Sunday, December 23, 2018

The 2018 National Midget Auto Racing Hall of Fame induction 




The 2018 class of the National Midget Auto Racing Hall of Fame induction ceremony will be held in Tulsa Oklahoma on January 18 2019. This will be an event not to be missed as all six of this year's  inductees - Mario Andretti, Tommy Astone, Bryan Clauson, Kenny Irwin Jr., Bob Marshman and Mike Streicher - will all be represented at the ceremony.  

Reservations are filling up quickly, do not be left out, contact 

kingdoodlebug@sbcglobal.net

for reservations and ticket information. The deadline for reservations is  December 31, 2018.









Sunday, August 5, 2018


Don Meacham

2012 inductee
photo courtesy of M&M Racing Photos


Charles “Don” Meacham began his long racing career at age 22 in a hardtop on the quarter-mile paved oval Kearney Bowl in his hometown of Fresno California shortly after Don finished his service in the United States Air Force. After he finished third in the 1959 season points at Kearney Bowl, he was offered an opportunity to drive Fred Hatfield’s midget with the Bay Cities Racing Association (BCRA) in Northern California.
By 1961 Meacham was racing with the elite drivers of the United States Auto Club (USAC) in selected events such as JC Agajanian’s promotion of a 50-lap race at Orange Show Speedway in a program that featured Indianapolis 500-mile race winner AJ Foyt, Danny Jones and Johnny Moorhouse.
In 1962 Don finished in the top ten in midget points at Bakersfield Speedway behind such names as Lowell Sachs and Lloyd Nygren. Don made his first start in the prestigious Turkey Night Grand Prix in November 1962 and completed the 150-lap race around the half-mile Ascot Park Speedway in seventh place.
For 1964, Mel Kenyon invited Don to travel with him on the USAC national midget circuit and as the season progressed, Meacham began to land better quality rides. Don scored his first USAC main event win at Springfield Illinois on July 13 as he drove the Saemann Grabow Offenhauser then followed that up with his second win a month later at Peoria Speedway in Illinois. Even though he raced only a partial season, Don wound up tenth in the 1964 USAC national midget standings.  
In the winter of 1965 and 1966 Meacham participated in the 14-race BCRA Pacific Coast Indoor Auto Racing Championship series held on the 1/10-mile oval inside the Oakland Exposition Building and finished in the top five in points. During the 1966 racing season as a member of the Myron Caves midget racing team Don along with teammate Mike McGreevy battled Mel Kenyon for the USAC national midget championship.
Don led all drivers as he captured nine 1966 USAC main event midgets wins but wound up third in points behind the eventual champion McGreevy and Kenyon. Don scored wins in Muncie Speedway in Indiana, Santa Fe Speedway and Bob-Jo Speedway Illinois as well as back to back wins on successive nights at Fairbury American Legion Park in Illinois. Meacham also won at the Allentown Pennsylvania fairgrounds and scored his ninth win of the 1966 season at his home track the Kearney Bowl
Don finished second in the 1966-67 BCRA Pacific Coast Indoor championship behind Billy Vukovich with 481 points to Billy’s 539 points. In May 1967, Don made the challenging jump from midgets to a rear engine car at Indianapolis teamed with a rookie car owner, Jim Hayhoe in an effort with a three-year Vollstedt chassis powered by supercharged Offenhauser engine.
The Cleaver-Brooks sponsored team fought hard and steadily improved but just couldn’t find the speed needed to make the starting field.  Offsetting his Indianapolis disappointment, Don finished fifth in the 1967 USAC National midget championship with the Myron Caves Buick Offenhauser powered midget and scored one feature win at Flat Rock Speedway in Michigan.  
In 1968 Don was invited to race “down under” in New Zealand and Australia and achieved much success with 14 wins in seventeen starts and Meacham became a great fan favorite and he returned to visit vintage events in Australia several times. Don cut back on his USAC schedule in 1968 and scored his final USAC feature victory on July 21, 1968 at Kokomo Speedway.
Later in his career, after he had retired from full-time driving and entered the orthopedic device industry, Don drove the Mason Cook Sesco-powered midget in BCRA competition against the rising tide of Volkswagen powered midgets, then he later decide that he would rather switch than fight and drove Len Gozel’s Volkswagen powered machine.  

Don Meacham in action in the Myron Caves midget in Australia
photo from the author's collection


Don’s career total of thirteen USAC national midgets wins places him in a tie with Steve Knepper, Ryan Newman and Stevie Reeves. The most remarkable aspect of his win total is that oftentimes Don raced the Caves Don Edmunds built midget without the help of a crewman.  Through his long career, Don drove for some truly legendary car owners that included his most frequent ride, the Myron Caves Offenhauser, as well as Jack London, Harry Stryker and Bob Rosen.
In addition to his membership in the National Midget Auto Racing Hall of Fame, Don Meacham is also a member of the Central California Racing Hall of Fame and was recently inducted into the Bay Cities Racing Association Hall of Fame.

