1955 Southern 500

Coordinates: 34°17′50.5″N 79°54′18.4″W / 34.297361°N 79.905111°W / 34.297361; -79.905111

1955 Southern 500
Race details[1][2]
Race 35 of 45 in the 1955 NASCAR Grand National Series season

Layout of Darlington Raceway
Date September 5, 1955 (1955-September-05)
Official name Southern 500
Location Darlington Raceway, Darlington, South Carolina
Course Permanent racing facility
1.375 mi (2.221 km)
Distance 400 laps, 500 mi (800 km)
Weather Warm with temperatures reaching up to 82.9 °F (28.3 °C)
Maximum sustained wind speed: 11.10 miles per hour (17.86 km/h)
Average speed 92.281 miles per hour (148.512 km/h)
Attendance 50,000[3]
Pole position
Driver Bob Fish
Time 44.723 seconds
Most laps led
Driver Joe Weatherly Charlie Schwam
Laps 140
Winner
No. 9 Herb Thomas Thomas Racing
Television in the United States
Network WJMX (local AM radio)
Announcers Local radio announcers

The 1955 Southern 500, the sixth running of the event, was a NASCAR Grand National Series event that was held on September 5, 1955, at Darlington Raceway in Darlington, South Carolina. This race officially spanned 500 miles or 800 kilometres on a paved oval track. An unofficial 30-minute highlight film of this race would appear on the collector's set of Stock Cars of 50s & 60s – Stock Car Memories: Darlington-Southern 500; which was released in 2008.[4]

Television coverage of the 1955 Southern 500 was impossible due to the then-niche demographics of the burgeoning motorsport. However, the local radio station WJMX made it possible for housebound fans (i.e., young boys and housewives) to hear their favorite drivers from the first green flag to the checkered flag.[4] School children who lived in the area could either watch the race live or listen on the local radio because the race took place on Labor Day.[5] Coverage of the race would be spotty outside the Darlington area due to the broadcasting limitations of AM radio. No school was held that day because it was a legal U.S. statutory holiday.[5] Confederate flags were still legal to utilize in all parts of the state back then;[6] they were shown with pride alongside the Stars and Stripes.

While the cost of gasoline would be under 25 cents a gallon (6.25 cents a litre) back in 1955, transportation to and from the race would be gruelling because the Interstate Highway System had not begun construction until the spring of 1956. This public works project would be activated by the passing of the Federal Aid Highway Act of 1956[7] and would help play a role in modernizing the infrastructure of the Southern United States.

Background

Layout of Darlington Raceway, the track where the race was held.

Darlington Raceway, nicknamed by many NASCAR fans and drivers as "The Lady in Black" or "The Track Too Tough to Tame" and advertised as a "NASCAR Tradition", is a race track built for NASCAR racing located near Darlington, South Carolina. It is of a unique, somewhat egg-shaped design, an oval with the ends of very different configurations, a condition which supposedly arose from the proximity of one end of the track to a minnow pond the owner refused to relocate. This situation makes it very challenging for the crews to set up their cars' handling in a way that will be effective at both ends.

The track is a four-turn 1.366 miles (2.198 km) oval.[8] The track's first two turns are banked at twenty-five degrees, while the final two turns are banked two degrees lower at twenty-three degrees.[8] The front stretch (the location of the finish line) and the back stretch is banked at six degrees.[8] Darlington Raceway can seat up to 60,000 people.[8]

Pre-race summary

Historical information

This event commenced during the daytime hours and finished sometime before dusk because lighting was not available at Darlington Raceway during that era.[9] This luxury would not appear until after the 1999 NASCAR Winston Cup Series season.[9] The lights that people would see at the current Darlington Speedway races would be first used at the 2000 Mall.com 400 race (which became the Carolina Dodge Dealers 400 from 2001 to 2004 and is currently under the schedule as the Showtime Southern 500). Nearly all the drivers who raced in this event owned their vehicles under their own name instead of relegating control of their vehicle to a multi-car team.[10] The Motor Racing Network would not be established until 1970; they would make national coverage of the later NASCAR races starting in the sport's "modern era." Its rival, the Performance Racing Network, would eventually be founded at a later date by Speedway Motorsports.

Smoking was unrestricted during this race as spectators, crew chiefs, and even drivers were often smoking cigarettes when they were not expected to perform a duty on the track. It would not be until the 1970s when the American Medical Association started to discourage people from smoking due to its newly discovered link with lung cancer. During the start of the post-Winston sponsorship era, smoking cessation programs began to emerge in NASCAR teams and officials (most notably in Hendrick Motorsports when Jeff Gordon starting sponsoring Nicorette).[11] This mentality would also extend to the flammability of the 100% petroleum-based gasoline that all the stock cars had to use from the original 1949 season to the beginning of the 2011 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series season.[12] By the end of the 20th century, it became against the rules of NASCAR to smoke cigarettes near the gas pump because ashes from the cigarette could cause the gasoline to turn to fire.

Being the thirty-fifth race of the 1955 season, there would be only ten races after the conclusion of the 1955 Southern 500 in the entire season.[3] This race was the major race of any NASCAR season that came prior to the very first running of the Daytona 500. Once the Daytona 500 was established in 1959,[13] the Southern 500 quickly became another NASCAR event.

