Monday, August 17, 2020

Steve Cannon





Steve Cannon 


A post on Facebook by our friend  Stan Kalwasinski of Steve Cannon the feature winner on May 18 1979 at the Chicago area Santa Fe Speedway along with his car owner Dick Heerboth in a Volkswagen powered car brought to mind Cannon's story shared when he was inducted into the National Midget Auto Racing Hall of Fame.   

Stephen "Steve" Cannon from the racing capital of Danville Illinois scored 21 United States Auto Club (USAC) National midget series wins during his sixteen-year midget racing career. 

Most remarkable is that Steve matched the win totals of fellow Hall of Fame members Rex Easton and Jimmy Caruthers in just 219 career starts. Steve was sometimes often too busy to race - in addition to midget racing, he was also a barber, like his brothers, ran an insurance agency and was a 29-year member of the Danville Fire Department. 

Steve began racing modified stock cars during the early nineteen sixties and by 1969 was a strong competitor in ‘Class A’ supermodifieds at the Williamson County Speedway in Marion Illinois. 1970 found Steve in competition in a midget with the St. Louis Auto Racing Association (SLARA), and then in 1971, Steve notched his first and second career USAC midget wins at Santa Fe Speedway and Quad Cities Speedway in a span of just two days.    

After a solid 1973 season in which he notched five USAC wins, in 1974 Steve started the season with a victory at the Fort Wayne Indiana Memorial Coliseum and the Indoor championship, then led all USAC Midget racers with a season-high six wins and a fifth place finish in the USAC National midget points standings. 
  
In 1976 Steve had another sterling season, with three USAC victories. In two of the most prestigious midget races of 1976, Steve finished as the runner-up to Gary Bettenhausen in the “Night before the 500” and he followed Bob Wente across the finish line in the “Hut Hundred” at the Terre Haute Action Track. Cannon was an adept racer indoors as he won a total of three features at Fort Wayne and in 1978 he beat a star-studded field to win a 100-lap race inside the Indiana State Fair Coliseum.

Steve Cannon was one of the most efficient midget racers ever, as he won nearly 10 percent of his starts and finished on the podium 25% of the time, an enviable record that earned him National Midget Auto Racing Hall of Fame membership. Steve sadly passed away on September 17 2015 in his hometown after a long illness. 




Friday, July 17, 2020

George Zarounian


George Zarounian 

Kevin Triplett's Racing History
photo by the author 

Arakel ‘George’ Zarounian was born into an Armenian farming family in the central California town of Goshen, California on December 28, 1920, the first of their four children.  George was in love with automobiles from an early age and built his first midget race car while still in high school. Following his service in the United States Army during World War Two, in 1948 Zarounian opened his first car dealership starting with just one car.

George whose trademarks were cigars, black Cadillacs, and cowboy hats opened his Cadillac/Oldsmobile dealership in Visalia in 1954, and while the automobile business remained a constant throughout his life, Zarounian was a prolific entrepreneur with many successful businesses that included tomato packing, restaurants, and real estate investments. 
 
Zarounian Motorsports, which included George’s son Gary, was dominant for two decades on the West Coast with Hall of Fame driver Ron “Sleepy” Tripp. They combined for more than eighty USAC Western States feature victories and seven season championships in ten years - 1983, 1985, 1987, 1998, 1990, 1991, and 1992. In addition the Zarounian team scored eleven feature wins in the United States Auto Club (USAC) National Midget series as well as fifteen USAC Silver Crown victories.

Zarounian cars won the Belleville Midget Nationals three times; twice with Tripp and once with Jack  Hewitt as the drivers while the team used three different engines – VW, Cosworth and Arias - and two different chassis - Beast and Edmunds. 

The “who’s who” list of drivers who drove the Zarounian #67 cars through the years includes Donnie Beechler, who won the 1995 Chili Bowl Nationals for “GZ,”, Tony Hunt,  Ed Carpenter, Kasey Kahne, Steve Knepper, Bud Kaeding, Dave Strickland Junior, Jeff Gordon and the California father and son team of Ken and Chad Nichols. 

George Zarounian died on January 3, 2014 just a few days after he celebrated his 94th birthday. The inscription on this National Midget Auto Racing Hall of Fame member’s grave marker truly sums up how he lived his life “I did it my way.”

