View Full Version : Stock Car Racing History, NASCAR, and Other Problems in American Racing History
Don Capps
19th February 2011, 03:13
Here is an example of what actually took place at a race during the 1964 season, Augusta in November 1963 in this example, as compared to what is found at 1964-02 Augusta (http://racing-reference.info/race/1964-02/W):
1964 Grand National Race Number 2 / Augusta
Augusta 510 / 17 November 1963
Augusta International Raceway / Augusta, Georgia 
139 laps of 3.0-mile road course for distance of 417.0 miles 
Attendance: 14-15,000	Purse: $50,620
Qualifying was spread over four days, three days – Wednesday through Friday – being devoted to time trials and then a qualifying race on Saturday.
Wednesday Qualifying / 13 November 1963
Qualifying	Speed	Driver	Make	Notes & Notes & Information
1st	88.545 mph	Fred Lorenzen	1963 Ford Galaxie	LaFayette Ford 
2nd	87.84 mph	Fireball Roberts	1963 Ford Galaxie	
3rd	87.15 mph	Marvin Panch	1963 Ford Galaxie	
4th	86.17 mph	David Pearson	1963 Dodge Polara	
5th	84.96 mph	Darel Dieringer	1963 Mercury Marauder	
6th 	83.74 mph	Ned Jarrett	1963 Ford Galaxie	
7th 	83.44 mph	Billy Wade	1963 Dodge Polara	
8th 	67.33 mph	Joe Weatherly 	1963 Mercury Marauder	Qualified by Larry Frank
Thursday Qualifying / 14 November 1963
Qualifying	Speed	Driver	Make	Notes & Notes & Information
9th 	88.75 mph	Richard Petty	1963 Plymouth Savoy	
10th 	88.51 mph	Junior Johnson	1963 Chevrolet Impala SS	
11th 	86.73 mph	Dave MacDonald	1963 Ford Galaxie	
12th 	86.71 mph	Jack Smith	1963 Plymouth	
13th 	85.00 mph	Rex White	1963 Mercury Marauder	
14th	82.45 mph	Graham Shaw	1961 Ford Galaxie	
15th 	85.03 mph	Larry Thomas	1962 Dodge Dart	
Friday Qualifying / 15 November 1963
Qualifying	Speed	Driver	Make	Notes & Notes & Information
16th 	90.00 mph	Buck Baker	1963 Plymouth Savoy	
17th 	81.81 mph	Jack Anderson	1963 Ford Galaxie	
18th 	83.07 mph	Frank Warren	1961 Pontiac Catalina	
19th	81.21 mph	Curtis Crider	1963 Mercury Marauder	
 
 
Qualifying Race / 16 November 1963
10 laps of 3.0-mile road course for distance of 30.0 miles
On Saturday, a ten-lap qualifying race was held for those not qualifying during the first three sessions.
Qualifying	Results	Driver	Make	Notes & Information
20th	1st	Bobby Johns	1963 Pontiac Catalina	10 laps
21st	2nd	Jim Pardue	1963 Pontiac Catalina	
22nd	3rd	Cale Yarborough	1963 Ford Galaxie	
23rd	4th	Larry Frank	1962 Chevrolet Bel Air	
24th	5th	Buddy Baker	1963 Pontiac Catalina	
25th	6th	G.C. Spencer	1962 Pontiac Catalina	
26th	7th	Doug Cooper	1962 Pontiac Catalina	
27th	8th	Roy Tyner	1962 Chevrolet Bel Air	
28th	9th	Wendell Scott	1962 Chevrolet Bel Air	
29th	10th	Neil ‘Soapy’ Castles	1962 Chrysler 300H	
30th	11th	Jake Penland	1961 Pontiac Catalina	
31st	12th	Jim Brey	1962 Chevrolet Bel Air	
32nd	13th	Weldon Adams	1962 Plymouth Savoy	
33rd	14th	Elmo Henderson	1962 Chevrolet Bel Air	
Qualifying	Driver	Make	Notes & Information
34th	Tiny Lund 	1963 Ford Galaxie	Did not qualify; Promoter’s option
35th	Ed Livingston 	1962 Ford Galaxie	Did not qualify; Promoter’s option
36th	Johnny Allen	1963 Ford Galaxie	Did not qualify; Promoter’s option
Results	Driver	No.	Car Owner	Make	Laps	Purse	Points	Notes & Information  
1st	Fireball Roberts 	22	John Holman, Holman Moody 	1963 Ford Galaxie	139	$13,190	2,500	4 hr 49 min 51 sec, 86.32 mph
2nd	Dave MacDonald 	29	Banjo Matthews, Holman Moody	1963 Ford Galaxie	138	$6,745	2,400	
3rd	Billy Wade 	5	Cotton Owens, Cotton Owens Garage	1963 Dodge Polara	137	$3,730	2,300	
4th	Joe Weatherly 	26	Bill Stroppe, Bill Stroppe & Associates	1963 Mercury Marauder	137	$2,650	2,200	
5th	Ned Jarrett 	11	Charles Robinson, Burton-Robinson Racing Team 	1963 Ford Galaxie	132	$1,675	2,100	
6th	Jimmy Pardue 	2	Cliff Stewart	1963 Pontiac Catalina	132	$1,800	2,000	
7th	Larry Thomas 	36	Wade Younts	1962 Dodge Dart	130	$1,250	1,900	
8th	Curtis Crider 	62	Curtis Crider	1963 Ford Galaxie	129	$1,100	1,800	
9th	Marvin Panch 	21	Ray Lee Wood, Wood Brothers 1963 Ford Galaxie	128	$1,220	1,700	Transmission 
10th	Buddy Baker 	87	Buck Baker	1963 Pontiac Catalina	127	$1,050	1,600	
11th	Graham Shaw 	12	Graham Shaw	1961 Ford Galaxie	126	$900	1,500	
12th	Tiny Lund 	32	Dave Kent	1963 Ford Galaxie	125	$800	1,400	
13th	Frank Warren 	80	 	1961 Pontiac Catalina	125	$625	1,300	
14th	Jack Anderson 	20	Jack Anderson	1963 Ford Galaxie	120	$775	1,200	
15th	Cale Yarborough 	19	Herman Beam	1963 Ford Galaxie	119	$650	1,100	
16th	Doug Cooper 	02	Bob Cooper	1962 Pontiac Catalina	117	$575	1,000	
17th	David Pearson 	6	Cotton Owens, Cotton Owens Garage 1963 Dodge Polara	115	$670	900	Engine 
18th	Wendell Scott 	34	Wendell Scott	1962 Chevrolet Bel Air	115	$525	800	
19th	Richard Petty 	43	Lee Petty, Lee Petty Engineering Company	1963 Plymouth Savoy	94	$820	700 Transmission – pinion gear 
20th	Johnny Allen 	92	 	1963 Ford Galaxie	66	$700	600	Engine 
21st	Junior Johnson 	3	Ray Fox, Ray Fox Engineering	1963 Chevrolet Impala SS	52	$620	500	Transmission
22nd	Neil Castles 	86	Buck Baker	1962 Chrysler 300H	47	$525	400	Clutch 
23rd	Larry Frank 	30	 	1962 Chevrolet Bel Air	37	$575	300	Engine 
24th	G.C. Spencer 	70	Paul Clayton	1962 Pontiac Catalina	33	$525	200	Engine 
25th	Roy Tyner 	9	Roy Tyner	1962 Chevrolet Bel Air	25	$525	100	Transmission – rear end gears 
26th	Rex White 	4	Louis Clements	1963 Mercury Marauder	17	$575	100	Engine 
27th	Darel Dieringer 	16	Bill Stroppe, Bill Stroppe & Associates 
1963 Mercury Marauder	14	$525	100	Engine – valve lifter 
28th	Fred Lorenzen 	28	Ralph Moody, Holman Moody	1963 Ford Galaxie	12	$625	100	Engine – piston
29th	Buck Baker 	42	Lee Petty, Lee Petty Engineering Company	1963 Plymouth Savoy	12	$575	100	Engine 
30th	Jim Bray 	156	Nick Rampling	1962 Chevrolet Bel Air	7	$525	100	Transmission 
31st	Elmo Henderson 	03	G.C. Spencer	1962 Chevrolet Bel Air	6	$525	100	Engine – oil pressure
32nd	Jack Smith 	47	Archie Smith	1963 Plymouth Savoy	4	$525	100	Engine 
33rd	Joe Penland 	05	Possum Jones	1961 Pontiac Catalina	4	$525	100	Engine – oil pressure
34th	Ed Livingston 	56	Ed Livingston	1962 Ford Galaxie	3	$575	100	Engine 
35th	Bobby Johns 	7	Shorty Johns	1963 Pontiac Catalina	2	$900	100	Crash 
36th	Weldon Adams 	23	Leland Colvin	1962 Plymouth Savoy	2	$525	100	Distributor 
Lap Leaders		Driver			Laps Led	Lap Prizes
Laps 1 thru 3		Fireball Roberts
Laps 4 thru 22		David Pearson	19 laps		$95
Laps 23 thru 27	Junior Johnson
Lap 28			Richard Petty
Laps 29 thru 35	Junior Johnson
Laps 36 thru 48	Richard Petty
Laps 49 thru 51	Junior Johnson	15 laps		$75
Laps 52 thru 93	Richard Petty		56 laps		$280
Laps 94 thru 128	Marvin Panch		35 laps		$175
Laps 129 thru 139	Fireball Roberts	14 laps		$470
* Greg Fielden, The Superspeedway Boom, 1959-1964, pp. 241-241; Southern Motorsports Journal, 21 November 1963, p. 3.
Don Capps
19th February 2011, 03:20
Daytona Speedweeks 
1964 Grand National Race Number 6 / Daytona
1964 Grand National Race Number 7 / Daytona
1964 Grand National Race Number 8 / Daytona
 
Pole Position Qualifying / 8 February 1964  
Daytona International Speedway / Daytona Beach, Florida
Average of two laps of 2.5-mile speedway for distance of 5.0 miles
Qualifying	Speed	Driver	No.	Car Owner	Make	Notes & Information  
1st,	174.910 mph	Paul Goldsmith	25	Ray Nichels, Ray Nichels Engineering	1964 Plymouth Belvedere	Fastest individual lap, 
175.029 mph
2nd 	174.418 mph	Richard Petty	43	Lee Petty, Lee Petty Engineering Company	1964 Plymouth Belvedere	
3rd	171.696 mph	Junior Johnson	3	Ray Fox, Ray Fox Engineering	1964 Dodge Polara	
4th	171.804 mph	Jimmy Pardue	54	Charles Robinson, Burton-Robinson Racing Team	1964 Plymouth Belvedere	
5th 	170.583 mph	David Pearson	6	Cotton Owens, Cotton Owens Garage	1964 Dodge Polara	
6th 	169.029 mph	Parnelli Jones	15	Bill Stroppe, Bill Stroppe & Associates	1964 Mercury Marauder	
7th 	168.586 mph	Darel Dieringer	16	Bill Stroppe, Bill Stroppe & Associates	1964 Mercury Marauder	
8th 	167.426 mph	Bobby Isaac	26	Ray Nichels, Ray Nichels Engineering	1964 Dodge Polara	
9th 	167.068 mph	Marvin Panch	21	Ray Lee Wood, Wood Brothers	1964 Ford Galaxie	
10th 	166.604 mph	Fred Lorenzen	28	Ralph Moody, Holman Moody	1964 Ford Galaxie	
11th 	164.604 mph	Ned Jarrett	11	Bondy Long, Bowani Inc. 	1964 Ford Galaxie	
12th 	164.113 mph	Jim McElreath	14	Bill Stroppe, Bill Stroppe & Associates	1964 Mercury Marauder	
13th 	163.013 mph	Tiny Lund	32	Graham Shaw	1964 Ford Galaxie	
14th 	162.206 mph	Bobby Marshman	06	Holman Moody	1964 Ford Galaxie	
15th	160.313 mph	Jo Schlesser	77	Bondy Long, Bowani Inc.	1964 Ford Galaxie	
Pole Qualifying Day Race No. 1 / 8 February 1964
Daytona International Speedway / Daytona Beach, Florida
20 laps of 2.5-mile speedway for distance of 50.0 miles
After the qualifying session for the pole position and the other front row starting position, the cars were split into two groups for the trophy dash races. 
