1950 Southern 500
Race details[1] | |||
---|---|---|---|
Race 13 of 19 in the 1950 NASCAR Grand National Series season | |||
Date | September 4, 1950 | ||
Official name | Southern Five-Hundred | ||
Location | Darlington Raceway, Darlington, South Carolina | ||
Course |
Permanent racing facility 1.25 mi (2.012 km) | ||
Distance | 400 laps, 500 mi (800 km) | ||
Weather | Very hot with temperatures of 90 °F (32 °C); wind speeds of 8.9 miles per hour (14.3 km/h) | ||
Average speed | 82.766 mph (133.199 km/h) | ||
Attendance | 25,000 | ||
Pole position | |||
Driver | John Eanes | ||
Time | 43.884 seconds[2] | ||
Most laps led | |||
Driver | Johnny Mantz | Hubert Westmoreland | |
Laps | 351 | ||
Winner | |||
No. 98 | Johnny Mantz | Hubert Westmoreland |
The inaugural Southern Five-Hundred (Southern 500 since 1951) was an automobile race held at Darlington Raceway in Darlington, South Carolina on September 4, 1950, as part of the 1950 NASCAR Grand National. While the 1950 race was co-sanctioned by NASCAR and its rival Central States Racing Association, all subsequent Southern 500 races were hosted exclusively by NASCAR. [3]
It is NASCAR's first 500-mile race, and still holds status as one of NASCAR's premier events. Since there had never been a 500-mile stock car race and Darlington was NASCAR's first superspeedway, drivers and teams came to the event with unique strategies. Darlington set the precedent for race strategies to come at tracks like the Daytona International Speedway and Talladega Superspeedway.
Background
[edit]The track at the time was a four-turn 1.25-mile (2.01 km) oval.[4] The track's first two turns are banked at twenty-five degrees, while the final two are banked two degrees lower at twenty-three degrees.[4] The front stretch (the location of the finish line) and the backstretch is banked at six degrees.[4]
Harold Brasington was a retired racer in 1948, who had gotten to know Bill France, Sr. while competing against France at the Daytona Beach Road Course and other dirt tracks in the Southeast and Midwestern United States.[5] He began planning a new speedway after he noticed the huge crowds while attending the 1948 Indianapolis 500[5] and thought, "If Tony Hulman can do it here, I can do it back home."[5] Brasington bought 70 acres from farmer Sherman Ramsey and started making a race track from a cotton and peanut field.[5] However, he was forced to create an egg-shaped oval with one corner tighter, narrower, and more steeply banked because he promised Ramsey that the new track would not disturb Ramsey's minnow pond at the west side of the property.[5] Brasington was able to make the other turn at the east side of the property wide, sweeping, and flat as he wanted.[5] It took almost a year to build the track.[5]
Race report
[edit]Historical information
[edit]The Interstate Highway System would not begin construction until later in the decade; its heyday and prominence as an "American superhighway" for leisure and business travel did not kick in until the late 1960s when NASCAR first felt the need to expand outside its regional "shell" and into the national stage.[6]
Qualifying
[edit]More than 80 entrants showed up for the race.[5] Brasington used a two-week qualifying scheme and arranged the 75 cars in three rows of 25, similar to the Indianapolis 500.[7] During those two weeks of qualifications, locals could take their cars and try to qualify, unlike today where independent contract drivers used to run the races.