Wednesday, June 3, 2020

The Justice Brothers


The Justice Brothers




The Justice Brothers were born in the tiny eastern Kansas town of Paola, into a family of six children. Lawrence Milton, known as “Zeke,” was born on March 12 1920 and youngest brother, Edward Ray, arrived fifteen months later on June 12 1921. Growing up, the boys and their older brother Gus, born in 1916, were obsessed with automobiles and speed. First the brothers stripped down an old Whippet before they built their own midget racer. The brothers terrorized the local residents and probably themselves with their high speed exploits in their home-built machines.

It seemed inevitable that the Justice Brothers would have to head to California to pursue their speed dreams. First Ed drove west on Route 66 in his Ford sedan and soon found work in the flight test department of Douglas Aircraft in Santa Monica. Before long, Ed sent word home to Kansas that he had found Zeke a job working in millionaire playboy Joel Thorne’s Burbank race car shop.  Unfortunately, Gus had suffered crippling injuries in a 1936 automobile accident and remained in Paola.

When World War Two came, Ed enlisted as an aircraft mechanic with the Eighth Army Air Force stationed in England, while Zeke worked during the war at Thorne Engineering building precision aircraft parts. The foreman of the Thorne Engineering shop was none other than Frank Kurtis, who later hired Zeke as his first employee when he struck out on his own to build race cars. 

Ed later also joined Kurtis-Kraft Inc. and the brothers helped construct many of the nearly 500 midget race cars K-K built during the post-war midget racing boom.  Some of which were sold as kits, and Frank Kurtis was too busy to take on repair jobs, so the enterprising pair opened Justice Brothers Race Car Repair and Fabrication in Glendale California to assemble Kurtis-Kraft midget kits and repair damaged Kurtis-Kraft race cars in their off hours.  

Once while Frank Kurtis was out of town on business, Ed convinced Zeke to help him incorporate standard aircraft fasteners for the first time on a midget race car being built by Kurtis for NMARHOF member “Bullet” Joe Garson. The pair attached the body panels using Dzus spring-loaded quarter -turn fasteners, and while Frank Kurtis was reportedly unhappy at first, the Justices sold him on their innovation which became the standard in race car fabrication.  

The brothers somehow found the time to build their own midget race car, and after just one outing at the famed Gilmore Stadium, sold the car for a $2,500 profit, which they used to invest in a Florida-based oil business.  Justice Brothers Inc. went on to sponsor the Kurtis-built 1950 Indianapolis 500 winner driven by Johnnie Parsons, Red Byron, the first NASCAR champion in 1949, and were the first sponsors of drag racing legend “Big Daddy” Don Garlits. 

Although we lost Gus in 1983, Zeke in 2001 and Ed in 2008, the Justice Brothers Inc. automotive chemicals company continues to grow under the leadership of Ed’s son, Ed Justice Junior, who is also a noted motorsports photographer, historian, broadcaster and publisher.


Thursday, May 21, 2020

Wes Saegesser


Wes Saegesser 
2016 NAMRHoF inductee 



By any measure, with 117 documented wins over twelve seasons, equally divided between the pre-and post- war racing eras, in eleven different states and the province of Ontario Canada, Wesley “Wes” Saegesser had a great midget racing career. 

Wes’ accomplishments become even more remarkable when one learns that all those race wins came while driving with only one arm, since Wes was born with shortened left arm without a hand and he did not use a prosthetic device while racing. 

Born in Grand Island Nebraska in 1908, Wes began racing International Motor Contest (IMCA ‘big cars’ on the dangerous South & Midwest fair circuits in 1932 before his career was temporarily slowed in 1933 when he broke his neck in a racing accident.   

Saegesser scored his first midget win with an Elto outboard powered machine in 1937 in Kansas City Missouri and claimed both the 1937 Southwestern Championship and the Tulsa Championship.

The following year, Wes frequently raced on the Zeiter Speedways circuit and notched fifteen feature wins that included back-to-back wins in an afternoon-evening split July 4th program in Ithaca Michigan and scored three straight feature wins at the ¼-mile Yellow Jacket Speedway near Philadelphia. 

In 1939, Wes won a startling twenty-one feature races, followed by eighteen more wins in 1940. Before racing was halted due to World War Two, Saegesser claimed both the 1942 Texas/Oklahoma Midget series championship and the Houston Speed Bowl championship the latter after six consecutive wins.

When racing resumed after World War Two, during the winters of 1946-47 and 1947-48, Wes dominated the winter series of races held at the Pan-American Speedway in San Antonio Texas.  During the 1949 season Wes notched six more feature wins and accepted a new role as the American Automobile Association (AAA) Southwest zone supervisor. 

