The history of auto racing in Haskell Texas
In the nineteen twenties, cotton farming was the major
industry in the central Texas county of Haskell, named in honor of the Texas
Revolution hero Charles Ready Haskell who died at the Alamo.
Haskell County held fairs intermittently at various locations
within the county, but that all changed in 1924. On May 22 1924, the Fort
Worth Star-Telegram published news from the city of Haskell, the county
seat, that on that very morning, 25 men began construction of permanent buildings and a
race track with a 4000-seat grandstand on 68 acres near the city’s business
district recently purchased by the Haskell County Fair Association.
The finished 5/8-mile oval dirt race track featured 6-to-1
sloped turns (9.5% banking) “to hold the swiftly moving cars safe on their
course,” according to an August 1924 article in the Fort Worth
Record-Telegram.
The Haskell County Fair opened its three-day run at the new location
on Thursday October 2 1924, with American Automobile Association (AAA) sanctioned
automobile races set for Friday. Before
the scheduled event at Haskell, the AAA racers appeared in Abilene Texas on
September 26th, Amarillo on September 27th and Wichita
Falls on September 29th. The Fort
Worth Record-Telegram newspaper listed drivers Phil “Red” Schafer
“well-known auto ace,” and Dick Calhoun from Cleveland Oklahoma as entries for
the Texas swing promoted by oil transport magnate D. H. Jeffries, the AAA area
representative.
Three accidents marred the September 26th West
Texas Fair race at Abilene, one of which killed a spectator. During the day’s
fourth race, a wheel came off Lee Bammel’s machine, “hopped over the fence,” as
described in the Fort Worth Record-Telegram report and struck farmer T.
W. “Tom” Carlisle who stood on the running board of his father-in-law’s car watching
the races. Carlisle, 28 years old and
married with three children, died later at the West Texas Baptist Sanitarium in
Abilene from a fractured skull.
“Red” Shafer, the July Abilene race winner, won the first 10-mile
race in his Duesenberg after early leader Dick Calhoun’s ‘Cresswell Special’ broke
a connecting rod and retired for the day. Shafer, a native of Des Moines who lived in
Fort Worth, won the day’s featured event, the fifteen-mile handicap race over
Harry Milburn. Shafer took the lead during the eleventh mile after he overcame the
one-minute starting handicap.
Before the races on October 3, officials treated the new
Haskell track surface with a reported 360 barrels of crude oil (over 15,000
gallons) to prevent dust. The afternoon program, attended by 5,000 fans,
boasted seven races and a total purse of $1,100 but a sparse field of cars Notably absent was the highly advertised “Red”
Shafer and his Duesenberg racer as he raced that day in the inaugural AAA “Raisin
Day Classic“ National Championship race on the 1-mile board track in Fresno
California.
Calhoun’s troubles continued at Haskell, as his car caught fire
during a practice run before time trials, but with the fire extinguished and
repairs effected, the ‘Cresswell Special’ set quick time as Calhoun completed
two laps in 77 seconds (58 miles per hour) and won the silver loving cup.
J. E. Larrick of Wichita Falls won the first five-mile race
for the eight fastest qualifiers, then Calhoun won the ten-mile race. During
the non-qualifiers race, the right rear wheel of H.V. Link’s machine collapsed
and he “came perilously near to ending in a junk heap,” according to the Fort
Worth Record-Telegram report. In the
day’s featured fifteen-mile handicap race, Calhoun edged Jimmie Reeder’s
Chrysler Special and German emigre Johnny Mais in his “16-valve” Dodge. For his
day’s work at Haskell, Calhoun won $375.
1925
Nearly a year passed before the AAA racers returned to
Haskell County. On September 25, 1925 D. H. Jeffries announced
that “Red” Shafer, Ralph DePalma, Frank Lockhart and Dick Calhoun were among
the twenty-five drivers entered the October 2nd races. Shafer and Calhoun were well-known to Texas
race fans, as well as DePalma, the 1915 Indianapolis 500-mile race winner, while
young Frank Lockhart, a relative unknown, had experienced some success behind the
wheel of Harry Miller’s 183-cubic inch dirt car.
The Haskell County Fair opened its three-day run on Thursday
October 1, with the races held on Friday afternoon. Among the honored guests at
the races were R.Q, Lee of the West Texas Chamber of Commerce accompanied by his
wife and Hardy Grissom the president of the Haskell County Fair Association.
