Forum Activity for @dave-fulton

Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
07/14/12 02:20:50PM
9,138 posts

Unsung Hero's Attempt to Pay Back Richard & the Petty Family


General


I stumbled across a 10-12 year old article this morning on the internet published in www.ConstructionEquipmentGuide.com . It's ironic that I saw it on a New Hampshire race weekend.

It brought memories of one of the nicest, most unique and unsung men I ever met in racing. His name is Hugh Hawthorne of Richmond, Virginia and I'll post the article I read a little further down the page. I'm guessing Hugh must be around his mid 80s today.

Former Richmond track operator, Paul Sawyer first introduced me to Hugh in 1981. Not only did he own Richmond's Alpine Construction Company, he also was one of three men who owned the 50% share of Richmond Fairgrounds Raceway stock not owned by Sawyer.

Hawthorne's company owned heavy equipment used for grading and site preparation. It included bulldozers, backhoes and a fleet of dump trucks in addition to standard grading equipment. All were readily recognizable, painted green & white, with the Alpine Construction logo inside a drawing of the Commonwealth of Virginia.

Hugh Hawthorne (center) with Alpine Construction Co. Equipment

I don't really know how Hugh got his start around racing. I do know that he used to lead the guard rail repair crew for Darlington and Daytona, as well as Richmond, before concrete walls and today's SAFER barriers.

When Wrangler Jeans sponsored its first Wrangler SanforSet 400 Winston Cup race at Richmond in September 1981, I got a call from Hugh asking the names and birthdates of every important executive and guest I'd have at the race. Little did I know that Hugh owned one of the finest collections of antique cars in the United States and was very instrumental in the organization and operation of various antique car organizations.

When my important guests arrived for Richmond race day in September 1981, each guest and executive was seated in their own personal Hugh Hawthorne antique vehicle built in the same year they were born. It was amazing.

To look at him, you'd never know Hugh had a dime to his name. He'd stand in the mud with post hole diggers repairing guard rail while his well dressed and fashionable wife served delicacies to friends at the race.

Hugh was born in Meherrin, Virginia, south of Richmond as you drive to South Boston on U.S. 360. One of his good friends, also from Meherrin, is country music star, Roy Clark. Hugh would bring Roy to the Fairgrounds to perform for the racers at our driver & media picnics. In Hugh's den is a sparkling Roy Clark jumpsuit and banjo in a glass case.

The other item of note in Hugh Hawthorne's den on Courthouse Road in Richmond is a #43 Richard Petty Superbird. That's because Hugh and the " King" have been longtime friends and Hugh traded a bulldozer and a backhoe to Richard for the Superbird back in the 70s. Our RR member, Billy Biscoe might have been working at Petty Enterprises when the car was prepared for Hugh.

Hugh Hawthorne's Richard Petty Superbird in one of its infrequent trips out of the Hawthorne den in Richmond

When you see the photos of the Richmond 1/2-mile track being torn up following the February 1988 race, that's Richard Petty on board one of Hugh's bulldozers ripping up the first few feet of asphalt.

Richard Petty on Hugh Hawthorne's Bulldozer at Richmond in February 1988

Those items are just several of hundreds of collectibles Hugh has amassed over the years. His property included heated/air conditioned warehouses where antique cars and watch collections were housed alongside staggering other collections of everything imaginable. He'd always invite our special Wrangler guests to tour the premises and they always left amazed.

Hugh Hawthorne shows off a few watches from his vast collection

Hugh sold his Richmond race track stock in October 1981, but through the years handled all construction projects for Sawyer, including the track expansion to 3/4-mile in 1988. Today one of his sons operates Alpine Construction and another son runs a separate construction company.

Richmond has always been a special place for the Pettys. Richard has a daughter married to former Late Model Sportsman driver, Charlie Luck who lives there and runs Luck Stone and Luck Quarries. Of course, Richard is the all-time race winner at Richmond. Dad, Lee won the first Cup race at Richmond in 1953 and son, Kyle completed the sweep in February 1986, becoming the first and to date only member of a family to win three Cup races at any venue.

I remember Hugh Hawthorne watching Adam Petty take a few "unauthorized" laps in Kyle's Mello Yello Cup car at a Richmond test session some years back and how excited he was to see the 4th generation of that family on the Richmond track he helped build, even if it wasn't official.

I can only imagine how hard it hit Hugh to learn of Adam's tragic accident in New Hampshire.

