Indy '77
Words by Jeff
Burk
Photos by Jimmy Rector
8/13/04
No enclosed trailer
for Bruce Larson in 1977. Looks like a ramp
truck had to do
I didn't get to my first U.S. Nationals until
1977, although I had wanted to since 1961 when
I started reading about my heroes from Amarillo
and other towns in Texas who raced there in
the National Dragsters that I bought at Amarillo
Dragway owner Ernie Walker's Shamrock gas station.
A couple of tours in the Air Force following
my graduation from Tascosa High School and some
Hunter Thompson-influenced years in the late
Sixties and early Seventies mostly kept me away
from drag racing.
By 1977 I was married and the proud but poverty
stricken owner, with my fellow college journalism
major Scott Brown, of a racing tabloid called
Midwest Racer which we published out of the
basement of my in-law's house in Urbana, IL.
We used our last G.I. Bill college checks to
start the publication.
Dennis Baca's crew celebrates
after winning
We had been putting the newspaper out for about
six months and since we covered NHRA, IHRA and
AHRA drag racing, I figured it was time for
us to cover the biggest drag race of them all
-- "The Nationals." I wrote a letter to NHRA
requesting credentials for myself and our staff
photographer (and my close friend) Jimmy Rector.
To my surprise we soon received an envelope
filled with the appropriate photo credentials,
parking stickers, and a few tickets for press
lunches that were served on the third floor
hospitality suite of the top end tower.
So, as the end of August approached, we put out an "Indy Special Issue" of Midwest Racer, put a thousand of them in the back of the Burkster's Vega station wagon along with a tent, sleeping bags, a cooler full of adult beverages, some food and Jimmy and I hauled ass for Indy. We were going to the freakin' U.S. Nationals!!
We got a late start and arrived in Clermont late Thursday night. We decided to drive down Crawfordsville Road to the main gate just to check the lay of the land. What we saw boggled our minds. In those days the camping area surrounding the front gate was freak show of the first order.
Travel trailers selling every kind of T-shirt,
tube steak, tattoos and God knows what else
lined both sides of the road a couple of miles
on either side of the main gate. There was a
mind-blowing mix of music, campfires, hot rods,
Harleys and Hells Angels. The campgrounds and
drive-in theater had the look and smell of a
combination of Woodstock, New York; Tombstone,
Arizona; and Hollister, California (which the
Angels had invaded back in the '40s).
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