1953 Southern 500

1953 Southern 500
Race details
Race 30 of 37 in the 1953 NASCAR Grand National Series season

Layout of Darlington Raceway
Date September 7, 1953
Location Darlington Raceway (Darlington, South Carolina)
Course Permanent racing facility
1.250 mi (2.011 km)
Distance 364 laps, 500.0 mi (804.6 km)
WeatherTemperatures reaching up to 82.9 °F (28.3 °C); wind speeds up to 8.9 miles per hour (14.3 km/h)[1]
Average speed 92.881 miles per hour (149.477 km/h)
Pole position
Driver Fonty Flock Frank Christian
Most laps led
Driver Buck Baker Bob Griffin
Laps 151
Winner
No. 87
Buck Baker
Bob Griffin
Television in the United States
Network untelevised
Announcers none

The 1953 Southern 500 was a NASCAR Grand National Series (now Sprint Cup Series, also formerly known as the Winston Cup Series and the Winston Cup Grand National Series) racing event held on September 7, 1953, at Darlington Raceway in the American community of Darlington, South Carolina.

Junior Johnson would make his NASCAR Cup Series debut as a driver in this event; amongst a laundry list of other rookie drivers. Bob Weatherly, Lonnie Bragg, and Elmer Cooper would race their only NASCAR event here along with several other "one-race wonders.[2]" Just months prior to the 1953 running of the Southern 500, the shape of the track forced vehicles to drive slowly at all time and passing opportunities were very few. A reconstruction effect helped to mold the racetrack into a fast venue for stock car racing prior to the completion of Daytona International Speedway.[3]

Summary

A grand total of 59 American born drivers competed in this 364-lap racing event.[4] More than 30 lead changes would occur in this event; an unprecedented activity in the formative years of NASCAR when the stock car were still relatively slow and drivers were not as aggressive as they would become in the 1970s and the 1980s. Instead of being measured by the apron, the races started to be measured by the banking. The races started to become longer following this event and would ultimately attract more people into becoming NASCAR followers.

Dick Meyer - a native of Porterville, California - would die while street racing back in California just several days after competing in this event. Porterville would eventually bring forth two more of its native sons to compete in NASCAR; 1973 Talladega 500 winner Dick Brooks and NASCAR legend Marv Acton.[5] Today, Acton is still involved in the stock car world, building NASCAR simulators and owning a shop dedicated to the fabrication of stock car vehicles. Ned Jarrett was destined to be the last-place finisher due to a faulty oil line on lap 8 while Bob Hunter was the lowest-finishing driver to survive the race; albeit 154 laps behind the lead lap drivers. After more than five hours of near-continuous racing, Buck Baker would go on to defeat Fonty Flock by a distance of at least three laps.

Flock was the brave pole sitter who amazed the other drivers by driving up to 107.983 miles per hour (173.782 km/h) during the mandatory solo qualifying runs. In contrast to that incredible speed, the average speed of the actual racing event was a meager 92.881 miles per hour (149.477 km/h). Seventeen laps in this event were run at reduced speeds as a result of the yellow caution flag.[4] Some of the notable owners in this race were Herb Thomas, Frank Christian and Bob Griffin. More than half the grid failed to finish the race; even mighty Herb Thomas himself had stock car engine problems on lap 354 that ultimately nailed him at a respectable fifth place finish.[4] Five drivers were declared to be "null" entries by NASCAR because they didn't submit their entry blanks within a reasonable period of time. While they were still permitted to race, their finishes did not count towards the overall season standings.[6]

Individual race earnings for this event ranged from the winner's share of $6,285 ($55,400.24 when adjusted for inflation) to the last-place finisher's portion of $100 ($881.47 when adjusted for inflation). NASCAR officials were allowed to hand out a total sum of $24,430 to all the competitors who qualified for this racing event ($215,342.55 when adjusted for inflation).[7]

Top twenty finishers

External Links

References

Preceded by
1952
Southern 500 races
1953
Succeeded by
1954