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History Historic Stock Car Photos

Discussion in 'Traditional Hot Rods' started by indybigjohn, Aug 28, 2008.

  1. willumbilt
    Joined: Jul 15, 2010
    Posts: 43

    willumbilt
    Member

    99% sure that was a "Gentleman Joe Lehman" car that ran at Lakeside and Englewood Speedways in Denver back in the 70's. You can easily research by going to the Auto Racing Memories website.
     
  2. nash510
    Joined: Mar 2, 2008
    Posts: 140

    nash510
    Member
    from Vista, CA

    I remember it most as Lehman's ride too but I'm pretty sure Dave Swan was in it at the time of the picture. A photo of Dave in another Lee Bierbaum #21 can be seen here: http://autoracingmemories.com/forums/showthread.php?t=350&highlight=dave+swan
     
  3. willumbilt
    Joined: Jul 15, 2010
    Posts: 43

    willumbilt
    Member

    Yep- You're absolutely right. It wasn't until after I posted that I looked closely and saw Dave's name on the roofline.
     
  4. Beentherebefore
    Joined: Feb 1, 2010
    Posts: 305

    Beentherebefore
    Member

    Looks like the mods deleted some of your postings as not meeting their criteria. That picture you posted of your Dad's '57 Plymouth racing at San Gabriel surely should fit their criteria and so should his '63. I never knew that Lonnie had a son, at least not when I knew him. Is he still alive? I used to chat with him in the pits after the main events @ San Gabriel and I scored for him once. He had a real nice fellow as a CC with him there almost every week but I can't recall his name after 45 years. If you'd like some more information on what I can remember about him, contact me through the Private message section.
     
  5. Beentherebefore
    Joined: Feb 1, 2010
    Posts: 305

    Beentherebefore
    Member

    I don't know whether you saw it or not, but check out the picture of your Dad's '63 Plymouth on P98 of this thread (post #1950) posted by "Allstarracing" who competed against your Dad @ San Gabriel.
     
  6. CHUCK STARK
    Joined: Apr 12, 2011
    Posts: 18

    CHUCK STARK
    Member

    i think that car was owned by lloyd templeton and his son bob from chicago. Bob and i raced "super stocks" in the dirt ovals in central iowa, webster city, boone, marshalltown, dayton, belmond to name a few.
     
  7. Peckerwud
    Joined: Sep 18, 2010
    Posts: 4

    Peckerwud
    Member

  8. allstarracing
    Joined: Apr 1, 2009
    Posts: 384

    allstarracing
    Member

    I don't know why they deleted some of the posts because they met the criteria. The first picture is San Gabriel or as later called 605 Speedway. You can see the sight wall behind the retaining wall. This was between the backstretch and the freeway and was to keep the gawking and wrecks from happening.I think this was added in 1968 just before I got to California. Lonnie's car is a 63 and the car beside his looks like a 65 by the roof. The second picture may be saugus by the way the stripes are painted on the wall. I don't ever recall 605 having the stripes painted on a foward slant. Allstarracing
     
  9. JThur01
    Joined: Aug 6, 2010
    Posts: 24

    JThur01
    Member

    Thanks for posting the photos Lonnie.

    Rivergrade Road was between the track and the freeway and went right along the backstraight. I mean, very close...just a matter of feet.

    The photo on the right in post #5461 looks to be at Orange Show Speedway (notice the logs). In the photo on the left, Gary Sigman's circle 6 Pontiac GTO is at the right side of the photo. Sigman had several drivers, so I'm not sure who that is, maybe Bill Butts, who later moved to Colorado and raced in the Denver area. He also usually ran Chevelles. If DRH is here, I'm sure he can tell us who that is in the GTO.

    In the photo in post 5460 from Riverside, that's from a Permatex race. I believe the #81 '63 T-Bird is John Borneman, who raced at Cajon Speedway.
     
    Last edited: Jan 8, 2012
  10. Tcab
    Joined: Dec 29, 2010
    Posts: 45

    Tcab
    Member

    Thanks for the pictures and info.The united Guys had some good races on different tracks.We went to a dirt track in Poughkeepsie N.Y. for a Grand American race. It was a ruff exciting 1-00 laper and I think Roy won that night.I think it was in the 57 Chevy? Thant was alot of memory ago.That was the last season for the track it was sold and a radio tower was built there.
     
