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It is hardly a secret
that the sport of drag racing set
its earliest roots in California.
Sources peg the year at about 1938
or 39, perhaps even earlier, but
just as the new shoots began to
reach skyward, the dark clouds of
war postponed such frivolities as
the hot rodders found themselves in
uniform, off to fight for their
country’s survival.
It was during that
time of war that these same young
men acquired new knowledge and
skills that they would utilize for
the design, building and competition
of automobiles. They returned with
their skills vastly improved in the
ways to make engines roar and
chassis handle the power produced.
In the process they met other
military servicemen with an equal
thirst for the thrill of speed in a
machine built, maintained and driven
with their own hands. It was from
this that a nationwide, coast to
coast hot rodding culture was
spawned.
Why then, did the hot
rodding sport, and ultimately that
offshoot of drag racing become so
identified with California, when
there was as much activity happening
“back east”? The answer lies within
the media coverage of the sport and
its embryonic creation. Perhaps even
more pointedly, “the media” pretty
much consisted of one Robert E.
Petersen and his fledgling Trend
Publishing Company. Notably, the
title of HOT ROD MAGAZINE, first
published in 1948, and edited in the
Los Angeles area, established
California as the place where hot
rodding and soon drag racing, was
“happening”. From the onset,
Petersen’s realm of editorial
coverage focused on Southern
California, and this quickly, if
unintentionally, led his readers to
assume that hot rodding was indeed a
California invention.
Since then hot
rodding and drag racing blossomed to
become far more than a mere weekend
diversion, a “hobby” for restless
young men. In the half century since
it’s beginning - on both west and
east coasts - hot rodding and drag
racing has become a major
motorsports activity and spawned an
industry that now boasts a more than
$1 billion dollar contribution to
the nation’s economy.
All well and good,
except that there remained, until a
scant five years ago, very little
recognition for the contributions to
this sport and industry made by
those from “The Right Coast”.
Perhaps the only exception to this
is the outstanding Museum of Drag
Racing, founded and operated by drag
racing legend Don Garlits, and his
national Drag Racing Hall of Fame,
which chooses its annual inductees
from candidates whose careers
occurred on both east and west
coasts.
But five years ago,
in 2002, one individual gathered
about her a small yet determined
group of eastern based drag racers,
media types and fans and formed the
East Coast Drag Times Hall of Fame.
The site chosen for this pioneering
effort, Henderson, North Carolina,
was selected because of the efforts
of one Nancy Wilson, a devoted fan
of drag racing and Director of the
Vance County Tourism Department.
Nancy provided the location and the
official support of the Vance County
officials who were keen on the
prospects of having such an
organization make its home in their
community.
Along those lines
Mrs. Wilson and her colleagues
created the entire East Coast Drag
Times Hall of Fame weekend. Held
each year in mid-October, this event
has grown to become one of the
Southeast’s largest car shows. The
show part of the weekend literally
closes down the main street of
Henderson, forming a pedestrian mall
that showcases hundreds of rods,
musclecars, antique vehicles and
race cars for a crowd of 20,000 plus
eager spectators. Each year’s list
of honored inductees gather on
Friday evening at three different
Henderson motels to enjoy cocktails
and re-establish old friendships and
racing rivalries from days past. A
cruise-in that same night gives the
car show participants the
opportunity to show off their rides
and return to the hallowed cruising
scene of the 1950’s and 60’s.
On Sunday, at the
Vance-Granville Civic Center, the
inductees are gathered for
recognition and formal entrance into
immortality within the East Coast
based drag racing community. There,
old photographs, stories and
memories are shared for those on
hand as well as those who are
honored posthumously.
This year’s East
Coast Drag Times Hall of Fame spans
the weekend of October 20 - 22. Host
motels the Hampton Inn, Holiday Inn
Express and Jameson Inn all report
that they are booked to capacity.
Alternate lodging choices are still
available. The 2006 Hall of Fame
inductee list includes: Jim and
Allison Lee, Dan Smoker, Billy
“Cigar” Holt, Gwyn Hartsoe, Dave
Bishop, Ernie Schorb, Sonny
DeCesaris, Mike Mihalko, Jerry
Coley, Bob Callaham, Earl Phillips,
Carol Hynson, Barnett Brothers,
Wayne Jeffers, Wendell Snowden,
Posthumous Award: Al Brown and the
Wally Parks Motorsports Statesman of
the Year Award: TBA
Additional details on the event are
available by calling the Vance
County Tourism Department at
252-438-2222 or toll-free at
866-438-4565. |