The Marchbanks Speedway
Hanford California
Part One- the early history of the first superspeedway west of the
Mississippi River
This article previously appeared in the Classic Racing Times - subscribe at http://theclassicracingtimes.com/subscribe
This article previously appeared in the Classic Racing Times - subscribe at http://theclassicracingtimes.com/subscribe
Bircha Lewis “B.L”. Marchbanks was born in 1895 and grew up
to become a cattle rancher in Lamb County in the southern part of the Texas
panhandle until he went bankrupt in 1924 and lost his ranch. Marchbanks arrived
in California nearly penniless and settled in Kings County in the Central
Valley near the small town of Hanford.
Through
years of hard work he and his two sons-in law built a large cotton and corn farm
southeast of Hanford, and in 1950 Marchbanks decided to devote 160 acres to the
construction of a new stadium venue located at the corner of the Central Valley
Highway (also known as 8th street in Hanford) and Idaho Avenue.
Marchbanks Stadium included a rodeo grounds and a half-mile
dirt track with a quarter-mile long straightaway that would also be used for
quarter-horse racing. The first rodeo took place during 1950, but B.L.’s hopes
of pari-mutuel gambling never materialized, and automobile racing debuted with
jalopy races on May 12, 1951.
One of the
more unusual features of the new facility was the building that was used primarily
for the driver’s meetings – B. L. Marchbanks bought the old one-room King Schoolhouse building and had it moved to
the race track site which was just north and east of his ranch home at 6888
Idaho Avenue.
Later that year, the fledgling National Association of Stock
Car Racing (NASCAR) group staged five Grand National races in California; three
at the half-mile dirt Carrell Speedway in Gardena, one at the 5/8-mile
high-banked oil-dirt Oakland Stadium, and on October 28 1951, a 200-lapper at
the new Marchbanks Stadium.
Admission to
the race promoted by Johnny Mantz, the winner of the inaugural NASCAR ‘Southern
500’ the previous year, offered grandstand seats for $2.40 each while box seats
were priced at $3.60 apiece.
The fans that arrived early to watch qualifying which began
at 2:30 PM saw Danny Letner of Downey emerge as the fastest qualifier of the 31
cars with a best lap of 29.92 seconds. Other entries that aimed for their
portion of the $3,550 total purse included North Carolina’s Marvin Panch, Oregon
racer Herschel McGriff, sprint car and midget standout Allen Heath, and Indianapolis
500-mile race veterans Harold “Hal” Cole and James “Dick” Rathman.
Herb Thomas, on his way to capturing the 1951 NASCAR
championship with six wins already that season, led the first 34 laps in a 1951
Hudson owned by Marshall Teague until he was involved in a crash which handed
the lead to second place starter Truman ‘Fonty’ Flock. ‘Fonty’ held the point until lap 74 when his ‘Red
Devil’ 1951 Oldsmobile dropped out of the race on the same lap that the day’s fast
qualifier Letner crashed out in spectacular fashion as barrel-rolled his 1951
Hudson three times.
Denny (sometimes stated as Danny) Weinberg in a 1951 Studebaker
Commander V-8 owned by Tony Sampo of Downey picked up the lead on lap 75.
Weinberg led the rest of the way and local newspapers reported that Weinberg “outlasted
the nation’s point leaders to win” with only five cars reportedly running when
Weinberg took the checkered flag.
Weinberg was a member of the family that
owned and operated the Coastal Grain Company in Norwalk California a firm that
processed and stored dairy feed and made loans to its customers to finance
their farm and livestock operations. Robert Weinberg, a vice-president of
Coastal Grain fielded entries for three years on the AAA Championship circuit
from 1950 to 1952 for former Southern California track roadster standout Manny
Auyolo.
During the 1952 racing season, B.L. Marchbanks staged a weekly
slate of race that featured jalopies, hardtops and roadsters under the sanction
of the Valley Jalopy Racing Association (VJRA). On Friday Memorial Day 1952 Marchbanks Stadium
held a 100-lap VJRA jalopy race that proved to have high a level of attrition
as many cars failed to finish due to broken axles, tire blowouts and crashes
into the retaining wall.
The VJRA, run by Ed Spellman, appears to have been a
short-lived organization that sanctioned races only during the 1952 season at
Marchbanks, and nearby Central Valley tracks in Visalia and Selma.
An aerial photograph of the Marchbanks facility taken during
1953 showed off the addition of some new features - a one-third mile oval
(oiled dirt) within the half-mile oval and a new short infield section that created
a five-eighth mile road course. In addition to the newly constructed permanent
parking facilities, the half-mile track had been paved with asphalt, and the
facility opened on Mother’s Day May 9 1954 with a heavily-advertised race on
the half-mile paved track for the URA “sprint cars.” Driver Bud Richmond
suffered a concussion when his car crashed during warm-up laps.