Saegesser retired from racing after the 1950 season to open his own garage in St Louis Missouri which he ran until he passed away in August 1957 of a heart attack.  Wes Saegesser the trailblazing one-armed midget champion into the National Midget Auto Racing Hall of Fame.  

Thursday, May 14, 2020


George Bignotti 



A smiling George Bignotti in 1962 
Photo courtesy of the
IUPUI University Library Center for Digital Scholarship
 Indianapolis Motor Speedway Collection




Today we pay tribute to National Midget Auto Racing Hall of Fame inductee George Bignotti, another example of a great racer who started their storied career in the sport of auto racing in midget racing.  

George born in San Mateo California in 1916 was the youngest of three brothers all of whom were auto racing mechanics.  In 1946, in partnership with his brother Al, George fielded a car powered by a Ford V8-60 engine in the Bay Cities Racing Association (BCRA) for Ed Normi.

The following season, the brothers bought a second midget and added 1946 BCRA champion Fred Agabashian to their team. Agabashian had a ride in the 1947 Indianapolis 500-mile race and thus missed many races, and was listed in 22nd place in the 1947 BCRA points when he returned in June.

Through a series of consistent finishes Agabashian with George and Al turning the wrenches on the #108 midget won the 1947 BCRA drivers’ championship by 92 points. When Agabashian returned to the Bay Area after the 1948 Indianapolis 500-mile race, George Bignotti had the new Kurtis-Kraft Ford V-8 60 powered “Burgermeister Special” #154 ready for Fred.

Late in the season, Agabashian’s leading competitor, Jerry Piper broke his arm in a crash and at the end of the season the team of Bignotti and Agabashian were champions - Agabashian with his third consecutive title and Bignotti his second.

For 1949, Piper and Agabashian started the BCRA season as teammates for George Bignotti. Agabashian set quick time on three occasions during the 8-race series and eventually lowered the track record to an amazing 8.22 seconds. Fred won the penultimate feature race, but Hayward’s Bob Sweikert won the inaugural BCRA indoor championship. 
During the 1949 season George became a top driver in the BCRA’s hardtop division, and in 1951 he won the BCRA midget title for a third time with Johnny Boyd.   

For the 1954 Indianapolis ‘500’ Fred Agabashian was set to drive the ‘Merz Engineering Special’ a brand new Kurtis Kraft 500C roadster with 270-cubic inches of Offenhauser power tilted 36 degrees. The car arrived late, and Fred called to ask his friend and former car owner Bignotti to come to Indianapolis and help out the short-handed Merz crew.

That visit marked the beginning of Bignotti’s magical 29-year career at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway.  

In 1956 George teamed with Bob Bowes of the Bowes Seal Fast Company to field an entry for Johnny Boyd and in 1957 Agabashian teamed with Johnny Boyd in a pair of new Kurtis-Kraft 500G models. At the end of the 1958 season, George won his USAC first USAC championship race at Sacramento with driver Jud Larson.

In 1960, Bignotti teamed with a young Texan named A J Foyt and together they won four USAC races and the USAC championship, the first of their four USAC championships. In 1961 George the won the first of a pair of Indianapolis 500-mile race wins with Foyt.

Before he retired at the end of the 1983 racing season, Bignotti won seven USAC national championships and won the Indianapolis 500-mile race seven times. Bignotti passed away at age 97 in 2013. The National Midget Auto Racing Hall of Fame is proud to count George Bignotti as one our inductees.    

IUPUI University Library Center for Digital Scholarship Indianapolis Motor Speedway Collection

Wednesday, May 6, 2020

2009 NMARHOF inductee 
Jeff Gordon's 
1990 midget race car 



This historic midget race car was on display in the MPD  Racing booth at the 2019 Performance Racing Industry (PRI) trade show. This car, owned then (and now) by Rollie Helmling was driven by a young 19 year old racer named Jeff Gordon.





Gordon dominated the 1990 United States Auto Club (USAC) midget season in this Diet Pepsi-sponsored Beast chassis with Pontiac power. His notable wins included his second consecutive win in the Night Before the 500 race at Indianapolis Raceway park,  the Hut Hundred at the Terre Haute Action Track, and the Belleville Midget Nationals in Kansas, with the season capped off when Gordon won the USAC National Midget driving title and Helmling the car owner title. 



Jeff Gordon was inducted into the National Midget Auto Racing Hall of Fame in 2009 

All photos by the author.   


Friday, April 24, 2020


Tommy Astone

1950- 2020

2018 inductee



Growing up in Fresno, California, Tommy Astone’s father, Tom Senior, was a race car owner and by the age of ten Tommy knew he wanted to be a race car driver. Astone started racing super modifieds at the age of 17 before he moved in the ranks of midget racing in 1969 with the Bay Cities Racing Association (BCRA).

