The rise and
fall
of the
Pacific Coast Speedways Association
In the glory
days of midget auto racing in the Los Angeles basin in the late nineteen
forties, there were two major sanctioning bodies that battled - the
United Racing Association, a regional midget-only group, and the American
Automobile Association the powerful national organization that sanctioned all
types of auto racing. The two organizations' battle sometimes put race track promoters in the
middle, so they took action.
In a meeting
held at the posh Los Angeles Biltmore Hotel on Saturday January 19 1946, a
group of nine men met and formed the Pacific Coast Speedways Association (PCSA),
a nonprofit group of managers and owners of auto racing tracks to “help
coordinate the sport on the Coast” according to the Los Angeles Times
article.
The PCSA had three
stated goals – coordinate racing dates, publicize the sport, and act as a
liaison between the promoters and the midget driver association. To fund group operations, each track pledged
to contribute 1% of their gross receipts to the Association.
The members
unanimously elected Tom Haynes of San Diego as president, Bob Ware of Long
Beach as vice-president and Dave Crosley and Long Beach as the group’s
treasurer. The group named Bob Moore as their business manager.
In addition to
those three promoters, attendees included Ross Page, promoter of races at Santa
Maria and San Jose, Bill Loadvine from Culver City, Harold Mathewson of Fresno, James LaFave and
Frank Guthrie from San Diego. Promoters from tracks in Fresno, Stockton,
Sacramento and Oakland did not attend the January 19th meeting but
instead provided proxies.
The
founding members
William E “Bill” Loadvine born in 1913 the son of oil wildcatter
and real estate investor E W Loadvine, worked as a child actor at the Mack
Sennett Studios in the silent movie era. Loadvine recalled that his meeting 1922
Indianapolis ‘500’ winner Jimmy Murphy as a young man ignited his life-long
interest in automobile racing.
Loadvine
related that he raced on the Muroc Dry Lake in the early 1930’s and worked as a
mechanic for “big car” drivers Ernie Triplett and Al Gordon. According to Bill, injuries that he sustained
in a crash in 1934 ended both his planned entry in the 1934 Indianapolis ‘500’
and his driving career. Bill began to work in racing promotion at various tracks,
which he said included the Legion Ascot Speedway.
After the end
of World War Two, Loadvine purchased the former Culver City Legion race track, located
at the western edge of Culver City near the northeast corner of the
intersection of Lincoln and Washington Boulevards. The 1/4-mile dirt track was originally
built in 1932 for the Culver City Kennel Club for greyhound racing. The track operators surreptitiously allowed
wagering which led to occasional police raids, but the track closed for good during
1939 after the new California Attorney General Earl Warren promised increased state
enforcement.
The flat
quarter-mile track briefly operated as a motorcycle and midget auto racing
venue during 1941 known as the Culver City Legion Stadium co-managed by WH
“Reg” Regelin and financier RC Wade with sponsorship from the local American
Legion Post #46 and sanctioned by the United Midget Car Association.
Robert K “Bob” Ware, a native of Arkansas had an impressive
history in auto racing. He drove his first race car at the age of 16, and became
one of the pioneers in midget auto racing with the United Midget Association
(UMA). He finished fifth in the 1935 Turkey Night Grand Prix and was one of a
group of thirteen drivers arrested at the infamous Victor McLaglen Stadium raid
on July 30 1936 for violations of the Los Angeles city fire code. Ware retired from driving after a serious crash
at the Orange Empire Speedway in Colton California on July 4 1940.
In addition to
his co-management of the Bonelli Stadium in Saugus Ware partnered in a Long
Beach insurance agency with David “Dave”
Crosley who co-managed the Bonelli Stadium race track owned by William
Bonelli. Crosley, midget racing fan moved into race management in 1945.
Ware and
Crosley proposed construction of a $125,000 stadium with parking for 7000 cars
and a 16,000 seat concrete and steel grandstand for football, rodeos, and
midget auto racing in Harbor City. When that plan fell through, the pair promoted
a Labor Day 1946 midget and big car race, the first post-war race at the nearby
“new” Gardena Bowl at 182nd and Vermont Avenue built on land owned
by Judge Frank Carrell. A crowd of 12,000 fans watched as Johnny McDowell won
the midget feature ahead of Danny “Poison” Oakes after the early leader
“Bullet” Joe Garson blew a tire.
Ross Page lived in Santa Maria and had a colorful legal history. In 1940 and 1941, as the operator of the Melody
Club, Page had several scrapes with local law enforcement regarding gambling
and operating a lottery on the night club premises. In 1943 Page bought a
supercharged 183-cubic inch Miller powered Indianapolis car from Leon Duray.
The February 5
1943 article in the Santa Maria Times demonstrates the inability of
writers in that era to check and substantiate claims by their subjects. The
article stated that the race car that Page purchased from Leon Duray is “the
holder of the current Indianapolis Motor Speedway record of 130 2/5 miles per
hour.” That statement blended several components of truth to craft a falsehood.