  11. Tricknology
    Joined: Mar 9, 2006
    Posts: 546

    Tricknology
    Member
    from DETROIT

    TOLEDO, Ohio - January 9, 2012) - Mildred Marcum, the co-founder and matriarch of ARCA who passed away shortly after her 98th birthday over the weekend, leaves behind an enduring legacy.



    A career in motorsports that began in the mid-1940s and spanned eight different decades was only extinguished by her passing. In fact, she worked in the home ARCA office on her birthday before celebrating with her family at home on Saturday.
    Mildred was born in Hubbard, Oregon on January 6, 1914 to John and Lydia Schoen before moving to Toledo, Ohio in 1916, just prior to America's involvement in World War I.
    She worked at the Packard automotive plant manufacturing planes during World War II. It was during that time that a friend asked if she'd like to go on a blind date. That blind date was John Marcum. Not long after, John took Mildred to her first race. "It was a midget race at Fort Miami," Mildred said. "That was about the only racing going on around wartime. And I decided I liked racing real well." Not long after that first date, John and Mildred were married.
    "I never met anybody like him. He was super. He was one of a kind. Whatever he set his mind to do, it didn't matter what it took, he got it done."
    [​IMG]John also raced in the Midwest and on the beach course at Daytona in the 40s, where John and Mildred met eventual lifelong friends and business acquaintances in Annie and Bill France Sr., founders of NASCAR. In the late 1940s and early 1950s, while John worked with Bill Sr. and learned about organizing, promoting and officiating stock car auto races, Mildred began a lifelong career of working the administrative and financial side of the business. Initially performing the hands-on functions of selling tickets, programs and concession food and beverages, she soon moved into management of those activities in addition to bookkeeping and accounting. While both Marcums were principals in each corporation, John specialized in racing-related matters while Mildred oversaw financial and administrative activities, a tandem effort which would exist until John's death in 1981.
    "How Johnny got acquainted with Bill was they used to drive racecars together, you know, they raced against each other. It was probably in the late 30s, at places like Fort Wayne and New Castle, Indiana. I guess they just hit it off because they always remained friends."
    The friendship eventually evolved into a business relationship in the late 40s.
    "Our first trip to Daytona was in 1947, and we took our car down there from Joe Dugan's car lot on Sylvania Avenue in Toledo to sell. We sold it in Daytona and the profit and what we made working for Bill at the race was our money to get back home on a bus.
    "While we were down there, we stayed at Bill France's house on Goodall Avenue. He had a filling station on Main Street at the time. Jimmy (France) was a baby, and Billy was just a kid and I remember him riding bicycles with our daughter Suzie.
    "Annie and Bill's house had a closed in porch and that's where we slept. Johnny, he would go down to the track with Bill early in the morning, and Annie and I would sell tickets. I remember I had an apron with pockets for bills and change, and the roll of tickets hung around my neck." [​IMG]
    The friendship evolved into a lifelong relationship for the foursome. John became one of France's officials in the fledging NASCAR division while Mildred worked the front gates under the direction of Annie. Mildred's eventual role in ARCA has often been compared to that of Annie's in NASCAR.
    "Back then we would live at North Wilkesboro in the hotel there for two months at a time, traveling and working races with Bill and Annie. I remember the first race Enoch Staley had at North Wilkesboro. The night before we spread the chloride on the dirt track, and the next day Annie worked in a little office with a dirt floor. But boy, did we sell the tickets."
    John and Mildred eventually turned their attention to promoting races back in Ohio where they organized OARA, the Ohio Auto Racing Association in the early 50s, working from his basement. OARA was the predecessor to MARC, the Midwest Association for Race Cars. Back then, Midget auto racing dominated the tracks in the Midwest until Marcum talked Skip Jechura into letting him do a stock car exhibition run at Toledo Raceway Park in 1950. There were only three cars to start it off but it grew fast because the crowds loved it. Stock car racing in the Midwest was officially born.
    In 1953, the Marcums founded a pair of motorsports companies in their home of Toledo, Ohio: the Midwest Association for Race Cars (MARC), a sanctioning body for organizing and administrating races and licensing and insuring competitors which would evolve into the present-day Automobile Racing Club of America (ARCA); and Marcum Promotions, formed to operate the grandstand side of the racing business advertising and promoting events, renting and leasing tracks for races, selling tickets and concession goods, arranging for sponsorships and managing tracks. While both Marcums were principals in each corporation, John specialized in racing-related matters while Mildred oversaw financial and administrative activities, a tandem effort which would exist until John's death[​IMG] in 1981.
    The MARC Circuit of Stars tour, comprised of fields of "race cars", were little more than street legal automobiles with numbers painted on. The Marcums quickly found that by sanctioning and promoting weekly events at local tracks, it not only paved the way for the traveling "New Car" circuit, but also increased MARC membership substantially. Within 10 years, MARC trailed only NASCAR and USAC, formed in 1956 when AAA left the sport, in terms of size and recognition. Promoting weekly and special event races in Michigan, Ohio, Indiana and Pennsylvania, the Marcums were instrumental in bringing about organization to the fledgling sport in the region.
    A typical race week was running Tuesday at Sportsman Park in Bedford, Ohio, Wednesday at Canfield, Ohio, Thursday at Strasburg, Ohio, Friday at Sharon, Pennsylvania, Saturday back at Canfield and Sunday at Toledo Raceway Park.
    "Back then, I remember that a lot of the fellas didn't have the money to make a racecar, so what they'd do is take their street car and put a number on the side of it and race it in the race. Of course, they hoped they didn't wreck ‘em because that was the only way they had to get back home.
    "I remember one time at Canfield Speedway we were short of cars and Johnny had Frank (Canale) put a number on the car we had driven down there to fill the field. Our hang-up clothes were still on the luggage bar that ran across the inside of the roof over the back seat and our suitcases were in the trunk." [​IMG]
    As the 1950s gave way to the 1960s, Bill France Sr. invited the Marcums to participate in February Speedweeks in 1964 at the 2.5 mile Daytona Int'l Speedway, and encouraged the pair to alter the "Midwest" reference in the sanctioning body's name to reflect its more widespread scope of activities. The resultant ARCA (Automobile Racing Club of America) tag proved well deserved, as the series has since sanctioned race events in well over half of the 50 states.
    Among the tracks at which Marcum-managed companies have either promoted or sanctioned weekly racing include Flat Rock Speedway, Mt. Clemens Race Track, Spartan Speedway and Jackson Speedway in Michigan; Toledo Speedway, Cloverleaf Speedway, Lorain County Speedway, Painesville Speedway, Dayton Speedway in Ohio; and Baer Field Raceway in Indiana. Marcum Promotions, meanwhile, has since its inception administrated weekly racing at Flat Rock Speedway since 1962, at Toledo Speedway from 1964-1978 and 1991 to present, and promoted events at tracks in Michigan, Ohio, Indiana and Pennsylvania. At one point in time, between John and Mildred Marcum, they were promoting and managing tracks which included racing activities 6 nights a week.
    In recognition of Mildred's pioneering spirit over the decades. Lyn St. James, founder of ‘Women in the Winner's Circle', awarded Mildred with the first-ever Mildred Marcum Pioneer Award in 2005. The honor is annually awarded in Mildred's name to deserving recipients, including NHRA co-founder Barbara Parks in 2006, NASCAR driver Louise Smith in 2008 and most recently Shirley Muldowney in 2011.



