Joe Boyer

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Joe Boyer (May 12, 1890 - September 2, 1924) won the 1924 Indianapolis 500.

Born in Detroit, Michigan, Joe Boyer led the last 24 laps of the 1924 race in relief of Lora L. Corum. He replaced Corum on lap 111, despite the fact that it required him to be relieved in his own car, which completed 176 laps. He died in a crash during a race at Altoona Speedway in Tyrone, Pennsylvania later that year.

[edit] Indy 500 results

Year Car Start Qual Rank Finish Laps Led Retired
1919 39 14 100.900 4 31 30 0 Rear axle
1920 6 2 96.900 2 12 192 93 Crash T3
1921 7 3 96.650 4 17 74 1 Rear axle
1923 3 13 98.800 7 18 59 0 Differential
1924 3 4 104.840 4 5 109 0 Relieved
  15 21 93.330 16 1 91 25 Running
Totals 555 119
Starts 5
Poles 0
Front Row 2
Wins 0
Top 5 1
Top 10 1
Retired 4
Preceded by
Tommy Milton
Indianapolis 500 Winner
1924
Succeeded by
Peter DePaolo
This biographical article related to auto racing is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.