances, red fire department ambulances and white volunteer rescue squad ambulances followed one behind the other, stirring the dust in front of the Richmond stands.

The booing in the stands had now stopped. As we looked on in disbelief, Paul and Billy Sawyer personally directed the ambulance traffic. A group of servicemen appeared and began to unload the precious cargo being gingerly transported by this special caravan. No one walked from one of these ambulances. No one was placed in a wheelchair. Each and every individual who had arrived in this unusual procession was instead placed on a stretcher, and accompanied by a personal nurse, was transported to a position of honor in Paul Sawyers new grandstand section.

A faint roar had begun to build in the stands and along pit road by this time. On cue, a prepared script was given to announcer, Ray Melton. He informed the now roaring crowd that the men and women who were being transported to a place of honor in the Raceways new section were all United States military veterans who had suffered the loss of all four limbs in combat preserving our freedom. They had no arms, they had no legs. They were all quadriplegic Veterans who were sometimes described as litter cases. These were the folk Billy Sawyer visited with and read to from his collected racing publications weekly at the McGuire Veterans Hospital.

Though these service personnel got their racing papers from Billy and Paul every week, many had never seen an actual race and had no reason to think they ever would. Theydidntknow of Paul Sawyers tenacious nature and his love of the United States of America and those who served. We could no longer hear anything being said over the P.A. by Ray Melton. The deafening roar from the crowd had by now reached a thundering crescendo.

Only now did Paul Sawyer give a hand signal and the American flag behind pit road began a slow journey up its pole. There was no band and no celebrity record label performer on hand that day 31 years ago to desecrate the song of our nation. Instead, Harlan Hoover of Carolina Sound inserted a cassette tape and the strains of our National Anthem sweetly and patriotically wafted throughout the battered Richmond Fairgrounds Raceway facility. It was a stirring rendition recorded by a military band. Many of us heard it in our youth before cable when television stations actually signed off the air and military planes flew over Mt. Rushmore in the background as it played.

Richmond race fans during National Anthem ten years after 9/11 tragedies. New York Times photo

As the Star Spangled Banner played, Paul Sawyer moved among the distinguished group of military veterans. On each head he placed one of our blue and yellow Wrangler hats. At each stop he saluted. The moment is indelibly etched in my memory. It was unforgettable. It was electric. I could never recount it in such a manner that it could possibly have the same chilling and spine tingling effect experienced by those 27,000 Richmond race fans.

Our Wrangler driver, Dale Earnhardt placed 6 th that day, two laps down in the Childress Pontiac. The 1981 Wrangler SanforSet 400 ironically was won by Benny Parsons, driving for Bud Moore, himself a veteran and a hero of the Allied invasion of Europe in World War II.

ItwasntVeterans Day, but it was a day for veterans.


updated by @dave-fulton: 12/05/16 04:02:07PM
Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
11/10/13 01:42:53PM
9,138 posts

#43 Picked from 137 Million Smithsonian Objects in 19 Museums as One of Top 101 Iconic American Items


General

I think at some point in coming months they're going to air a 4-part television series covering the 101 picks. Here's a peek at a few more:

Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
11/10/13 11:52:44AM
9,138 posts

#43 Picked from 137 Million Smithsonian Objects in 19 Museums as One of Top 101 Iconic American Items


General

The #43 STP Pontiac owned by Mike Curb, sponsored by STP, crewed by Buddy Parrott and driven by Richard Petty to his 200th Cup win on July 4. 1984 in front of President Ronald Reagan at Daytona Speedway has been picked from over 137 million objects in 19 museums by The Smithsonian as one of the 101 Most Iconic Items of Americana.

Only things I can think of that would make this even sweeter would be if the car had been a Plymouth owned by Lee Petty and crewed by Dale Inman with a Maurice Petty-built 426 cu. in. powerplant.

Why No One Will Ever Replace Richard Petty as the King of NASCAR

Theres a good reason why his stock car is in the collections of the American History Museum

  • By Jeff MacGregor
  • Smithsonian magazine, November 2013, Subscribe
Richard Petty car
(Mark Ulriksen)

In America every car is a declaration of independence.

The special genius of this car lies not in what it is, but in what it did. Richard Petty, The King, won the Firecracker 400 behind the wheel of this car on July 4, 1984, down in Daytona Beach, Florida. It was his 200th Nascar career victory, an achievement unmatched in stock-car racing history, and he did it on the nations birthday in front of Ronald Reagan, the first sitting U.S. president to visit Nascars most famous track. This car carried the sports greatest star to what may have been the sports greatest moment.

