Oakland Speedway
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The Oakland Speedway was the first motor racing track near
Oakland, California Oakland is the largest city and the county seat of Alameda County, California, United States. A major West Coast of the United States, West Coast port, Oakland is the largest city in the East Bay region of the San Francisco Bay Area, the third ...
, a one-mile, banked dirt oval track built in 1931, which operated throughout the
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and postwar years. The track featured
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races with Indy cars and drivers from 1931 until 1936, when the AAA pulled out of the West Coast. Thereafter the track still featured racing by members of the Bay Cities Racing Association, in roadsters and motorcycles, as well as Big Cars, stock cars, and midgets. It was known as the "fastest dirt track in the Nation".


History

In 1931 the Oakland Speedway was built near Oakland, but actually was located between Oakland and nearby
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, on the site of what is now Bayfair Mall in
San Leandro, California San Leandro (Spanish for " St. Leander") is a city in Alameda County, California, United States. It is located in the East Bay of the San Francisco Bay Area; between Oakland to the northwest, and Ashland, Castro Valley, and Hayward to the sou ...
.''Where to Go, How to Go, A guide to points of interest in the east shore empire'', Key System, Ltd.; Key Terminal Railway, Ltd.; East Bay Street Railways, Ltd.; East Bay Motor Coach Lines, Ltd., ca. 1933 (during
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Construction and after Morcom Rose Garden (1932))
Lap #1 How Barky Got Started RACING
, Davis Motorsports, reminiscence by Bob Barkhimer, former race driver and Business Manager for BCRA (Bay Cities Racing Association) and
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co-founder
Annually each fall the track hosted the "Oakland 500" race. Many of the local East Bay races were exhibited by the Bay Cities Racing Association. In 1948 local East Bay driver Bob Barkhimer quit racing to become the business manager for the racing association. In 1949 Barkhimer took over San Jose Speedway and also started his own association, and in 1954 he co-founded west coast
NASCAR The National Association for Stock Car Auto Racing, LLC (NASCAR) is an American auto racing sanctioning and operating company that is best known for stock car racing. The privately owned company was founded by Bill France Sr. in 1948, and hi ...
. Among top drivers who were killed at the Oakland Speedway was Clyde Rea Bray, who had held second place in the A.R.A. points in 1939, behind champion Wally Schock. Bray had come in 5th in the Oakland "500" that year. Two years later, on
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, 1941, during the Oakland Speedway 500 race, on the 356th lap, Bray was fatally injured after being thrown from his car, after it sailed over the south fence. Among legendary top race drivers who got their start at the Oakland Speedway was
Bob Sweikert Robert Charles Sweikert (May 20, 1926 – June 17, 1956) was an American racing driver, best known as the winner of the 1955 Indianapolis 500 and the 1955 National Championship, as well as the 1955 Midwest Sprint car championship - the only ...
, the 1955
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winner. On
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, May 26, 1947 at the Oakland Speedway, Sweikert drove his own handbuilt track roadster in his debut race for prize money, and finished second. Championship motorcycle races were also held at the Oakland Speedway. The American Motorcycle Association sanctioned 200-mile nationals for 1935, 1938, 1939, 1940 and 1941. They were won, respectively, by Jimmy Young, Sam Arena, Jack Cottrell/Armando Magri, Louis Guanella and Ernie Holbrook. All winners rode Harley-Davidsons, except Holbrook, who won on an Indian. But for motorcycles, the track was notoriously unsafe. It was full of sand that flew up into your face, and little chunks of clotted, oiled dirt were missing along the straightaways. On warm afternoons, the top of the banked curves would sweat oil, which oozed down onto the track’s lower sections, making some parts slippery while others buckled-up. "You had to find the right groove, and stay in it," said Armando Magri's brother Ernie, who rode practice laps but did not compete. "It was flat-out dangerous," said Magri. The Oakland Speedway claimed scores of injuries, and ultimately, the lives of four motorcycle racers. The first was Dick Ince, the millionaire son of Hollywood Director Thomas Ince, in 1938. Tommy Hayes and June McCall died in a multi-rider accident in 1940, and Gus Hunter died in October 1941. After that race, Oakland Tribune columnist Alan Ward called for the end of motorcycle racing on the track. But two months later, there would be no more racing at all. Oakland Speedway lost its lease just as America entered World War II.


Other local tracks

In the early 1930s, Emeryville Motorcycle Speedway was built on 53rd Street in nearby
Emeryville, California Emeryville is a city located in northwest Alameda County, California, in the United States. It lies in a corridor between the cities of Berkeley and Oakland, with a border on the shore of San Francisco Bay. The resident population was 12,905 as o ...
, on the present site of the Emery Bay Village residential and shopping center. Another rival 1930s motorcycle track was Neptune Beach Speedway, on the
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bay shoreline. A later local venue similar to the Oakland Speedway was Oakland Stadium, a 5/8 mile track, with a banking of 62 degrees, held racing events between 1946 and 1955 that featured Big Cars, Sprints, Midgets, Roadsters, and Hardtops.Tom Mottor, ''A History of Oakland Stadium 1946-1955, (Volume 2, Tracks of the West)'' Before he moved up to the
sprint car Sprint cars are high-powered open-wheel race cars, designed primarily for the purpose of running on short oval or circular dirt or paved tracks. Sprint car racing is popular primarily in the United States and Canada, as well as in Australia, New ...
s, Bob Sweikert won a 50 lap feature in his Thompson Motors Special Roadster at that venue on October 17, 1948. In October 1949 he set the new one lap track record there at 20.78 seconds in a V8 Special. Surprisingly, there were no driver fatalities at this race track even with the extreme banking in the turns. Another local venue was the
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Indoor Midget Race Track, the only one west of Chicago. It was built inside the converted Exhibition Building, and featured a small 1/12 mile oval track, and became the site of featured races by the Bay Cities Racing Association, with the debut event on January 8, 1949. Bob Sweikert won that Indoor Midget championship that year with the concluding event on February 12, 1949.


References

{{AAA tracks Motorsport venues in California Defunct motorsport venues in the United States Buildings and structures in San Leandro, California Sports venues in the San Francisco Bay Area