Qualifying	Speed	Driver	Make	Notes & Information
1st	174.910 mph	Paul Goldsmith	1964 Plymouth Belvedere	
2nd	171.696 mph	Junior Johnson	1964 Dodge Polara	
3rd	170.583 mph	David Pearson	1964 Dodge Polara	
4th	168.586 mph	Darel Dieringer	1964 Mercury Marauder	
5th	167.068 mph	Marvin Panch	1964 Ford Galaxie	
6th	164.604 mph	Ned Jarrett	1964 Ford Galaxie	
7th	163.013 mph	Tiny Lund	1964 Ford Galaxie	
8th	Did not qualify	Fireball Roberts	1964 Ford Galaxie	
Results	Driver	No.	Car Owner	Make	Notes & Information
1st	Paul Goldsmith	25	Ray Nichels, Ray Nichels Engineering	1964 Plymouth Belvedere	20 laps, 17 min 39 sec, 170.490 mph
2nd	Junior Johnson	3	Ray Fox, Ray Fox Engineering	1964 Dodge Polara	
3rd	David Pearson	6	Cotton Owens, Cotton Owens Garage	1964 Dodge Polara	
4th	Marvin Panch	21	Lee Ray Wood, Wood Brothers	1964 Ford Galaxie	
5th	Darel Dieringer	16	Bill Stroppe, Bill Stroppe & Associates	1964 Mercury Marauder	
6th	Tiny Lund	32	Graham Shaw	1964 Ford Galaxie	
7th	Fireball Roberts	22	John Holman, Holman Moody	1964 Ford Galaxie	
8th	Ned Jarrett	11	Bondy Long, Bowani Inc.	1964 Ford Galaxie	
Fastest Lap: 174.351 mph on lap 2 by Paul Goldsmith
Pole Qualifying Day Race No. 2 / 8 February 1964
Daytona International Speedway / Daytona Beach, Florida
20 laps of 2.5-mile speedway for distance of 50.0 miles
Qualifying	Speed	Driver	Make	Notes & Information
1st	174.418 mph	Richard Petty	1964 Plymouth Belvedere	Lee Petty Engineering Company
2nd	171.804 mph	Jimmy Pardue	1964 Plymouth Belvedere	Burton-Robinson Racing Team
3rd	169.029 mph	Parnelli Jones	1964 Mercury Marauder	Bill Stroppe & Associates
4th	167.426 mph	Bobby Isaac	1964 Dodge Polara	Ray Nichels Engineering
5th	166.604 mph	Fred Lorenzen	1964 Ford Galaxie	Holman Moody
6th	162.206 mph	Bobby Marshman	1964 Ford Galaxie	
7th	160.313 mph	Jo Schlesser	1964 Ford Galaxie	Bowani Inc.
Results	Driver	No.	Car Owner	Make	Notes & Information
1st	Richard Petty	43	Lee Petty 	1964 Plymouth Belvedere	20 laps, 17 min 27 sec, 171.919 mph
2nd	Jimmy Pardue	54	Charles Robinson 	1964 Plymouth Belvedere	
3rd	Bobby Isaac	26	Ray Nichels	1964 Dodge Polara	
4th	Fred Lorenzen	28	Ralph Moody	1964 Ford Galaxie	
5th	Parnelli Jones	15	Bill Stroppe	1964 Mercury Marauder	
6th	Bobby Marshman	06	Holman Moody	1964 Ford Galaxie	
7th	Jo Schlesser	77	Bondy Long	1964 Ford Galaxie	
Fastest lap: 173.644 mph on lap 2 by Richard Petty
1964 Grand National Race Number 6 / Daytona 500 Qualifying Race No. 1 / 21 February 1964 
Daytona International Speedway / Daytona Beach, Florida
40 laps of 2.5-mile speedway for distance of 100.0 miles 
Attendance: 17,500	Purse: $5,075
Start	Speed	Driver	Make	Notes & Information
1st	174.910 mph	Paul Goldsmith	1964 Plymouth Belvedere	
2nd	171.696 mph	Junior Johnson	1964 Dodge Polara	
3rd	170.583 mph	David Pearson	1964 Dodge Polara	
4th	168.586 mph	Darel Dieringer	1964 Mercury Marauder	
5th	167.068 mph	Marvin Panch	1964 Ford Galaxie	
6th	164.604 mph	Ned Jarrett	1964 Ford Galaxie	
7th	163.013 mph	Tiny Lund	1964 Ford Galaxie	
8th		Fireball Roberts	1964 Ford Galaxie	
9th		Buck Baker	1964 Plymouth Belvedere	
10th		Billy Wade	1964 Mercury Marauder	
11th		Johnny Rutherford	1964 Mercury Marauder	
12th		Dave MacDonald	1964 Mercury Marauder	
13th		Bobby Johns	1964 Pontiac Catalina	
14th		Bucky Boutwell	1963 Ford Galaxie	
15th		Ronnie Chumley	1963 Pontiac Catalina	
16th		Doug Cooper	1963 Ford Galaxie	
17th		Roy Gemberling	1963 Plymouth Savoy	
18th		Bob Cooper	1962 Pontiac Catalina	
19th		Joe Clark	1964 Ford Galaxie	
20th		Jim Bray	1962 Chevrolet Bel Air	
21st		Larry Thomas	1963 Plymouth Savoy	
22nd		Elmo Henderson	1963 Pontiac Catalina	
23rd		Reb Wickersham	1964 Dodge Polara
Results	Driver	No.	Car Owner	Make	Laps	Purse	Points	Notes & Information  
1st	Junior Johnson 	3	Ray Fox, Ray Fox Engineering	1964 Dodge Polara	40	$1,100	400	35 min 08 sec, 170.777 mph
2nd	Buck Baker 	41	Lee Petty, Lee Petty Engineering Company	1964 Plymouth Belvedere	40	$600	384	
3rd	David Pearson 	6	Cotton Owens, Cotton Owens Garage	1964 Dodge Polara	40	$400	368	
4th	Marvin Panch 	21	Ray Lee Wood, Wood Brothers	1964 Ford Galaxie	40	$300	352	
5th	Darel Dieringer 	16	Bill Stroppe, Bill Stroppe & Associates	1964 Mercury Marauder	40	$300	336	
6th	Tiny Lund 	32	Graham Shaw	1964 Ford Galaxie	40	$250	320	
7th	Fireball Roberts 	22	John Holman, Holman Moody	1964 Ford Galaxie	40	$225	304	
8th	Ned Jarrett 	11	Bondy Long, Bowani Inc.	1964 Ford Galaxie	40	$200	288	
9th	Dave MacDonald 	17	Bill Stroppe, Bill Stroppe & Associates	1964 Mercury Marauder	40	$150	272	
10th	Billy Wade 	1	Bud Moore, Bud Moore Engineering	1964 Mercury Marauder	39	$150	256	
11th	Bobby Johns 	7	Shorty Johns	1964 Pontiac Catalina	39	$150	240	
12th	Larry Thomas 	27	Wade Younts	1963 Plymouth Savoy	38	$125	224	
13th	Ronnie Chumley 	04	H.B. Bailey	1963 Pontiac Catalina	38	$125	208	
14th	Smokey Boutwell 	84	Rocky Hinton	1963 Ford Galaxie	37	$100	192	
15th	Doug Cooper 	60	Bob Cooper	1963 Ford Galaxie	37	$100	176	
16th	Roy Gemberling 	71	Roscoe Sanders	1963 Plymouth Savoy	34	$100	160	Engine – overheating
17th	Paul Goldsmith 	25	Ray Nichels, Ray Nichels Engineering	1964 Plymouth Belvedere	28	$100	144	Engine 
18th	Johnny Rutherford 	01	Bud Moore, Bud Moore Engineering	1964 Mercury Marauder	17	$100	FIA	Engine 
19th	Elmo Henderson 	70	Paul Clayton	1963 Pontiac Catalina	4	$100	128	Engine – oil pressure
20th	Reb Wickersham 	95	Ken Spikes	1964 Dodge Polara	3	$100	112	Engine – valves
21st	Bob Cooper 	61	Bob Cooper	1962 Pontiac Catalina	2	$100	96	Engine – head gasket
22nd	Joe Clark 	97	Al McCline	1964 Ford Galaxie	2	$100	80	Handling 
23rd	Jim Bray 	56	Nick Rampling	1962 Chevrolet Bel Air	2	$100	64	Handling 
Lap Leaders		Driver			Laps Led
Laps 1 thru 7		Paul Goldsmith	
Laps 8 thru 21		Buck Baker	
Lap 22			Paul Goldsmith	18 laps
Laps 23 thru 39	Buck Baker		21 laps 
Lap 40			Junior Johnson	1 lap
Don Capps
19th February 2011, 03:22
1964 Grand National Race Number 7 / Daytona 500 Qualifying Race No. 2 / 21 February 1964 
Daytona International Speedway / Daytona Beach, Florida 
40 laps of 2.5-mile speedway for distance of 100.0 miles 
Attendance: 17,500	Purse: $5,075
Start	Speed	Driver	Make	Notes & Information
1st	174.418 mph	Richard Petty	1964 Plymouth Belvedere	
2nd	171.804 mph	Jimmy Pardue	1964 Plymouth Belvedere	
3rd	169.029 mph	Parnelli Jones	1964 Mercury Marauder	
4th	167.426 mph	Bobby Isaac	1964 Dodge Polara	
5th	166.604 mph	Fred Lorenzen	1964 Ford Galaxie	
6th	162.206 mph	Bobby Marshman	1964 Ford Galaxie	
7th	160.313 mph	Jo Schlesser	1964 Ford Galaxie	
8th		Jim McElreath	1964 Mercury Marauder	
9th		Jim Paschal	1964 Dodge Polara	
10th		Dan Gurney	1964 Ford Galaxie	
11th		A.J. Foyt	1964 Ford Galaxie	
12th		Larry Frank	1964 Ford Galaxie	
13th		Cale Yarborough	1964 Ford Galaxie	
14th		Sal Tovella	1964 Ford Galaxie	
15th		G.C. Spencer	1963 Pontiac Catalina	
16th		Ralph Earnhardt	1963 Ford Galaxie	
17th		Curtis Crider	1963 Mercury Marauder	
18th		Jack Anderson	1963 Ford Galaxie	
19th		Bill McMahan	1963 Pontiac Catalina	
20th		Jim Cook	1963 Ford Galaxie	
21st		Wendell Scott	1962 Chevrolet Bel Air	
22nd		Neil “Soapy” Castles	1962 Chrysler 300H	
23rd		LeeRoy Yarbrough	1964 Plymouth Belvedere	
Results	Driver	No.	Car Owner	Make	Laps	Purse	Points	Notes & Information  
1st	Bobby Isaac 	26	Ray Nichels, Ray Nichels Engineering	1964 Dodge Polara	40	$1,100	400	35 min 20 sec, 169.811 mph
2nd	Jimmy Pardue 	54	Charles Robinson, Burton-Robinson Racing Team	1964 Plymouth Belvedere	40	$600	384	
3rd	Richard Petty 	43	Lee Petty, Lee Petty Engineering Company	1964 Plymouth Belvedere	40	$400	368	
4th	A.J. Foyt 	00	Banjo Matthews	1964 Ford Galaxie	40	$300	FIA	
5th	Jim Paschal 	5	Cotton Owens, Cotton Owens Garage	1964 Dodge Polara	40	$300	352	
6th	Parnelli Jones 	15	Bill Stroppe, Bill Stroppe & Associates	1964 Mercury Marauder	40	$250	FIA	
7th	Larry Frank 	29	Holman Moody	1964 Ford Galaxie	40	$225	336	
8th	Bobby Marshman 	06	Holman Moody	1964 Ford Galaxie	39	$200	FIA	
9th	Joe Schlesser 	77	Bondy Long, Bowani Inc.	1964 Ford Galaxie	39	$150	FIA	
10th	Dan Gurney 	12	Ray Lee Wood, Wood Brothers	1964 Ford Galaxie	39	$150	FIA	
11th	Cale Yarborough 	19	Herman Beam	1964 Ford Galaxie	38	$150	320	
12th	Sal Tovella 	09	Herb Onash	1964 Ford Galaxie	38	$125	304	