Drivers who failed to qualify for the race were Dorothy Shull, Bill Bennett, Lewis Hawkins, Pap White, Louise Smith, and Pat Sutton. The fastest qualifying speed was 82.034 miles per hour or 132.021 kilometres per hour by Wally Campbell, while the slowest was 74.637 miles per hour or 120.117 kilometres per hour by Bill Widenhouse.[2] Herb Thomas did qualify for the race beforehand; the car was on the grid until just before the race when it was repossessed, counting as an automatic withdrawal for Thomas.[2]
Pee Wee Martin and Bob Smith retired from professional stock car racing after this event. Byron Beatty, Walt Crawford, P.E. Godfrey, Bill Henson, Pete Keller, Jerry Kempf, Lee Morgan, Dick Soper, and Jack Yardley made their only NASCAR start in this event. Weldon Adams, Roy Bentley, Jack Carr, Gene Comstock, Gene Darragh, John DuBoise, Carson Dyer, Joe Eubanks, Johnny Grubb, J.E. Hardie, Tex Keene, Bub King, Virgil Livengood, Hub McBride, Hershel McGriff, Bill Osborne, Barney Smith, Rollin Smith, Jesse James Taylor, Charles Tidwell, Murrace Walker, Bill Widenhouse and Shorty York began their NASCAR career at this race and established the first generation of stock car drivers.[8]
Analysis
[edit]U.S. Senator Strom Thurmond was the official marshal for the 1950 Southern 500.[9][10]
The top prize for the race was $10,510 ($133,098 when adjusted for inflation) while the lowest prize was $100 ($1,266 when adjusted for inflation) for 72nd-75th place. Seventy-five cars competed in this era of relatively unregulated racing for a total of $25,325 in winnings ($320,713 when adjusted for inflation).[11] It is pretty incredible, especially for this era to see more than 50 cars out of the 75 starters were still running on lap 300 of 400.[11]
Gober Sosebee led the first four laps. Curtis Turner, the polesitter, then led until lap 22 before being wrecked out of the race on lap 275 with a significant amount of roof damage. After Turner lost the lead, Cotton Owens lead for 23 laps. After that, Mantz led to the finish. Mantz had taken advantage of an offer from Firestone to test a tire designed for asphalt stock car racing. While some cars used over 60 tires to go the remainder of the race, Mantz kept increasing his lead and won by over nine laps. The total time of the race was 6 hours, 38 minutes, and 40 seconds. The average speed was 75.250 miles per hour (121.103 km/h) while the pole position speed was 82.034 miles per hour (132.021 km/h). Two cautions lasted thirteen laps. Four hundred laps were done spanning 1.250 miles (2.012 km). Most of the known DNFs in the race were caused by crashes, the worst of which involved drivers Tex Keene, Curtis Turner, and Jack Smith all rolling their cars over the course of the race.[11]
For the average car in the race, the tire load unleashed on the tires on the new, paved circuit was too much on the tires, whether it was a Firestone or a random dirt tire. A legend spread around that teams were so desperate to get new tires that they would steal the tires from parking lots and the infield from the spectators. The race is considered to be the first "tire disaster" in NASCAR history, with the next major tire disaster being the 1969 Talladega 500.[12]
Results
[edit]Finishing order
[edit]Section reference:[11]