During his breakout 1970 BCRA season, Tommy swept a twin 50-lap program at San Jose Speedway and the 50-lap Western States midget championship race at Tahoe-Carson (T-CAR) Speedway. In August at West Capitol Raceway, while he challenged for his consecutive straight BCRA feature win, Tommy tangled with another car. His midget flipped eight times and Tommy suffered a broken collarbone and broken ribs and missed five weeks. 

In the 1970 season’s final BCRA race at Roseville Speedway, Tommy entered with a 12-point lead and only had to finish the feature to be crowned the champion. The youngster was black-flagged during the feature by BCRA officials and Gary Arnold finished in third place and won the championship over Astone by 14 points.

By December 1970, Tommy now 21 years old and able to race with the United States Auto Club (USAC) made a clean sweep at the ½-mile Irwindale Speedway, as he set fast time, won his 20-lap preliminary race and then captured the 100-mile feature. 

During the 1971 season, Tommy raced with USAC, the BCRA, and the Southern California-based USRC and URA midget clubs. In 1972, Astone made his first full-season foray with USAC, finished seventh in points and was named the rookie of the year.

Astone claimed his inaugural USAC win on June 20, 1973 at the 3/8-mile clay ‘34 Speedway’ in   Burlington Iowa. The 1973 USAC midget championship was settled on the final day of the season at a twin 50-lap program at Phoenix International Raceway, and Larry Rice emerged as the champion over Astone.

In 1974, Astone spent much of the USAC season in second place in points as he won the prestigious ‘Night Before the 500’ race at Indianapolis Raceway Park.  Tommy missed the final two races of the season due to injuries he suffered in a violent crash at Clovis Speedway but had amassed enough points to again finish second in the USAC midget championship.  

In 1976, Astone finished in third place in USAC midget points before he returned to racing on the West Coast primarily with the BCRA.  Tommy’s USAC midget career includes seven USAC national wins and five USAC Western States midget wins. Tommy Astone was inducted into the Bay Cities Racing Association Hall of Fame in 2009, he was welcomed him into the National Midget Auto Racing Hall of Fame as member of the class of 2018.

Tommy Astone Junior passed away April 14 2020 RIP

Monday, April 20, 2020


Boots Archer




Born in 1913 in Oakland California, in 1931 David J. Archer Junior, known as  "Boots" started to work for a Bay Area well drilling company. He worked in the well drilling, pump installing and repairing field for other for ten years until he decided to start his own business in San Francisco in May of 1941 named Pump Repair Service Company. As the business grew, his wife Helen joined the company and managed the office.

In 1955, Boots’ son, David “Dave” Archer III joined the family business. Over the years, Dave learned the business and eventually in 1980 took over ownership of the company when “Boots” retired.  The company is still family owned by Dave Archer and his sons Wayne and Steve.


‘Boots’ first entered the “racing game” as a mechanic and partner in a Ford touring stock car with his friend Lynn Deister in the mid 1930’s. Sadly, Deister died in a midget racing crash at Bayshore Stadium in South San Francisco on Labor Day 1947.

After World War Two, ‘Boots’ served as the Business Manager for the Bay Cities Racing Association (BCRA) from 1945 to 1948, when he was forced to resign due to the growing demands of his pump business. While he was the Business Manager of BCRA, “Boots” made a strong effort to unite the BCRA (Northern California) and United Racing Association (URA) of Southern California but his efforts fell short.  

Less than a year after he resigned, ‘Boots’ returned to the BCRA Business Manager’s role on an interim basis after 1945 BCRA champion Bob Barkheimer who quit his race driving career to take over as BCRA business manager, resigned to take over management of the San Jose Speedway. “Boots” managed the BCRA operation for nearly two months until Ab Allen was hired as a permanent replacement. 

‘Boots’ served throughout the 1950’s and  1960’s as the referee at BCRA racing events, including the legendary winter time Pacific Coast Indoor Auto Racing Championship midget auto racing events held indoors at the Oakland Exposition Building.  For most of those years, ‘Boots’ was assisted by Northern California auto racing legend Jerry Piper, while Mel Fernandez served as the flamboyant starter.

Boots’ racing efforts were not confined just to midget auto racing, as due to knowledge of racing rules he also served as the referee for many major west coast stock car races promoted by Bob Barkheimer, such as the 1953 National 500-lap Stock Car Race held at Oakland Speedway. 

