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TMC Chase
@tmc-chase
10/24/13 10:14:50AM
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Racing History Minute - October 24, 1965


Stock Car Racing History

Based on the race preview, it sounds like the promoter had expected Richard Petty to race...

Source: Spartanburg Herald

...but when the green flag fell, it was Paschal taking the reins of the 43 vs. Richard. Would be interesting to know the reaction of the fans when they learned of the swap. By all I've read over the years, Paschal was a likable enough guy. And he certainly did a lot to keep Petty Enterprises afloat in the early 1960s. But if you bought a ticket to the Hillsboro race expecting to see King race, hmm.

Source: Spartanburg Herald

TMC Chase
@tmc-chase
10/24/13 10:02:21AM
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Racing History Minute - October 24, 1965


Stock Car Racing History


Ed Sanseverino has this great pic from the race in his collection. However, the photo's caption does include an error. While logical to think Richard Petty was behind the wheel of the 43, he wasn't. Jim Paschal drove the 43 for the Petty team that day. Richard didn't participate in it. I assume he had a conflicting drag racing commitment though I haven't been able to find an article to support my hunch.


updated by @tmc-chase: 10/24/17 09:54:24AM
TMC Chase
@tmc-chase
10/23/15 10:39:09AM
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October 23, 1960: Speedy's Final GN Win


Stock Car Racing History

Couple of race preview articles from The Progress Index of Petersburg, VA.

TMC Chase
@tmc-chase
10/23/13 01:41:01PM
4,073 posts

October 23, 1960: Speedy's Final GN Win


Stock Car Racing History


With Speedy Thompson being a central figure in the Racing History Minute - October 23, 1956 posted by Tim Leeming today, I thought I'd add this post featuring him as well in a 100-mile race 4 years later on October 23, 1960.

The GN circuit raced at the half-mile, dirt Richmond fairgrounds speedway in the Capital City 200. The event was the next to last race of the 1960 season. Ned Jarrett started from the pole with Joe Weatherly starting alongside him. Thompson in the #21 Wood Brothers Ford and Doug Yates made up the 2nd row.

Rex White, who claimed the 1960 GN championship, didn't have a stellar day at Richmond. He qualified 12th and finished 8th in the 19-car field.

The reigning GN champion from 1959, Lee Petty, was not in a position to repeat. But he was in a position to vision the future for Petty Enterprises. Son Richard had already begun his driving career. And Lee believed it was time to help his other son build his skills from behind the wheel as well. Lee opted not to race at Richmond. Instead, he turned his familar #42 Petty blue Plymouth over to 19 year-old and future NASCAR Hall of Famer Maurice Petty. The race was Chief's 2nd GN start but the first on dirt. Coincidentally, the Capital City 200 was the 43rd race of the 1960 season. Maurice may have been told to follow Rex because he qualified 13th and finished 9th - both times he was one spot behind White.

The race got off to a rough start with 4 cars starting at the rear of the field getting tangled up in the first turn of the first lap.

Thompson dominated the race by leading 173 of 200 laps - including the final 81. Ned Jarrett with 19 and Junior Johnson with 8 were the only other lap leaders. The 3 of them represented the top 3 finishing spots too with Thompson winning, Junior 2nd and Ned 3rd. All of them were on the lead lap. Richard Petty finished 4th with no laps led and 3 laps down to the leaders.

Race report from Spartanburg Herald.

The win was Thompson's 2nd in a row. A week earlier, he won at Charlotte Motor Speedway in the inaugural National 400.

The races were his 19th and 20th (and last) Grand National victories for Speedy. According to the following article, Thompson won on the half-mile, dirt Richmond track in the same Wood Brothers Ford in which he won on Charlotte's 1-1/2 mile paved track.

Source: Free Lance-Star

Thompson's brief run with the Wood Brothers - and the wins - is recapped on the Wood Brothers Racing website :


In his first-ever start for the Wood Brothers, the driver that the NASCAR world seemed to have forgotten, delivered them their first-ever superspeedway victory. Suddenly, the Woods and Thompson had become hot NASCAR properties, and Paul Sawyer, the promoter at the Richmond Fairgrounds track, knew a good thing when he saw one. With Richmonds 200-lap race coming up next on the schedule, Sawyer figured he could sell a lot more tickets with Thompson and the Woods No. 21 Ford in the starting field. So he called his fellow Virginian and friend Glen Wood and offered him $2,500 to bring Thompson and the winning car to his track and added another grand if hed bring a second Ford for Joe Weatherly.

Paul was pretty good about getting something while it was hot, Glen Wood recalled. And hot they were. Thompson qualified third at Richmond, took the lead from pole-sitter Ned Jarrett after just 19 laps and led 173 of the 200 laps on the half-mile dirt oval to get his 20th and final victory on the circuit now known as Sprint Cup. Leonard Wood remembers well that fall afternoon in Richmond. It surprised us how well Speedy ran on dirt, he said. He would back off early getting into the corner and let the car make a set, he said. A lot of drivers would run too hard into the corner and it would slow them down in the middle, but Speedy had a style of driving at Richmond that was really smooth. And of course he had equipment that allowed him to look good on the track. As NASCAR participants and fans came to better understand in later years, a car that been touched by Leonard Woods wrenches was a huge advantage.

The 1960 Ford that Thompson drove to his 19th and 20th career wins was once a burned-out heap in a junkyard. The Woods chose it because the fire had rid it of the heavy soundproofing materials and glue and other unnecessary weight. And Leonard Wood had done a little of his own magic on the 352-cubic-inch engine that was built on Fords assembly line right alongside those destined for passenger cars and trucks. There wasnt a lot you could do to them under the rules, Wood explained. But we could port the heads a little, and do a valve job. They had to have a certain compression ratio, and the cubic inches had to be right.