    [​IMG]
     
  12. Tricknology
    Joined: Mar 9, 2006
    Posts: 546

    Tricknology
    Member
    from DETROIT

    TOLEDO, Ohio - January 9, 2012) - Mildred Marcum, matriarch and co-founder of ARCA, passed away overnight at St. Vincent Hospital in Toledo, Ohio. Mildred had just celebrated her 98th birthday on January 6, 2012.
    In 1953, Mildred and husband John Marcum founded a pair of motorsports companies in their home of Toledo, Ohio: the Midwest Association for Race Cars (MARC), a sanctioning body for organizing and administrating races and licensing and insuring competitors which would evolve into the present-day Automobile Racing Club of America (ARCA); and Marcum Promotions, formed to operate the grandstand side of the racing business. Mildred worked in the ARCA home office right up until her birthday on Friday.
    Mildred is survived by her daughter Suzie Drager, grandsons John, Ron and Jim, and a host of great grandchildren.
    Funeral services are pending.
     
  13. Beentherebefore
    Joined: Feb 1, 2010
    Posts: 305

    Beentherebefore
    Member

     
  14. Beentherebefore
    Joined: Feb 1, 2010
    Posts: 305

    Beentherebefore
    Member

     
  15. indybigjohn
    Joined: May 22, 2008
    Posts: 1,713

    indybigjohn
    Member Emeritus

    I was so sorry to hear about Mildred Marcum, but they're together again. She was a wonderful lady. John gave me my first chance to flag with a traveling sanction back in the early 60s, and I think he's responsible for a lot of what my career became. RIP, Mrs. Marcum.
     