13th	Jim McElreath 	14	Bill Stroppe, Bill Stroppe & Associates	1964 Mercury Marauder	37	$125	FIA	
14th	Ralph Earnhardt 	31	Tom Spell	1963 Ford Galaxie	36	$100	288	
15th	Curtis Crider 	62	Curtis Crider	1963 Mercury Marauder	36	$100	272	
16th	G.C. Spencer 	2	Cliff Stewart	1963 Pontiac Catalina	32	$100	256	Fuel 
17th	Fred Lorenzen 	28	Ralph Moody, Holman Moody	1964 Ford Galaxie	31	$100	240	Tire
18th	Jack Anderson 	92	Ray Osborne	1963 Ford Galaxie	10	$100	224	Engine – overheating
19th	Neil Castles 	86	Buck Baker	1962 Chrysler 300	4	$100	208	Engine – plugs
20th	Wendell Scott 	34	Wendell Scott	1962 Chevrolet Bel Air	4	$100	192	Handling 
21st	LeeRoy Yarbrough 	89	David Walker	1964 Plymouth Belvedere	3	$100	176	Engine – oil leak
22nd	Bill McMahan 	82	Casper Hensley	1963 Pontiac Catalina	3	$100	160	Bearing 
23rd	Jim Cook 	20	Jack Anderson	1963 Ford Galaxie	3	$100	144	Vibration 
Lap Leaders		Driver		Laps Led
Laps 1 thru 39		Richard Petty	39
Lap 40			Bobby Isaac	1
Don Capps
19th February 2011, 03:23
1964 Grand National Race Number 8 / Daytona 500 / 23 February 1964 
Daytona International Speedway, Daytona Beach, Florida 
200 laps of 2.5-mile speedway for distance of 500.0 miles 
Attendance: 69,738	Purse: $100,750
Qualifying	Speed	Driver	Make	Notes & Information
1st	174.910 mph	Paul Goldsmith	1964 Plymouth Belvedere	
2nd	174.418 mph	Richard Petty	1964 Plymouth Belvedere	
3rd		Junior Johnson	1964 Dodge Polara	
4th		Bobby Isaac	1964 Dodge Polara	
5th		Buck Baker	1964 Plymouth Belvedere	
6th		Jimmy Pardue	1964 Plymouth Belvedere	
7th		David Pearson	1964 Dodge Polara	
8th		A.J. Foyt	1964 Ford Galaxie	
9th		Marvin Panch	1964 Ford Galaxie	
10th		Jim Paschal	1964 Dodge Polara	
11th		Darel Dieringer	1964 Mercury Marauder	
12th		Parnelli Jones	1964 Mercury Marauder	
13th		Tiny Lund	1964 Ford Galaxie	
14th		Larry Frank	1964 Ford Galaxie	
15th		Fireball Roberts	1964 Ford Galaxie	
16th		Bobby Marshman	1964 Ford Galaxie	
17th		Ned Jarrett	1964 Ford Galaxie	
18th		Jo Schlesser	1964 Ford Galaxie	
19th		Dave MacDonald	1964 Mercury Marauder	
20th		Dan Gurney	1964 Ford Galaxie	
21st		Billy Wade	1964 Mercury Marauder	
22nd		Cale Yarborough	1964 Ford Galaxie	
23rd		Bobby Johns	1964 Pontiac Catalina	
24th		Sal Tovella	1964 Ford Galaxie	
25th		Larry Thomas	1963 Plymouth Savoy	
26th		Jim McElreath	1964 Mercury Marauder	
27th		Ronnie Chumley	1963 Pontiac Catalina	
28th		Ralph Earnhardt	1963 Ford Galaxie	
29th		Smokey Boutwell	1963 Ford Galaxie	
30th		Curtis Crider	1963 Ford Galaxie	
31st		Doug Cooper	1963 Ford Galaxie	
32nd		G.C. Spencer	1963 Pontiac Catalina	
33rd		Bunkie Blackburn	1963 Plymouth Savoy	
34th		Fred Lorenzen	1964 Ford Galaxie	
35th		Johnny Rutherford	1964 Mercury Marauder	
36th		Jack Anderson	1963 Ford Galaxie	
37th		Elmo Henderson	1963 Pontiac Catalina	
38th		Neil “Soapy” Castles	1962 Chrysler 300H	
39th		Reb Wickersham	1964 Dodge Polara	
40th		Wendell Scott	1962 Chevrolet Bel Air	
41st		Bob Cooper	1962 Pontiac Catalina	
42nd		Buddy Baker	1964 Plymouth Belvedere	
43rd		Joe Clark	1964 Ford Galaxie	
44th		Bill McMahan	1963 Pontiac Catalina	
45th		Jim Bray	1962 Chevrolet Bel Air	
46th		Jim Cook	1963 Ford Galaxie	
Results	Driver	No.	Car Owner	Make	Laps	Purse	Points	Notes & Information  
1st	Richard Petty 	43	Lee Petty, Lee Petty Engineering Company	1964 Plymouth Belvedere	200	$33,300	4,850	3 hr 14 min 23 sec, 154.334 mph
2nd	Jimmy Pardue 	54	Charles Robinson, Burton-Robinson Racing Team	1964 Plymouth Belvedere	199	$11,600	4,656	
3rd	Paul Goldsmith 	25	Ray Nichels, Ray Nichels Engineering	1964 Plymouth Belvedere	198	$8,600	4,462	
4th	Marvin Panch 	21	Ray Lee Wood, Wood Brothers	1964 Ford Galaxie	198	$4,350	4,268	
5th	Jim Paschal 	5	Cotton Owens, Cotton Owens Garage	1964 Dodge Polara	197	$3,700	4,074	
6th	Billy Wade 	1	Bud Moore, Bud Moore Engineering	1964 Mercury Marauder	197	$2,500	3,880	
7th	Darel Dieringer 	16	Bill Stroppe, Bill Stroppe & Associates	1964 Mercury Marauder	197	$2,000	3,686	
8th	Larry Frank 	29	Holman Moody	1964 Ford Galaxie	197	$1,750	3,492	
9th	Junior Johnson 	3	Ray Fox, Ray Fox Engineering	1964 Dodge Polara	197	$1,500	3,298	
10th	Dave MacDonald 	17	Bill Stroppe, Bill Stroppe & Associates	1964 Mercury Marauder	196	$1,200	3,104	
11th	Tiny Lund 	32	Graham Shaw	1964 Ford Galaxie	195	$1,200	2,910	
12th	Buck Baker 	41	Lee Petty, Lee Petty Engineering Company	1964 Plymouth Belvedere	194	$1,200	2,716	
13th	Jo Schlesser	77	Bondy Long, Bowani Inc.	1964 Ford Galaxie	192	$1,200	FIA	Relief driver: Ned Jarrett
14th	Dan Gurney 	12	Ray Lee Wood, Wood Brothers	1964 Ford Galaxie	192	$1,200	FIA	
15th	Bobby Isaac 	26	Ray Nichels, Ray Nichels Engineering	1964 Dodge Polara	189	$1,500	2,522	Fuel 
16th	Larry Thomas 	27	 Wade Younts	1963 Plymouth Savoy	188	$1,000	2,328	
17th	Cale Yarborough 	19	Herman Beam	1964 Ford Galaxie	187	$1,000	2,134	
18th	Doug Cooper 	60	Bob Cooper	1963 Ford Galaxie	186	$1,000	1,940	
19th	Ralph Earnhardt 	31	Tom Spell	1963 Ford Galaxie	180	$1,000	1,746	
20th	Smokey Boutwell 	84	Rocky Hinton	1963 Ford Galaxie	180	$1,000	1,552	
21st	Curtis Crider 	62	Curtis Crider	1963 Ford Galaxie	177	$725	1,358	
22nd	Reb Wickersham 	95	Ken Spikes	1964 Dodge Polara	131	$725	1,164	Sway  bar 
23rd	Sal Tovella 	09	Herb Onash	1964 Ford Galaxie	129	$725	970	Engine
24th	A.J. Foyt 	00	Banjo Matthews	1964 Ford Galaxie	127	$825	FIA	Engine
25th	Jim McElreath 	14	Bill Stroppe, Bill Stroppe & Associates	1964 Mercury Marauder	126	$725	FIA	Crash
26th	Johnny Rutherford 	01	Bud Moore, Bud Moore Engineering	1964 Mercury Marauder	107	$725	FIA	Crash 
27th	Ned Jarrett 	11	Bondy Long, Bowani Inc.	1964 Ford Galaxie	106	$725	776	Crash 
28th	Parnelli Jones 	15	Bill Stroppe, Bill Stroppe & Associates	1964 Mercury Marauder	77	$725	FIA	Engine 
29th	Buddy Baker 	89	David Walker	1964 Plymouth Belvedere	64	$725	582	Engine 
30th	David Pearson 	6	Cotton Owens, Cotton Owens Garage	1964 Dodge Polara	52	$725	388	Crash 
31st	Fred Lorenzen 	28	Ralph Moody, Holman Moody	1964 Ford Galaxie	49	$725	194	Engine
32nd	Jack Anderson 	92	Ray Osborne	1963 Ford Galaxie	41	$725	194	Rear end gears
33rd	G.C. Spencer 	2	Cliff Stewart	1963 Pontiac Catalina	31	$725	194	Engine 
34th	Ronnie Chumley 	04	H.B. Bailey	1963 Pontiac Catalina	21	$725	194	Engine 
35th	Bobby Marshman 	06	Holman Moody	1964 Ford Galaxie	17	$725	FIA	Engine – overheating
36th	Bobby Johns 	7	Shorty Johns	1964 Pontiac	15	$725	194	Engine 
37th	Fireball Roberts 	22	John Holman, Holman Moody	1964 Ford Galaxie	13	$725	194	Transmission 
38th	Wendell Scott 	34	Wendell Scott	1962 Chevrolet Bel Air	7	$725	194	Engine – overheating
39th	Elmo Henderson 	70	Paul Clayton	1963 Pontiac Catalina	4	$725	194	Engine 
40th	Joe Clark 	97	Al McCline	1964 Ford Galaxie	4	$725	194	Engine – head gasket
41st	Bill McMahan 	82	Casper Hensley	1963 Pontiac Catalina	3	$725	194	Handling 
42nd	Jim Bray 	56	Nick Rampling	1962 Chevrolet Bel Air	2	$725	194	Handling 
43rd	Bunkie Blackburn 	71	Roscoe Sanders	1963 Plymouth Savoy	1	$725	194	Engine – crankshaft
44th	Bob Cooper 	61	Bob Cooper	1962 Pontiac Catalina	1	$725	194	Engine – oil pressure
45th	Jim Cook 	20	Jack Anderson	1963 Ford Galaxie	1	$725	194	Handling 
46th	Neil Castles 	86	Buck Baker	1962 Chrysler 300	1	$725	194	Transmission 
Lap Leaders		Driver			Laps Led
Lap 1			Paul Goldsmith	
Laps 2 thru 6		Richard Petty	
Laps 7 thru 9		Bobby Isaac		3 laps
Laps 10 thru 39	Richard Petty	
Laps 40 and 41	A.J. Foyt		2 laps
Laps 42 thru 51	Paul Goldsmith	11 laps
Laps 52 thru 200	Richard Petty		184 laps
Cautions
Three caution periods for 19 laps
Laps 54 thru 60	Pearson wreck
Laps 112 thru 118	Rutherford and Jarrett wreck
Laps 130 thru 134	McElreath wreck
Don Capps
19th February 2011, 03:26
1964 Grand National Race Number 13 / Atlanta
Qualifying was originally intended to be spread out from Wednesday, 1 April, until Saturday, 4 April. The first ten positions in the field to be determined on Wednesday, the next ten on Thursday, fifteen positions on Friday, and the remainder on Saturday. However, rain washed out the Friday session. This led to a change in the qualifying sessions, with a final qualifying session on Saturday followed by a consolation race. On top of this was added a six-lap “Race of Champions” for the previous winners at the Atlanta speedway.
