Forum Activity for @tim-leeming

Tim Leeming
@tim-leeming
09/06/13 09:21:17AM
3,119 posts

1,000th Nationwide Race Friday Night at RIR; I Was in Victory Lane at 1st


Stock Car Racing History

Wonderful memories, Dave. I am really serious about you needing to write that book. You have so many personal memories and expereiences and race fans, especially those of us who still read REAL books and look at pictures like what you've posted woutl be awesome. Thanks for adding so much to my daily enjoyment.

Tim Leeming
@tim-leeming
09/04/13 09:45:34PM
3,119 posts

Racing History Minute, September 5, 1960


Stock Car Racing History

I hope there are many of you out there who remember this race and can add to what has been posted here.

Tim Leeming
@tim-leeming
09/04/13 09:43:20PM
3,119 posts

Racing History Minute, September 5, 1960


Stock Car Racing History

The 1960 Southern 500, although filled with exciting racing, confusion over the winner, and packed with over 80,000 fans, was also very tragic. This time it was not a driver killed, but two mechanics, Paul McDuffie and Charles Sweatlund, and a NASCAR official, Joe Taylor. Bobby Johns, in a Pontiac, rubbed Roy Tyner's Oldsmobile and slammed into the concrete pit wall which threw large concrete chunks through the air, killing the three and injuring three of Joe Lee Johnson's pit crew. Even before that tragic event Ankrum "Spook" Crawford was injured when Elmo Langley crashed into the pits and debris flew and hit Crawford as he was in the pits.

In those days, the pits at Darlington were literally the inner part of the track. There was a wall behind which the pit crew was located until it was time to pit the car. They would then go over that wall be would be changing tires and working on the cars less that three feet, at times, from where the race cars were going by at full speed. It is somewhat amazing that more fatalities or injuries were not sustained with that practice.

The race started with Fireball Roberts in a Pontiac on the pole with Buck Baker in another Pontiac starting second. Jim Paschal started third in a Plymouth, Joe Weatherly fourth in a Pontiac and Bobby Johns fifth in another Pontiac. Buck Baker would slam his Boomershine Pontiac out front on the green flag with Roberts hot on his tailpipes. Fireball would finally move around Baker on lap 7 and lead until lap 27 when Baker went back out in front. The race then became a battle between Fireball, Buck Baker, Cotton Owens, Bobby Johns, Richard Petty, Lee Petty and Rex White with each getting a turn at the lead.

The real battle for position finally wound down to a three way race between Baker and Roberts in the powerful Pontiac, and the blue Plymouth of second year driver Richard Petty who surprised everyone in the crowd (and the Pontiac folks) with the way he had that Plymouth right there in a position to win the race.

As the laps were winding down, Baker was leading, but Fireball and Richard had closed to the back bumper of Baker's Pontiac. Fans were going crazy expecting a real shoot out to the checkered flag. With only 11 laps to go, Fireball's Smokey Yunick Pontiac blew a plume of smoke from the tail pipes and he was done. That left it up to Richard Petty to hound the number 47 Pontiac. Petty was literally pushing Baker with three laps to go and fans were anticipating the possibility of a photo finish when, with three laps left, the Plymouth 43 wobbled as a tire blew taking Richard out of the hunt. Buck Baker was not on a lap by himself out front with two to go.

With a lap and a half to go, a loud "pop" eminated from under Baker's Pontiac as he blew a tire. Rex White, who now found himself in second after Petty's blown tire, passed by Buck as Buck rode around the apron. Rex took the white flag. Came back around took the white flag again. Next time by he got the checkers. To say there was confusion is to state it midly, but NASCAR Chief Scorer, Joe Epton was able to determine it was Buck Baker in the three wheel Pontiac that had crossed the line first at the end of 500 miles. It was after 7:00 p.m. when the official announcement came from NASCAR scoring that Baker had won and Rex White had finished second. That second place finish almost assured Rex White of the 1960 Grand National Championship which he did claim at the end of the season.

