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rssThe Founding Fathers
The Founding Fathers
The Rickenbacher Years
The Hulman Years
Current Ownership Of The Speedway
Past Indy 500 Winners
THE FOUNDING FATHERS
The Indianapolis Motor Speedway was the brain child of an
energetic entrepreneur named Carl Fisher.
Born in
When
approached by an inventor of an acetylene lamp for use on automobiles, Carl
Fisher seized the opportunity to begin manufacturing head lights for the auto
industry and through a series of plants around the country supplied the
headlights for most every automobile and truck made in
Carl Fisher’s dealership sold, Oldsmobile, Packard, Stutz,
and the Stoddard-Dayton automobiles. On
a trip to
Carl was well on his way to becoming a wealthy man by this
time. He had several successful ventures
including a company which manufactured the Prest-o-Lite
lamps installed on virtually every truck and car built in the
new venture. James Allison, Arthur Newby, and Frank
Wheeler signed on, invested their money with Carl and soon formed the Indianapolis
Motor Speedway Company. They purchased a
240 acre farm a few miles northwest of
James Allison, the inventor of the Allison Perfection Fountain Pen, met Carl Fisher through their mutual interest in the bicycle craze. Together they formed the ZigZag bicycle club. Later they joined as partners in the Prest-o-Lite venture. James Allison then formed the Indianapolis Speedway Team Company, which evolved into the Allison Engine Company that is now the Allison Transmission Company of General Motors. Rolls Royce acquired the engine building division of Allisons in 1995.
Arthur Newby was the president of National Motor Vehicle
Company, located in
Frank Wheeler, the fourth founding member of the
Indianapolis Motor Speedway, was a partner in the Wheeler-Schebler
Carburetor Company, which manufactured carburetors for automobile manufactures
throughout the
The farm they purchased, known by the locals as the Pressley
Farm, sat near the corner of Crawfordsville Pike (now known as 16th
St.) and Georgetown Rd, five miles west of downtown Indianapolis. However, another farmer named Levi Munter owned 80 acres, which sat directly on the corner of
what is now 16th and
In the spring of 1909, the land around the speedway was
largely pasture land, but a few factories, situated just south of the site of
the new Indianapolis Motor Speedway, had been in operation for several years
prior. Those factories included the Prest-o-Lite company built and operated by Carl
Fisher. James Allison’s machine shop was
also located just south of the site of the new speedway. The Allison machine shop that later became
the Allison transmission and engine company is still in operation at or near the
same location today. The town of
Automobile racing was not popular at that time. Building a
race course for the sake of holding automobile races,
was not Carl Fisher’s plan. His plan was
to build a testing ground for American automobile manufacturers to test their
machines and make them faster and more reliable. The races he organized in 1909 were part of
his plan to promote the track and encourage automobile makers to take up the
challenge. Better cars meant happy
buyers which in turn brought about enthusiastic sales. Carl Fisher and his partners were perhaps
better able to benefit from the anticipated boom of automobile sales than any
other persons in the world. With the
first automobile dealership and a manufacturing plant that made running lights
for virtually every automobile made in the
Since 1911 when the first
There is perhaps no race driver in history who did more to capture the attention and admiration of the
world, than Barney Oldfield. Born Berna Eli Oldfield, in 1878 near
For
many years, motorcycle cops around the country, were fond of asking “who in the
hell do you think you are, Barney Oldfield?”, when stopping motorists for exceeding the speed
limit. Oldfield,
with his trademark cigar and thick black mustache, was one of the most
celebrated drivers in the early years at the
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