Qualifying was determined by the average speed of four laps, six miles, around the super speedway.
The “Race of Champions” was a trophy dash between the six previous winners at the Atlanta track: Fred Lorenzen and Fireball Roberts in Fords, Junior Johnson and David Pearson in Dodges, Rex White in a Mercury, and Bobby Johns in a Pontiac
Atlanta 500 / 5 April 1964
Atlanta International Raceway / Hampton, Georgia
334 laps of 1.5-mile paved track  for distance of 501.0 miles 
Attendance: 50,000	Purse: $57,655
Wednesday Qualifying / 1 April 1964
4 laps of 1.5-mile super speedway for distance of 6.0 miles
Qualifying	Average	Fastest Lap	Driver	Make  
1st	146.470 mph	146.898 mph	Fred Lorenzen	1964 Ford Galaxie
2nd	145.867 mph	145.945 mph	A.J. Foyt	1964 Ford Galaxie
3rd	145.670 mph	146.347 mph	Paul Goldsmith	1964 Plymouth Belvedere
4th	145.337 mph	145.945 mph	Fireball Roberts	1964 Ford Galaxie
5th	144.830 mph	145.200 mph	Billy Wade	1964 Mercury Marauder
6th	144.510 mph	144.894 mph	Bobby Isaac	1964 Dodge Polara
7th	144.105 mph	144.655 mph	Parnelli Jones	1964 Mercury Marauder
8th	143.932 mph	144.115 mph	Richard Petty	1964 Plymouth Belvedere
9th	143.445 mph	143.540 mph	Junior Johnson	1964 Dodge Polara
10th	143.179 mph	143.198 mph	Larry Frank	1964 Ford Galaxie
Thursday Qualifying / 2 April 1964
4 laps of 1.5-mile super speedway for distance of 6.0 miles
Qualifying	Average	Fastest Lap	Driver	Make  
11th	145.562 mph	145.670 mph	Dan Gurney	1964 Ford Galaxie
12th	144.849 mph	145.161 mph	Marvin Panch	1964 Ford Galaxie
13th	144.752 mph	145.161 mph	Buck Baker	1964 Plymouth Belvedere
14th	144.626 mph	144.889 mph	Jimmy Pardue	1964 Plymouth Belvedere
15th	144.549 mph	144.617 mph	Rex White	1964 Mercury Marauder
16th	144.278 mph	144.617 mph	Darel Dieringer	1964 Mercury Marauder
17th	144.028 mph	144.578 mph	Ned Jarrett	1964 Ford Galaxie
18th	143.702 mph	144.385 mph	Dave MacDonald	1964 Mercury Marauder
19th	143.454 mph	143.846 mph	Jim McElreath	1964 Mercury Marauder
20th	141.825 mph	141.843 mph	David Pearson	1964 Dodge Polara
Saturday Qualifying / 4 April 1964
4 laps of 1.5-mile super speedway for distance of 6.0 miles
Qualifying	Average	Driver	Make  
21st	143.502 mph	Jim Hurtubise	1964 Plymouth
22nd	143.312 mph	Tiny Lund	1964 Plymouth
23rd	141.065 mph	Bobby Johns	1964 Pontiac Catalina
24th	140.625 mph	Jim Paschal	1964 Dodge Polara
25th	135.891 mph	G.C. Spencer	1964 Chevrolet Impala SS
26th	134.128 mph	Bay Darnell	1964 Ford Galaxie
27th	133.399 mph	Larry Thomas	1963 Plymouth Savoy
28th	127.405 mph	Bill McMahan	1963 Pontiac Catalina
Consolation Race / 4 April 1964
Qualifying	Results	Driver	Make	Notes & Information
29th	1st	LeeRoy Yarbrough	1964 Plymouth Belvedere	140.089 mph
30th	2nd	Ken Spikes	1964 Dodge Polara	
31st	3rd	E.J. Trivette	1962 Chevrolet Bel Air	
32nd	4th	Jimmy Helms	1962 Chrysler 300	
33rd	5th	Curtis Crider	1963 Mercury Marauder	
34th	6th	Roy Tyner	1962 Chevrolet Bel Air	
35th	7th	Lyle Stelter	1963 Ford Galaxie	Did not start on Sunday
36th	8th	Jack Anderson	1962 Chevrolet Bel Air	
37th	9th	Buddy Baker	1964 Ford Galaxie	
38th	10th	Roy Mayne	1963 Mercury Marauder	
39th	11th	Soapy Castles	1962 Chrysler 300	
40th	12th	Joe Clark	1964 Ford Galaxie	
41st	13th	Kenneth Sanderson	1963 Ford Galaxie	Did not start on Sunday
42nd	14th	Doug Cooper	1963 Ford Galaxie	Did not start on Sunday
Race of Champions / 4 April 1964
6 laps of 1.5-mile super speedway for distance of 9.0 miles
Results	Driver	Make	Laps	Notes & Information  
1st	Fred Lorenzen	1964 Ford Galaxie	6	
2nd	Junior Johnson	1964 Dodge Polara		
3rd	Fireball Roberts	1964 Ford Galaxie		
4th	Rex White	1964 Mercury Marauder		
	Bobby Johns	1964 Pontiac Catalina		
	David Pearson	1964 Dodge Polara		
Results	Driver	No.	Car Owner	Make	Laps	Purse	Points	Notes & Information  
1st	Fred Lorenzen	28	Ralph Moody, Holman Moody	1964 Ford Galaxie	334	$18,000	2,450	3 hr 46 min 05 sec, 134.137 mph
2nd	Bobby Isaac 	26	Ray Nichels, Ray Nichels Engineering	1964 Dodge Polara	332	$8,065	2,352	
3rd	Ned Jarrett 	11	Bondy Long, Bowani Inc.	1964 Ford Galaxie	331	$4,500	2,254	
4th	Junior Johnson 	3	Ray Fox, Ray Fox Engineering	1964 Dodge Polara	330	$2,925	2,156	Relief driver: Jim Hurtubise
5th	Buck Baker 	41	Lee Petty, Lee Petty Engineering Company	1964 Plymouth Belvedere	327	$1,850	2,058	
6th	Tiny Lund 	35	David Walker	1964 Plymouth Belvedere	326	$1,275	1,960	
7th	Richard Petty 	43	Lee Petty, Lee Petty Engineering Company	1964 Plymouth Belvedere	325	$1,100	1,862	
8th	Jim Paschal 	5	Cotton Owens,  Cotton Owens Garage	1964 Dodge Polara	315	$1,050	1,764	
9th	Bill McMahan 	82	Casper Hensley	1963 Pontiac Catalina	279	$925	1,666	
10th	Ken Spikes 	95	Ken Spikes	1964 Dodge Polara	269	$925	1,568	
11th	A.J. Foyt 	00	Banjo Matthews	1964 Ford Galaxie	246	$775	FIA	Engine 
12th	Billy Wade 	1	Bud Moore, Bud Moore Engineering	1964 Mercury Marauder	225	$750	1,470	Engine 
13th	Bay Darnell 	66	Holman Moody	1964 Ford Galaxie	205	$625	FIA	Engine – push rod
14th	Marvin Panch 	21	Ray Lee Wood, Wood Brothers	1964 Ford Galaxie	190	$755	1,372	Engine 
15th	Jim McElreath 	14	Bill Stroppe, Bill Stroppe & Associates	1964 Mercury Marauder	173	$500	1,274	Engine 
16th	Dave MacDonald 	17	Bill Stroppe, Bill Stroppe & Associates	1964 Mercury Marauder	150	$500	1,176	Engine 
17th	Bobby Johns 	7	Shorty Johns	1964 Pontiac Catalina	149	$600	1,078	Engine – head gasket
18th	Rex White 	01	Bud Moore, Bud Moore Engineering	1964 Mercury Marauder	119	$550	980	Engine 
19th	Larry Frank 	06	Holman Moody	1964 Ford Galaxie	110	$500	882	A frame 
20th	Fireball Roberts 	22	John Holman, Holman Moody	1964 Ford Galaxie	107	$640	784	Crash
21st	David Pearson 	6	Cotton Owens, Cotton Owens Garage	1964 Dodge Polara	106	$550	686	Crash 
22nd	LeeRoy Yarbrough 	89	David Walker	1964 Plymouth Belvedere	78	$650	588	Engine 
23rd	Jim Hurtubise 	2	Norm Nelson	1964 Plymouth Belvedere	77	$585	FIA	Transmission – rear end gears
24th	Buddy Baker	92	Ray Osborne	1964 Ford Galaxie	74	$540	490	Gas leak 
25th	G.C. Spencer 	49	G.C. Spencer	1964 Chevrolet Impala SS	73	$525	392	Engine – rocker arm
26th	Curtis Crider 	62	Curtis Crider	1963 Mercury Marauder	60	$580	294	Engine – overheating
27th	E.J. Trivette 	52	Jess Potter	1962 Chevrolet Bel Air	58	$600	196	Transmission – rear end gears
28th	Roy Tyner 	9	Roy Tyner	1962 Chevrolet Bel Air	58	$570	98	Transmission – rear end gears
29th	Paul Goldsmith 	25	Ray Nichels,  Ray Nichels Engineering	1964 Plymouth Belvedere	55	$1,075	98	Crash 
30th	Roy Mayne 	02	Curtis Crider	1963 Mercury Marauder	42	$530	98	Handling 
31st	Darel Dieringer 	16	Bill Stroppe, Bill Stroppe & Associates	1964 Mercury Marauder	41	$500	98	Crash 
32nd	Larry Thomas 	36	Wade Younts	1963 Plymouth Savoy	31	$525	98	Ignition 
33rd	Jack Anderson 	20	Jack Anderson	1963 Ford Galaxie	26	$550	98	Ignition 
34th	Jimmy Helms 	88	Buck Baker	1962 Chrysler 300	22	$590	98	Transmission – rear end gears
35th	Jimmy Pardue 	54	Charles Robinson, Burton-Robinson Racing Team	1964 Plymouth Belvedere	19	$525	98	Crash 
36th	Dan Gurney 	12	Ray Lee Wood, Wood Brothers	1964 Ford Galaxie	17	$550	FIA	Crash 
37th	Parnelli Jones 	15	Bill Stroppe, Bill Stroppe & Associates	1964 Mercury Marauder	17	$450	FIA	Crash 
38th	Joe Clark 	97	Al McCline	1964 Ford Galaxie	3	$475	98	A frame
39th	Neil Castles 	86	Buck Baker	1962 Chrysler 300	2	$475	98	Handling 
Lap Leaders		Driver		Laps Led
Laps 1 thru 55	Paul Goldsmith	55 laps
Laps 56 thru 58	Fireball Roberts	3 laps
Laps 59 and 60	Jim Hurtubise	2 laps
Laps 61 thru 91	Marvin Panch	31 laps
Laps 92 thru 112	Fred Lorenzen	
Lap 113		Bobby Isaac	
Laps 114 thru 129	Fred Lorenzen	
Laps 130 thru 149	Bobby Isaac	
Lap 150		Fred Lorenzen	
Laps 151 thru 166	Bobby Isaac		37 laps
Laps 167 thru 334	Fred Lorenzen	206 laps
Cautions
Four caution periods for 19 laps
Laps 22 thru 24		
Laps 57 thru 61		
Laps 100 thru 117 	
Laps 124 thru 126
Don Capps
19th February 2011, 03:29
1964 Grand National Race Number 17 / Columbia
Columbia 200 / 16 April 1964
Columbia Speedway / Cayce, South Carolina 
200 laps of 0.5-mile dirt track for distance of 100.0 miles 
Attendance: 	Purse: $4,990
Qualifying	Speed	Driver	Make	Notes & Information
1st	71.485 mph	David Pearson	1964 Dodge Polara	
2nd		Ned Jarrett	1964 Ford Galaxie	
3rd		Richard Petty	1964 Plymouth Belvedere	
4th		Billy Wade	1964 Mercury Marauder	
5th		LeeRoy Yarbrough	1963 Plymouth Savoy	
6th		Marvin Panch	1964 Ford Galaxie	
7th		Tiny Lund	1964 Ford Galaxie	
8th		Dicker Hutcherson	1964 Ford Galaxie	
9th		Larry Frank	1962 Ford Galaxie	
10th		John Sears	1962 Dodge Dart	
11th		Ralph Earnhardt	1963 Ford Galaxie	
12th		Bobby Keck	1963 Ford Galaxie	