At the time,
the standing lap record at the Speedway of 130.757 MPH set by Jimmy Snyder in
the Joel Thorne owned 180-cubic inch Sparks “Little Six” powered car. The car
Page bought built by Duray in 1938 never set on the pole position or set track
records. As an owner/driver, Leon Duray, whose real name was George Stewart,
set the track record in Indianapolis in 1928 of 122.39 MPH in his Miller
front-drive car that stood for 11 years.
The Santa
Maria Times article went on to indicate that Page himself would drive the
car at Indianapolis when racing resumed, and noted that Page last drove at
Indianapolis in 1936 in the Martz Special. The author has been unable to
uncover any record to support the claim that Ross Page ever drove or was a
riding mechanic at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway. The Larry Martz owned Hudson-powered car driven
by George Bailey did not qualify in 1936, and in previous appearances in 1933
and 1934 was driven by Gene Haustein with Ed Beaudine as the riding
mechanic.
In September
1945, Page promoted a midget auto race on the ½-mile dirt track at the Santa
Maria Fairgrounds in partnership with Dr. Lloyd Clemons won by Gordon Cleveland
after favorite Johnnie Parsons crashed in time trials.
For 1946, Page became
the promoter of the San Jose Speedway on Tully Road, and that same year the
“Ross Page Special” the proto-roadster built by Frank Kurtis and powered by the
Duray supercharged 183-cubic inch Miller engine, first appeared in the
Indianapolis ‘500.’
Tom Haynes and his partner, Frank Guthrie began promoting races at the San Diego City Stadium,
later known as Balboa Stadium, in 1939 with the United Midget Association. In
1940 the pair took over the management of the Orange Empire Speedway in Colton and
the Atlantic Speedway in East Los Angeles. In 1946, they refocused their
efforts on San Diego.
Harold “Hal” Mathewson from Fresno was a motorcycle hill
climber an amateur member of the Indian motorcycle factory team and in 1938 was
crowned the class B Pacific Coast champion. In 1937 as the president of the
Fresno motorcycle club, Harold got his first taste of promotion while as he
continued to compete. Hal’s events continued through 1942, as like auto racing,
motorcycle racing events continued up until midnight on July 31 1942.
Months after
the Second World War ended, Hal and a partner Frank Ennis promoted a combined
motorcycle and midget auto racing program on September 29 1945 at the Tulare-Kings
County Fairgrounds. At the time of the Pacific Coast Speedways Association meeting
in January 1946, Mathewson planned to build a new midget auto racing facility
in Bassett, east of El Monte California. When that fell through he promoted
midget races at the Huntington Beach Speedway.
The PCSA in 1946
In a meeting in
Los Angeles on February 19 1946, the PCSA announced the sanctioning of four
midget racing meetings - Stockton Fairgrounds promoted by Frank Crowley would
open on April 7, the same date that Ware and Crosley were set to open Bonelli
Stadium.
Ross Page would
open the racing season at San Jose on May 5th and Haynes and Guthrie
were set to open Balboa Stadium in San Diego on May 30. The Association
received applications from track in Alhambra, Bassett, Bakersfield, Long Beach
and Santa Fe Springs, but indicated it would not issue sanctions to those
planned tracks until permits were issued for construction.
On March 15,
1946, the PCSA issued a sanction to the new track under construction in Oildale
near Bakersfield by James Banducci and Carl Lindsay. Originally known as the ”B
and L Speedbowl” it featured eight-foot high banked turns and grandstands
seating for 6500 fans built on the west side of the track. With the approval from the PCSA to open on May
4 1946, Roy Morrison, President of the United Racing Association, then issued
his group’s sanction for Saturday night racing at Oildale in the 1946 season.
In late April
1946 the Fresno Airport Speedway, rebuilt after the war with 3000 additional
seats to allow for a total of 9500 fans, announced its affiliation with the
PCSA. With Fresno’s scheduled opening on Sunday night May 5, the PCSA now had
tracks in Sacramento, San Jose, Bakersfield, Fresno, Saugus and San Diego.
The 1948 Crisis
By 1948, the
URA and the American Automobile Association (AAA) were in fierce competition
for tracks and cars, and the Pacific Coast Speedways Association put themselves
in the middle of the dispute. In the second week of January, the PCSA convened
a three-day conference for the managers and operators of their 13 affiliated tracks
at the storied Hollywood Roosevelt hotel to plan a unified racing schedule for
the upcoming season.
Attendees
included charter PCSA members Haynes and Guthrie, and Mathewson with his new
partner at Fresno, Huntington Beach and San Bernardino, Ernie Lauck. New PCSA
members included Dick Russell, promoter of the Last Frontier Sportsdrome in Las
Vegas (which had opened in late 1947), Stewart Metz, promoter at Orange Show
Speedway, Bob Murphy, who ran the Tulare, Bakersfield (Oildale track) and
Carpinteria “Thunderbowls,” Stan Moore and Billy Hunnefield, operators of
Hughes Stadium in Sacramento, the Stockton 99 Speedway and Modesto 99 Stadium
and Burt Chalmers the Culver City Stadium publicity director.