The old magazine article I read tells of how Hugh was able to help his friends, the Petty family in a way well suited to his talents. I don't know that you can use the term "pay back," perhaps "paying it forward" is more appropriate.

Today, Richmond's Hugh Hawthorne sits on the Board of Directors of Victory Junction Gang Camp . I wish you could all know him. In my opinion, he is one of racing's unsung heroes. Here's the little story of some of the wheels Hugh got turning after Adam's death:

Heavy Hitters Team Up for Victory Junction Project
Construction Equipment Guide

By: Giles Lambertson

Born of heartache, a camp for sick children in North Carolina has touched the hearts of numerous heavy hitters in the southeast regions construction industry.

The Victory Junction Gang Camp is little more today than 65 acres of trees and a couple of cleared areas. But the project already has created enormous goodwill among contractors and holds promise of being a true blessing to thousands of children within a few years.

The camp is the brainchild of the racing family of North Carolina, Richard and Kyle Petty. Richard Petty is a retired NASCAR legend and the son of another legend, Lee. Richards son, Kyle, still races on the NASCAR circuit.

But a fourth generation of Petty racing men, Adam, is the emotional center point of the camp. Adam Petty was killed in May 2000 when his Busch Series race car rammed a wall at the New Hampshire International Speedway.

Before that tragedy, Kyle and his wife, Pattie, had become interested in a series of free camps operated for children who suffer with life-threatening illnesses. They are called Hole in the Wall Gang Camps and are patterned after a camp started in the New England area by actor Paul Newman.

The Pettys had visited one of the camps in Florida, The Boggy Creek Gang Camp, as celebrity hosts for a fund-raiser. The Pettys liked the idea so much they decided to bring one to North Carolina.

Then Adam was killed at age 19 and the project became a balm that took on new meaning for the whole Petty family and its friends.

Construction of the camp truly is a labor of love. It is being constructed on land given by the family, and being cleared by a friend of the family, Hugh Hawthorne , who is volunteering his labor using equipment loaned by a dealer. Charity begets charity .

The project began to roll after Hawthorne got wind of the Pettys determination to establish the camp. The Hawthornes and Pettys have been close friends for decades.

Richard donated 100 acres on the back side of his farm, said Hawthorne. I told him, count me in. Ill come in and do the site work.

Hawthorne is more than just a family friend and former stock car racing driver. He is a retired construction contractor from Richmond, VA. To get started, he borrowed a couple of pieces of equipment from his sons, both of whom also are contractors in the Richmond area. Hugh Jr. runs Excaliber Construction. Scot is president of Alpine Construction.

With equipment in tow, the 72-year-old Hawthorne and a friend of his, Walter Link, rumbled on down I-85 in early spring of this year to the Petty property south of Greensboro, NC, near Level Cross. There the volunteers began their personal quest to begin turning 65 rural acres into a campsite.

The acreage is fully-wooded with stands of pine and hardwoods and is gently rolling like much of North Carolina. It is situated near a stream called Polecat Creek and adjacent to one of the states many paved farm-to-market roadways.

Before long, Hawthorne realized he needed more equipment. So he approached a John Deere equipment dealer in the Richmond area with whom he and his sons had worked, James River Equipment.

James River operates 11 John Deere equipment and parts outlets in Virginia, four more in North Carolina and one in South Carolina. Mark Romer, president of the company, listened to his good customers pitch. Romer has stated that he quickly realized the camp was a very interesting project, a good idea.

That meant Hawthorne and Link suddenly had a wealth of John Deere equipment with which to work. Romer has provided to them, for free, an 850C dozer, a 755C crawler loader, two excavators a 330 LC and 200CLC and a 9400 ag tractor to pull a scraper pan. He threw in an articulated off-road truck for the heavy hauling.

A Hugh Hawthorne bulldozer clears Richard Petty land for Victory Junction Gang Camp

Any maintenance needs for the equipment are met by field service mechanics out of the James River store just up the road in Greensboro.

This has been one of the greatest experiences, Hawthorne said of the contributions by James River Equipment. He spoke in May during a lull in his site preparation work. I couldnt ask for anybody to do more than he [Romer] has done. And cost has never been mentioned in any way.

By late April, the two volunteers had cleared and burned about 8 acres (3.2 ha) in the area where a lake will be formed and were awaiting a permit for the dam. They had cleared the path of the main roadway into the camp and completed some other preliminary work.