13th		E.J. Trivette	1962 Chevrolet Bel Air	
14th		Elmo Henderson	1962 Pontiac Catalina	
15th		Wendell Scott	1962 Chevrolet Bel Air	
16th		Jimmy Pardue	1964 Plymouth Belvedere	
17th		Curtis Crider	1963 Mercury Marauder	
18th		Ken Rush	1963 Pontiac Catalina	
19th		Stick Elliott	1962 Pontiac Catalina	
20th		Neil “Soapy” Castles	1962 Chrysler 300H	
21st		Buddy Baker	1963 Dodge Polara	
22nd		Jimmy Helms	1962 Chrysler 300H	
Results	Driver	No.	Car Owner	Make	Laps	Purse	Points	Notes & Information  
1st	Ned Jarrett 	11	Bondy Long, Bowani Inc.	1964 Ford Galaxie	200	$1,150	400	1 hr 33 min 09 sec, 64.412 mph
2nd	Marvin Panch 	21	Ray Lee Wood, Wood Brothers	1964 Ford Galaxie	199	$700	384	
3rd	LeeRoy Yarbrough 	45	Louis Weathersbee	1963 Plymouth Savoy	198	$400	368	
4th	Billy Wade 	1	Bud Moore, Bud Moore Engineering	1964 Mercury Marauder	198	$300	352	
5th	Dick Hutcherson 	7	Dick Hutcherson	1964 Ford Galaxie	198	$275	336	
6th	David Pearson 	6	Cotton Owens, Cotton Owens Garage	1964 Dodge Polara	198	$240	320	
7th	Elmo Henderson 	75	Paul Clayton	1962 Pontiac Catalina	193	$200	304	
8th	Jimmy Pardue 	54	Charles Robinson, Burton-Robinson Racing Team	1964 Plymouth Belvedere	190	$175	288	Transmission – rear end gears
9th	Curtis Crider 	01	Curtis Crider	1963 Mercury Marauder	190	$150	272	
10th	Bobby Keck 	23	E.B. Rich	1963 Ford Galaxie	188	$140	256	
11th	Ralph Earnhardt 	31	Tom Spell	1963 Ford Galaxie	188	$130	240	
12th	Ken Rush 	2	Cliff Stewart	1963 Pontiac Catalina	187	$120	224	
13th	E.J. Trivette 	91	Jess Potter	1962 Chevrolet Bel Air	186	$110	208	
14th	Wendell Scott 	34	Wendell Scott	1962 Chevrolet Bel Air	180	$100	192	
15th	Richard Petty 	43	Lee Petty, Lee Petty Engineering Company	1964 Plymouth Belvedere	129	$100	176	Transmission – rear end gears
16th	John Sears 	81	John Black	1962 Dodge Dart	95	$100	160	Transmission 
17th	Neil Castles 	86	Buck Baker	1962 Chrysler 300	48	$100	144	Brakes 
18th	Larry Frank 	79	Speedy Spiers	1962 Ford Galaxie	35	$100	128	Engine – overheating
19th	Tiny Lund 	98	Graham Shaw	1964 Ford Galaxie	32	$100	112	Engine – overheating
20th	Stick Elliott 	18	Toy Bolton	1962 Pontiac Catalina	13	$100	96	Engine – radiator
21st	Buddy Baker 	87	J.C. Parker	1963 Dodge Polara	1	$100	80	Transmission – shift  
22nd	Jimmy Helms 	88	Buck Baker	1962 Chrysler 300	0	$100	62	Engine – carburetor
Lap Leaders		Driver		Laps Led
Laps 1 thru 18 	David Pearson		
Laps 19 thru 32	Tiny Lund		14 laps
Laps 33 thru 57	LeeRoy Yarbrough	25 laps
Laps 58 thru 74 	David Pearson	35 laps
Laps 75 thru 136 	Billy Wade		62 laps
Laps 137 thru 200	Ned Jarrett		64 laps
Cautions
Six caution periods for 14 laps
Don Capps
19th February 2011, 03:37
1964 Grand National Race Number 21 / Darlington
Rebel 300 / 9 May 1964
Darlington Raceway / Darlington, South Carolina 
219 laps of 1.375 mile speedway for distance of 301.1 miles
Attendance: 30,000	Purse: $40,600
 
Wednesday Qualifying / 6 May 1964
4 laps of 1.375-mile speedway for distance of 5.5 miles
Qualifying	Speed	Driver	Make 	Notes    
1st	135.727 mph	Fred Lorenzen	1964 Ford Galaxie	Fastest lap – 136.101 mph
2nd	135.301 mph	Richard Petty	1964 Plymouth Belvedere	
3rd	135.273 mph	Jimmy Pardue	1964 Plymouth Belvedere	
4th	134.787 mph	Junior Johnson	1964 Ford Galaxie	
5th	134.757 mph	Fireball Roberts	1964 Ford Galaxie	
6th	134.091 mph	David Pearson	1964 Dodge Polara	
7th	134.055 mph	Jim Paschal	1964 Plymouth Belvedere	
8th	133.477 mph	Marvin Panch	1964 Ford Galaxie	Fastest lap – 135.467 mph
Dash / 6 May 1964 
4 laps of 1.375-mile speedway for distance of 5.5 miles
Fireball Roberts was first in the four-lap dash.
Thursday Qualifying / 7 May 1964
4 laps of 1.375-mile speedway for distance of 5.5 miles
Qualifying	Speed	Driver	Make 	Notes    
9th	134.597 mph	Rex White	1964 Mercury Marauder	
10th	134.401 mph	Ned Jarrett	1964 Ford Galaxie	
11th	133.901 mph	Buck Baker	1964 Dodge Polara	
12th	133.486 mph	Johnny Allen	1964 Mercury Marauder	
13th	133.037 mph	Larry Thomas	1964 Dodge Polara	
14th	132.636 mph	LeeRoy Yarbrough	1964 Dodge Polara	
15th	131.378 mph	Cale Yarborough	1964 Ford Galaxie	
16th	128.072 mph	G.C. Spencer	1964 Chevrolet Impala SS	
Friday Qualifying Race / Airlift Dash / 8 May 1964
Qualifying	Position	Driver	Make	Notes 
17th	1st	Darel Dieringer	1964 Mercury Marauder	
18th	2nd	Billy Wade	1964 Mercury Marauder	
19th	3rd	Bobby Isaac	1964 Dodge Polara	
20th	4th	Paul Goldsmith	1964 Plymouth Belvedere	
21st	5th	Tiny Lund	1964 Plymouth Belvedere	
22nd	6th	Bunkie Blackburn	1963 Pontiac Catalina	
23rd	7th	Bob Cooper	1963 Ford Galaxie	
24th	8th	J.T. Putney	1962 Chevrolet Bel Air	Or Roy Mayne, 1962 Chevrolet Bel Air
25th	9th	Ken Spikes	1964 Plymouth Belvedere	Or Buddy Baker, 1963 Dodge Polara
26th	10th	Curtis Crider	1963 Mercury Marauder	
27th	11th	E.J. Trivette	1962 Chevrolet Bel Air	
28th	12th	Neil “Soapy” Castles	1962 Chrysler 300H	
29th	13th			
30th	14th			
31st	15th	Buddy Arrington	1962 Dodge Dart	
32nd	16th	Jimmy Helms	1962 Chrysler 300H	
Results	Driver	No.	Car Owner	Make	Laps	Purse	Points	Notes   
1st	Fred Lorenzen 	28	Ralph Moody, Holman Moody 	1964 Ford Galaxie	219	$10,265	1,750	2 hr 18 min 51 sec, 130.013 mph
2nd	Fireball Roberts 	22	John Holman, Holman Moody	1964 Ford Galaxie	219	$5,990	1,680	
3rd	Junior Johnson 	27	Banjo Matthews	1964 Ford Galaxie	218	$4,510	1,610	
4th	Ned Jarrett 	11	Bondy Long, Bowani Inc.	1964 Ford Galaxie	216	$2,995	1,540	
5th	Jimmy Pardue 	54	Charles Robinson, Burton-Robinson Racing Team	1964 Plymouth Belvedere	215	$2,170	1,470	
6th	David Pearson 	6	Cotton Owens, Cotton Owens Garage	1964 Dodge Polara	215	$1,500	1,400	
7th	Billy Wade 	1	Bud Moore, Bud Moore Engineering	1964 Mercury Marauder	214	$1,270	1,330	
8th	LeeRoy Yarbrough 	03	Ray Fox, Ray Fox Engineering	1964 Dodge Polara	213	$1,000	1,260	
9th	Paul Goldsmith 	25	Ray Nichels, Ray Nichels Engineering	1964 Plymouth Belvedere	212	$900	1,190	
10th	Richard Petty 	43	Lee Petty, Lee Petty Engineering Company	1964 Plymouth Belvedere	211	$840	1,120	
11th	Marvin Panch 	21	Ray Lee Wood, Wood Brothers	1964 Ford Galaxie	211	$750	1,050	
12th	Jim Paschal 	41	Lee Petty, Lee Petty Engineering Company	1964 Plymouth Belvedere	209	$700	980	Crash 
13th	Johnny Allen 	16	Bill Stroppe, Bill Stroppe & Associates	1964 Mercury Marauder	205	$650	910	
14th	Larry Thomas 	5	Cotton Owens, Cotton Owens Garage	1964 Dodge Polara	204	$600	840	Crash 
15th	Bunkie Blackburn 	82	Casper Hensley	1963 Pontiac Catalina	202	$550	770	
16th	G.C. Spencer 	49	G.C. Spencer	1964 Chevrolet Impala SS	189	$500	700	
17th	J.T. Putney 	56	Walt Hunter	1962 Chevrolet Bel Air	187	$450	630	
18th	Ken Spikes 	95	Ken Spikes	1964 Plymouth Belvedere	177	$400	560	
19th	Cale Yarborough 	19	Herman Beam	1964 Ford Galaxie	172	$350	490	
20th	Tiny Lund 	89	David Walker	1964 Plymouth Belvedere	167	$300	420	Engine 
21st	Rex White 	4	Bud Moore, Bud Moore Engineering	1964 Mercury Marauder	161	$415	350	Engine – head gasket
22nd	E.J. Trivette 	52	Jess Potter	1962 Chevrolet Bel Air	140	$300	280	Engine 
23rd	Bob Cooper 	60	Bob Cooper	1963 Ford Galaxie	109	$300	210	Transmission – rear end gears
24th	Roy Mayne 	09	Bob Adams	1962 Chevrolet Bel Air	86	$300	140	Transmission – rear end gears
25th	Darel Dieringer 	14	Bill Stroppe, Bill Stroppe & Associates	1964 Mercury Marauder	81	$415	70	Engine – bearing
26th	Buck Baker 	3	Ray Fox, Ray Fox Engineering	1964 Dodge Polara	59	$340	70	Battery 
27th	Bobby Isaac 	26	Ray Nichels, Ray Nichels Engineering	1964 Dodge Polara	35	$340	70	Crash 
28th	Curtis Crider 	01	Curtis Crider	1963 Mercury Marauder	18	$300	70	Handling 
29th	Buddy Baker 	87	J.C. Parker	1963 Dodge Polara	7	$300	70	Transmission 
30th	Neil Castles 	88	Buck Baker	1962 Chrysler 300	5	$300	70	Engine – oil pressure
31st	Buddy Arrington 	78	Buddy Arrington	1962 Dodge Dart	4	$300	70	Handling 
32nd	Jimmy Helms 	86	Buck Baker	1962 Chrysler 300	2	$300	70	Engine – bearing
Lap Leaders		Driver		Laps Led
Laps 1 thru 57	Richard Petty	
Laps 58 thru 74	Fred Lorenzen	
Laps 75 thru 98	Richard Petty	
Laps 99 thru 101	Fred Lorenzen	
Laps 102 and 103	Richard Petty	
Laps 104 thru 106	Fred Lorenzen	
Laps 107 and 108	Richard Petty	
Laps 109 thru 123	Fred Lorenzen	
Laps 124 thru 133	Richard Petty	95 laps
Laps 134 thru 219	Fred Lorenzen	124 laps
Cautions
One caution period for 5 laps
Despite my best efforts I have never quite figured out the 29th and 30th qualifying positions, there being no end of contradictory information on this matter. Even Greg Fielden admitted he was a bit perplexed by it.... Nor have I gotten anything solid on the finishing positions regarding the four lap dash thatRobets won.