Pre-race festivities

Before the race, each part was individually inspected to make sure that every part is stock (i.e., can be bought at regular automobile shops as opposed to sneaking in "police parts" or parts intended entirely for racing).[4] Sometimes, entire vehicles had to be dismantled in order to find parts that look dissimilar to everyday passenger vehicles.[4] Only roll bars were added for extra safety during the 500 miles of racing. Every car that passed the inspection and was "certified stock" was given a certification ticket on the dash.[4] Having a certification permitted the driver to participate in the event with the full blessing of NASCAR. Intermittent periods of rain hampered qualifying and made the track wet.[4] Eventually, the stopped and the rest of the qualifying session proceeded normally with Fireball Roberts earning the coveted pole position for the race.[4] Six drivers failed to qualify for this race, including Harvey Eakin and Leland Sewell.[3]

On the night preceding the race, a beauty pageant was conducted with Fonty Flock as one of the judges; this tradition would be repeated at the 1956 Southern 500 and at all subsequent Southern 500 races.[4] Out of the numerous contestants that signed up from the Darlington area, Miss Martha Williams (from Myrtle Beach, South Carolina) won the honors of becoming Miss Southern 500 and accepted the ceremonious position that she held during the race.[4]

A marching band was also used as a part of the pre-race festivities.[4] It was unknown whether NASCAR had a pre-race invocation service or not during the 1950s as the highlight film never showed a detailed coverage of the pre-race ceremonies like today's live coverage on television. The singing of The Star-Spangled Banner (which had been the official anthem of the nation since 1931) would be performed but not filmed in the highlight video. NASCAR would become one of the first major league sports where the American national anthem was used since its inception. Even back in those days, it was customary to hear "Gentlemen start your engines" to fire up the racers into a rolling start. Qualifying would take up the whole month just like it does at today's Indianapolis 500 races;[4] regulations made in the "modern era" of the sport (1972–2003) modified the rules so that qualifying would eventually be contracted to one day.

In-race summary

Fireball Roberts earned the pole position for the beginning of the race driving a maximum speed of 110.682 miles per hour or 178.125 kilometres per hour.[3] The average speed of the race (with full racing traffic), however, was 92.281 miles per hour or 148.512 kilometres per hour.[3] Out of the 336 laps, there were eight yellow flag periods consisting of fifty-one laps.[3] Fifty thousand people attended the live event to see sixty-nine cars race (less than half of them managed to withstand the pressures of the race).[3] Regulations made decades after this race would finally standardize the field to forty-three racing vehicles; a far cry from the fairly unregulated days that the 1955 Southern 500 took place in.

Vehicles ranged in production year from the 1953 models that were driven by the less affluent teams to the 1955 models driven by wealthy teams like Petty Enterprises (now Richard Petty Motorsports with the merger of Gillett Everham Motorsports in 2009).[3] All drivers were expected to race in the vehicles that they personally drove to the racetrack in by virtue of NASCAR's then-strict homologation rules against producing vehicles specifically for racing. Some of the other notable NASCAR Grand National Series drivers that participated in this racing event were Junior Johnson, Ned Jarrett, and Lee Petty.[3] All of the drivers competing at this race were Caucasian American males; foreigners and minorities did not attempt to qualify for this race.[3] By comparison, at least one or two foreign-born drivers compete in today's NASCAR Sprint Cup Series races (usually Juan Pablo Montoya and/or Marcos Ambrose).

The infamous crash between Arden Mounts and Don Duckworth is captured within this still image.

Mounts' appearance at this racing event, where he would crash into Don Duckworth's stalled vehicle, would be captured on highlight films for generations.[4][14] While Bill Champion managed to avoid Duckworth by swerving past the vehicle rapidly, Arden Mounts managed to see the stalled vehicle too late and crashed into him in a very hard manner.[4][14] The proper usage of seat belts on the stock car automobiles would save the lives of both Mounts and Duckworth.[4][14]

Herb Thomas would end up winning the race after five hours, twenty-five minutes, and twenty-five seconds of racing.[3] He would receive $7,480 in American dollars ($66,186.39 when adjusted for inflation) while the total winnings for the race were considered to be $28,270 ($250,145.60 in when adjusted for inflation).[3] Thomas drove a 1955 Chevrolet Bel Air during a time where NASCAR was used to test the endurance of the newest passenger automobiles. However, the eventual championship winner would be Tim Flock with 18 season wins and an annual salary of $37,780 ($334,294.34 when adjusted for inflation).[15] Vehicle manufacturers involved in the race were Studebaker (defunct), Plymouth (defunct), Chevrolet (active), Buick (active but not racing), Dodge (active), Ford (active), Hudson (defunct), Cadillac (active but not racing), Pontiac (defunct), and Nash Motors (defunct).

More than half of the vehicles used were manufactured by Chevrolet while Nash Motors only had one vehicle in the running along with Studebaker. Sponsors for the drivers in the race included Mercury Outboards, Marion Cox Garage, Schwam Motors, Helzafire (owned by Kentucky Colonel Ernest Woods),[16] The Racing Club, Paper Hangers, and Fish Carburetor.

