Watertown Speedway
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Start of a semi-final at Watertown Speedway May 1962 | |
| Location | Watertown, New York |
|---|---|
| Owner | City of Watertown New York |
| Operator | Northern Stock Car Club |
| Broke ground | 1843 |
| Opened | 1936 |
| Closed | 1974 |
| Oval | |
| Surface | Clay |
| Length | .8 km (0.50 mi) |
Watertown Speedway was a 1/2 mile dirt oval raceway located at the Jefferson County fairgrounds in Watertown, New York.
Auto racing was first presented at the former horse track located on Coffeen St in 1936 and again in 1940, when the Jefferson County Fair featured sprint car races sanctioned by the American Automobile Association. In 1949, the Fair introduced the International Midget Auto Racing Association, which returned for two additional shows the same year.[1]
Adirondack Stock Car Club
In 1951, Brewerton and Vernon Speedway promoter Al Richardson bought stock cars to Watertown for the first time, but by the end of that year, George Clark and George “Bud” Herbert, owners of the Edgewood Speedway in nearby Alexandria Bay took over promotion. Races at both tracks were sanctioned by the Adirondack Stock Car Club (ASCC), an organization of local car owners and drivers organized by Al Mosher.[2] Club champions were determined by combined points earned from both racetracks.[3]
In 1955, Herbert and Clark began construction of Adventure Town amusement park to replace the Edgewood racetrack.[4][5] The ASCC continued plans to race at the Watertown Fairgrounds track in 1955, and Tony Costanzo took over as race promotor. Unfortunately, low attendance and financial difficulties resulted in the season being cancelled after only 7 events.[6]
ASCC champions were Don June (1951), Andy Rae (1952), Bobby Miller (1953), Allen Shirley (1954), and Tiny Benson (1955).[7] Benson made six appearances in the NASCAR Grand National Series (predecessor of the NASCAR Cup Division) from 1958 to 1959.[8]