
BEDFORD
FAIRGROUNDS SPEEDWAY
History in the making
By: Eric Zembower & Dave Harclerode
The Bedford Speedway, located at the Historic Bedford Fairgrounds, has
emerged as one of the oldest active speedways in the United States.
The first racing event
at Bedford was held in 1936 during the Great Bedford Fair. Racing only
occurred during fair week until the mid 1960’s. These fair races
were part of the championship open wheeled “Big Car” series,
sanctioned by the AAA (American Automobile Association). The Bedford Fair
Association commissioned nationally known race promoters Sam Nunis and
George Marshman to promote these early fair races.
Some of the best drivers
in the country participated at Bedford during the 1930’s, 40’s
and 50’s. The road to Indy came right through Bedford. Indy 500
winner Bill Holland graced Bedford’s victory lane during this period.
Other notable drivers during this time included 1952 and ’53 Indy
winner Jimmy Bryan, Ted Horn, Paul Russo, Tommy Hinnershitz, Joie Chitwood,
Duane Carter, Bill Schindler, and Buster Warke. Indy 500, Daytona 500,
and Formula One World Driving Champion Mario Andretti even competed at
Bedford in 1961.
The AAA ended their
racing division in 1955 to concentrate on being just an auto club for
the general public. From this point until the late 1960’s the United
Racing Club (URC) open wheel sprint car division sanctioned the fair races.
Friday night companion races were also staged with Super Modifieds and
Semi-Late Models (forerunner to today’s Super Late Models).
Saturday fair races
were a yearly ritual for many folks around the area. They would wait all
year in anticipation of the races that accompanied “The Great Bedford
Fair”. Race fans from that time still talk about the great childhood
memories of attending the Saturday fair races and seeing some of the greatest
drivers in the country. With a little research you might still be able
to find video footage of the early racing at Bedford.
The 1967 fair race
saw its first and only loss of life. Up and coming driver Joe Ciski (pronounced
“Chicki”) was rounding turn 4 when he bumped wheels with future
Indy 500 starter, Jerry Karl. Joe flipped end over end down the front
stretch, landing in front of the flagman’s stand. Joe was pronounced
dead at Bedford Memorial Hospital shortly after his arrival. Ciski’s
death might have had a significant impact on the racing world. The sprint
cars during this time were open cockpit with no roll cage, but shortly
after Ciski’s death, roll cages similar to the ones in today’s
sprint cars became mandatory nationwide in all sanctioning bodies. Ciski’s
URC sprinter was also unique because it carried a 6-cylinder Ford Falcon
engine, built by Ciski himself.
The end of the sixties
marked the end of the fair races. They would be reinstated by the fair
board in 1990, but the memories of those early races will live forever.
Weekly racing at Bedford
did not start until 1965 when Breezewood’s Roy Morral became the
promoter. Roy is credited with installing the first lighting system and
opening up the Super Modified rules, which eventually turned the class
into Winged Super Sprint cars.
The big winner during
these years was Fredericksburg, Pa’s Ray Tilley. Driving the number
88 Ford Super Modified/Sprint, Tilley was the east coast leading feature
winner with many victories at Bedford. Some of the other tracks at which
Ray won were the prestigious Williams Grove, Hagerstown and Port Royal
speedways.
Notable drivers from
the Morral era included Kenny Weld, Gerald Chamberlain, Boyd Arnold, Milt
Miller, Muss Weyant, Elmer Ruby, Mitch Smith, Bob Elbin, Jim Kennedy,
Bryan Osgood, Junior Ritchey and many others. Future Hall of Fame drivers
Turk Burket, Larry Wright, Miles Chamberlain and Jim Nave started their
careers during this period in the Semi-Late division.
An interesting story
from this time period was when a race started while the previous race
winner was being interviewed on the front stretch. The year was 1965 and
Lewistown’s Pete Swarmer had just won the Super Modified feature.
During the post race interview, the Semi-Late Model class was getting
lined up on the backstretch when someone turned on the green light and
total mayhem transpired in front of the grandstand crowd. To this day
nobody knows, or will tell who turned the light on.
Swarmer, who was fitted
with a wooden leg, dove on to the hood of his car after seeing the cars
coming out of turn 4 at race speed. Crew members, officials and fans did
everything they could to get out of the way of the roaring mass of metal
bearing down on them.
The front row starters
immediately started slowing down once they noticed Swarmer and the others
were still on the track. The drivers in the back did not. They plowed
into the front cars and into Swarmer’s car, with Pete and his wooden
leg clinging to the hood. Unbelievably, no one was seriously injured,
but there were a lot of bent up race cars and unhappy drivers and car
owners.