POS | ST | # | DRIVER | SPONSOR / OWNER | CAR | LAPS | MONEY | STATUS | LED |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 43 | 98 | Johnny Mantz | Hubert Westmoreland | '50 Plymouth | 400 | 10510 | running | 351 |
2 | 67 | 82 | Fireball Roberts | Sam Rice | '50 Oldsmobile | 391 | 3500 | running | 0 |
3 | 7 | 22 | Red Byron | Parks Novelty (Raymond Parks) | '50 Cadillac | 390 | 2000 | running | 0 |
4 | 23 | 59 | Bill Rexford | Julian Buesink | '50 Oldsmobile | 385 | 1500 | running | 0 |
5 | 15 | 77 | Chuck Mahoney | Brooks Motors | '50 Mercury | 381 | 1000 | running | 0 |
6 | 35 | 42 | Lee Petty | Petty Special (Petty Enterprises) | '49 Plymouth | 380 | 800 | running | 0 |
7 | 38 | 71 | Cotton Owens | F.J. Bland | '50 Plymouth | 380 | 930 | running | 23 |
8 | 64 | 2 | Bill Blair | Sam Rice | '49 Cadillac | 375 | 600 | running | 0 |
9 | 44 | 52 | Hershel McGriff | City of Roses (Hershel McGriff) | '50 Oldsmobile | 374 | 500 | running | 0 |
10 | 26 | 61 | George Hartley | Julian Buesink | '50 Oldsmobile | 371 | 450 | running | 0 |
11 | 16 | 9 | Tim Flock | Buddy Elliott | '50 Oldsmobile | 370 | 400 | running | 0 |
12 | 57 | 44 | Johnny Grubb | Johnny Grubb | '50 Plymouth | 368 | 350 | running | 0 |
13 | 62 | 26 | Dick Linder | Don Rogala | '50 Oldsmobile | 367 | 300 | running | 0 |
14 | 68 | 89 | John DuBoise | John DuBoise | '50 Ford | 367 | 250 | running | 0 |
15 | 72 | 72 | Weldon Adams | Harold Mays | '49 Plymouth | 367 | 225 | running | 0 |
16 | 32 | 99 | Barney Smith | Barney Smith | '50 Oldsmobile | 366 | 275 | running | 0 |
17 | 3 | 51 | Gober Sosebee | Cherokee Garage (Gober Sosebee) | '50 Oldsmobile | 364 | 290 | running | 4 |
18 | 52 | 39 | Elmer Wilson | Elmer Wilson | '49 Plymouth | 360 | 100 | running | 0 |
19 | 21 | 4 | Joe Eubanks | Joe Eubanks | '50 Mercury | 359 | running | 0 | |
20 | 19 | 43 | Shorty York | B.S. Beeson | '50 Buick | 358 | running | 0 | |
21 | 51 | 64 | Walt Crawford | South's Garden Spot / Carolina Motors (Walt Crawford) | '50 Buick | 358 | running | 0 | |
22 | 33 | Murrace Walker | Murrace Walker | '50 Oldsmobile | 358 | running | 0 | ||
23 | 48 | Gene Comstock | Gene Comstock | '50 Oldsmobile | 355 | 0 | |||
24 | 27 | 17 | Jack White | Dailey Moyer | '50 Ford | 354 | 0 | ||
25 | 71 | 65 | Byron Beatty | Byron Beatty | '50 Ford | 351 | 0 | ||
26 | 53 | Bill Widenhouse | Bill Widenhouse | '49 Plymouth | 350 | 0 | |||
27 | 4 | 7 | Bob Flock | Bob Flock Garage (Frank Christian) | '50 Oldsmobile | 348 | running | 0 | |
28 | 10 | 47 | Fonty Flock | Frank Christian | '50 Oldsmobile | 346 | 0 | ||
29 | 13 | 19 | Jack Smith | R & W Auto Service | '50 Oldsmobile | 345 | crash | 0 | |
30 | 30 | 34 | Pee Wee Martin | Eanes Motor Co. / Firestone Tires (John Eanes) | '50 Oldsmobile | 344 | 100 | overheating | 0 |
31 | 5 | 5 | Lee Morgan | Lee Morgan | '49 Oldsmobile | 342 | running | 0 | |
32 | 8 | Hub McBride | Hub McBride | '50 Mercury | 341 | 0 | |||
33 | 11 | Slick Smith | '50 Oldsmobile | 340 | 0 | ||||
34 | 12 | 45 | Ted Chamberlain | Ted Chamberlain | '50 Plymouth | 338 | running | 0 | |
35 | 6 | 66 | Virgil Livengood | Virgil Livengood | '50 Oldsmobile | 338 | running | 0 | |
36 | 9 | Billy Carden | '50 Ford | 338 | running | 0 | |||
37 | 14 | 37 | Bill Snowden | Nash Motor Co. (Nash Motor Co.) | '50 Nash | 338 | running | 0 | |