Top ten finishers were:

1. Buck Baker, Boomershine Pontiac, winning $19,900.00

2. Rex White, Piedmont/Friendly Chevrolet, winning $9,780.00

3. Jim Paschal, Petty Engineering Plymouth, winning $5,595.00

4. Emanuel Zervakis, Monroe Shook Chevrolet, winning $3,125.00

5. Ned Jarrett, Courtesy Ford, winning $2,000.00

6. Richard Petty, Petty Engineering Plymouth, winning $2,575.00

7. Banjo Matthews, Matthews Ford, winning $1,255.00

8. Johnny Beauchamp, Chevrolet, winning $1,025.00

9. Fireball Roberts, John Hines Pontiac, winning $2,175.00

10. Doug Yates, Yates Plymouth, winning $775.00

Marvin Panch finished 11th, PAUL LEWIS finished 14th. Herman Beam was 18th, Tiny Lund 19th,, Curtis Crider 20th, Joe Weatherly 21st, and G.C. Spencer 22nd. Cotton Owens would claim 24th, David Pearson 27th, Fred Lorenzen 28th,Lee Petty 30th, Reb Wickersham 32nd, and Jimmy Pardue 23rd. Buddy Baker clocked in as the 34th place finisher with Jim Reed 36th, Johnny Allen 37th, Tiger Tom Pistone 38th, and Speedy Thompson 39th. Elmo Langley finished 45th, Bunkie Blackburn 46th with Junior Johnson 47th.

PERSONAL MEMORIES from that event: I do remember that it was very, very hot that Labor Day. I have never really had a problem with heat, not even today at my advanced age, but I can almost feel the heat blowing off that asphalt in turn three right into the fence where I was standing to watch the race.

I heard the crash when Bobby Johns hit the pit wall but I never knew, that day, that anyone was killed. It was the next day when Uncle Bobby told me about it. I had already witnessed Bobby Myers being killed right in front of me in 1957 and I guess he was worried that, at my young age, I would come to associate racing with only death. I never did, but he was watching out for me.

Being the Petty fan that I already was, I remember screaming my lungs out most of the race as Richard was running a great race. In my little teenage mind, there was no doubt he was going to win. When he came by with that blown tire, I went as deflated as that tire. I remember Buck Baker coming by a couple laps later actually throwing sparks off that wheel with no rubber left. We actually thought Rex White won the race because that's what everyone was saying. We left the track for the drive back to Columbia believing it was Rex White. Next morning was school for me and I remember showing up unable to talk above a whisper because of all the yelling from the day before, not to mention being as sunburned as I have every been. To top all that off, my ears were still ringing with the sound of those race cars. I don't have much of a recollection of that first day of school, but I can still feel the vibrations under my feet as those cars came by me each lap. Funny how that works, huh?

OTHER SOUTHERN 500s run on September 5th through 1983.

1955:

1. Herb Thomas, Chevrolet

2. Jim Reed, Chevrolet

3. Tim Flock, Chrysler

4. Gwyn Staley, Chevrolet

5. Larry Flynn, Ford.

1966:

1. Darel Dieringer, Mercury

2. Richard Petty, Plymouth

3. David Pearson, Dodge

4. Marvin Panch, Plymouth

5. Fred Lorenzen, Ford

1977:

1. David Pearson, Mercury

2. Donnie Allison, Chevrolet

3. Buddy Baker, Ford

4. Richard Petty, Dodge

5.Cale Yarborough, Chevrolet

1983:

1. Bobby Allison, Buick

2. Bill Elliott, Ford

3. Darrell Waltrip, Chevrolet

4. Neil Bonnett, Chevrolet

5. Terry Labonte, Chevrolet

Honor the past, embrace the present, dream for the future


updated by @tim-leeming: 12/05/16 04:00:58PM
Tim Leeming
@tim-leeming
09/04/13 08:56:22PM
3,119 posts

Needed This Back in the Day When I Camped at the Track


Current NASCAR

That is amazing! Talk about a marketing bonanza! Wish we had one of those back when we were camping in the infields all over. We usually had everything we needed as we always overstocked, but there were those times.

Tim Leeming
@tim-leeming
09/04/13 08:58:30PM
3,119 posts

Other September 4 Southern 500 winners


Stock Car Racing History

Awesome posts Chase! Awesome. Love the pics and the videos.

Tim Leeming
@tim-leeming
09/04/13 09:00:28PM
3,119 posts

Passing of Herb Lewis in Nashville


Local and Regional Short Track Racing

I add my thoughts and prayers to the friends and family. Also, to all race fans because we have all lost a treasure whether we ever met him or not. What a wonderful legacy he leaves.

