|
 |
|
NASCAR history can trace its
roots back to 1794. Of course, that's a whole century
before the invention of the automobile, but it was the
year of the Whiskey Rebellion. This was a protest of a
federal tax on whiskey by frontier farmers. Instead of
being subject to the tax, many frontiersmen built secret
stills, manufactured, and delivered their product in
secret. Not often mentioned, but this is the true origin
of NASCAR history.
During
the Prohibition era of the 1920's and early 30's, the
undercover business of whiskey, or "moonshine", running
began to boom. More of a problem than secret manufacture
of moonshine was the secret transportation of it. The
common term for moonshine runners was "bootleggers".
Bootleggers were "men who illegally ran whiskey from
hidden stills to hundreds of markets across the Southeast.
These men were the real Dukes of Hazzard, only there was
nothing funny about their business. Driving at high speeds
at night, often with the police in pursuit, was dangerous.
The penalty for losing the race was jail or loss of
livelihood." (1)
As bootlegging boomed, the drivers began to race among
themselves to see who had the fastest cars. Bootleggers
raced on Sunday afternoons and then used the same car to
haul moonshine Sunday night. Inevitably, people came to
see the races, and racing moonshine cars became extremely
popular in the backroads of the South. Bootlegging
continued even after the end of the Prohibition era,
because of the huge tax placed on whiskey upon repeal of
the Volstead Act in 1933.
CLICK HERE FOR
NASCAR TICKETS
In the summer of 1938 a man named William H.G. "Bill"
France organized a race on the wide, firm sands of Daytona
Beach, Florida. The winner recieved such items as a bottle
of rum, a box of cigars, and a case of motor oil
(precursors to present-day sponsor involvement in the
sport) - NASCAR history had begun. France was a visionary;
he realized for stock car racing to grow, an official
organization had to exist to list champions, keep
statistics, and memorialize records and record-holders.
The outbreak of World War II brought stock car racing to a
halt. The drivers went to war and the production of new
cars ceased. At the end of the war, some drivers came back
and ran occasional, haphazard races at places like the
beach at Daytona.
By 1947, Bill France realized it was high time for a
national sanctioning body to govern stock car racing. On
December 12 of that year he gathered promoters from the
Southeast, Northeast, and Midwest to the Ebony Bar atop
the Streamline Inn as Daytona. Over the next three days
rules were drawn and specifications agreed upon. The name
of the organization would by NASCAR- the National
Association for Stock Car Auto Racing.
The first "true" NASCAR race, in the division that would
lead to the present-day WInston Cup Series, was held at
the Charlotte (N.C.) Fairgrounds on June 19, 1949. The
division of NASCAR in which this race was held, at that
time, was called the "Strictly Stock" division. "The
'Strictly Stock' division was open to competitiors who
drove full-sized, American made passenger cars, with
complete bodies, hoods, fenders, bumpers, and grilles- all
parts were required to be listed in the manufacturer's
catalog for each model."
The winner of that race was Glenn Dunnaway in a '47 Ford.
After the race, however, inspectors found an illegal part
in the shocks of his car. The car had been used for
bootlegging earlier that week, and the illegal shock wedge
was used often to increase speed of bootlegging cars.
Dunnaway's car owner sued, but the NASCAR lawyer kept
repeating the word "bootlegger" over and over in court,
and NASCAR won the case. Jim Roper, driving a '49 Lincoln,
went down as the winner of the first ever NASCAR race. At
the end of the season Red Byron became NASCAR's first ever
national champion. [Jim Roper recently waved the green
flag at the Texas 500 in April 1998.]
On September 4, 1950, the concept of the "superspeedway"
became a reality at Darlington, South Carolina. The first
Southern 500 was held that day, on a track larger, wider,
and faster than any stock car driver had ever seen before.
Johnny Mantz won in a 1950 Plymouth. This event, which is
now a Labor Day tradition, helped bring people to the
sport which previously had no interest in it. [Darlington
is incidentally one of the smaller tracks on the Winston
Cup circuit].
Through the 1950's NASCAR began to flourish. Corporate
sponsors, such as Pure Oil and Champion Sparkplugs took an
active role in the sport. Even the major automobile
manufacturers, such as Ford, Chevrolet, and Chrysler gave
"factory backing" to individual drivers-- the drivers
would recieve money from a manufacturer to drive its
product. A common motto for these automobile manufacturers
was "Win on Sunday, sell on Monday". The car companies
realized the potential of racing to sell cars. In the
1950's, NASCAR held races in such places as Municipal
Stadium [later JFK Stadium] in Philadelphia and Soldier
Field in Chicago. [Richard Petty's first race that counts
in his 1,185 starts was held clear out of the U.S.- in
Toronto, Canada.]
NASCAR
faced its first major crisis when all of the automobile
manufacturers pulled out of racing in May 1957 following
an incident at the Martinsville (Va.) Speedway where five
people-including an 8 year old boy- were hurt from flying
debris from a crash. Bill France, however, managed to keep
the organization functioning by convincing promoters to
increase prize monies. Two other factors, perhaps
coincidental, served to keep NASCAR alive.
The first was the appearance of NASCAR's first superstar,
Glenn "Fireball" Roberts in 1958. Roberts got his nickname
from the fierce fastball he threw while playing baseball
at Florida State. He won 32 races in his career.
Ironically, what eventually caused Roberts' death was a
different type of fireball. During the 1964 World 600 at
Charlotte (N.C.) Motor Speedway, Junior Johnson and Ned
Jarrett crashed on the back straightaway. Roberts swerved
to avoid the cars, flipped, and broke the car's fuel tank
open. The car burst into flames, and Jarrett ran to pull
him out of the fire.