Friday, July 6, 2018


Dick Atkins
2017 NMARHoF  




Richard F. "Dick" Atkins was born into a large family with eight brothers and sisters in 1936 in Oakland California, and graduated from Castlemont High School in 1954 after standout career in varsity athletes particularly in football.  Dick who worked as a building contractor in Hayward California began racing in 1960 as a hobby, and by 1963 he was a force in Bay Cities Racing Association (BCRA) competition driving Sim Clark’s Chevy II powered midget with a signature win in a 50-lap feature at Capitol Speedway on May 30 and he set a track record in June at Stockton 99 Speedway.

1964 was Atkins’ breakout season in 2017 Sim Clark’s Chevy II that included a July 4 weekend sweep of the BCRA races at Chico on the dirt at Silver Dollar Speedway and the tight paved oval at Lakeport California. During July 1964 Dick Atkins captured three consecutive wins and he was crowned the 1964 BCRA outdoor champion following in his third place finish in the October 17 1964 25-lap feature at Vallejo Speedway.

For the 1965 season, Atkins joined the multi-car team of John Pestana and Bob Lang that fielded a pair of Offenhauser-powered midgets for BCRA competition as well the former Fike Plumbing sprint car in Northern Auto Racing Club (NARC) races. Atkins won races in both divisions, notably 100-lap features at Santa Maria on Memorial Day and in July at Vallejo Speedway and claimed his second consecutive BCRA driving title.

On Thanksgiving night 1965 on Ascot Park Speedway, Atkins qualified the Pestana #3X in fifth place then watched as AJ Foyt and Parnelli Jones dueled for the early lead until Jones flipped on lap 70. Foyt continued to lead with pressure from Atkins until Foyt pitted on lap 118 and Atkins led the remaining 32 laps to claim the 25th annual Turkey Night Grand Prix victory and nationwide notoriety.

1966 was Atkins’ breakout year which began as he claimed the BCRA Pacific Coast Indoor Auto Racing Champion’s crown as joined JC Agajanian’s REV 500 racing team on the USAC (United States Auto Club) championship circuit at Indianapolis. In his first attempt to qualify for the ‘500,’ Dick passed his rookie test and qualified for the field at 158.158 miles per hour, only to be bumped out of the field the following day  by Larry Dickson and wound up the first alternate.

Days after the ‘500,’ a mechanic’s torch set off an explosion that damaged the Shrike that Atkins had driven at Indianapolis, and for the rest of the USAC season, Dick became the driver of the famed Agajanian #98 entry. Dick also found time to race sprint cars and set quick time and won the final USAC sprint car race held at the Allentown Pennsylvania fairgrounds in August. Dick finished sixth in his first appearance at the high-banked Winchester Speedway in a sprint car after he started 14th and trailed Al Smith, Bobby Unser, Mario Andretti, Roger McCluskey and Arnie Knepper to the finish line.  

Midway during the USAC championship car season, Dick began to pile up steady top ten and top five finish, and in the penultimate race of 1966 at the State Fairgrounds dirt mile in Sacramento, he qualified second. Atkins tracked leader Mario Andretti all race long then swept past to claim victory when Andretti car suffered rear end failure with six laps to go. In one year, Atkins had claimed wins in the three elite USAC classes- champ car, sprint car and midgets.

On the cusp of stardom, with a full-time ride with JC Agajanian set for 1967, Dick Atkins just thirty years old was struck down three weeks after his Golden State victory following a USAC sprint car crash at Ascot Park that also claimed the life of Don Branson. On the fifth lap of the 30-lap feature Branson in what was scheduled to be his final race became incapacitated and his car crashed hard into the outside wall.

Branson’s flipping car landed on top of Dick’s Wally Meskoswitz owned sprint car which exploded into flames. Though rescuers pulled him from the car Atkins had suffered severe burns and a basal skull fracture and he passed away in the Gardena Memorial Hospital at noon the next day. Dick just thirty years old and on the cusp of superstardom was struck down just three weeks after his ‘Golden State 100’ victory.  The tragic Branson/Atkins double fatality led USAC to mandate the use of fuel cells in both sprint cars and midgets.  

Taken from us too soon, we were honored to welcome Dick Atkins truly a phenomenal driver into the National Midget Auto Racing Hall of Fame as a member of the class of 2017 at ceremonies in Tulsa Oklahoma on January 12 2018.

     

 

     

  

Tuesday, June 12, 2018


The mission of the
National Midget Auto Racing Hall of Fame
The mission of the National Midget Auto Racing Hall of Fame (NMARHoF) is to preserve, honor and promote the heritage of the sport of midget auto racing and perpetually recognize and remember individuals who have contributed to the sport. 
Another part of our mission to maintain a permanent exhibit to provide a national presence for race fans and participants everywhere to visit and enjoy, saluting those individuals who have been enshrined as Hall of Fame inductees.
Formed in 1984 by official Ed Watson and race organizer John Stiles, the National Midget Auto Racing Hall of Fame annually announces its inductees, who are then formally honored ceremoniously.

To present an individual involved in the sport of Midget Auto racing for consideration by the induction committee for membership in the NMARHoF by contacting the organization’s National office, which in 2018 is accessed at kingdoodlebug@sbcglobal.net which will provide a nomination package.