Tim Leeming
@tim-leeming
09/03/13 10:06:47PM
3,119 posts

Racing History Minute - September 4, 1950


Stock Car Racing History

It should be a safe assumption that all of you reading this History Minute have, at the very least, a passing knowledge of how and why Darlington Raceway came about. If not, there are two posts here on the Forum outlining the construction and history of the track. Also, there is a brief history of Harold Brasington, the man with the dream and desire to have a major race track for stock cars. So much so was Harold Brasington involved with Darlington that most of the actual construction work was the tractors or whatever it took, he got the job done. He also worked with NASCAR and the Central States Racing Association (CSRA) to get a race sanctioned on his new track.

Harold had attended the Indy 500 in 1949 and was convinced stock cars could race 500 miles as well, if they had a track on which do to it. So, he set about building that track. When completed, it was 1.25 miles around with high banked turns in one and two and slightly flatter turns in three and four. He set his first race for Labor Day, 1950. Sam Nunis had planned to run a 500 mile race on Lakewood Speedway, a dirt track near Atlanta, but when Brasington got Darlington completed, Big Bill France believed the asphalt track would be the way to go.

Not at all certain that stock cars could race at speed for 500 miles, Big Bill suggested to Brasington that he increase the size of the field from 30 as Brasington initally planned, to 75 with the hopes some may finish. Most of the talk around the Southeast in the days leading up to the first of 15 days of qualifying was mostly in agreement that it was unlikely many cars could stand the pace of racing 500 miles on asphalt at the speeds they would be making. Nevertheless, the race was set and 15 days prior, the qualifying got underway.

When qualifying was over, Curtis Turner had an Oldsmobile on the pole with a four lap average speed of 82.034 mph. Middle of the front row (they started three abreast as did Indy) was Jimmy Thompson in a Lincoln with Gober Sosebee in an Oldsmobile on the outside. The second row was made up of Bob Flock, Lee Morgan and Virgil Livengood, all in Oldsmobiles. Dorothy Shull of West Columbia attempted to qualify on the last day but spun her car three different times in turn two and did not make the field. Louise Smith, a premier woman driver of the day, failed to enter within the prescribed time and was not allowed an attempt to qualify.

On Labor Day morning, 75 cars took the green flag and roared into turn one in a cloud of dust. Literally, the dust was so thick it could have been a dirt track. In reality, hardly any of the drivers in the race had ever driven on asphalt and certainly not a track of that length with turns banked that high. Turn one was like bumper cars as cars banged off each other but they all made it through. Gober Sosebee would lead the first four laps before Curtis Turner took over on lap 5. On lap 27, Cotton Owens assumed the lead and he would stay there until lap 49. On lap 50, the slowest qualifier in the race, Johnny Mantz, took over the lead and he would stay there until lap 400 when the checkered flag waved.

Johnny Mantz was driving a Plymouth, a lighter car than most, and therein was a huge advantage. Tires were popping like fireworks on the Fourth of July as the heavier cars were overtaxing what the tires could stand. Soon, crews were going into the infield and taking tires off passenger cars, first with owner's permission and later by stealing them, just to keep tires on the cars. Johnny Mantz, who had competed in the Indy 500 several times, decided to use a hard compound "truck" tire on his light Plymouth and basically all he had to stop for was fuel. He had come from his 43rd starting position to the lead in 50 laps and would steadily lengthen that lead until he would win by nine laps.

The Plymouth, number 98jr, just kept on lapping the heavier and faster cars who were stopping ever 14 to 20 laps for tires. Oh, and the number 98jr? That was Johnny's number for his Indy ride in a J. C. Agajanian car and anyone with any knowledge of Indy will recognize that famous name. Having only competed in two NASCAR races prior to Darlington's first Southern 500, Johnny Mantz was more inclined to think along "Indy terms". An interesting fact about that Plymouth is that it was being used by Big Bill France and Harold Brasington to run errands around town before being converted to a race car by painting the number on the doors. Truly stock back in those days.

The stories of that first race are legendary. Things like Brasington expecting a crowd of 5,000 and hoping for maybe 9,000 but was surprised with approximately 25,000. Ladies at the track in their best summer outfits. Men in ties with their fedoras to shade their eyes. And let us not forget the bloody wreck that "killed" Buck Baker. Seems he had an horrendous accident and was knocked out. When the rescue folks got there all they saw as a knocked out Buck Baker with "blood" all over him and the inside of the car. One worker described it as the "bloodiest accident I've ever witnessed". In a few minutes Buck began to move and utter sounds and the surprised rescue workers began to remove him from the car. What really happened was Buck had filled the thermos behind the seat with cold tomato juice to drink during the race and the thermos had burst and splattered tomato juice everywhere.