Don Capps
19th February 2011, 03:48
The purpose, such as it is, of the preceding posts was give you an idea of just how keeps getting left on the table when it comes to any discussion of the GN division. The "box score results" approach leads to a serious myopia problem regarding doing a proper job of setting out the framework for these events.
Despite all the good intentions in the world on my part, my opus on the 1964 GN season is still largely unwritten, consisting of piles upon piles upon piles of research and reference notes and almost countless rough drafts. I have yet to see anyone do this level of work on a GN season, which is, of course, why I did it in the first place. It was an easy idea to have, but very, very challenging to produce the samples that were posted. Stock car racing and NASCAR history is largely, to be kind, a huge mess, there being no end of baloney and nonsense passed off as "history" and blindly accepted since almost no one bothers to do the grunt work to check the stories out. 
But, I digress....
A tip of the hat to Greg Fielden for his pioneering work, which has served as the basis for Racing-Reference and about every other Web site containing NASCAR GN results.
Alexamateo
21st February 2011, 04:32
Interesting, the Racing-reference site has a number of qualifying races included in its "Exhibition or Unclassified" section, but none of the examples you just gave are listed.  I gather that qualifying races and "trophy dash" type races were regular occurrences, and who knows how much info was just never recorded or reported on.
Don Capps
21st February 2011, 16:14
Interesting, the Racing-reference site has a number of qualifying races included in its "Exhibition or Unclassified" section, but none of the examples you just gave are listed.  I gather that qualifying races and "trophy dash" type races were regular occurrences, and who knows how much info was just never recorded or reported on.
Contrary to the above statement, the information was certainly recorded and kept for the record. While it was usually reported upon, this was not always the case, of course, or the story was edited to fit the space allocated for such minor sports news. During the first two or three decades following WW2, the number of sports writers dedicating most of their time to automobile racing in the US was minuscule compared to the primary sports that appeared in the papers. This was no less true in the South as it was elsewhere. The weekly and bi-weekly tabloids often filled that gap, but not always. National Speed Sport News was not all that concerned with Southern racing in general and did not devote very much attention to stock car racing nationally, much less NASCAR for many years. 
The "history" of stock car racing and NASCAR continues to be incomplete, half-assed, prone to mythology, left to ill-trained often incompetent amateurs, and generally a sorry mess in its various forms. That most of the archival information is controlled by a very few, is generally incomplete, and is seen as a commercial entity rather than as historical material says a great deal as to why it is in this state. Don't even get me started on the whole issue of the "origins" of stock car racing....
Having been to many of the GN events of the period that includes the 1964 season, I was aware of the various ways qualifying was done as well as the qualifying races. Yet, it is almost impossible to find anything on them in any of the usual sources. They are simply ignored. That there are but a very few sources that assign points to the finishing positions prior to 1975 or 1968 should strike one as odd, but those few with the necessary curiosity to do the research and the digging are usually disappointed, always coming up short -- or keeping that information to themselves, assuming that they found much in the first place. 
I ended up with the 1964 Grand National season for the simple reason that it was the earliest season that I could find the compete results and points for, although was often a problem given that I was saved several times by digging up or finding sources which filled in the gaps that suddenly appeared. The qualifying sessions and races took a great deal of digging and digging and digging. Information is there, but it is very difficult to find. Despite efforts such as Racing-Reference or even the Fielden books -- which form the basis of the Racing-Reference site since they certainly did not do the research themselves, merely copied it without attribution or credit, which is standard operating procedure for internet racing sites -- there are much left untold in just the statistical or race data aspects of NASCAR GN racing.
Again, my intent with researching the 1964 GN season was to see if it were possible to create a template of the season and its events similar to what others had done for that much overworked-but under-researched set of events usually bunched together as "Grand Prix" or "Formula 1." Whenever I get the time I will finally transfer my notes into the various race reports and other information relating to the season. The entire effort to assemble what you see only a fraction of took much longer than anticipated, literally years, which meant that other things eventually took priority and I have never gone back to complete the narrative part of the work, which is even more time-consuming, if possible.
Mark in Oshawa
22nd February 2011, 19:02
Those Daytona results have some great names in there..but you can see also from reading the results how the field was far more spread out. Racing wasn't even remotely close in some ways. You had 2 to 3 guys at the top and a spread heading down through the field. Now, you have guys all going a lot faster in clumps within 100'th's of seconds....it is a different world.
Lousada
23rd February 2011, 15:00
Thank you for posting this information, and also for your contributions in other threads. 
This may seem like a rather dumb question, but how did the people involved at the time consider the championship? Where the competitors really driving for points like they do in this day and age? Where fans/followers as obsessed about the points table as they do nowadays? It must have been very hard to keep track of what was going on if you weren't actually at the track itself. 
I'm interested in this because the season seems to begin and end at a completely random point in mid-november. Todays conventions demand that history is divided into seasons, but I was wondering if the people at the time also saw mid-november as the beginning and end. Or did they rather moved from big race to big race?
Alexamateo
23rd February 2011, 15:41
Just looking at it from the outside, There were 62 races that year and a driver could run 61 (two of the races were Daytona qualifiers and a driver could only run one).  Only two drivers ran 61 races (David Pearson and champion Richard Petty, while Ned Jarrett ran 59.  A few more ran at least 50 races, but none of those are drivers you would consider championship threats, so in general, drivers just went out for the biggest races.  
However, the factories dictated it and would only run certain drivers in the full schedule.
In 1962 for example Joe Weatherly won the championship, but for 1963, His factory Bud Moore Pontiac team cut back to just major races, so he picked up rides for the other races driving for no less than 9 different owners as he won his second championship.  Most couldn't or wouldn't go to such extremes.
Don Capps
26th February 2011, 05:06
Just looking at it from the outside, There were 62 races that year and a driver could run 61 (two of the races were Daytona qualifiers and a driver could only run one).  Only two drivers ran 61 races (David Pearson and champion Richard Petty, while Ned Jarrett ran 59.  A few more ran at least 50 races, but none of those are drivers you would consider championship threats, so in general, drivers just went out for the biggest races.  
However, the factories dictated it and would only run certain drivers in the full schedule.
In 1962 for example Joe Weatherly won the championship, but for 1963, His factory Bud Moore Pontiac team cut back to just major races, so he picked up rides for the other races driving for no less than 9 different owners as he won his second championship.  Most couldn't or wouldn't go to such extremes.
Close, but there are a number of pieces missing in your analysis.
Alexamateo
28th February 2011, 03:43
Well by all means, please fill us in. :)
I only know what I have read, and I know (now) that all that I have read is not to be taken as gospel.  For instance, I am pretty sure that stock car racing didn't originate from a cow-pasture in north Georgia from just a bunch of bootleggers looking for something to do on a Sunday afternoon. :p
I'll give you some of my history as a race fan.  I went to the 1981 Indy 500 with my dad when I was not quite 12.  I was bitten by the bug and became obsessed with racing (all). I was always crazy for statistics and there was a rundown of all the Indy 500's in the back of the program so I started charting all of the races.  When 1982 rolled around, I started with the Daytona 500 that year cutting all of the newspaper articles (Memphis' Commercial Appeal) that had anything to do with racing and keeping them in a notebook as well as charting the races.
Back then it was hard, sometimes you only had the top 10 or 5 even listed and it might be two months before I could get a complete run-down. (in Stock Car racing magazine, it was only later I would discover National Speed Sport News).
Of course I wanted to at least get a list of winners of past races, but that also illustrated a problem.  My mom got me the book Stock Car Heroes (or something like that by Bill Libby. It had a line in the preface talking about Neil "Soapy" Castles pulling into victory lane in Greeneville SC to end a 0 for 4 or 500 race losing streak.  That bugged me for a long time because I could never find another reference to that race anywhere.  I now know it was a Grand national East race which was where all of the 200 lappers were placed when Winston came on and the Cup schedule was shortened.  At the time though it was maddening to me.
I kept this up until about 1986 or so.  By then, Greg Fieldings Forty Years of Stock Car Racing came out and I of course bought it.
The point of all of this is to say that I realize that what you stated earlier in this thread, "Stock car racing and NASCAR history is largely, to be kind, a huge mess, there being no end of baloney and nonsense passed off as "history" and blindly accepted since almost no one bothers to do the grunt work to check the stories out. ",is true.
I am very interested in what you have to say about NASCAR history and in knowing your perspective, but at times I don't know what I can contribute, because much of my knowledge is tainted so to speak.
Don Capps
28th February 2011, 16:47
I only know what I have read, and I know (now) that all that I have read is not to be taken as gospel.  For instance, I am pretty sure that stock car racing didn't originate from a cow-pasture in north Georgia from just a bunch of bootleggers looking for something to do on a Sunday afternoon. 
You are already far, far ahead of the power curve, knowing more about the origins of stock car racing than the vast majority of those claiming to "stock car racing historians" -- to say nothing of the stock car racing journalists those who are fans. The entire business about the Stockbridge track has long been proven to be a myth, yet you would not know it from what continues to be written by many journalists and accepted by the fans. However, this is a topic I will delve into later.
Don Capps
1st March 2011, 18:49
Despite the fact that the "history" of stock car racing as manufactured by various -- at best careless and at worst deceptive or spurious -- journalists and NASCAR over the years has been under attack recently, old falsehoods die hard. The involvement of those engaged in the illegal alcohol business, either as a maker or transporter of "moonshine," and Southern stock car racing is a staple of both Southern and racing folklore. The role of those in "moonshine" business and stock car racing has often been both quite exaggerated and yet at the same time little understood.
That there have been those actively engaged in the illegal manufacture and transport of illegal alcohol who also drove and/or owned stock cars or tracks or were promoters is not questioned. What is under question is the role of those folks in the formation of stock car racing. In many cases, the numbers and roles of the "moonshiners" involved in stock car racing, especially NASCAR, during the Forties and Fifties have been either exaggerated or somewhat embellished tending to overshadow, deliberately or otherwise, the presence of the others involved in the sport. It could be suggested that the focus on the drivers who were -- or thought to be -- involved in the transportation of illegal liquor may have shifted attention away from the true role of the illegal alcohol business regarding stock car racing -- as a means to "launder" money generated by that illegal activity. Recent discussions on the role of "moonshine" in stock car racing tend to be focusing on this aspect of their involvement, particularly in light of the known instances of money generated from the illegal liquor trade being used to promote events through the simple expedient of track ownership. 
The origins of "stock car racing" probably reaches back to at least the reorganization of the AAA's involvement in automobile racing in the 1908/1910 timeframe -- and probably earlier than that. The Contest Rules of 1910 use the term "stock car," for instance. Plus, once one begins to look closely at materials such as the AAA Sanction Records, contemporary newspaper articles, and various otther sources, the more evident it becomes that the Southern "moonshiners" were late to the stock car racing game, there being major stock car racing events in California at Mines Field and the Oakland Speedway long before the November 1938 event at Lakewood Speedway which is often cited as the "beginning" of stock car racing, at least in the South -- assuming that one ignores the events at Daytona Beach for starters, of course. 
This is still much to be done on this topic, but slowly and surely there are historians -- of the scholarly or academic sort, not the journalist who writes an article or book about the past and then thinks he is actually a historian when he is nothing of the sort -- are digging into this topic and as is usually the case, the truth is far more interesting and fascinating than the mythology. And, much more complicated and frustrating, of course.
Alexamateo
2nd March 2011, 04:28
If the story is to be believed, when Bill France disqualified Glenn Dunnaway in the very first strictly stock race, he was able to prevail when challenged in court by saying what was done with the springs was something a bootlegger would do to alter their cars, and it aided in swaying the court's opinion.  This would seem to indicate that any association with the illegal alcohol business was certainly frowned upon by polite society.  I am sure France wanted to downplay any association in the beginning because he wanted decent people as paying customers at his races.
