As the Long Beach Grand
Prix approaches (September 24-26, 2021), let’s take a look at the past and
another racing venue that had everyone talking.
Many remember Lions Dragstrip in Wilmington, at 223rd and Alameda. Though in another city, it was the youth of Long Beach, especially those in the Westside, that benefited most from the drag strip.
Hot rods were a national passion among 1950s and 60s
teenagers. Like today, there were good teens, and there were troublesome teens.
It was hard to distinguish gang members from car club members. Both wore
special jackets and painted names on their cars. Most car clubs had a good
bunch of youngsters and were sponsored by law enforcement and civic
organizations.
In Long Beach, the Associated Car Clubs of Long Beach, the
first of its kind in the nation, was formed by nine local car groups in June
1951. Members realized they needed a responsible central organization which
would have the approval of police and civic groups. One of the necessary
qualifications for membership was to pass the California Highway Patrol’s test
for safe vehicles, which meant the association needed places where members
could test their cars, conduct speed and timing tests and just enjoy drag
racing. Thanks to Long Beach judge Frederick Miller, whose courtroom was
overwhelmed with street racing incidents, they found a place - Lions Dragstrip.
Judge Miller persuaded all nine Harbor Area Lions Club to
take on the project. They volunteered to raise $50,000 ($566,400 today) to
cover construction costs. Also, a
deal was made with the Harbor Commission to buy a narrow strip of land that
still sprouted a bit of alfalfa from farming days. The land, once used for
storage by the railroad, was now situated among oil tanks and derricks at 223rd
and Alameda. The Lions went to work.
According to hot rod enthusiasts, the Lions track
“officially” opened in October 1955 (9th?), shortly after actor
James Dean’s death. However, the first reference to the strip I found was in a
newspaper article in December 1954 in the Long
Beach Independent when the Rod and Custom Car Association asked the Lion’s
Club if they could use the drag strip on specific days to educate the public on
hot rods and safety programs. At that time many youths desperately wanted to be
part of the “in group” of car club members, many of whom identified with James
Dean and Dean’s 1955 film Rebel Without a
Cause. In real life Dean was a car racing enthusiast, and many young men
wanted to be just like him. Dean’s death
in a car accident in September 1955 raised his image to cult-like status. Drag
racing among the clubs “a la James Dean style” became the “in” thing to do, as
did clashes between rivals.
James Dean in his race car |
For the first 3 years attendance was low (after all would James Dean give up street racing for a drag strip), but in 1957 strip manager Mickey Thompson hit on what many felt was the salvation for the entire sport: night racing. Fans who avoided the sport began to pour back in record numbers and within five years the mortgage was paid in full and member Lions Clubs began donating their profits to needy charities. By 1971, over $480,000 ($3.2 million today) had been donated.
Just to give you an idea of how popular the clubs and the
sport of drag racing was, it was estimated there were 1500 car clubs, with an
average membership of 15 to 20 in Los Angeles/Orange counties in 1961. Mickey Thompson, who served as Lions manager
until 1962, was an inspiration to local youth, holding more than 485 world land
speed records. Thompson estimated that
about 50% of the kids who raced or watched the Wednesday and Saturday grudge
races were Hispanic or Black. Admission was only $2 ($18 today), something they could
afford. He claimed that within two years of opening street racing incidents had
been cut in half, and by 1962 they were almost non-existent.
At that time, however, the port of Los Angeles was
expanding and needed space for more storage, or so they said. In reality, they
wanted to avoid a lawsuit by nearby residents annoyed by the noise. Coincidently, the lawsuit was dropped when
the LA Harbor Department announced it was closing the strip because they needed
the area for storage. On December 2, 1972, after witnessing Don Moody break a
National Hot Rod elapsed time record before a crowd of 21,000, the strip was
forced to close. The land remained
vacant until the late 1970s.
In 1979 Big Willie Robinson, head of the nonprofit
Brotherhood of Street Racers, opened another drag strip on Terminal Island. It
closed in 1985. Today sanctioned racing is no more. However, those who remember Lions and the
sport of drag racing may visit the Lions Automobilia Foundation & Museum,
2790 E. Del Amo Blvd., Rancho Dominguez. The museum, founded in December 2019, opened in late August 2021. Advance tickets must be purchased in advance and Covid
restrictions followed.
Also, here's a You-tube link by Long Beach film maker Danny Miguel which talks about West Long Beach and Lions Drag Strip.
Wonderful Claudine, keep up the great work. You are a great Historian.
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