Forum Activity for @dave-fulton

Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
06/28/15 10:59:57AM
9,137 posts

What do you do with all the clothing with the flag imprinted on them?


Stock Car Racing History

The NASCAR modifieds #22 & #23 fielded by Hubert Hensley out of Virginia for cousins Billy & Jimmy Hensley always had a flag on the rear deck:

As Robert already mentioned, the Confederate flag hasn't been allowed on any NASCAR race cars for a number of years now.

Ironically, the only racing souvenir I ever purchased in my entire life was a Darlington cushion at the 1966 Southern 500 with that flag.

I don't really see that NASCAR can take any other stance. It will get extremely interesting if they attempt to prohibit fans from displaying that flag at Talladega, etc.

Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
06/27/15 01:02:12PM
9,137 posts

Half Way – “The Beginning of the End”


Stock Car Racing History

Well, Dennis, as I've mentioned before, I made it to 3 GT/GA races - two on dirt, one on pavement at 3 different tracks in 3 different years. They were all very enjoyable to me.

In 1968 I made the Richmond dirt event won by Donnie Allison in the Mustang. We were fascinated with the Austin-Cooper from Tidewater, Va. that would run under all the pony cars in the turns, then be passed back on the straights.

My second GA race - the only on pavement - was at South Boston in 1969 when Pete Hamilton drove that blazing fast red Gene White Camaro with the 180 degree headers and sound like no other to the win over my racing hero Ray Hendrick of Richmond, making a rare start outside the modified and Late Model Sportsman ranks - I'm sure, to help the promoter fill the stands at the track where he was the all-time winner. I'd love to know whose car Ray drove that night.

Lastly, after moving to Wilson, NC 4th of July week 1970 to go to work for the Wrangler Jeans folks, I made it over to the Raleigh Fairgrounds to catch Jim Paschal in that red/white/blue Huggins Javelin take a win on dirt, in the next to last NASCAR series race run on dirt at Raleigh. Richard Petty would win the final, a Cup event later in the year. It had rained hard before that race and the place was a mud hole. I thought it would never dry. I had seen a couple of Late Model Sportsman shows at Raleigh with Haskel Willingham and Farmer John Matthews, but this was the only touring series race I ever saw there.

All the GT/GA races I saw gave the fans more than their money's worth and provided good racing.

Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
06/27/15 12:43:50PM
9,137 posts

HAMPTON 100 June 27, 1970


Stock Car Racing History

Associated Press auto racing writer, Bloys Britt carried news of Tiny's Hampton win at Langley Field in his summary of weekend racing as reported in the Fredericksburg Free Lance Star.

Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
06/27/15 12:34:00PM
9,137 posts

HAMPTON 100 June 27, 1970


Stock Car Racing History

Here's a race report story from the Spartanburg Herald-Journal:

Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
06/27/15 12:14:43PM
9,137 posts

HAMPTON 100 June 27, 1970


Stock Car Racing History

Last week, watching the new television series, "The Astronauts' Wives Club" - I was reminded of a few Saturday afternoon excursions from Richmond to Langley Field Speedway in Hampton, Va. with my pal, Frank. We usually went to South Boston on Saturday, but took in a few Langley shows.

The original NASA space program was housed at Langley Field and to honor the space program - Project Mercury - and the original seven Mercury astronauts, Hampton renamed a main drag Mercury Boulevard . Coming to Langley from Richmond, you turned off on Mercury Boulevard heading to the track.

Almost across from the track's main gate, were very impressive wind tunnels and wind research bubbles, some of the largest and most sophisticated in the world. It was a quite impressive site to see as you got to the track.

I'm not aware of any of the NASCAR teams back in the 60s-70s using those facilities, even though they were directly across the street. For some reason, races weren't being decided by aero push.

Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
06/25/15 04:05:07PM
9,137 posts

The driver with a 100% batting average


Stock Car Racing History

I thought the driver with the 100% batting average would be Kasey Kahne who has hit something in every race he's entered.

Here's an uncredited photo of Marvin Burke scoring his lone GN win at Oakland:

Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
06/27/15 01:04:59PM
9,137 posts

June 25, 1950 - First Ford GN Win


Stock Car Racing History

Kinda looks like the trunk is full of moonshine!

Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
06/25/15 12:09:56PM
9,137 posts

June 25, 1950 - First Ford GN Win


Stock Car Racing History

Looking at a Dennis Andrews response to a Tim Leeming history post several years ago, it dawned on me that today is the 65th anniversary of the first Ford Grand National win in NASCAR on June 25, 1950 in Dayton, Ohio..

Here's the comment Dennis made back in 2013:

"Jimmy Florian was the first to win a Grand National race in a Ford when he won at the Dayton Speedway on June 25, 1950 in a '50 Ford with Euclid Motors on the side of the car. The car originally belonged to the Chief of Police in Detroit."

I haven't done any research, but maybe Tim, Dennis or Chase have much more info.

The article below appeared on the Wood Brothers Racing site in 2011:

Shirtless Jimmy Florian Gives Ford Racing First NASCAR Win

In NASCARs formative days, the stars who won all the races and championships were the likes of Lee Petty, Curtis Turner, Joe Weatherly, Herb Thomas and Red Byron.
Not many people outside of Ohio knew who Jimmy Florian was when NASCARs stock car circuit came to the Dayton Speedway on June 25, 1950, but that all changed when the 27-year-old Cleveland native shocked his fellow competitors and fans alike by winning the 100-lap feature in a 1950 flathead Ford.
Florian passed Turner with 35 laps to go and never looked back in giving Ford its first official NASCAR Grand National win.
It was a car originally that belonged to the chief of police in Detroit and Euclid Ford got a hold of it, recalled Florians best friend, Bill Whitley, who spoke about that day with Ford Racing in 1999. The night that he won the race against (Curtis) Turner, (Joe) Weatherly all the big boys were there he just outdrove them thats all. We talked about that for years and years and years.
I kept telling him there was no way he could outrun those Oldsmobiles with a flathead Ford, but we had been running on that track seven nights a week in midgets and sprint cars and it was just a fact that we were very familiar with it and they werent, continued Whitley. He just outdrove them.
Some of his fellow drivers couldnt believe it either and protested, but Florians No. 27 Euclid Motors Ford passed NASCARs post-race inspection. Florian claimed the $1000 prize money for winning that day and firmly embedded himself in Ford Racing history.
He was about a half lap ahead when the race was over, recalled Whitley. I remember a whole lot about it because it was four oclock in the morning before we got paid. Turner, Weatherly, Petty the whole bunch they protested saying there was no way they could have been outrun with a flathead Ford.
And while his accomplishment on the race track was big enough news, he generated even more when he got out of car in victory lane bare chested. NASCAR eventually established a rule that a driver had to at least wear a shirt while driving. Hence, the nickname Shirtless Jimmy Florian.
It was hotter than hell, thats all there was to that, said Whitley about why Florian wasnt wearing a shirt that day. The rulebook back thenyou didnt have any rollbarsyou didnt have to have a seatbelt if you didnt want it, and the seat had to be just like it came out of the factory a plain old seat and they were uncomfortable.
You couldnt do anything to the car back then. For ventilation, you had to run with the windows down and that was the main reason he was shirtless. He thought that was the greatest because he had all the protection in the world around him. We ran a midget and sprint car back then and you had to have something on because you were getting hit by rocks. That was the main reason for that.
Florian didnt win anymore NASCAR events, but continued to have a successful short track career locally. He raced until he was 70 years old and often took his four children three daughters and a son to the race track with him. He sold his final vintage sprint car when he was 72 and lived for three more years until he passed away from cancer in February 1999 at the age of 75.


updated by @dave-fulton: 12/05/16 04:00:58PM
Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
06/19/15 05:35:26PM
9,137 posts

Buffalo NY - a lost GN race?


Stock Car Racing History

Nothing about we black sheep Fultons!

Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
06/19/15 01:54:08PM
9,137 posts

Buffalo NY - a lost GN race?


Stock Car Racing History

Apparently Ed Otto devised something for his Buffalo races he considered more thrilling for the fans than NASCAR's current debris cautions. But his gimmick cost him exclusive promoting rights at Buffalo according to the May 1950 clip out of Montreal:

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