For the 1954 racing season NASCAR had expanded to the West
Coast under the direction of former champion midget driver turned race promoter
Bob Barkheimer. The NASCAR Pacific Coast Late Model circuit presented a
nine-race schedule at venues throughout California with Marchbanks Stadium’s 100-lap race scheduled
for Saturday June 26.
Don Basile who had
previously managed Carrell and Clovis Speedways, told local newspaper reporters
that NASCAR and the track planned for a 24-car field with at least eight
different makes and models, but after qualifying was completed, only 22 cars
representing six different makes started the race.
The field included entries from a pair of competitors that
had participated in the 1951 NASCAR Marchbanks race, Danny Letner and Marvin
Panch, but the 1951 winner Denny Weinberg had retired from racing. In addition
to the race with a $2,500 guaranteed purse, the night’s admission price included
a “free full half-hour” of fireworks.
The fast qualifier was John Soares who
posted a lap at 29.264 seconds, almost 6/10 of a second faster than the 1951
pole position time. Soares led the first two circuits in his 1954 Dodge until
he yielded to Panch’s similar machine, and Panch led the rest of the race to
win $450 with Soares second and eventual inaugural NASCAR Pacific Coast series
champion Lloyd Dane in eighth position.
NASCAR established a strong position and served as the
regular sanctioning body for Marchbanks Stadium. After the 1955 season when it co-sanctioned
the jalopies, modified hard tops and claiming races (for amateurs) with the
Valley Stock Car Racing Association (VSCRA), NASCAR became the track’s sanctioning
body for many years.
On July 23 1954 the Northern California-based Bay Cities
Racing Association (BCRA) and the Southern California based United Racing
Association (URA) staged an unusual mid-season jointly sanctioned 100-lap midget
race on the Marchbanks Stadium 1/3 mile oiled dirt track which was won by BCRA
two-time defending Johnny Baldwin.
Nearly a month later, on August 21 1954,
BCRA and URA co-sanctioned another 100-lapper won by the URA points leader
Billy Garrett with Baldwin second trailed by BCRA regulars Earl Motter and Norm
Rapp in third and fourth places respectively. The midgets returned to the
Marchbanks 1/3-mile track one more time during the 1955 season with the August
27 BCRA sanctioned race won by Johnny Baldwin.
On Sunday October 10th 1954 Marchbanks Stadium hosted a $1,000
purse jalopy and modified hardtop race on the “speedy half-mile paved track”
that featured such emerging Central Valley racing stars Frank Secrist and
Johnny Mello. In late July 1955 regular competitor Ronald McLane was critically
injured when he inexplicably walked across the track during a yellow caution
flag period of the 500-lap race. Struck by a passing race car, the impact broke
both of McLane’s legs and his pelvis and he was reportedly off work for a year.
Marchbanks Stadium hosted a “Little Indianapolis” 500-lap
race for jalopies and hardtops during the Memorial Day holiday in both 1956 and
1957 but the events were marred by tragedy. During the May 29 1956 running of
the race, Arlen Smith a 22-year old mechanic for the car of ‘Chick’ Connery was
struck in the back and shoulder by a wheel that had left the race car driven by
Fred Dudley of San Jose.
Smith a resident of Las Vegas suffered a concussion
when his head hit the ground after he was knocked down and he unfortunately
died at the Hanford Community Hospital two hours after the accident.
One year and a day later, during the 1957 “Little
Indianapolis” race, Ernest “Ernie” Cornelson, a successful Central Valley area
jalopy and modified racer perished when his “Beacon Propane Special” rolled
over several times, slammed into the retaining wall and burst into flames. Newspapers
reported that the 30-year old Cornelson was mercifully killed instantly in the
crash, and the race which had just completed its 148th lap was stopped for over
an hour as the wreckage was cleared.
During the 1958 season the Marchbanks Sports Club Inc. appeared
as the sponsor of the amateur claiming jalopy races sanctioned by NASCAR held every
Saturday night during the season. On
Saturday September 20 the Marchbanks Stadium featured California Racing
Association-sanctioned "big car" races, and the Marchbanks 1958
season closed with a visit from the NASCAR modified and sportsman series which
drew entries from both the southern and northern California series.
For the 1959 season, B. L. Marchbanks under the guise of his
company Marchbanks Sports Club Inc. became the promoter of the Bakersfield
Speedway in Oildale California, and he made dramatic changes to the facility
that included paving the racing surface with asphalt. The renovated facility
opened on May 30 1959 with a double-header program of claimer jalopies and
modified stock cars with the jalopy feature won by Ron McLane and the modified feature
won by Johnny Mello who scored a bonus of 100 silver dollars from promoter B. L.
Marchbanks.
Marchbanks Stadium meantime had opened its 1959 season on
May 10 and in early June Marchbanks’ two paved tracks featured back-to-back
Saturday and Sunday night URA midget programs. The Marchbanks Stadium 1959
racing season closed in October with the “Valley Championships” for the
modified hardtops and jalopies. Big
changes were on the horizon for the 1960 season at Marchbanks Stadium which
will be detailed in the second and final installment of the history of the Hanford
superspeedway.