Roy Morral ended is
promoting career in 1966 and concentrated on being a car owner. Many drivers
raced for Roy over the years, including Junior Ritchey, Smokey Snellbaker,
Gary Howsare, and Keith Kauffman.
Only special invitational
races were held from 1967 to 1971, along with the fair races. These invitational
races included Langhorne Speedway qualifiers and Late Model races, which
were promoted by Mel Norris of Everett, Pa. This would not be the last
we’d here from Mel Norris.
Bedford’s promoter
in 1972 was New Oxford, Pa’s Hilly Rife. Hilly was also the promoter
of Lincoln Speedway at that time. Super Sprints and Modern Stock (Late
Models) were on the card for weekly Friday night racing, but with one
catch: Everett’s Gayland Speedway (formerly South Penn Speedway)
was also running on Friday nights with Late Models, Novice and Fender
Bender divisions.
Some of the best Super
Sprint drivers of the day raced at Bedford in ’72. Kenny Weld, Jan
Opperman (the Flying Hippie), Elmer Ruby, Rick Ferkel, Lynn Paxton, Keith
Kauffman, Steve Smith, Milt Miller, Jim Edwards, Smokey Snellbaker, Gary
Howsare and others were on hand weekly.
The Late Model division
was another story. There were about 20 local Late Model drivers in the
early seventies. With Everett and Bedford both racing on Friday nights,
the locals were split. The Bedford Late Models featured local racers Gary
Martz, Don Snyder, Gerry Price and Dave Hite. Featured out of town drivers
were Charlie Johnson, Buddy Armel, Butch Devilbiss, Roscoe Barnes, Roland
Cox, Gary Balough, Bill Rousch, and brothers Ron and Jim McBee. Everett
had a very loyal following of Late Model drivers such as Turk Burket,
Jim Nave, Mace Foor, Larry Wright, Burt Alberta, Red Vaughn, Jerry Claar,
Miles Chamberlain and others.
There were a lot of
racing politics going on with the two tracks that split the field. For
instance, drivers were paid extra money to race at Bedford, and were often
given bonuses for swaying another driver to race there. This, along with
bad weather (Hurricane Agnes) and the fact that two tracks, within 10
miles of each other, raced on the same night led to the demise of both
tracks.
The Everett track
never regained from the blow and only staged a few races in 1973. The
track closed for good after that. The Everett Elementary School now sits
on the land that was once the Gayland/South Penn Speedway. The Hobby Auto
Racing Association promoted the races at South Penn until the late sixties.
Several others, including Galen Whetstone, also promoted at the speedway.
Many area racing observers and fans cherish the great racing that took
place in Everett. The well-known racing families Chamberlain and Cragan
began their career there. Everett, Pa will always be known throughout
the nation as a prominent racing town.
There have been high
points and low points at the historic Bedford Fairgrounds, and the years
1974 to 1978 have been earmarked as one of the brightest points in the
track’s history. Enter promoter Mel Norris.
Melvin Norris, former
board member of the now defunct Hobby Auto Racing Association, became
interested in bringing back weekly races to Bedford. A deal was struck,
and the popular Norris began the 1974 season with weekly Wednesday night
racing. One of the reasons for running Wednesday nights was the speculation
of the Everett track opening back up. That never happened, but Norris
stuck to his guns and kept the racing on Wednesdays. Huge crowds showed
up to watch a large contingent of local drivers in the Late Model and
Novice divisions. The Super Sprint cars, which had been the headline division,
fell out of favor with local fans. Reasons for this included lower car
counts due to the high cost of running a sprint compared to the defunct
Super Modifieds, and the fall off of local sprint drivers.
Mel switched back
to Friday nights in 1975 without skipping a beat. The only change was
renaming the Novice class the Semi-Lates.
Norris was a great
promoter. He had a great personality, and both drivers and fans liked
him. He worked hard on getting the community to support the speedway.
From local politicians to area businesses, everyone wanted to help him
make racing go at Bedford. Mel was known for giving away many passes for
free entry into the races. This, along with other promotional ideas established
the Bedford Fairgrounds Raceway (BFR) as one of the most fan friendly
tracks on the east coast.
Some of the best Late
Model racing also occurred during this time. Local drivers included Turk
Burket, Larry Wright, Jim Nave, Dave Hite, Gerry Price, Jerry Claar, Charlie
Cragan, Miles Chamberlain, Veryl Felton, Gary Martz, Bob Elbin, Junior
Ritchey, Milt Miller, Johnny Grum, Bobby Maiers and Tom Peck. Outside
of the area drivers included Paul Fess, Dave Srock, Clate Husted, Buddy
Armel, Frank Lewis, Bobby Goodling, Blackie Watt, Paul Wagner and others.