‘Boots’ also served as the chairman of California Auto Racing Fan Club (CARF) and for many years hosted that club’s annual Indianapolis 500-mile breakfast and remote viewing party. In September 1970, ‘Boots’ served as the referee of the inaugural ‘California 500’ USAC (United States Auto Club) championship car race at Ontario Motor Speedway, working alongside stewards Richard King and J. Gordon Betz and starter Shim Malone.

Boots became a member of the BCRA Hall of Fame in 1987 and passed away at age 83 in 1996.

Monday, April 13, 2020


Hall of Fame spotlight 
Johnnny Mantz






John Robert "Johnny" Mantz was born in 1918 in Hebron Indiana but grew up in Southern California and worked on his family’s farm before he started racing motorcycles. In 1940 he switched to racing midgets with the United Midget Association as a teammate to his car owner, Gib Lilly, before he joined the military in April 1942.

With the war over,  Mantz resumed action with the United Racing Association (URA) and posted three feature wins during 1946. In 1947,  Mantz finished second in the standings on the URA ‘Blue’ circuit for Offenhauser powered machines with eleven wins and placed eleventh in the URA ‘Red’ or non-Offenhauser circuit points with nine wins. 

During early June 1947, Johnny won five races in a three-week stretch and in September he won three races over a six-day period. “Joltin’ Johnny’s” 1947 season wins came at tracks in Bakersfield, Culver City, Carpinteria, the Rose Bowl and Balboa Stadiums and the Orange Show Speedway where Mantz won four features and scored six trophy dash wins.

After 1947 Mantz raced a ‘big car’ and championship car for JC Agajanian, won two American Automobile Association (AAA) championship car races, and was crowned the 1949 AAA Pacific Coast ‘big car’ champion. 

While he retired from racing open-wheel cars in early 1950, Mantz continued to race stock cars – he ran four of the five Mexican road races and scored a best finish of second in class in 1952. On Labor Day 1950, Mantz drove a 1950 Plymouth coupe to victory in the first 500-mile ‘Strictly Stock Car” race at Darlington South Carolina and he was crowned the inaugural 1956 USAC stock car champion.

Johnny lost his left arm after a horrific winter 1962 highway accident, and he died on October 25 1972 in another highway crash near his home in Ojai California. 

Mantz was inducted into the West Coast Stock Car Hall of Fame in 2004, and since 2009, the NASCAR ‘Southern 500’ has awarded the Darlington race winner the “Johnny Mantz Trophy.” We are proud to have midget racing pioneer Johnny Mantz as a member of the National Midget Auto Racing Hall of Fame.

Wednesday, February 26, 2020

Hall of Fame highlights
Sim Clark 
2017 Hall of Fame inductee 



Sim Clark, born in 1908, drove and won races with the American Race Drivers Club (ARDC) and the American Automobile Association (AAA) before and after World War Two until a serious accident in Pennsylvania ended his driving career. 

In 1950 Sim was the owner of the car driven by Stan Disbrow of Poughkeepsie that won the Reynolds Motors Cup, emblematic of the New York State midget championship. The team of Clark and Disbrow won four straight features in a row at Brewerton Speedway on April 30, May 7, May 14, and May 21 and then capped off the season with a win on June 11 1950.

Later that year, Clark moved west and opened a garage and service station in Santa Clara California.  On February 17 1951 Sim and driver Ed Normi were crowned the  Bay Cities Racing Association (BCRA) Pacific Coast Indoor Auto Racing champions after seven hectic weeks of midget racing on Tuesday and Saturday nights inside the Oakland Exposition Center. 1951 proved to be just the beginning, as Clark fielded V8-60 powered cars for Tommy Copp that captured the BCRA Indoor Championship in 1959 and 1961.

Clark was a pioneer in the racing development of the 155-cubic inch four-cylinder inline engine used in the Chevrolet Chevy II passenger car. Sim Clark Chevy II powered midget cars won four outdoor BCRA titles, first with Oakland’s Dick Atkins in 1964, and then Sim teamed with Fremont’s Bob DeJong to win the BCRA title in 1969.  In 1971 and 1972, Hall of Fame driver Hank Butcher won his first two of his four BCRA championships behind the wheel of Clark’s Chevy II-powered midget.  

As a testament to his patience and skills as a mentor, many of the drivers who drove for Clark through the years including Butcher, Chuck Booth and Billy Vukovich built Hall of Fame careers. Sim who passed away in August 1974 was inducted into the BCRA Hall of Fame in 1985 and in 2017 into the National Midget Auto Racing Hall of Fame.