In time trials, five drivers broke Calhoun’s year-old track
record of 77 seconds, led by John Gerber (misidentified as “Goerber” and
“Garber” by some sources). Gerber completed his two qualifying laps in 72
seconds with an average speed of 62 miles per hour (MPH) while Calhoun could
not defend his record as his car experienced engine trouble.
Gerber, the original ‘outlaw’ racer from Meriden Kansas, won
the day’s first 10-mile race for the eight fastest qualifiers in his Chevrolet-powered
“bobtail” over Shafer, then George Souders won the second race and Harry
Milburn won the day’s third race, each of which were 5 miles in length. W. R
Hayes won the day’s third five-mile race, then he captured the day’s featured
15-mile event and its $250 purse. J.E. Larrick finished second and George
Souders (misidentified as “Souder” in some reports) originally from Lafayette
Indiana but then living Abilene finished in third place and won $75.
1926
As in 1925, the Haskell County Fair races were part of a
series of Texas fair races along with races in Abilene and Amarillo. Peter DePaolo the 1925 Indianapolis 500-mile
race winner, received top billing and was joined by Elbert “Babe” Stapp, Dick
Calhoun, George Souders, Fred Fame, Roy Meacham and Chester “Chet” Gardner. Frank
Lockhart originally signed to appear, but after his brilliant Indianapolis 500-mile
race victory, he chose to concentrate on the AAA National Championship trail, much
to D. H. Jeffries’ annoyance.
The September 22nd West Texas Fair races in Abilene were
marred by the death of Freeman Minyett, a welder by trade, who suffered a
fractured skull when his Frontenac-powered racer overturned. The
other racers, including Chet Gardner, the feature race winner, donated their
portion of the purse to Minyett’s widowed mother.
The three-day Haskell County Fair opened on September 30th, with the races scheduled for October 1 and 2nd. On the opening day of races, Fred Frame, in a Miller Special, won the first 7-1/2-mile race while Souders, who would win the 1927 Indianapolis 500-mile race, in a similar machine in third.
Roy Meacham won
the second 7-1/2-mile preliminary race, then finished second in five-mile dash
behind Roy Gardner of Denver. Fred Frame won the 15-mile finale to claim $250, as
Meacham in second place won $140, while Souders finished third and won
$90.
We do not have the results from the second day of races in
Haskell, but during the day’s third race, Meacham of Pawhuska Oklahoma died
instantly from a broken neck after his Chevrolet racer veered out of control
and plunged over the embankment.
Meacham, a World War one veteran, had been a motorcycle officer in Tulsa
and Pawhuska before he started racing motorcycles then graduated to racing cars
in the three months before his death.
1927
1927 saw the introduction of motorcycle racing on the
Haskell 5/8-mile track on July fourth. The
fourth annual Haskell County Fair held from October 6 through 8, 1927 featured
two days of automobile racing on the 7th and 8th. Again,
results of the races are nonexistent but during the second day’s featured
fifty-lap race, H.S. Fortner’s car crashed into the disabled machine of Joe
Miller and overturned several times. An
ambulance rushed Fortner to the Stamford Hospital, 15 miles south of
Haskell.
Fortner who hailed from Okmulgee in east central Oklahoma
reportedly passed away the following day, with the news of his death distributed
widely on the Associated Press wire service. On October 12, many Texas
newspapers, including the Austin American, reported that Fortner had not
only not died, but was in fact “rapidly recovering.” After his recovery, Fortner
relocated to the Houston area and raced briefly during the 1928 season before
he started a sewing machine sales firm.
1928
Motorcycles returned for the July 4th races, and
attracted a large field of riders and 5,000 spectators. Perrett Austin “E. A.”
Kathcart from Waco established a new track record as he rode two laps on his
Harley-Davidson in 77 1/5 seconds then went on to win the day’s five-mile and
eight-mile events.
The AAA Contest Board granted sanction #2085 to Henry
Alexander (of the Fair Board) for two days of automobile racing on October 4th
and 6th 1928. In qualifying on the 6th, Vic Felt, a
standout driver from Colorado in his Marathon Special, lowered the track record
for two laps to 68 3/5 seconds. Felt won the first event, a 7-1/2-mile (12-lap)
dash over Tulsa’s John Bolling, but Bolling swept the other two races on the
program, the 2-1/2 and 5-mile races in a program marred by numerous accidents
but thankfully no injuries.
After 1928, horse races on the 5/8-mile track replaced automobile
races during the Haskell County Fair but auto racing would return to the
fairgrounds track eight years later. In the intervening years, large oil
deposits were discovered in Haskell County which transformed the local economy.