  16. allstarracing
    Joined: Apr 1, 2009
    Posts: 384

    allstarracing
    Member

     
  17. JThur01
    Joined: Aug 6, 2010
    Posts: 24

    JThur01
    Member

     
    Last edited: Jan 12, 2012
  18. hotrodlarry
    Joined: Jul 13, 2009
    Posts: 80

    hotrodlarry
    Member

    Darrell Waltrip mentioned on Speed tv today that he was inducted into the Kentucky Motorsports Hall of Fame along with a long time ASA flag man whose first name was John.

    inidybigjohn, was this you?
     
  19. indybigjohn
    Joined: May 22, 2008
    Posts: 1,713

    indybigjohn
    Member Emeritus

    hotrodlarry, I'm afraid it was. It's a real honor. He even mentioned my book. Larry McReynolds, who I converse with from time to time by e-mail, brought up the subject when Mike mentioned DW going into the NASCAR hall. This one ain't as big as that, but it means a lot to me. Funny thing is, I know or knew most of the others on this year's list.
     
  20. allstarracing
    Joined: Apr 1, 2009
    Posts: 384

    allstarracing
    Member

    Very cool and you deserve it. One of the best. Allstarracing
     
  21. indybigjohn
    Joined: May 22, 2008
    Posts: 1,713

    indybigjohn
    Member Emeritus

    Thanks, Allstarracing. That's much appreciated, coming from one of "my" old racers.
     
  22. skeeter200zx
    Joined: Jan 13, 2012
    Posts: 2

    skeeter200zx
    Member
    from Illinois

    # 46 is Rat Lane I think. He was All Pro driver from Loiusiana.
     
  23. k9racer
    Joined: Jan 20, 2003
    Posts: 3,091

    k9racer
    Member

    Rat was and still is from Penacola Fla. A true caracture.
     
  24. Falconred
    Joined: Mar 27, 2008
    Posts: 872

    Falconred
    Member


    Which post are you refering too??

    PS: John, glad you are getting the recognition that you deserve.
     
    Last edited: Jan 16, 2012
  25. Falconred
    Joined: Mar 27, 2008
    Posts: 872

    Falconred
    Member

  26. DRH556
    Joined: Mar 7, 2010
    Posts: 18

    DRH556
    Member

    Yep Larry Esau drove Sigman's GTO during the '70 season at both OSS & San Gabe. Later that season they put a '66 Chevelle body on it. That car had a '57 Chevy chassis under it. Bill Butts drove for Sigman in '71....The car was a '64 Chevelle & used the Chevelle chassis.
     
  27. DRH556
    Joined: Mar 7, 2010
    Posts: 18

    DRH556
    Member

    The photos in posts #5460 & #5461 are really cool. It's ironic that in the photo in post 5460 has Borneman in the former Clem Proctor T-Bird while Proctor is driving the #99 Torino!!!! Quite a coincidence. Sure miss those old Permatex races at Riverside.......
     
  28. Beentherebefore
    Joined: Feb 1, 2010
    Posts: 305

    Beentherebefore
    Member

    In 1972, Sigman built a Mopar for Butts to drive in the W.West series. Interesting is the fact that the car was powered by a bb wedge motor and was quite competitive with the Hemi powered cars that were dominating the series in those years. The wedge motor was built by Norm Palmer. The car was painted in the same color scheme as Sigman's other cars - metallic blue with a copper colored top and white circle with a #6. You wouldn't happen to have a picture of that car in your collection, would you?
     
  29. skeeter200zx
    Joined: Jan 13, 2012
    Posts: 2

    skeeter200zx
    Member
    from Illinois

    I'm a new member to this site and it's right up my alley. Grew up going to races at Huntsville Speedway in AL late 60's and 70's and have always had an interest in that era. Went to many of the All-Pro races in the 80's and kept up with those guys. I have pics I'll be digging out and scanning. Live in north IL now near Rockford Speedway, a lot of history around here as well. #3002 #92 is Jimmy "Smut" Means at Nashville.
     
    Last edited: Jan 17, 2012
  30. indybigjohn
    Joined: May 22, 2008
    Posts: 1,713

    indybigjohn
    Member Emeritus

    Falconred, thanks. And thanks to everyone who commented. It was a real surprise, and I'm especially happy to be going in with so many others I know and knew, like Joie Ray, DW, the Woosley TAD team, and Collings Downes Sr.
     

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