Just how much dirt will be moved is unclear, but Hawthorne projects it will be a minimum of 100,000 cu. yds. (76,455 cu m). As much as 20 ft. (6 m) of earth must be scraped away in places to get the site to grade.

This is partly because of the camps special needs. Unlike some gently rolling properties that contractors try to work around and preserve, the footprint of much of this site must be pretty level.

Greg Shaw, senior project manager for general contractor Shelco Inc., explained that the goal is to create a site that provides convenient accessibility for every child who comes to camp.

Were going to try to obtain a grade that meets ADA [Americans with Disabilities Act] requirements, he said. Backdrop hillsides will still be rolling, but any parts of the camp to be explored by one child will be accessible to all.

As plans for the NASCAR-themed camp were being drawn in truth, noted Hawthorne, They are drawing plans as we go along. Richard Petty mused aloud about really giving it a racing flavor.

It would be nice if we could get a race track in this camp, Hawthorne remembered Petty saying. So be it. Hawthorne already has roughly cleared an area for a simulated track, which will be about a .5 mi. (.8 km) around.

Grading for it isnt complete because Hawthorne ran into rock on turns 3 and 4, he said, with a hint of frustration.

The race track ultimately will be the focus of 36 camp buildings. The placement of each structure will be determined in relation to the extended oval.

Race track-themed buildings will include a medical center, theater, gym, spiritual center, dining hall, library and numerous cabins, as well as horse and boating facilities.

Will there be race cars? Yes, said Brian Collier, executive director of the camp. The cars will be designed to be loud, but not fast.

Collier added that the board overseeing development wants a safe camp with maximum access for the estimated 230,000 children in the Carolinas and Virginia who are seriously ill and can benefit from it.

Working with architect Little & Associates in Charlotte, the board is incorporating access into its very design, Collier said. Were trying to exceed ADA guidelines.

The Hole in the Wall Gang organization provides seed money after a formal assessment shows that a camp will meet real needs. The North Carolina camp has a $25-million price tag, of which about a quarter has been raised, Collier explained.

Victory Junction will be the fifth of the affiliated camps in the United States and, of course, the only one with a racing theme. The connection with racing is more than novelty.

Richard [Petty] is in my office just about every day, said Collier. The family is extremely involved in the camp. Kyle, of course, has other obligations in terms of racing.

Besides the Pettys, the 12-person board of directors includes Hawthorne, who raced stock cars for four years beginning in 1959, and Rick Hendrick, who sponsors a NASCAR racing team.

The influence of Romer of James River Equipment does not end with the donated use of his machinery. In early April, he sponsored a tour of approximately 150 contractors of a John Deere and Hitachi excavator manufacturing plant in Kernersville, NC, near Greensboro.

Romer decided to guide the tour over to the Victory Junction site as well, giving contractors the chance to meet the Pettys and to become acquainted with the project.

It was an amazing thing, he said weeks later. All were very impressed. More than 20 of the contractors offered to donate their time to the project. Some sent money.

Hawthorne added that he received personal pledges of commitment from some heavy hitters in the industry. Two-thirds of the contractors who visited told me, If you can use some help, you call me.

Also volunteering services and products is a major home improvement store, a regional seed dealer, a fuel oil company and a Richmond trucking company, Southern Transport.

The project is a sensitive one and the senior manager of it is being careful about who is selected to work. We want subs who have some compassion, concern, a feel for this project, said Shaw, the Shelco project manager. This job is a little different. The bottom line is who its for. If we have a passion for it now, in the beginning, that will reflect on how we do. Shaw added that Shelco considers it a privilege to be working on this.

Shelco is a Charlotte company founded in 1978 in Winston-Salem, with 2001 revenues totalling approximately $305 million. It operates in the Carolinas, Virginia and Georgia.

Shaw said he has been told the site will be ready for his subcontractors in August. If that schedule is met, the camp is expected to be completed in April 2004 with the first campers arriving the following June.

Victory Junction will offer summer sessions for up to 125 children at once, all with the same illness, which could range from arthritis to heart disease to sickle cell anemia. The camp also will offer family weekend retreats and special retreats for children with severe illnesses or handicaps, such as spina bifida.


updated by @dave-fulton: 12/20/20 03:43:46PM
Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
07/14/12 03:09:07PM
9,138 posts

Elvis n' RR


General

I thought Tom Cruise was on a Tomkat break to Myrtle Beach.

Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
07/14/12 02:52:43PM
9,138 posts

Elvis n' RR


General

Going for the 1968 Elvis teevee performance of "I Can Dream!"

Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
07/14/12 11:35:20AM
9,138 posts

Anniversary of J.D. McDuffie's Best-Ever Finish and Final Top-10 for Wendell Scott - 7/14/71- Malta, NY


Stock Car Racing History

I hope each and every RR member reads the " This Day In Petty History " links put up faithfully by member, toomuchcountry .

Those reports usually uncover so many fascinating facts and trivia in addition to the performance of Richard Petty and family.

For instance.... one of today's anniversary links for the July 14, 1971 race in Malta, NY

( http://bench-racing.blogspot.com/2012/07/july-14-this-day-in-petty-history-part_14.html )

reveals that today is the anniversary of the best finish ever posted at the top level by J.D. McDuffie, a third-place effort. The same race also provided the stage for the final top-10 finish earned by Wendell Scott, a 7th place effort.

Elmo Langley had a good 5th place run that day in The Empire State and Ron Kesolowski - Bad Brad's uncle - made a rare Cup appearance finishing 9th. He drove the #88, same number Brad wheeled at JR Motorsports.

Just amazing the facts that can be gleaned from perusing the "Petty Reports" posted by Chase. What a wonderful service he provides us all for an in-depth look at our stock car racing history.

I encourage you to look at the tmc post for July 14 and go to the link for the Malta race.

Going to the Greenville-Pickens race link in the same post will unveil a story documenting the murder of an up & coming South Carolina driver being watched by Bud Moore.

I propose we raise a Schaefer to the gentleman!

Here's the racing Reference recap of the Malta race:

1971 Albany-Saratoga 250

NASCAR Winston Cup race number 29 of 48
July 14, 1971 at Albany-Saratoga Speedway, Malta, NY
250 laps on a .362 mile paved track (90.5 miles)

Time of race: 1:21:21
Average Speed: 66.748 mph
Pole Speed: 74.896 mph Cautions: 2 for 10 laps
Margin of Victory: 2 laps +
Attendance: 7,000
Lead changes: 7

Fin St # Driver Sponsor / Owner Car Laps Money Status Led
1 1 43 Richard Petty Petty Enterprises '71 Plymouth 250 1,500 running 181
2 4 2 Dave Marcis Dave Marcis '69 Dodge 248 900 running 59
3 6 70 J.D. McDuffie J.D. McDuffie '69 Mercury 244 500 running 5
4 9 48 James Hylton Hylton Engineering (James Hylton) '71 Ford 243 350 running 0
5 18 67 Elmo Langley Ron Ronacher '69 Ford 242 325 running 0
6 8 10 Bill Champion Bill Champion '71 Ford 240 300 running 0
7 10 34 Wendell Scott Wendell Scott '69 Ford 240 275 running 0
8 19 24 Cecil Gordon Cecil Gordon '69 Mercury 240 270 running 0
9 26 88 Ron Keselowski Roger Lubinski '70 Dodge 239 265 running 0
10 25 8 Ed Negre Ed Negre '69 Ford 239 260 running 0
11 23 77 Charlie Roberts Charlie Roberts '70 Ford 236 255 running 0
12 22 19 Henley Gray Henley Gray '69 Ford 235 250 running 0
13 11 30 Walter Ballard Ballard Racing (Vic Ballard) '71 Ford 233 245 running 0
14 13 74 Bill Shirey Bill Shirey '69 Plymouth 221 240 running 0
15 33 73 Jerry Churchill Jerry Churchill '69 Ford 216 235 running 0
16 29 45 Bill Seifert Bill Seifert '70 Ford 207 230 rear end 0
17 28 41 Ken Meisenhelder Ken Meisenhelder '69 Chevrolet 191 225 ignition 0
18 15 23 Jabe Thomas Don Robertson '69 Plymouth 189 220 vibration 0
19 31 28 Bill Hollar Earl Brooks '69 Ford 165 215 brakes 0
20 3 12 Bobby Allison Coca-Cola (Holman-Moody) '69 Mercury 144 210 engine 0
21 7 39 Friday Hassler Friday Hassler '70 Chevrolet 130 205 vibration 0
22 14 68 Larry Baumel Auto Lad (Allan Schlauer) '69 Ford 130 200 engine 0
23 27 64 Dick May Elmo Langley '69 Mercury 123 100 brakes 0
24 5 49 G.C. Spencer G.C. Spencer '69 Plymouth 105 100 rear end 0
25 20 79 Frank Warren Frank Warren '69 Dodge 97 100 axle 0
26 30 6 Ed Hessert Neil Castles '69 Dodge 94 100 suspension 0
27 2 91 Pete Hamilton Junior Fields '71 Chevrolet 82 100 transmission 5
28 17 96 Richard Childress Tom Garn '70 Chevrolet 75 100 transmission 0
29 21 86 Bobby Mausgrover Neil Castles '69 Dodge 53 100 brakes 0
30 16 4 John Sears J. Marvin Mills Heating & Cooling (John Sears) '69 Dodge 36 100 engine 0
31 12 62 Rene Charland Kaye Engineering (John Keselowski) '69 Dodge 33 100 brakes 0
32 32 40 D.K. Ulrich D.K. Ulrich '70 Ford 27 100 flat tire 0
33 24 06 Neil Castles Neil Castles '70 Dodge 13 100 transmission 0
34 34 25 James Cox Don Robertson '69 Plymouth 1 100 quit 0

