Langhorne Speedway



























































Langhorne Speedway
"The 'Horne"
"The Big Left Turn"
"The Track That Ate the Heroes"
"Puke Hollow" (Turn #2)
Langhorne-race-sign.jpg
Location
Middletown Township, Bucks County, near Langhorne, Pennsylvania
Capacity Approximately 60,000
Owner
National Motor Racing Association (1926–1929)
Ralph "Pappy" Hankinson
(1930–1941)
Earl "Lucky" Teter (1941–1942)
John Babcock (1946–1950)
Irv Fried and Al Gerber
(1951–1971)
Operator Langhorne Speedway
Opened 1926
Closed 1971
Former names New Philadelphia/Philadelphia Speedway (1926–c. 1930)
Major events
AAA Championship Car Langhorne 100 (1930–1955)
USAC Championship Car Langhorne 100 (1956-1970)
NASCAR Grand National
(1949–1957)
Langhorne National Open (1951–1971)
Circle
Length 1.6 km (1.0 mi)
Banking minimal

Pennsylvania Historical Marker
Designated 2006[1]



Langhorne Speedway was an automobile racetrack in Middletown Township, Bucks County, near the borough of Langhorne, Pennsylvania, a northern suburb of Philadelphia.


According to the book Langhorne! No Man's Land by L. Spencer Riggs: "With all other courses up to that time being fairground horse tracks, Langhorne was the first [one-]mile dirt track built specifically for cars" (p. 5). High-profile American racing clubs like the American Motorcyclist Association (AMA), American Automobile Association (AAA), and United States Auto Club (USAC) made Langhorne one of the stops on their national circuits. These events included AMA-sanctioned National Championship Motorcycle races between 1935 and 1956, AAA-sanctioned Championship Car races between 1930 and 1955, and USAC-sanctioned Championship Car races from 1956 to 1970. The USAC races featured (and were won by) notable racers such as A. J. Foyt, Mario Andretti, Al Unser, Bobby Unser, Gordon Johncock, Lloyd Ruby, and Eddie Sachs. Langhorne was also featured prominently in NASCAR's early years and hosted at least one NASCAR-sanctioned race every year from 1949 to 1957. The track can be played in Indianapolis 500 Evolution.




Contents






  • 1 Track history


    • 1.1 Site after closure of speedway


    • 1.2 Deaths and serious injuries


    • 1.3 "Puke Hollow"




  • 2 Race history


    • 2.1 Langhorne in NASCAR's pioneering years


      • 2.1.1 NASCAR Grand National winners




    • 2.2 Langhorne National Open


      • 2.2.1 Langhorne National Open winners




    • 2.3 AAA Champ Car winners


    • 2.4 USAC Champ Car winners


    • 2.5 AMA 100 Mile National Speedway winners




  • 3 References





Track history


The speedway was built by a group of Philadelphia racing enthusiasts known as the National Motor Racing Association (NMRA) and the first race was held on June 12, 1926 (scheduled for May 31 but postponed by rain). Freddie Winnai of Philadelphia qualified in 42.40 seconds, a new world's record for a one-mile (1.6 km) track, and went on to win the 50-lap main event.


The NMRA operated Langhorne through the 1929 season, staging 100-lap events on Labor Days and occasional shorter races. Difficulties in track preparation, management disputes, and poor attendance drove the speedway to the brink of bankruptcy until noted promoter Ralph "Pappy" Hankinson took over in 1930. "Pappy" brought in AAA Championship 100-lap races and continued to stage shorter Sprint car racing on the circular track. One of the first stock car races in the northeastern U.S. was held at Langhorne in 1940; Roy Hall of Atlanta, Georgia was victor in the 200-lap event.


In 1941, Hankinson sold the track to stuntman Earl "Lucky" Teter after a falling out with the AAA. However, Teter's tenure only lasted until July 5, 1942 when he was killed while attempting his Rocket Car leap stunt in Indiana State Fairgrounds. [2][3] That very same month, the U.S. Government banned all forms of auto racing due to America's involvement in World War II. As a result, the Speedway sat idle and did not host a race of any kind until 1946. Less than a month after the racing ban was enacted, "Pappy" Hankinson, the man so instrumental in bringing notoriety to Langhorne early on, died of natural causes in Florida. With a huge void created in the track's management, ownership of Langhorne Speedway was passed on to John Babcock and his family. Then in 1951, Irv Fried and Al Gerber became promoters.


