Bob Marshman
2018 NMARHoF inductee
George Robert “Bobby” Marshman was born on September 24,
1936 in Pottstown Pennsylvania into a racing family, as the son of George
Marshman who reigned as the 1949 American Automobile Association (AAA) East
Coast Midget series champion and later became the promoter of Hatfield Speedway.
At age 19 Bobby started his racing career with the United
Racing Club in a sprint car and was the club’s 1955 Rookie of the Year then the
following season he was eighth in URC points in the Ellis Brothers Dodge. After he finished second in URC points in 1957
though with no wins, in 1958 Bobby began his midget racing career with the
American Race Drivers Club (ARDC).
At just 23 years of age, Bobby drove for the
powerful Harry Hespell 4-car team with multi-time ARDC champions Ed “Dutch”
Schaffer and Len Duncan and Wayne Doerstler and wound up third in 1958 points
in that very competitive series. Bobby started his record of success at the big
Trenton New Jersey one-mile track as he won a 25-mile ARDC feature on August 3,
1958. Marshman branched out into USAC
(United States Auto Club) competition in the 1959 season still with the Hespell
team teamed with Duncan, Al Herman, and Don Allison.
Bobby started his 1960 season with a win in a 35 lap three
quarter midget race on the 1/10 track inside the Island Garden on January 3, then
at the end of February he scored a stock car win inside the Teaneck New Jersey Armory.
Marshman drove for Bruce Homeyer’s ‘Konstant Hot’ team in 1960 and won the 300-mile
ARDC midget race held at Trenton on July 24, 1960. Bobby led the final 109 laps and finished in
3 hours 8 minutes, yet he finished only 25 seconds ahead of Chuck Arnold.
At the 1961 Indianapolis ‘500,’ Marshman was the youngest
driver in the field as he started last in Eph Hoover’s ‘Hoover Motor Express
Special.’ With just five days of practice, he finished the race in seventh
place and shared the Rookie of the Year award with Parnelli Jones.
Bobby’s career record includes eight ARDC feature wins and
four USAC feature wins, and he excelled in long-distance midget races, particularly,
as he won the 250-mile USAC/ARDC at Trenton on July 2, 1961. Due to the sweltering heat Bob gave way to
relief driver Jimmie Davis after 186 laps but the pair still finished at an average
speed of over 93 miles per hour (MPH).
Marshman’s midget schedule slowed down in 1962 onward as he
became a regular on the USAC championship car circuit – in 1962 he was the
third fastest qualifier at Indianapolis and finished fifth in championship
points. On September 16, 1962 Marshman won the USAC sanctioned 100-mile midget
in a record time of one hour and 1.48 seconds.
As Bob’s fame began to spread he got more opportunities to
display his skills – he won the shortened 1962 Bobby Ball Memorial race for
dirt championship cars at the Arizona State Fairgrounds in Lindsay Hopkins’
Kuzma Offenhauser, a victory in USAC
Sprint Car competition 1963 at the Terre Haute Action Track for Wally
Meskowski, and in 1964 driving Don
White’s Zecol-Lubaid Ford stock car, Bobby won the Allen
Crowe Memorial raceat the Illinois state fairgrounds without a pit stop.
In 1964, his tenth season of racing Bobby qualified second
at the Indianapolis ‘500’ and led 33 laps, but sadly one of racing’s brightest stars
passed away on December 5. 1964, just a week after a fiery crash during a tire test
at the Phoenix International Raceway at
just 28 years old.
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