Lap leader breakdown:
Leader From
Lap To
Lap # Of
Laps
Richard Petty 1 58 58
J.D. McDuffie 59 63 5
Pete Hamilton 64 67 4
Dave Marcis 68 69 2
Pete Hamilton 70 70 1
Richard Petty 71 98 28
Dave Marcis 99 155 57
Richard Petty 156 250 95


updated by @dave-fulton: 12/05/16 04:00:58PM
Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
07/14/12 11:18:27AM
9,138 posts

July 14: King Richard wins 'em in North AND South


Stock Car Racing History

Those are an interesting series of side note you have posted on your blog about the Malta Petty win.

I found it particularly noteworthy that the event marked the best finish of JD McDuffie's career and the final top-10 finish for Wendell Scott. Really good stuff.

Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
07/14/12 11:48:15AM
9,138 posts

REX WHITE


Administrative

Hope Rex will prove to be a quick healer and up & about quickly.

Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
07/14/12 11:55:19AM
9,138 posts

CARL EDWARDS HAS A GREAT IDEA


Current NASCAR

Charlotte racing reporter, Jim Utter reached very deep in the speculative bag last night and questioned whether Edwards' suggestion smacked of attempting to unionize the drivers. If so, you can bet NASCAR will say, "Duck Feathers" to that idea.

In order to prevent another woodshed visit, here's the complete Utter piece, though most of it duplicates what you've already posted.

Did Carl Edwards suggest a driver's union?
By Jim Utter - jutter@charlotteobserver.com
Friday, Jul. 13, 2012

LOUDON, N.H. Is Carl Edwards advocating the creation of a driver's union in NASCAR?

It sure sounds like it.

In response to questions Friday at New Hampshire Motor Speedway about NASCAR's drug testing program, Edwards said he thought it would be a good idea for drivers to get together as a group and collectively pay for independent testing at the same time as NASCAR's test is conducted.

I think the drivers, this is just my theory, I think the drivers need to get together and we need to have our own group that is paid by us, that works for us, to here in tandem with the NASCAR drug testers and have them test us at the same time, Edwards said.

I don't think it's a contentious thing. I think that would remove almost all doubt in any situation of a positive test. Edwards said until there was an independent test, there is always going to be that little question of, 'Maybe there was a mistake.'

The idea of driver unions have not gone over well in NASCAR.

Together with Fireball Roberts and Tim Flock, Curtis Turner attempted to organize a union, the Federation of Professional Athletes, in 1961. Turner was banned for life but reinstated four years later.

In September 1969, many of NASCAR's best-known drivers formed the Professional Drivers Association. The group boycotted a race at Talladega when NASCAR refused to address concerns it had about the tire being used.

NASCAR Founder Bill France Sr. found 36 drivers to take their place and ran the race anyway with Richard Brickhouse winning the event.

Read more here: http://www.thatsracin.com/2012/07/13/91279/did-carl-edwards-suggest-a-drivers.html#storylink=cpy

Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
08/16/12 02:17:47PM
9,138 posts

Saugus Speedway Now a California Ghost Track


Stock Car Racing History

And... Carol, you might possibly be able to answer this question posed by Sheila here in 2008:

http://stockcar.racersreunion.com/forum/topics/1981311:Topic:71092

Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
08/16/12 02:10:36PM
9,138 posts

Saugus Speedway Now a California Ghost Track


Stock Car Racing History

Rummaging in the attic last night brought forth a June 1969 issue of Stock Car Racing Magazine. The clip below was written by Steve Smith in his "West Coast News" column:

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