38 | 22 | 21 | Harold Kite | Edmunds Motors (Harold Kite) | '49 Lincoln | 334 | 0 | ||
39 | 25 | 49 | Glenn Dunaway | Glenn Dunaway | '50 Lincoln | 333 | 0 | ||
40 | 2 | 25 | Jimmy Thompson | Leland Colvin | '50 Lincoln | 332 | 125 | engine | 0 |
41 | 65 | 27 | Jimmy Florian | Euclid Motor Co. (Jimmy Florian) | '50 Ford | 331 | spindle | 0 | |
42 | 20 | 35 | Bob Smith | Central Chevrolet Corp. | '50 Oldsmobile | 331 | running | 0 | |
43 | 24 | 0 | Jimmie Lewallen | Sam Rice | '50 Oldsmobile | 330 | 0 | ||
44 | 75 | Jesse James Taylor | Jesse James Taylor | '50 Mercury | 329 | 0 | |||
45 | 29 | Bub King | T.L. King | '50 Mercury | 329 | 0 | |||
46 | 36 | 24 | Gene Darragh | '50 Hudson | 323 | 0 | |||
47 | 39 | Roy Bentley | Roy Bentley | '50 Studebaker | 319 | 0 | |||
48 | 42 | J.E. Hardie | '50 Studebaker | 317 | 0 | ||||
49 | 34 | Jerry Kempf | '50 Lincoln | 315 | 0 | ||||
50 | 46 | 36 | Bill Osborne | '50 Mercury | 311 | 100 | 0 | ||
51 | 37 | Carson Dyer | Carson Dyer | '50 Lincoln | 310 | 0 | |||
52 | 60 | 33 | Wally Campbell | Wally Marks | '50 Oldsmobile | 309 | 100 | 0 | |
53 | 40 | 79 | Jim Paschal | Julian Buesink | '50 Ford | 307 | 0 | ||
54 | 45 | 18 | Charles Tidwell | '49 Oldsmobile | 300 | 100 | 0 | ||
55 | 41 | Ruel Smith | '50 Pontiac | 289 | 0 | ||||
56 | 47 | Al Keller | W.O. Taylor | '50 Oldsmobile | 284 | 0 | |||
57 | 50 | Dick Soper | '50 Kaiser | 282 | 0 | ||||
58 | 54 | Pete Keller | '50 Studebaker | 281 | 0 | ||||
59 | 56 | P.E. Godfrey | '49 Lincoln | 278 | 0 | ||||
60 | 1 | 41 | Curtis Turner | Eanes Motor Co. (John Eanes) | '50 Oldsmobile | 275 | 320 | crash | 22 |
61 | 49 | Bob Apperson | Bob Apperson | '49 Oldsmobile | 249 | 0 | |||
62 | 55 | Tommy Thompson | Tommy Thompson | '50 Hudson | 238 | 0 | |||
63 | 61 | 6 | Marshall Teague | Paul Cox | '50 Lincoln | 230 | 0 | ||
64 | 70 | 14 | Tex Keene | Tex Keene | '50 Plymouth | 229 | crash | 0 | |
65 | 31 | 38 | Clyde Minter | Clyde Minter | '50 Lincoln | 219 | 100 | 0 | |
66 | 74 | Rollin Smith | '50 Hudson | 208 | 0 | ||||
67 | 17 | 86 | Bill Henson | '49 Oldsmobile | 200 | 100 | 0 | ||
68 | 50 | 48 | Gayle Warren | Earl Blevins | '49 Oldsmobile | 188 | 100 | 0 | |
69 | 28 | 87 | Buck Baker | Griffin Motors / Darlington Intl. Raceway (Bob Griffin) | '49 Oldsmobile | 176 | crash | 0 | |
70 | 58 | 46 | Kenneth Wagner | Moyer Co. (Dailey Moyer) | '49 Lincoln | 155 | 100 | 0 | |
71 | 18 | 62 | Lloyd Moore | Julian Buesink | '50 Lincoln | 112 | 100 | 0 | |
72 | 73 | 48 | Alton Haddock | Alton Haddock | '50 Ford | 98 | 100 | 0 | |
73 | 69 | 54 | Jack Yardley | Saverance Motors | '50 Ford | 89 | 0 | ||
74 | 66 | Jack Carr | '50 Mercury | 52 | engine | 0 | |||
75 | 63 | Roscoe Thompson | Charles Venable | '49 Oldsmobile | 24 | overheating | 0 | ||
Failed to qualify, withdrew, or driver change | |||||||||
POS | NAME | NBR | SPONSOR | OWNER | CAR | ||||
Bill Bennett | Bill Bennett | Kaiser | |||||||
Lewis Hawkins | Plymouth | ||||||||
Dorothy Shull | Oldsmobile | ||||||||
Pap White | Mercury | ||||||||
Pat Sutton | 54 | Saverance Motors | Ford | ||||||
Louise Smith | 94 | Leslie Motor Co. | Louise Smith | Nash | |||||
WD | Herb Thomas | 92 | Herb Thomas | Plymouth |
Timeline
[edit]Section reference:[11]
- Start of race: Gober Sosebee officially started the race with the pole position.