Catering chiefly to USAC's Championship Car division, Fried and Gerber had the track's layout reconfigured to a "D" shape in 1965 by building a straightaway across the back stretch and paving over the uneven dirt surface with asphalt. However, as suburban growth engulfed the speedway, the offers from developers became too tempting to refuse. Fried and Gerber announced the sale of the property to mall developers in 1967, but the speedway held on through five more seasons. The final race held at Langhorne occurred on October 17, 1971, with Roger Treichler claiming the checkered flag at the National Open for Modified stock cars.



Site after closure of speedway


The landscape of the once-famous racetrack was dramatically altered after that last race over 40 years ago. Almost immediately after Langhorne's closure, the property was razed in order to make way for a new shopping development. The current space features a Sam's Club and a Restaurant Depot warehouse (in addition to a vacant lot which will be developed at a later time) where the pits and grandstand were once located. A heavily overgrown wooded area has completely enveloped the infield and backstretch, while a small grocery store and asphalt parking lots around the perimeter of the site cover up the rest. As a result, no physical remnants of the track itself remain.


On Saturday, October 14, 2006, almost 35 years to the day of the last race held at Langhorne, the Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission dedicated a historical marker at 1939 E. Lincoln Highway (in the same general area where the track was located) which reads:


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Opened in 1926, this circular one-mile dirt track was known as the "Big Left Turn." It hosted a NASCAR inaugural race in 1949. Notable drivers Doc Mackenzie, Joie Chitwood, Rex Mays, Lee Petty, Dutch Hoag, A.J. Foyt, and Mario Andretti raced here in stock, midget, sprint, and Indy cars. Langhorne was reshaped as a "D" and paved in 1965. The National Open Championship run here was regarded as the "Indy of the East." Final race was held in 1971. [4][5]


Langhorne was relocated to southern New Jersey and became Bridgeport Speedway in Bridgeport, New Jersey.[6]



Deaths and serious injuries


The track became known as one of the more dangerous tracks in motorsports. There have been 18 drivers, five motorcycle riders, three spectators, and one flagman killed at the track.[7]Larry Mann, Frank Arford, Bobby Marvin, John McVitty, Joe Russo, Mike Nazaruk, and Jimmy Bryan were all killed racing at this track. In the first National Open in 1951, a large wreck blocked the track and burned driver Wally Campbell, that year's NASCAR National Modified Champion.[8] Several other noted drivers were injured in accidents, often described as spectacular, due to high speeds on the mile-long but rough dirt surface.


In 1965, one of the most spectacular comebacks in auto racing history began with the serious burns and injuries to Mel Kenyon. Kenyon would later return to racing to place third at the Indy 500 and win numerous national midget racing championships.



"Puke Hollow"


Probably the most notorious area of the original dirt race course, which earned the nickname "Puke Hollow", was located at turn #2 (see note below). It received this moniker due to the fact that a driver might be inclined to "puke" as a result of the extreme jostling his car would experience when hitting the deep ruts which formed in this section of the track as a race progressed. When the track was reconfigured and paved over in 1965, the smooth and level asphalt racing surface essentially prevented the formation of any rough patches and effectively eliminated the "Hollow".


  • (Note: Since the racetrack was a near perfect circle until 1965, there were no clear-cut "turns" as compared to a more traditional track layout; the turns are based on dividing the circular track into 4 quarters, with turn #2 being the second "quarter" from the start line.)


Race history



Langhorne in NASCAR's pioneering years


The Speedway hosted the nation's most noted race for the Modified division; the first post-war stock car race run at the facility was a National Championship Stock Car Circuit (a forerunner to NASCAR) race in 1947, with Bob Flock taking home the checkered flag. In September 1949, Langhorne hosted the fourth race of NASCAR's first year of sanctioning unmodified cars, then called Strictly Stock; Curtis Turner won that race.[9] The Strictly Stock series was renamed the Grand National series for the 1950 season, and the series is now known as Sprint Cup. Langhorne continued to host an annual stop on the Grand National schedule from 1950 to 1957. Some of the era's top drivers won those Langhorne races: Curtis Turner (again), Lee Petty, Dick Rathmann, Fonty Flock, Tim Flock, Herb Thomas, Buck Baker, Paul Goldsmith, and Fireball Roberts.[10]



