Indoor hardtop racing
in San Francisco
in San Francisco
Part one
The Cow Palace shown during the nineteen fifties
on a postcard from the author's collection
In early January 1955, multiple newspapers in the
Oakland/San Francisco Bay Area began to publish articles about an upcoming
series of indoor full-size stock automobile races to be held in the Cow Palace
in San Francisco.
The Cow Palace (known officially as the California State
Livestock Pavilion), located seven miles south of downtown San Francisco in the
Bayshore District, was first proposed based on success of the livestock
pavilion at the 1915 Panama–Pacific International Exposition (World’s Fair).
After many years of planning, the final site near the San Francisco and San Mateo county boundary was selected and purchased in 1935. Construction began in the summer 1936 with funding from San Francisco and San Mateo counties supplemented with federal Public Works Administration (New Deal) funding.
After many years of planning, the final site near the San Francisco and San Mateo county boundary was selected and purchased in 1935. Construction began in the summer 1936 with funding from San Francisco and San Mateo counties supplemented with federal Public Works Administration (New Deal) funding.
Photo of the interior of the Cow Palace shortly after completion from the book Public Buildings: A Survey of Architecture of Projects Constructed by Federal and Other Governmental Bodies Between the Years 1933 and 1939 with the Assistance of the Public Works Administration by C.W. Short and R. Stanley-Brown. Photo appears courtesy of the Living New Deal program in the Department of Geography at the University of California.
The main structure, the Livestock Exhibition Building, was a
reinforced concrete arena with a 6-acre steel arched truss roof designed by San
Francisco architect Wilbur Peugh. With permanent seating for 12,000 visitors,
construction of the arena was completed in February 1938 at a cost of $700,000.
However, the complex, with a final project cost to $2.5 million, was not
completed for several years and the first event in the Cow Palace, the Western
Classic Holstein Show was held in the new arena on April 20th and 21st 1941.
The Cow Palace complex was formally dedicated by Governor
Culbert Olson during the opening ceremonies for the first Grand National
Livestock Exposition on November 15 1941. The initial Grand National exposition
was a huge success, with over 142,000 attendees, but three weeks later, the
Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor and the United States government requisitioned
the Cow Palace.
Beginning in January 1942, for a rental cost of $1.00 a
year, the Army used the Cow Palace as a processing center for troops prior to
their deployment to the Pacific Theatre. Later in the war the Ordnance Corps used
the facility as a vehicle repair center through 1946, with the second Grand
National Livestock Exposition held in November 1946.
The Cow Palace arena shortly after completion in 1938 from the book Public Buildings: A Survey of Architecture of Projects Constructed by Federal and Other Governmental Bodies Between the Years 1933 and 1939 with the Assistance of the Public Works Administration by C.W. Short and R. Stanley-Brown.
Photo appears courtesy of the Living New Deal Program in the Department of Geography at the University of California.
The Cow Palace, owned and managed by the 1-A District
Agricultural Association, a California State agency regularly held rodeos, horse
and livestock shows, concerts, consumer shows and sporting events such as
roller derbies, basketball games and boxing and wrestling matches.
The idea of indoor hardtop, or stock car, races was novel, and public interest was piqued on January 13 1955 when several Bay Area newspapers carried the announcement of the North California Indoor Hardtop Championships.
The idea of indoor hardtop, or stock car, races was novel, and public interest was piqued on January 13 1955 when several Bay Area newspapers carried the announcement of the North California Indoor Hardtop Championships.
The races were scheduled be held every Saturday night for
two months beginning February 12 1955 -
each night would feature qualifying and the 11-race program, scheduled for
50 cars each night, was sponsored by the Crown American Racing Club of San
Francisco.
On February 2 1955 an article in the Oakland Tribune newspaper reported that an all-steel guardrail was being erected inside the Cow Palace “to afford greater safety for spectators” during the upcoming races, and noted that “more than 200 drivers have applied for entry for the national debut of indoor stock car racing.”
On February 2 1955 an article in the Oakland Tribune newspaper reported that an all-steel guardrail was being erected inside the Cow Palace “to afford greater safety for spectators” during the upcoming races, and noted that “more than 200 drivers have applied for entry for the national debut of indoor stock car racing.”
As the college basketball regular season wound down (the
University of San Francisco used the Cow Palace as a home court for its biggest
opponents), on Sunday February 6, the Oakland Tribune published an
interview with Jack Smith managing director of the Oakland Racing Association
(ORA), the group that would sanction the races. ORA appeared to have started during the 1954 season to sanction "stock hard top" racing.
Smith revealed the roster of
officials for the Cow Palace races, which was headed by Hillary Govia of
Hayward as the referee, with Frank Vogel as the starter and the legendary BCRA Jack Carmedy the
public address announcer while Mack (Mac) McGrete of Concord worked the timing clocks.
In the pit area, George Sweeney was the technical inspector with Bob Moss the pit marshal assisted by Steward Manuel Picanco and course clerks Harry Schilling, Tim Ahern and Bill Evans. McGrete and Schilling had served of co-promoters of Oakland Speedway located near San Leandro during the 1954 season.
In the pit area, George Sweeney was the technical inspector with Bob Moss the pit marshal assisted by Steward Manuel Picanco and course clerks Harry Schilling, Tim Ahern and Bill Evans. McGrete and Schilling had served of co-promoters of Oakland Speedway located near San Leandro during the 1954 season.
The article in the February 6th edition of the Oakland
Tribune claimed that the 1/5-mile Cow Palace oval would be “the world’s
fastest indoor paved speedway” and that “tests are being run to ascertain the
best type of asphalt that will be applied in special areas on the paved
speedway.” The field of over 200 entries
received would be winnowed “down to the fastest 50 cars" after a rigid
screening and qualifying process by the Oakland Racing Association (ORA) board.”
During the week before the February 12 1955 inaugural race, the
ORA released a partial list of entrants for the first night of the Cow Palace
hardtop races. The list was topped by Ben Gregory of Crockett California whose given
name was Gordon Campbell, raced under a nom de guerre to hide his racing
activities from his employer, the California Highway Patrol.
In 1952, Gregory won
$2,500 (equivalent to $23,000 today) for his victory in the 250-mile stock car
race held on the Bay Meadows one-mile thoroughbred race track. Gregory the day’s fastest qualifier took the
lead with three laps to go in his 1950 Oldsmobile Rocket 88 coupe.
Other entries for the first Cow Palace race included noted
sports car racer Jack Flaherty of San Francisco, Joe Roletto, the 1954 American
Racing Association (ARA) ‘big car’ champion, veteran San Jose Speedway hardtop
racer Carmel Fernandez, and hot rod roadster racer George “Blonde” Pacheco, as
well as drivers Dan Regan of Palo Alto, Joe Cairate from San Bruno, Glen Jensen
of Menlo Park and Ted Hanning, Orval Rose, and Dave Davies, all of San
Francisco.
In our next installment we will reveal the results of the 1955 wintertime races in the Cow Palace.
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