Raymond Parks (auto racing)

Raymond Parks
Born June 5, 1914
Dawsonville, Georgia, United States
Died June 20, 2010 (aged 96)
Atlanta, Georgia, United States
Nationality American
Known for NASCAR pioneer
1949 Strictly Stock (now Sprint Cup) champion car owner

Raymond Parks (June 5, 1914[1] June 20, 2010[2]) was the owner of Red Byron's car which won NASCAR's first Strictly Stock (now Sprint Cup) championship in 1949.

Background

Parks was the first child of Alfred and Leila Parks and great-great-nephew of settler Benny Parks, who found gold in the state of Georgia in the early nineteenth century. Born in Dawsonville, Georgia, Raymond was the oldest of his father's sixteen children, six of whom were born to Leila, and ten of whom were born to Leila's sister, Ila. Parks left home at age 14[3] and began hauling moonshine. He served nine months of a one-year and one-day sentence in the federal penitentiary in Chillicothe, Ohio, from 1936 to 1937.[4] Parks served in World War II during the famous Battle of the Bulge in Belgium.[5] He served in the 99th Infantry Division and was briefly stationed at Fort Benning, Georgia.[6]

Racing/NASCAR

Most famous for being a moonshine runner who helped to start NASCAR, he is recognised as the first "team" owner in stock car racing.. Prior to the founding of NASCAR, Parks was the car owner for moonshine runner and nephews Lloyd Seay and Roy Hall as far back as 1938. In 1948-49, with Red Byron as the driver Parks's cars won the first two NASCAR Championships ever awarded; the Modified class in 1948, and the above mentioned championship in 1949.[7] Parks was one of the last living members of the group who created NASCAR during a meeting at the Streamline Hotel in Daytona Beach, Florida in 1947. Raymond Parks died on June 20, 2010. He was 96 years old.

Awards

He was one of eight drivers inducted in the first class of the Georgia Racing Hall of Fame in 2002, along with his cousin Lloyd Seay, Byron, Tim Flock, and Bill Elliott.[8] He was inducted in the International Motorsports Hall of Fame in 2009.

References

  1. http://www.nascar.com/news/features/rparks.hof.bio/ Raymond Parks Nascar Biography
  2. "NASCAR pioneer Raymond Parks dies at 96". San Francisco Chronicle. Associated Press. Retrieved 20 June 2010.
  3. Driving With the Devil,by Neal Thompson, page 241. Caption of bottom picture
  4. Driving With the Devil, by Neal Thompson, page 47
  5. Driving With the Devil, by Neal Thompson, page 149
  6. Driving With the Devil, by Neal Thompson, page 150
  7. http://www.nascar.com/2009/news/features/03/07/raymond.parks.donation/index.html
  8. "Inductees". Georgia Racing Hall of Fame. 2008. Retrieved 2008-07-30.

External links