Thompson passed away in 1972 after suffering a heart attack during a late model race at Metrolina Speedway. He was laid to rest in Monroe NC.

Source: FindAGrave.com

Fin # Driver Car
1 21 Speedy Thompson '60 Ford
2 27 Junior Johnson '59 Chevrolet
3 11 Ned Jarrett '60 Ford
4 43 Richard Petty '60 Plymouth
5 17 Fred Harb '59 Ford
6 87 Buck Baker '60 Chevrolet
7 36 Tommy Irwin '59 T-Bird
8 4 Rex White '59 Chevrolet
9 42 Maurice Petty '60 Plymouth
10 10 Bill Morgan '59 Buick
11 74 L.D. Austin '58 Chevrolet
12 5 Nace Mattingly '58 Ford
13 83 Curtis Crider '58 Ford
14 61 Elmo Langley '59 T-Bird
15 23 Doug Yates '59 Plymouth
16 16 Joe Weatherly '58 Ford
17 54 Jimmy Pardue '59 Dodge
18 14 Wes Morgan '60 Chevrolet
19 7 Buddy Baker '58 Ford

updated by @tmc-chase: 10/23/17 09:25:27AM
TMC Chase
@tmc-chase
10/24/13 11:10:08AM
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October 23, 1976 - Ray Hendrick Takes Second Consecutive World Service Life 300 Late Model Sportsman at Charlotte


Stock Car Racing History

Seeing Pond's Junior Johnson-prepared car in Holly Farms colors reminded me of a photo I had seen here at RR before. Took me a while to find it, but I think its from this same race. Same model Monte Carlo for Jack Ingram's car too.

From Gerald Medford's collection.

TMC Chase
@tmc-chase
10/23/13 11:47:37PM
4,073 posts

October 23, 1976 - Ray Hendrick Takes Second Consecutive World Service Life 300 Late Model Sportsman at Charlotte


Stock Car Racing History


Despite my best efforts to tie down the year for some of the Ray Hendrick Charlotte photos on RacersReunion, I think I "hunched" too early. I think I may have guessed wrong in giving info to Dave. But I'm back with Take Two! So here goes.

Andy Towler has this photo in his collection that I now think is from the 1975 WSL 300. Looks like it may have be from an issue of Stock Car Racing magazine.

This pic appears to be the same one included in Ray Lamm's collection . Again - probably 1975.

And this car inĀ  Brian Norton's collection looks to be same car, same track - Charlotte 1975. However, I'm not 100% certain because of the addition of the STP and Goodyear contingency decals.

Tonight I found 2 more photos that I now think are from the 1976 race. The first one is from Andy Towler's collection . Same sponsor as 1975 - Nu Style - but with number as 01 vs. 1. Taped over fuel filler and moisture on the ground? Seems to me that's consistent with rain-plagued race weekends.

Ray Lamm has this one of Hendrick racing Dave Marcis described as from the 76 WSL 300. Ray's contingency decals match the ones in the pic from Towler's collection. Also, Marcis did NOT race the WSL 300 in 1975 - and he drove a Chevy in the 1977 WSL. So I think this one is indeed 76.

Finally, Don Smyle from Smyle Media shared this pic with me from the 1977 WSL 300. Hendrick returned with similarly painted #01 Chevy Monte Carlo. But his sponsor was changd from Nu Style to Housby Mack.

Andy Towler also has this Charlotte victory lane photo of Hendrick, his wife and Dick Armstrong. I'm not sure if its from 75 or 76. However, in the above photos that now seem to be from 75, Ray does NOT have the left side vertical stripes on his uniform. So perhaps this one is from 76.


updated by @tmc-chase: 10/23/17 09:30:41AM
TMC Chase
@tmc-chase
10/23/13 11:14:45PM
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October 23, 1976 - Ray Hendrick Takes Second Consecutive World Service Life 300 Late Model Sportsman at Charlotte


Stock Car Racing History

Race preview for the 2nd attempt to run the race. Final "hooligan races" were held to complete the field on Oct 16. But the next day: rain again.

Source: Wilmington's Star-News

TMC Chase
@tmc-chase
10/23/13 05:19:25PM
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October 23, 1976 - Ray Hendrick Takes Second Consecutive World Service Life 300 Late Model Sportsman at Charlotte


Stock Car Racing History


As Dave noted, the race was originally scheduled to run the day before the National 500, October 9, 1976. Rain postponed the race to October 17th. From Spartanburg Herald .

But ... on October 17th ... yep, more rain. ( Spartanburg Herald ) So the race was rescheduled for October 23rd.

Race program fromĀ  Andy Towler collection.


updated by @tmc-chase: 10/23/17 09:29:16AM
TMC Chase
@tmc-chase
10/23/13 04:54:36PM
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October 23, 1976 - Ray Hendrick Takes Second Consecutive World Service Life 300 Late Model Sportsman at Charlotte


Stock Car Racing History


Pretty sure Joe Millikan would have been in a Petty Enterprises prepared Dodge. He won the Permatex 300 at Daytona in February of the 1976 LMS season in the #04 Petty Charger.

Race report from Spartanburg Herald


updated by @tmc-chase: 10/23/17 09:28:58AM
TMC Chase
@tmc-chase
10/23/13 11:11:05AM
4,073 posts

Racing History Minute - October 23, 1956


Stock Car Racing History

Not only did Buck race the following week in the sweepstakes race Martinsville, but he also won the pole. Teammate Thompson qualified 2nd but started 3rd. Joe Eubanks started 2nd as the fastest timed convertible.

Source: Spartanburg Herald

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