Curtis Turner

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Curtis Turner
Born (1924-04-12)April 12, 1924
Floyd, Virginia, United States
Died Script error: The function "death_date_and_age" does not exist.
Cause of death Airplane crash
Achievements 1956 Southern 500 Winner

Inaugural winner at Rockingham Speedway (1965)
Led Grand National Series in wins one time (1950)
Holds record for most career NASCAR Convertible Division wins (38)
Holds record for most career NASCAR Convertible Division poles (23)
Holds record for most NASCAR Convertible Division wins in a season (22, 1956)

Holds record for most NASCAR Convertible Division poles in a season (16, 1956)
Awards 1956 Grand National Series Most Popular Driver

Named one of NASCAR's 50 Greatest Drivers (1998) International Motorsports Hall of Fame (1992) Motorsports Hall of Fame of America (2006)

NASCAR Hall of Fame (2016)
NASCAR Cup Series career
184 races run over 17 years
Best finish 5th (1950)
First race 1949 Race No. 1 (Charlotte)
Last race 1968 Hillsboro 150 (Hillsboro)
First win 1949 untitled race (Langhorne)
Last win 1965 American 500 (Rockingham)
Wins Top tens Poles
17 73 16
Statistics current as of February 22, 2013.
Turner's 1967 Daytona 500 racecar

Curtis Turner (April 12, 1924 – October 4, 1970) was an American stock car racer. In addition to his success in racing, he made a fortune, lost it, and remade it buying and selling timberlands. Throughout his life he developed a reputation for drinking and partying. In 1999, he was inducted into the Virginia Sports Hall of Fame.

History

He was born in Floyd, Virginia and began his racing career in 1946 when he finished 18th in a field of 18 contestants in a race at Mount Airy, North Carolina. However, he rebounded and won his next race. During his career, he won 360 races in several different racing series, including 22 in the NASCAR Convertible Division in 1956, and 17 wins in the NASCAR Grand National series (now Sprint Cup). From 1950 to 1954, he drove for Oldsmobile being billed as the Blond Blizzard of Virginia. He switched to driving Fords in 1954. He eventually acquired the nickname of Pops, allegedly because of the way he would "pop" other drivers on the track.

Turner drove a Holman Moody-prepared Studebaker Lark in the 2-hour compact car race accompanying the inaugural United States Grand Prix at Sebring, Florida, on December 12, 1959. He finished second overall, trailing the disc-brake equipped Jaguar 3.4 of Walt Hansgen.[1]

Accomplishments

He is noted for several other racing accomplishments:[1]

  • The only NASCAR driver to win two Grand National races in a row from the pole by leading every lap (Rochester, New York and Charlotte, North Carolina in July 1950)
  • The only win in NASCAR for Nash — Charlotte 150 — April 1, 1951
  • The only driver to win 25 major NASCAR races in one season driving the same car in each of them (in 1956 — 22 were won as the #26 car in the convertible division, the other three, including the 1956 Southern 500, were with a top welded on.)
  • The only driver to win a major NASCAR race that was red-flagged because his car was the only one still running (at the Asheville-Weaverville, North Carolina track on September 30, 1956.)
  • Turner conceptualized, secured financing for, and built Charlotte Motor Speedway in 1960 before being forced out by his business partners.
  • The first driver to climb Pikes Peak in less than 15 minutes (in a 1962 Ralph Moody Ford — the actual time was 14 minutes 37 seconds for the 12.42-mile course.)
  • The first winner of the American 500 at Rockingham, North Carolina (in a 1965 Woods Brothers Ford.)
  • The first driver to qualify for a NASCAR Grand National race at a speed greater than 180 miles per hour (1967 Daytona 500, driving #13, a 1967 Smokey Yunick Chevrolet.)
  • 2006 inductee of the Motorsports Hall of Fame of America
  • Turner's 1967 Daytona 500 car designed by Smokey Yunick, seen to the right, was the inspiration for the car driven by the Talladega Nights character Reese Bobby. The car was banned by NASCAR thus starting Smokey's tenuous relationship with NASCAR.
  • 2016 Inductee of the NASCAR Hall of Fame

Labor Union

Being able to see the racing industry from the business end, he developed a feeling that drivers deserved a better deal for their role in the sport. Together with Fireball Roberts and Tim Flock, he attempted to organize a union for them, the Federation of Professional Athletes, in 1961.[2] According to The Washington Post: "His aims are for better purses, a share in broadcasting rights and retirement benefits for the drivers." [3] Unfortunately for him, NASCAR has never looked favorably on an organized union for the drivers, and Turner was banned for life.

