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TRIBUTES/MEMORIALS TO
LEGENDS
Curtis Turner

Curtis Turner was one of the pioneers of NASCAR stock car racing, a
member of that hale and hearty band of competitors who raced hard, lived
hard and enjoyed every moment of it.
He never let racing interfere with parties and fun. In fact, there were
times when he went from one of his marathon parties straight to the race
track. If a lack of sleep affected his driving perception, it was not
evident. He was a remarkable man but, understandably, he wasn't as
remarkable as the legend which grew around him.
Turner was born on April 12, 1924 in Floyd, VA. He learned two things
quickly: the lumber business and driving an automobile. He was raised in
the era of booting whiskey so, naturally, he became part of the lore.
There is no proof he drove the modified Fords which hauled "moonshine"
because his name never appeared on the police blotter. But the many
legends about his expertise in the field undoubtedly have some basis in
fact. Once he lined up eight full bottles of liquor on the roadway in a
double row barely wider than the Cadillac with which he proposed to
execute a tail sliding 180 degree turn to slide backwards between the
bottles. He performed the maneuver, then got out and drawled, "It was
easy. I couldn't waste all the good liquor.
Turner began "real" racing in 1946 at a small track in Mount Airy, NC,
finishing last in a field of 18 cars. But he won his second race and began
to build a reputation as perhaps the best dirt track driver of them all.

Turner raced almost from the inception of NASCAR. He was a star of
Oldsmobile from 1950 through 1954, when he switched to Ford. He was
originally billed as the Blond Blizzard from Virginia but he quickly
picked up the nickname Pops for the way he routinely popped competitors
off the track with great abandon.
He won 22 races in NASCAR's old convertible division in 1956 and added 17
and the Southern 500 in the Grand National division for good measure. With
his free for all style, Turner won 360 races, in NASCAR and out. Perhaps,
though, one of his most memorable races was one he didn't win. In the
Rebel 300 at Darlington, SC. Turner and Fred Lorenzen started the last lap
fender to fender. What had started out as fender banging evolved into a
minor demolition derby around the 1-3/8th mile track. Lorenzen got in the
last bash and won the race but on the extra "cool down" lap, Turner plowed
into Lorenzen, smashing the front end of his own car to bits. He walked
back to the pits.
Away from the track, Turner added to his Bunyanesque reputation. He made
and lost and remade fortunes buying and selling timberlands. In 1960, he
conceived Charlotte Motor Speedway and somehow, with hardly enough money
to pay for the property, he got it built only to lose it soon afterward.

After a view from the business side, he was convinced the drivers were
getting a shabby deal from NASCAR. He attempted to organize the drivers as
a local of the Teamsters Union, which failed utterly and caused him to be
banished from NASCAR for life. But, by 1965, NASCAR President Bill France
Sr. rescinded the banishment.
Turner made his return to competition in the American 500 at North
Carolina Motor Speedway in Rockingham, NC. Despite a broken rib, Turner
started fourth in a Ford owned by Glen Wood. He was a contender from the
beginning. He fought off drivers whose fathers had once been his rivals.
Finally it was between Turner and the idol of the young, Cale Yarborough.
Lap after lap, Turner held off every Yarborough probe and went on to score
his most lucrative victory. His great driving talent never left him.
Turner came back to win the Permatex 300 in a Late Model Sportsman car at
Daytona Beach, FL, the following year. Then he and Smokey Yunick
collaborated on a Chevelle. But Turner crashed heavily in Atlanta and
Yunick withdrew, saying, "I will not build the car that Curtis Turner was
killed in."
After that, Turner raced infrequently, coming out of retirement when the
price was right. He had intended to come out for the National 500 at
Charlotte in 1970 when his plane crashed against a mountainside near
Punxsutawney, PA, on October 4, killing him and a passenger, golf
professional Clarence King.
Turner's passing marked the end of an era in automobile racing, for
today's professional is committed to the proposition that driving race
cars requires complete dedication, with which parties cannot interfere.
Turner was a different breed and his success earned him his lofty perch in
motorsports history.



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