1936
The four-day Central West Texas Fair in Haskell hosted
automobile racing on the first two days of the fair October 21 and 22, promoted
by Eugene Tonn (the local Farm Bureau agent) and sanctioned by the Southwestern
Automobile Racing Association and part of the six-race series to determine the
1936 Southwestern dirt track champion.
The Haskell race on the 21st counted towards the
title, along with races at Oklahoma City, San Antonio and Meridian Mississippi.
Morris Musick, one of the five racing Musick brothers from Dallas, won the
feature in a 17-car program that also featured entries from Joie Chitwood,
Leonard Musick, and Augustus “Cotton” Grable, the “Blond Blizzard from Texas.”
1937
Haskell hosted a two-day meet on July 3rd and 4th
1937 again promoted by Tonn, as each program featured time trials and five races
- three eight-lap heat races, one five-lap handicap and the 20-lap feature.
“Wild” Bill Morris of Lincoln Nebraska had great success on July 3rd,
but could not race on the 4th as his “DO Hal” racer had reportedly
“thrown a connecting rod.”
On July the fourth, 2,000 fans watched Herschel Buchanan set
quick time with a 33.4 second lap. Red Hodges won the first heat race over Buchanan,
but Herschel came back to win the day’s feature race over “Tex” West of
Junction City Kansas.
Automobiles raced again at Haskell on October 23 1937 on the
last day of the Central West Texas Fair with a scheduled field of fourteen cars.
“Wild” Bill Morris led qualifying with a 38-second lap and won his heat race,
then captured the feature event over Leon Fondoble and Buddy Rusch.
1938
In 1938, the 5/8-mile dirt oval in Haskell then known either
as “Fair Park Speedway” or “Haskell Speedway” hosted a two-day racing program
held over the Fourth of July holiday, promoted by Oklahoma-based Joe Ziobro
with the sanction provided by the Southwestern Auto Racing Association.
On Sunday July third, Joe Termin of Dallas Texas dominated
in his blue double overhead camshaft “DO Hal” powered machine, which used a
conversion cylinder head built by Harold “Hal” Hosterman for the four-cylinder
Ford model B engine. Termin set quick
time and new lap record of 33.3 seconds in qualifying, won his preliminary six-lap
heat race and the twelve-lap feature as he finished ahead of Johnny Holland and
Gene Fredrick.
William “Red” Hodges of Dallas won the second “slow” heat
race despite that his car limped around the last two laps of the race on a flat
tire. Lex Newbill of McKinney Texas won the day’s four-lap consolation
race.
Promoter Joe Ziobro promised the 1,200 fans a better show for
Monday the fourth of July, with three new cars scheduled to arrive from
Oklahoma City that included Waldo Parnett and Posey Reeves together with a
possible visit by Texas Governor James Allred.
1,000 fans turned out on July fourth and saw Termin qualify
second fastest. As Termin entered the
first turn on the third lap of the preliminary heat race, the right rear tire
on his “DO Hal” racer failed, and the out-of-control machine went through the
wooden fence and disappeared over the embankment. Termin, a 35-year old auto
mechanic married less than a year, suffered fatal injuries when the car rolled
over him. According to fellow racing historian Bob Lawrence, Termin’s death was
the first fatality in Ziobro’s twelve years of racing promotions
Herschel Buchanan, the 31-year old
driver from Shreveport Louisiana, won the six-lap heat race which was
completed under the caution flag after Termin’s crash. Oscar Coleman won the
second heat race which was marred by a crash by rookie driver Arthur Rhodes in
the same place as Termin’s earlier fatality, but Rhodes escaped unhurt. “Red” Hodges captured the third heat race,
then Buchanan, who years later became a two-time champion in International
Motor Contest Association (IMCA) late model stock cars, won the Haskell 12-lap
feature event ahead of Hodges in a time of six minutes and nine seconds.
There were no races presented as part of the two-day 1938 West
Central Texas Fair, and reportedly there were “stock car” races held in Haskell
on the 5/8-mile track in August, September and October 1939 but the author has
been unable to uncover any details.
There was a second Haskell Speedway which began operation in
1966 located approximately 4 miles west of the town of Haskell on farm land
owned by T C Redwine and promoted by Redwine and CW McKelvain. The first two
seasons the track hosted stock car races on Sunday afternoons, but for 1968 and
1969 presented races on Saturday nights. The track apparently closed after the 1969
season.
The author has been unable to find information about the
exact locations of the either the Fairgrounds 5/8-mile or the later “Haskell Speedway,”
and welcomes any leads from our readers.
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