“If you won
at Bedford, you beat the best” was the saying back then. Business
flourished for local car builders Gary Martz, Miles Chamberlain and the
combination of Gerald Chamberlain and Gus Frear. Drivers from all over
the east coast ordered cars from them. A Martz Chassis engineering car
from South Carolina was the leading winning car in the country in 1979.
For unknown reasons,
Norris stepped down after the 1978 season. Bedford did not stage any auto
racing in 1979. Several interested groups looked into the possibility
of promoting the track, but no deals were made.
The year 1980 started
a new era. Piney Lasky and family became the new promoters of Bedford.
It looked like everything was going to be all right even though the country
was in a recession. The Lasky’s also promoted the Jennerstown Speedway
in Somerset County, and some folks felt Bedford was the redheaded stepchild.
Piney’s second
night of promoting in April of 1980 was the Piney’s Birthday Special.
It was on this night that Lasky got on the P.A. system and announced to
the fans that he was unhappy with all of the littering and beer drinking
and promptly outlawed alcohol at the speedway. Mel Norris had allowed
alcohol during his tenure. The fans were outraged with Lasky, and although
the racing was just as good as it was in the past, the track would suffer.
Many fans disliked
Lasky, but he always tried to give back to the Bedford community. From
using local contractors to buying products at local stores, Piney’s
money was good. Unknown to many, Piney would overpay the rent for the
track to the Fair Association. Jake Hoover, former driver and then Fair
President, would hold the check until conferring with Lasky. Piney would
always say “Put it towards the Fair”.
During the Lasky era,
Bedford and sister track Jennerstown were the highest paying Late Model
tracks on the east coast. Hagerstown Speedway suffered the most from this
since Promoter Jack Gunn was not interested in increasing his Late Model
purse. In June of 1980 the Hagerstown drivers boycotted the track stating
they would not race there until they were paid the same as Bedford and
Jennerstown. Gunn didn’t give in to them and subsequently dropped
the weekly Late Model races. Health problems forced Gunn to hand over
his promotion duties to McConnelsburg businessman Frank Plessinger in
1981. Plessinger, Tom Peck’s car owner, gave the drivers a pay raise
and Hagerstown has been a Late Model mainstay ever since.
After 3 seasons and
a sluggish economy, Lasky turned the speedway keys over to national driving
legend Gerald Chamberlain in 1983. By then, the actual look of a Late
Model resembled a cheese wedge with sideboards and wings. A far cry from
the stock appearing cars that raced just a few years before. The cars
in ’83 were very similar to today’s Super Late Models.
The cost to run a
Super Late Model had just about doubled in 5 years. Chamberlain’s
plan was to reduce the cost of racing. Along with Jennerstown and Winchester,
the Super Late Models were dropped and replaced with Restricted Late Models.
Also on the card at Bedford was the Street Stock division.
Reducing the cost
of racing a Late Model wasn’t the only reason they were dropped.
By 1983, the local Late Model driver roster was on a decline. Turk Burket
did not have a full time ride. Gary Martz had retired. Dave Hite, Charlie
Cragan and Jerry Claar had moved down to the Restricted Late Models. The
only Late Model drivers left were Jim Nave, Tom Eriksen, Larry Wright
and Tom Peck.
The Chamberlain plan
was admirable, but the Bedford fans wanted Super Late Models. By Memorial
Day, the Super Lates were back. Super Late Model drivers who competed
at Bedford in ’83 included Jim Nave, Tom Peck, Jim Irvine, Jr, L.J.
Dennis, Chuck Brannon, Tom Clise, Tom Eriksen, Ronnie Franklin and Lynn
Geisler.
Restricted Late Model
drivers included Frank Choura, Buddy Harbaugh, Dion LaSalle, Danny Hager,
Dave Hite, Charlie Cragan, Stuart Shaffer, Dan White, Scott Rhodes, Jerry
Claar and Butch Moyer.
Highlights of ’83
include Kenny Brightbill getting disqualified for being light on the scales
after a feature win, and Ronnie Franklin and Jeff Robinson battling for
the lead with Robinson launching over the turn one wall after making some
contact with Franklin.
After a tough and
demanding season for the Chamberlain’s, they decided not to return
for the 1984 season. For the second time in 5 years, Bedford did not open
for racing.
Jim Leidy, New Enterprise
dairy farmer and former racer, signed an agreement to operate the speedway
for the 1985 season. Leidy promoted Bedford for the next 3 seasons. He
tried different promotional angles, including Late Models, Limited Late
Models, Super Sprint cars, Slide Stocks and Enduros.