- Lap 5: Curtis Turner took over the lead from Gober Sosebee.
- Lap 24: Roscoe Thompson overheated his vehicle, making him the last-place finisher.
- Lap 27: Cotton Owens took over the lead from Curtis Turner.
- Lap 50: Johnny Mantz took over the lead from Cotton Owens.
- Lap 52: Jack Carr's vehicle overheated while he was racing.
- Lap 89: Jack Yardley failed to finish the race.
- Lap 98: Alton Haddock failed to finish the race.
- Lap 112: Lloyd Moore failed to finish the race.
- Lap 155: Kenneth Wagner failed to finish the race.
- Lap 176: Buck Baker had a terminal crash, forcing him to retire from the event.
- Lap 188: Gayle Warner failed to finish the race.
- Lap 200: Bill Henson failed to finish the race.
- Lap 208: Rollin Smith failed to finish the race.
- Lap 219: Clyde Minter failed to finish the race.
- Lap 229: Tex Keene had a terminal crash, forcing him to retire from the event.
- Lap 230: Marshall Teague failed to finish the race.
- Lap 238: Tommy Thompson failed to finish the race.
- Lap 249: Bob Apperson failed to finish the race.
- Lap 278: P.E. Godfrey failed to finish the race.
- Lap 281: Pete Keller failed to finish the race.
- Lap 282: Dick Soper failed to finish the race.
- Lap 284: Al Keller failed to finish the race.
- Lap 320: Curtis Turner had a terminal crash after leading 22 laps, forcing him to retire from the event.
- Lap 331: Jimmy Florian had a problem with his vehicle's spindle, knocking him out of the race.
- Lap 332: Jimmy Thompson managed to overheat his vehicle's engine.
- Lap 333: Glenn Dunaway finished well behind the lead lap drivers, his standing wasn't fully recorded.
- Lap 334: Harold Kite finished well behind the lead lap drivers, his standing wasn't fully recorded.
- Lap 340: Slick Smith finished well behind the lead lap drivers, his standing wasn't fully recorded.
- Lap 341: Hub McBride finished well behind the lead lap drivers, his standing wasn't fully recorded.
- Lap 344: Pee Wee Martin managed to overheat his vehicle while he was racing.
- Lap 345: Jack Smith had a terminal crash, forcing him to retire from the event.
- Lap 346: Fonty Flock finished well behind the lead lap drivers, his standing wasn't fully recorded.
- Lap 350: Bill Widenhouse finished well behind the lead lap drivers, his standing wasn't fully recorded.
- Lap 351: Byron Beaty finished well behind the lead lap drivers, his standing wasn't fully recorded.
- Lap 354: Jack White finished well behind the lead lap drivers, his standing wasn't fully recorded.
- Lap 355: Gene Comstock finished well behind the lead lap drivers, his standing wasn't fully recorded.
- Finish: Johnny Mantz was officially declared the winner of the event.
References
[edit]- ^ Complete weather information for the 1950 Southern 500 at The Old Farmers' Almanac
- ^ a b c 1950 Southern 500 qualifying information at Racing Reference
- ^ NASCAR Off the Record at Google Books
- ^ a b c "Darlington Raceway". CBS Sports. Archived from the original on 2012-10-19. Retrieved 2013-05-07.
- ^ a b c d e f g h Fleischman, Bill; Al Pearce (1999). The Unauthorized NASCAR Fan Guide (1998-99). Visible Ink Press. pp. 7.
- ^ Darlington made stock car racing a modern sport at NASCAR.com
- ^ Fleischman, page 8
- ^ "1950 Southern 500 results: race-database.com". www.race-database.com. Retrieved 2022-11-15.
- ^ Information about the official marshal Archived 2012-08-05 at archive.today at 50 Things You May Not Know About NASCAR
- ^ Paul Finkelman and Peter Wallenstein, eds. The Encyclopedia Of American Political History (CQ Press, 2001) pp. 124–126
- ^ a b c d e "Race Graph". Racing-Reference. Retrieved 2022-11-15.
- ^ Blood on the Asphalt: The NASCAR Tire Wars of 1988-89 & 1994, archived from the original on 2021-12-15, retrieved 2021-05-31