Like every stock car, No. 43 is an outrage. It is coarse and loud and ill-mannered. It is a red, white and blue insult to civility and aerodynamics. It is a 630-horsepower brick through Americas living-room window.

Stock cars were originally exactly that, cars raced straight off the showroom floor with only minor modifications for safety and performance. By 1984 they were expensive hand-built specialty racing machines. But even then these cars were an unsophisticated anachronismbad handling super-heavyweight carbureted V-8s with cast-iron blocks in an automotive world moving fast to nimble high-mileage subcompact aluminum and digital fuel injection. Part of the romance of Nascar then and now is the technological simplicity of its all-American excess.

Stock cars were also a sales tool for the big Detroit manufacturers. Hang around the tracks and garages long enough even now and youll still hear people say Win on Sunday, sell on Monday.

This version of the famous No. 43 was a Pontiac Grand Prix owned by Curb Motorsports. Slow to anger and hard to turn, but capable of straight-line speeds well north of 200 miles per hour, it was purpose-built for the longer super speedway tracks at Daytona and Talladega, Alabama. The paint scheme was and is instantly recognizable to race fans. The number, the colors, that Petty Blue, that oval logo with the burly cartoon half-script. STP, a fuel additive, was Pettys primary sponsor for decades. It stood for Scientifically Treated Petroleum. Or Studebaker Tested Products. No one seemed sure.

The King was a throwback, too, in his Stetson and his pipestem jeans and gator boots and those sunglasses like Chanel welding goggles. The North Carolina son of Nascars first great star, Lee Petty, he fathered the next generation of racings most famous dynasty. This race car and that racer and that 1984 race bridged the years from Nascars moonshine and red-dirt beginnings to its cork-lined helmet and bathing-beauty days to the clean-shaven, two-terabyte matinee idol brand strategy the sport has lately become. Drivers now are less Southern, more corporate, more camera-readyand inauthentic in the way 21st-century country music feels inauthentic.

Richard Petty was the thing itself. He didnt win again, but 200 is a round and beautiful number. And likely never to be equaled. Next man on the list has 105.

Look for Mr. Petty these days in the luxury suites at Daytona, the corrugated sheds at Martinsville or the pits at Bristol, still tall and lean as a picket. Smiling. Shaking hands with fans. He retired in 1992 with seven championships, the winningest driver in Nascar history.

Maybe stock car racing is what you get when you bend the American frontier back on itself, every one of us running wide open in circles trying to get back to where we started. The world roaring by in a blur. Real race fans of every generation, the true believers down in the chicken bone seats, understand the 43 is more than a car, or even a race car. Its a promise, a contract, a binding agreement with sensation. An uprising. A revolution. Seven-thousand revolutions a minute, an ode to spectacle and sex and inefficiency, to upward mobility and economic freedom. To velocity and possibility. It is a time machine and a love affair, a prison break and a thunderclap and the first step west when you light out for the territories. It is good money and bad fun, necessity and opportunity, an anthem for Americans everywhere and anywhere without a voice of their own.

A writer for ESPN, Jeff MacGregor moved frequently as a child, and says his earliest ideas about America were formulated from the window of a moving car. Fittingly, his first book, Sunday Money , is an account of his year following the Nascar circuit.



Read more: http://www.smithsonianmag.com/history-archaeology/Why-No-One-Will-Ever-Replace-Richard-Petty-as-the-King-of-NASCAR-228932061.html#ixzz2kGHTAO00
Follow us: @SmithsonianMag on Twitter


updated by @dave-fulton: 12/05/16 04:02:07PM
Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
11/10/15 12:50:51PM
9,138 posts

Racing History Minute - November 10, 1963


Stock Car Racing History

I don't think a large group of fans crowding around wanting his autograph will ever protect Joey Logano.

Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
11/10/13 12:11:26PM
9,138 posts

Racing History Minute - November 10, 1963


Stock Car Racing History


This would mark the final Cup win for Jarrett's car owner, Charles "Red " Robinson , owner of Burton & Robinson Concrete Construction of Fairfax, Virginia. Jarrett moved to Bondy Long and Robinson dropped out of Cup racing completely following the deaths of his drivers Jimmy Pardue and Larry Thomas in 1964.

Ned Jarrett posed with the 1963 #11 Burton & Robinson Concrete Construction Ford, driven to its final win on November 10, 1963 at Concord, NC. Ford Racing Archives

Member, David Bentley has a photo posted on this site of future NASCAR Grand National Rookie of the Year, Bill Dennis, of Glen Allen, Virginia, driving a Burton-Robinson sponsored NASCAR Modified.

  270