The biggest contribution
from Leidy’s tenure was the Enduro racing events that he held. The
low cost of entering an Enduro type car (completely stock) attracted many
new and experienced drivers. Even Turk Burket ran in an Enduro event.
Many of these races started as many as 200 cars in 200 lap events. Many
drivers got the racing bug and wanted more. Leidy did not have the desire
to run weekly racing events, but Joe Padula and Doug Timmons did.
Padula and Timmons
came on in 1988 and brought back the weekly racing. Crowd support was
good and car counts began to grow. Several interesting developments occurred
during the Padula years: Rick Eckert’s road to stardom, the Semi-Late
class and the large contingent of Enduro drivers moving up to the Street
Stocks and Semi-Late divisions. Padula was at the right place at the right
time.
Rick Eckert and his
father Junior made the trek to Bedford each week from their York, PA home.
His all out driving style brought many fans to the track. Battles on the
track, most notably with Tom Clise, brought the fans to their feet. With
multiple track championships during the ‘90’s at Bedford,
Eckert moved on to the national touring series STARS and UDTRA. Rick was
crowned the 2001 and 2002 UDTRA champion.
The Semi-Late class
in the late eighties and nineties evolved from the early to mid eighties
Street Stock class. This division at times also included former enduro
and Late Model racers. The top winning drivers was a who’s who list
of the best local talent which included Jack Pencil, Brian Weyandt, Dion
LaSalle, Jim Deneen, Eric Zembower, J.R. Keifer, Miles Chamberlain, Rodney
Sweitzer, Tom Eriksen, Chuck LaSalle, Mike Altobelli, Brain Musselman,
Kevin Smith and Todd Ritchey. The division began to fade because of the
lack of continuity with other tracks, and the division was dropped in
1997. Jim Deneen won the first Padula era Semi-Late race in 1988, and
Eric Zembower won the last one in 1997.
The Late Model division
during this period got stronger as time went on. There were only several
local drivers in 1988. However, by 1999 over half of the field came from
within a 50-mile radius. Fan favorites included Eckert, Mike Hess, Bob
Salathe, Scott Haus, Chris Harr, Wayne Johnson, Ken Dickson, Junior Eckert,
Jim Bernheisel, Tom Clise, Bob Wearing, Jr., Larry Wright, Tom Myers,
Kevin Smith, Tony Flanagan, Pork Sell, Will Rowe, Scott Rhodes, Rick Singleton,
Andy Fries and Randy Kimmel. Drivers Mike Altobelli, J.R. Keifer, Jack
Pencil, Dion LaSalle, Todd Ritchey, Eric Zembower, Rodney Sweitzer, Dave
Hoover and Shane Beegle all moved up to the Late Models during this period.
As the new millennium
grew near, local Late Model driver Bob Salathe realized he’d like
to try his hand at promoting. At the last race at Cumberland Raceway in
1999 it was announced that Salathe would be taking over the promoting
duties from Ben Evans. Evans, a former racer, brought the Cumberland oval
out of its grave in 1991 and returned racing to the Cumberland, Md. area.
The following year,
Salathe’s Rock Entertainment group took over the reigns at Bedford.
In 2000, Salathe announced that the two speedways would switch race nights.
Cumberland would race on Fridays, and Bedford on Saturdays. Many fans
were upset with the move and by the 2001 season, the tracks were back
to running their original nights. Salathe succeeded in dotting the schedules
of both tracks with high profile Super Late Model and Super Sprint races
that brought great racing to both venues.
In November of 2001,
Salathe announced that he would no longer be promoting the Bedford Speedway
and would concentrate solely on the Cumberland track. After Salathe’s
announcement, it appeared that racing would never happen again at the
Bedford Fairgrounds Speedway. Many people couldn’t believe that
racing might be over at the speedway. One man, former track champion J.R.
Keifer, knew that something needed to be done immediately.
Keifer, along with
Late Model driver Ken Dickson of McVeytown, Pa and Jim Maybury of Lavale,
Md signed an agreement to operate the historic track in January 2002.
The trio dubbed themselves D.K.M. Racing Promotions. D.K.M. knew they
had a lot of work to do in order to be ready for an April starting date.
With massive support
from area fans and businesses, D.K.M. and Bedford Speedway had a very
successful 2002 season. With the first year under their belts, D.K.M.
is ready to improve on an already successful program. With continued support
from the fans, sponsors, and drivers, 2003 will just be another stepping
stone towards Bedford Speedway reaching its greatest era in history.
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