NASCAR Grand National winners


All winners were United States American















































































































Season
Date
Winning Driver
Manufacturer
1949
September 11

Curtis Turner

Oldsmobile

1950
April 16

Curtis Turner

Oldsmobile
1950
September 17

Fonty Flock

Oldsmobile

1951
September 15

Herb Thomas

Hudson

1952
May 4

Dick Rathmann

Hudson
1952
September 14

Lee Petty

Plymouth

1953
May 3

Buck Baker

Oldsmobile
1953
June 21

Dick Rathmann

Hudson
1953
September 20

Dick Rathmann

Hudson

1954
May 2

Herb Thomas

Hudson
1954
September 26

Herb Thomas

Hudson

1955
April 24

Tim Flock

Chrysler
1955
September 18

Tim Flock

Chrysler

1956
April 22

Buck Baker

Chrysler
1956
September 23

Paul Goldsmith

Chevrolet

1957
April 14

Fireball Roberts

Ford
1957
September 15

Gwyn Staley

Chevrolet


Langhorne National Open


From 1951 to 1971, Langhorne Speedway hosted the Langhorne National Open, which became the nation's most prestigious race for Sportsman and Modified cars. Guaranteed starting positions were awarded to the winners (or highest finishers not already qualified) at special Langhorne Qualifier races held at weekly racetracks throughout the Northeast and Southeast. It was common to have over a hundred cars attempt to qualify for the National Open. From 1951 to 1957, the race was sanctioned by NASCAR. In 1961 and 1962, Supermodifieds raced with the Modifieds and Sportsman cars. Dutch Hoag was the most successful driver, winning five times. Hoag was the only driver to win the National Open on both the dirt and pavement surfaces.[11]


The National Open since 1972 has become the Race of Champions Modified race, raced exclusively on pavement and at various Northeastern tracks, and its history has been combined into the National Open. Pavement Modified star Matt Hirschman won five of the past six editions since 2012, and has tied Hoag for most wins in this race's combined history.





Langhorne National Open winners


All winners were United States American







































































































































Season
Date
Winning Driver
Home State
1951
October 14
Hully Bunn (relief driver: Dick Eagan)
Connecticut
1952
October 12
Jim Delaney
New Jersey
1953
October 11
Ted Swaim
North Carolina
1954
October 10

Frankie Schneider
New Jersey
1955
October 9
Pete Corey
New York
1956
October 14

Dutch Hoag
New York
1957
October 13
Glenn Guthrie
District of Columbia
1958
October 12
Jim Delaney
New Jersey
1959
October 11
Jim Delaney
New Jersey
1960
October 9

Dutch Hoag
New York
1961
October 8
Bob Malzahn
New Jersey
1962
October 14

Frankie Schneider
New Jersey
1963
October 13

Dutch Hoag
New York
1964
October 11
Freddy Adam
Pennsylvania
1965
October 10
Bill Slater
Connecticut
1966
October 9
Will Cagle
New Jersey
1967
October 8

Dutch Hoag
New York
1968
October 13

Dutch Hoag
New York
1969
October 12

Ray Hendrick
Virginia
1970
October 11
Merv Treichler
New York
1971
October 17(*)
Roger Treichler
New York

(*) = Last race ever held at Langhorne Speedway. See Race of Champions for a history of this race since 1972.



