Forum Activity for @dave-fulton

Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
10/02/13 01:14:58PM
9,138 posts

Late, Great Announcer Bob Montgomery Interviews Cale - Film Clip - Sept. 1968 Martinsville


Stock Car Racing History

From the digitized archive of 16mm news & sports film donated by Roanoke, Virginia television station WSLS to the University of Virginia Library comes an Old Dominion 500 pre-race interview with Cale Yarborough by the late announcer Bob Montgomery at Martinsville.

Clip link below followed by Sports anchor transcript:

http://search.lib.virginia.edu/catalog/uva-lib:2219654


updated by @dave-fulton: 12/05/16 04:00:58PM
Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
10/02/13 01:02:10PM
9,138 posts

Late, Great Announcer Bob Montgomery Interviews Allison Brothers - Film Clip - Sept. 1968 Martinsville


Stock Car Racing History

I think the University of Virginia Library may have hit the "mother lode" when it acquired Roanoke, Virginia television station WSLS' 16mm news and sports film archive and began digitizing it.

The link below will take you to September 1968 at Martinsville Speedway prior to the Old Dominion 500 NASCAR Grand National stock car race.

The late, great radio announcer Bob Montgomery , anchor of the old Universal Racing Network radio race broadcasts before his passing, interviews brothers Bobby and Donnie Allison.

This archive of WSLS film runs from the years 1951 - 1971, by month. I think RR member, TMC-Chase needs to peruse it to see if there is any Lee Petty, Julian Petty, etc. footage floating around.

The link is below and the sports anchor's script is printed below the film link:

http://search.lib.virginia.edu/catalog/uva-lib:2219652


updated by @dave-fulton: 12/05/16 04:00:58PM
Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
10/02/13 06:09:13PM
9,138 posts

Racing History Minute - October 2, 1966


Stock Car Racing History

It is our privilege to see the name of PAUL LEWIS in upper case letters in the History Minutes. That is a great thing you do, Tim.

Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
10/02/13 09:39:21AM
9,138 posts

Rare TV News Footage of Ray Hendrick Winning 1968 Martinsville Cardinal 500 NASCAR Modified Race


Stock Car Racing History

Just found on the University of Virginia Library web site some raw WSLS, Roanoke, Virginia television sports footage of Richmond's Ray Hendrick winning the Fall 1968 Cardinal 500 NASCAR Modified race at Martinsville, Virginia in the Tant/Mitchell "Flying 11."

This was a very historic event - the first 500-lap modified race at Martinsville Speedway. The prevailing opinion was that the mods couldn't hold up for 500 laps. Many "naysayers" opined it couldn't be done, but "Rapid Ray" Hendrick proved them wrong, as usual! And 17,500 fans, including me, turned out to witness NASCAR Modified Division history.

By the way, Hendrick would win 14 more times at Martinsville before he hung up his helmet, becoming the track's all-time winner with 20 victories, trailed only by "The King" - Richard Petty.

The #21 Ford coupe involved in the big crash in turn 4 was being driven by Middleburg, North Carolina's Eddie Royster for Frank Edwards. This car was originally built by the Wood brothers of Stuart, Virginia for Richmond's Sonny Hutchins and later driven by Donnie Allison before being sold to Frank Edwards.

The silent clip is brief, but it is solid gold. Look at those beautiful coupes! Enjoy!

Below the clip link, I've included the original sports anchor script that accompanied the piece on WSLS-TV

http://search.lib.virginia.edu/catalog/uva-lib:2220029


updated by @dave-fulton: 12/05/16 04:00:58PM
Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
10/01/13 01:46:11PM
9,138 posts

Where is the lost "CBS - 60 MINUTES" Diane Sawyer taped interview of "King" Richard Petty? Destroyed? Located in CBS ARCHIVED PHOTO/ FILM SALT MINE VAULT?


Stock Car Racing History

That's a good question, Dennis. I remember before the piece was aired on CBS' 60 Minutes, Diane switched network affiliations and joined ABC. I don't think CBS showed any of the stuff she had in the can after the switch.

Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
10/01/13 08:04:47AM
9,138 posts

Racing HIstory Minute - October 1, 1978


Stock Car Racing History

Like you, Tim - I can't believe 35 years has passed since the event you've recapped.

Today is my late father's birthday. He would be 98 today. After I introduced him to auto racing, he became a huge fan of Junior Johnson and his 70s era Chevys. I guess the highlight for Dad of all the racing trips he accompanied me on was seeing Junior's #3 Charlie Glotzbach Monte Carlo on the pole for the World 600. He loved to watch Cale wheel Junior's Chevy and would have enjoyed your retelling of the North Wilkesboro race.

Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
09/30/13 03:52:15PM
9,138 posts

Occoneechee - Orange Speedway Feature Story - The Daily Tar Heel - 9/24/2013


Stock Car Racing History

By Brian Fanney
Updated: 14 hours ago

Frank Craig is the president of the Historic Speedway Group. The Historic Speedway Group began restoring the Occoneechee Speedway in 2006.

A sign advertising the Hillsborough Savings & Loan Association once
hung on the grandstand at the race track.

The only unrestored building on the property is an outhouse. The words No Negroes allowed are visible on the side of the building.

At the intersection of race, religion and booze in Orange County lies Occoneechee Speedway in Hillsborough, the last of 52 dirt tracks from NASCARs inaugural season.

Though it was lost first to nature and almost to a bypass, the skeleton of the track remains adjacent to Hillsboroughs Ayr Mount plantation. The track, once clear-cut and riveted more by tire tracks than tree roots, is now wooded after 45 years of neglect, but the one-mile oval is memorialized as a trail.

Its a Mother Nature-meets- NASCAR kind of thing, said Frank Craig, president of the Historic Speedway Group, which restored parts of the track and adjacent buildings.

Though racing stopped at Occoneechee in 1968 with Richard Pettys Hillsboro 150 win, the Historic Speedway Group is hosting a car cruise-in and racers reunion at the speedway today and Saturday that Craig said hundreds will attend.

But the tracks place in history was nearly forgotten after nature reclaimed the property, transforming it to just another part of the forest around the Eno River.

Starting in 2006, the Historic Speedway Group cleared the grandstands of brush, rebuilt the flag stand and ticket office and cleared some of the trees at the tracks center, among other improvements to the area. The groups work followed an Ayr Mount initiative to open trails at the track in 2003.

The property is owned by the Classical American Home Preservation Trust and managed by the Historic Preservation Foundation of North Carolina.

All these buildings were down, they had fell just all into themselves. We rebuilt all of them just exactly like they were in the same spot and matter of fact, used the same foundation, Craig said. It was just woods and its still a lot of woods.

The property is open to the public, and walkers and runners frequent the track and surrounding trails.

Money came from more than 100 sponsors and a grant from Hillsboroughs Tourism Board. Craig said he hopes to open a museum at the track, but isnt sure where the money will come from.

The track is one of three speedways on the National Register of Historic Places.

Preserving the speedways past was a personal battle for Craig.

Well, I can tell you the history of it because I was a big part of it when I was a kid, he said. I had a lot of history here with my dad and stuff. My dad died when I was 15 thats why its close to my heart.

But Craig said for him, the preservation was also partly about bringing the good, bad and ugly parts of NASCARs history to a wider audience.

Driving around the track, the first thing Craig points out are faint letters on an abandoned outhouse.

Youll see some racial crap down here on this wall that was written in the early 60s, Craig said. They wrote on the side, No Negroes allowed, because it was still segregated.

He shakes his head with disgust.

We left it up there because its part of history, he said. Its a bad part of history, but it is part of history. We talked to the local NAACP people and told them about it, and theyre good with it. They said everyone needs to know it.

Last year, the Historic Speedway Group honored Wendell Scott, who broke NASCARs color barrier and remains the only black driver to ever win a Sprint Cup then called Grand National series race.

Youve got a black man in a white mans sport in the Deep South. He had to be tough, Craig said. I never met the man, but he must have been a really special person, because he persevered through all that.