I wonder if it was only later that it became romanticized, probably starting with Tom Wolfe's article on Junior Johnson, The Last American Hero.  At its core, wasn't that article essentially a highfalutin' PR piece because Johnson was switching to Fords?
Don Capps
2nd March 2011, 15:20
If the story is to be believed, when Bill France disqualified Glenn Dunnaway in the very first strictly stock race, he was able to prevail when challenged in court by saying what was done with the springs was something a bootlegger would do to alter their cars, and it aided in swaying the court's opinion.  This would seem to indicate that any association with the illegal alcohol business was certainly frowned upon by polite society.  I am sure France wanted to downplay any association in the beginning because he wanted decent people as paying customers at his races.
The legal basis for sports sanctioning bodies operating as businesses to establish and enforce their own regulations was, from all I have been able to gather, already a well-established point by 1949. This was scarcely the landmark legal precedence that NASCAR has always made it out to be. It was more a case of NASCAR -- for which one may substitute Bill France -- was not expecting this tactic and was taken by surprise. Bill France ran NASCAR much as any businessman ran his business in the South in those days -- his way or literally the highway. The courts in the South were very much in agreement with this philospohy, with drivers and owners being considered "independent contractors" -- they still are, in fact -- and , therefore, bound by any rules that the organization established in order to operate. What would have been unusual in this case would have been if NASCAR had lost.
It should be noted that until very recently NASCAR in its own writings regarding its creation and that of stock car racing pointed fails to mention the involvement of "moonshiners" in the sport, any mention being obscure, oblique, and brief. Only at some point during the late-Seventies and into the Eighties did the "moonshiners" get any "official" mention by NASCAR and it was probably not until the period around its 50th anniversary that NASCAR began to quietly promote the romantic legend and support the mythology of the "moonshiners." Apparently, this was prompted as much by self-interest than any acceptance of the "moonshiners" as a part of NASCAR's origns given that such a mythology was literally very good for business.
The official story that forms the basis for the founding of NASCAR is not that those "moonshiners" in the Piedmont regions of Georgia, the Carolinas, and Virignia needed someone to take over the organization of their existing efforts to race stock cars, but rather that those poor, yeoman racers needed someone to ensure that they received the fruits of their labor from the wily, unscrupelous promoters who so often took the money and ran, leaving the poor drivers without a cent. NASCAR built this into a legend that was and is readily accepted as an article of faith, the con man promoter fleecing the poor drivers. The irony, of course, is that NASCAR was established by and for race promoters, any efforts to protect the interests of the drivers being secondary at best. NASCAR was first and foremost a business and France simply provided a better business model for the promoters.
The general social hypocrisy of much the South during the developing years of Southern stock car racing, the first decade and a half after WW2, meant that, among other things, the illegal liquor business was both soundly condemned while also being strongly supported in many communities. It should not be overlooked that there was a very strong, vocal element within the South that were bitterly opposed to the use of alcohol, legal or otherwise. Keep in mind that part of the problem was the transportation and sell of alcohol legally bought in one place for sell elsewhere where its purchase was forbidden. While the "Thunder Road" mythology certainly contained grains of truth, the reality of the illegal liquor business was one that required a great deal of romanticizing for the most part given its often harsh, even squalid nature. It was, keep in mind, an illegal activity, a criminal enterprise. In the all too usual romaticizing of the "moonshine" business, that "organzied crime" was all involved and that implies is often skipped over less it spoil a good story.
So, iwhile t seems that while France and NASCAR did keep up appearances and frown upon the very idea of "moonshiners" and their activities by keeping them at arm's length, France was also willing to create business arrangements with those in the illegal alcohol trade to keep his business afloat, especially in the very early years of NASCAR when cash flow was an issue. It is difficult to think that France was unaware of the business interests of a number of those who built tracks and promoted races using NASCAR sanctions, especially given that France was often a partner in the tracks that were built or part of the promotion team for the events held at those tracks. Just saying....
I wonder if it was only later that it became romanticized, probably starting with Tom Wolfe's article on Junior Johnson, The Last American Hero.  At its core, wasn't that article essentially a highfalutin' PR piece because Johnson was switching to Fords?
The entire romantic legend created by journalists using the notion of the "noble moonshiner" as racing driver and Southern working class hero probably does get pinned on Wolfe. There seems to be an increase in the number of articles that mention the correlation of "moonshine" and stock car racing in the wake of the Wolfe article, an early trickle soon becoming a flood, the notion then being well-established by the early Seventies among the journalists.
To consider the Wolfe article on Johnson as a PR piece due to Johnson's switiching to Ford might be an anachronistic stretch. Given that the article appeared many months after the switch from Ray Fox and MOPAR to Banjo Matthews and Ford difficult to understand the PR value of the piece. Besides, it is a bit difficult to imagine Wolfe as a Ford PR flack and being capable of sticking to the party line. Re-read the article and you might be a sense of what that means. When the article appeared, it was quite a sensation among the racing set. NASCAR did not take kindly to the article until sometime later when it realized that any mention in an East Coast liberal high-brow magazine a good thing.
Alexamateo
3rd March 2011, 05:49
It's interesting to note that my comment about the Wolfe article came from something that I had read in the past.  That was one commentators take.  I have tried to lay hands on it today, but I realize I may have just seen it in something I don't own.  It's funny though, that was an idea that stuck in my head.
When I first started following racing, the first book I bought with my own money was Kim Chapin's Fast as White Lightning. I know it plays up the bootlegging aspect to be sure, but I have always loved it. Are you familiar with it, and if so, What's your take on it?
Don Capps
3rd March 2011, 14:51
It's interesting to note that my comment about the Wolfe article came from something that I had read in the past.  That was one commentators take.  I have tried to lay hands on it today, but I realize I may have just seen it in something I don't own.  It's funny though, that was an idea that stuck in my head.
When I first started following racing, the first book I bought with my own money was Kim Chapin's Fast as White Lightning. I know it plays up the bootlegging aspect to be sure, but I have always loved it. Are you familiar with it, and if so, What's your take on it?
The Wolfe article still exists somewhere out there in the ether; I think the Esquire site used to have it in their on-line archives. I do not remember at the moment where I got my copy, but that may have been the source. I did have the original issue of Esquire with the article, but it was lost when part of my library was wiped out by a water leak while my materials were in storage awaiting quarters. The switch by Johnson from MOPAR to Ford came about after Wolfe had already committed to the article and visiting Wilkes County.
The Chapin book is on one of the bookshelves in my research office, last being re-read a few (five or six?) years ago when I was delving into stock car racing history and looking at various secondary sources. When it concerned itself with Tiny Lund, it was a far better depiction of contemporary NASCAR and stock car racing than when it strayed off into the "moonshine" legend/mythology material. In the last reading I found myself questioning and wondering about much of what I was reading. Not having read it for awhile, those are the impressions that I still carry regarding Chapin book. As someone who knew Lund off and on over the years, one of the reasons I bought the book rather than just read or skim it at a library was that it devoted time to Lund, someone I thought rather highly of, then and now.
Lee Roy
3rd March 2011, 16:13
Don,
I too have always had an iterest in Lund.  Never met him, but I was at the race in Talladega when he lost his life.  He was a fascinating character and is one I think of when I try to remember what NASCAR was really like (at the "cup" level, but mostly below the "cup" level) in the 60's and 70's.
What I really would like to know about Lund is, what part he really played in saving Marvin Panch's life when Panch crashed that sports car in 1963 which led to Lund's Daytona 500 win.
Don Capps
3rd March 2011, 20:26
Don,
I too have always had an iterest in Lund.  Never met him, but I was at the race in Talladega when he lost his life.  He was a fascinating character and is one I think of when I try to remember what NASCAR was really like (at the "cup" level, but mostly below the "cup" level) in the 60's and 70's.
What I really would like to know about Lund is, what part he really played in saving Marvin Panch's life when Panch crashed that sports car in 1963 which led to Lund's Daytona 500 win.
Below is something that I wrote literally a decade ago regarding Lund and the incident at Daytona. Someone had written the following -- "Ten days before the Daytona 500, in 1963,Marvin Panch flipped a Maserati. An unemployed driver,Tiny Lund,waded through waist deep flames and pulled Panch clear of the inferno. The grateful Panch insisted that Lund drive his Wood Brothers Galaxie in the 500. Lund won the 500 and a Carnegie medal for heroism." -- which should explain parts of the response I offered.  
[quote="Don Capps, 28 Feb 2001, The Nostalgia Forum, "Bravery Awards""] Marvin Panch was NOT entered to drive the Maserati in the 1963 Daytona Continental, a 3-Hour FIA GT race. There were three 'sports car races that year. The USRRC event on 3 February, which was won by Jim Hall]
Lund and the others did not "wade through waist deep flames" to rescue Panch although there was a minor fire in the cockpit area of Maserati and spilled fuel was pooling around the crash site. The five men, working together, managed rescue Panch before the fuel ignited and created the inferno that one often sees in the photographs of the incident. They scarcely pulled Panch from the wreckage before the fuel ignited. Only a few minor injuries and some burns were suffered by the rescue team. By lifting the rear of the Tipo 151, Lund allowed the others the space needed to extract Panch. 
While working the press box and the pits at a number of races, then as a "Gofer" for several of Lund's racing efforts, and on visits his fish camp near Cross several times to see him, I became acquainted with Lund. We were scarcely good friends, but we got to talk a bit over the years. He definitely had a temper that manifested itself at times on the track, but that was scarcely unique at the time. 
While the "moonshiner" angle of stock car racing has been vastly exaggerated, other aspects regarding the "working class behavior" of those involved in the sport do reflect the reality of the drivers, spectators, and the track personnel. There was scarcely an occurrance at each and every race, but conflict resolution was often handled in various ways and with varied means, often away from the track. Behavior at the GN level was often exemplary compared with what would take place in the Sportsman ranks. 
But, I digress....
Alexamateo
3rd March 2011, 21:27
Thanks,  I agree that the prologue on Tiny Lund makes the whole book, and is a glimpse at how racing was at the Sportsman level then.  That race was Tiny's 4th race in 5 days.  He was gunning for the Sportsman Championship, and according to Butch Lindley, was only running a Winston Cup race (Talladega was his first Winston Cup start in two years) in order to earn money to apply towards the Sportsman championship.
Lee Roy
3rd March 2011, 23:09
Thanks Don.  I never doubted Tiny's heroism or selflessness in the Panch incident, I just was curious as to what was fact and what was embelishment.  I never heard that he had won the Carnegie award.
I'll never forget being in the stands at 'dega and seeing the wrecker pulling his car around into the garage.  
The week before (the August race at 'dega was run a week late due to rain on that Sunday) I got to see Mark Donohue set a closed course speed record in his Posche Can-Am Car, but he would die a couple of days after Lund. 
A few weeks later they had a fund raiser race at the Jacksonville Speedway.  Tiny and the promoter there were good friends.  I saw Buddy Baker and David Pearson there signing autographs and Bobby Allison brought his car and participated in the race.  Also got to meet another hero of mine, Lee Roy Yarbrough.  This was a few short years before Lee Roy wound up in the mental hospital from which he would never leave.
August/September of 75 was a month I'll never forget.
Don Capps
4th March 2011, 01:26
Lee Roy Yarbrough lived in our neighborhood in Columbia for a bit before moving to another area of the city. He knew my second cousin, Jimmy Lee Capps, from the Jacksonville area racing scene in the early Sixties. The racing scene in the Carolinas was quite an interesting place to be during the Sixties and into the Seventies -- I missed almost all of the Fifties racing scene in the area since we were stationed in Europe at the time. Yarbrough was working the various tracks in the area in the Sportsman Division as well as getting the occasional GN ride until it came together for him -- only for it to all far apart in such a unfortunate way. He did give me a few fast laps around Darlington during a tire testing session that further confirmed the idea that I was far more inclined to be a writer about racing than being a racer. My (lack of) performance in the Hobby Division quickly confirmed that notion -- I was simply not as crazy as the others on the track (of course having by that time I had done time in combat in the Lurps & Rangers and after having been shot up, shot down, and sunk, perhaps a degree of maturity had set in) who were gunning to move up a notch or two.