The race started at 11:00 a.m. which, incidentally, was the same time they started races in Indy. Still the Indy influence. It was 6:30 and getting dark when Mantz finally raced under the flag at an average speed for 500 miles of 75.250 mph which was almost 2 mph FASTER than he had qualified. Amazingly,there were only two caution flags for a total of 13 laps.

One additional interesting fact about the first Southern 500 is that Herb Thomas qualified for the race but withdrew before the event, as did Bill Bennett, Louis Hawkins and Pap White. No reason given. Thomas would go on to Southern 500 fame in later races.

Top ten finishers:

1. Johnny Mantz, Westmoreland/France Plymouth, winning $10,500.00

2. Fireball Roberts, Sam Rice Oldsmobile, winning $3,500.00

3. Red Byron, Parks Novelty Cadillac, winning $2,000.00

4. Bill Rexford, Julian Buesink Oldsmobile, winning $1,500.00

5. Chuck Mahoney, Brooks Motors Mercury, winning $1,000.00

6. Lee Petty, Petty Special Plymouth, winning $800.00

7. Cotton Owens, Plymouth, winning $930.00

8. Bill Blair, Sam Rice Cadillac, winning $600.00

9. Hershel McGriff, City of Roses Oldsmobile, winning $500.00

10.George Hartley, Julian Buesink Oldsmobile, winning $450.00

Tim Flock was 11th, Gober Sosebee 17th, Bill Widenhouse 26th, Bob Flock 27th, Fonty Flock 28th, Jack Smith 29th, Jimmie Lewallen 43rd, Jim Paschal 53rd, and Curtis Turner 60th. Marshall Teague would finish 63rd, Buck Baker 69th (tomato juice and all) and finishing 75th and last, completing 24 of the 400 laps, was Roscoe Thompson.

Darlington Raceway still stands and in known by many names, most prominent in my opinion is "Too Tough to Tame". David Pearson and Cale Yarborough did pretty well taming the track, but it was that first Southern 500 in 1950 that gave us the confirmation that "stock cars" could race for 500 miles and people would love it. It was 1959 before the next superspeedway opened in Daytona, with Charlotte and Atlanta soon to follow. Then came Rockingham in 1965 and Talladega in 1969. These days NASCAR races all over the country and what was once a Labor Day tradition in the South Carolina Pee Dee has been replaced by a night race spectacular at Atlanta International Raceway. The Southern 500 is still a named used by Darlington but it is a race run on the Saturday night of Mother's Day weekend. Not quite the same. But then, neither are the cars, the drivers, or I dare say the fans. Things were different in 1950. That first Southern 500 set the bar for what was to come. So all fans of today's NASCAR can whisper a "thank you Harold Brasington" for what he did that first Labor Day race in 1950.

Other Southern 500 Races run on September 4th, through 1983.

1961:

1. Nelson Stacy, Ford

2. Fireball Roberts, Pontiac

3. David Pearson, Pontiac

4. Jim Paschal, Pontiac

5.Emanuel Zervakis, Chevrolet

1967:

1. Richard Petty, Plymouth

2. David Pearson, Ford

3. G. C. Spencer, Plymouth

4. Charlie Glotzbach, Dodge

5. Lil Bud Moore, Dodge

1972:

1. Bobby Allison, Chevrolet

2. David Pearson, Mercury

3. Richard Petty, Dodge

4. Fred Lorenzen, Chevrolet

5. H. B. Bailey, Pontiac

1978:

1. Cale Yarborough, Chevrolet

2. Darrell Waltrip, Chevrolet

3. Richard Petty, Chevrolet

4. Terry Labonte, Chevrolet

5. Bobby Allison, Ford

Honor the past, embrace the present, dream for the future.


updated by @tim-leeming: 12/05/16 04:00:58PM
Tim Leeming
@tim-leeming
09/03/13 08:13:45PM
3,119 posts

Annual NASCAR Day Festival - Randleman, NC - Oct. 26


Stock Car Racing History

Dave, I did see where Richard was taking it back to Level Cross. I think that is a good thing. Back in the 60s and early 70s, we would go to his shop often, four or five times a year at least. We had free run of the shop and all the junk yard behind the shop. Richard was so good to us as was Dale Inman. Even Maurice was nice to us but he could get feisty with little provocation! lol

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