AAA Champ Car winners


All winners were United States American






























































































Season
Date
Winning Driver
Chassis
Engine
1930
May 3

Bill Cummings

Miller

Miller
1935
October 13

Kelly Petillo

Wetteroth

Offy
1940
June 16

Duke Nalon
Adams
Sparks
1941
June 22

Duke Nalon
Adams
Sparks
1946
June 30

Rex Mays
Stevens

Winfield
1947
June 22

Bill Holland

Wetteroth

Offy
1948
June 20

Walt Brown

Kurtis Kraft

Offy
1949
October 16

Johnnie Parsons

Kurtis Kraft

Offy
1950
June 25

Jack McGrath

Kurtis Kraft

Offy
1951
June 24

Tony Bettenhausen

Kurtis Kraft

Offy
1954
June 20

Jimmy Bryan

Kuzma

Offy
1955
June 19

Jimmy Bryan

Kuzma

Offy


USAC Champ Car winners


All winners were United States American






















































































































































Season
Date
Winning Driver
Chassis
Engine
1956
June 24

George Amick

Kuzma

Offy
1957
June 7

Johnny Thomson

Kuzma

Offy
1958
June 15

Eddie Sachs

Kuzma

Offy
1959
June 14

Van Johnson

Kurtis Kraft

Offy
1960
June 19

Jim Hurtubise

Kuzma

Offy
1961
June 18

A. J. Foyt

Meskowski

Offy
1962
July 1

A. J. Foyt

Meskowski

Offy
1962
August 26

Don Branson

Watson

Offy
1963
June 23

A. J. Foyt

Meskowski

Offy
1964
June 21

A. J. Foyt

Meskowski

Offy
1965
June 20

Jim McElreath

Brabham

Offy
1965
August 8

Jim McElreath

Brabham

Offy
1966
June 12

Mario Andretti

Brawner Hawk

Ford
1966
August 7

Roger McCluskey

Eagle

Ford
1967
June 18

Lloyd Ruby
Mongoose

Ford
1967
July 30

Mario Andretti

Brawner Hawk

Ford
1968
June 23

Gordon Johncock

Gerhardt

Offy
1968
July 28

Al Unser

Lola

Ford
1969
June 15

Bobby Unser

Eagle

Offy
1970
June 14

Bobby Unser

Eagle

Offy


AMA 100 Mile National Speedway winners


































































































Season
Winning Rider
Make
1935
Woodsie Castonguay

Indian
1936
J. Lester Hillbish

Indian
1937
Ed Kretz

Indian
1938
Ed Kretz

Indian
1939
Robert Sparks

Norton
1940
Ed Kretz

Indian
1941
Tommy Hays

Harley-Davidson
1946
Johnny Spiegelhoff

Indian
1947
Ed Guill

Norton
1948
Ed Kretz

Indian
1949
Jimmy Chann

Harley-Davidson
1950
Billy Huber

Harley-Davidson
1951
Billy Huber

Harley-Davidson
1952
Rick Fisher

Triumph
1953
Paul Goldsmith

Harley-Davidson
1954
Everett Brashear

Harley-Davidson
1955
Brad Andres

Harley-Davidson
1956
Everett Brashear

Harley-Davidson

References: American Motorcycle Association Archives; Jack Vanino, motorcycle historian



References





  1. ^ "PHMC Historical Markers Search" (Searchable database). Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission. Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. Retrieved 2014-01-25..mw-parser-output cite.citation{font-style:inherit}.mw-parser-output q{quotes:"""""""'""'"}.mw-parser-output code.cs1-code{color:inherit;background:inherit;border:inherit;padding:inherit}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-free a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/65/Lock-green.svg/9px-Lock-green.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-limited a,.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-registration a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d6/Lock-gray-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-gray-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-subscription a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/aa/Lock-red-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-red-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration{color:#555}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription span,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration span{border-bottom:1px dotted;cursor:help}.mw-parser-output .cs1-hidden-error{display:none;font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-visible-error{font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration,.mw-parser-output .cs1-format{font-size:95%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-left,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-left{padding-left:0.2em}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-right,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-right{padding-right:0.2em}


  2. ^ https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=888&dat=19420707&id=ICJPAAAAIBAJ&sjid=eE0DAAAAIBAJ&pg=3342,5569254


  3. ^ Billboard July 11, 1942


  4. ^ http://www.explorepahistory.com/hmarker.php?markerId=994


  5. ^ http://www.portal.state.pa.us/portal/server.pt?objID=442806&mode=2&open=514&markerId=666


  6. ^ http://www.thenewbridgeportspeedway.com/speedway_info_facts.php


  7. ^ Hembree, Mike (January 8, 2018). "The Killing Field". Autoweek: 40–44.


  8. ^ Hedger, Ron, "The King of Langhorne", Stock Car Racing (ISSN 0734-7340), Vol. 35, No. 2, February 2000.


  9. ^ "1949 Strictly Stock Standings and Statistics" page of Racing-Reference website, retrieved 9 May 2007.


  10. ^ Langhorne Speedway page of Racing-Reference website, retrieved 9 May 2007.


  11. ^ Langhorne National Open page of TheVintageRacer.com, retrieved 9 April 2007.






Coordinates: 40°10′42″N 74°53′05″W / 40.178224°N 74.884602°W / 40.178224; -74.884602







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