ORIGINS OF THE MARION COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS
By Bob WilsonThe current fairgrounds was purchased
in the late 1800s and a new half-mile horse racing track was constructed at that
time. The annual county fairs were held on the grounds but no actual auto racing
was staged until 1914, unless of course one counts the 1901 race, which can most
likely be touted as the first automobile race attempted on a fairgrounds in
Iowa, if not the country.
The race was reported as being “nothing remarkable” and “the time made was not
especially good on account of the wind. One of the vehicles belonged to the
Wells Manufacturing Co. of Des Moines and the other to Fred Tone of the Tone
Spices Co.” The cars were on display at the fairgrounds during the day and they
drew large crowds of onlookers.
It wasn't until 1917 that all the buildings were built (including the old
covered grandstand which was razed in the! 1969). The local high school football
games and track meets were staged on the infield and track (respectively) until
the late 1930s when the current football stadium was built. Huge KU KLUX KLAN
meetings were held at the fairgrounds in the mid-twenties, which shows how
active that organization was during that era in Iowa. (Interestingly, the KKK
was embraced by politicians, townsfolk and ministers alike.)
It was also at this time that automobile racing meets (as they were called then)
were staged on the track during the summers and early autumn. The success led to
a string of racing events between 1927 to 1936. Named drivers such as Johnny
Gerber, "Speed" Adams and other regionally known drivers competed in the meets
during that time. Of course, no lighting existed around the half mile at that
time so all events were staged in the afternoon hours. Additionally, calcium
chloride was used on the surface of the oval to keep dust at a minimum.
During the early 1940s and especially during the war years, no racing at all was
contested at the fairgrounds site. It wasn't until late in the decade that
racing once again returned in the form of hot rods. The first four years of the
1950s saw competitions with hot rods, midgets and stock cars. The stock cars
were sanctioned by the Newton Stock Car Racing Association (Newton, Iowa).
1954 saw the first weekly racing staged at the Knoxville half mile. Lights had
been added, new fencing circling the track while the track itself was graded to
create banking in the turns (whereas prior to this the surface was flat for
horse racing). The Southern Iowa Stock Car Racing Association (SISCRA) based out
of Oskaloosa (Iowa) sanctioned the racing of stock cars at Knoxville, Oskaloosa
and Ottumwa.
'Stock Car' racing had become extremely popular across the United States af! ter
World War II. Generally speaking, stock cars were pre-war passenger cars
stripped of glass, innards and extra metal such as fenders and running boards.
Most sanctioning bodies demanded that roll cages be constructed inside the car
as a safety feature. As a rule, the racing was a slam-bang affair and the paying
customers could not get enough of the action.
In 1955, the SISCRA pulled out of its sanctioning at Knoxville due to internal
problems leaving the Marion County Fairgrounds to promote the races on its own.
The local Board of Directors continued to do so for that year and in 1956 hired
Marion Robinson of Des Moines to promote the local racing here. From that point
until the mid-1970s Robinson was at the helm at Knoxville.
Under Robinson's hand, the racing of stock cars turned into 'modifieds'. A
'modified' was simply a 'stock car' tha! t had had modifications made to the
engine and other key parts. The modifieds quickly evolved into the 'supermodifieds'
by the late '50s. Supermodifieds were modifieds that had their car bodies cut
way down to eliminate weight. At this point in time these race cars still looked
similar to passenger cars. As the supermodified evolved into the 1960s, most
builders eliminated the chopped and channeled car bodies and replaced them with
sheet metal. Some builders even began to replace the actual car frames (which
were taken from production autos) with tubing. Once that happened, the genie was
out of the proverbial bottle as sprint car frames with roll cages attached were
the fastest way around the Knoxville oval. By 1968, the sprint car as we know it
today was the choice of car owners, replacing the supermodifieds at Knoxville
for good.
It was Robinson who conceived of the Knoxville Nationals in 1961. At that time
is was called the First annual Super-Modified National Championship. It was a
two-day event back then with time trials only on Friday and racing on Saturday.
The event became such a success that by 1966 it had grown to a 3-day affair. In
1973 Robinson convinced the fairboard to allow 'wings' at the Nationals in order
to entice more of the Eastern cars to race at the event. (After the 1961 season,
'wings' or 'air scoops' as they were called back then, were banned at Knoxville.
The 'air scoop' had found its way to Knoxville during the first Nationals. No
one around here knew about the 'foil', and many owners added the new 'appendage'
after the event was history. However, the 'air scoop' continued to be legal at
many tracks around the nation, including the hotbeds of Pennsylvania, Indiana,
Ohio, Michigan and New York). Again, at Knoxville, the wing was made illegal
after the 1973 season was concluded.
1974 saw a! n end to an era as Marion Robinson was replaced as race promoter by
P. Ray Grimes. Grimes served in that capacity until the 1977 season when due to
injuries in a snowmobiling accident over the winter he was no longer able to
fulfill his duties. It was Grimes who added one more day to the Nationals making
it a 4-day gathering. With Grimes gone, that year Ralph Capitani was hired as
the Race Director of Knoxville Raceway. Under Capitani's supervision the track
sanctioned the World of Outlaws in its initial season for the Knoxville
Nationals of 1978.
It was Capitani who began to grow the event to what it is now. By 1982 he had
increased the payoff for the 4-days of racing to $100,000. That compares to a
total purse payoff of just over $5,000 in 1961. The following year, 1983, saw
the 360 sprint division begin at the track under the name of 'Modifieds'! . At
the end of the season a $50,000 points fund was dispersed to the drivers and
owners. That fund is currently sitting at over one-quarter of a million dollars
in 2004.
1985, the silver anniversary of the Nationals, saw a check of $25,000 go to the
winner of the championship feature on Saturday night. Two years later, The
Nashville Network (TNN) made the first tape-delayed broadcast of the event. All
the while the event continued to grow in many ways other than stature. In 1987
the total payoff increased to $200,000 and by the early '90s with new permanent
backstretch seating in place, the total purse had surpassed $300,000 with
$50,000 to win. That fall, the National Sprint Car Hall of Fame and Museum
opened its doors to the public.
The first $400,000 Nationals was celebrated in 1993. It was the following year
that TNN televised the first live broadcast of the event. That year also
featured a $500,000 purse with $100,000 to win the championship feature.
2002 ! saw the Knoxville Raceway head into a new era with a massive paving
project in the infield of the half-mile race track taking Knoxville head and
shoulders above all other dirt track racing facilities in the nation as well as
the world. The payout for the 2004 Nationals was over $764,000 and coupled with
other racing venues at the Marion County Fairgrounds, the total monies paid out
for the year approached two and a half million dollars. Today the seating
surrounding the Knoxville Raceway will hold nearly 24,000 spectators, which is
thought to be the third largest outdoor facility in Iowa (behind the football
stadiums of Iowa and Iowa State Universities). Seating in 1954 was listed as
2,000.
2003 marked the Golden Anniversary of racing at Knoxville Raceway. In 50 years
this storied fairgrounds has developed a reputation that is known world wide and
has become an icon for what others strive to be. In 2004 Knoxville presented its
first multi-day late model show. The track and B! oard of Directors hope to
eventually grow this event into another Nationals-like happening in 2005 and
beyond.
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