Turner continued to race under other sanctioning bodies, including the Midwest Association for Race Cars (MARC),[4] even promoting his own 100-mile event on the dirt at Lakewood Speedway, Georgia, in October 1961. Tim Flock finished second in that event.[5] Turner and Flock sued NASCAR and its president Bill France "seeking $200,000 punitive damages each and restitution for loss of earnings." [6] "Attorneys for the drivers claim the ban represents a violation of state right to work laws because test driving contracts involving $150 a day plus expenses were canceled as a result of the action. NASCAR and France's attorneys contended the ban isn't a right to work violation because it doesn't involve an employer-employee relationship. They said Flock and Turner are individual contractors and not employees of NASCAR or any track." [7]

NASCAR comeback

However, the ban was lifted after four years in 1965, and Turner returned to NASCAR racing. Bill France was in a bind and needed to mend some fences. 1962 and 1963 NASCAR-points champion Joe Weatherly was killed driving a Mercury at Riverside, California on January 19, 1964,[8] and his star driver Fireball Roberts had died following a fiery crash on May 24, 1964, at the World 600 in Charlotte.[9] The track owners wanted Turner back. "Turner was slated to drive for a newly-organized group, The Grand American Racing Association, organized July 31 in Sumter, S.C. Turner was due to compete in the first of 17 scheduled races at Concord, N.C. Aug 21." [10] France was also short of cars. The Chrysler factory were boycotting NASCAR over the organizing body's ban of the Hemi engine, and Richard Petty went drag racing in the first half of the 1965 season. The Ford factory were also in dispute with NASCAR over the SOHC engine, which faced a joint NASCAR-USAC ban on December 17, 1965.[11]

Turner, then 41, soon notched the first victory of his comeback in a Ford at the inaugural American 500, at the North Carolina Motor Speedway, Rockingham, North Carolina, on October 31, 1965, winning a purse of $13,090.[12] Turner lost his Ford ride in 1966 when: "Ford withdrew its factory backed racing teams from competition when the National Association for Stock Car Auto Racing and the United States Auto Club ruled April 6 that Fords equipped with an overhead cam engine must carry 427 additional pounds." [13] Turner started the 1966 season in a Ford, but with the Ford-factory withdrawal, he signed to drive a Chevrolet for Smokey Yunick out of Daytona Beach, Florida.[14]

Death

He died in an airplane crash near Punxsutawney, Pennsylvania on October 4, 1970. The crash also killed golfer Clarence King.[15] Police said the Aero Commander 500 piloted by Turner crashed shortly after taking off from the Dubois-Jefferson Airport en route to Roanoke, Virginia.[16]

See also

References

  1. Competition Press, December 31, 1959, Page 4 (picture), Page 8 (report).
  2. Augusta Chronicle, August 11, 1961, Page 13.
  3. The Washington Post, Times Herald, August 23, 1961, Page D9.
  4. Augusta Chronicle, October 25, 1961, Page 8.
  5. Augusta Chronicle, October 23, 1961, Page 7.
  6. Springfield Union, Sept 13, 1961, Page 27.
  7. Augusta Chronicle, October 23, 1961, Page 6.
  8. Plain Dealer, January 20, 1964, Page 32.
  9. Dallas Morning News, July 3, 1964, Section 2, Page 3.
  10. Competition Press and Autoweek, August 28, 1965, Page 8.
  11. Competition Press and Autoweek, January 15, 1966, Pages 1, 11.
  12. Oregonian, Nov 1, 1965, Page 43.
  13. Springfield Union, April 16, 1966, Page 34.
  14. Augusta Chronicle, April 27, 1966, Section A, Page 6.
  15. New York Times, October 6, 1970, Page 50.
  16. Greensboro Record, October 5, 1970, Page 34.

External links