Lloyd Moore would announce his permanent retirement from NASCAR after this race.[17] He would end up having six daughters; whose names were withheld from the media.[17]

Timeline

Results

  1. Herb Thomas† (only driver to end the race on lead lap)
  2. Jim Reed
  3. Tim Flock (highest finishing Chrysler)
  4. Gwyn Staley
  5. Larry Flynn(highest finishing Ford)
  6. Buck Baker(highest finished Buick)
  7. Lou Spears
  8. Cotton Owens
  9. Bill Widenhouse†*
  10. Jimmy Massey*
  11. Banks Simpson
  12. Joe Eubanks(highest finishing Oldsmobile)
  13. Marvin Panch
  14. Nace Mattingly
  15. Jimmie Lewallen
  16. Ralph Liguori (highest winning Mercury)
  17. Banjo Matthews
  18. Dave Terrell
  19. Russ Graham
  20. Bill Champion†
  21. Lee Petty(highest winning Dodge)
  22. Johnny Patterson
  23. Billy Myers
  24. Lloyd Moore† (last Cup Series start)
  25. Ray Platte(the only employee of NASCAR owner Harry Parry)
  26. Bill Blair
  27. Bobby Waddell
  28. Blackie Pitt
  29. Jimmy Thompson
  30. Bob Welborn
  31. Curley Hatfield
  32. Roy Bentley
  33. Joe Weatherly†* (led 140 laps in his third career start)
  34. Jim Paschal
  35. Bill Bowman
  36. Junior Johnson
  37. Ned Jarrett (highest winning Pontiac)
  38. Ed Bergin
  39. Billy Carden
  40. Tojo Stephens
  41. Possum Jones
  42. Eddie Skinner
  43. Harold Kite
  44. Van Van Wey†*
  45. Speedy Thompson†*
  46. Fred Johnson* (highest winning Cadillac)
  47. Doug Cox*
  48. Gene Comstock(highest winning Hudson)
  49. Clarence DeZalia*
  50. Dick Allwine*
  51. Fonty Flock†*
  52. Gene Simpson*
  53. Dick Beaty* (his Cup Series debut)
  54. Jim Thompson*
  55. Don Duckworth* (involved in a crash with Arden Mounts)
  56. Arden Mounts†* (involved in a crash with Don Duckworth)
  57. Jimmy Roland*
  58. Curtis Turner
  59. Elmo Langley†*
  60. Donald Thomas*
  61. Slick Smith*
  62. Dick Rathmann†*
  63. Bud Rackley*
  64. Tommy Thompson*
  65. Gordon Smith*
  66. Fireball Roberts†*
  67. Pop McGinnis*
  68. Ed Cole*
  69. George Parrish*

† signifies that the driver is known to be deceased
* Driver failed to finish race

References

Notes

  1. "Climate information for Darlington, South Carolina, on September 5, 1955". The Old Farmers' Almanac. Retrieved 2010-10-15.
  2. "Pole qualifying time for the 1955 Southern 500". Ultimate Racing History. Retrieved 2011-02-28.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 "1955 Southern 500 information". Racing-Reference. Archived from the original on 2009-07-23. Retrieved 2009-07-09.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 Stock Cars of 50s & 60s – Stock Car Memories: Darlington-Southern 500 (DVD). Topics Entertainment.
  5. 1 2 "September 1955 Calendar Information". Time and Date. Archived from the original on 2009-07-23.
  6. Brunner, Borgna (2000-06-30). "Confederate Flag Controversy". Archived from the original on 27 September 2010. Retrieved 2010-10-06.
  7. "The Cracks are Showing". The Economist. June 26, 2008. ISSN 0013-0613. Retrieved October 23, 2008.(subscription required)
  8. 1 2 3 4 "Darlington Raceway". CBS Sports. Retrieved 2013-05-07.
  9. 1 2 "Darlington Raceway Might Add Lights". Encyclopedia.com. 1999-03-09. Retrieved 2010-03-17.
  10. "Car ownership information for the 1955 Southern 500". Driver Averages. Retrieved 2010-10-24.
  11. "NASCAR Smoking Cessation Program". ESPN. 2006-10-27. Retrieved 2009-08-11.
  12. "NASCAR going green; E15 fuel next season". Speedwaymedia.com. 2010-10-16. Retrieved 2010-12-30.
  13. Caraviello, David (2008-02-16). "In 1959, first Daytona 500 changed city, sport forever". NASCAR. Archived from the original on 15 September 2010. Retrieved 2010-10-06.
  14. 1 2 3 "Don Duckworth 1955 Crash". YouTube. Retrieved 2012-01-20.
  15. "1955 NASCAR Grand National Championship Points (final tally)". Racing-Reference. Retrieved 2011-12-11.
  16. "NASCAR Facts". msgexp.net. Retrieved 2010-04-15.
  17. 1 2 "Lloyd Moore after the 1955 Southern 500". Insider Racing News. Retrieved 2011-02-04.

External links

Preceded by
1954
Southern 500 races
1955
Succeeded by
1956
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/22/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.