Scott competed in every race the track hosted from 1961 until it closed in 1968.

Dan Pierce, chairman of UNC -Ashevilles history department and author of Real NASCAR : White Lightning, Red Clay, and Big Bill France, said some of NASCARs first women drivers also raced at the Orange County track.

In the early days of NASCAR , (founder) Bill France is trying to do everything he can to come to races, he said. It was kind of a novelty. By the 1950s, they wouldnt allow women in the infield.

Pierce said four female drivers raced during NASCARs inaugural season, and in many ways, they were more daring than the men.

The best NASCAR -related movie is Cars, and its got that famous part of it where the Hudson Hornet guy is teaching Lightning McQueen how to go through turns, he said. You throw the back end out and youre steering right to go left through the turns. Its called a power slide.

After learning how to power slide for the first time at Occoneechee Speedway just a few hours earlier, first lady of NASCAR Louise Smith tried the move during the race, lost control and ended up in the Eno River.

Craig said this was a common occurrence.

I was sitting here watching the race and this guy, Ill never forget, named Major Melton. Hes just a guy that runs in the back most of the time. He lost control on the back straightaway and he went off the track. There were people that used to climb trees around the track to watch the race. He hit a tree with about five people in it. It knocked them all down, he said.

They hooked the wrecker and pulled him up the back with him still in the car, unconscious, and brought him down here to the ambulance, which was a hearse. Thats what they used. They pulled up to the hearse, and I said, This guy is dead. I was like 10 then.

Melton was taken to Duke Hospital and survived.

Craig laughs at the story now, but the wild reputation of the speedway and moonshine connections gave it a bad name among religious groups.

In the mid- to late 1950s, the Orange County Anti-Racing Association organized protests of the track and lobbied to ban racing on Sundays, a ban that lasted from 1957 to 1961.

Pierce said he considered Occoneechee one of NASCARs bootlegger tracks because the money to support the track came from Wilkes County moonshiners.

NASCAR admits there were a few drivers (in moonshine), but they downplay the connections, he said. The deeper I looked, the more liquor I found.

Kelly Flock-Bair, the granddaughter of NASCAR pioneer Fonty Flock, said moonshine was the basis for the familys racing involvement.

Thats exactly how they got started, she said. They would soup up their cars to outrun the law.

Fonty Flock was the brother of racers Tim Flock, Bob Flock and Ethel Mobley.

Craig said he expects to see current and former moonshiners at the show Saturday.

It was characters, man. A lot of moonshiners, Craig said. Thats just part of the history.

At this years show, the group will honor Marvin Panch, a prolific driver from 1949 to 1966.

Panch said he was proud to be honored at the show.

The 87-year-old racer said he got his start by chance when he owned a car raced by another man.

(My driver) won but got spun coming across the finish line. He said, I dont know if I want to drive against these guys, he said. Next Saturday night he didnt show up, so I started driving it myself.

He went on to win 17 races, including the Daytona 500, placing in the top 10 126 times.

He said his racing career was full of ups and downs. Driving a modified Maserati on Floridas Daytona speedway, the car flipped, caught on fire and the doors wouldnt open.

His crew was able to kick the doors open and rescue him.

That was one of my worst and best days all in one, he said. I was just fortunate that they got to me.

He said many contemporary fans of the sport have overlooked the original NASCAR drivers, but he appreciated the Historic Speedway Groups efforts to remind fans.

Not everybody looks after the old drivers. Theyre kind of forgotten, Panch said. These guys keep them going.

city@dailytarheel.com

Published September 24, 2013 in City

updated by @dave-fulton: 12/05/16 04:00:58PM
Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
10/01/13 01:35:17PM
9,138 posts

Racing History Minute - September 30, 1955


Stock Car Racing History

Absolutely awesome, Dennis! Thanks for sharing.

Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
10/01/13 07:52:29AM
9,138 posts

Racing History Minute - September 30, 1955


Stock Car Racing History

Thanks for the aerial view, Russ. Looks like a real "paperclip" - kinda like a double sized Martinsville.

  301