"Jarrett finally did pull him out, burning his own hands,
and once he got him out, he began tearing off Roberts'
clothing. Roberts, still conscious, helped. After the
rescue squad finished attending to Rpberts, the racer was
taken to Charlotte Memorial Hospital. He was burned over
80% of his body." (3) Roberts died a little over a month
after the crash, on July 2, 1964.
The second factor that helped bring NASCAR through its
first lean years was the opening of the Daytona
International Speedway in 1959. The track had been a dream
of Bill France for many years. France risked almost
everything he had on building the track over a plot of
swampland four miles away from the ocean. Many people
thought France was going to lose it all and thought the
track was going to be a failure.
However, the first Daytona 500 proved his critics all
wrong. The race had recieved a great deal of hype in the
weeks leading up to it; even Walter Cronkite came to cover
it. Any spectator could see every part of the 2.5 mile
track (almost twice as long as any other track raced on to
that time) from any seat in the grandstand. Nobody had
ever seen the speeds and fierce competition that were
showcased in the first Daytona 500 in 1959. In fact, after
five hundred miles of racing, it took a photo finish and
61 hours to determine that Lee Petty's Oldsmobile beat
Johnny Beauchamp's Ford by a fraction of a car length. The
photo taken at the finish line is one of the most famous
photos in racing history.
All of the automobile manufacturers agreed to return to
NASCAR racing between 1962 and 1964. By the mid 60's,
NASCAR's rules had changed from a stock car having to be
"stock" to a stock car being anything but "stock". The
cars became heavily modified, mostly for safety, in
everything except body outline.
In 1964, Chrysler returned to racing and brought with it
the 426 cubic inch hemispherical engine, or simply the
"hemi". This engine was so powerful that Chrysler began to
dominate NASCAR racing, so much so that the level of
competition came to suffer extremely. Before the 1965
season Bill France outlawed the hemi, and Chrysler pulled
out of racing again to protest France's decision. France
allowed a modified version of the hemi to return in 1966,
and Chrysler re-entered NASCAR again.
The manufacturers once again pulled out of racing in the
late 1960's. Many racing historians agree that it was the
accomplishments of one man that kept NASCAR strong. That
man is know as the "King", Richard Petty.
Richard is the son of Lee Petty, winner of the first
Daytona 500 in 1959. He started out in the long-defunct
convertible division of NASCAR, and quickly moved up to
the Grand National division (which the Strictly Stock
division was renamed in 1950). Richard owns much of the
records in NASCAR's record book; many will probably never
be broken. Some of these include: most wins (200), pole
positions (127), races won from the pole (61), races
entered (1,185), most wins in a season (27), and most
consecutive wins (10 in 1967). Richard ended his career in
1992 with the illustrious "fan appreciation tour". His
career spanned 35 years, and he racked up seven NASCAR
championships and seven Daytona 500 victories, in 1964,
'66, '71, '73, '74, '79, and '81.
Petty became a superstar in the late 1960's, and his
heartfelt appreciation for all of his fans (he has
willingly signed every autograph presented to him by any
fan), as well as his racing exploits carried NASCAR from a
time of crisis to a time of prosperity.
In 1970, soon after the Nixon administration signed a bill
banning cigarette manufacturers from advertising on
television or radio, the R.J. Reynolds tobacco company
talked to Bill France to see if the company could put
their advertising dollars into sponsoring an elite
division of NASCAR racing. France happily agreed, and
beginning in the 1971 season, the top division of NASCAR
would be known by its present name, the Winston Cup
Series. The money pumped into NASCAR by R.J. Reynolds
(makers of Winston cigarettes-hence the name) would no
longer make squabbles over factory backing an issue in
NASCAR. [Junior Johnson, former moonshiner, 1960 Daytona
500 champion, and 6 time Winston Cup champion owner, was
instrumental in pulling the RJR deal together.
Moving to the present, a man who helped bring NASCAR to
its present popularity was Dale Earnhardt. Earnhardt has
won seven Winston Cup championships, in 1980, '86, '87,
'90, '91, '93, and '94. Throughout the 80's and 90's
Earnhardt's dirty driving style and his sinister black
Chevy has made him both the crowd favorite and crowd
nemesis. Any race fan has an opinion on Earnhardt, and
often certain stands at racetracks would be divided into
sections which either all love or hate Earnhardt.
And then the unthinkable happened. The tragic accident in
the closing lap of the 2001 Daytona 500. Dale Earnhardt
died that day, but his memory will live on.
Earnhardt, a native of Kannapolis, N.C., was Daytona's
career victories leader and the winner of the 1998 Daytona
500. According to Dr. Steve Bohannon, emergency medical
services director at Daytona International Speedway who
responded to the crash, Earnhardt was killed instantly.
"He had what I feel were life-ending type injuries at the
time of impact," Dr. Bohannon said. "Really nothing could
be done for him."
The announcement was made at 7 p.m. ET by NASCAR President
Mike Helton.
"Undoubtedly this is one of the toughest announcements
I've personally had to make," said Helton, whose
motorsports career covers more than 20 years. "After the
accident in Turn 4 at the end of the Daytona 500 we've
lost Dale Earnhardt."
Earnhardt's death was the 27th in the history of the
track, which opened with the inaugural Speedweeks in 1959.
The first fatality was Daytona Beach native Marshall
Teague, who died before Speedweeks began while testing an
Indy car for a world closed course speed record.

|
|