Also attending
the January meetings were representatives from Carrell Speedway and Gene Doyle
from Gilmore Stadium but those two tracks were not yet members of the
association. The promoters listened to a presentation from representatives of
the URA and when the meeting concluded on Wednesday January 7 the group agreed
to continue to operate under a URA blanket sanction.
Between four and
six of the tracks would operate as “open tracks” which would allow Offenhauser and
non-Offenhauser engines to compete, while the balance of the PCSA tracks would
be part of the “Red” or non-Offenhauser circuit. Haynes was re-elected PCSA president, Lauck, the
vice-president, with Guthrie as the secretary and Metz as the group’s
treasurer.
Two days later,
“Hollywood” Bill White, the promoter of midget auto races at the Los Angeles
Coliseum announced that his events would be held under AAA sanction. At the
announcement, AAA Western Region supervisor Gordon Betz took the opportunity to
criticize the PCSA group and told Jack Curnow of the Los Angeles Times
that the AAA was first invited to speak to the promoter’s group during the
conference, then the invitation had been withdrawn. According to Betz, “the
deal was cut and dried before the meeting opened.”
Despite the
blanket sanction agreement, there were still machinations behind the scenes, as
the URA board balked at the concept of “open competition,” the board said that tracks
were to be designated as either “Red” or “Blue” circuit tracks which did not
align with the PCSA-URA agreement.
On January 28th
Burt Chalmers, the PCSA spokesman, announced that Gilmore Stadium had joined the
Association and thus would be a URA track in 1947. Haynes detailed that five PCSA tracks -
Gilmore, Culver City, San Bernardino, Fresno and San Diego - would be “open” to
cars with either Offenhauser or pushrod engines. The remaining PCSA tracks -
Tulare, Carpinteria, San Jose, Stockton, Las Vegas, Sacramento, Bonelli
Stadium, Modesto and Huntington Beach – would ban Offenhauser powered
midgets.
Haynes the PCSA
President than gave the URA board an ultimatum – they had seven days to either accept
or reject the PCSA proposal. The PCSA’s inclusion of San Diego as an “open”
track triggered an immediate outcry from URA ‘Red” circuit car owners and
drivers, because Balboa Stadium in San Diego had traditionally been a
stronghold for the non-Offenhauser URA circuit, and the change “would put them out
of business.” The URA board agreed with
the non-Offenhauser car owners and drivers and refused to accept the PCSA
proposal.
With a race
scheduled at Las Vegas on Sunday February 29, on Monday February 9 1948 Haynes
and the PCSA began to sign up car owners and drivers in preparation for
sanctioning their own races. The Los Angeles Times auto racing writer, Jack
Curnow, reported that 36 car owners and 35 drivers signed up that first day.
The list of car owners included AJ Walker, the 1947 URA “Blue Circuit” car
owner champion, Ray Gardner, the Krause brothers and the Famaghetti brothers.
Curnow reported that drivers that signed with the PCSA included the rising star
Troy Ruttman and veterans Lyle Dickey and Johnny Garrett.
Former racer Roscoe
Turner the new URA President, called for an emergency board meeting on February
11 to reconsider the PCSA proposal specifically regarding Balboa Stadium. The
URA Board still refused to consider San Diego as an “open” track and in
response the PCSA group broke off negotiations.
On Valentine’s
Day 1948 the PCSA announced that Gilmore, Culver City, San Diego, and San
Bernardino would operate under AAA sanction in 1948. Betz could barely contain his glee as many
former URA drivers and cars that included Lyle Dickey, Gordon Reid and Peewee
Distarce, signed in at the pit gate at the Los Angeles Coliseum for the
season-opener the following night.
Alas, the AAA
alliance did not hold, as Betz could not guarantee 24 cars for every program, and
after low car counts at Culver City in early April, just before the 1948 season
opened in earnest, the PCSA announced that all 14 PCSA tracks would be “open”
to Offenhauser and non-Offenhauser cars under URA sanction.
With all the
races classified as “open,” Roscoe Turner and the URA had no problem meeting
the 24-car minimum, particularly at the “Big Four” LA-area tracks - Culver City
(Tuesday nights), Balboa (Wednesday nights), Gilmore (Thursday nights) and San
Bernardino which ran a Friday night schedule.
This crisis was
the last action by the Pacific Coast Speedways Association – in 1949, midget
racing began to decline, the American Auto Association pulled out of the
Southern California midget racing picture and the United Racing Association controlled
its own destiny as far as schedule and the PCSA promoters’ group faded into
obscurity.
For the 1949 season,
the regular scheduled URA “Blue” circuit stops were Gilmore on Thursday nights,
followed by San Bernardino on Friday nights and Culver City on Saturday nights.
Huntington Beach on Tuesday nights, Balboa in San Diego on Wednesday nights and
Fresno on Sunday nights became the regular stops on the 1949 URA “Red” circuit
which banned Offenhauser engines.
As the decade
of the nineteen fifties continued midget car counts dropped so much that the URA
ceased to count separate “Red circuit” or “Blue circuit” points and crowned a
combined champion.