I have always thanked my lucky stars I was elsewhere -- Fort Bragg -- when Lund crashed at Talladega. I was listening to the race on the radio and had no idea it was that bad at first. Then having Mark Donohue die within a day or so was also a shock. Easy for people to forget just how close the dark side of racing was still lurking under the surface at the time.
Alexamateo
19th March 2011, 22:33
What can you tell us about your cousin?  I know he made a handful of starts in the 70's and also see he made his first start in the race that Wendell Scott won albeit belatedly at Jacksonville in December of 1963.  I'd be interested in knowing his impressions if any at the time.
Don Capps
23rd March 2011, 01:21
Jimmy Lee is about nine years older than I am, and he also lived in Florida (the Jacksonville area), so I did not see very much of him even during the Sixties. He visited us a few times in South Carolina (he was running some Sportsman events as I remember), and the last time I probably saw him was at Rockingham in either 1977 or maybe 1978. I would say that we met hardly a dozen times over the years, if that.
As for the Jacksonville race in December 1963, I never asked him. Nor did it really come up other than that was his first GN start. He crashed early in the race, which is about all I remember his mentioning at the time.
From what I have found from contemporary sources, Scott was awarded the victory within the time it would usually take to do a scoring check and did receive the prize money for first place -- in cash. That Scott always insisted on being paid in cash is something that I was told by several sources, one of them being John Bishop. The lack of a trophy was not mentioned in the contemporary accounts. It should be noted that there were several other races that season marred by scoring errors; however, keep in mind that just south of Jacksonville, in St. Augustine, there was considerable unrest over civil rights at that time.
Lee Roy
23rd March 2011, 15:43
Don, when you lived in Florida did you ever go to races over at the tracks in Lake City and down near Ocala?  I used to go to the races at Lake City quite a bit during the early to mid 1970's.
Don Capps
18th April 2011, 20:31
In the bookshelf recommendations thread, I mention that several from the academic communiy have ventured into the NASCAR history wars. Dan Pierce, on the history faculty of UNC-Asheville, blows quite a few holes in the usual NASCAR/stock car racing legends, folklore & mythology, but he still tends to listen a bit more to his Appalachian roots and his being a true fan of NASCAR racing than exercising a bit more the historian's objectivity at times. If nothing else, Pierce reinforces and puts on paper what some have long maintained: it is highly improbable that stock car racing trippers carving out an oval outside Stockbridge, Georgia for their weekend entertainment created stock car racing in the sense that we know it. This is because there is little to no likelihood that such a track ever existed. Extensive, exhaustive research on the part of Pierce failed to find any evidence for the existence of such a track in the Stockbridge area at the time when all the excitement was supposedly going on. 
I have skimmed and now doing a closer reading of Beekman's NASCAR Nation. One can easily quibble with some of his information -- there was a sanction for an event held in 1910 in West Virginia, which prior to the 1935 date that Beekman claims as being the earliest AAA-sanctioned event in that state, for instance -- and some of his conclusions and interpretations, but it is not the all-too-usual endless rehashing of legend, folklore, and mythology that mars most books on stock car racing and NASCAR's past. That Beekman uses footnotes -- the reason for the re-read is that I am doing through them -- cannot be overlooked. 
Something that both Pierce and Beekman and others make clear is that Big Bill France seized control of stock car racing in the Southeast through a variety of measures, most of them involving more than a bit of arm-twisting. Pierce takes the time to closely examine the labor relations aspects of NASCAR and the drivers, which is an area the usual NASCAR fare steers well clear of, given that France's views of those relations did not differ very much from that of those autocrats of the New South, the textile mill owners. The blow-up with the PDA at Talladega in 1969 was only one battle in the stormy relationship that France had with the "labor force" in NASCAR.
One should approach many of the recollections found in the Wilkinson book with some caution. As historians are always painfully aware, recollections and memory are like gossamer, fragile and often unsubstanial. While invaluable in providing the crucial elements of Zeirgeist, it is best to remember the caution implied in "trust, but verify." 
At some point, all the various efforts should coalesce and a more-informed, realistic view of the origins of stock car racing and NASCAR will emerge; however, mythology dies hard....
Alexamateo
19th April 2011, 05:28
It seems to me that the Stockbridge oval story may be attributable to Tim Flock,  whose interviews feature prominently in both the Chapin and Wilkinson books.  I just pulled Chapin's book off the shelf and Flock was adamant that that was the way it started,  ....."I don't care what anyone else tells you," .... he is quoted as saying in reference to stock car racing starting in a cow pasture outside of Atlanta.
I have no doubt that there was an impromptu race or two in a cow pasture, but somehow he built it up in his mind that that was the origin of stock car racing until he believed it.  Memory is funny.  Things that happened once gradually become what you did all of the time and ordinary events become embellished to the extraordinary.
Don Capps
19th April 2011, 15:02
You are correct regarding Tim Flock and the Stockbridge mythology. All the research in recent years points to Flock as the probable -- or at least most vocal -- proponent of the Stockbridge story. Pierce went to considerable effort to examine and research the possibility of the Stockbridge track story being true. In both Chapin and then in Wilkinson, Flock is quite adamant about the tale. However, there is more than sufficient reason to cast considerable doubt on the veracity of the story. Historians are more than aware of the foibles of memory, any historian dealing with oral history has found this out, more often than not the hard way. However, whatever the problems there might be with oral history collections, they definitely serve a purpose and can be invaluable. 
Pierce contends, correctly I believe, that Flock confused the date and location of the "Stockbridge" track with a post-war effort. During that period there were tracks literally carved from the red clay of the Southeastern Piedmont almost overnight. That Flock and others were never challenged or closely questioned -- at least openly -- regarding this and other similar claims, allowed the legend become folklore which then morphed into mythology. 
It is interesting to note how some "old-timers" and writers turned the "Stockbridge" story into a venue that would have easily rivaled Lakewood Speedway, with Bill France promoting the events and also setting up the infrastructure for the "track." Truly amazing stuff to read. So, how it could have escaped notice is a mystery in and of itself, of course.
The history of the development of stock car racing in the United States is a far more complex and nuanced story than most care to read or even think about. It is certainly not simple. Plus, NASCAR is not above changing the story and its role in it to suit its purposes, as the moonshiner still in the NASCAR museum in Charlotte clearly indicates. For years and years, NASCAR consistently ignored any talk of the role of the "trippers" in its development, its raison d'etre being as a counter to the unscrupulous promoters skipping out with the purse leaving the drivers and others high and dry -- a practice which France and NASCAR presented as commonplace, but for which there has been scant documentation, even Ray Parks having trouble recalling any cases of promoters stiffing the drivers. 
In additon, few today seem to understand source of the enmity that Bruton Smith continues to harbor against NASCAR and the France family, which has it origins during his time with one of the biggest rivals to NASCAR, the National Stock Car Racing Association (NSCRA), for which Smith worked and then led. The unusual combination of France managing to get NASCAR involved in the inaugural Southern 500 and Smith being drafted during the Korean War allowed France to outflank NSCRA.
At any rate, one must tread with much caution and skepticism though most of the literature relating to stock car racing history and NASCAR and their development.
Alexamateo
19th April 2011, 17:04
.................
That there have been those actively engaged in the illegal manufacture and transport of illegal alcohol who also drove and/or owned stock cars or tracks or were promoters is not questioned. What is under question is the role of those folks in the formation of stock car racing. In many cases, the numbers and roles of the "moonshiners" involved in stock car racing, especially NASCAR, during the Forties and Fifties have been either exaggerated or somewhat embellished tending to overshadow, deliberately or otherwise, the presence of the others involved in the sport. It could be suggested that the focus on the drivers who were -- or thought to be -- involved in the transportation of illegal liquor may have shifted attention away from the true role of the illegal alcohol business regarding stock car racing -- as a means to "launder" money generated by that illegal activity. Recent discussions on the role of "moonshine" in stock car racing tend to be focusing on this aspect of their involvement, particularly in light of the known instances of money generated from the illegal liquor trade being used to promote events through the simple expedient of track ownership. 
..................
You know some parts that are generally ignored come much closer to the truth.  A little further in the same chapter comes this tidbit from an interview with former driver Jack Smith:
"......the people that owned the racetracks.  They was [sic] just as bad as the race drivers.  They had made lots of money during the war sellin' whiskey and different things, and they come in and build a nice race track where other people didn't have the money. And some of the promoters that's promoting today, that's how they got their money to get started into this thing.  If you found a man that was in that kind of business, he was a gambler anyhow.  He didn't mind taking a chance on his money. ......."
There it is right there, in the midst of all the tall tales about haulin' whiskey down to Atlanta from Dawsonville on Highways 9 and 19.
Don Capps
19th April 2011, 18:37
Those in the background of the development of stock car racing in the pre-war years and then the post-war years and the emergence of NASCAR have, with few exceptions, been largely left out of the narrative; this has not been necessarily by accident it would seem. Some have been mentioned and even gained a bit of recognition, but generally ignored given the intense focus on the drivers and, of course, Big Bill France. As the scholarship continues to emerge and then develop, I would suggest that more attention to those with business interests, such as track ownship and so forth, will come under closer examination by those kicking over and looking under different rocks than those the non-historians repeatedly looked under time and again without really looking very closely.
It will be interesting to see where all this leads. NASCAR's belated embracing the Moonshine mythology may turn out to have unintended consequences should it become known just how many business arrangements may have had with those in the illegal liquor business -- in addition to those alread known or strongly suspected, of course. 
As one of my professor once pointed out, at times it is easy to forget which is the revisionist history, something that certainly seems to be the case with stock car racing and especially NASCAR. The ability of NASCAR to control the narrative, restrict access to information, and generally ensure the party line is strictly adhered to, just might be showing signs of finally meeting its match.
Don Capps
20th April 2011, 18:08
A term that has recently come into vogue in the history field is "counterfactual." The automobile racing history of the United States continues to experience problems with "counterfactual history" in certain areas, stock car racing and that of NASCAR -- along with that of the "early years" of the AAA National Championship -- being the major issues in this regard.
D-Type
20th April 2011, 21:15
Don,
Please elaborate or explain.
Does "counterfactual" mean falsifying history?  Or does it mean inventing history?  Does it have to be a deliberate act?
Don Capps
20th April 2011, 21:58
Don,
Please elaborate or explain.
Does "counterfactual" mean falsifying history?  Or does it mean inventing history?  Does it have to be a deliberate act?
Strictly speaking, counterfactual history is defined as an "what if" exercise. This concept was originally taken from the field of philosophy, something along the lines of "If A had not occurred, C would not have occurred". It is can be an effective exercise in determing causation, or at least as a starting point for the discussion of causation and related factors. However, in the field of psychology, it has the meaning of something along the lines of the tendency people have to imagine alternatives to reality. There are times when what is often tossed ito the "revisionist" history pot is actually "counterfactual" in the psychological sense, that people imagine something and, therefore, for any number of reasons, it must be so. 
Consider this: A writer (usually a jounalist) using only secondary sources written by other writers (journalists for the most part, enthusiasts for the other part) and who does no research as such aside from that -- just as those whose works he is using did, and does not question any of the assertions he reads, but provides eloquent prose on the role of "trippers" in the origins of stock car racing as it developed and evolved from a rude, red clay oval cut from a farmer's field on the outskirts of Stockbridge, Georgia in the early Thirties; prose that is both readable and, therefore, believeable. Is this "counterfactual" or "revisionist" if those who have done the research find no evidence for it? 
Does believing in something, even if not necessarily true, but fervently believing in it hard enough and long enough make something true? Does believing in something because you wish it to be true, make it true? By truth, I mean, of course, the historians' "truth,"  which as Wilde succiently reminds us, "....is rarely pure and never simple." 
Does the belief in something not necessarily "true" and yet could be true if things had been just a bit different, really make it a "falsehood?" Does ignorance of the truth make it a deliberate falsehood? 
All this could make for a good panel discussion at a conference or at least for an interesting classroom discussion.
Powered by vBulletin® Version 4.2.2 Copyright © 2025 vBulletin Solutions, Inc. All rights reserved.